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FOURTH
SECTION
CASE OF EVAGOROU CHRISTOU v. TURKEY
(Application
no. 18403/91)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
27
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 Evagorou Christou v. Turkey,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Nicolas Bratza, President,
Lech
Garlicki,
Ljiljana Mijović,
David Thór
Björgvinsson,
Ján Šikuta,
Päivi
Hirvelä,
Işıl Karakaş, judges,
and
Fatoş Aracı, Deputy
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 6 January 2009,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 18403/91) against the Republic
of Turkey lodged with the European Commission of Human Rights (“the
Commission”) under former Article 25 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by a Cypriot national, Mrs Anna Evagorou Christou
(“the applicant”), on 31 May 1991.
- The
applicant, who was granted legal aid, was represented by
Mr A. Demetriades, a lawyer practising in Nicosia. The
Turkish Government (“the Government”) were represented by
their Agent, Mr Z.M. Necatigil.
- The
applicant alleged that the Turkish occupation of the northern part of
Cyprus had deprived her of her home and properties.
- The
application was transmitted to the Court on 1 November 1998, when
Protocol No. 11 to the Convention came into force (Article 5 § 2
of Protocol No. 11).
- By
a decision of 24 August 1999 the Court declared the application
admissible.
- The
applicant and the Government each filed observations on the merits
(Rule 59 § 1). In addition, third-party comments were received
from the Government of Cyprus, which had exercised its right to
intervene (Article 36 § 1 of the Convention and Rule 44 § 1
(b)).
THE FACTS
- The
applicant was born in 1925 and lives in Nicosia.
- The
applicant lived with her family in Kalogrea, a village in the
District of Kyrenia. During the 1974 intervention, the Turkish
military troops evicted the applicant and her family from their home
and forced them to leave Kyrenia and flee to the south.
- The
applicant alleged that until 7 September 1999, when the properties
were transferred to her children, she had been the owner of ten plots
of land in Kalogrea, two of which had one house each on them. One of
these houses had been the applicant's home. It was an ancestral house
built in 1916, comprising huge, spacious rooms, two bedrooms, a
living room, a kitchen and a bathroom. It had two levels and a huge
yard. It was built of stone, had marble floors and a titled roof, and
wooden doors and windows. The second house was the applicant's
holiday home, built in 1958 and situated in the locality known as
Roukania. It had two spacious bedrooms and was very close to the sea
(about 50 metres).
- In
support to her claim to ownership, the applicant produced
affirmations of ownership issued by the Department of Lands and
Surveys of the Republic of Cyprus, stating that she was the legal and
registered owner of the two houses and of the pieces of lands
registered under the plots nos. 260, 268, 45, 119/5, 119/6, 164.9,
121/2/3, 122/2/4, 359/1 and 425.
The
applicant also produced certificates of registration for eight of the
ten properties at issue.
- The
applicant claimed that she had been prevented from returning to her
home and properties because the Turkish military authorities had
continuously occupied and used them.
- On
9 December 1990 the applicant made an attempt to return to her home
and property in Kyrenia and in the Kalogrea Village by participating
in a convoy of cars of fellow refugees intending to return home. The
demonstration organisers had informed the Commander of the United
Nations (UN) forces in Cyprus of their intentions.
- The
applicant and her fellow refugees stopped at the check point in the
"buffer zone", on the main road linking Nicosia and
Famagusta. There, they asked the UN officer on duty to be allowed to
return to their homes, property and villages. They requested the same
officer to forward their demand to the Turkish military authorities.
The officer replied that the latter had refused their request.
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS
14. The
Government raised preliminary objections of inadmissibility ratione
loci and ratione temporis, non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies and lack of victim status. The Court observes that these
objections were identical to those raised in the case of Alexandrou
v. Turkey (no. 16162/90, §§ 11-22, 20 January 2009),
and should be dismissed for the same reasons.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 TO
THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained of a violation of her right to peaceful
enjoyment of her possessions, since she was prevented from returning
to and making use of his property in northern Cyprus.
She invoked Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, which reads as
follows:
“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.”
- The
Government disputed this claim.
A. The arguments of the parties
1. The Government
- The
Government submitted that the applicant had produced no evidence that
at the time of the 1974 Turkish intervention she had been the owner
of plots of lands in the Kalogrea village. It followed that her
claims under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 were unsubstantiated.
Moreover, the applicant had not applied through the proper channels
to visit her alleged properties. She had not attempted to enter the
northern part of Cyprus at an approved crossing point; the so-called
attempt on 9 December 1990 had been a publicity ploy, instigated
by the Greek-Cypriot administration.
- Finally,
the alleged interference with the applicant's property rights could
not be seen in isolation from the general political situation on the
island of Cyprus and had been in any event justified in the general
interest.
2. The applicant
- The
applicant complained that since the Turkish invasion of the northern
part of Cyprus in July 1974, Turkey had prevented her from exercising
her right to the peaceful enjoyment of her home and possessions. She
submitted, in particular, that on 9 December 1990 she had been
prevented from returning to her home and property. The applicant
observed that she had produced documentary evidence that she was the
owner of the properties at issue. Relying on the principles laid down
by the Court in the case of Loizidou v. Turkey ((merits), 18
December 1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-VI),
she alleged that the interference with her property rights had lacked
any legal justification.
B. The third-party intervener's arguments
- The
Government of Cyprus observed that their Department of Lands and
Surveys had provided certificates confirming ownership to those
persons who did not have title deeds in their possession but whose
title was entered in the District Land Offices registers in the
Turkish-occupied area. These certificates were prima facie
evidence of their right of property. The authorities of the
“Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus” (the “TRNC”)
were in possession of all the records of the Department of Lands and
Surveys relating to the title to properties. It was therefore the
duty of the respondent Government to produce them.
- The
Government of Cyprus further noted that the present case was similar
to that of Loizidou ((merits) cited above), where the Court
had found that the loss of control of property by displaced persons
arose as a consequence of the occupation of the northern part of
Cyprus by Turkish troops and the establishment of the “TRNC”,
and that the denial of access to property in occupied northern Cyprus
constituted a continuing violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
C. The Court's assessment
- The
Court first notes that the documents submitted by the applicant (see
paragraph 10 above) provide prima facie evidence that, until
she transferred it to her children, she had a title of ownership over
the properties at issue. As the respondent Government failed to
produce convincing evidence in rebuttal, the Court considers that the
applicant had a “possession” within the meaning of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
- The
Court recalls that in the aforementioned Loizidou case
((merits), cited above, §§ 63-64), it reasoned as follows:
“63. ... as a consequence of the fact
that the applicant has been refused access to the land since 1974,
she has effectively lost all control over, as well as all
possibilities to use and enjoy, her property. The continuous denial
of access must therefore be regarded as an interference with her
rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Such an interference
cannot, in the exceptional circumstances of the present case to which
the applicant and the Cypriot Government have referred, be regarded
as either a deprivation of property or a control of use within the
meaning of the first and second paragraphs of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1. However, it clearly falls within the meaning of the first
sentence of that provision as an interference with the peaceful
enjoyment of possessions. In this respect the Court observes that
hindrance can amount to a violation of the Convention just like a
legal impediment.
64. Apart from a passing reference to the
doctrine of necessity as a justification for the acts of the 'TRNC'
and to the fact that property rights were the subject of
intercommunal talks, the Turkish Government have not sought to make
submissions justifying the above interference with the applicant's
property rights which is imputable to Turkey.
It has not, however, been explained how the need to
rehouse displaced Turkish Cypriot refugees in the years following the
Turkish intervention in the island in 1974 could justify the complete
negation of the applicant's property rights in the form of a total
and continuous denial of access and a purported expropriation without
compensation.
Nor can the fact that property rights were the subject
of intercommunal talks involving both communities in Cyprus provide a
justification for this situation under the Convention. In such
circumstances, the Court concludes that there has been and continues
to be a breach of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.”
- In
the case of Cyprus v. Turkey ([GC], no. 25781/94,
ECHR 2001 IV) the Court confirmed the above conclusions (§§
187 and 189):
“187. The Court is persuaded that both
its reasoning and its conclusion in the Loizidou judgment (merits)
apply with equal force to displaced Greek Cypriots who, like Mrs
Loizidou, are unable to have access to their property in northern
Cyprus by reason of the restrictions placed by the “TRNC”
authorities on their physical access to that property. The continuing
and total denial of access to their property is a clear interference
with the right of the displaced Greek Cypriots to the peaceful
enjoyment of possessions within the meaning of the first sentence of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
...
189. .. there has been a continuing violation
of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 by virtue of the fact that
Greek-Cypriot owners of property in northern Cyprus are being denied
access to and control, use and enjoyment of their property as well as
any compensation for the interference with their property rights.”
- The
Court sees no reason in the instant case to depart from the
conclusions which it reached in the Loizidou and Cyprus
v. Turkey cases (op. cit.; see also Demades v.
Turkey, (merits), no. 16219/90, § 46, 31 July 2003).
- Accordingly,
it concludes that there has been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 to the Convention by virtue of the fact that the applicant has
been denied access to and control, use and enjoyment of her property
as well as any compensation for the interference with her property
rights.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- The applicant submitted that in
1974 she had had her home in Kalogrea. As she had been unable to
return there, she was the victim of a violation of Article 8 of the
Convention.
This provision reads as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
- The
Government disputed this claim, observing that the applicant
complaints were only in respect of “field plots” and not
in respect of her “home”. Moreover, she was no longer
living in the area where she alleged she had had her “home”.
In any event, the applicant's inability to return to northern Cyprus
had been an inevitable consequence of the political state of affairs
on the island and of the existence of the UN buffer zone. The alleged
interference with her rights under Article 8 had therefore been
necessary in the interests of national security, public safety, for
the prevention of disorder and for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others.
- The
applicant submitted that, contrary to the applicant in the Loizidou
case, she had been the owner of a house in Kalogrea and that until
1974 she and her family had been using these premises as their home.
She claimed that any interference with her Article 8 rights had not
been justified under the second paragraph of this provision.
- The
Government of Cyprus submitted that where the applicant's properties
constituted the person's home, there was a violation of Article 8
of the Convention.
- The
Court notes that the Government failed to produce any evidence
capable of casting doubt upon the applicant's statement that, at the
time of the Turkish intervention, she was regularly residing in
Kalogrea and that this house was treated by the applicant and her
family as a home.
- Accordingly,
the Court considers that in the circumstances of the present case,
the house of the applicant qualified as “home” within the
meaning of Article 8 of the Convention at the time when the acts
complained of took place.
- The
Court observes that the present case differs from the Loizidou
case ((merits), cited above) since, unlike Mrs Loizidou, the
applicant actually had a home in Kalogrea.
- The
Court notes that since 1974 the applicant was unable to gain access
to and to use that home. In this connection the Court recalls that,
in its judgment in the case of Cyprus v. Turkey (cited above,
§§ 172-175), it concluded that the complete denial of
the right of Greek-Cypriot displaced persons to respect for their
homes in northern Cyprus since 1974 constituted a continuing
violation of Article 8 of the Convention. The Court reasoned as
follows:
“172. The Court observes that the
official policy of the 'TRNC' authorities to deny the right of the
displaced persons to return to their homes is reinforced by the very
tight restrictions operated by the same authorities on visits to the
north by Greek Cypriots living in the south. Accordingly, not only
are displaced persons unable to apply to the authorities to reoccupy
the homes which they left behind, they are physically prevented from
even visiting them.
173. The Court further notes that the
situation impugned by the applicant Government has obtained since the
events of 1974 in northern Cyprus. It would appear that it has never
been reflected in 'legislation' and is enforced as a matter of policy
in furtherance of a bi-zonal arrangement designed, it is claimed, to
minimise the risk of conflict which the intermingling of the Greek
and Turkish-Cypriot communities in the north might engender. That
bi-zonal arrangement is being pursued within the framework of the
inter-communal talks sponsored by the United Nations
Secretary-General ...
174. The Court would make the following
observations in this connection: firstly, the complete denial of the
right of displaced persons to respect for their homes has no basis in
law within the meaning of Article 8 § 2 of the Convention
(see paragraph 173 above); secondly, the inter-communal talks cannot
be invoked in order to legitimate a violation of the Convention;
thirdly, the violation at issue has endured as a matter of policy
since 1974 and must be considered continuing.
175. In view of these considerations, the
Court concludes that there has been a continuing violation of Article
8 of the Convention by reason of the refusal to allow the return of
any Greek-Cypriot displaced persons to their homes in northern
Cyprus.”
- The
Court sees no reason in the instant case to depart from the above
reasoning and findings (see also Demades (merits), cited
above, §§ 36-37).
- Accordingly,
it concludes that there has been a continuing violation of Article 8
of the Convention on account of the complete denial of the
applicant's right to respect for her home.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF THE CONVENTION AND
OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE CONVENTION TAKEN IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 8
OF THE CONVENTION AND ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1
- The
applicant complained of a violation of the general obligation to
respect human rights enshrined in Article 1 of the Convention.
She also complained of a violation under Article 14 of the
Convention on account of discriminatory treatment against her in the
enjoyment of her rights under Article 8 of the Convention and Article
1 of Protocol No. 1. She alleged that this discrimination had been
based on her national origin and religious beliefs.
The relevant provisions read as follows:
Article 1 of the Convention
“The High Contracting Parties shall secure to
everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in
Section I of [the] Convention.”
Article 14 of the Convention
“The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set
forth in [the] Convention shall be secured without discrimination on
any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a
national minority, property, birth or other status.”
- The
Government disputed these claims.
- The
Court recalls that in the above-mentioned Alexandrou case
(cited above, §§ 38-39) it has found that it was not
necessary to carry out a separate examination of the complaint under
Article 14 of the Convention. The Court does not see any reason to
depart from that approach in the present case (see also, mutatis
mutandis, Eugenia Michaelidou Ltd and Michael Tymvios v.
Turkey, no. 16163/90, §§ 37-38, 31 July 2003).
Moreover, the Court has found the respondent Government to be in
breach of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and of Article 8 of the
Convention and does not consider it necessary to examine the
complaint under Article 1, which is a framework provision that
cannot be breached on its own (see Ireland v. the United
Kingdom, § 238, 18 January 1978, Series A no. 25,
and Eugenia Michaelidou Ltd and Michael Tymvios, cited above,
§ 42).
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. Pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage
1. The parties' submissions
(a) The applicant
- In
her just satisfaction claims of 19 November 1999, the applicant
requested 236,004 Cypriot pounds (CYP –
approximately 403,236 euros (EUR)) for pecuniary damage. She relied
on an expert's report assessing the value of her losses which
included the loss of annual rent collected or expected to be
collected from renting out her plots of lands and her houses in
Kalogrea and Roukania, plus interest from the date on which such
rents were due until the day of payment. The rent claimed was for the
period dating back to January 1987, when the respondent Government
accepted the right of individual petition, until January 2000. The
applicant did not claim compensation for any purported expropriation
since she was still the legal owner of the properties. The valuation
report contained a description of Kalogrea village and of the
applicant's properties.
- The
valuation report calculated the annual rent obtainable from the
applicant's properties as a percentage (ranging from 4 to 6 percent)
of their market value in 1974. In particular, the house where the
applicant had permanently resided had a value of CYP 7,928
(approximately EUR 13,545), while her summer place was worth CYP
6,924 (approximately EUR 11,830). In 1974, the annual rent was CYP
317 (approximately EUR 541) for the first house and CYP 277
(approximately EUR 473) for the second one. The total rent obtainable
in 1974 from the applicant's fields was estimated at CYP 1,324
(approximately EUR 2,262). The expert further took into account the
trends in rent increase (an average of 5% per annum). Moreover,
compound interest for delayed payment was applied at a rate of 8% per
annum.
- On
24 January 2008, following a request from the Court for an update on
developments in the case, the applicant submitted updated claims for
just satisfaction, which were meant to cover the period of loss of
use of the property from 1 January 1987 to 31 December 2007. She
produced a revised valuation report which, on the basis of the
criteria adopted in the previous report, concluded that the whole sum
due for the loss of use was CYP 394,254 plus CYP 346,113 for
interest. The total sum claimed under this head was thus CYP 740,368
(approximately EUR 1,264,993).
- In
her just satisfaction claims of 19 November 1999, the applicant
further claimed CYP 180,000 (approximately EUR 307,548) in
respect of non-pecuniary damage. In particular, she claimed CYP
30,000 for the anguish and frustration suffered on account of the
continuing violation of her property rights. She stated that this sum
had been calculated on the basis of the sum awarded by the Court in
the Loizidou case ((just satisfaction), 28 July 1998,
Reports 1998-IV), taking into account, however, that the
period of time for which the damage was claimed in the instant case
was longer. Further the applicant claimed CYP 90,000 for the distress
and suffering she had been subjected to due to the denial of her
home. She considered this to be more serious than the violation of
her property rights. She also requested CYP 60,000 for the violation
of her rights under Article 14 of the Convention.
- Finally,
in her updated claims for just satisfaction of 24 January 2008, the
applicant requested an additional EUR 50,000 for non-pecuniary
damage.
(b) The Government
- The
Government filed comments on the applicant's updated claims for just
satisfaction on 30 June 2008 and 15 October 2008. They pointed out
that the present application was part of a cluster of similar cases
raising a number of problematic issues and maintained that the claims
for just satisfaction were not ready for examination. The Government
had in fact encountered serious problems in identifying the
properties and their present owners. The information provided by the
applicants in this regard was not based on reliable evidence. As
concerns specifically the present application, the Government noted
that in the application form were listed two separate plots of land
described as “fields”. However, in her just satisfaction
claims of November 1999 the applicant had listed ten plots of land.
Moreover, owing to the lapse of time
since the lodging of the applications, new situations might have
arisen: the properties could have been transferred, donated or
inherited within the legal system of southern Cyprus. These facts
would not have been known to the respondent Government and could be
certified only by the Greek Cypriot authorities, who, since 1974, had
reconstructed the registers and records of all properties in northern
Cyprus. Applicants should be required to provide search certificates
issued by the Department of Lands and Surveys of the Republic of
Cyprus. Moreover, in cases where the original applicant
had passed away or the property had changed hands, questions might
arise as to whether the new owners had a legal interest in the
property and whether they were entitled to pecuniary and/or
non-pecuniary damages.
- The
Government further noted that some applicants had shared properties
and that it had not been proved that their co-owners had agreed to
the partition of the possessions. Nor, when claiming damages based on
the assumption that the properties had been rented after 1974, had
the applicants shown that the rights of the said co-owners under
domestic law had been respected.
- The
Government further submitted that as an annual increase of the value
of the properties had been applied, it would be unfair to add
compound interest for delayed payment, and that Turkey had recognised
the jurisdiction of the Court on 21 January 1990, and not in January
1987. In any event, the alleged 1974 market value of the properties
was exorbitant, highly excessive and speculative; it was not based on
any real data with which to make a comparison and made insufficient
allowance for the volatility of the property market and its
susceptibility to influences both domestic and international. The
report submitted by the applicant had instead proceeded on the
assumption that the property market would have continued to flourish
with sustained growth during the whole period under consideration.
- The
Government produced a valuation report prepared by the
Turkish-Cypriot authorities, which they considered to be based on a
“realistic assessment of the 1974 market values, having regard
to the relevant land records and comparative sales in the areas where
the properties [were] situated”. This report contained two
proposals, assessing, respectively, the sum due for the loss of use
of the properties and their present value. The second proposal was
made in order to give the applicant the option to sell the properties
to the State, thereby relinquishing title to and claims in respect of
them.
- The
report prepared by the Turkish-Cypriot authorities specified that it
would be possible to envisage, either immediately or after the
resolution of the Cyprus problem, restitution of the pieces of lands
registered under the plots no. 260, 268, 119/5, 119/6, 359/1 and 425
(see paragraph 10 above). The other immovable properties referred to
in the application were possessed by refugees; they could not form
the object of restitution but could give entitlement to financial
compensation, to be calculated on the basis of the loss of income (by
applying a 5% rent on the 1974 market values) and increase in value
of the properties between 1974 and 7 September 1999 (date on
which the applicant transferred her properties to her children –
see paragraph 9 above). Had the applicant applied to the Immovable
Property Commission, the latter would have offered CYP 98,377.12
(approximately EUR 168,087) to compensate the loss of use and
CYP 238,849.23 (approximately EUR 408,097) for the value of the
properties. According to an expert appointed by the “TRNC”
authorities, the 1974 open-market value of the applicant's properties
was CYP 10,225 (approximately 17,470 EUR). Upon fulfilment of certain
conditions, the Immovable Property Commission could also have offered
the applicant exchange of her properties with Turkish-Cypriot
properties located in the south of the island.
51. Finally,
the Government did not comment on the applicant's submissions under
the head of non-pecuniary damage.
2. The third-party intervener
- The
Government of Cyprus fully supported the applicant's updated claims
for just satisfaction.
3. The Court's assessment
- The
Court first notes that the Government's submission that doubts might
arise as to the applicant's title of ownership over the properties at
issue (see paragraph 46 above) is, in substance, an objection of
incompatibility ratione materiae with the provisions of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Such an objection should have been
raised before the application was declared admissible or, at the
latest, in the context of the parties' observations on the merits. In
any event, the Court cannot but confirm its findings that the
applicant had a “possession” over the properties at issue
within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (see paragraph 22
above).
- In
the circumstances of the case, the Court considers that the question
of the application of Article 41 in respect of pecuniary and
non-pecuniary damage is not ready for decision. It observes, in
particular, that the parties have failed to provide reliable and
objective data pertaining to the prices of land and real estate in
Cyprus at the date of the Turkish intervention. This failure renders
it difficult for the Court to assess whether the estimate furnished
by the applicant of the 1974 market value of her properties is
reasonable. The question must accordingly be reserved and the
subsequent procedure fixed with due regard to any agreement which
might be reached between the respondent Government and the applicant
(Rule 75 § 1 of the Rules of Court).
B. Costs and expenses
- In
her just satisfaction claims of 19 November 1999, relying on bills
from her representative, the applicant sought CYP 3,207
(approximately EUR 5,480) for the costs and expenses incurred in the
proceedings before the Court. This sum included CYP 900
(approximately EUR 1,537) for the cost of the expert report assessing
the value of her properties. In her written observations of 15
January 2004 the applicant claimed additional legal fees for CYP
2,645 (approximately EUR 4,519). In her updated claims for just
satisfaction of 24 January 2008 she submitted additional bills
of costs for the new valuation report and for legal fees amounting to
EUR 1,955 and EUR 2,955.5 respectively. The total sum
sought for cost and expenses was thus approximately EUR 14,910.
- The
Government did not comment on this point.
- In
the circumstances of the case, the Court considers that the question
of the application of Article 41 in respect of costs and expenses is
not ready for decision. The question must accordingly be reserved and
the subsequent procedure fixed with due regard to any agreement which
might be reached between the respondent Government and the applicant.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Dismisses by six votes to one the Government's
preliminary objections;
- Holds by six votes to one that there has been a
violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention;
- Holds by six votes to one that there has been a
violation of Article 8 of the Convention;
- Holds unanimously that it is not necessary to
examine whether there has been a violation of Articles 1 and 14 of
the Convention;
- Holds unanimously that the question of the
application of Article 41 is not ready for decision;
accordingly,
(a) reserves
the said question in whole;
(b) invites
the Government and the applicant to submit, within three months from
the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, their written
observations on the matter and, in particular, to notify the Court of
any agreement that they may reach;
(c) reserves the further procedure and delegates
to the President of the Chamber the power to fix the same if need be.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 27 January 2009, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Fatoş Aracı Nicolas Bratza
Deputy Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the dissenting opinion of Judge
Karakaş is annexed to this judgment.
N.B.
F.A.
DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE KARAKAŞ
(Translation)
Unlike
the majority, I consider that the objection of non-exhaustion of
domestic remedies raised by the Government should not have been
rejected. Consequently, I cannot agree with the finding of violations
of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and of Article 8 of the Convention.
The
rule of exhaustion of domestic remedies is intended to give
Contracting States the opportunity to prevent or provide redress for
violations alleged against them before such allegations are referred
to the Court. That reflects the subsidiary nature of the Convention
system.
Faced
with the scale of the problem of deprivations of title to property
alleged by Greek Cypriots (approximately 1,400 applications of this
type lodged against Turkey), the Court, in the operative part of its
Xenides Arestis v. Turkey judgment of 22 December 2005,
required the respondent State to provide a remedy guaranteeing the
effective protection of the rights set forth in Article 8 of the
Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in the context of all the
similar cases pending before it. The State has a legal obligation not
just to pay those concerned the sums awarded by way of just
satisfaction under Article 41 of the Convention, but also to select
the general or, if appropriate, individual measures to be adopted in
its domestic legal order to put an end to the violation found by the
Court and to redress so far as possible the effects. The Government
submitted that by enacting the Law on Compensation for Immovable
Properties (Law no. 67/2005) and setting up a Commission to deal with
compensation claims it had discharged that obligation (see also
Xenides Arestis v. Turkey (just satisfaction), no.
46347/99, § 37, 7 December 2006). It is that domestic
remedy which, in their submission, the applicant failed to exercise
in the present case.
The
exhaustion of domestic remedies is normally assessed at the
time when an application is lodged with the Court. However, there are
exceptions to the rule which may be justified by the
particular circumstances of each case (see Baumann v.
France, no. 33592/96, § 47, ECHR 2001-V (extracts)).
Examples
of such exceptions are to be found in the cases against Italy which
raised similar questions and in which the Court found that certain
specific facts justified departing from the general principle
(see Brusco v. Italy, (dec.) no. 69789/01, ECHR
2001-IX).
In
other examples the Court also took the view, in the light of the
specific facts of the cases concerned, and having regard to the
subsidiary nature of the Convention mechanism, that new domestic
remedies had not been exhausted (see the following
decisions: Nogolica v. Croatia, no. 77784/01, ECHR
2002-VIII; Slaviček v. Croatia, no.
20862/02, ECHR 2002-VII; Andrášik and Others v.
Slovakia, nos. 57984/00, 60226/00, 60242/00, 60679/00, 60680/00
and 68563/01, ECHR 2002-IX; and Içyer v. Turkey,
no. 18888/02, ECHR 2006-I).
In
situations where there is no effective remedy affording the
opportunity to complain of alleged violations, individuals are
systematically compelled to submit to the European Court of Human
Rights applications which could have been investigated first of all
within the domestic legal order. In that way, the functioning of the
Convention system risks losing its effectiveness in the long term
(the most pertinent example is the Broniowski v. Poland case
([GC], no. 31443/96, ECHR 2004-V).
In my
opinion the above examples provide an opportunity to review the
conditions for admissibility in the event of a major change in the
circumstances of the case. For the similar post-Loizidou
cases, the Court can always reconsider its admissibility decision and
examine the preliminary objection of failure to exhaust domestic
remedies.
Since
the Court may reject “at any stage of the proceedings”
(Article 35 § 4 of the Convention) an application which it
considers inadmissible, new facts brought to its attention may lead
it, even when examining the case on the merits, to reconsider the
decision in which the application was declared admissible and
ultimately declare it inadmissible pursuant to Article 35 § 4 of
the Convention, taking due account of the context (see, for example,
Medeanu v. Romania (dec.), no. 29958/96, 8 April 2003,
and Azinas v. Cyprus [GC], no. 56679/00, §§ 37-43,
ECHR 2004-III).
The
existence of a “new fact” which has come to light
after the admissibility decision may prompt the Court to reconsider
that decision.
I
consider that the Law on Compensation for Immovable Properties (Law
no. 67/2005) and the Commission set up to deal with compensation
claims, which are based on the guiding principles laid down by the
Court in the Xenides-Arestis case, are capable of providing an
opportunity for the State authorities to provide redress for breaches
of the Convention's provisions, including breaches alleged in
applications already lodged with the Court before the Act's entry
into force (see Içyer, cited above, § 72). That
consideration also applies to applications already declared
admissible by the Court (see Azinas, cited above).
In
order to conclude whether there has or has not been a breach of the
Convention, complainants must first exercise the new domestic remedy
and then, if necessary, lodge an application with the European Court
of Human Rights, the international court. Following that logic, I
cannot in this case find any violation of the Convention's
provisions.