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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF VAAS v. GERMANY
(Application
no. 20271/05)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
26
March 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 Vaas 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,
Mark
Villiger,
Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva, judges,
and Stephen Phillips,
Deputy
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 3 March 2009,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application
(no. 20271/05) 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 a German national, Mr Anton Alfons
Vaas
(“the applicant”), on 2 June 2005.
- The
applicant was represented by Mr R. Battenstein, a lawyer practising
in Düsseldorf. The German Government (“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mrs A.
Wittling-Vogel, Ministerialdirigentin, of the Federal Ministry
of Justice.
- On
29 January 2008 the
Court declared the application partly inadmissible and decided to
communicate the complaint concerning the length of the proceedings to
the Government. It also decided to rule on the admissibility and
merits of the application at the same time (Article 29 § 3).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1935 and lives in Nettetal.
1. Background to the case
- From
1952 until May 1991 the applicant worked as a lorry driver.
On
10 May 1991 he was diagnosed with a back disease (intervertebral
disc degeneration) and gave up his profession as a lorry driver.
2. Administrative proceedings
- On
11 February 1993 the applicant filed an application with the Vehicle
Operators Insurance Association (Berufsgenossenschaft für
Fahrzeughaltungen) for a declaration that he was suffering from a
work-related back disease, which would have entitled him to
special pension benefits.
- On
4 January 1996 the Insurance Association found that the applicant's
illness had not been work-related.
- On
23 January 1996 the applicant lodged an administrative appeal which
the Insurance Association, following further internal enquiries,
rejected on 4 September 1996.
3. Proceedings before the Düsseldorf Social Court
- On
2 October 1996 the applicant brought an action before the Düsseldorf
Social Court for an industrial injury pension on the grounds of
occupational disease.
- On
15 January 1998 the Social Court set down the case for hearing on
11 February 1998.
- On
11 February 1998 it rejected the applicant's claim on the grounds
that it had not been established that his disease was work-related.
- On
13 March 1998 the judgment was served on the applicant's counsel.
4. Proceedings before North-Rhine Westphalia Social
Court of Appeal
- On
26 March 1998 the applicant lodged an appeal with the
North-Rhine-Westphalia Social Court of Appeal without submitting
the statement of grounds of appeal. Following two reminders in April
and
July 1998 the court received the applicant's statement of
grounds of appeal on 10 November 1998.
- On
17 November 1998 the Social Court of Appeal held an oral hearing
during which it decided to make further investigations.
- Between
23 November 1998 and 23 March 1999 the Social Court of Appeal
consulted the applicant's disability files which it had received from
the Düsseldorf Pension Office, the report of the defendant's
technical supervisory services and various medical statements and
certificates from the applicant's doctors.
- On
26 March 1999 the Social Court of Appeal commissioned a report by an
orthopaedic expert, S., which was submitted on 20 May 1999 and stated
that the applicant's disease had not been caused by his work as a
lorry driver.
- On
14 July 1999 the applicant applied under section 109 of the Social
Courts Act (see paragraph 44 below) for a fresh medical report by
another expert. He also put additional questions to the expert S.
which were answered on 23 July 1999.
- On
25 August 1999 the Social Court of Appeal commissioned a report by
B.-A., an expert specialised in occupational medicine.
- On
17 September 1999 the Court of Appeal ordered the applicant to pay a
further advance to cover the costs of additional examinations which
B.-A. considered necessary. On 14 October 1999 the applicant
advanced those costs.
- On
15 December 1999 the applicant cancelled his appointment with B.-A.
scheduled that day.
- On
22 March 2000 B.-A. submitted a report finding that the applicant's
disease had to be considered as being work-related.
- On
5 July 2000 the Social Court of Appeal invited S. to lodge
supplementary observations on the findings of B.-A.'s report, which
he did on 2 August 2000.
- Following
the applicant's request for a supplementary report by
B.-A. in
accordance with section 109 of the Social Court Code, the Court of
Appeal ordered B.-A. on 13 September 2000 to submit supplementary
comments.
- Between
13 November 2000 and 13 February 2001 the court reminded B.-A. three
times to give his comments and set him a time limit of 15 March
2001. On 15 February 2001 B.-A. submitted his comments.
- On
26 April 2001 S. was asked for his observations on B.-A.'s
supplementary comments. These he gave on 22 May 2001.
- On
9 July 2001 the Social Court of Appeal set the appeal down for
hearing on 18 September 2001. At the hearing the court ordered the
taking of further evidence.
- On
8 October 2001 the defendant submitted an expert report prepared by
its own technical supervisory service challenging B.-A.'s
conclusions.
- On
18 October 2001 the Court of Appeal commissioned the preparation of a
further report by a consultant surgeon, B., who submitted his report
on 19 November 2001.
- On
22 January 2002 the applicant requested inter alia the
preparation of a further expert report under section 109 of the
Social Courts Act.
- On
27 February 2002 the Social Court of Appeal commissioned
ex
officio a medical report by an orthopaedic expert, V.
- In
March and April 2002 the Social Court of Appeal reminded V. of its
request for a report. In reply, V. informed the court that the
applicant had cancelled his appointment for examination scheduled on
26 April 2002 and that it had had to be postponed to 20 June 2002. On
3 September 2002 the Social Court of Appeal received V.'s report
dated 12 August 2002.
- Between
27 September 2002 and 20 February 2003 the applicant requested the
court seven times to extend the time-limits for the submission of his
comments on V.'s expert report.
- On
5 May 2003 the applicant submitted his comments and a private
orthopaedic expert's report on which B. commented on 9 June 2003.
- On
26 August 2003 the applicant informed the court that he intended to
commission another private expert report.
- On
22 September 2003 the Social Court of Appeal held an oral hearing at
which the applicant's counsel requested a two-week adjournment to
allow him to comment on the future conduct of the proceedings.
- On
27 October 2003 the applicant appointed a new legal representative
who asked the court for access to the case files on 2 December
2003.
- On
12 December 2003 the Social Court of Appeal postponed the hearing
scheduled for 16 December 2003 because the applicant's counsel had
failed to return the case files.
- On
23 March 2004, after a hearing, the Social Court of Appeal rejected
the applicant's appeal. Considering that the relevant questions had
been sufficiently examined by the experts B., S., and V., it did not
find it necessary to seek a further expert opinion, as had been
requested by the applicant.
- On
12 May 2004 the judgment was served on the applicant's counsel.
5. Proceedings before the Federal Social Court
- On
8 June 2004 the applicant lodged a request for leave to appeal on
points of law with the Federal Social Court which was rejected on
7 September 2004. This decision was served on the applicant's
counsel on 15 September 2004.
6. Proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court
- On
14 October 2004 the applicant lodged a constitutional complaint. On
19 November 2004 the Federal Constitutional Court (no. 1 BvR 2324/04)
refused to admit the applicant's complaint. This decision was served
on the applicant's counsel on 3 December 2004.
7. Supervisory review proceedings
- On
an unspecified date the applicant requested the Insurance Association
to revoke its decisions of 4 January 1996 and 4 September 1996 in
accordance with section 44 of the Social Code no. X (Sozialgesetzbuch
X) (see paragraph 45 below). On an unknown date
the Insurance Association rejected his request.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
1. Action for failure to act
- Section 88 of the Social Courts Act exempts applicants
from the requirement to await the outcome of the preliminary
administrative proceedings and allows them to lodge a court action
directly with the Social Court if the administrative authorities fail
without sufficient justification to decide the administrative appeal
within a reasonable time, in general three months.
2. Application for the hearing of an expert
- Section 109 of the Social Courts Act provides that the
insured person may request a further expert report. This request can
only be rejected if granting it would delay the proceedings and if
the court is satisfied that the request has been made in an attempt
to delay the proceedings or was not submitted earlier due to gross
negligence. The commissioning of the expert report may be made
conditional on the applicant advancing the costs.
3. Application for supervisory review
- Section 44 of the Social Code no. X provides that if
social benefits are rejected on the basis of an unlawful
administrative act, the competent authority shall, under certain
circumstances, revoke that act with retrospective effect even after
it has become final. In such cases the grant of social benefits is
limited to a period of four years preceding the date of the
application for supervisory review.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the length of the administrative and social
court proceedings had been incompatible with the “reasonable
time” requirement, laid down in Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention, which reads as follows:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a ... hearing within a
reasonable time by [a] ... tribunal...”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
1. Applicability of Article 6 to the administrative
proceedings
- The
Government, referring to the Court's decisions in inter alia
the König judgment (see König v. Germany, 28
June 1978, § 98, Series A no. 27), submitted that
the period between the filing of the applicant's request with the
Insurance Association on 11 February 1993 and the lodging of his
administrative appeal on 23 January 1996 was not covered by Article 6
§ 1 as it concerned purely administrative proceedings before a
public authority.
- The
applicant considered that Article 6 § 1 of the Convention did
apply to the administrative proceedings preceding his administrative
appeal.
- The
Court agrees with the Government that a “dispute” within
the meaning of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention arose only on 23
January 1996 when the applicant filed his administrative appeal
against the decision of the Insurance Association (see, amongst other
authorities, Janssen v. Germany, no. 23959/94, § 40,
20 December 2001; and König, cited above § 98).
- If
follows that to the extent that the complaint about the length of the
proceedings relates to the administrative proceedings preceding the
applicant's administrative appeal, that is the period from 11
February 1993 to 4 January 1996, this complaint is incompatible
ratione materiae with the provisions of the Convention within
the meaning of Article 35 § 3 and must be rejected in
accordance with Article 35 § 4.
2. Exhaustion of domestic remedies
- The
Government further argued that the applicant had failed to lodge an
action for failure to act under section 88 of the Social Courts Act
(see paragraph 43 above), a remedy which the Court has considered
to be effective to challenge the length of administrative proceedings
(see Glüsen v. Germany, no. 1679/03, § 67,
10 January 2008). Therefore the relevant period did not start to
run until 2 October 1996 when the applicant lodged his action with
the Düsseldorf Social Court.
- The
Court notes that the Insurance Association rejected the applicant's
administrative appeal on 4 September 1996, eight months after he
lodged the appeal on 23 January 1996. Given that relatively short
period (see, by contrast, Glüsen, cited above, §§
13-15 and 67) and bearing in mind that an action for failure to act
would have deprived the applicant of a (potentially favourable)
decision by the Insurance Association, the Court considers that in
the instant case the applicant could not have been expected to lodge
such an action.
- It
follows that the Government's objection in this respect must be
rejected.
3. Conclusion
- 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. Period to be taken into consideration
- The
Court notes that the relevant period started to run on
23 January
1996, when the applicant lodged his administrative appeal, and ended
on 3 December 2004, when the final decision of the Federal
Constitutional Court was served on the applicant's counsel. It thus
lasted some eight years and ten months for one level of compulsory
administrative appeal and four levels of jurisdiction.
2. The reasonableness of the length of proceedings
a. Submissions made before the Court
- The
applicant, without disputing the facts submitted by the Government,
contended that the proceedings had been unreasonably long. He argued
that the length of the proceedings before the Düsseldorf
Social
Court was not justified as no evidence had been taken before that
court. He alleged that it had taken the authorities and courts seven
years to commission the first expert report after he lodged his
pension request in 1993. Nor could he be blamed for requesting
further expert reports or statements after S., B. and V. had given
unfavourable reports. Finally, the length of the proceedings had
restricted the possibility of his being granted his pension benefits
following a request for a supervisory review under section 44 of the
Social Code no. X. as that provision provided that social benefits
would be paid retroactively only for a period of four years before
the request was lodged.
- The
Government considered that the length of proceedings was not
unreasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the case. The
subject matter of the action raised difficult questions of fact and
law, necessitating extensive and time-consuming investigations and
the commissioning of a total of four expert reports (one at the
applicant's request).
- The
Government pointed out that no periods of inactivity had been
attributable to the domestic courts. In so far as delays were
attributable to experts or the parties, the Social Court of Appeal
had continuously tried to speed up the proceedings by sending
reminders that their reports and statements were to be lodged within
the set time-limits. Furthermore, the Social Court of Appeal had been
obliged by section 109 of the Social Courts Act to commission a
report by B.-A and to hear his expert evidence.
- The
Government emphasised that a period of at least one year and eleven
months was attributable to the applicant's own conduct as he had
delayed in submitting his statement of grounds of appeal, his
comments on the expert reports and the required X-rays. Furthermore,
he was late in paying the advance on the costs of B.-A.'s expert
report and had cancelled appointments with two of the experts, which
had inevitably delayed the preparation of their reports. Finally, he
had repeatedly applied for fresh expert reports when the existing
reports were unfavourable to him and had therefore accepted that the
proceedings would take even longer.
- When
assessing the importance of what was at stake for the applicant, the
Government noted that the domestic authorities found that he was not
entitled to the requested pension. Nor had the length of the
proceedings curtailed his rights to receive pension benefits
following a request for supervisory review under section 44 of the
Social Code no. X, as that request concerned the re-opening of the
initial administrative proceedings and thus a separate matter from
that in issue in the instant proceedings.
b. The Court's assessment
- The
Court reiterates that the reasonableness of the length of proceedings
must be assessed in the light of the circumstances of the case and
with reference to the following criteria: the complexity of the case,
the conduct of the applicant and the relevant authorities and what
was at stake for the applicant in the dispute (see, among many other
authorities, Frydlender v. France [GC], no. 30979/96, §
43, ECHR 2000-VII).
- The
Court observes, at the outset, that the proceedings concerned the
question whether the applicant's illness qualified as a work-related
disease, thus entitling him to special pension benefits.
- It
recognises that those proceedings were of a considerable complexity.
The social courts were faced with the difficult question as to
whether there was a causal connection between the exertions the
applicant had been exposed to at work and his back disease. The
complexity of that issue is demonstrated by the differing opinions
expressed by the four experts heard. The assessment of the evidence
was also complicated by the fact that the domestic courts had to take
into account the applicant's working conditions over a period of
almost forty years which involved numerous inquiries concerning his
former employers and medical history.
- As
regards the applicant's own conduct, the Court observes that during
the proceedings before the Social Court of Appeal, he lodged two
requests under section 109 of the Social Courts Act for a further
expert opinion. This request caused a delay of several months. In
this connection, the Court notes that, while the applicant cannot be
blamed
for making
full use
of the remedies available to him under the domestic law, his
behaviour, is an objective fact which must be taken into account for
the purpose of determining whether or not the "reasonable time"
has been exceeded (see, Lesar v. Slovenia, no.
66824/01, § 30, 30 November 2006; and Girardi v. Austria,
no. 50064/99, § 56, 11 December 2003).
66. The Court also notes that the applicant submitted his
statement of grounds of appeal with the Social Court of Appeal more
than six months after the court had requested him to do so.
Furthermore, he cancelled his appointments with two of the medical
experts, B.-A. and V., thus delaying the proceedings by three months.
It took the applicant eight months to comment on V's report and one
and a half months to comment on B.'s report. Finally, delays of some
five months and two weeks were caused by the change of the
applicant's legal counsel and by the fact that he was late in paying
the advance on the expert's fees and in returning the X-rays to the
court. Therefore, the Court considers that a total of two years was
attributable to the applicant's own conduct.
- As
to the conduct of the domestic authorities, the Court notes that the
proceedings were pending for approximately one year and five months
before the Social Court, which dismissed the applicant's action
without having obtained expert evidence, whereas the proceedings
before the
Social Court of Appeal lasted six years and one month
including the two years of delay for which the applicant is to be
held responsible. The length of the proceedings before the Social
Court of Appeal was primarily due to the court's extensive
investigations into the applicant's medical history and the potential
occupational hazards he was exposed to and to the taking and
assessment of substantial expert evidence.
- As
to the number of experts heard, the Court considers that the domestic
courts are better placed than the Court to assess the need for expert
opinion. Nevertheless, the need to obtain expert reports does not
release the national courts from the obligation to ensure compliance
with the reasonable-time requirements of Article 6 of the Convention
(see Glüsen, cited above, § 83).
- In
the instant case, the Court notes that the Social Court of Appeal
considered it necessary to appoint four experts (including one at the
applicant's request), who were specialised in different medical
fields.
It further observes that no significant periods of
inactivity were attributable to the Social Court of Appeal in that
connection. In particular, it proceeded swiftly to the commissioning
of the expert report requested by the applicant under section 109 of
the Social Courts Act (see, by contrast, Glüsen, cited
above, § 82). Furthermore, it attempted to expedite the
proceedings by setting time-limits or reminding the experts –
when necessary – to submit their statements or reports.
Finally, bearing in mind that the applicant even sought to have
further experts appointed, the Court considers that the number of
experts heard by the Social Court of Appeal was not excessive.
- The
Court further notes that the Federal Social Court and the Federal
Constitutional Court conducted the proceedings before them speedily.
- As
to what was at stake for the applicant, the Court accepts that the
length of the proceedings at issue caused a degree of hardship to the
applicant as the pension claimed was meant to cover at least part of
his living expenses. However, in so far as the applicant alleged that
the length of the proceedings had curtailed his rights in connection
with the supervisory-review proceedings, the Court notes that the
Insurance Association rejected the applicant's request to revoke its
earlier decisions. Thus the applicant did not qualify for a
retroactive payment of the pension in dispute and so was not affected
by the four-year time-limit he referred to. The applicant's
allegation in this connection is therefore unsubstantiated.
- In
conclusion, the Court considers that in view of the particular
circumstances of the case, notably the high complexity of its subject
matter and the considerable delays caused by the applicant's own
conduct, the overall length of the proceedings can still be regarded
as reasonable.
- Accordingly,
there has been no violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the application admissible;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 26 March 2009, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Stephen Phillips Peer Lorenzen
Deputy Registrar President