BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[New search]
[Contents list]
[Printable RTF version]
[Help]
FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF KAEMENA AND THÖNEBÖHN v. GERMANY
(Applications
no. 45749/06 and no. 51115/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
22
January 2009
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Kaemena and
Thöneböhn v. Germany,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Peer Lorenzen, President,
Rait
Maruste,
Karel Jungwiert,
Renate
Jaeger,
Isabelle Berro-Lefèvre,
Mirjana
Lazarova Trajkovska,
Zdravka Kalaydjieva, judges,
and
Stephen Phillips, Deputy
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 16 December 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
cases originated in two applications (no. 45749/06 and no. 51115/06)
against the Federal Republic of Germany lodged with the Court under
Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by two German
nationals, Ms Christiane Kaemena and Mr Uwe-Karsten Thöneböhn
(“the applicants”), on 10 November 2006 and 19 December
2006 respectively.
- The
first applicant, Ms Christiane Kaemena, was represented by Mr H.-J.
Weider and Mr R. Schlothauer, Professors of Law and lawyers
practising in Frankfurt am Main and Bremen respectively. The second
applicant, Mr Uwe-Karsten Thöneböhn, was represented by Mr
S. Barton, Professor of Law at the University of Bielefeld. The
German Government (“the Government”) were represented by
their Deputy Agent,
Mr H.-J. Behrens, Ministerialrat, of
the Federal Ministry of Justice.
- Relying
on Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, the applicants argued, in
particular, that the length of the criminal proceedings against them
had exceeded a reasonable time. They further submitted that they
could still claim to be victims of a violation of their Convention
rights because the domestic courts had failed to afford redress for
this breach of Article 6 by mitigating their life sentences.
- On
23 August 2008 the President of the Fifth Section decided to give
notice of the applications to the Government. It was also decided to
examine the merits of the applications at the same time as their
admissibility (Article 29 § 3).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
first applicant, Ms Kaemena, was born in 1967 and is currently
detained in Vechta. The second applicant, Mr Thöneböhn, was
born in 1968 and is currently detained in Celle.
1. The investigation proceedings
- On
9 May 1996 the first and the second applicant were arrested and
placed in pre-trial detention on suspicion of having jointly murdered
the first applicant's husband on 2 May 1996.
- On
5 September 1996 the indictment for murder was preferred against the
applicants with the Verden Regional Court.
2. The proceedings before the Regional Court
- On
21 January 1997 the Verden Regional Court opened the trial against
the applicants, who were represented by counsel throughout the
proceedings before the domestic courts, and against another
co-defendant (M.).
- On
16 December 1997 the Verden Regional Court convicted the applicants
and their co-defendant, who had all denied the charges, of having
jointly murdered the first applicant's husband, who had stood in the
way of the applicants' plan to marry, and sentenced them to life
imprisonment.
- Having
heard more than fifty witnesses and at least five experts, having
inspected the scene of the crime and having analysed the time and
duration of numerous telephone calls between the defendants, the
Regional Court concluded that the first applicant had given 20,000
Deutschmarks to M. and had lured her husband to a remote place, where
he had been shot by the second applicant and M. acting jointly.
- The
Regional Court found that in view of their considerable involvement
in their intimate relationship, in which they had driven each other
to commit the offence in question, the applicants' guilt was not of a
particular gravity (Article 57a § 1 of the Criminal Code; see
paragraph 45 below).
3. The proceedings before the Federal Court of Justice
- On
17 December 1997 the applicants both lodged an appeal on points of
law. They complained, inter alia, that the Regional Court had
made a procedural error in that it had based its judgment on a
document containing a list of telephone calls they had made without
that evidence having been produced at the main hearing.
- The
Public Prosecutor's Office likewise lodged an appeal on points of
law, which it reasoned on 29 May 1998. It contested in particular the
Regional Court's finding that the applicants' guilt was not of a
particular gravity.
- By
a decision of 10 February 1999 the Federal Court of Justice (third
senate) dismissed the applicants' appeal on points of law as
manifestly
ill-founded. It added that it considered the
applicants' appeal to be inadmissible in so far as they had alleged a
procedural error. It argued that the applicants had failed
sufficiently to substantiate this complaint.
They had not
informed the court that in the summons for a witness working for the
telephone company who had listed the applicants' phone calls, the
president of the Regional Court had stated that the witness was
called to explain the content of the said list of calls.
- By
a judgment delivered on the same day, the Federal Court of Justice,
having held a hearing, allowed the prosecution's appeal on points of
law. It quashed the judgment of the Verden Regional Court in so far
as the latter had not considered the applicants' guilt to be of a
particular gravity and remitted the case to a different chamber of
the Regional Court.
4. Proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
- By
submissions dated 8 and 9 April 1999 respectively the second and the
first applicant lodged a constitutional complaint with the Federal
Constitutional Court. They notably contested the Federal Court of
Justice's finding that their appeal had been inadmissible in so far
as they had alleged a procedural error.
- On
5 July 2001 the Federal Constitutional Court communicated the
constitutional complaints to the Federal Court of Justice and the
Federal Public Prosecutor for observations.
- On
6 December 2001 the Federal Public Prosecutor submitted his
observations to the Federal Constitutional Court. On 27 December 2001
the president of the Federal Court of Justice filed the observations
of all senates of that court.
- In
January 2002 the Federal Constitutional Court invited the applicants
to submit written observations in reply by 30 April 2002.
- On
20 August 2002 the first applicant and on 14 October 2002 the second
applicant lodged observations in reply. Both applicants had
previously been informed by the Federal Constitutional Court, at
their request, that the court would not take a decision before the
end of that year.
- On
30 March 2004 the Federal Constitutional Court informed the first
applicant, at her request, that a decision would probably be taken in
the course of the year 2004.
- On
25 January 2005 the Federal Constitutional Court, sitting as a senate
of eight judges, quashed the decision of the Federal Court of Justice
of 10 February 1999 and remitted the case to that court (file no. 2
BvR 657/99 and no. 2 BvR 656/99).
- In
its leading decision (running to 45 pages), the Federal
Constitutional Court examined the constitutionality of the
requirements set forth in the case-law of the Federal Court of
Justice which an appellant has to satisfy in order to lodge an
admissible appeal on points of law about a procedural error. The
Federal Constitutional Court found that as a rule, these requirements
did not violate the individuals' right to effective legal protection.
However, in the applicants' case, having regard to the entirety of
their submissions made, the Federal Court of Justice had
over-stretched the said requirements by requesting information also
about a witness's summons as such, and had therefore breached the
applicants' right to effective legal protection.
- The
Federal Constitutional Court's decision was served on the applicants'
counsel on 25 May 2005.
5. Renewed proceedings before the Federal Court of
Justice
- In
their submissions dated 18 July 2005 to the Federal Court of Justice
the applicants, contesting the Federal Public Prosecutor's view,
argued, in particular, that the proceedings had lasted unreasonably
long. They requested the court to find a violation of Article 6 §
1 of the Convention (the first applicant argued that there had also
been a breach of Article 5 § 3 of the Convention) and to
mitigate the length of their prison term in compensation.
- On
28 September 2005 the execution of the arrest warrant against the
first applicant was suspended and she remained at liberty until
23 February 2006.
- The
hearing fixed for 1 December 2005 had to be cancelled as the first
applicant's counsel were unavailable.
- On
15 December 2005 the second applicant suffered a heart attack.
- Having
held a hearing on 12 January 2006, the Federal Court of Justice
(third senate) dismissed the applicants' appeal on points of law by
judgment of 7 February 2006. It found that the applicants' complaint
that the Regional Court had made a procedural error in using the
telephone lists in evidence was ill-founded because the time and
duration of the telephone calls in question had been confirmed by
different witnesses who had been confronted at the hearing with the
data contained in the telephone list.
- Moreover,
the Federal Court of Justice found that the length of the proceedings
did not warrant a mitigation of the applicants' sentence of life
imprisonment.
- The
lapse of time since its decision of 10 February 1999 was not
automatically attributable to the judicial authorities only because
the Federal Constitutional Court had subsequently quashed that
decision. It argued that, as a rule, the fact that a decision was
quashed and the case remitted to the lower court did not entail a
violation of the right to have one's case heard within a reasonable
time, but was a necessary consequence of the possibility to rectify
mistakes on appeal. Only delays caused by decisions which disclosed a
flagrant breach of the law could therefore be considered as having
delayed the proceedings contrary to the rule of law. As in the
present case its decision of 10 February 1999 did not disclose such a
flagrant breach of the law, there had not been a delay which was
attributable to the judicial authorities since then.
- Moreover,
the Federal Court of Justice considered that it could leave open the
question whether the Federal Constitutional Court had failed to treat
the applicants' constitutional complaints without undue delay. Even
assuming that there had been such a delay, the applicants could not
claim redress therefor. Pursuant to Article 211 of the Criminal Code
(see paragraph 43 below) a person acting with criminal responsibility
who was found guilty of murder had to be sentenced to life
imprisonment. The court further left open whether an exception to
this rule had to be made in exceptional cases in which there had been
an extreme delay, as this was not the case in the proceedings against
the applicants. As their convictions and their sentence had been
final according to the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure
already on 10 February 1999, the uncertainty arising from the
applicants' mere hope that the Federal Constitutional Court would
allow their constitutional complaints did not entail a strain which
necessitated compensation. In these circumstances, there was no
reason for a mere declaration that there had been a violation of the
Convention.
- The
judgment was served on the applicants' counsels on 9 March 2006.
6. Renewed proceedings before the Federal
Constitutional Court
- In
April 2006 the applicants lodged a constitutional complaint with the
Federal Constitutional Court against the judgment of the Federal
Court of Justice of 7 February 2006. Invoking their right to liberty
and to be heard within a reasonable time, they argued in particular
that due to the excessive delays in the proceedings, in particular
between 10 February 1999 and 7 February 2006, their sentences of
life imprisonment should have been reduced to fixed terms of
imprisonment.
- On
21 June 2006 the Federal Constitutional Court, sitting as a panel of
three judges, declined to consider the applicants' constitutional
complaints (file no. 2 BvR 750/06 and no. 2 BvR 752/06) as these were
manifestly ill-founded.
- Even
though the Federal Constitutional Court was not convinced that the
duration of proceedings before it could be added to the length of
criminal proceedings, as it was not part of the ordinary system of
legal remedies, it left this question open. It found that it was not
necessary to examine whether there had been undue delays contrary to
the rule of law in the proceedings before it or before the Federal
Court of Justice.
- Even
assuming such delays, a reduction of the applicants' sentences was
excluded because in cases of murder, the sentence of life
imprisonment was mandatory according to Article 211 of the Criminal
Code. Therefore, a violation of the right to be heard within a
reasonable time could not, as a rule, lead to a mitigation of this
sentence. The court reiterated that the unreasonable duration of
criminal proceedings could reduce an offender's guilt and could, in
exceptional cases, even warrant compensation by dispensing with
punishment or by discontinuing the proceedings. However, Article 211
of the Criminal Code did not authorise the courts to consider any
aspects reducing a murderer's guilt such as the excessive duration of
the proceedings against him or her. This finding was confirmed by
Article 78 § 2 of the Criminal Code (see paragraph 44 below). By
ruling that murder was not subject to the statute of limitations, the
legislator showed that even long delays between the commission and
the conviction of this offence should not be taken into consideration
as a mitigating factor.
- The
Federal Constitutional Court found that it could be left open whether
in cases in which decades had passed between the commission of the
offence and the murderer's final conviction a mitigation of the
sentence of life imprisonment was necessary for reasons of
proportionality. Even assuming that there had been unreasonable
delays in the present proceedings after the Federal Court of
Justice's decision of 10 February 1999, these had not been so long as
to justify a mitigation of the mandatory life sentence prescribed by
law for murder.
- The
court, disagreeing with the applicants, further found that the rights
of a murderer were not less protected than those of other offenders.
Unreasonable delays during the proceedings before the criminal courts
could, for example, lead to his or her release from detention pending
trial.
- The
decision was served on the applicants' counsel on 5 July 2006.
7. Renewed proceedings before the Verden Regional Court
- On
6 November 2006 the Verden Regional Court resumed the proceedings
concerning the question whether the applicants' guilt was of a
particular gravity, which it had suspended at the applicants'
request.
- In
its judgment delivered on 15 December 2006 the Verden Regional Court
found that, having regard to the circumstances in which the murder
had been committed, the applicants' guilt was not of a particular
gravity (Article 57a § 1 of the Criminal Code).
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
1. Relevant provisions of the Criminal Code
- Under
Article 211 of the Criminal Code, the intentional killing of a person
is to be qualified as murder if certain aggravating elements are
present. A murderer is notably a person who kills another out of
cupidity or other base motives (Article 211 § 2). Murder is
punishable by life imprisonment (Article 211 § 1).
- Murder
is not subject to the statute of limitations (Article 78 § 2 of
the Criminal Code).
- A
declaration by the sentencing court which imposed a life sentence
that the offender's guilt was of particular gravity has a bearing on
a subsequent decision of the court dealing with the execution of
sentences as to whether or not to suspend the remainder of the
offender's prison sentence on probation. Pursuant to Article 57a §
1 of the Criminal Code, that court suspends the remainder of a life
sentence on probation if the convicted person has served fifteen
years of his or her sentence, provided that this can be justified in
the interests of public safety and provided that the particular
gravity of the offender's guilt does not warrant the continued
execution of the sentence.
- Article
49 and Article 51 of the Criminal Code contain rules on the fixing of
sentences. Pursuant to Article 49 § 1 no. 1 of the Criminal
Code, the courts are to reduce a life sentence to a term of
imprisonment of not less than three years if the mitigation of the
penalty under this provision is either prescribed or authorised by
law. Article 51 § 1 of the Criminal Code prescribes that the
time a convicted offender has spent in detention pending trial for
the offence at issue in the proceedings shall, as a rule, be deducted
from the term of imprisonment imposed on him. If a period of time
spent in detention abroad is to be deducted from the sentence, the
court shall determine the period to be deducted at its discretion
(Article 51 § 4 of the Criminal Code).
2. Case-law of the domestic courts on complaints of
excessive length of criminal proceedings
a. Case-law at the time of the proceedings
against the applicants
- According
to the settled case-law of the Federal Constitutional Court, which is
applied by the criminal courts, Article 2 § 1 of the Basic Law,
read in conjunction with the principle of the rule of law as
enshrined in Article 20 § 3 of the Basic Law, guarantees the
right to expeditious criminal proceedings (see, inter alia,
that court's judgment of 24 November 1983, no. 2 BvR 121/83, §
3; and decision of 5 February 2003, nos. 2 BvR 327/02, 2 BvR 328/02
and 2 BvR 1473/02, § 33). Moreover, penalties imposed on a
defendant have to comply with the constitutional right to liberty
guaranteed by Article 2 § 2 of the Basic Law, read in
conjunction with the principle of proportionality enshrined in the
rule of law (see, inter alia, the Federal Constitutional
Court's decision of 5 February 2003, nos. 2 BvR 327/02, 2 BvR 328/02
and 2 BvR 1473/02, § 58; and decision of 21 January 2004,
no. 2 BvR 1471/03, § 28).
- As
the legislator did not lay down any rules on the consequences of a
violation of the right to expeditious proceedings, the criminal
courts and the prosecution authorities are, as a rule, called upon to
draw the necessary conclusions from undue delay in the proceedings.
They may discontinue the proceedings pursuant to Articles 153 and
153a of the Code of Criminal Procedure, limit criminal prosecution
pursuant to Articles 154 and 154a of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
terminate the proceedings either by dispensing with a penalty or by a
warning with sentence reserved (Verwarnung mit Strafvorbehalt)
or take the proceedings' length into account as a mitigating factor
when fixing the penalty (see Federal Constitutional Court, judgment
of 24 November 1983, no. 2 BvR 121/83, §§ 4-5; and
decision of 21 January 2004, no. 2 BvR 1471/03, §§ 31-32).
- If
there was a violation of the right to expeditious proceedings, the
criminal courts, in their judgments, expressly had to determine the
extent of the delays and their cause. If redress was afforded by a
mitigation of the penalty, the courts then had to fix the extent of
the compensation granted by indicating the penalty which they would
have imposed without the delay and by fixing the penalty mitigated
because of the delays. Only the latter, mitigated penalty appeared in
the operative part of the judgment (see, inter alia, Federal
Constitutional Court, decision of 7 March 1997, no. 2 BvR 2173/96,
Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht (NStZ) 1997, p.
591; Federal Court of Justice, decision of 21 December 1998, no. 3
StR 561/98, NJW 1999, pp. 1198-1199 with further
references).
b. New case-law of the Federal Court of
Justice
- In
its decision of 17 January 2008 the Federal Court of Justice, sitting
as Grand Senate for Criminal Matters, reversed its previous case-law
on the way in which compensation should be granted for excessive
delays in criminal proceedings (file no. GSSt 1/07).
- The
Federal Court of Justice held that in cases in which criminal
proceedings had been excessively delayed, the criminal courts should
no longer directly reduce the penalty imposed on the convicted person
(so-called mitigation of penalty approach –
Strafabschlagslösung), but should instead state in the
operative part of the judgment that a specified part of the penalty
imposed was to be considered as having been executed (so-called
“execution approach” – Vollstreckungslösung).
- The
Federal Court of Justice considered that in certain cases, mitigating
the penalty in order to compensate for the excessive length of
proceedings, which was called for by the Basic Law and the
Convention, was not compatible with the provisions of the Criminal
Code and of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Notably in cases in which
compensation could be granted only by reducing a minimum penalty
prescribed by law, the “mitigation of penalty approach”
could not be reconciled with the provisions of the Criminal Code. For
instance, it was not possible under the provisions of that Code to
dispense with imposing a mandatory life sentence in order to
compensate for the undue duration of proceedings.
- By
contrast, the “execution approach”, which could be
derived from the principle of compensation enshrined in the
Convention and from Article 51 §§ 1 and 4 of the Criminal
Code (see paragraph 46 above) and which was compatible with Articles
6 and 13 of the Convention, made it possible to afford compensation
in all cases of excessive duration of proceedings. It allowed the
criminal courts both to impose the minimum sentence prescribed by law
and nevertheless to afford compensation by declaring that a fixed
part of that penalty had to be considered as already executed. In the
case of a life sentence, for instance, the courts could afford
compensation by declaring that a part of the minimum sentence to be
served (see Article 57a § 1 of the Criminal Code, paragraph 45
above) had to be considered as having been served. Moreover, by
separating the fixing of the penalty in accordance with the
defendant's guilt and the granting of compensation, the penalty
maintained its function with respect to other provisions of criminal
law (concerning, for instance, probation or preventive detention) and
provisions concerning civil servants and foreigners.
- When
applying the “execution approach”, the criminal courts
first had to determine the extent and causes of undue delays in the
proceedings. In fixing the sentence in accordance with the
defendant's guilt, they had to take into consideration as a
mitigating factor that a long lapse of time between the offence and
the judgment in general reduced the necessity to punish the offender.
Moreover, the undue duration of the proceedings could play a role in
that the defendant was subjected to a greater burden as a result of
lengthy proceedings. In a further step the criminal courts, having
regard to all the circumstances of the case, then had to determine
which part of the penalty was to be considered as having already been
executed in order to compensate the defendant for the delay caused by
the State authorities and courts contrary to the rule of law. Both
the penalty and the part of it which had to be considered as executed
had to be taken up in the operative part of the judgment.
THE LAW
I. JOINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS
- Given
that the two applications both concern questions related to the same
set of criminal proceedings, instituted against the first and the
second applicant as co-defendants, the Court decides that the
applications shall be joined (see Rule 42 of the Rules of Court).
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that the criminal proceedings against them had
lasted an unreasonably long time. They relied on Article 6 § 1
of the Convention, which, in so far as relevant, provides:
“In the determination of ... any criminal charge
against him, everyone is entitled to a ... hearing within a
reasonable time by [a] ... tribunal ...”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
- The Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any other
grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties' submissions
- The
applicants took the view that the proceedings until the second
decision of the Federal Constitutional Court of 21 June 2006 had not
been terminated within a reasonable time as required by Article 6 §
1. The proceedings, which could not be considered particularly
complex, had not been duly furthered from April 1999 onwards. Their
duration could not be justified by reference to the Federal
Constitutional Court's workload as it was for the State sufficiently
to staff its courts so that these were in a position to dispose of
the cases brought before them within a reasonable time. The excessive
duration of the proceedings had put a strain on the applicants as
they remained in a state of uncertainty as to the outcome of the
proceedings. The first applicant further submitted that she had been
subjected to changing detention regimes throughout the proceedings.
In particular, she had initially lost certain relaxations in the
conditions of her detention due to the fact that following the
Federal Constitutional Court's decision of 25 January 2005, she had
no longer been detained as a convicted offender, but had been placed
again in detention pending trial. The second applicant submitted that
the outcome of the proceedings had been of particular importance for
him as he had not been granted any relaxations in the conditions of
his detention throughout the proceedings, during which his state of
health had deteriorated.
- The
Government conceded that the proceedings before the Federal
Constitutional Court following the applicants' first constitutional
complaint had lasted a long time. However, the proceedings had been
quite complex as that court had had to adjudicate for the first time
on the interpretation of the conditions of admissibility for an
appeal on points of law by the Federal Court of Justice. Referring to
statistical material, the Government stressed that the senate having
jurisdiction to decide on the applicants' complaints had faced a
heavy workload during the relevant period, to which it had responded
by employing further registry staff. In view of its special role as
guardian of the Constitution, it had had to give priority to ten
other cases pending before it which raised more important issues for
the general public. The Government further argued that the duration
of the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court had put a
lesser burden on the applicants than the duration of proceedings
before the criminal courts, in which the applicants had been finally
convicted as early as 10 February 1999. Only two per cent of
complaints to the Federal Constitutional Court were successful, so
the applicants must have been in less doubt about the outcome of the
proceedings against them. The Government further contested that the
applicants' detention regimes had been related to the duration of the
proceedings.
2. The Court's assessment
- The
Court finds that the period to be taken into consideration started on
9 May 1996, the day of the applicants' arrest. The applicants
complained about the duration of the proceedings until the second
decision of the Federal Constitutional Court of 21 June 2006, which
was served on the applicants' counsel on 5 July 2006. These
proceedings lasted ten years and almost two months, at the
investigation stage and at three levels of jurisdiction, including
one remittal.
- The
Court considers that, whereas the proceedings were duly furthered by
the domestic authorities and courts otherwise, they have been pending
before the Federal Constitutional Court for more than six years and
one month as regards the applicants' first constitutional complaint.
It observes in this connection that according to its well-established
case-law, Article 6 § 1 applies to proceedings before the German
Federal Constitutional Court because their result could affect the
outcome of proceedings against a complainant before the criminal
courts (see Gast and Popp v. Germany, no. 29357/95, §§
64-66, ECHR 2000 II, with further references). It would add
that, were the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
generally considered as not being capable of affecting the outcome of
the proceedings before the criminal courts, a complaint to that court
could not be considered as an effective remedy which an applicant had
to exhaust for the purposes of Article 35 § 1 of the Convention
before lodging an application with the Court.
- The
Court, having regard to the criteria established in its case-law (see
Frydlender v. France [GC], no. 30979/96, § 43, ECHR
2000-VII), accepts that the subject-matter of the proceedings before
the Federal Constitutional Court, in which the senate of that court
gave a leading decision on the constitutionality of the conditions of
admissibility for an appeal on points of law, was not simple.
However, the applicants cannot be considered to have caused any
delays in the proceedings before that court. In particular, they sent
their observations in reply after expiry of the time-limit set by
that court after having been informed that their case could in any
event not yet be considered. Although the Court is not convinced that
the duration of the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional
Court as such had negative repercussions on the conditions of the
applicants' detention, it further accepts that the outcome of the
proceedings, which could have had a bearing on the applicants'
criminal conviction for murder, was important for them.
- As
to the conduct of the proceedings by the domestic courts, the Court
observes that there have been substantial periods of delay in the
first proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court. In
particular, more than two years passed between the receipt of the
applicants' constitutional complaints and their communication to the
domestic authorities for observations. Furthermore, there was a delay
of more than two and a half years between the receipt of the second
applicant's observations and the day on which the decision of the
Federal Constitutional Court was served on the applicants. The Court
accepts that the Federal Constitutional Court, as guardian of the
Constitution, plays a special role in the domestic legal system and
faced a heavy workload at the relevant time. Nevertheless, Article 6
§ 1 imposes on the Contracting States the duty to organise their
judicial systems in such a way that their courts can meet each of its
requirements, including the obligation to hear cases within a
reasonable time (see, inter alia, Gast and Popp, cited
above, §§ 75, 78; Kirsten v. Germany, no. 19124/02,
§ 45, 15 February 2007), which, in view of the foregoing, has
not been the case here.
- There
has accordingly been a violation of Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION
- In
the applicants' submission, the domestic courts refused to afford
them adequate redress for the breach of the reasonable time
requirement. They complained that the German courts had argued that,
even assuming that the proceedings had been unreasonably long, they
were not authorised under the provisions of German law to mitigate
the applicants' life sentences by commuting them into fixed terms of
imprisonment.
- The
Court considers that the applicants' complaint falls to be examined
under Article 13 of the Convention, which provides:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
- The
Government objected that the applicants had not expressly relied on
Article 13 of the Convention in their applications to the Court and
that Article 13 therefore was not the subject of the present
application.
- According
to its well-established case-law, the Court has jurisdiction to
review in the light of the entirety of the Convention's requirements
circumstances complained of by an applicant. In the performance of
its task, it is free to attribute to the facts of the case, as found
to be established on the evidence before it, a characterisation in
law different from that given by the applicant or, if need be, to
view the facts in a different manner (see, inter alia,
Camenzind v. Switzerland, 16 December 1997, § 50, Reports
of Judgments and Decisions 1997 VIII; and Rehbock v.
Slovenia, no. 29462/95, § 63, ECHR 2000 XII).
- The
Court notes that in the present case the applicants complained that
the domestic courts had refused to afford them redress for the
unreasonable length of the proceedings against them, arguing that
they were not authorised to do so under German law. It considers that
this factual complaint is to be legally qualified as a complaint
under Article 13 of the Convention, and not under Article 34 of the
Convention, which it has jurisdiction to do.
- The
Court finds that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further
notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must
therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties' submissions
a. The applicant
- The
applicants claimed that at the relevant time, there had not been an
effective remedy to obtain redress for the excessive length of the
criminal proceedings against them. The first applicant further argued
that the decision of the Federal Court of Justice of 17 January 2008
(see paragraphs 50-54 above) did not apply to the present case. This
decision presupposed that the domestic courts had expressly
recognised a breach of the reasonable time requirement, but neither
the Federal Court of Justice in its decision of 7 February 2006
nor the Federal Constitutional Court in its decision of 21 June
2006 had done so. Moreover, it only applied ex nunc and was
not applicable to proceedings which had previously been terminated by
final decision.
b. The Government
- The
Government argued that, as a rule, there was an effective remedy
under German law to complain about the excessive length of criminal
proceedings. The domestic courts had jurisdiction to either mitigate
the penalty or discontinue the proceedings to compensate for
unreasonable delays. In the present case, however, it had not been
possible under German legislation and case-law as it stood at the
relevant time, for the reasons given by the Federal Court of Justice
in its judgment of 7 February 2006 and by the Federal Constitutional
Court in its decision of 21 June 2006, to mitigate the applicants'
sentences by commuting the life sentences for murder into fixed terms
of imprisonment. In fixing a mandatory penalty for murder – a
life sentence – in Article 211 of the Criminal Code, the
legislator had made clear that any mitigating circumstances could not
be taken into account. Moreover, there had been no extraordinary
circumstances in which the offenders' actual guilt had not
corresponded to the degree of wrongdoing attached to the offence by
law. It had therefore not been possible exceptionally to reduce the
life sentences by commuting them into fixed terms of imprisonment
pursuant to Article 49 § 1 no. 1 of the Criminal Code (see
paragraph 46 above).
- In
the Government's submission, Article 13 did not, however, require an
effective remedy against the processing of a case by the court of
last instance. This would result in a never-ending chain of domestic
remedies.
- The
Government further submitted that the Grand Senate of the Federal
Court of Justice, in its leading decision of 17 January 2008, had
introduced a new method to afford compensation for the excessive
duration of criminal proceedings (see paragraphs 50-54 above).
Redress should no longer be granted by mitigating the penalty
imposed, but by declaring that a certain period of the penalty
imposed had to be considered as served. This made it possible to
afford redress also in such cases as the present one, in which a
defendant had to be sentenced to a minimum penalty, such as life
imprisonment. The Government conceded that this new case-law did not
apply to the present proceedings, which had previously been
terminated by final judgment.
2. The Court's assessment
a. General principles
- By
virtue of Article 1 of the Convention, the primary responsibility for
implementing and enforcing the guaranteed rights and freedoms is laid
on the national authorities. The machinery of complaint to the Court
is thus subsidiary to national systems safeguarding human rights.
This subsidiary character is articulated in Articles 13 and 35 §
1 of the Convention (see Kudła v. Poland [GC], no.
30210/96, § 152, ECHR 2000 XI; and Scordino v. Italy
(no. 1) [GC], no. 36813/97, § 140, ECHR 2006 ...).
- Article
13 of the Convention guarantees an effective remedy before a national
authority for an alleged breach of the requirement under Article 6
§ 1 to hear a case within a reasonable time. It is
therefore necessary to determine in each case whether the means
available to litigants in domestic law are “effective” in
the sense either of preventing the alleged violation or its
continuation, or of providing adequate redress for any violation that
has already occurred (see Kudła, cited above, §§
156-158; and Hartman v. Czech Republic, no.
53341/99, § 81, ECHR 2003 VIII (extracts)).
- Article
13 therefore offers an alternative: a remedy is “effective”
if it can be used either to expedite a decision by the courts dealing
with the case, or to provide the litigant with adequate redress for
delays that have already occurred (see Mifsud v. France (dec.)
[GC], no. 57220/00, § 17, ECHR 2002 VIII; Hartman,
cited above, § 81; and Sürmeli v. Germany [GC],
no. 75529/01, § 99, ECHR 2006 ...).
b. Application of these principles to the
present case
- In
view of the fact that the applicants' complaints about the length of
the criminal proceedings against them have been declared admissible
(see paragraph 58 above), the Court considers that the applicants
have an “arguable claim” to be victim of a violation of
Article 6 § 1 for the purposes of Article 13 of the
Convention (compare, inter alia, Powell and Rayner v. the
United Kingdom, 21 February 1990, §§ 31-33, Series A
no. 172; and Ivison v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no.
39030/97, 16 April 2002).
- As
to the Government's argument that Article 13 did not require an
effective remedy against the processing of a case by a court of last
instance, the Court considers that there is nothing in the letter of
Article 13 to support such a restriction of its scope of
applicability. Accordingly, the Court has previously rejected that
argument (see, for instance, Kirsten, cited above, §§ 55
and 56). It sees no reason to depart from that finding.
- The
Court notes that in the Government's submission, it had only
exceptionally not been possible under the provisions of German law,
as interpreted by the German courts at the relevant time, to afford
redress for the undue duration of the criminal proceedings in the
applicants' case.
- The
Court accepts that, in principle, the means available to applicants
under German law for raising a complaint about the length of criminal
proceedings can be considered as “effective” for the
purpose of Article 13 in that they are capable of providing adequate
redress for a violation of the reasonable time requirement which has
occurred. According to the well-established case-law of the German
courts, the criminal courts and the prosecution authorities, if
necessary on direction of the Federal Constitutional Court, are to
draw consequences from the excessive duration of criminal proceedings
(see paragraphs 47-49 above). These notably include discontinuing the
proceedings pursuant to Articles 153 and 153a of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, limiting criminal prosecution pursuant to Articles 154 and
154a of the Code of Criminal Procedure or dispensing with or
mitigating the penalty. The Court has, consequently, considered that
an applicant has to avail himself of these effective remedies, in
particular of a complaint to the Federal Constitutional Court, prior
to lodging a complaint about the length of the criminal proceedings
against him with this Court (see Weisert v. Germany (dec.),
no. 14374/03, 3 April 2007; compare further Jansen v. Germany
(dec.), no. 44186/98, 12 October 2000 and DZelili v. Germany,
no. 65745/01, §§ 100-104, 10 November 2005, for a
mitigation of the sentence; and Sprotte v. Germany (dec.), no.
72438/01, 17 November 2005, for a discontinuance of the
proceedings).
- However,
the Court observes that it is a prerequisite for all forms of redress
at issue that the person concerned has either been found guilty of an
offence or – if Articles 153, 153a, 154 or 154a of the Criminal
Code are applied – that the proceedings are discontinued on the
assumption that the person concerned could be found guilty of an
offence by the criminal courts otherwise. Furthermore, the applicable
provisions of criminal law and of the law of criminal procedure must
have authorised the use of the measure providing redress in the
circumstances of the case.
- The
Court notes that the applicants in the present case have been found
guilty of an offence, murder. According to the findings of both the
Federal Court of Justice, in its judgment of 7 February 2006 (see
paragraph 32 above) and of the Federal Constitutional Court, in
its decision of 21 June 2006 (see paragraphs 37 and 38 above) a
reduction of the applicants' sentences was excluded by the provisions
of the Criminal Code in these circumstances. The domestic courts
found that in cases of murder the sentence of life imprisonment was
mandatory according to Article 211 of the Criminal Code and could be
reduced, if at all, only in exceptional circumstances in which there
had been an extreme delay; such circumstances had not been present in
the applicants' case. Thus, the remedies at the disposal of the
domestic courts at the relevant time had not been capable, in the
circumstances of the present case, of providing the applicants with
adequate redress for a violation of the reasonable time requirement.
The Government indeed conceded this.
- The
Court further takes note of the recent reversal in the case-law of
the Federal Court of Justice on the way in which criminal courts
should afford redress in cases of a violation of the reasonable time
requirement (see paragraphs 50-54 above). As expressly stated by the
Federal Court of Justice in its decision of 17 January 2008, under
the new so-called “execution approach” the criminal
courts would also be able, in compliance with the provisions of the
Criminal Code, to afford redress to litigants in cases such as the
present one, in which a mandatory life sentence had to be imposed
under the applicable provisions of the Criminal Code. The courts
could afford compensation by declaring that a specified part of the
life sentence – which is executed for at least fifteen years
(see paragraph 45 above) – had to be considered as having been
served.
- The
Court welcomes this initiative. It is in keeping with the subsidiary
character of the machinery of complaint to the Court articulated in
Articles 1, 35 § 1 and 13 of the Convention, which lays the
primary responsibility for implementing and enforcing the rights and
freedoms of the Convention on the national authorities. However, as
is indeed uncontested between the parties, this new case-law
postdates the decisions of the domestic courts in the present case,
which have become final. It cannot, therefore, alter the conclusion
that at the relevant time, the applicants had not had at their
disposal an effective remedy capable of affording redress for a
violation of the reasonable time requirement in the circumstances of
their cases.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 3 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
first applicant also complained that the duration of her detention
pending trial was excessive. She relied on Article 5 § 3 of the
Convention which, in so far as relevant, reads:
“Everyone arrested or detained in accordance with
the provisions of paragraph 1 (c) of this Article shall be
... entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release pending
trial. Release may be conditioned by guarantees to appear for trial.”
- The
Court has examined the first applicant's complaint as submitted by
her, having regard to all material in its possession and to the fact
that detention under Article 5 § 3 comes to an end for the
purposes of the Convention with the finding of guilt and the sentence
imposed at first instance (see, inter alia, Solmaz v.
Turkey, no. 27561/02, §§ 24-26, ECHR 2007 ...
(extracts)). It finds that, even assuming the exhaustion of domestic
remedies, the complaint does not disclose any appearance of a
violation of the rights and freedoms set out in Article 5 § 3.
- It
follows that this part of the first applicant's application must be
rejected as being manifestly ill-founded, pursuant to Article 35 §§
3 and 4 of the Convention.
V. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- The
first applicant, referring to the burden put on her by the lengthy
proceedings (see paragraph 59 above), claimed 29,557 euros (EUR) in
respect of non-pecuniary damage, considering compensation of EUR 11
for each of the 2,687 days in which the proceedings had not been duly
furthered as adequate.
- The
second applicant claimed EUR 24,640 in respect of non-pecuniary
damage, equally considering compensation of EUR 11 for each of the
2,240 days in which the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional
Court had not been duly furthered as adequate. He submitted that he
had particularly suffered from having to wait for the Federal
Constitutional Court's decision and had not been granted any
relaxations in the execution of his sentence during that period.
Moreover, his state of health had been irreparably damaged as a
result of the protracted length of the proceedings and he had
suffered a heart attack in December 2005.
- The
Government, referring to their submissions as to the limited burden
put on the applicants due to the duration of the proceedings before
the Federal Constitutional Court (see paragraph 60 above), argued
that the applicants' claims in respect of non-pecuniary damage were
excessive. Moreover, the second applicant had failed to demonstrate
that there was a causal link between the length of the proceedings
against him and the deterioration of his state of health or his
conditions of detention.
- The
Court, referring to its above findings as to the importance of the
outcome of the proceedings for the applicants (see paragraph 63
above), considers that the applicants must have suffered distress
from the unreasonable length of the proceedings against them and from
the lack of an effective remedy to complain about that length. Making
its assessment on an equitable basis, the Court awards EUR 3,000 to
each of the applicants in respect of non-pecuniary damage, plus any
tax that may be chargeable.
B. Costs and expenses
- Submitting
documentary evidence, the first applicant claimed EUR 1,964.58
(including value-added tax (VAT)) for the costs and expenses incurred
in the renewed proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
and EUR 3,638.06 (including VAT) for those incurred before the Court
(comprising EUR 2,975 for the drafting of the submissions and
EUR 663.06 for their translation into English).
- The
second applicant, submitting documentary evidence, claimed EUR
1,385.58 for the costs and expenses incurred in the renewed
proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court and EUR 5,750 for
those incurred before the Court (comprising EUR 5,000 for the
drafting of the submissions and EUR 750 for their translation into
English).
- As
regards the first applicant, the Government considered that under the
provisions of the Regulation on Lawyers' Fees, only EUR 490.28 could
be considered as adequate costs and expenses for the proceedings
before the Federal Constitutional Court; the same amount was adequate
for the costs and expenses incurred in the proceedings before this
Court. As to the second applicant, who, in the Government's
submission, was not subjected to VAT, only EUR 412 could be
considered as adequate costs and expenses for the proceedings before
the Federal Constitutional Court and again for the proceedings before
this Court.
- According
to the Court's case-law, an applicant is entitled to the
reimbursement of costs and expenses only in so far as it has been
shown that these have been actually and necessarily incurred and were
reasonable as to quantum. The Court observes in the present case that
the renewed proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court were
essentially aimed at preventing or redressing a breach of the
reasonable time requirement. Regard being had to the information in
its possession and the above criteria, it considers it reasonable to
award the sum of EUR 4,000 to each of the applicants, plus any tax
that may be chargeable to them, covering costs and expenses under all
heads.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Decides to join the applications;
- Declares the complaint concerning the length of
the first applicant's detention pending trial inadmissible and the
remainder of the applications admissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
13 of the Convention;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay to each of the applicants, within
three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final in
accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention:
(i) EUR 3,000
(three thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in
respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 4,000
(four thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable to the
applicants, in respect of costs and expenses;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicants'
claims for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 22 January 2009, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Stephen Phillips Peer Lorenzen
Deputy Registrar President