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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF
HOUSING ASSOCIATION OF WAR DISABLED AND VICTIMS OF WAR OF ATTICA AND
OTHERS v. GREECE
(Application
no. 35859/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
13
July 2006
This judgment will
become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2
of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Housing Association of War Disabled and Victims of
War of Attica and Others v. Greece,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr L. Loucaides,
President,
Mr C.L. Rozakis,
Mrs F.
Tulkens,
Mrs E. Steiner,
Mr K. Hajiyev,
Mr D.
Spielmann,
Mr S.E. Jebens, judges,
and Mr S.
Nielsen, Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 22 June 2006,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 35859/02) against the Hellenic
Republic lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by an association with legal personality under
Greek law, the Housing Association of War Disabled and Victims of War
of Attica (“the first applicant”), on 25 September 2002.
The first applicant lodged the present application acting both in its
own capacity and on behalf of 157 of its members, whose names have
been submitted to the Court, on the basis of a decision taken by its
general assembly on 8 September 2002.
- The
applicants were represented by Mr N. Alivizatos and
Mrs E. Kioussopoulou, both lawyers practising in Athens.
The Greek Government (“the Government”) were represented
by the delegates of their Agent, Mr V. Kyriazopoulos, Adviser at the
State Legal Council and Mr D. Kalogiros, Legal Assistant at
the State Legal Council.
- The
applicants complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 about an
interference with their property rights.
- The
application was allocated to the First Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the
Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 § 1 of the
Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 § 1.
- On
1 November 2004 the Court changed the composition of its Sections
(Rule 25 § 1). This case was assigned to the newly composed
First Section (Rule 52 § 1).
- By
a decision of 27 January 2005 the Court declared the application
admissible.
- The
applicants, but not the Government, filed further written
observations (Rule 59 § 1).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
first applicant was set up in 1951 by disabled Second World War
veterans and relatives of soldiers who died in that war with the aim
of providing housing to its members. It raised its capital by means
of members’ contributions.
- In
1957, by deed no. 4572, the first applicant bought 50,000 sq. m in
the area of Aghios Ioannis in Cholargos, for a total of 400,000
drachmas. The Government claimed that the land did not belong to the
persons who had sold it to the applicants but to the State. They
relied in this connection on a judgment issued in 1968 by the Athens
Court of Appeal. The applicants contested this view. They stressed
that the 1968 judgment had been delivered after the exchange of their
land in 1964 (see paragraph 10 below), namely after they had
transferred to the State all their possible claims against the former
owners of their land, and that in any event they had purchased this
land in good faith and at market value.
- In
1960 the land was requisitioned without compensation for the needs of
the Greek Army. After an application by the association, the Supreme
Administrative Court ruled that the requisition was null and void
because it was serving permanent and not temporary needs (judgment
no. 143/1963). In 1964, as a result of this judgment, the State
bought the unlawfully requisitioned land and exchanged it with
100,000 sq. m of land owned by the National Defence Fund in the
nearby area of Korakovouni. The area was public woodland outside the
boundaries of the urban development plan. According to the
applicants, the understanding was that the association would be
allowed to develop it after the State had issued the appropriate
changes to the local planning regulations. The first applicant paid
one drachma per sq. m to cover the difference in value between the
old and the new land. The relevant decision approving the contract of
sale and exchange was retroactively validated by virtue of the
Necessity Act (Law no. 62/1967). The Government asserted that
the above price was symbolic and that at the relevant time the market
value of the land was 15 drachmas per sq. m. Therefore, they
considered that the land in question had been donated to the
applicants. The applicants contended that this assertion was false.
- On
6 May 1966 a Royal Decree included the land in the revised urban
development plan, following a proposal by the Cholargos District
Council and an affirmative opinion by the Supreme Administrative
Court sitting in an administrative capacity with the power to give a
non-binding advisory opinion.
- In
1974 Legislative Decree no. 303/1974 declassified the land from being
reafforestable (άρση αναδάσωσης).
Further, the Minister of Agriculture issued a license for building
roads and cutting down trees in order to implement the new town plan.
In 1975 the applicant association started transferring plots of land
to its members and applied to the Cholargos District Council for an
altitude study, which was necessary under Greek law for the
implementation of the urban development plan. The first building
licenses were also issued.
- In
1975 the new Constitution introduced new rules for the protection of
the environment (see paragraph 22 below).
- In
1976 the Cholargos District Council rejected the association’s
application for an altitude study. Further, the Minister of
Agriculture requested that the Minister of Public Works revoke the
1966 Royal Decree whereby the planning zone had been extended to the
land owned by the first applicant, for the reason that it had been
issued without the assent of the Ministry of Agriculture even though
the area “was a forest”. In 1978 the Minister of Public
Works replied that he would not revoke the decree because it had
already been applied for twelve years and had been relied upon by
third parties (decision no. Γ21046/3102/7.7.1978). He then
issued a new decision approving the detailed zoning plan (ρυμοτομικό
σχέδιο) and the altitude study. On
an application by the Cholargos District Council, the Supreme
Administrative Court found both decisions illegal. It held in
particular that under the 1975 Constitution the protection of the
forest was more important than the expectations created by the fact
that the land had already been in the process of being developed
(judgment no. 2330/1980).
- On
8 November 1980 the Minister of Planning, Housing and the Environment
gave a new decision which repeated in substance the annulled decision
concerning the detailed zoning plan and the altitude study. The
Cholargos District Council again applied to the Supreme
Administrative Court, which quashed the new decision as well,
considering that following its earlier ruling the administration had
to revoke the zoning decree or give new reasons for not doing so
(judgment no. 362/1982). A third-party appeal (τριτανακοπή)
by the first applicant was dismissed by the Supreme Administrative
Court (judgment no. 2920/1985).
- On
15 April 1988 a Presidential Decree abolished the 1966 Royal Decree
in so far as it extended the urban development plan to the
association’s land. Members of the association brought their
case unsuccessfully before the Supreme Administrative Court which on
26 April 1990 ruled that, even if the Necessity Act (Law no. 62/1967)
had ratified the inclusion of a forest in a zoning area, such law
would have been considered to have been abrogated by virtue of the
1975 Constitution (judgment no. 1403/1990).
- From
1990 to 1999 the first applicant undertook various initiatives which
aimed at a settlement of its dispute with the State but to no avail.
- In
1999 the Forest Inspectorate of Penteli issued a decision declaring
that the first applicant’s land was a forest according to the
Forests Code.
- On
17 March 1999 the applicant association and three of its members
invited the State to exchange the association’s land for new
land of equal value belonging to the State, or to expropriate it,
according to the provisions of Law no. 998/1979 (see paragraph 23
below). The authorities did not reply.
- On
22 July 1999 the case was brought before the Supreme Administrative
Court. The applicants referred to the history of the proceedings and
inter alia argued that their property had been interfered with
for more than forty years with no compensation whatsoever. Coming to
the current situation, they stressed that Presidential Decree of 15
April 1988, and the interpretation of Articles 24 § 1 and 117 §
4 of the 1975 Constitution as set out in the 1403/1990 judgment and
in the jurisprudence of the Supreme Administrative Court, made clear
that it was no longer possible to build on their land. Such
interference was even more odious in view of the aims of the
association which was the provision of appropriate housing for its
members, an aim that had now come to nought, despite the great
amounts of money and time invested in it by the association and its
members. The applicants claimed that according to the provisions of
Law no. 998/1979 they were entitled to compensation for the
deprivation of their right to use their property for the purposes for
which they had bought it. Thus, by refusing to exchange their land
for new land of equal value, or to expropriate it, the State had
violated Articles 17 of the 1975 Constitution and 1 of Protocol No. 1
to the Convention.
- On
4 October 2001 the Supreme Administrative Court, by a majority,
dismissed the application on the ground that the relevant provisions
of Law no. 998/1979 were unconstitutional. In particular, it held
that, “by providing for the possibility of expropriating or
exchanging woodland which cannot become a residential area, Section
50 § 3 presupposes that the urban development of woodland is in
principle lawful, something which is contrary to Article 24 of the
1975 Constitution”. However, one judge expressed the opinion
that the expropriation or the exchange of land which was purchased
before the entry into force of the 1975 Constitution was not contrary
to it (judgment no. 3403/2001). The judgment was certified (θεώρηση)
on 23 March 2002.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. The Constitution
- The
relevant provisions of the Constitution, which came into force on 11
June 1975, read as follows:
Article 17
“1. Property is protected by the State;
rights deriving therefrom, however, may not be exercised contrary to
public interest.
2. No one shall be deprived of his property
except in the public interest, which must be duly shown, when and as
specified by law and always following full compensation corresponding
to the value of the expropriated property at the time of the court
hearing on the provisional determination of compensation. In cases in
which a request for the final determination of compensation is made,
the value at the time of the court hearing of the request shall be
considered...”
Article 24 § 1
“The protection of the natural and cultural
environment is an obligation of the State. The State is bound to take
special preventive or repressive measures for the preservation of the
environment. Matters pertaining to the protection of forests and
woodland in general shall be regulated by law. It is forbidden to
alter the status and use of State forests and woodland, except where
agricultural development or other use is paramount for the national
economy and serves the public interest.”
Article 117 § 4
“The expropriation of forests or woodland that
belong to private individuals or corporations is allowed only for the
benefit of the State, according to Article 17 of the Constitution
[which provides the conditions for the taking of property], for the
public interest; their status as forests or woodlands is not thereby
changed.”
B. The Protection of Forests and Forest Lands Act (Law
no. 998/1979)
- The
relevant section of Law no. 998/1979 reads as follows:
Section 50 (3)
“Forests and private woodland belonging to Housing
Associations at the time of entry into force of this law and which
cannot lawfully become a residential area or be included in such an
area according to [§§ 1 and 2 of this Section], shall be
expropriated by the State at the expense of the Central Fund of
Agriculture and Forests, or shall be exchanged with land of equal
value or other vacant land which is under the management of the
Ministry of Agriculture and has been included in a residential area
according to current legislation. The expropriation shall take place
by virtue of a joint decision of the Ministers of Finance and
Agriculture, on the basis of an opinion by the Forestry Technical
Council...”
In
1987 the Supreme Administrative Court held that “in its true
meaning [Section 50 of Law no. 998/1979] regulated the status of
private forests and woodland purchased by housing associations”;
it thus considered that the above provision was not applicable in a
case where land was donated to a housing association (judgment no.
4884/1987).
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT’S PRELIMINARY
OBJECTION
- The
Court observes that, in its decision on the admissibility of the
application, it joined to the merits the Government’s objection
that the application was lodged out of time.
- In
particular, the Government argued that the six-month period ran from
judgment no. 1403/1990, by which the Supreme Administrative Court had
ruled that, even if the Necessity Act (Law no. 62/1967) had ratified
the inclusion of a forest to a zoning area, such law would have been
considered abrogated by virtue of the 1975 Constitution. Since that
judgment, the applicants had had no hope that they could ever build
on their land. This was all the more so as since 1987 the Supreme
Administrative Court had already held that in the event of concession
of woodland by the State, the provisions of Section 50 of Law no.
998/1979 were not applicable (judgment no. 4884/1987 – see
paragraph 23 above). The Government therefore considered that the
applicants had applied in 1999 to the Supreme Administrative Court
only to circumvent the six-month time-limit.
- The
applicants submitted in reply that the scope of their application to
the Supreme Administrative Court, which had resulted in the 1403/1990
judgment, had nothing to do with the scope of their application
before the same court which was concluded with judgment no.
3403/2001. In 1990 they had unsuccessfully requested the
reinstatement of the 1966 inclusion of their land in the urban
development plan for Cholargos, in order to be able to build their
homes on it, whereas in 1999 they had tried to alienate themselves
from the same land in order to obtain some sort of compensation for
the impossibility to build on it caused by the Presidential Decree of
15 April 1988 and the interpretation of the relevant provisions
of the 1975 Constitution as set out in the 1403/1990 judgment and in
the jurisprudence of the Supreme Administrative Court. Thus, they had
invited the State to exchange it for new land of equal value
belonging to the State, or to expropriate it pursuant to Section 50
of Law no. 998/1979 which was the only possibility open to them. But
to no avail. They further argued that the Government’s
reference to judgment no. 4884/1987 was misleading, because in that
judgment the Supreme Administrative Court had not held that the
relevant provisions of Law no. 998/1979 were unconstitutional; it had
merely held that these provisions did not apply to cases in which the
land in question was donated by the State to housing associations,
whereas they did apply to cases where such lands were purchased by
housing associations. Given that the applicants had purchased their
land, the precedent of the 1987 judgment of the Supreme
Administrative Court was irrelevant to the present proceedings.
- The
Court observes that, following the enactment of the new Constitution,
as subsequently interpreted by the Supreme Administrative Court, the
applicants found themselves in a state of uncertainty as to the
future of their property and unsuccessfully made various attempts to
obtain redress: in 1990 they tried to obtain permission to build on
their land. From 1990 to 1999 they tried to settle their dispute with
the State and, finally, in 1999 they invited the State either to
exchange their land for new land of equal value, or to expropriate it
pursuant to Law no. 998/1979.
- The
Court accepts that the Supreme Administrative Court’s judgment
of 26 April 1990 put an end to the applicants’ possibilities of
using their land for building purposes. However, the applicants
cannot be blamed for having tried, after their unsuccessful challenge
to the Presidential Decree of 15 April 1988 (see paragraph 16 above),
to obtain at least some compensation via the expropriation or the
exchange of their land. This possibility was offered to them by
virtue of Law no. 998/1979 (see paragraph 23 above), the
constitutionality of which had not been questioned at the time when
the applicants attempted that remedy; it cannot therefore be argued
that when the applicants applied to the Supreme Administrative Court
in 1999, they had reasons to believe that their recourse to that
remedy would be of no avail (see, by contrast, Astikos Oikodomikos
Synetairismos Nea Kostantinoupolis v. Greece (dec.), no 37806/02,
20 January 2005). The Government’s argument that judgment
no. 4884/1987 should have indicated to the applicants that their
application to the Supreme Administrative Court was bound to fail
does not convince the Court either. It does not find it established
that this case-law would leave the applicants’ case without
success.
- The
Court has not overlooked the fact that the applicants waited for
almost nine years before inviting the State to exchange their land
for new land of equal value or to expropriate it and considers that
this delay is subject to criticism. However, it has taken note of the
applicants’ assertion that, during this period, they had not
remained inactive but had unsuccessfully undertaken various
initiatives aimed at settling their dispute with the State (see
paragraph 17 above). This assertion, which is not questioned by the
Government, and the fact that the applicants’ land was formally
declared to be a forest only in 1999 (see paragraph 18 above),
constitute a sufficient explanation for the delay by the applicants
in bringing their application on the basis of Law no. 998/1979.
Finally, the Court notes that the outcome of the proceedings under
Law no. 998/1979 would be of crucial importance for the applicants’
decision as to whether or not to bring an application before the
Court, as it affected the question of proportionality of the
interference with their property.
- In
the light of the above, the Court does not agree with the
Government’s argument that the application should have been
lodged within six months from the date of the delivery of judgment
no. 1403/1990 of the Supreme Administrative Court; the
preliminary objection in question must accordingly be dismissed.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL No. 1
- The
applicants alleged a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, which
reads as follows:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
- This
provision contains three distinct rules: the first rule, set out in
the first sentence of the first paragraph, is of a general nature and
enunciates the principle of the peaceful enjoyment of property; the
second rule, contained in the second sentence of the first paragraph,
covers deprivation of possessions and subjects it to certain
conditions; the third rule, stated in the second paragraph,
recognises that the Contracting States are entitled, amongst other
things, to control the use of property in accordance with the general
interest. The second and third rules, which are concerned with
particular instances of interference with the right to peaceful
enjoyment of property, must be construed in the light of the general
principle laid down in the first rule (see Iatridis v. Greece
[GC], no. 31107/96, § 55, ECHR 1999-II, and Immobiliare
Saffi v. Italy [GC], no. 22774/93, § 44, ECHR 1999-V).
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicants stressed that in 1964 at the time when the land in
question was obtained by them, forests and woodland did not enjoy a
legal status comparable with the special status which they enjoy
after the enactment of the 1975 Constitution, as systematically
interpreted by the courts from 1980 onwards. Thus, they had every
reason to believe that they could build their homes on the land in
question. This was all the more so as in 1966 the Royal Decree of 6
May had included the land in the revised urban development plan and
in 1974 Legislative Decree no. 303/1974 had declassified the land
from being reafforestable. Hence, when the new Constitution entered
into force, their land was already a residential area in the process
of being developed. However, the State had unlawfully reversed their
rights without paying them any compensation and without even granting
their request to exchange their land for new land of equal value or
to expropriate it. Moreover, their funds diverted to their housing
projects were now lost, since the value of land in this particular
part of Athens, if one could not secure planning permission for
building purposes, was close to zero. The applicants asserted that
the interference with their property rights had not taken place by
means of any law and had not respected the fair balance which should
be struck between the demands of the general interest of the
community and the requirements of the protection of the individual’s
fundamental rights.
- The
Government argued that there had been no interference with the
applicants’ property rights in the present case. They claimed
that from the outset the applicants had been aware that they could
not build on the land in question, because that land had long before
been classified as land “to be reforested”. In that
connection, the Government stressed that the protection of forests
was guaranteed without limitation in time and notwithstanding illegal
destruction or deforestation. Moreover, the designation of an area as
an area to be reforested and the prohibition of any use that would
prevent reforestation were not left to the discretion of the
authorities but was mandatory and the Supreme Administrative Court
had scrupulously enforced these principles in order to safeguard the
country’s forestry resources. Even if there had been an
interference with the applicants’ property rights, the
Government argued that such interference would amount to control of
the use of property and would not disclose any breach of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1.
B. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court notes that it is not its task to settle the issue of the
original ownership of the disputed land, that is to decide whether
the land purchased in 1957 belonged to the persons who sold it to the
applicants or to the State (see paragraph 9 above). It is common
ground that throughout the domestic procedure, the applicants were
regarded as the owners of the land in question, which they obtained
in 1964. This suffices for the purposes of the proceedings before the
Court.
- The
Court is unable to accept the Government’s submission that
there has been no interference with the applicants’ property
rights within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention. In this respect, the Court recalls that in 1966 the land
was included in the urban development plan; in 1974 it was
declassified from being reafforestable, the Minister of Agriculture
issued a licence for building roads and cutting down trees in order
to implement the new town plan and the first building licenses were
issued (see paragraphs 11 and 12 above). The subsequent developments,
i.e. the 1975 Constitution, the Presidential Decree of 15 April
1988 and the Supreme Administrative Court’s judgment of 1990,
which placed a prohibition on building houses on the land belonging
to the applicants, in the Court’s view clearly amounted to a
control of the use of their property, within the meaning of the
second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Following the
completion of the proceedings which were instituted in 1999 and which
were crucial for the assessment of the proportionality of the above
measure, the Court must, therefore, examine whether the interference
complained of can be justified under that provision.
- The
Court considers that, in an area as complex and difficult as that of
spatial development, the Contracting States should enjoy a wide
margin of appreciation in order to implement their town- and
country-planning policy (see Elia S.r.l. v. Italy, no.
37710/97, §§ 77, ECHR 2001-IX). Nevertheless, the Court
cannot fail to exercise its power of review and must determine
whether the requisite balance was maintained in a manner consonant
with the applicants’ right of property (see Saliba v. Malta,
no. 4251/02, § 45, 8 November 2005).
- In
the present case, the principal thrust of the Government’s
arguments is that the protection of forests is guaranteed without
limitation in time and notwithstanding illegal destruction or
deforestation. However, the Court considers that in such a complex
situation in which any decision could weigh heavily on the property
rights of a large number of people, the legitimate concern to protect
the forests, understandable as it is in the modern day, should not
absolve the State of its responsibility to provide adequate
protection to people such as the applicants who bona fide
possess or own property (see, mutatis mutandis, Papastavrou
and Others v. Greece, no 46372/99, § 37, ECHR
2003-IV).
- The
Court is particularly struck by the fact that, although the very
substance of the applicants’ ownership has been affected (see
Sporrong and Lönnroth v. Sweden, judgment of 23 September
1982, Series A no. 52, p. 23, § 60), the applicants were
not successful in obtaining compensation under Greek law. This,
combined with the State’s ultimate refusal to expropriate the
applicants’ property or to exchange it for new land of equal
value, aggravated considerably the adverse effects on the applicants’
situation and placed a disproportionate burden on them.
- The
above circumstances lead the Court to conclude that there was no
reasonable balance struck between the public interest and the
requirements of the protection of the applicants’ rights.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
- The
applicants asked the Court to apply in the present case the
principles laid down in the case of Papamichalopoulos and Others
v. Greece ((Article 50), judgment of 31 October 1995,
Series A no. 330-B) and to invite the Government either to
restore their right to build their homes on the land in question, or
to pay them compensation amounting to 60-65 million euros (EUR). This
sum corresponded to the market value of their land. The applicants
further claimed EUR 14,700,000 for non-pecuniary damage and EUR
100,000 for costs and expenses.
- The
Government replied that the criterion used by the applicants in order
to assess their pecuniary damage was “erroneous and
irrelevant”, because there was no market or objective value for
woodlands and reafforestable lands. They considered that the
pecuniary damage allegedly sustained should be equivalent to the
price which the applicants had paid at the time of the transfer of
their land, legally readjusted. The Government further argued that
any award for non-pecuniary damage should not exceed EUR 1,000 for
each applicant. Finally they contended that it would be reasonable to
award each applicant EUR 500 euros for costs and expenses.
- The
Court considers that the question of the application of Article 41
is not ready for decision. Accordingly, it should be reserved and the
subsequent procedure fixed having regard to any agreement which might
be reached between the Government and the applicants (Rule 75 §
1 of the Rules of Court).
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Dismisses the Government’s preliminary
objection;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1;
- Holds that the question of the application of
Article 41 is not ready for decision;
accordingly,
(a) reserves
the said question in whole;
(b) invites
the Government and the applicants to submit, within three months from
the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, their written
observations on the matter and, in particular, to notify the Court of
any agreement that they may reach;
(c) reserves
the further procedure and delegates to the President of the
Chamber the power to fix the same if need be.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 13 July 2006, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Loukis Loucaides
Registrar President