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    European Court of Human Rights


    You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> Sergey TRONIN v Russia - 24461/02 [2008] ECHR 998 (11 September 2008)
    URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2008/998.html
    Cite as: [2008] ECHR 998

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    FIRST SECTION

    DECISION

    AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF

    Application no. 24461/02
    by Sergey TRONIN
    against Russia

    The European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting on 11 September 2008 as a Chamber composed of:

    Christos Rozakis, President,
    Nina Vajić,
    Anatoly Kovler,
    Elisabeth Steiner,
    Khanlar Hajiyev,
    Giorgio Malinverni,
    George Nicolaou, judges,

    and Søren Nielsen, Registrar,

    Having regard to the above application lodged on 3 June 2002,

    Having regard to the decision to apply Article 29 § 3 of the Convention and examine the admissibility and merits of the case together,

    Having regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and the applicant,

    Having deliberated, decides as follows:

    THE FACTS

    The applicant, Mr Sergey Yuryevich Tronin, is a Russian national who was born in 1969 and lives in Novoaltaysk. He is represented before the Court by Mr K. Volokitin, a lawyer practising in Novoaltaysk. The respondent Government were represented by Mr P. Laptev, the former Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of Human Rights.

    A.  The circumstances of the case

    The facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as follows.

    The applicant is the holder of Urozhay-90 bonds with a total nominal value of 152,200 non-denominated Russian roubles (RUR).

    In 2001 the applicant brought an action against the Russian Government and Ministry of Finance seeking to recover the current value of his bonds. He argued that in 1991 a holder of bonds worth RUR 16,000 could exchange them for a Russian-made passenger car.

    On 26 December 2001 the Novyy Altay Town Court of the Altay Region granted the applicant’s claim. It awarded him 1,246,919 Russian roubles (RUB) which represented the nominal value of the bonds divided by 16,000 and multiplied by the current price of a passenger car (RUB 113,770).

    On 27 February 2002 the Altay Regional Court quashed the judgment of 26 December 2001. It held that the Commodity Bonds Act had not yet been implemented in the part concerning the Harvest-90 bonds and the first-instance court had erroneously found that the bonds had been mature for redemption. It noted that “the determination of the claim... without regard to particular features of the underlying relationships, would negatively affect the channelling of budgetary resources...”

    B.  Relevant domestic law

    On 26 July 1990 the RSFSR Council of Ministers adopted Resolution no. 259 “On urgent measures for increasing the purchase of agricultural products harvested in 1990 and for ensuring their safe-keeping”. Its relevant parts provided:

    I.  Measures to increase the independence of decision-making by collective and Soviet farms concerning the sale of the harvest

    1.  To authorise all manufacturers of agricultural produce to sell the surplus of such produce that remains after delivery under existing agreements... to procurers or other consumers at negotiated prices...

    2.  To declare inadmissible any restrictions on the sale or shipment of agricultural produce to consumers in autonomous districts or regions of the RSFSR under paragraph 1 of the present resolution... Should local councils introduce such restrictions in their territories, the RSFSR Council of Ministers may stop issuing Urozhay-90 bonds or delivering goods against them in those territories...”

    II.  Measures to encourage the sale of agricultural produce to the State through the reciprocal sale of goods in high demand

    7.  To begin issuing, in 1990, Urozhay-90 bonds to employees of collective and Soviet farms, other agro-industrial enterprises and organisations, peasants’ farms and owners of personal subsidiary land plots in respect of agricultural produce sold to the State.

    To determine that the bonds certify the right to purchase goods in high demand at retail prices in trade outlets. The said bonds are not legal tender.

    8.  The RSFSR Ministry of Finance and the RSFSR Ministry of Agriculture and Food will, until 1 September 1990, print and put into circulation through the branches of the RSFSR State Bank Urozhay-90 bonds for a total amount of 10 billion roubles. The bonds are to be used before 1 October 1991.

    9.  To establish that Urozhay-90 bonds are issued by the branches of the RSFSR State Bank:

    - to all producers who sold standard products to the State between 1 July 1990 and 30 June 1991... in the amount equivalent to 10% of the value of the sold products...

    ...

    13.  The Russian Consumers’ Association is to submit to the RSFSR Ministry for Foreign Economic Relations requests for those goods in high demand which are to be sold against the Urozhay-90 bonds, and organise their sale, on advance orders by citizens and organisations, at regional fairs and exhibitions and in specialised trade outlets. The Consumers’ Associations is to deliver goods to the consumers against the Urozhay-90 bonds no later than 1 January 1990 [sic]. In 1991 orders under the said bonds will be executed within two months.”

    On 15 March 1992 the Russian Government issued Resolution no. 161, intended to compensate the owners of Urozhay-90 bonds for an increase in retail prices. It provided, in particular:

    1.  To establish that passenger cars and other consumer goods which are made available to citizens as reward for the grain and other agricultural produce that was sold to the State in 1990 and 1991, are to be sold at the retail prices that prevailed before 2 January 1992...

    2.  To extend the period of validity of the Urozhay-90 bonds until the end of 1992...”

    On 10 August 1992 the Government adopted Resolution no. 1442-r. It required the Russian ministries to allocate substantial amounts for the purchase of goods that were to be sold against the Urozhay-90 bonds. It further provided:

    4.  The Ministry for Trade and Material Resources, in co-operation with the Central Consumers’ Union, shall define, within two weeks, the list of goods destined for the implementation of the Urozhay-90 bonds...

    5.  The Prices Committee of the Ministry of the Economy shall determine the increase in prices on domestic and imported goods since 1990... The price difference shall be reimbursed from the republican budget.

    6.  The Ministry of Agriculture shall carry out an inventory of bonds held by agricultural enterprises and organisations and private individuals as on 1 September.

    7.  The Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Agriculture shall elaborate, within two weeks, the procedure for buy-out of the Urozhay-90 bonds through the branches of the Savings Bank. It is to be taken into account that these bonds may be either used for purchasing goods or bought out by the State with a co-efficient of 10.”

    On 22 October 1992, by Resolution no. 1927-r, the Government required the Central Bank to grant a loan to the Central Consumers’ Union for the purchase of goods which would be sold to holders of the Urozhay-90 bonds. The Consumers’ Union would repay the loan out of the proceeds from the sale of goods under the bonds.

    On 16 April 1994 the Government approved Regulation no. 344 “On State commodity bonds” which provided as follows:

    With a view to redeeming the State commodity bonds and preventing accrual of the State’s liability to compensate the price differences, the Government of the Russian Federation resolves:

    1.  The Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation –

    will buy out... the Urozhay-90 bonds at a price equivalent to their nominal value multiplied by 70 and credit that amount into a bank account...”

    On 1 June 1995 the Commodity Bonds Act (no. 86-FZ, ФЗ «О государственных долговых товарных обязательствах») was enacted. It provided that State commodity bonds, including Urozhay-90 bonds, would be recognised as the internal State debt of the Russian Federation (section 1). The obligations arising out of the commodity bonds would be settled in accordance with the general principles of the Russian Civil Code, the limitation period being set at ten years (section 2). The original wording of section 3 provided:

    The Government of the Russian Federation shall draft, in 1995-1997, the State Programme for settlement of the internal debt of the Russian Federation described in section 1, based on the principle of full compensation. The Programme shall provide for redemption terms... convenient for citizens, including, at their choice: provision of goods designated in... the State bonds issued to agricultural suppliers...; redemption of State commodity bonds at consumer prices prevailing at the moment of the redemption...; conversion of the debt into State securities...”

    On 16 January 1996 the Government adopted Resolution no. 33, by which it annulled Regulation no. 344 and instructed the Ministry of Finance to redeem the State commodity bonds within the amounts allocated for that purpose in the federal budget.

    On 2 June 2000, section 3 of the Commodity Bonds Act was amended to provide that the procedure for implementation of the State’s obligations to holders of the Urozhay-90 bonds would be determined in a special federal law. No such law has yet been adopted.

    On 27 December 2000 the Government adopted the State Programme for settlement of the internal debt of the Russian Federation. Paragraph 14 of the Programme provided that the procedure for payments in respect of the Urozhay-90 bonds would be determined in a special federal law.

    Since 2003 the application of section 1 of the Commodity Bonds Act has been suspended in the part concerning the Urozhay-90 bonds, in accordance with the law on the federal budget for each successive year (Federal Law no. 176-FZ of 24 December 2002; no. 186-FZ of 23 December 2003; no. 173-FZ of 23 December 2004; no. 189-FZ of 26 December 2005; no. 238-FZ of 19 December 2006; and no. 198-FZ of 24 July 2007).

    On 15 December 2000 the Constitutional Court issued a decision on an application lodged by the Parliament of the Sakha (Yakutiya) Republic which claimed that the amendments of 2 June 2000 (see above) had indeterminately delayed the implementation of the State’s obligations towards the bearers of the Urozhay-90 bonds. The Constitutional Court declared the application inadmissible for the following reasons:

    In its [previous decisions] the Constitutional Court has already determined that a unilateral change in the scope of the State obligations towards individuals, including the obligation to sell goods against commodity bonds, is impermissible. This does not exclude, however, the possibility of imposing restrictions on the property rights of individuals – in the established form and within the constitutional limits – in the matter of State obligations, which is compatible with Article 55 § 3 of the Constitution.

    In particular, it follows from the case-law of the Constitutional Court... that implementation of the rights and lawful interests of individual citizens or groups of citizens should not excessively and adversely affect the budgetary resources allocated for satisfying the rights and interests of society as a whole. This principle becomes particularly relevant in a situation where budgetary resources are insufficient to resolve many social problems relating to the exercise of the rights to life and personal dignity. It follows that the balance between the rights and lawful interests of the individuals who act as creditors for the State in property relationships, on one hand, and everyone else, on the other hand, may, in principle, be struck only in the form of an act of Parliament.

    Hence, given that the legislature may restrict individual rights and freedoms (including property rights) for the purpose of the protection of the rights and lawful interests of others, a review of the federal law amending section 3 of the Commodity Bonds Act by the Constitutional Court would imply an assessment of the financial and economic justification for the legislative decision on the procedure for settlement of State commodity bonds, which... falls outside the jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court.

    When examining claims relating to settlement of the State commodity bonds, courts of general jurisdiction have the right and duty to interpret the legislative provisions in the light of the interests of an individual (Articles 2 and 18 of the Constitution) and be guided, in particular, by section 2 of the Commodity Bonds Act, which establishes that State commodity bonds are to be settled in an appropriate form and in accordance with the Civil Code of the Russian Federation.”

    COMPLAINTS

  1. The applicant complained under Article 6 of the Convention that there was no procedural equality between the parties because the State, being the defendant in his claim, could legislate on the adjudicated matter, which it had done by amending section 3 of the Commodity Bonds Act in 2000 and then by repeatedly suspending its application in the part concerning Harvest-90 bonds for every following year.
  2. The applicant complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 that the Russian State unilaterally suspended its obligations arising out of the Harvest-90 bonds.


  3. THE LAW

  4. The applicant complained under Article 6 of the Convention that in the civil proceedings he was placed at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the State authorities which could amend legislation on the matter directly affecting his property rights. The relevant part of Article 6 provides as follows:
  5. In the determination of his civil rights and obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a] ... tribunal ...”

    The Court reiterates that the principle of the rule of law and the notion of fair trial enshrined in Article 6 preclude any interference by the legislature with the administration of justice designed to influence the judicial determination of the dispute (see Stran Greek Refineries and Stratis Andreadis v. Greece, judgment of 9 December 1994, Series A no. 301 B, § 49). In the instant case, however, it does not appear that the Russian legislature passed any laws which had direct and significant effect on the adjudication of the applicant’s pending civil claim. Indeed, section 3 of the Commodity Bonds Act had been amended in 2000, that is before the applicant lodged his claim, and the application of section 1 was for the first time suspended in December 2002, that is after the delivery of a final judgment on his claim.

    It follows that this complaint is manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention.

  6. The applicant complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 about the Russian State’s failure to implement a procedure for redemption of Urozhay-90 bonds. Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 provides:
  7. Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.

    The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties.”

    A.  Submissions by the parties

    1.  The Government

    The Government explained that section 2 of the Commodity Bonds Act fixed the time-limit for settling the State obligations arising out of the commodity bonds at ten years. Accordingly, such obligations were to be settled in the period from 2001 to 2004. However, the authorities had been forced to declare a moratorium on settlement of those obligations.

    The moratorium had a lawful basis because it was confirmed by federal budget laws for each respective year. It pursued a public interest since, in a situation where the budgetary resources were insufficient to satisfy pressing social needs, the State had a duty to protect the budget from excessive spending resulting from the obligations that had been adopted by the USSR Cabinet of Ministers and subsequently voluntarily assumed by the Russian Federation.

    The Government pointed out that the moratorium did not annul the obligations arising out of the commodity bonds but merely delayed their settlement until such time as an appropriate federal law had been adopted. That law had not been yet prepared because it had been necessary to reconcile the public and private interests and to devise an effective procedure for indexation and settlement of the amounts outstanding which would have allowed the private bond holders to be adequately compensated. A further matter of public interest was the task of detecting a “huge number of counterfeit bonds issued in the last ten years and still circulating” and “bonds which had not met the legal requirements at the time of their issue”.

    Referring to the Constitutional Court’s decision of 15 December 2000 (cited above) and the domestic courts’ decisions in the applicant’s case, the Government maintained that the redemption procedure must be set out in a federal law. Applying the civil-law provisions by analogy in this sphere would detrimentally affect distribution of budgetary funds which have been earmarked for other social needs. In the Government’s submission, the Regional Court had rightly refused the applicant’s claim because a different decision would have violated the constitutional rights and interests of all citizens.

    Finally, the Government acknowledged that the Urozhay-90 bonds constitute the applicant’s “possessions” within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. They emphasised that the bonds had been recognised as the State’s internal debt and that the obligations arising out of the bonds would be discharged upon adoption of a federal law governing the redemption procedure.

    2.  The applicant

    The applicant claimed that the time-limit for settling the obligations arising out of the commodity bonds had expired on 1 October 2001. The moratorium on settlements could not be regarded as “lawful” because the federal laws suspending the application of section 1 of the Commodity Bonds Act had been adopted after the expiry of the time-limit.

    The applicant considered unconvincing the Government’s argument about insufficient budgetary funds. In 2003, 2004 and 2005 the revenues of the Russian federal budget had constantly exceeded expenditure and multi-billion amounts had been transferred into the Stabilisation Fund or used for advance repayments of Russia’s external debt. The applicant found it inexplicable that advance payments were being made on foreign obligations, whereas the domestic obligations were suspended.

    B.  The Court’s assessment

    1.  Compatibility ratione temporis

    The Court observes at the outset that the bonds which are at issue in the present case were introduced in 1990 and that the period of their validity was subsequently extended until the end of 1992. The buy-out scheme was established in 1994 but abolished in 1996, following the adoption of the Commodity Bonds Act in 1995. All these events preceded the ratification of the Convention by Russia, which occurred on 5 May 1998. Accordingly, the Court must verify, even though this objection was not raised by the Government in the present case, whether it has competence ratione temporis to examine the present application (see Blečić v. Croatia [GC], no. 59532/00, § 67, ECHR 2006 ...).

    The Court reiterates that its jurisdiction ratione temporis covers only the period after the ratification of the Convention or its Protocols by the respondent State. From the ratification date onwards, all the State’s alleged acts and omissions must conform to the Convention or its Protocols and subsequent facts fall within the Court’s jurisdiction even where they are merely extensions of an already existing situation (see Broniowski v. Poland (dec.) [GC], no. 31443/96, § 74, ECHR 2002 X).

    Accordingly, the Court is competent to examine the facts of the present case for their compatibility with the Convention only in so far as they occurred after 5 May 1998, the date of ratification of Protocol No. 1 by Russia. It may, however, have regard to the facts prior to ratification inasmuch as they could be considered to have created a situation extending beyond that date or may be relevant for the understanding of facts occurring after that date.

    The Court observes that the applicant did not complain about the impossibility of buying goods in high demand against the Urozhay-90 bonds at the time when these bonds had been just introduced. Likewise, he did not complain about the domestic authorities’ refusal to buy out the Urozhay-90 bonds during the implementation of the buy-out scheme in 1994-1996. In fact, his complaint was not directed against a single specific decision or measure taken before, or even after, 5 May 1998.

    The factual basis for the applicant’s Convention claim is the alleged failure of the Russian State to satisfy his entitlement to redemption of the State’s internal debt which was vested in him under Russian law on the date of the Protocol’s entry in force and which, despite intervening legislation, subsists today. The Court notes that the Commodity Bonds Act, which was already in force on 5 May 1998, established the Government’s obligation to adopt implementing legislation governing the procedure for redeeming the State’s internal debt in the form of, in particular, the Urozhay-90 bonds held by the applicant. It is undisputed that no such legislation has been enacted to date and that the applicant has not had at his disposal any procedure for satisfying his entitlement.

    It follows that, in so far as the applicant’s complaint is directed against the failure of the Russian State to implement the entitlement vested in him under Russian law – an entitlement which existed on 5 May 1998 and still exists today – the Court has temporal jurisdiction to entertain the complaint.

    2.  Compatibility ratione materiae

    The parties concurred that the Urozhay-90 bonds constituted the applicant’s “possessions” within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Nevertheless, the Court has to satisfy itself that it has jurisdiction ratione materiae in any case brought before it. To hold the contrary would mean that where a respondent State waived its right to plead or omitted to plead incompatibility, the Court would have to rule on the merits of a complaint against that State concerning a right not guaranteed by the Convention (see Blečić, loc. cit.).

    The Court reiterates that the concept of “possessions” in the first part of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 has an autonomous meaning, which is not limited to ownership of physical goods and is independent from the formal classification in domestic law: certain other rights and interests, for instance debts, constituting assets can also be regarded as “property rights”, and thus as “possessions” for the purposes of this provision. The issue that needs to be examined is whether the circumstances of the case, considered as a whole, conferred on the applicant title to a substantive interest protected by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (see Broniowski (dec.), cited above, § 98).

    In the present case, that approach requires the Court to have regard to the following points of law and of fact. It observes that the scope of entitlement conferred by the Urozhay-90 bonds on their holders has not been identical throughout their lifetime. The following periods may be discerned:

    (a)  In the initial period following the introduction of the bonds and until early 1992, the bonds merely certified their holders’ right to purchase consumer goods in high demand. Holders of the bonds had to pay cash for the goods and also produce bonds corresponding to the amount of the purchase. The bonds, in themselves, were not legal tender or a money substitute but rather an indispensable element for concluding the purchase, up to the maximum amount determined by their face value.

    (b)  In March 1992 the Government established that consumer goods under the bonds would be sold at the prices that had prevailed before January 1992. The resolution of 10 August 1992 further specified that the price difference would be subsidised from the republican budget. Given the rampant inflation at that time, in practical terms this measure implied that purchasing goods against the bonds would be cheaper than buying the same goods on the open market.

    (c)  On 10 August 1992 the Government’s Resolution introduced, for the first time, the possibility of having the bonds bought out by the State at their face value multiplied by 10. The resolution of 16 April 1994 left the buy-out as the only option available to bearers and increased the buy-out co-efficient to 70. Thus, there existed in that period a procedure for exchanging the bonds for monetary compensation.

    (d)  Since the adoption of the Commodity Bonds Act in 1995, the bonds have been recognised as the State’s internal debt. Nevertheless, the federal law defining the procedure for settlement of that debt has not been enacted to date.

    The Court observes that in the initial period (a) the bonds had no independent economic value, being merely an administrative instrument for the distribution of consumer goods in high demand. However, in the subsequent periods they acquired the characteristics of an economic asset. Thus, in period (b) their economic effect was similar to that of discount coupons, and in period (c) their bearers obtained access to monetary compensation. It follows that, although the right the bonds had originally certified – the right to purchase goods in high demand – lost its value and relevance on transition to the market economy, the legal regulation of the Urozhay-90 bonds evolved over time in line with the changing economic conditions in Russia, with the result that the bearers of the bonds obtained a pecuniary interest qualifying for the protection under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.

    It appears to have been uncontested by the parties that by enacting the Commodity Bonds Act in 1995, the Russian State took upon itself an obligation to settle the debt arising out of the Urozhay-90 bonds. Since the enactment of the Commodity Bonds Act the applicant has continuously held a claim against the Russian State arising out of the bonds. This claim existed both on the date of ratification of the Convention by Russia and on the date of submission of the application to the Court. Although the implementation of the Commodity Bonds Act has been suspended since 2003 in the part concerning the Urozhay-90 bonds, the relevant provisions have never been revoked or annulled. It follows that the legal basis for the entitlement which is the subject-matter of the applicant’s complaint before the Court has been established in domestic legislation on a continuing basis.

    The Russian courts’ decisions on individual claims brought by bearers of the Urozhay-90 bonds have been contradictory. On at least one occasion a Russian court awarded the applicant the entire amount he had claimed under the bonds, finding, in particular, that “the failure to adopt a federal law governing the procedure for redemption of the State’s obligations did not prevent the plaintiff from seeking judicial protection of his legitimate interests” (see Volokitin v. Russia, no. 374/03, § 8, 9 November 2006). In another case a district court determined that the debt arising out of the bonds was a medium-term debt whose maturity date had not yet occurred, while a town court in the same region dismissed similar claims on the ground that an act of Parliament governing the settlement procedure had not yet been adopted (see Malysh and Others v. Russia (dec.), no. 30280/03, 19 June 2008). The absence of a federal law governing the procedure for redemption was also invoked as a ground for dismissing the applicant’s claim in the present case. Despite the discrepancy in the grounds invoked by the domestic courts, all the decisions acknowledged the existence of a debt arising out of the Urozhay-90 bonds under the Commodity Bonds Act and chargeable to the State.

    Having regard to the above, the Court is satisfied that the applicant has had a proprietary interest which was both recognised under Russian law and acknowledged by Russian courts. While the Court does not find it necessary to determine the precise content and scope of the legal interest in question, since it considers that that issue should more appropriately be dealt with at the merits stage, it finds that the proprietary interest at issue is eligible for protection under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.

    It follows that the complaint cannot be rejected as being incompatible ratione materiae with the provisions of the Convention.

    3.   Compliance with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1

    As far as compliance with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is concerned, the Court considers, in the light of the parties’ submissions, that the complaint raises serious issues of fact and law under the Convention, the determination of which should depend on an examination of the merits.

    No other ground for declaring the complaint inadmissible has been established.

    For these reasons, the Court unanimously

    Decides to discontinue the application of Article 29 § 3 of the Convention and to declare the complaint about an alleged violation of the applicant’s property rights admissible;

    Declares the remainder of the application inadmissible.

    Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
    Registrar President



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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2008/998.html