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FOURTH
SECTION
DECISION
Application no.
49247/08
Niazi KAZALI and Hakan KAZALI against Cyprus
and 8 other applications
(see list appended)
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting on 6 March
2012 as a Chamber composed of:
Lech
Garlicki,
President,
David
Thór Björgvinsson,
Päivi
Hirvelä,
George
Nicolaou,
Ledi
Bianku,
Nebojša
Vučinić,
Vincent
A. De Gaetano,
judges,
and
Fatoş Aracı, Deputy
Section Registrar,
Having
regard to the above applications lodged on 8 October 2008, 8 October
2008, 2 August 2005, 30 December 2005, 14 August 2006, 13 December
2006, 8 October 2005, 1 January 2005, and 13 January 2005;
Having
regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and
the observations in reply submitted by the applicants,
Having
regard to the further information submitted by the respondent
Government at the request of the Chamber and the applicants’
observations in reply,
Having
regard to the comments submitted by the Government of Turkey as
intervenor,
Having
deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The
applicants are:
49247/08 Niazi Kazali born 1922, resident in Kyrenia,
in the “Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus” (“TRNC”),
British and Cypriot national;
Hakan Kazali born 1947, resident in Norfold, United Kingdom, British
and Cypriot national;
49307/08 Esat Mustafa, born 1953, resident in Enfield, United
Kingdom, British and Cypriot national;
Nafia Mustafa, born 1933, resident in Nicosia, “TRNC”,
Cypriot national;
Zeka Mustafa, born 1956, resident in London, United Kingdom, Cypriot
national;
Kenan Mustafa, born 1951, resident in Nicosia, “TRNC”,
Cypriot national;
Enis Bolcocuk, born 1981, resident in Güzelyurt (Morphou),
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
Sabiha Aslanturk, born 1960, resident in Güzelyurt (Morphou),
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
Safiye Kansal, born 1962, resident in Famagusta, “TRNC”,
Cypriot national;
Gokcen Mustafa, born 1964, resident in Nicosia, “TRNC”,
Cypriot national;
30792/05 Alp Z. Nouri, born 1931, resident in Mesa, United
States of America, US and Cypriot national;
Keray F. Nouri, born 1933, resident in Phoenix, United States of
America, US national;
1760/05 Savash Kamil, born in 1948, resident in London, United
Kingdom, British national;
represented before the
Court by Mr Z. Necatigil and Mrs Sulen Karabacak, lawyers practising
in Nicosia.
4080/06 Erdogan Durmus, born 1934, resident in Famagusta,
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
34776/06 Mehmet Ali Osman, born 1937, resident in Nicosia,
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
represented before the
Court by Mr A. Yesilada, a lawyer practising in Nicosia.
1545/07 Hassan Houssein Chakarto, born in 1936, resident in
Banstead, United Kingdom, British national;
Necla
Cagis, born in 1950, resident in Güzelyurt (Morphou),
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
Mumin
Cakartas, born in 1941, resident in Güzelyurt (Morphou),
“TRNC”, Cypriot national;
Gokcen Bayar, born in 1939, resident in
Güzelyurt (Morphou), “TRNC”, Cypriot
national;
represented
before the Court by Mr A. Aksu, a lawyer practising in Ankara.
38902/05 Aiten Abni, born in 1934, resident in Nicosia,
Cypriot national;
3240/05 Niyazi Salih, born in 1957, resident in Turnford,
United Kingdom, British national;
represented before the
Court by Mr M. Georgiou, a lawyer practising in Nicosia.
A. The circumstances of the case
1. Application nos. 49247/08 Kazali and 49307/08
Mustafa and others
- Application
no. 49247/08 concerns a plot of land (a house with a vineyard and
fruit trees) in the village of Vroisha. The applicants moved to
Larnaca in 1954 and rented out the property in Vroisha. The
applicants continued to visit the village during the summer months
until 1964, when the inhabitants of Vroisha left the village due to
alleged acts of aggression by Greek Cypriots.
- Niazi Kazali currently resides on Greek-Cypriot
property; Hakan Kazali resides abroad.
- Application
no. 49307/08 relates to several plots of land (a house with vineyards
and fruit trees), also in Vroisha, inherited by the applicants from a
deceased relative in 1995. The applicants (with the exception of the
fifth applicant) left the property in 1964 due to alleged acts of
aggression by Greek Cypriots (the deceased mother of the fifth
applicant also left Vroisha in 1964).
- Esat Mustafa and Zeka Mustafa now reside abroad; Nafia
Mustafa, Kenan Mustafa, Enis Bolcocuk, Sabiha Aslanturk and Safiye
Kansal reside on Greek-Cypriot property; Gokcen Mustafa resides on
Turkish-Cypriot property.
- The
applicants allege that their properties were burnt down in or around
1964.
- Together
with other former villagers of Vroisha, the applicants formed the
Vroisha (Yağmuralan) Association (“the Association”),
which is based in England. On 30 March 2004 the Association made
submissions to the Cypriot Minister of the Interior via the Cyprus
High Commission in London demanding the return of the village to the
legal owners and compensation. On 6 May 2004 the Cyprus High
Commission in London replied indicating that the Ministry of the
Interior was examining the request. The letter also advised that
according to the Ministry of the Interior, under the Turkish-Cypriot
Properties Management and Other Matters Law 139/91 (see paragraphs
40-48 below), all Turkish-Cypriot properties which had been abandoned
in the free areas of the Republic of Cyprus came under the
custodianship of the Custodian of Turkish-Cypriot properties and that
since the “Cyprus Problem” was unresolved, the owners of
those properties could not exercise their rights with regard to those
properties.
- On
12 January 2006, the Minister of the Interior replied to the
Association’s submissions. He indicated that:
“... no damage was caused to the properties of the
T/C inhabitants of Vroisha village or any loss of life by organs of
the Republic.
...
The village of Vroisha was voluntarily abandoned by its
T/C inhabitants in early 1964 ... What survives from the buildings
today are ruins. The destruction is basically due to abandonment and
the lapse of time.”
- He
noted that the land had remained unused and unexploited since the
village was abandoned. He advised that the Department of Lands and
Surveys would be able to furnish owners with information about the
properties upon request. He concluded by reiterating that:
“... all T/C properties in the area controlled by
the Republic came under the custody of the Minister of the Interior
acting as the Custodian of the T/C Properties in accordance with the
provisions of the T/C Properties (Administration and Other Matters)
(Temporary Provisions) Laws of 1991-2003. They will remain so until
the end of the abnormal situation created as a result of the Turkish
invasion and occupation of 1974.”
- The
applicants in application no. 49247/08 subsequently obtained a search
certificate and, on 4 August 2006, the first applicant transferred
his interest in the property to his son, the second applicant.
2. Application no. 30792/05 Nouri
- The
complaints relate to property, including a mansion, in Larnaca
transferred to the applicants in 1994 by way of a gift from their
mother, who was a citizen of the United States from 1939. The mansion
was destroyed through alleged acts of aggression by Greek Cypriots in
1964. A house, shop and restaurant/bar have since been constructed on
the property without the applicants’ consent.
- Alp Nouri and Keray Nouri currently reside abroad. Alp
Nouri stays in Greek-Cypriot property when he visits the “TRNC”.
- The
applicants instructed a lawyer in Larnaca to have the title to the
property transferred into their names. The new title deed was issued
on 5 October 2007.
3. Application nos. 4080/06 Durmus and 34776/06 Osman
- Application
no. 4080/06 relates to property in Mari Village (vineyards and a
well). In August 1974, the applicant was taken prisoner and released
north of the Green Line. He was unable to return to his property.
- The applicant resides in a house built on
Greek-Cypriot property.
- On 30 April 1992 a notice of expropriation was
published in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Cyprus
indicating that part of the applicant’s property was to be
compulsorily acquired by the Electricity Authority of Cyprus. On 11
September 1992 the expropriation order was published and on 18
February 1993 the Electricity Authority offered compensation in
respect of the compulsory purchase. On 17 November 1993 the
compensation offered was accepted by the Custodian on behalf of the
applicant and the agreed amount was deposited by the Electricity
Authority into a special fund on 22 July 1994.
- A notice of expropriation regarding the remaining part
of the applicant’s property was published in the Official
Gazette on 28 February 2003. On 4 July 2003 the expropriation order
was published and on 23 September 2003 compensation was offered.
- Application
no. 34776/06 concerns property in Kellia in the district of Larnaca
(three houses, one of which he occupied, and a plot of land with
trees). The applicant left the property in mid-August 1974 due to
alleged acts of aggression by Greek Cypriots.
- The applicant resides in Turkish-Cypriot property.
- On 22 November 2007 a requisition order by the Cypriot
National Guard was issued in respect of part of the applicant’s
property. The offer for compensation by the Ministry of Defence is
pending. The remainder of the property is being used by a Greek
Cypriot for agricultural purposes.
- On 9 August 2005 the applicants’ lawyer wrote to
the Service for the Management of Turkish-Cypriot Properties at the
Ministry of the Interior, enclosing the title deeds and seeking the
return of the properties and compensation. On 31 August 2005 he
received a reply from the Acting Director of the Service for the
Management of Turkish-Cypriot Properties in the following terms:
“... the Turkish Cypriot Properties, which have
been abandoned as a result of Turkish invasion and occupation, have
come under the management and custody of the Custodian of Turkish
Cypriot Properties, according to the provisions of the Turkish
Cypriot Properties (Management and Other Matters) (Temporary
Provisions) Law No. 139/91.
According to the above Law, the Minister of Interior has
been appointed as the Custodian of all the Turkish Cypriot Properties
and all abandoned properties came under his management with the aim
of meeting the needs of the refugees.
In view of the above, I regret to inform you that your
application is not able to be considered at present. Any matter
outstanding will be considered and settled upon the final solution of
the Cyprus Problem.”
- The
applicants did not commence an action in the District Court to seek
payment of the compensation deposited in respect of the compulsory
acquisitions.
4. Application no. 1545/07 Chakarto and others
- The
application relates to property comprised of a vineyard and business
centre, containing 15 shops and three residences, in Limassol. The
applicants allege that they were transferred north of the Green Line
in Nicosia in 1974, as a result of the threat to their lives
following the events of July 1974 and the kidnapping and
disappearance of the fourth applicant’s husband in August 1974.
They were unable to return to their property.
- Hassan Houssein Chakarto now resides abroad but rents
a house in the “TRNC” built on Greek-Cypriot property;
Necla Cagis, Mumin Cakartas and Gokcen Bayar reside on Greek-Cypriot
property.
- In
April 2003 one of the applicants returned to Limassol. The property
was within a fenced-off area and was in a poor state of repair. The
applicants sought information regarding the property, with no
success. They subsequently appointed a lawyer who, in June 2003,
wrote to the Service for the Management of Turkish-Cypriot Properties
at the Ministry of the Interior, enclosing the title deeds and
seeking the return of the properties and compensation. On 19 July
2003, she received a reply in similar terms to those received by the
applicants in applications 4080/06 and 34776/06 (see paragraph 20
above).
5. Application no. 38902/05 Abni
- The application concerns two houses in Paphos
inherited by the applicant from her parents. She let these houses for
some time after moving to Nicosia. Following the events of summer
1974 she was not able to collect rent as she was not able to visit
the properties. In 2003 she visited the two houses as well as two
plots of land she had bought with her husband. They had been rented
to displaced Greek Cypriots by the Cypriot Government since 1974.
- The applicant currently resides on Turkish-Cypriot
property.
- The
applicant never applied to the Custodian to seek the return of her
property. She considered that in light of the jurisprudence of the
Supreme Court, any legal action would have been ineffective.
6. Application no. 1760/05 Kamil
- The
application concerns a plot of land (a house with fruit trees) in
Mari Village which was partially transferred to the applicant’s
mother by the applicant’s maternal grandfather in 1973, with
the remainder inherited following his death on an unspecified date.
The applicant’s grandfather was forced to leave the property in
1974 due to alleged acts of aggression by Greek Cypriots. The
applicant inherited the property following the death of his mother.
- The applicant, who resides abroad, took no steps to
seek to recover the property.
7. Application no. 3240/05 Salih
- The
application relates to property (including a house) in Limassol which
belonged to the applicant’s father. The applicant’s
father left the property in 1959 following an army posting to the
United Kingdom and the house was left empty. There has been no access
to the property since 1974.
- The applicant resides abroad.
- On
13 February 2001, following the death of his father, the applicant
wrote to the Land Registry of Cyprus asking for information regarding
the property. The Custodian consented to the transfer of the property
into the applicant’s name on 21 January 2005.
- The
applicant claimed that he instructed a solicitor to assist in the
recovery of the properties, to no avail.
B. Relevant domestic law and practice
1. Constitution
- Article 6 of the Constitution prohibits discrimination
between Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots.
- Article 13 grants the right to citizens to move freely
throughout the island and to reside in any part of it, subject to any
restrictions imposed by law and necessary for the purposes of defence
or public health or provided as punishment to be passed by a
competent court.
- Article 23 protects the right to property and provides
that no deprivation, restriction or limitation of any such
right shall be made except where it is imposed by law and is
absolutely necessary in the interests of public safety, public
health or public morals, town and country planning, the
development and use of any property for the promotion of the public
benefit or for the protection of the rights of others.
- Article 28 guarantees the right to equal treatment and
non discrimination.
- Article 144 enables a party to any judicial
proceedings to raise the question of the constitutionality of any law
or decision. However, the provisions of this Article were rendered
inoperative following the inter communal problems in 1963 and
the procedure for reference under the above provision is no longer
applicable. The Administration of Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Law 33/1964 was enacted in order to address a situation of emergency
and to set up the necessary judicial machinery for the continued
administration of justice. By virtue of this law, the two highest
courts, that is, the Constitutional Court and the High Court, were
merged into one, the Supreme Court of Cyprus, to which the
jurisdiction and powers of the two pre-existing courts were
transferred. The establishment and operation of the new Supreme Court
was held to be in conformity with the Constitution on the basis of
recognised principles of the Law of Necessity (the
Attorney-General of the Republic v. Mustafa Ibrahim and others,
(1964) C.L.R. 195). As the procedure for reference under Article 144
(1) is no longer applicable in cases other than those of the Family
Courts, questions of alleged unconstitutionality are treated as
issues of law in the proceedings, subject to revision on appeal in
due course, in so far as the lower courts are concerned. All courts
when dealing with a case are competent to examine questions of
alleged unconstitutionality arising in the case which are material
for the determination of any matter at issue.
- Article 146 vests exclusive jurisdiction in the
Supreme Court to adjudicate on complaints that administrative
decisions are contrary to the Constitution or any law, including
Convention law, or are made in excess of or in abuse of the powers
vested in any organ, authority or person.
2. The Turkish-Cypriot properties (Administration and
Other Matters) (Temporary Provisions) Law of 1991 (as amended) (“Law
139/1991”)
(a) Law 139/1991 prior to 7 May 2010
- Law 139/1991 (“the Law”) was enacted
according to its preamble to regulate the administration of
Turkish-Cypriot properties in the Republic of Cyprus:
“Whereas, because of the massive removal of the
Turkish-Cypriot population as a result of the Turkish invasion to the
areas occupied by the Turkish invasion forces and the prohibition by
such forces of the movement of such population within the areas of
the Republic of Cyprus, properties which consist of movable and
immovable property were abandoned,
And whereas it became essential for the protection of
those properties to take immediate measures,
And whereas the measures taken included the
administration of such properties by a special committee which was
constituted through administrative arrangements,
And whereas the regulation by law of the question of the
Turkish-Cypriot properties in the Republic became necessary ...”
- Section 2 provides definitions of relevant terms used
in the Law:
“‘Abnormal situation’ means the
situation created as a result of the Turkish invasion which continues
to exist until the Council of Ministers, by notification published in
the Official Gazette of the Republic, appoints a date for the
termination of such situation;
...
‘Turkish-Cypriot’ means a Turkish-Cypriot
who does not have his usual residence in the areas controlled by the
Republic and includes a company or other legal person which is
controlled by a Turkish-Cypriot, as well as by the Evcaf;
‘Turkish-Cypriot property’ includes every
property movable or immovable which belongs to a Turkish-Cypriot and
is situated in the areas under the control of the Republic and
includes Evcaf property.”
- Section 3 establishes the post of Custodian of
Turkish-Cypriot properties who is to administer such property in
accordance with the provisions of Law 139/1991 and exercise the
functions conferred on him by that Law during the abnormal situation
and until final settlement of this matter is reached.
- Section 5 stipulates that:
“Subject to the provisions of this Law, the
Custodian in administering Turkish-Cypriot properties and exercising
the functions conferred on him by this Law, shall have all the rights
and obligations which their Turkish-Cypriot owner would have:
Provided that, notwithstanding the amendment to the
principal law made by this Law, all acts or decisions which have been
done or taken by the Custodian, in accordance with the principal law,
shall be regarded as having been done or taken lawfully.”
- Section 6 sets out some specific functions of the
Custodian, without prejudice to the generality of section 5. These
include:
“(a) to administer every
Turkish-Cypriot property in accordance with the circumstances of each
case and to this end–
(i) to collect every sum which is due to the
beneficiary and to give the necessary receipts; ...
(ii) to collect and dispose of the produce of
such property in the most beneficial manner for the owner;
(iii) to make the necessary payments for the
fulfilment of obligations concerning the property under
administration;
(iv) to arrange for the necessary repairs,
improvements, cultivations, plantations or, where necessary, such
changes to the property which would be beneficial to the owner;
(v) to make arrangements, to enter, terminate
or cancel contracts or to undertake obligations or charges concerning
each such property and more specifically to lease same at the most
favourable terms for the owner; ...
(vi) to sell or otherwise dispose of every
such movable property which is subject to deterioration or which
because of its nature ought to be sold or disposed in the interest of
the owner;
(vii) generally to do everything which is
consequential to or necessary for the administration of
Turkish-Cypriot properties.
...
(c) To accept service of actions, reference
or other judicial process concerning Turkish-Cypriot property, to
represent and bind the owner of any Turkish-Cypriot property before
any judicial, administrative or other authority in the Republic or
anywhere else outside the Republic, to give or receive notifications
by virtue of the provisions of any Law applicable in connection with
Turkish-Cypriot property and to be present at local enquiries and
negotiations concerning such property.
(d) To administer the Fund of Turkish-Cypriot
properties which is established by virtue of section 11 of this Law;
...
Provided that in the case of immovable property, the
Custodian, in the exercise of his functions by virtue of this
section, cannot take actions as a result of which after the
termination of the operation of this Law–
(i) The owner would be other than the owner
at the date of entry into force of the present Law, except in
exceptional cases in which this would be beneficial for the owner or
necessary in the public interest; or
(ii) the right of the owner concerning the
property would be in any way restricted or charged more than what
would be absolutely necessary or beneficial for the property or the
owner or necessary in the public interest; ...”
- Section 7 requires the
Custodian, in administering the Turkish Cypriot
properties and in exercising his functions by virtue of Law 139/1991,
to look after the needs of refugees and at the same time serve the
interests of the owners of the said properties on the basis of
“prescribed criteria”.
- Pursuant to section 9 of Law
139/1991:
“The payment of any sum due to an owner of
Turkish-Cypriot property in relation to such property is suspended
during the abnormal situation which exists in the Republic of Cyprus
by reason of the Turkish occupation.”
- Section 11 establishes a
“Special Fund”:
“(1) A Special Fund under the name
‘Fund of Turkish-Cypriot Properties’ is constituted by
this Law and for the purposes thereof, which is under the
administration of the Custodian. In the Fund are deposited all
receipts and all payments are made therefrom, in accordance with the
provisions of this Law.
...”
- Section 15 provides that every person who pays any
debt due to a Turkish Cypriot to any person other than the Custodian;
or assumes possession of or in any way uses a Turkish-Cypriot
property in a manner other than that which is provided in Law
139/1991 is guilty of an offence and is liable to imprisonment not
exceeding three months or to a fine not exceeding one thousand pounds
or to both such penalties.
(b) Law 139/1991 after 7 May 2010
- Law 139/1991 was amended by Law No. 39(1) of 2010,
published in Official Gazette no. 4240 of 7 May 2010, by the
insertion of additional provisions. The following was inserted at the
end of section 3:
“Provided that in the exercise of his above
authority to administer Turkish-Cypriot properties during the
abnormal situation the Minister also has the power as custodian, to
lift by duly reasoned decision and under terms which are in his
judgment appropriate the custodianship concerning particular
Turkish-Cypriot property or part of it, after taking into account in
connection with the administration the situation and circumstances of
each case and weighing all factors relevant to this matter, including
whether the Turkish-Cypriot owner of the property or his heirs or
successors in title, as the case may be, occupy property belonging to
a Greek-Cypriot in the areas not under the Republic’s control:
Provided further that inter alia the following factors
weigh in favour of lifting the Custodianship of Turkish-Cypriot
property–
(a) that the matter concerns the
administration of property which at the time it came under its regime
of custodianship, its Turkish-Cypriot owner had ordinary residence
abroad where he had gone at any time before or after the Turkish
invasion of 1974, and the said owner continues to reside there or has
returned or intends to return from abroad for permanent settlement in
the Government controlled areas of the Republic,
(b) that the matter concerns the
administration of property which at any time after it came under its
regime of custodianship by the Custodian the Turkish-Cypriot owner of
the property settled permanently in the Government controlled areas
of the Republic and continues to be constantly settled there
permanently ,
(c) that the property under administration
concerns a house which its Turkish Cypriot owner was living [in]
and occupying before the Turkish invasion of 1974 and intends to live
in it upon his coming from the occupied areas for permanent
settlement in the Government controlled areas of the Republic.”
- A new section 6A was inserted
into the Law:
“(1) Violation of a right guaranteed by
the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms or the Protocols thereto ratified by Law, owing
to the application of a provision of this Law, is actionable.
(2) A person alleging violation of any right
guaranteed by the above Convention and or its Protocols owing to the
application of a provision of this Law in his case, is entitled, in
case of rejection of his relevant claim by the Minister, to have
recourse to the district courts by way of action brought against the
Republic and the Custodian for the alleged violation, and to claim
for the violation the remedies provided for in this section:
Provided that where the remedies sought include a claim
by the owner for an order of the court that his property under
custodianship under the provisions of this law be restored to him,
the action is also directed against the person lawfully in occupation
of the property.
(3) In determining in an action under
sub-section (2) whether the plaintiff’s right was violated the
court examines the circumstances of the case and takes into account
the factors which the European Court of Human Rights takes into
account as relevant to the issue to be determined as these transpire
from its relevant case-law on the matter.
(4) Where in an action under this section the
court determines that the plaintiff’s right was violated, he is
entitled in the action:
(a) to compensation for any pecuniary damage,
loss, costs, and expenses actually incurred on account of the
violation,
(b) to compensation for non-pecuniary damage
or injury sustained on account of the violation,
(c) to legal costs actually incurred by him
on account of the violation,
(d) to the issue of a binding order of
recognition of right under the Courts of Justice Laws,
(e) to any other remedy that the court has
power to grant in exercise of its civil jurisdiction under the Courts
of Justice Laws or any other law for the time being in force, or the
applicable general principles of law.
(5) For ascertaining the damage attributable
to the violation as provided for in subsection (4) and assessing and
awarding compensation under the said sub-section, the court takes
into account the criteria and factors taken into account for this
purpose by the European Court of Human Rights as they transpire from
its case-law in cases of violation of the right concerned which is
guaranteed by the above Convention or its Protocols.
Where in an action under this section the court issues
an order for the restoration to the plaintiff of property under
custodianship, the Custodian and the property’s lawful occupier
are entitled in the action by relevant respective counterclaims
against the plaintiff, to any amounts of costs that each has actually
incurred for repairs, improvements, developments, building and
conversions he has effected on the property under this Law:
Provided that the said right of the lawful occupier is
only for costs of repairs, improvements, developments, building and
conversions he has effected on the property with the Custodian’s
permission.
(7) Where the Custodian for purposes of
compliance with a judgment by the court in an action under this
section decides to lift the custodianship of Turkish-Cypriot
property, he is entitled by action against the owner in whose favour
the said judgment was issued, or against his heirs or successors in
title, as the case may be, to any amount of costs he has actually
incurred for repairs, improvements, developments, building and
conversions he has effected on the property under this Law while it
was under custodianship:
Provided that a person lawfully in occupation of the
said property at the time of the judgment of the court or of the
above decision of the Custodian and subsequently forced to abandon it
as a result of the court judgment or the lifting of its
custodianship, is entitled by action against the above owner, his
heirs and successors in title, to any amount of costs he has actually
incurred for repairs, improvements, developments, building and
conversions he has effected on the property with the Custodian’s
permission whilst he was in occupation.”
3. Relevant domestic court judgments
(a) Attorney General of the Republic v.
Muazzez Edhem Bahchecioglou and Isa Edhem (1998) 1 AAD 426
- The plaintiffs, Turkish Cypriots living in England
since 1962, were owners of three plots of land and a house. In 1976
refugee housing was built on one of the plots; the other two plots
and the house were granted to refugees for temporary use. The
plaintiffs filed a civil action before the District Court of Limassol
seeking eviction orders, rents as from the day of trespass and
exemplary damages.
- On 29 September 1995, the District Court found that
the respondent had committed trespass. It held that Law 139/1991 was
not applicable to the case as no evidence had been put before it
establishing that the plaintiffs had abandoned their property as a
result of the Turkish invasion of 1974. The court dismissed the
plaintiffs’ claim for exemplary damages and awarded them
ordinary damages for trespass, noting that they had, during the
proceedings, withdrawn their application for return of the house. The
Attorney-General appealed the judgment.
- Handing down its judgment, the Supreme Court set aside
the findings of the first-instance court concerning the
non-applicability of Law 139/1991 to the case. Relying on the
definition of “Turkish-Cypriot” in section 2 of the Law
(see paragraph 41 above), the court concluded that the definition of
“abandoned property” had been specified by the legislator
as the property of a Turkish Cypriot who did not have his ordinary
residence in the areas controlled by the Republic. The meaning of the
term “abandoned properties” was therefore unambiguous and
Law 139/1991 applied in the claimants’ case.
- The Supreme Court ordered that the case be sent back
to the District Court for retrial to determine the amount of
compensation from the date of trespass as ascertained by the first
instance court until the date of entry into force of Law 139/1991 on
1 July 1991 and to determine whether the relevant provisions of Law
139/1991 were constitutional. It noted that if the answer to the
latter question was positive then the claim for damages for the
period after 1 July 1991 would have to be dismissed; if negative,
then damages would have to be assessed for the period after 1 July
1991.
- The case was eventually settled at the retrial stage
and the constitutionality issue was therefore not determined.
(b) Kitsis v. the Attorney-General
- On 20 July 2001, the Supreme Court rejected the
argument that Law 139/1991 infringed Article 23 of the Constitution
by requisitioning property indefinitely, noting that the law did not
provide for requisition or acquisition but administration, and for a
temporary period only.
(c) A.Ch Solomonides Ltd and others v.
the Attorney-General and the Minister of the Interior acting as the
Custodian of Turkish-Cypriot properties
- The Custodian initiated a civil action for possession
of certain properties in accordance with Law 139/1991. The defendants
submitted that they were in possession of the relevant properties in
accordance with their agreement with the Vakf (a public benefit
foundation) and that Vakf properties were excluded from the
application of the Law.
- On 15 February 2002, in an interim judgment, the
District Court decided that properties owned by the Vakf were not
excluded from Law 139/1991. It considered that section 2 of the Law
was contrary to Article 23 of the Constitution but that it could be
justified on the basis of the doctrine of necessity for the
administration and protection of the abandoned Turkish Cypriot
property. The defendants appealed.
- On 29 September 2003 the Supreme Court dismissed the
appeal. It held that following the Turkish invasion and occupation,
the State was entitled to take measures which entailed limitation or
even deprivation of the rights and liberties set out in the
Constitution. Law 139/1991 introduced measures to allow the State to
meet the needs that arose due to the Turkish invasion and, the court
concluded, the measures were both necessary and proportionate.
(d) Arif Moustafa v. the Ministry of
Interior (case no. 125/2004)
- The plaintiff, a Turkish Cypriot, was the owner of a
property in the district of Limassol since 1963. Following the
enactment of Law 139/1991, his property was vested in the Custodian
and used by two Greek Cypriots. In September 2002, the plaintiff
moved from the occupied area of Cyprus to the government-controlled
area and requested that his house be returned to him. His request was
dismissed on the ground that as a result of the Turkish invasion of
1974, all Turkish-Cypriot properties had been vested in the Custodian
until final settlement of the Cypriot problem.
- The plaintiff lodged a recourse against this decision
with the Supreme Court under Article 146 of the Constitution (see
paragraph 39 above). He contended, inter alia, that he was
entitled to recover his property as he resided in the
government-controlled area, relying on section 2 of the Law (see
paragraph 41 above). The Attorney General argued that “residence”
was determined on the day the Law entered into force and not at any
subsequent time so that from the moment the Custodian took over the
administration of Turkish-Cypriot property, such administration would
continue as long as the Law was in force.
- On 24 September 2004 the Supreme Court rejected the
Government’s interpretation of section 2, finding that such an
interpretation would constitute an illogical, unjustifiable and
excessive limitation of the fundamental constitutional right to
property. It referred to the preamble of the Law (see paragraph 40
above) and held that:
“...
the Legislator also decided, as it appears from the definition of the
term ‘Turkish-Cypriot’, as his criterion, that only in
the case where the owners of the properties in question are not
resident in the areas controlled by the Republic is their protection
necessary, evidently as those Turkish properties whose owners live in
the areas controlled by the Republic do not need such protection,
thus establishing a criterion which does not apply generally to
Turkish-Cypriots en masse but specifically to each owner. The
ordinary residence of the specific owner in the areas controlled by
the Republic, as the criterion of the same Legislator, puts the said
specific properties on the same footing as all the other properties
there and rules out the intervention or further intervention of the
Custodian in their protection and administration. As things are, it
does not matter whether the specific owner acquired his ordinary
residence in the areas controlled by the Republic before or after
1.7.1991 and whether he returns to his ordinary residence there and
seeks to live in his own house. In such a case, the criterion of the
Law itself excludes the property from the administration of the
Custodian. And, furthermore, it is certainly not only, to avoid
referring to elementary human logic, the normal rules of
interpretation which dictate this view but also the fundamental
principles of interpretation which require the interpretation of the
laws to be compatible with constitutional rights and to be
analogously restrictive. If the Law were to be interpreted otherwise
so as to cover the continuation of the administration of
Turkish-Cypriot property after the reestablishment of the ordinary
residence of the owner in the areas controlled by the Republic, in
all probability it would constitute an unjustified and excessive,
even as regards the necessity expressly stated in the Law as
justifying this, restriction of the fundamental constitutional right
to property. This approach also arises from the jurisprudence of the
ECHR as regards the validity of the principle of proportionality, as
an objective and reasonable criterion, concerning the restrictions
which may be placed on the basis of discrimination in violation of
Article 14 of the Convention (which is reflected in Article 28 of the
Constitution). It is sufficient for me to refer to a very recent
decision in the case of Aziz v Cyprus, 69949/01, 22.6.2004.”
- Accordingly, the Supreme Court upheld the recourse and
annulled the decision in question.
- The Attorney General filed an appeal against the
judgment but withdrew this on 13 February 2005. The plaintiff’s
property was returned to him on 22 February 2006.
(e) Ali Kiamil, as the heir of Kiamil
Ali Riza v. the Minister of the Interior acting as the Custodian for
protection of Turkish-Cypriot properties (case no. 133/2005)
- The plaintiff, a Turkish Cypriot, was appointed
administrator of the estate of his deceased father, who owned a half
share of a plot of land in the district of Limassol which had vested
in the Custodian. Part of the property had been granted to refugees
for temporary use and part was compulsorily purchased, with the
Custodian’s consent, for public interest purposes. An amount in
respect of compensation for the compulsory acquisition had been
deposited in the Special Fund of Turkish-Cypriot properties (see
paragraph 47 above). However, payment of the sum to the plaintiff was
suspended, in accordance with section 9 of Law 139/1991, for as long
as the abnormal situation continued to exist (see paragraph 46
above).
- The plaintiff sought the transfer of the property to
the legal heirs and payment of the amount due as a consequence of the
compulsory acquisition. Although the Custodian gave his consent to
the issue of letters of administration, he noted that the
Turkish-Cypriot owners and their heirs did not have the right to the
use of their properties vested in the Custodian and were barred from
exercising any property rights without the permission of the
Custodian as long as the abnormal situation created by the Turkish
occupation continued. He further noted that the request for payment
of the compensation could not be satisfied because, in accordance
with section 9 of Law 139/91, payment of any amount owed to an owner
of Turkish Cypriot property was suspended.
- The plaintiff lodged a recourse requesting the
recovery of his property and claiming that Law 139/1991 was contrary
to Article 23 of the Constitution and the constitutional principle of
equality, and that the compulsory acquisition had been unlawful.
- On 19 January 2007 the Supreme Court dismissed the
recourse. It found that, as the plaintiff had been living in the
occupied areas, Law 139/1991 was applicable to the case. It further
found that the plaintiff was not prevented from fulfilling his
obligations as administrator of the deceased’s estate and from
distributing and transferring the property to the lawful heirs. He
was only prevented temporarily from possessing and administering the
property. This limitation did not affect his rights and interests,
which would be granted to him when the abnormal situation ended.
- The court also dismissed the plaintiff’s claim
as to the incompatibility of Law 139/1991 with Article 23 of the
Constitution. In this respect it observed that the State, in 1974,
had found itself faced with circumstances which necessitated the
creation of a state of emergency. The State had, therefore, the duty
to adopt measures even if these limited the fundamental rights and
liberties protected by the Constitution. The mass movement of Turkish
Cypriots and the abandonment by them of their properties in areas
which were controlled by the Republic of Cyprus gave rise to a need
to protect these properties for their owners’ benefit, as
stated in the preamble of the Law (see paragraph 40 above). The
enactment and adoption of the Law was completely justified.
- The plaintiff lodged an appeal. The judgment in the
appeal was handed down on 15 September 2009. The court noted that the
applicants did not request the Custodian to return the property. It
further observed that issues arose as to the constitutionality of
section 9 of Law 139/1991 and it encouraged applicants to go to the
District Courts, which had jurisdiction to examine the matter.
(f) Ahmet Mulla Suleyman v. the
Republic of Cyprus , through (i) the Minister of the Interior as the
Custodian of Turkish-Cypriot properties; and (ii) the Director of
Management of Turkish-Cypriot properties (case no. 99/2005)
- The plaintiff was a Turkish Cypriot who had abandoned
his property as a result of the events of 1974 and had since been
living in the occupied part of Cyprus. Part of his property had been
granted to refugees for temporary use and part of the property had
been compulsorily acquired for public benefit purposes.
- The plaintiff requested damages for the part of his
property that had been compulsory acquired and the return of the
remainder of his property. The requests were rejected and the
plaintiff filed a recourse before the Supreme Court. He complained
that Law 139/1991 infringed Articles 6, 13, 23 and 28 of the
Constitution (see paragraphs 34-37 above) and Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 of the Convention. He further claimed that following the
relaxation of restrictions on movement from the occupied areas to the
areas controlled by the Republic, the abnormal situation on which the
above mentioned law was based had ceased to exist. He relied on
the Court’s judgments in the case of Loizidou v. Turkey,
18 December 1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996 VI
and Aziz v. Cyprus, no. 69949/01, ECHR 2004 V.
- On 21 May 2007 the Supreme Court dismissed the
recourse. It reaffirmed the need to protect the abandoned properties
of Turkish Cypriots and to help displaced Greek Cypriots who had lost
their property that had been created following the Turkish
occupation. The abnormal situation still existed and would only cease
to exist following a decision of the Council of Ministers to that
effect, in accordance with section 2 of the Law. Turkish Cypriots
were not deprived of their property as they continued to be the
owners, notwithstanding the fact that during the abnormal situation,
the administration of the properties was vested in the Custodian. The
court further considered that the fact that the abnormal situation
had continued for so many years did not affect the temporary nature
of the Law as it did not intend to impose permanent limitations or to
deprive the lawful owners of their rights. The measures adopted were
absolutely necessary and proportionate to the situation which had to
be faced.
- With regard to Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 the court
noted:
“Article 1 of the Convention’s protocol,
after recognising the right of every natural or legal person to
peaceful enjoyment of his property, refers to the exceptions, to set
aside the right for public interest purposes under conditions
provided for by the law and by the general principles of public
international law. The protection afforded by Article 1 does not take
away the right of the state to enact such laws as it considers to be
necessary for controlling the use of property in accordance with the
general interest ...
The exception of Article 1 exists in the present case.
Law 139/91 was mandated for reasons of public interest which are
obvious. On the contrary in Turkey’s case the deprivation of
the rights of Ms. Loizidou was made without any legal basis and of
course without the existence of any law. Let us not forget that the
occupied part of Cyprus does not constitute a state recognised by the
international community. Moreover, in the case of Law 139/91
ownership remains with the Turkish-Cypriot owners and the Custodian
simply has the responsibility and competence to administer the
property until the end of the abnormal situation ...”
- The plaintiff lodged an appeal before the Supreme
Court but the appeal was withdrawn on 15 June 2010 in order for an
action to be lodged with the District Court in accordance with the
amended Law 139/1991 (see paragraph 50 above).
(g) Şermın Kemal Balci (appeal
62/2008)
- On 18 May 2010 the
Supreme Court, hearing an appeal from the District Court, handed down
its judgment in a case where the plaintiff had argued that Law
139/1991 violated the Constitution and the Convention. It noted that
the constitutionality of Law 139/1991 was well-established in Cypriot
jurisprudence, referring to its judgment in Solomonides. It
accordingly dismissed the appeal.
(h) Zehra Kemal Ahmet and Nuray Kemal
Ahmet v. the Republic of Cyprus, via the Minister of the Interior as
Custodian of Turkish-Cypriot properties (case no. 1011/2004)
- The plaintiffs were
Turkish Cypriots residing in the occupied part of Cyprus. They filed
a recourse before the Supreme Court challenging the decision of the
Custodian to refuse to return the property they owned in Larnaca,
arguing that they had not abandoned their property following the
Turkish invasion and that, accordingly, Law 139/1991 did not apply.
- On 8 June 2007 the
Supreme Court dismissed the recourse. It relied, inter
alia, on the
judgments of the Supreme Court in the cases of
Solomonides, Ali Kiamil
and Suleyman
and (see paragraphs 57-59, 65-70
and 71-75 above).
- On 14 February 2011 the Supreme Court sitting as an
appellate court dismissed the plaintiffs’ appeal. It noted the
Court’s decision in Sofi v. Cyprus (striking out
dec.), no. 18163/04, 14 January 2010, and the Government’s
position as presented to this Court in that case. However, it did not
consider that in making a proposal for friendly settlement the
Government had accepted that Law 139/1991 violated the Convention. It
further considered that their undertaking to amend the Law was
irrelevant, as the amendment concerned merely the lifting of
custodianship for Turkish-Cypriot property owners who permanently
resided abroad before or after 1974.
- In the case before, the court noted that the
plaintiffs’ claim was concerned with the applicability of Law
139/1991 and accordingly concluded that the only issue raised in the
case was whether the Custodian was a trespasser. This was a matter of
private law and there was therefore no jurisdiction in the case.
(i) Özgün Ahmet Mümtaz
(Soyer) v. the Attorney-General
- The plaintiff lodged an action for trespass and
alleged a violation of his property rights as protected by Article 23
of the Constitution. On 17 February 2011 the District Court
handed down its judgment.
- The court considered whether the applicant’s
property fell within the scope of Law 139/1991. It noted that the Law
applied to properties owned by Turkish-Cypriots who did not have
their usual residence in the territories controlled by the Republic.
It referred to the Supreme Court judgment in Solomonides and
considered that this decision confirmed that Law 139/1991 could be
justified on the basis of necessity. The judge emphasised that
ownership of properties was not transferred under Law 139/1991: only
the administration vested in the Custodian. Accordingly the measures
did not restrict or deprive the owners of their rights and were
absolutely necessary.
- The plaintiff’s claim was accordingly dismissed.
3. Information concerning the operation of the amended
Law
(a) Applications for lifting of
custodianship
- Between the entry into force of the amendments to Law
139/1991 on 7 May 2010 and 17 August 2011, when the Government
provided statistical information to the Court as to the operation of
the amended Law, approximately 115 applications were made to the
Custodian requesting the lifting of custodianship over
Turkish-Cypriot property.
- 102 of the applications lodged concerned sales of
properties to Greek-Cypriot buyers. In these cases, the relevant sale
agreement was lodged with the Land Registry for completion of the
necessary procedures prior to referral to the Custodian for a
decision on whether to lift the custodianship. Of these, 83
applications were still under examination by the Land Registry. The
remaining 19 cases were referred by the Land Registry to the
Custodian for decision.
- Of the 19 sales cases referred to him, the Custodian
decided to lift custodianship in 2, in both cases reversing prior
negative decisions made before 7 May 2010. He declined to lift the
custodianship in 8 cases. In the remaining 9 case, inquiries as to
the facts and circumstances were ongoing.
- Of the 13 applications lodged which did not concern
sales, inquiries by the Custodian as to the facts and circumstances
were ongoing in 12. These 12 outstanding cases concern the return of
property (6 cases), the return of property for occupation by the
owners (2 cases), requests for negotiations for the purchase of the
property by the Government (3 cases) and a claim that the property
does not fall within the scope of Law 139/1991 (1 case). In the only
decided case, custodianship was lifted under an agreement with the
Turkish-Cypriot owner following negotiations for the purchase of the
property by the Government at an agreed price reflecting its present
day value.
- It can therefore be seen that of the 32 applications
lodged between 7 May 2010 and 17 August 2011 and put before the
Custodian for decision, inquiries were continuing in respect of 21.
In the 11 concluded cases, he agreed to lift the custodianship in 3
and refused to do so in 8.
- The Custodian also examined under the Law as amended a
further 34 applications made prior to 7 May 2010. Examination of all
34 applications has been concluded.
- A total of 29 of these applications concerned sales
and the Custodian agreed to lift custodianship in 8 of them. He
declined to do so in 21 cases.
- He agreed to lift the custodianship in the 5 non-sales
cases. 4 of these concerned agreements with the Turkish-Cypriot
owners following negotiations for the purchase of the property by the
Government at an agreed price reflecting its present day value. In
the remaining case custodianship was lifted in respect of a transfer
under a will.
- In summary, of the 34 cases lodged prior to 7 May
2010, custodianship was lifted in 13 cases and was not lifted in 21
cases.
- In total, the Custodian has decided 45 applications to
date. In 16 cases he lifted custodianship and in 29 he refused to do
so.
- In 13 of the 16 cases in which custodianship was
lifted, the owners had their ordinary residence abroad and did not
occupy Greek-Cypriot property in the north of Cyprus. In 2 of them
the owners were permanently settled in areas controlled by the
Republic. In the remaining case the owner was permanently settled in
the north of the island and custodianship was lifted in order to
enable the administrator of the estate of a deceased Turkish-Cypriot
owner to sell part of the property to cover administration costs and
enable distribution of the property to the heirs. Aside from this
case, all other cases in which custodianship was lifted concerned
sales, either to Greek-Cypriot buyers or to the Government.
- All 29 cases in which the Custodian refused to lift
custodianship were sales cases. In 7 of them, the owners were
permanently settled in the north of the island and occupied
Greek-Cypriot property. In these cases the occupation of
Greek-Cypriot property was a factor taken into account by the
Custodian but was not, in most of these cases, the only factor. In 5
cases the owners alleged that they had their ordinary residence
abroad but failed to substantiate the claim despite being requested
to do so and in 5 cases the owners failed to provide any details
about their place of residence despite being requested to do so. In
these cases the failure to provide the information was a factor taken
into account by the Custodian as it was possible that they occupied
Greek-Cypriot property in the north of the island. It was not,
however, the only factor. Other relevant factors included low sale
prices indicating that buyers were seeking to take advantage of the
abnormal situation in order to make a profit at the expense of the
owner. In 3 cases the owners had their ordinary residence abroad but
also occupied Greek-Cypriot property in the north of the island. In
these cases the occupation of Greek-Cypriot property was the only
reason for not lifting the custodianship. Finally, in 9 cases the
owners had their ordinary residence abroad and did not occupy
Greek-Cypriot property in the north of the island. In these cases the
Custodian weighed all relevant factors; in most cases the sale price
was significantly lower than the property’s market value.
(b) Payment of compensation in decided
cases
- Only 3 of the 45 cases decided by the Custodian
involved claims for compensation. In 2 cases, civil proceedings had
previously been lodged in the District Courts for damages for
trespass (loss of rents). These proceedings were withdrawn following
the lifting of the custodianship. In the remaining case, the buyer
filed civil proceedings in the District Court under the amended law
on 16 November 2010 seeking damages for a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 as a result of the Custodian’s decision not to
lift the custodianship of a property subject to a sale agreement
with the Turkish-Cypriot owners. The Custodian subsequently agreed to
lift custodianship and the proceedings were withdrawn.
(c) Pending court cases
- Following the entry into force of the amendments to
Law 139/1991, 6 civil actions were filed with the District Court
against the Republic of Cyprus and the Custodian alleging a violation
of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and claiming compensation and other
remedies.
- Of these, 4 actions concerned refusals by the
Custodian prior to 7 May 2010 to lift custodianship so that the
property could be transferred under sale agreements. Of these, 1 (the
District Court proceedings lodged by a buyer described in paragraph 96
above) was subsequently withdrawn. In another an application has been
made to the Custodian for re-examination, which is pending. The
plaintiffs in 3 of the cases claim compensation for damage and loss
caused by the refusal to lift custodianship and thereby allow a
property transfer to be effected pursuant to a sale agreement, as
well as general damages for the alleged violation of the Convention
as a result of the custodianship. They also seek declaratory
judgments that they are entitled to exercise their ownership rights,
and orders lifting the custodianship. In the case in which
re-examination has been requested, no compensation is sought: the
claim brought by the heir of a deceased Turkish-Cypriot owner was for
a declaratory judgment recognising her right to the property and an
order lifting the custodianship.
- The remaining 2 actions concern a refusal of the
Custodian before 7 May 2010 to lift custodianship and return the
property to the owners free of occupation. Damages for loss of use
and for an alleged violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 are also
claimed.
- In conclusion, five cases are pending before the
District Courts. At the time of submission of the information, the
exchange of pleadings had not yet been completed in the cases.
COMPLAINTS
- The applicants complained under Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 about the restrictions on their use of their property within
the Republic of Cyprus.
- With the exception of the applicants in application
nos. 1545/07 and 3240/05, the applicants also complained of
interference with their right to respect for their homes under
Article 8.
- With the exception of the applicants in application
nos. 38902/05, 1760/05 and 3240/05, they further invoked Articles 6
and 14 of the Convention in this regard.
- With the exception of the applicants in application
nos. 4080/06, 34776/06, 1760/05 and 3240/05, the applicants also
invoked Article 13 of the Convention in this regard.
- The applicant in application no. 34776/06 further
relied on Article 3 of Protocol No. 4 and argued that insofar as
Law 139/1991 prevented him from living in his property and thus
within the territory controlled by the Cypriot Government, he had
effectively been expelled from his own country.
- The applicant in application no. 1760/05 also
complained about the eviction itself and the level of force used. He
further complained about the death of his applicant’s
grandfather which he alleged occurred as a result of his becoming a
refugee and having his land confiscated. His application was directed
against Greece and the United Kingdom, in addition to Cyprus.
THE LAW
I. JOINDER
- Given
their similar factual and legal background, the Court decides that
the nine applications should be joined pursuant to Rule 42 § 1
of the Rules of Court.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ARTICLES 8 AND 14 OF THE
CONVENTION AND ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1
- The
applicants principally complained of an unjustified interference with
their right to respect for property as a consequence of the actions
of the Custodian pursuant to Law 139/1991. The majority of the
applicants also complained of an unjustified interference with their
right to respect for their homes and that they had been discriminated
against (see paragraphs 102 103 above).
- Article
8 of the Convention provides:
“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.”
- Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 provides:
“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.”
- Article
14 provides:
“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.”
A. The parties’ submissions on exhaustion of
domestic remedies as a result of the amended Law
1. The Government
- The
Government contended that the amendment of Law 139/1991 ensured that
all the applicants could now access the courts and rely on alleged
violations of their rights under the Convention. The available
remedies were wide-reaching and reflected the approach of this Court.
The Government therefore argued, on the basis of Demopoulos and
Others v. Turkey (dec.), nos. 46113/99, 3843/02, 13751/02,
13466/03, 10200/04, 14163/04, 19993/04 and 21819/04, ECHR 2010 ...,
that the applicants should be required to exhaust the remedy provided
by the amendment to Law 139/1991. In particular, the remedy proposed
offered guarantees of impartiality and independence as regards the
judicial system. As the Court held in Demopoulos, cited above,
§ 87, the fact that the remedy did not exist at the time the
applicants had lodged their applications was not an obstacle to the
requirement that they now exhaust it. There was nothing in the
amending Law to limit the new remedies to only those applications
made after its entry into force. It was therefore clear that the
amended Law applied prospectively and retrospectively, and was
accordingly available to applicants who had already introduced an
application to the Court.
- Specifically as regards the provisions of the amended
Law, the Government noted the following. First, while the Custodian
had discretion to decide to lift custodianship, his discretion was
subject to judicial control and could therefore not be exercised
arbitrarily. Reasons would have to be provided. Second, the remedies
available to the domestic courts under the amending law were the same
as those which could be awarded by the Court when finding a
violation, including restoration of property in addition to
compensation for pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage. In particular,
domestic courts were required to take into account, when deciding on
the appropriate redress, the criteria and factors taken into
consideration by the Court. Third, the new remedy provided by the law
was significantly different from an Article 146 recourse: challenging
an administrative action as being illegal under Article 146 of the
Constitution and challenging it as amounting to an interference under
the Convention were different things. Fourth, as regards the
applicants’ contention that the law of necessity would prevent
the courts from finding a violation, the case-law to which the
applicants referred in support of their argument was developed in the
context of Article 146 of the Constitution and not on the basis of
the amended Law which offered remedies based on the Convention
itself. If necessity was invoked by the District Court in the context
of any future application, it could be that this Court would also be
persuaded that the interference was justified on this basis. Fifth,
the prior examination of a claim by an administrative authority was
standard practice across Europe and could not be viewed as hindering
access to court. In the event of a negative decision by the
Custodian, the applicants would be entitled to go directly to the
District Court to challenge the decision as being contrary to the
Convention. They would not be required first to commence an Article
146 recourse. Sixth, the terms of the Custodian’s discretion to
award restitution were wide enough to enable him to award
compensation for loss of use. In any event, if the Custodian refused
such compensation, the applicants would be able to go to the District
Court relying on the Convention. Seventh, while Article 9 of Law
139/1991 suspended payment of any sum due to a Turkish Cypriot, it
did not suspend the right to compensation for a violation of
Convention rights. Section 9 related to the Special Fund established
under section 11, which in turn related to rents and other sums
received from tenants of the properties. In respect of cases of
compulsory acquisition, such as Durmus, the properties in
question were no longer under custodianship and it was open to
applicants to complain to the Supreme Court or to the District Court
regarding any delays in payment of compensation. Finally, as regards
the requirement to pay for improvements to the property, the
applicants could raise any argument regarding the compatibility of
the Law with the Convention before the domestic courts.
- In
conclusion, the Government emphasised that mere doubts as to the
prospects of success of national proceedings did not absolve the
applicants from the obligation to exhaust the remedy proposed.
2. The applicants
(a) The applicants in Kazali,
Mustafa, Nouri and Kamil
- The
applicants contended that the amendments to Law 139/1991 could not be
relied upon by the Government as a ground for arguing non exhaustion
in their cases. First, there was nothing in the amended Law to
indicate that it had retrospective application and it could therefore
only apply to those whose applications were introduced after its
enactment. Second, the applicants emphasised that the assessment of
whether domestic remedies had been exhausted was generally to be
carried out by reference to the date on which the application was
lodged. They contended that the present cases did not fall within the
limited exceptions to that rule and distinguished their cases from
that of Demopoulos and Others, where the remedy was introduced
to provide redress for some 1,400 pending applications raising
similar issues. However, far fewer cases were pending against Cyprus
and the Court could easily deal with these cases without applying the
exception to the general rule.
- The
applicants further contended that years after the filing of the
applications and the exchange of pleadings, it would be unjust and
unfair to make them resort to new remedies the effectiveness of which
was in their view doubtful. There were no examples of how the amended
Law would operate to offer redress to applicants. The applicants
argued that in Demopoulos and Others, the activities of the
Immovable Property Commission were under the Court’s scrutiny
for a sufficient period of time before the effectiveness of the
Commission was decided by the Court. They also referred to a number
of cases where the Court had refrained from requiring applicants to
resort to domestic remedies at the just satisfaction stage (citing De
Wilde, Ooms and Versyp v. Belgium (Article 50), 10
March 1972, § 16, Series A no. 14; Barberà,
Messegué and Jabardo v. Spain (Article 50), 13 June 1994,
§ 17, Series A no. 285 C; and Camp and Bourimi v. the
Netherlands, no. 28369/95, § 43, ECHR 2000 X), and
noted that in the present cases the Court would consider just
satisfaction claims together with the merits.
- As
to the specific provisions of the amended Law, the applicants made
several comments. First, they submitted that the new power in
section 3 of the law for the Custodian to lift custodianship
allowed him unfettered discretion. As a result, the administrative
remedy lacked clarity and transparency and was insufficient as a
means of redress. Second, they argued that it was implicit that if
restitution was granted by the Custodian, no compensation would be
available for loss of use. There was nothing in the amended Law to
grant the Custodian power to award such compensation. Third, the
applicants emphasised that section 6A of the amended law provided
that any redress was dependent on the domestic courts finding a
violation of the Convention. This did not modify the existing
position, where it was open to the applicants to argue before the
courts that the custodianship regime, and the refusal to return their
properties, constituted a violation of the Convention, and in
particular of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. As the Supreme Court had
found in Kitsis and Solomonides (see paragraphs 56 and
57-59 above) that the custodianship was necessary, the applicants
seeking redress under the amended law would be in no better position.
In Suleyman, the Supreme Court had expressly considered the
terms of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and found the restrictions on
Turkish-Cypriot property owners to be necessary (see paragraphs
71-75 above). The applicants noted in this regard that the respondent
Government in their observations still refused to accept that any
violation of the Convention had occurred. Fourth, the requirement
that applicants make a request to the Custodian prior to any right
arising to raise an action in the district courts hindered direct
application to the courts. Further, under Article 146(6) of the
Convention, an unfavourable administrative act would first require to
be challenged for abuse or excess of power, illegality or
unconstitutionality. Thus access to the District Court would only be
secured after such a challenge, rendering the procedure excessively
cumbersome. Fifth, the amended Law did not explain what would be the
effect of section 9 of the Law, which stipulated that the payment of
any sum due to a Turkish-Cypriot owner was suspended during the
abnormal situation prevailing in Cyprus. The provision had not been
amended and the policy of the Government to date had been not to pay
any compensation due to a Turkish Cypriot, even where there had been
a compulsory acquisition. Sixth, the Law required Turkish Cypriots to
pay for buildings and conversions effected on their properties
without their consent.
- As
to the information provided by the Government on the operation of the
amended Law, the applicants considered it striking that not a single
property had been returned unfettered to its Turkish-Cypriot owner.
In practice, the decision to lift custodianship was conditional on
the alienation of the owners’ property rights and the foregoing
of compensation, including for loss of use. The present applicants
did not wish to sell: they sought the return of their properties and
compensation for loss of use. They further agued that the criteria
were applied by the Custodian in an arbitrary and non-transparent
way. As to challenge in the courts pursuant to section 6A, the
absence of any possibility in the amended Law for compensation for
loss of use was borne out by the practice of the Custodian not to
award compensation. As a consequence, the applicants argued that any
cause of action in the courts was illusory. They referred to three
recent judgments which post-dated the entry into force of the
amendments (see paragraphs 76-83 above) to support their arguments.
(b) The applicants in Durmus and
Osman
- The
applicants adopted the submissions of the applicants in Kazali,
Mustafa, Nouri and Kamil. In particular, they
disagreed that the amendments to Law 139/1991 had resolved the
violation which lay at the root of their complaints and considered in
any event that their case could be distinguished from the case of
Demopoulos and Others, cited above. In particular, they
emphasised that the Demopoulos decision was published
following the judgment in Xenides-Arestis v. Turkey, no.
46347/99, 22 December 2005, where the Court decided to suspend
consideration of all pending applications raising the same issues
pending the implementation of relevant general measures adopted
pursuant to the judgment. The passage of five years before the
inadmissibility decision in Demopoulos and Others was adopted
was critical to the Court’s finding that the new remedy was
effective, as was the fact that the Committee of Ministers had
enjoyed the opportunity to supervise the execution of the previous
judgment.
- In
their contention the respondent Government had failed to establish
that the new remedy offered reasonable or realistic prospects of
success. The Custodian’s discretion to allow restitution in a
particular case was unfettered and therefore did not comply with the
requirement of lawfulness. The applicants further highlighted that
the Supreme Court had ruled against the payment of compensation to
Turkish Cypriots, despite the provisions of the Constitution, on the
basis of necessity. In assessing whether the provisions of Law
139/1991 were compatible with the Convention, the District Courts
would be required to follow the precedents of the Supreme Court. It
was, in the applicants’ view, irrelevant whether the courts
were required to consider the provisions in the context of an
Article 146 recourse or an application pursuant to section 6A of
the amended Law. The applicants contended that it was for the
Government to demonstrate that the courts were actually applying the
amended Law in an effective way.
- They
emphasised that in their cases, their properties had been
compulsorily purchased or requisitioned. It was not foreseeable
whether the Custodian could restore to their owners properties which
had been compulsorily acquired or requisitioned and were now in the
hands of third parties. The applicants further referred to the
Custodian’s consistent practice pursuant to section 9 of the
Law of refusing payment of compensation from the Special Fund to
Turkish-Cypriot owners for as long as the abnormal situation
continued. While the Government now contended that the non payment
was not due to the operation of section 9 of the Law, they had
provided no explanation as to why compensation which was payable to
certain of the applicants whose properties had been compulsorily
purchased had not been paid.
- As
to the information submitted by the respondent Government on the
practice since 7 May 2010, the applicants contended that this
confirmed their view that the amendments did not render the remedy
upon which the Government relied effective. In particular, since the
Government appeared to be arguing that the applicants’
properties were no longer under custodianship as they had been
compulsorily purchased or requisitioned, the new powers had no
relevance to them. Their access to court depended, pursuant to
section 6A, on a rejection by the Custodian of a request to lift
custodianship. There could be no such rejection where, according to
the Custodian, a situation of custodianship no longer existed.
Further, the Government had failed to provide any information on
whether compensation had been paid in cases involving compulsory
purchases.
- In
their cases, sums had not been paid to them pursuant to section 9 of
the Law, which had not been amended. The domestic courts would adhere
to the view that the Law was justified on grounds of necessity. It
was therefore not practical or effective in their cases.
(c) The applicants in Chakarto and
Others
- Like
the other applicants, the applicants in Chakarto and Others
argued that the existence of effective remedies was a question to be
assessed by reference to the date on which the application was
lodged. The recent amendments to the law were therefore irrelevant.
They also expressed concerns that the amended Law was not retroactive
and that accordingly any domestic claims they sought to lodge would
be time-barred. In any event, they complained about the Custodian’s
unfettered discretion and the jurisprudence of the domestic courts’
date as to the justification for Law 139/1991.
- The
applicants emphasised that the information provided by the respondent
Government demonstrated the importance of residence to his decision
whether to lift custodianship. He had consistently refused to return
property to Turkish Cypriots living in the north of the island
(except in one case where custodianship was lifted in an inheritance
situation – see paragraph 91 above). There was no clear
position where some of the owners lived abroad and some in the north,
as in the present case. Another relevant factor was the occupation of
Greek-Cypriot property, and there was no case where the Custodian had
lifted custodianship if such occupation was present. It was clear
from the information provided that only in sales cases did the
Custodian lift custodianship. Further, as demonstrated by the
information provided, the Custodian had no power to award
compensation, and had in no case awarded compensation for loss of
use. The courts had also rejected such applications and awarded costs
in favour of the Government, further discouraging applications to
them.
- The
applicants therefore concluded that even the amended Law did not
constitute an effective remedy for the purposes of Article 35 §
1.
(d) The applicants in Salih and
Abni
- The
applicants complained about the unclear nature of the legislation,
and in particular about the fact that “Turkish-Cypriot”
was not defined and that as a result they did not know whether their
properties fell under the Law 139/1991.
- As
to the amendments to the legislation, the applicants emphasised that
the District Courts had no power to rule on whether the very
existence of the Custodian violated an individual’s human
rights. They further argued that section 5 of the Law prevented any
retroactive redress for human rights violations as it provided that
all prior decisions by the Custodian will be regarded as having been
taken lawfully, notwithstanding the amendment to the law.
- The
applicants concluded that the Custodian applied rules which had no
legal basis, were not transparent and were not published anywhere.
3. The Turkish Government
- The
Turkish Government were granted leave to intervene as a third party
and submitted comments on the compliance of the custodianship regime
with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. However, they were not invited by
the Court to comment on the amendments to Law 139/1991 and the
implications for the respondent Government’s argument of
non-exhaustion, nor did they seek leave to do so.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. Article 35 § 1 of the Convention
- Article
35 § 1 provides:
“1. The Court may only deal with the
matter after all domestic remedies have been exhausted, according to
the generally recognised rules of international law, and within a
period of six months from the date on which the final decision was
taken.”
2. General principles of exhaustion
- The
Court reiterates that it is primordial that the machinery of
protection established by the Convention is subsidiary to the
national systems safeguarding human rights. This Court is concerned
with the supervision of the implementation by Contracting States of
their obligations under the Convention. It cannot, and must not,
usurp the role of Contracting States whose responsibility it is to
ensure that the fundamental rights and freedoms enshrined therein are
respected and protected on a domestic level. The rule of exhaustion
of domestic remedies is therefore an indispensable part of the
functioning of this system of protection. States are dispensed from
answering before an international body for their acts before they
have had an opportunity to put matters right through their own legal
system and those who wish to invoke the supervisory jurisdiction of
the Court as concerns complaints against a State are thus obliged to
use first the remedies provided by the national legal system (see,
among many authorities, Akdivar and Others v. Turkey, 16
September 1996, § 65, Reports 1996-IV). The Court cannot
emphasise enough that it is not a court of first instance; it does
not have the capacity, nor is it appropriate to its function as an
international court, to adjudicate on large numbers of cases which
require the finding of basic facts or the calculation of monetary
compensation – both of which should, as a matter of principle
and effective practice, be the domain of domestic jurisdictions.
- The
Court refers to its classic and comprehensive statement set out in
the Akdivar judgment (cited above, §§ 66-69)
concerning the application of the rule of exhaustion of domestic
remedies as required by former Article 26, now Article 35 §
1 of the Convention (see also Demopoulos and Others, cited
above, § 70):
“66. Under Article 26 normal recourse
should be had by an applicant to remedies which are available and
sufficient to afford redress in respect of the breaches alleged. The
existence of the remedies in question must be sufficiently certain
not only in theory but in practice, failing which they will lack the
requisite accessibility and effectiveness (see, inter alia,
the Vernillo v. France judgment of 20 February 1991, Series A
no. 198, pp. 11-12, para. 27, and the Johnston and Others v.
Ireland judgment of 18 December 1986, Series A no. 112, p. 22,
para. 45).
Article 26 also requires that the complaints intended to
be made subsequently at Strasbourg should have been made to the
appropriate domestic body, at least in substance and in compliance
with the formal requirements and time-limits laid down in domestic
law and, further, that any procedural means that might prevent a
breach of the Convention should have been used (see the Cardot v.
France judgment of 19 March 1991, Series A no. 200, p. 18,
para. 34).
67. However, there is, as indicated above, no
obligation to have recourse to remedies which are inadequate or
ineffective. In addition, according to the "generally recognised
rules of international law" there may be special circumstances
which absolve the applicant from the obligation to exhaust the
domestic remedies at his disposal (see the Van Oosterwijck v.
Belgium judgment of 6 November 1980, Series A no. 40, pp. 18-19,
paras. 36-40). The rule is also inapplicable where an administrative
practice consisting of a repetition of acts incompatible with the
Convention and official tolerance by the State authorities has been
shown to exist, and is of such a nature as to make proceedings futile
or ineffective (see the Ireland v. the United Kingdom judgment
of 18 January 1978, Series A no. 25, p. 64, para. 159, and the report
of the Commission in the same case, Series B no. 23-I, pp. 394-97).
68. In the area of the exhaustion of domestic
remedies there is a distribution of the burden of proof. It is
incumbent on the Government claiming non-exhaustion to satisfy the
Court that the remedy was an effective one available in theory and in
practice at the relevant time, that is to say, that it was
accessible, was one which was capable of providing redress in respect
of the applicant’s complaints and offered reasonable prospects
of success. However, once this burden of proof has been satisfied it
falls to the applicant to establish that the remedy advanced by the
Government was in fact exhausted or was for some reason inadequate
and ineffective in the particular circumstances of the case or that
there existed special circumstances absolving him or her from the
requirement (see, inter alia, the Commission’s decision on the
admissibility of application no. 788/60, Austria v. Italy, 11
January 1961, Yearbook, vol. 4, pp. 166-168; application no.
5577-5583/72, Donnelly and Others v. the United Kingdom (first
decision), 5 April 1973, Yearbook, vol. 16, p. 264; also the judgment
of 26 June 1987 of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in the
Velásquez Rodríguez case, Preliminary
Objections, Series C no. 1, para. 88, and that Court’s Advisory
Opinion of 10 August 1990 on "Exceptions to the Exhaustion of
Domestic Remedies" (Article 46 (1), 46 (2) (a) and 46 (2) (b) of
the American Convention on Human Rights),Series A no. 11, p. 32,
para. 41). One such reason may be constituted by the national
authorities remaining totally passive in the face of serious
allegations of misconduct or infliction of harm by State agents, for
example where they have failed to undertake investigations or offer
assistance. In such circumstances it can be said that the burden of
proof shifts once again, so that it becomes incumbent on the
respondent Government to show what they have done in response to the
scale and seriousness of the matters complained of.
69. The Court would emphasise that the
application of the rule must make due allowance for the fact that it
is being applied in the context of machinery for the protection of
human rights that the Contracting Parties have agreed to set up.
Accordingly, it has recognised that Article 26 must be applied with
some degree of flexibility and without excessive formalism (see the
above-mentioned Cardot judgment, p. 18, para. 34). It has
further recognised that the rule of exhaustion is neither absolute
nor capable of being applied automatically; in reviewing whether it
has been observed it is essential to have regard to the particular
circumstances of each individual case (see the above-mentioned Van
Oosterwijck judgment, p. 18, para. 35). This means amongst other
things that it must take realistic account not only of the existence
of formal remedies in the legal system of the Contracting Party
concerned but also of the general legal and political context in
which they operate as well as the personal circumstances of the
applicants.”
3. Application of the general principles to the facts
of the cases
- The
Court refers to its observations regarding the historical and
political background of the cases set out in its judgment in
Demopoulos and Others, cited above, §§ 83-85, which
it considers apply with equal force to the present cases.
Accordingly, as in the case of Demopoulos and Others, the
Court’s interpretation and application of the Convention will
be informed by those considerations.
- The
applicants have argued that they should not be required to exhaust a
remedy which came into being after they lodged their applications.
They considered that the exception to the general rule, applied in
Demopoulos and Others, cited above, §§ 87-88, did
not apply here. However, the Court observes that, as in Demopoulos
and Others, the remedy under consideration was enacted to redress
at a domestic level the Convention grievances of persons whose
applications were pending before the Court. Giving weight therefore
to the subsidiary character of its role, the Court considers that the
exception applies here also. It will therefore examine the extent to
which the new remedy can be considered practical and effective such
as to satisfy the requirements of Article 35 § 1.
- The
applicants made a number of arguments impugning the effectiveness of
the remedy proposed on several grounds, including the wide discretion
of the Custodian and the importance of residence and occupation of
Greek-Cypriot property to his decision; the inadequate definition of
the property subject to the custodianship regime; the absence of a
provision in the amended Law for compensation for loss of use; the
need for a finding of a violation of the Convention before a right to
redress in the courts arose pursuant to section 6A of the amended
Law; the absence of direct access to the courts; the failure to amend
section 9 of the Law regarding payments from the Special Fund and the
consequence for cases of compulsory acquisition and requisition; the
obligation to pay for building work and conversions to their
properties; and the lack of evidence as to practice. The Court will
examine each of these complaints in turn.
(a) The unfettered discretion of the
Custodian and the importance of residence and occupation of
Greek-Cypriot property to his decision
- The
applicants complained that the Custodian’s discretion in
deciding requests to lift custodianship was unfettered and that his
manner of exercising was not transparent. It was clear from the
information provided by the Government that he had done so in few
cases since the amended Law entered into force, and only in cases
where the property was to be sold to a Greek-Cypriot buyer or to the
Government: there was no example of a case where a property has been
returned to its Turkish-Cypriot owner. Further, as the information
confirmed, residence abroad and/or non-occupation of Greek-Cypriot
property were necessary elements for him to lift custodianship. He
was therefore unlikely to lift custodianship in their cases. There
was also uncertainty as to what would be his approach in cases
involving joint owners, where some satisfied his criteria for lifting
custodianship and some did not.
- The
Court recalls that the decision of the Custodian is merely the first
step in the procedure envisaged under amended Law 139/1991 and that
in the event of a refusal, his decision can be judicially reviewed by
the lodging of an action in the District Court (see paragraph 50
above). The Court therefore does not consider that the fact that the
Custodian may be unlikely to lift the custodianship in a particular
case undermines the effectiveness of the overall remedy proposed.
- Insofar
as criticism is made of the allegedly overly-restrictive approach to
restitution of possession of property to its Turkish-Cypriot owners
by the Custodian, the Court reiterates that any decision of the
Custodian can subsequently be reviewed by the courts. In any event,
in Demopoulos and Others, cited above, § 111, the Court
explained that many decades after the loss of possession by the then
owners, properties have in many cases changed hands, by gift,
succession or otherwise. Those claiming title may have never seen, or
ever used the property in question. Several of the present applicants
appear to be in this position. The issue therefore arises to what
extent the notion of legal title, and the expectation of enjoying the
full benefits of that title, is realistic in practice. As the Court
indicated in Demopoulos and Others, cited above, § 114,
there has always been a strong legal and factual link between
ownership and possession and it must be recognised that with the
passage of time the holding of a title may be emptied of any
practical consequences. The Court’s case-law indicates that if
the nature of the breach allows restitutio in integrum, it is
for the respondent State to implement it. However, if it is not
possible to restore the position, the Court, as a matter of constant
practice, had imposed the alternative requirement on the Contracting
State to pay compensation for the value of the property.
(b) The inadequate definition of the
property subject to the custodianship regime
- The
Court accepts that the definition of what constitutes
“Turkish Cypriot property” for the purposes of Law
139/1991 may be open to some debate. However it does not consider
that this ambiguity undermines the effectiveness of the remedy. It is
open to the applicants to argue that their properties do not fall
within the scope of the Law at all, in which case the custodianship
regime would not apply to them. In the event that their argument is
unsuccessful, the remedies offered by the amended Law as regards the
possibility of having custodianship lifted will be available to them.
(c) The absence of a provision in the
amended Law for compensation for loss of use
- The
applicants argued that there was no provision for compensation for
loss of use in the legislation, and that the practice of the
Custodian and the District Court indicated that no such compensation
was available. The Government maintained that such an award was
within the power of the Custodian (see paragraph 113 above).
- The
Court agrees that the amended Law does not expressly refer to the
availability of compensation for loss of use. However, it would
appear that, pursuant to section 6A(2) of the amended Law, an
applicant who made a claim to the Custodian for compensation for loss
of use and had that claim rejected would be able to lodge an action
in the District Court claiming a violation of his rights under the
Convention. Section 6A(3) requires the District Court to have regard
to the factors considered relevant by this Court in determining
whether a violation has occurred and under section 6A(4) and (5), in
the event of a violation the court is able to award compensation for
pecuniary damage and must have regard to the criteria and factors
taken into account for this purpose by this Court (see paragraph 50
above).
(d) The need for a finding of a violation
of the Convention before a right to redress in the courts arises
pursuant to section 6A of the amended Law
- The
applicants referred to the case-law of the courts, particularly of
the Supreme Court in the context of cases lodged pursuant to Article
146, which had found Law 139/1991 to be justified on the ground of
the law of necessity. They pointed out that some judgments post-dated
the entry into force of the amended Law and were indicative that the
approach of the courts had not changed since the amendments had been
enacted. They therefore considered that the courts had already
established in the domestic context that no violation of the
Convention arose as a result of Law 139/1991.
- The
Court acknowledges that the case-law of the Cypriot courts cited by
the parties which pre-dated the entry into force of the amended Law
indicated, for the most part, a resistance to the argument that the
provisions of Law 139/1991 violated the Convention, and in particular
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (see paragraphs 51-75 above). It would
seem that the few judgments provided to the Court which post-date the
amended Law have followed this restrictive approach (see paragraphs
76-83 above). However, there appears to be no reference in the
judgments to section 6A of Law 139/1991, and as a consequence the
Court considers that it is not clear how the courts will approach
their task of interpreting the provisions of the amended Law. The
Court notes that in the event of an unsuccessful decision in the
District Court, an appeal will be possible to the Supreme Court. In
this connection, the Court observes that in the case of Ahmet,
in which judgment was handed down by the Supreme Court on appeal in
February 2011, the Supreme Court was not asked to assess the
compliance of the acts of the Custodian or the provisions of Law
139/1991 with the Convention, and the case was ultimately dismissed
on grounds of a lack of jurisdiction (see paragraphs 77 and 80
above). It therefore cannot be considered to provide any elucidation
of what will be the Supreme Court’s approach to these
questions.
- In
conclusion, the Court is satisfied that in examining cases brought
under the amended Law the Cypriot courts will have due regard to this
Court’s case-law concerning, in particular, Article 8 and
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and that in handing down judgments they
will examine the matter afresh, setting out in full their reasoning
and explaining clearly whether and how the restrictions imposed on
Turkish-Cypriots’ property are justified under those Articles.
(e) The absence of direct access to the
courts
- Some
of the applicants complained that the remedy proposed did not offer
them direct access to court. However, Article 35 § 1 does not
require direct access to court in order for a remedy to be considered
effective. The Court reiterates that an adverse decision by the
Custodian can subsequently be reviewed by the courts.
(f) The failure to amend section 9 of the
Law regarding payments and the consequences for cases of compulsory
acquisition and requisition
- The
applicants in Osman and Durmus referred to the
Government’s contention that their properties were no longer
under custodianship as they had been compulsorily purchased or
requisitioned. Accordingly, they argued, no remedy was available to
them under amended Law 139/1991 as their properties were no longer
subject to that Law and Article 9 regarding suspension of payments
during the abnormal situation had not been amended.
- The
Court agrees that the extent to which the provisions contained in Law
139/1991 now apply to applicants whose properties have been
compulsorily purchased or requisitioned is not entirely clear. While
the Government argued that the properties were no longer subject to
custodianship (see paragraph 113 above), this does not in itself
preclude the application of Law 139/1991 or the new remedy contained
in section 6A, as the Government pointed out. The applicants alleged
that payment of compensation was being withheld pursuant to section 9
of the Law. The Court notes that section 6A refers to the rejection
of a “claim” by the Custodian giving rise to a right to
bring an action in the District Court and allege a violation of the
Convention. Nothing presented to the Court by the Government or the
applicants would appear to preclude an application being made to the
Custodian for payment of compensation agreed by the Custodian and
awarded by the authorities in respect of compulsory acquisition or
requisition of Turkish-Cypriot property, followed by proceedings in
the courts in the event of an unfavourable decision.
(g) The obligation to pay for building
work and conversions to their properties
- The
Court acknowledges that pursuant to the amended Law, where the court
orders restoration of a property to its Turkish-Cypriot owner, the
Custodian and the lawful occupier are entitled to seek costs incurred
for improvements and repairs to the property (see paragraph 50
above). However, any decision as to costs to be awarded would be made
by the courts, bearing in mind the principles set out in the Court’s
case-law, and it would be open to the applicants to argue in the
context of any legal proceedings that the award of costs in their
cases would violate their rights under the Convention.
(h) The lack of evidence as to practice.
- The
applicants emphasised that unlike in Demopoulos and Others,
where the Court had considered the position carefully in the context
of its previous pilot judgment and subsequent just satisfaction
judgment and where substantial evidence of the Immovable Property
Commission’s practice was available, in the present case the
remedy was introduced at a late stage in the written procedure and
there was insufficient evidence as to practice for the Court to
conclude that the remedy offered reasonable prospects of success.
- The
Court accepts that to date there is limited evidence as to the
practice of the Custodian, and even less evidence regarding the
approach of the domestic courts. However, it is encouraged by the
fact that the Custodian has agreed to lift custodianship in a number
of cases with circumstances in some respects similar to those
prevailing in the cases of several of the applicants (see paragraph 94
above). It is further encouraged to see that cases have been lodged
in the District Courts (see paragraphs 97 100 above) where these
cases should be progressed within a reasonable time pursuant to the
respondent State’s obligations under Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention. It may be noted that the District Courts and the Supreme
Court in Cyprus have an established record demonstrating their
general compliance with the requirements of Article 6 of the
Convention.
(i) Conclusion
- In
conclusion, the new provisions in Law 139/1991 are formulated in
broad terms and by express reference to the guarantees of the
Convention as interpreted by this Court. They allow the applicants to
make a claim to the Custodian alleging a violation of their
Convention rights and, in the absence of a favourable response, to
lodge a case in the District Court. The remedies available include an
order for restoration of the property and an order for payment of
compensation to cover pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage as well as
costs and expenses.
- The
Court therefore cannot exclude that Law 139/1991 as amended provides
an accessible and effective framework of redress in respect of
complaints about interference with the property owned by Turkish
Cypriots. The applicant property owners in the present cases have not
made use of this mechanism and their complaints under Articles 8 and
14 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention must therefore be rejected for non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies pursuant to Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the
Convention.
III. OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION
- Some
of the applicants made a number of other complaints, including
complaints directed against Greece and the United Kingdom
(see paragraphs 103-106 above).
- In
the light of all the material in its possession, and in so far as the
matters complained of are within its competence, the Court finds no
appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms set out in the
Convention or its Protocols arising from these complaints.
For these reasons, the Court unanimously
Decides to join the applications;
Declares the applications inadmissible.
Fatoş Aracı Lech Garlicki
Deputy Registrar President
Appendix
List of
other applicants
|
Application No.
|
Case Name
|
1.
|
49307/08
|
MUSTAFA and Others v. Cyprus
|
2.
|
30792/05
|
NOURI v. Cyprus
|
3.
|
1760/05
|
KAMIL v. Cyprus
|
4.
|
4080/06
|
DURMUS v. Cyprus
|
5.
|
34776/06
|
OSMAN v. Cyprus
|
6.
|
1545/07
|
CHAKARTO and Others v. Cyprus
|
7.
|
38902/05
|
ABNI v. Cyprus
|
8.
|
3240/05
|
SALIH v. Cyprus
|