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FIFTH SECTION
DECISION
AS TO THE
ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application no. 20612/02 by Slavi Georgiev
Slavov against Bulgaria lodged on 14 May 2002
|
Application no. 42563/02 by Amalia Dimitrova
Yordanovich against Bulgaria lodged on 14 November 2002
|
Application no. 42596/02 by Zhores and Kiril
Peychevi Georgievi against Bulgaria lodged on 18 November
2002
|
Application no. 16059/03 by Margarita Ganeva
Slavova and Others against Bulgaria lodged on 14 May 2003
|
Application no. 32427/03 by Stoyan Georgiev
Boyadzhiev and Others against Bulgaria lodged on 4 October
2003
|
|
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting on 2 December
2008 as a Chamber composed of:
Peer
Lorenzen,
President,
Rait
Maruste,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Renate
Jaeger,
Mark
Villiger,
Isabelle
Berro Lefèvre,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva,
judges,
and
Claudia Westerdiek, Section
Registrar,
Having
regard to the above applications lodged on 14 May and 14 and
18 November 2002 and 14 May and 4 October 2003,
Having
regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and
the observations in reply submitted by the applicants,
Having
deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
- The applicant in no. 20612/02, Mr Slavi Georgiev
Slavov, is a Bulgarian national who was born in 1932 and lives in
Stara Zagora.
- The applicant in no. 42563/02, Ms Amalia Dimitrova
Yordanovich, is a Bulgarian national who was born in the 1950s and
lives in Stara Zagora.
- The applicants in no. 42596/02, Mr Zhores Peychev
Georgiev and Mr Kiril Peychev Georgiev, are Bulgarian nationals
who were born in 1949 and 1954 respectively and live in Stara Zagora.
- The applicants in no. 16059/03, Ms Margarita Ganeva
Slavova, Ms Lilyana Ganeva Slavova, Mr Slavi Georgiev Slavov, Ms
Ruska Miteva Dyankova, Ms Svetoslava Dimitrova Petkova, Ms Mariyka
Stancheva Slavova, Mr Dimitar Slavchev Dimitrov and Mr Stanko
Slavchev Dimitrov, are Bulgarian nationals who were born in 1932,
1933, 1942, 1950, 1970 and 1977 respectively and live in Stara
Zagora.
- The applicants in no. 32427/03, Mr Stoyan Georgiev
Boyadzhiev, Ms Yulia Georgieva Popvasileva and Ms Velichka
Radkova Bicheva, are/were Bulgarian nationals who were born in 1915,
1913 and a later unknown date respectively and live(d) in Sofia. In a
letter of 29 January 2007 the Court was apprised of the deaths of the
first two applicants, and of the wish of their heirs, Ms Maria
Stoyanova Boyadzhieva (sole heir to Mr Stoyan Boyadzhiev), and
Ms Elitsa Vasileva Mineva and Ms Maria Kostadinova Mineva (sole heirs
to Ms Yulia Popvasileva), to pursue the application. In a letter of
13 February 2007 the applicants informed the Court that they wished
to withdraw their application; however, in a letter of 28 September
2007 Ms Maria Stoyanova Boyadzhieva expressed her wish to pursue the
application.
- All
applicants were represented before the Court by Ms M. Slavova, a
lawyer practising in Stara Zagora (also applicant in no. 16059/03).
The Bulgarian Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Ms M. Kotseva, of the Ministry of
Justice.
A. The circumstances of the case
- The
facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as
follows.
1. The case of Mr Slavov
- Mr Slavov’s father owned a house with a yard in
Stara Zagora. With his brothers – Mr Slavov’s uncles –,
with whom he had formed a partnership, he also owned a food oil
factory. One of his brothers also owned a house with a yard in Stara
Zagora.
- In 1947 proceedings were brought against them under the
1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 below). In a judgment of 23
May 1947 the Stara Zagora Regional Court confiscated the
above mentioned properties and various other assets owned by
them. Mr Slavov’s father and his brothers appealed. So did the
prosecution, but it later withdrew its appeal. In a judgment of 4
November 1948 the Supreme Court quashed the lower court’s
judgment and proceeded to examine the case on the merits. In a
judgment of 27 February 1950 it confiscated the above mentioned
properties and various other assets owned by the appellants.
- In the meantime, while the proceedings were still
pending, the 1947 Nationalisation Act came into force (see paragraph
41 below) and all the assets of the partnership owned by Mr Slavov’s
father and his brothers were earmarked for nationalisation. However,
as confiscation proceedings were already underway, the nationalised
property was not inventoried as provided for in the 1947
Nationalisation Act.
- The two houses were later demolished and a communist
party building was erected in their place. After the fall of the
communist regime the building was given to the Stara Zagora municipal
authorities and the social security authorities. A number of
buildings in the factory were also demolished and new ones
constructed in their place; machinery was also replaced.
- On 16 April 1998, some years after the fall of the
communist regime, the Chief Prosecutor, acting pursuant to a request
by Mr Slavov, made a petition for a review of the 1947 and 1950
judgments, demanding that they be set aside and that the confiscation
ordered in them be rescinded. He asserted that those judgments were
unlawful and arbitrary. On 8 July 1998 the Supreme Court of Cassation
refused to examine the petition. It noted that prior to the entry
into force of a 1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act (see
paragraph 44 below) it had accepted such petitions for examination.
However, that amendment had restituted ex lege the properties
confiscated under the 1946 Confiscation Act and had thus removed the
legal interest of the former owners or their heirs in seeking review
of confiscation judgments made under that Act. When the
Constitutional Court had declared the amendment unconstitutional in
March 1998 (see paragraph 45 below) that interest had resurfaced, but
the adding of the new section 2(1a) to the 1992 Restitution Act,
effective from 25 April 1998 (see paragraph 46 below), had opened a
new avenue of redress in respect of such confiscations, namely
re opening. As procedural rules were immediately applicable, the
court could no longer entertain petitions for review in such cases.
Those concerned could instead seek re opening.
- On 3 August 1998 the Chief Prosecutor renewed his
petition. On 12 January 1999 the Supreme Court of Cassation
again refused to examine it, finding that it was identical to the
previous one.
- Mr Slavov, with almost all of the applicants in
no. 16059/03 (see paragraph 4 above) and another co heir,
subsequently requested the re opening of the 1947 50
proceedings. In a final decision of 16 April 1999 the Supreme Court
of Cassation refused to examine the request. It held that re opening
under Article 362 § 1 (5) of the 1974 Code of Criminal Procedure
(see paragraph 48 below) was possible only if the judgment with
regard to which setting aside was being requested had not been
subjected to cassation review. However, the 1947 judgment had been
examined by the Supreme Court on an appeal by Mr Slavov’s
ancestors. That court had acted as a cassation court and not, as Mr
Slavov and the other petitioners asserted, as a court of second
instance.
- On 4 March 1998 Mr Slavov and one of his co heirs
lodged with the regional governor a request for compensation under
the 1997 Compensation Act (see paragraph 43 below) for their
ancestor’s house. As the governor did not reply, Mr Slavov and
his co heir sought judicial review of his tacit refusal. In a
judgment of 15 February 2001 the Stara Zagora Regional Court
dismissed their application. It noted that the 1997 Compensation Act
provided for compensation only of owners (or their heirs) whose
property had been taken under one of the statutes enumerated in the
1992 Restitution Act. However, at the time when the regional governor
was due to have made his decision on the compensation request, the
1992 Restitution Act, having been partially declared
unconstitutional, no longer referred to the 1946 Confiscation Act
(see paragraphs 43 45 below). The governor’s tacit refusal
was therefore consistent with the law as it stood at the material
time. Mr Slavov appealed on points of law. In a final judgment
of 27 November 2001 the Supreme Administrative Court upheld the lower
court’s judgment with almost identical reasoning.
2. The case of Ms Margarita Slavova and her co heirs
- The
attempt by Ms Margarita Slavova and her co heirs to obtain
re opening of the proceedings in which the properties of their
ancestors were confiscated is described in paragraph 14 above.
- On 4 March 1998 Ms Margarita Slavova and Ms Lilyana
Slavova lodged with the regional governor a request for compensation
under the 1997 Compensation Act (see paragraph 43 below) for the
confiscated house which had belonged to their ancestor, Mr Slavov’s
uncle (see paragraph 8 above). As the governor did not reply, they
sought judicial review of his tacit refusal. In a judgment of 7
January 2002 the Stara Zagora Regional Court dismissed their
application. It held that the 1997 Compensation Act provided for
compensation only of owners whose property had been taken under one
of the statutes enumerated in the 1992 Restitution Act. However, at
the time when the regional governor was due to have made his decision
on the compensation request, the 1992 Restitution Act, having been
partially declared unconstitutional, no longer referred to the 1946
Confiscation Act (see paragraphs 43 45 below). The governor’s
tacit refusal was therefore consistent with the law as it stood at
the material time. The court went on to hold that it was immaterial
when the request for compensation had been lodged, because, since the
property no longer existed in its original state, title to it had not
been vested ex lege in the applicants. The applicants appealed
on points of law. In a final judgment of 28 November 2002 the Supreme
Administrative Court upheld the lower court’s judgment with
almost identical reasoning.
- In a separate bid to obtain compensation for their
ancestors’ factory (see paragraph 8 above), on 20 November 1998
Ms Margarita Slavova, the other applicants in no. 16059/03 (see
paragraph 4 above) and Mr Slavov asked the Minister of the Economy to
compensate them either with shares in the State owned company in
whose assets the factory had been included, or, if no shares were
available, with compensatory bonds. As the Minister did not reply, on
1 February 1999 they sought judicial review of his tacit refusal.
- According to the applicants, in the ensuing judicial
review proceedings they requested the Supreme Administrative Court to
stay, as an interim measure, the privatisation of the above mentioned
State owned company. The court apparently failed to rule on
those requests.
- In a judgment of 30 July 2002 a three member
panel of the Supreme Administrative Court quashed the tacit refusal
and partly acknowledged the applicants’ right to compensation
by bonds, up to an amount of 23,221,116 new Bulgarian levs. It held
that the properties had been taken ex lege under the 1947
Nationalisation Act (see paragraph 41 below), and not pursuant to a
judgment under the 1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 below), as
the judgment had been made after the 1947 Act’s entry into
force. It also held that the properties did not exist in their
original state and that the applicants were thus entitled to
compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act. The manner of
compensation was bonds, as the State owned company in whose
assets the properties had been included had been privatised and it
was thus impossible to compensate the applicants with shares in it.
- Upon appeals by the parties, in a judgment of 27
February 2003 a five member panel of the Supreme Administrative
Court quashed that judgment and remitted the case. It held that the
three member panel had not properly established the facts. It
was evident that the properties had been taken partly under the 1947
Nationalisation Act and partly pursuant to a judgment made under the
1946 Confiscation Act. Whereas the 1997 Compensation Act provided for
compensation for property taken under the former Act, after the
Constitutional Court’s decision of 11 March 1998 it no longer
provided for compensation for property taken under the latter (see
paragraphs 43 45 below). It was thus essential to establish,
through an expert report, under which Act each piece of property had
been taken.
- On remittal another three member panel of the
Supreme Administrative Court, after apparently ignoring several
evidentiary requests by the applicants relating to the privatisation
of the above mentioned State owned company, wholly
dismissed the application for judicial review in a judgment of 22
December 2003. It found, on the basis of a report by an expert
appointed during the proceedings, that certain of the properties had
been taken pursuant to a judgment under the 1946 Confiscation Act; no
compensation was due in respect of those. The court further found
that the remainder of the properties, taken under the 1947
Nationalisation Act, had not been duly inventoried at the time of
their nationalisation and that the net worth of the applicants’
ancestors’ partnership which had owned the properties had not
been positive, as was apparent from the expert’s report. No
compensation was therefore due in respect of those properties either
(see paragraph 43 below).
- The applicants appealed. In a final judgment of 31 May
2004 a five member panel of the Supreme Administrative Court
dismissed the appeal, fully endorsing the three member panel’s
reasoning. It observed that under the 1997 Compensation Act
compensation was due for property taken under the 1947
Nationalisation Act only if the nationalised undertakings’ net
worth, defined as assets minus liabilities, was positive, which, as
was apparent from the expert report, had not been the case. It went
on to hold that no breaches of the rules of procedure had taken place
in the gathering and assessment of evidence. In particular, the
expert report had been duly admitted in evidence and the applicants
had not tried to challenge it or request another expert report. It
finally noted that, unlike restitution under the 1992 Restitution
Act, which had occurred ex lege, compensation under the 1997
Act was subject to the positive outcome of administrative
proceedings. The applicant’s arguments based on the Supreme
Court of Cassation’s interpretative decision (see paragraphs 48
and 49 below) were thus inapposite, as its ruling applied only to
properties which had remained intact and could be restored. In the
instant case, the applicants had no right to compensation as they had
lodged their request after the publication of the Constitutional
Court’s decision declaring the 1997 amendment unconstitutional.
3. The case of Ms Yordanovich
- An ancestor of Ms Yordanovich had been a co-owner of
three plots of land with buildings in Stara Zagora and two plots of
land near it.
- In 1946 proceedings were brought against her ancestor
under the 1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 below). In a
judgment of 9 May 1947 the Stara Zagora Regional Court confiscated
the above mentioned properties along with various other assets
part owned by her. In a judgment of 17 July 1947 the Supreme
Court upheld the confiscation.
- The properties were later modified, thus ceasing to
exist in their original state.
- After an unsuccessful attempt to obtain review through
a petition made by the Chief Prosecutor and following the enactment
of the new section 2(1a) of the 1992 Restitution Act (see paragraph 46
below), in 1998 Ms Yordanovich requested, along with some of her
co heirs, the re opening of the 1947 proceedings. In a
final decision of 3 April 1999 the Supreme Court of Cassation refused
to examine the request. It held that the 9 May 1947 judgment had been
examined in cassation proceedings. Re opening under Article 362
§ 1 (5) of the 1974 Code of Criminal Procedure was therefore
impossible. Moreover, no legal interest existed for Ms Yordanovich
in requesting re opening, as properties confiscated under the
1946 Confiscation Act had been restituted ex lege with the
1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act (see paragraph 44 below).
- On 20 November 1998 Ms Yordanovich and some of her
co heirs lodged with the regional governor a request for
compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act (see paragraph 43 below)
for the properties confiscated in 1947. The governor turned down the
request. Ms Yordanovich sought judicial review of his decision.
In a judgment of 27 July 2001 the Stara Zagora Regional Court
dismissed the application, holding that at the time when the request
for compensation had been made and at the time when the regional
governor had made his decision the 1997 Compensation Act, read in
conjunction with the 1992 Restitution Act, no longer provided for
compensation for property confiscated under the 1946 Confiscation Act
(see paragraphs 42 45 below). Ms Yordanovich appealed on points
of law to the Supreme Administrative Court. In a judgment of 21 May
2002 the Supreme Administrative Court upheld the lower court’s
judgment, endorsing its reasoning.
4. The case of Messrs Georgievi
- An ancestor of Messrs Georgievi owned a house with a
yard in Stara Zagora.
- In 1946 proceedings were brought against him under the
1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 below). In a judgment of 22
April 1947 the Stara Zagora Regional Court confiscated the
above mentioned property together with various other assets
owned by him. In a judgment of 30 October 1947 the Supreme Court
upheld the confiscation, slightly modifying the perimeter of the
yard.
- Some time after the confiscation the property was
modified, thus ceasing to exist in its original state.
- Following the enactment of the new section 2(1a) of
the 1992 Restitution Act (see paragraph 46 below), Messrs Georgievi
requested the re opening of the 1946 47 proceedings. In a
decision of 18 June 1999 the Supreme Court of Cassation refused to
examine their request. It held that, in so far as it was based on
Article 362 § 1 (5) of the 1974 Code of Criminal Procedure (see
paragraph 48 below), the request could not be entertained, because
that provision was applicable only to judgments which had not been
reviewed in cassation proceedings and had been delivered after 1
April 1998, which was not the case. Moreover, Messrs Georgievi had no
legal interest in requesting re opening because their ancestor’s
property had been restituted ex lege with the 1997 amendment
to the 1992 Restitution Act, and that restoration had not been
overturned by the subsequent declaration of unconstitutionality of
that provision (see paragraphs 44 and 45 below). Thus, all they had
to do was to request the competent officials to return the property.
- In the meantime, on 5 March 1998 Messrs Georgievi and
one of their co heirs lodged with the regional governor a
request for compensation for the house and the yard under the 1997
Compensation Act (see paragraph 43 below). In a decision of 29
December 2000 the governor turned down the request. Messrs Georgievi
sought judicial review of this decision. In a judgment of 20 July
2001 the Stara Zagora Regional Court dismissed their application.
They appealed on points of law. In a final judgment of 5 June 2002
the Supreme Administrative Court upheld the lower court’s
judgment, holding that at the time of the governor’s decision
the 1992 Restitution Act, having been declared partly
unconstitutional, no longer referred to property taken under the 1946
Confiscation Act (see paragraphs 42, 44 and 45 below). The governor’s
refusal was therefore consistent with the law as it stood at the
material time. The applicants’ argument that the property had
already been restituted ex lege was inapposite, because the
1997 Compensation Act was a special piece of legislation which made
compensation contingent on special prerequisites and laid down a
special procedure for obtaining it.
5. The case of Mr Boyadzhiev and his sisters
- The father of Mr Boyadzhiev, Ms Mineva and Ms Bicheva
– all siblings – owned a piece of land in the village of
Voluyak, an orchard in the town of Bankya, and some movable property
and securities.
- In 1946 proceedings were brought against him under the
1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 below). In a judgment of 15
January 1947 the Sofia Regional Court confiscated the above-mentioned
properties. In a judgment of 1 April 1947 the Supreme Court upheld
the confiscation and, in addition, confiscated Mr Boyadzhiev’s
flat.
- In 1958 the State sold the flat to a private person.
It is not clear what became of the piece of land and the orchard.
- In November 1998 Mr Boyadzhiev requested the
re opening of the 1946 47 proceedings. In a decision of 3
June 1999 the Supreme Court of Cassation refused to examine his
request, noting that the trial court’s judgment had been
examined in cassation proceedings. It went on to hold that Mr
Boyadzhiev had no legal interest in requesting re opening
because his property had been restituted ex lege with the 1997
amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act (see paragraph 44 below).
- On 11 November 1999 the three applicants lodged with
the regional governor a request for compensation under the 1997
Compensation Act for the properties taken from their father. In a
decision of 19 January 2000 the governor turned down their request.
They sought judicial review of his decision. In a judgment of 11
December 2000 the Sofia City Court dismissed their application, in so
far as it related to their father’s movable property, but
quashed the governor’s decision in so far as it related to the
piece of land in Voluyak and the orchard in Bankya. It instructed the
governor to strike the latter off the register of State property, if
they were intact and were still owned by the State, a municipality,
or a State or municipally owned company. The court noted
that the title-vesting effect of the 1997 amendment to the 1992
Restitution Act had not been invalidated by the Constitutional
Court’s decision (see paragraphs 44 and 45 below). Therefore,
it had to be verified whether the properties were still intact and
were owned by the State, a municipality, or a State or
municipally owned company. If that were the case, they were to
be returned to the applicants. On an appeal by the governor, on 24
April 2003 the Supreme Administrative Court quashed the judgment and
wholly dismissed the application for judicial review. It found that
the applicants’ request for compensation had been lodged after
the Constitutional Court’s decision and thus had no basis in
law. It also noted that the governor’s decision to strike a
piece of land off the register of State property was not subject to
judicial review, as it had no incidence on the title to that
property, which could be determined only in a civil action.
- Concomitantly, on 21 October 1999 Mr Boyadzhiev lodged
with the regional governor a request for compensation for the flat.
In a decision of 21 July 2000 the governor turned down the
request. Mr Boyadzhiev sought judicial review of his decision. In a
judgment of 12 November 2001 the Sofia City Court dismissed his
application. It found that Mr Boyadzhiev’s request for
compensation had not been made within the time-limit laid down in
section 6(1) of the 1997 Compensation Act (see paragraphs 43 in
fine and 47 below). It further held that after the Constitutional
Court’s decision the right to compensation under the 1997
Compensation Act in respect of property taken under the 1946
Confiscation Act had ceased to exist (see paragraphs 44 and 45
below). It noted that, had the flat been owned by the State, title to
it would have been vested in Mr Boyadzhiev by operation of law.
However, it had been sold to private persons in 1958 and had thus not
been restituted ex lege. On an appeal by Mr Boyadzhiev, on 18
April 2003 the Supreme Administrative Court upheld the judgment. It
also found that Mr Boyadzhiev’s request had been out of
time and observed that what had happened to the title to the flat
between 22 November 1997 and 21 March 1998, during which period the
1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act had been in force, was
immaterial for the right to compensation under the 1997 Compensation
Act. The Supreme Court of Cassation’s interpretative decision,
which had proclaimed the amendment’s title vesting effect
(see paragraphs 48 and 49 below), concerned civil proceedings, not
judicial review proceedings, and the arguments based on it were
inapposite.
B. Relevant domestic law and practice
1. Confiscation and nationalisation legislation adopted
in the 1940s
- In 1946, in the early stages of the establishment of
the communist regime in Bulgaria, the legislature enacted the
Confiscation of Property Acquired through Speculation and by Unlawful
Means Act („Закон
за конфискуване
на придобити
чрез спекула
и по незаконен
начин имоти“ –
“the 1946 Confiscation Act”), an Act providing for the
confiscation, by court order made after adversarial trial and
cassation proceedings, of certain properties of individuals and
companies who had allegedly enriched themselves through speculation
or in an unlawful manner between 1935 and 1946.
- In 1947 the legislature enacted the Nationalisation of
Private Industrial and Mining Undertakings Act („Закон
за национализация
на частни
индустриални
и минни предприятия“
– “the 1947 Nationalisation Act”) which provided
for the nationalisation ex lege of a number of private
undertakings.
2. Restitution and compensation legislation adopted in
the 1990s
- In 1992, after the fall of the communist regime, the
legislature enacted the Restitution of Nationalised Immovable
Properties Act („Закон
за възстановяване
собствеността
върху одържавени
недвижими
имоти“ – “the
1992 Restitution Act”). Its section 2(1), as originally
enacted, provided for the restitution ex lege, under certain
conditions, of immovable properties nationalised under several
exhaustively listed statutes enacted in the 1940s and the 1950s, one
of which was the 1947 Nationalisation Act. One of the conditions for
restitution was that the properties existed intact in their state
prior to nationalisation (section 2(2) before 1997, thereafter
section 2(3)). Section 3(3) provided that if restitution was
impossible – for example, because the properties no longer
existed in their original state – the former owners or their
heirs were to be compensated in the manner set out in a separate
statute.
- In 1997 the legislature enacted such a statute –
the Compensation of the Owners of Nationalised Properties Act („Закон
за обезщетяване
на собственици
на одържавени
имоти“ – “the
1997 Compensation Act”). It provided for compensation of the
former owners of nationalised property or their heirs in cases where
it was impossible to restitute the property because it had been put
in the public domain, had been acquired in good faith by third
parties, or had been transformed by building or otherwise (section
2(1) of the Act). Compensation consisted of either (i) shares of
title to the buildings erected on the nationalised plots or to the
plots to which they had been appended, (ii) shares in State-owned
companies in whose capital these properties had been put, or (iii)
compensatory bonds. Compensation for properties taken under the 1947
Nationalisation Act was subject, inter alia, to the existence
of a positive net worth of the nationalised undertakings at the time
of nationalisation (section 3(5) of the Act). Those considering
themselves entitled to compensation were to apply to the regional
governors or the competent ministers not later than six months after
the Act’s entry into force (section 6(1) of the Act).
- Paragraph 1(1)(a) of the transitional and concluding
provisions of the 1997 Compensation Act amended section 2(1) of the
1992 Restitution Act, adding to its list of statutes (see paragraph 42
above) the 1946 Confiscation Act (see paragraph 40 above). The
amendment was published in the State Gazette on 18 November 1997 and
came into force on 22 November 1997.
3. The Constitutional Court’s decision of 11
March 1998
- Immediately thereafter, in November 1997, fifty two
Members of Parliament challenged the amendment before the
Constitutional Court. On 4 December 1997 the court declared the
challenge admissible and invited a number of interested public
authorities and two non-governmental organisations to submit briefs.
It examined the merits of the case at a closed hearing held on 24 and
25 February 1998, and in a decision of 11 March 1998, published in
the State Gazette on 17 March 1998 and entering into force on 21
March 1998 (реш. № 4 от
11 март 1998 г.
по к.д. № 16 от 1997 г.,
обн., ДВ, бр. 30
от 17 март 1998 г.),
unanimously found that the amendment was unconstitutional because it
purported to overturn judicial rulings made pursuant to the 1946
Confiscation Act by Act of Parliament. This ran counter to the
separation of powers doctrine enshrined in Article 8 of the
1991 Constitution and to the principle of the independence of the
judiciary.
4. The creation of the right to seek re opening of
proceedings under the 1946 Confiscation Act
- Shortly thereafter, on 14 April 1998, the legislature
added a new subsection (1a) to section 2 of the 1992 Restitution
Act. This came into force on 25 April 1998 and provided that the
former owners of property taken under the 1946 Confiscation Act or
their heirs could request re opening of the proceedings under
that Act in accordance with the relevant provisions of the 1974 Code
of Criminal Procedure. This was in line with the position adopted in
a 1993 interpretative decision of the former Supreme Court, which
found that the proceedings under the 1946 Confiscation Act had been
criminal (пост. №
1 от 1993 г.
по д. №
1/1993 г., Пленум
на ВС).
- At the same time the time limit for lodging
requests for compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act (see
paragraph 43 in fine above) was extended to one year.
5. The Supreme Court of Cassation’s
interpretative decision of 29 June 1999
- In an interpretative decision of 29 June 1999 (тълк.
реш. № 1 от 29 юни
1999 г. по н.д. № 3/1998 г.,
ОСНК на ВКС),
made after a wave of requests for re opening under the new
section 2(1a) of the 1992 Restitution Act, the Supreme Court of
Cassation noted, inter alia, that prior to the adoption of the
1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act it had examined petitions
for review of judgments under the 1946 Confiscation Act, but that
such review had subsequently become pointless since, under the
amendment, title to the confiscated properties had been vested ex
lege in their former owners or their heirs. However, following
the declaration on 11 March 1998 that the 1997 amendment was
unconstitutional, the problem had re emerged. In attempting to
solve it the new section 2(1a) of the 1992 Restitution Act had opened
a fresh avenue for reviewing judgments under the 1946 Confiscation
Act. Those seeking re opening had accordingly relied on Article
362 § 1 (5) of the 1974 Code of Criminal Procedure, which
provided that re opening was possible if the final judgment (i)
had not been reviewed in cassation proceedings and (ii) was in breach
of the substantive or the procedural law or had imposed a patently
unjust penalty. As the 1946 Confiscation Act had made provision for
cassation proceedings, the only possible conclusion was that
re opening under section 2(1a) of the 1992 Restitution Act was
possible only if the first instance judgments under the 1946
Confiscation Act had not been reviewed in cassation proceedings.
- The court went on to state that it was questionable
whether the persons whose property had been taken or their heirs had
any legal interest in requesting re opening. At the very moment
when the 1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act had entered into
force (see paragraph 44 above), title to the confiscated properties
had been vested ex lege in its former owners or their heirs.
The amendment had remained in force until 21 March 1998, when it had
been declared unconstitutional. However, the Constitutional Court’s
decision had not operated retroactively and had not wiped out the
transfer of title. Therefore, the persons whose property had been
confiscated or their heirs had no legal interest in requesting
re opening, unless they sought to achieve results which were not
purely pecuniary.
- Section
86(2) of the 1994 Judicial Power Act („Закон
за съдебната
власт“) provided that the
Supreme Court of Cassation’s interpretative decisions were
binding on the judiciary and the executive.
6. Relevant case law of the Supreme Administrative
Court
- In a judgment of 11 January 2000 (реш.
№ 46 от 11 януари
2000 г. по адм.д. №
4938/1999 г., ВАС, III
о.) a three member panel of the Supreme
Administrative Court held that requests for compensation in respect
of property taken under the 1946 Confiscation Act had to be
determined in accordance with the law as it stood when they were
lodged. If they had been lodged before the 1997 amendment to the 1992
Restitution Act was declared unconstitutional, they had to be
determined in accordance with this amendment.
- In two another judgments, given on 28 March 2000 (реш.
№ 1868 от 28 март 2000 г.
по адм. д. № 6778/1999
г., ВАС, IV о.)
and on 22 August
2000 (реш. № 5541
от 22 август
2000 г. по адм.д.
№ 8152/1999 г., ВАС,
III o.), two other three member panels of the Supreme
Administrative Court reached the opposite conclusion, on the basis of
the same reasoning as in the applicants’ cases.
COMPLAINTS
- In their initial applications the applicants raised
the following complaints:
(a) Mr
Slavov, Ms Margarita Slavova, Ms Lilyana Slavova, Ms Yordanovich
and Messrs Georgievi complained that the Supreme Court of Cassation
had refused to re open the proceedings against their ancestors
under the 1946 Confiscation Act. They relied on Articles 1, 6 and 13
of the Convention.
(b) Mr
Slavov, Ms Margarita Slavova, Ms Lilyana Slavova, Ms Yordanovich,
Messrs Georgievi and Mr Boyadzhiev and his sisters complained under
Article 6 of the Convention about the outcome and the fairness of the
proceedings before the administrative courts. They submitted that,
because of the latter’s bias in favour of the State, they had
adopted an erroneous interpretation of the law and, having arrived at
conclusions which differed from those of the Supreme Court of
Cassation, had deprived them of the right to compensation for the
properties confiscated from their ancestors.
(c) Mr
Slavov, Ms Margarita Slavova, Ms Lilyana Slavova, Ms Yordanovich,
Messrs Georgievi and Mr Boyadzhiev and his sisters complained under
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 that, as a result of the discrepancies
between the Supreme Court of Cassation’s and the Supreme
Administrative Court’s interpretations of the effects of the
1997 98 changes to the 1992 Restitution Act, they had been
deprived of the right to compensation for the properties confiscated
from their ancestors.
(d) Mr
Slavov complained under Article 14 of the Convention that those
persons, like him, whose ancestors’ property had not remained
in its original state after its nationalisation had been
discriminated against. Unlike those whose property had remained
intact and who could reclaim it as a result of the Supreme Court of
Cassation’s finding that the 1997 amendment to the 1992
Restitution Act had title vesting effect, they had remained
without compensation.
- In a letter of 18 November 2004 the applicants in no.
16059/03 raised additional complaints:
(a) They
complained under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention that in
examining their application for judicial review of the Minister of
the Economy’s refusal the Supreme Administrative Court had been
biased, had neglected their evidentiary requests relating to the
privatisation of the State owned company which owned the
confiscated property, had deliberately protracted the proceedings,
had made erroneous findings of fact, had misconstrued the relevant
legal provisions, had not given adequate reasons and had not examined
their request for interim relief.
(b) They
also complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention
that the Supreme Administrative Court, by erroneously assessing the
facts and misconstruing the law, had denied them compensation. They
also alleged that the system of compensation by bonds, as laid down
in the relevant legislation and case law of the courts, did not
provide adequate compensation for the property taken from their
ancestors more than sixty years previously.
(c) Finally,
they complained under Article 14 of the Convention that they had been
discriminated against in that, under the 1946 Compensation Act, they
had been entitled at most to compensatory bonds, whereas those whose
unlawfully acquired properties had been returned to their rightful
owners after the fall of the communist regime had received better
compensation, as had the former king, whose properties had been
restored.
THE LAW
A. Preliminary questions
- As
all five applications are based on similar facts and as they contain,
for the most part, identical complaints, the Court considers it
appropriate to join them under Rule 42 (former 43) § 1 of the
Rules of Court.
- The
only remaining applicant in application no. 32427/03, Ms Velichka
Bicheva, and two of the heirs to the other
applicants in this application, Ms Elitsa Mineva and Ms Maria
Mineva, expressed their wish to withdraw their complaints and, unlike
the third heir, Ms Maria Boyadzhieva, did not
subsequently reverse their position (see paragraph 5 above). In view
of this, the Court considers that these three applicants no longer
intend to pursue their applications (Article 37 § 1 (a) of the
Convention). It also observes that they have raised the same
complaints as the rest of the applicants in the present case, on
which it will express its opinion below. The Court therefore finds no
reasons relating to respect for human rights, as defined in the
Convention and its Protocols, which would require it to continue the
examination of the complaints of these three applicants (Article 37 §
1 in fine)
(see Denizci and Others v. Cyprus, nos. 25316-25321/94
and 27207/95, § 369, ECHR 2001 V).
B. Complaint about the refusals of the Supreme Court of
Cassation to re-open the proceedings under the 1946 Confiscation Act
- The Court considers that the
applicants’ complaint that the Supreme Court of
Cassation refused to re open the confiscation proceedings
against their ancestors (see paragraph 53 (a) above) falls to be
examined under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, which provides:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is
entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an
independent and impartial tribunal established by law.”
- The
Court observes at the outset that Article 6 § 1 was not
applicable under its criminal limb, as the proceedings did not
concern criminal charges against the applicants, but against their
ancestors (see Kurzac v. Poland (dec.), no. 31382/96, ECHR
2000 VI). The question remains, then, whether the proceedings,
which were issued under a special rehabilitation law, fell under the
civil limb of this provision (ibid.) and could have a bearing on the
applicants’ ability to obtain compensation for the properties
taken from their ancestors. However, the Court is not required to
resolve this issue, because even assuming that Article 6 § 1 was
applicable, the complaints are inadmissible as being out of time.
- The
requests for re opening in all five cases were turned down by
final decisions of the Supreme Court of Cassation delivered more than
six months prior to the introduction of the applications (see
paragraphs 14, 27, 32 and 37 above). It is true that the attempts to
secure re opening were part of a broader endeavour to obtain
compensation, which was eventually frustrated by judgments of the
Supreme Administrative Court delivered less than six months before
the lodging of the applications (see paragraphs 15, 17, 23, 28, 33, 38
and 39 above). However, although this might be of relevance for the
complaints under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention and
Article 14 of the Convention, it is immaterial for the complaint
under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention about the refusal to
re open the proceedings.
- It
follows that this complaint has been introduced out of time and must
be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the
Convention.
C. Complaints under Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention about the proceedings before the administrative courts
- In
respect of their complaints about the fairness of the proceedings
before the administrative courts (see paragraphs 53 (b) and 54 (a)
above) the applicants relied on Article 6 § 1 of the Convention,
the text of which has been set out in paragraph 57 above.
- In so far as the applicants complained about the
manner in which the various administrative courts examining their
applications for judicial review had established the facts and had
construed Bulgarian law, the Court observes that it is not its
function to deal with errors of fact or law allegedly made by
national courts (see García Ruiz v. Spain [GC], no.
30544/96, § 28, ECHR 1999-I), as it is not a court of appeal
from these courts (see, among many other authorities, Cornelis v.
the Netherlands (dec.), no. 994/03, ECHR 2004-V (extracts)). It
does not consider that the administrative courts’ judgments
were arbitrary. In particular, the Court does not find that their
rulings that the determination of the applicants’ compensation
requests had to be based on the law as it stood at the time when the
authorities decided or ought to have decided the matter (see
paragraphs 15, 17, 28, 33, 38 and 39 above) was so patently unlawful
or unreasonable as to raise an issue under Article 6 § 1. It may
have ran counter to an earlier judgment of the Supreme Administrative
Court (see paragraph 51 above), but was hardly out of line with the
remainder of that court’s case law (see paragraph 52
above). Nor is the Court persuaded that the rulings that the business
undertaking belonging to the ancestors of the applicants in nos.
20612/02 and 16059/03 had been taken in part under the 1946
Confiscation Act and in part under the 1947 Nationalisation Act, and
that the net worth of the part taken under the latter Act was not
positive (see paragraphs 22 and 23 above) were so untenable or flawed
as to render the proceedings unfair. It reiterates on this point that
it is primarily for the national authorities, notably the courts, to
interpret and apply domestic law.
- In
so far as the applicants in no. 16059/03 complained that the Supreme
Administrative Court had ignored their requests to gather evidence
relating to the privatisation of the State owned company whose
capital comprised properties once owned by their ancestors (see
paragraph 22 above), the Court observes that Article 6 § 1 does
not require the court hearing a case to allow the gathering of
evidence solely because a party has asked for it. It is for the court
to assess whether such evidence would be relevant for the examination
of the case (see H. v. France, 24 October 1989, §§
60 and 61, Series A no. 162 A). Considering the grounds on which
the Supreme Administrative Court disposed of the case (see paragraphs
22 and 23 above), it was entitled to take the view that the evidence
sought to be adduced by the applicants would be immaterial.
Accordingly, the fact that it did not accede to their requests did
not infringe their right to a fair trial.
- As
to the alleged deliberate protraction of the proceedings for judicial
review of the Minister of the Economy’s tacit refusal, examined
as a length issue, the Court observes that the proceedings, which
raised relatively complex issues of fact and law, lasted a little
over five years for four levels of jurisdiction (see paragraphs 18 23
above). Such an amount of time does not, in the circumstances, appear
excessive.
- Concerning
the bias allegedly underlying the courts’ rulings, the Court
observes that it has not been argued that the courts were not
independent by reason of lack of guarantees against outside pressure,
or that there existed objective factors casting doubt on their
impartiality. Nor is there any indication that the judges who dealt
with the applicants’ cases acted with personal bias, showed
partiality in favour of the executive, or based their rulings on
factors other than their opinions about the facts of the cases and
the proper interpretation of the relevant legal provisions. The
principle that a tribunal is presumed to be free of personal
prejudice or partiality is long established in the Court’s
case-law (see, as a recent authority, Kyprianou v. Cyprus [GC],
no. 73797/01, § 119, ECHR 2005 XIII).
- Finally,
in so far as the applicants complained about the Supreme
Administrative Court’s failure to impose the interim measure
sought by them (see paragraph 19 above), the Court observes that it
is questionable whether this grievance comes within the ambit of
Article 6 § 1 (see, among many other authorities, Gallogly v.
the United Kingdom, no. 7990/77, Commission decision of 11 May
1981, Decisions and Reports 24, p. 57, at p. 61; Ribstein v.
France, no. 31800/96, Commission decision of 16 April 1998,
unreported; APIS a.s. v. Slovakia (dec.), no. 39754/98, 13
January 2000; Starikow v. Germany (dec.), no. 23395/02, 10
April 2003; Libert v. Belgium (dec.), no. 44734/98, 8
July 2004; Biserica Sfantul Haralambie v. Moldova (dec.), no.
19967/02, 30 November 2004; and Saarekallas Oü v. Estonia,
no. 11548/04, 8 November 2007; but see also, to the contrary,
Micallef v. Malta, no. 17056/06, §§ 34-47, 15
January 2008, referred to the Grand Chamber). However, the Court does
not need to resolve this issue in the instant case. Even assuming
that Article 6 § 1 applied, it does not seem that the Supreme
Administrative Court’s failure to order the measure sought by
the applicants had a bearing on the fairness of the proceedings as a
whole. In view of the grounds on which that court eventually disposed
of the case (see paragraphs 22 and 23 above), it can hardly be said
that its failure to stay the privatisation of the State owned
company in whose assets the applicants’ ancestors’
factory had been included impinged on their rights.
- It
follows that these complaints are manifestly ill founded and
must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 and 4
of the Convention.
D. Complaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention
- In
respect of their complaints that they had been deprived of the right
to compensation for the properties taken from their ancestors (see
paragraphs 53 (c) and 54 (b) above) the applicants relied on Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention, which 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.”
1. The parties’ submissions
- The
Government submitted, with reference to a number of the Court’s
judgments and decisions relating to the process of restitution in
Eastern Europe, that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 was not applicable.
In their view, the facts that the scope of the restitution and
compensation statutes in Bulgaria had been circumscribed, and that
the return of the nationalised properties or the obtaining of
compensation had been made subject to certain conditions did not run
counter to this provision. It was evident that under these statutes
the applicants did not have an existing possession, but merely a
claim. However, this claim was not sufficiently established to amount
to a “legitimate expectation” within the meaning of the
Court’s case law.
- The
Government further argued that following the 1997 amendment to the
1992 Restitution Act the applicants could have applied for
compensation for the properties taken under the 1946 Confiscation
Act. However, the decision of the Constitutional Court, and the
change which it brought in the law, had eliminated this opportunity.
The consistent rulings of the administrative courts that the
authorities were bound to apply the law as it stood when the matter
came for decision meant that the applicants’ requests for
compensation had been legitimately dismissed. The position might have
been otherwise if the declaration of unconstitutionality had applied
retroactively. However, it had not. Although the applicants’
requests had been lodged before that declaration, they had come up
for decision after it. At that time, the law no longer enshrined a
right to compensation.
- In
the Government’s view, the applicants’ inability to
obtain restitution or compensation through the re opening of the
confiscation proceedings under the newly added section 2(1a) of the
1992 Restitution Act had also not been constitutive of a breach of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. It was obvious that re opening had
been made contingent on prerequisites whose fulfilment was to be
determined by the courts. One of these had been for the confiscation
judgments not to have been reviewed in cassation proceedings.
However, in each of the applicants’ cases the Supreme Court of
Cassation had found this prerequisite lacking. In any event, even if
the applicants had been able to obtain re opening, one could not
conjecture as to whether the confiscation judgments would ultimately
have been set aside.
- The applicants submitted that while they could not
have expected the restoration of their property, which had been
modified after its nationalisation, they could have legitimately
expected the payment of compensation for it under the 1992
restitution legislation, as amended in 1997. They had met all of the
prerequisites for such compensation and had duly applied to receive
it. This legitimate expectation, which had amounted to a possession
within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, had been based on
several factors. Firstly, it had found support in the Supreme Court
of Cassation’s binding interpretative decision, where it had
ruled that title to confiscated property had been vested
automatically in its former owners when the 1997 amendment to the
1992 Restitution Act had entered into force, regardless of the fact
that this amendment had later been declared unconstitutional.
Secondly, it had been based – as regards the factory – on
the fact that property taken under the 1947 Nationalisation Act could
not be seized for a second time pursuant to subsequent judgments made
under the 1946 Confiscation Act. Thirdly, it had been based on the
Supreme Administrative Court’s earlier ruling that requests for
compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act were to be determined on
the basis of the law as it stood when they had been lodged – an
opinion which found full support in the prevailing principles of
civil procedure.
- In
the applicants’ view, the 1997 amendment, as authoritatively
construed by the Supreme Court of Cassation, had not created a
conditional claim; it had given rise to an existing right which did
not depend on a future favourable judicial decision. The
administrative courts should not have revisited the question –
already settled by the Supreme Court of Cassation – whether or
not the applicants were entitled to compensation, but should have
merely determined its amount.
- The
applicants finally argued that as a result of the administrative
courts’ rulings in their cases their legitimate expectation had
been frustrated. These rulings, which had amounted to interferences
with their right to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions, had
failed to take into account the position adopted by the Supreme Court
of Cassation. As a result, they could not obtain any compensation for
the properties taken from their ancestors, which upset the fair
balance between their rights and the public interest, and made them
bear a special burden.
2. The Court’s assessment
- According
to the Court’s settled case law, applicants may allege a
violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 only in so far as the
impugned decisions relate to their “possessions” within
the meaning of that provision. “Possessions” can be
either “existing possessions” or assets, including
claims, in respect of which the applicants can argue that they have
at least a “legitimate expectation” of obtaining
effective enjoyment of a property right (see, among other
authorities, Malhous v. the Czech Republic (dec.) [GC], no.
33071/96, ECHR 2000 XII; Gratzinger and Gratzingerova v. the
Czech Republic (dec.) [GC], no. 39794/98, § 69, ECHR
2002-VII; Kopecký v. Slovakia [GC], no. 44912/98,
§ 35, ECHR 2004-IX; Von Maltzan and Others v. Germany
(dec.) [GC], nos. 71916/01, 71917/01 and 10260/02, § 74
(c), ECHR 2005 V; and, more recently, Bata v. the Czech
Republic (dec.), no. 43775/05, 24 June 2008).
- It
is clear that this case does not concern the applicants’
“existing possessions”, as the properties belonging to
their ancestors were taken in the 1940s and 1950s, long before the
entry into force of the Convention and Protocol No. 1 in respect of
Bulgaria on 7 September 1992. Deprivation of ownership or of another
right in rem is in principle an instantaneous act and does not
produce a continuing situation of “deprivation of a right”
(see Malhous; Kopecký, § 35 (a); and Von
Maltzan and Others, §§ 74 (a) and 79 82, all
cited above).
- It
remains to be determined whether the applicants could be said to have
acquired a “legitimate expectation” of obtaining
restitution of the properties taken from their ancestors or
compensation for them.
- The
Court has previously accepted that legislation enacted or in force
after the ratification of the Convention and Protocol No. 1 and
providing for full or partial restoration of property confiscated
under a previous regime, or compensation in lieu thereof, may be
regarded as giving rise to a new property right protected by Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 for those satisfying the conditions for
entitlement (see Von Maltzan and Others, cited above, §
74 (d) in fine, citing Broniowski v. Poland [GC],
31443/96, § 125, ECHR 2004 V). In 1992 and 1997 the
Bulgarian legislature enacted such statutes (see paragraphs 42 44
above). The Court must therefore determine whether the applicants
satisfied the various conditions for entitlement.
- The
Court observes at the outset that despite the Supreme Court of
Cassation’s statements in the decisions denying re opening
(see paragraphs 14, 27, 32 and 37 above) and in its interpretative
decision of 29 June 1999 (see paragraphs 48 and 49 above), it does
not seem that the applicants could seek the return of the properties
taken from their ancestors, as they had not remained intact (see
paragraphs 11, 26, 31 and 36 above). On the one hand, this physically
prevented them from being restored. On the other, physical integrity
was one of the express prerequisites for restitution under the 1992
Restitution Act (see paragraph 42 above). Thus, the applicants’
“possessions”, if any, were, as pointed out by the
administrative courts (see paragraphs 15, 17, 28, 33, 38 and 39
above), solely their alleged entitlements to compensation under the
1997 Compensation Act (see Malhous, cited above). Indeed, the
applicants conceded this point (see paragraph 72 above).
- This
being clarified, the Court will now examine whether the applicants
did indeed have a “legitimate expectation” of obtaining
compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act, as initially enacted or
subsequently modified (see paragraphs 43 46 above). The analysis
of this question requires that their ancestors’ properties be
divided in two groups: those taken wholly or in part under the 1947
Nationalisation Act, and those taken pursuant to the 1946
Confiscation Act. This is so because the Constitutional Court’s
decision declaring the 1997 amendment to the 1992 Restitution Act
unconstitutional did not affect the right to compensation in respect
of the former, but solely in respect of the latter (see paragraphs 44
and 45 above).
- From
the materials in the case file it appears that the only properties
arguably taken under the 1947 Nationalisation Act were those
belonging to the partnership formed by the ancestors of Mr Slavov and
the applicants in no. 16059/03. After examining this point in
detail, the national courts found that only part of these properties
had been nationalised under this Act. They further found, contrary to
what was being asserted by the applicants, that no compensation was
due in respect of them, because the net worth of the partnership
which had owned them had not been positive (see paragraphs 22 and 23
above), whereas the positive net worth of the nationalised
undertaking was an absolute precondition for the right to
compensation under the 1997 Compensation Act (see paragraph 43
above). The Court has already found that this ruling was not
arbitrary (see paragraph 62 above). There is therefore no basis on
which it could reach a different conclusion (see Jantner v.
Slovakia, no. 39050/97, § 32, 4 March 2003; and
Kopecký, cited above, §§ 56 and 58). Bearing
in mind that no “legitimate expectation” can be said to
arise where there is a dispute as to the correct application of
domestic law and the applicants’ submissions are ultimately
rejected by the national courts (see Kopecký, cited
above, § 50; and Anheuser Busch Inc. v. Portugal
[GC], no. 73049/01, § 65 in fine, ECHR
2007 ...), the Court concludes that the applicants did
not have such an expectation in respect of the properties taken under
the 1947 Nationalisation Act.
- Turning
to the remainder of the properties, taken pursuant to judgments made
under the 1946 Confiscation Act, the Court observes that Bulgarian
law provided for compensation in respect of them only between 22
November 1997, when the 1997 Compensation Act entered into force, and
21 March 1998, when its relevant provision was declared
unconstitutional (see paragraphs 44 and 45 above). The point in issue
is whether or not this entitlement, which never materialised because
the administrative proceedings for obtaining compensation all came to
an end after the declaration of unconstitutionality, amounted to a
“legitimate expectation”.
- According
to the Court’s case law, a “legitimate expectation”
relates to the way in which a claim would be treated under domestic
law; such expectation must have a sufficient basis in that law, that
is, be based on a reasonably justified reliance on a legal act which
has a sound legal basis (see Kopecký, cited above, §§
47 and 52).
- In
the instant case, it is significant that, unlike the right to
restitution of property which had remained intact, the right to
compensation did not arise ex lege, but was subject to the
lodging of requests and their approval by the competent
administrative authorities (see paragraphs 42 and 43 above). The
applicants could therefore not expect that their right to
compensation would materialise before the successful completion of
administrative proceedings, which were bound to take some time and in
the course of which the authorities would have to verify whether they
met the various conditions for entitlement. Some of the applicants –
Mr Slavov, Ms Margarita Slavova and her co heirs, and
Messrs Georgievi – lodged such requests while the proceedings
before the Constitutional Court were still underway, whereas the
remainder lodged theirs after that court had already declared
unconstitutional the provision on which they were based (see
paragraphs 15, 17, 28, 33, 38 and 39 above).
- As
far as the latter are concerned, the Court finds that they could not
have harboured a “legitimate expectation” of obtaining
compensation. Following the Constitutional Court’s decision,
the legal situation was settled and it became evident that the 1997
Compensation Act, read in conjunction with the 1992 Restitution Act,
no longer gave rise to any entitlement in respect of properties taken
under the 1946 Confiscation Act.
- The
Court is not persuaded that even the former could be said to have
entertained a “legitimate expectation” of obtaining
compensation. At the time when they lodged their requests – 4
and 5 March 1998 – the legal provision serving as basis for
them had been under challenge before the Constitutional Court for
several months. That court had already declared the challenge
admissible and had examined it at a hearing (see paragraph 45 above).
The applicants could not have been unaware of these developments,
which greatly limited the extent of their expectation.
- More
importantly, it can hardly be said that a legislative enactment which
immediately after entering into force was challenged as allegedly
contrary to essential constitutional principles – and was later
found unconstitutional on this ground – amounted to a sound
legal basis within the meaning of the Court’s case law. It
is true that the Supreme Court of Cassation subsequently stated that
the declaration of unconstitutionality had not invalidated that law’s
title vesting effect (see paragraph 49 above). However, as
pointed out by the Supreme Administrative Court, that ruling applied
solely to properties which had remained intact and whose restitution
could be claimed in civil proceedings, and was not determinative of
the existence or otherwise of a right to compensation under the 1997
Compensation Act (see paragraph 39 in fine above). The
applicants could not therefore hold a “legitimate expectation”
that their claims would be determined in accordance with that law
after its invalidation. Nor could they legitimately expect that the
determination of their compensation claims would be based on the law
as it stood when they had been lodged rather than on the law as it
stood when they came up for decision. The Court has already found
that the national courts’ rulings to the contrary were not
arbitrary or departed from established case law (see paragraph 62
above).
- It
is true that where an issue in the general interest is at stake, the
authorities are under an obligation to act in an appropriate and
consistent manner (see Broniowski, cited above, § 151).
It might seem incoherent to raise a hope by enacting a compensation
law only to set aside the law and dash the hope shortly thereafter.
However, the Court attaches considerable importance to the fact that
the provision in issue was not annulled through an extraordinary, ad
hoc mechanism, but as a result of the normal operation of the
machinery for controlling the constitutionality of statutes. It also
observes that these changes in the law took place in the context of a
difficult transition from a State owned planned economy to a
market one. In such a situation a State has a wide margin of
appreciation when passing laws intended to redress wrongs committed
under a preceding regime (see, among other authorities, Kopecký,
cited above, § 36; and Jahn and Others v. Germany [GC],
nos. 46720/99, 72203/01 and 72552/01, § 113, ECHR 2005 VI).
- As
regards the subsequently introduced possibility to apply for
re opening of the confiscation proceedings under section 2(1a)
of the 1992 Restitution Act (see paragraph 46 above), the Court
observes that all the applicants availed themselves of this
opportunity but failed, as the Supreme Court of Cassation found that
they did not meet the requisite conditions (see paragraphs 14, 27, 32
and 37 above). Even if that court’s rulings that the applicants
did not have a sufficient legal interest to seek re opening may
seem questionable, the Court observes that it grounded its refusals
mainly on another factor, namely that the confiscation judgments had
been reviewed in cassation proceedings. Under the relevant provisions
of the 1974 Code of Criminal Procedure, to which section 2(1a)
expressly referred, this was an absolute bar to re opening (see
paragraph 48 above). It is true that this formal test might have
minimised the fact that the cassation proceedings which occurred in
the 1940s and 1950s were possibly as unfair as those at first
instance. However, according to the Court’s case law, the
Convention imposes no specific obligation on the Contracting States
to provide redress for wrongs or damage caused prior to ratification
(see, among others, Kopecký, cited above, § 38).
Nor does Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 restrict their freedom to choose
the conditions under which they agree to indemnify those concerned
(see Von Maltzan and Others, cited above § 77).
- In
view of the foregoing considerations, the Court concludes that the
applicants did not have a “legitimate expectation” of
obtaining compensation in respect of the properties taken under the
1946 Confiscation Act either.
- It
follows that their complaints under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to
the Convention are incompatible ratione materiae with the
provisions of the Convention within the meaning of Article 35 §
3 and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 § 4.
E. Complaints under Article 14 of the Convention
- In
respect of their complaints that they had been discriminated against
in the exercise of their rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to
the Convention (see paragraphs 53 (d) and 54 (c) above) the
applicants relied on Article 14 of the Convention, which 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.”
- Having
regard to the fact that Article 14 of the Convention is not
autonomous and to the conclusion that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is
not applicable, the Court considers that Article 14 cannot apply in
the instant case (see Gratzinger and Gratzingerova, cited
above § 76; Polacek and Polackova v. the Czech Republic
(dec.), no. 38645/97, § 69, 10 July 2002; Jantner,
cited above §§ 40 and 41; and Von Maltzan and Others,
cited above, §§ 116 and 117).
- It
follows that these complaints are incompatible ratione materiae
with the provisions of the Convention within the meaning of Article
35 § 3 and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35§
4.
For these reasons, the Court unanimously
Decides to join the applications;
Decides to strike the case out of the list in so far as it
concerns Ms Velichka Radkova Bicheva, Ms Elitsa Vasileva Mineva
and Ms Maria Kostadinova Mineva;
Declares the remainder of the applications inadmissible.
Claudia Westerdiek Peer Lorenzen
Registrar President