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FOURTH
SECTION
CASE OF KUCHARSKI v. POLAND
(Application
no. 51521/99)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
3 June
2008
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 Kucharski v. Poland,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Nicolas
Bratza,
President,
Lech
Garlicki,
Ljiljana
Mijović,
David
Thór Björgvinsson,
Ján
Šikuta,
Päivi
Hirvelä,
Mihai
Poalelungi, judges
and Lawrence Early, Section
Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 13
May 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application
(no. 51521/99) against the
Republic of Poland lodged with the Court
under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”)
by a Polish national, Mr Jerzy
Kucharski (“the applicant”), on 15 April 1999.
- The
Polish Government (“the Government”) were represented by
their Agent, Ms S. Jaczewska, and subsequently
Mr J. Wołąsiewicz of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
- The
applicant alleged that his detention on remand had exceeded a
“reasonable time” within the meaning of Article 5 §
3 of the Convention. He
also complained that the proceedings for review of the lawfulness of
his detention had breached Article 5 § 4 of the Convention in
that they had not been adversarial and had not ensured equality of
arms, and that he had not been able to take any proceedings to
contest the decisions to extend his detention on remand.
- On
16 October 2003 the Court declared the application partly
inadmissible and decided to communicate the complaints under
Article 5 §§ 3 and 4 of the Convention to
the Government. Under the provisions of Article 29 § 3 of the
Convention, it decided to examine the merits of the application at
the same time as its admissibility.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1959 and lives in Drwalew, Poland.
The
facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be summarised
as follows.
- On
20 November 1996 the applicant was arrested on suspicion of
aggravated robbery, kidnapping, false imprisonment and other related
offences. It was alleged that the applicant had committed those
offences with two accomplices and while acting as a member of an
organised criminal gang.
- On
22 November 1996 the Warsaw District Court (Sąd Rejonowy)
remanded him in custody. The decision was justified by the gravity of
the charges against the applicant, a reasonable suspicion that he had
committed the offences in question, the likelihood that a severe
penalty would be imposed and the need to ensure the proper conduct of
the proceedings.
- The
investigation, which was conducted by the Warsaw Regional Prosecutor
(Prokurator Wojewódzki), lasted until the beginning of
April 1998. Originally, the proceedings had involved twelve
suspects and twenty-five various charges against them. At the
beginning of 1998 the charges against six persons, including the
applicant, were severed from the case and the investigation against
the remaining suspects was discontinued.
- In
the course of the investigation, the applicant's detention was
extended several times by decisions of the Warsaw Regional Court (Sąd
Wojewódzki) of 17 February and 16 May 1997 and a
decision of the Warsaw Court of Appeal (Sąd Apelacyjny)
of 12 August 1997. In all their review of detention decisions the
authorities repeatedly relied on the original grounds for the
applicant's detention.
- On
20 November 1997 the length of the applicant's detention reached
one year, which at the material time was the maximum statutory
time-limit for detention during investigation. On that date the
Supreme Court (Sąd Najwyższy), upon an application
by the Prosecutor General (Prokurator Generalny) under Article
222 § 4 of the 1969 Code of Criminal Procedure (“the 1969
Code”), extended the applicant's detention beyond the statutory
period. The Supreme Court considered that the fact that a witness had
partly changed his testimony coupled with the need to confront a
number of witnesses with each other constituted “exceptional
circumstances” within the meaning of Article 222 § 4 of
the 1969 Code and justified the extension of the applicant's
detention.
- On 19 January 1998 the Supreme Court ordered a hearing
to be held on 29 January 1998 to review the applicant's
detention. Only the State Prosecutor (Prokurator Krajowy) was
informed about this decision. The applicant's lawyer was not
summoned.
- On
29 January 1998, having heard the arguments of the State Prosecutor,
the Supreme Court decided to extend the applicant's pre-trial
detention, relying on the need to carry out additional acts of
investigation since one of the witnesses had partly changed his
testimony.
- On
15 April 1998 the applicant was indicted before the Warsaw Regional
Court (Sąd Okręgowy) on charges of aggravated
robbery and false imprisonment. The bill of indictment comprised
twenty-five different charges, including attempted murder, brought
against six defendants. The prosecution asked the court to hear
evidence from more than 180 witnesses, including several anonymous
witnesses, and to examine several expert reports.
- On
26 October 1998 the Warsaw Regional Court made an application under
Article 263 § 4 of the so-called “New Code of Criminal
Procedure” of 1997 (“the 1997 Code”), which entered
into force on 1 September 1998, and asked the Supreme Court to
extend the applicant's detention until 31 March 1999. The
Regional Court noted that in the light of the evidence before it, and
in particular the testimonies of anonymous witnesses, there was a
strong likelihood that the applicant had committed the offences he
was charged with. The court further observed that the proceedings
could not be completed before the expiry of the two-year time-limit
for pre-trial detention laid down in Article 263 § 3 of the 1997
Code because the trial had had to be postponed due to the fact that
three of the applicant's co-defendants were involved in separate
trials which were being conducted concurrently.
- On
19 November 1998 the Supreme Court granted the request. The Supreme
Court shared the opinion of the Regional Court that the nature of the
case and the fact that the applicant's co-defendants were involved in
other criminal proceedings justified a further extension of the
applicant's detention. The applicant's counsel and the State
Prosecutor were present at the hearing.
- The
trial began on 7 December 1998. Subsequent hearings were listed for
8, 9, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 22 December 1998 and 11, 12, 19, 20 and
27 January 1999. However, all hearings scheduled between 11 and
20 January 1999 were cancelled due to the absence on sick-leave
of one of the lay judges. The next hearing, listed for 24 February
1999, was cancelled for an unspecified reason. Subsequent hearings
were listed for 14 June and 1 and 15 July 1999.
- It
appears that during the first-instance proceedings the Warsaw
Regional Court scheduled forty-one hearings, of which sixteen were
cancelled or adjourned.
- On
several occasions the Warsaw Regional Court asked the Supreme Court
to extend the applicant's detention. The applicant, for his part,
made many unsuccessful applications for release from detention and
appealed against the refusals to lift that measure.
- On
5 March 1999 the Warsaw Regional Court once more requested the
Supreme Court under Article 263 § 4 of the 1997 Code to extend
the applicant's detention. The applicant's defence counsel had been
informed of the date and time of the court session. He could not,
however, present his arguments to the court because the case had been
heard earlier than scheduled and prior to his arrival at the court.
The court submitted that the applicant's trial would not be concluded
by 31 March 1999, that being the deadline for holding the
applicant in custody as fixed previously by the Supreme Court. The
Warsaw Regional Court noted that it was still necessary to hear
evidence from a significant number of witnesses including
six anonymous witnesses. In the court's opinion, there were also
other grounds that justified the request for the extension of the
applicant's detention, such as a reasonable suspicion that he had
committed the offences in question and the severity of the expected
sentence. In this connection, the court stressed that the offence of
aggravated robbery, with which the applicant had been charged,
carried a maximum punishment of eight years' imprisonment.
- On
an unspecified date, presumably on 15 March 1999, the Supreme Court
ordered a hearing to be held on 24 March 1999 to review the
applicant's detention. The applicant's lawyer was successfully
summoned.
- On
15 March 1999 the applicant asked the Supreme Court to reject the
application of the Regional Court of 5 March 1999. He argued that
holding him in custody no longer served the interests of securing the
proper conduct of the trial and that that purpose could be attained
by other, less severe measures. He stressed that he had already spent
more than two years in pre-trial detention. He also expressed serious
doubts as to whether it would be possible for the trial court to
complete the proceedings by 30 June 1999, given that the
court had needed the whole of the previous year to hear evidence from
forty witnesses and it still had 140 witnesses to examine.
Furthermore, the applicant asserted that the procedure concerning the
application to the Supreme Court made by the Regional Court had not
been adversarial because he had not been informed about it. As a
result, he had been unable to contest the court's findings in respect
of the circumstances relevant to his detention or the submissions of
the prosecutor. He also advanced arguments as to the general
inadequacy of the procedure for the extension of detention beyond the
statutory time-limit, emphasising that it was inherently
non-adversarial and left a detainee without any opportunity to
challenge effectively the grounds for holding him in custody.
- On
18 March 1999 the applicant asked the Warsaw Court of Appeal to
'annul' the decision of the Warsaw Regional Court of 5 March
1999. His request was considered to be an appeal against the impugned
decision and was referred to the Warsaw Regional Court. On 6 April
1999 the Warsaw Regional Court refused to deal with the appeal,
holding that it was inadmissible in law as no appeal could be lodged
against a decision whereby a trial court had asked the Supreme Court
to extend a defendant's detention beyond the statutory time-limit.
- Meanwhile,
on 24 March 1999 the Supreme Court held its hearing in the presence
of the applicant's lawyer. The court fully endorsed the reasons
adduced by the Warsaw Regional Court in its application of 5 March
1999 and decided to extend the applicant's detention until
30 June 1999.
- On
14 June 1999 the Warsaw Regional Court made another request to the
Supreme Court to extend the detention of the applicant and two
co defendants until 30 September 1999. The court maintained that
the trial would not be completed by 30 June 1999, the deadline set
previously, since many witnesses had not yet appeared before the
court and there had been difficulties in ensuring their presence.
- On
17 June 1999 the Supreme Court ordered a hearing to be held on
29 June 1999 to review the applicant's detention. The
defendants' lawyers were successfully summoned.
- On
29 June 1999 the Supreme Court agreed to extend the applicant's
detention. The court considered that there were solid grounds for
holding the applicant and his co-defendants, Z.R.R. and A.B., in
detention. The court noted that even though the applicant's role in
the commission of the aggravated robbery had not been significant, he
nevertheless remained an accomplice to the offences charged. His
detention was therefore necessary in view of the existence of a
reasonable suspicion that he had committed the offence in question.
Moreover, the Supreme Court observed that the trial was being
conducted efficiently and only practical difficulties had prevented
it from being concluded, namely the absence of witnesses and the fact
that one of the co-defendants, Z.R.R., who had initially decided to
make use of his right against self-incrimination, at a later stage of
the proceedings had agreed to testify. Finally, the Supreme Court
expressed the opinion that the Warsaw Regional Court was likely to
finish the trial before the expiry of the applicant's newly extended
period of detention. The applicant's counsel was present at the
hearing.
- The
trial court failed to complete the proceedings within the period
indicated. As a result, on 30 August 1999, the Warsaw Regional Court
once more asked the Supreme Court to extend the detention of the
applicant and his co-defendants on the ground that it would not be
possible to terminate the proceedings by 30 September 1999. The
trial court justified the delay by the fact that experts in
psychiatry, who had meanwhile examined Z.R.R., had recommended that
he be subjected to psychiatric observation for six weeks. In
consequence, the court cancelled six out of ten hearings scheduled
between 7 September and 8 December 1999. The trial court held
hearings on 27 September, 22 October and 9 and 16 November 1999.
- On
14 September 1999 the applicant filed with the Supreme Court his
comments on the application of the Warsaw Regional Court to extend
his detention. The applicant asserted that the Regional Court had
already heard all evidence relevant for the assessment of his
criminal responsibility. He contested the legal classification of the
offences with which he had been charged as well as the testimonies
given by some witnesses. He also argued that the charges against him
had no reasonable basis. Furthermore, the applicant stressed that his
detention, which would soon reach three years, had already been
exceptionally long and was putting a severe strain on him and his
family. He argued that the measure ought to be replaced by another,
more lenient means of securing his presence in court. In the
applicant's view, it was unlikely that the proceedings would be
completed by 30 November 1999. In this connection, he submitted
that the fact that Z.R.R. had been required to undergo psychiatric
observation was not the only obstacle to the progress of the trial as
most of the delays had been caused by the repeated absence of
witnesses. The applicant asked the Supreme Court to consider the case
in the light of all the available material and to reject the Warsaw
Regional Court's application.
- On
2 September 1999 the Supreme Court scheduled its hearing for review
of the applicant's detention for 17 September 1999. The defendants'
lawyers were summoned.
- On
17 September 1999 the Supreme Court granted the Warsaw Regional
Court's request and extended the applicant's detention. The Supreme
Court considered that, in view of the importance of the psychiatric
observation of Z.R.R., a further extension of the date for the trial
to end and, in consequence, of the applicant's detention, was fully
justified. The court held that, from the point of view of “general
and specific grounds for detention”, there were valid reasons
for keeping all defendants in custody. It was not explained, however,
which particular grounds listed in the relevant provisions applied in
the case. Referring briefly to the applicant's pleadings of
14 September 1999, the Supreme Court observed that his
arguments related essentially to the assessment and credibility of
evidence, the legal classification of the offence and the likely
sentence, all of which constituted circumstances which would be taken
into account at the stage of conviction and sentencing. The
applicant's lawyer was present at the Supreme Court's session.
- On
22 October 1999 the Warsaw Regional Court rejected the applicant's
request for release. The court relied on the existence of strong
evidence against the applicant and the severity of the expected
sentence. The Regional Court found no exceptional circumstances, as
defined in Article 259 § 1 (2) of the 1997 Code, that would
justify his release. Nevertheless, the court acknowledged the fact
that the situation of the applicant's family, namely his partner and
his child, was difficult but not severe enough to have very serious
consequences for them.
- On
2 November 1999 the applicant again applied for release, arguing that
his detention, which had exceeded a reasonable time, was in breach of
Article 5 § 3 of the Convention and, for all practical purposes,
amounted to serving a prison sentence. The applicant stressed that
the trial court had already heard all evidence relevant for the
assessment of the charges against him and that his continued
detention was putting a severe strain on him and his family.
- On
9 November 1999, the Warsaw Regional Court asked the Supreme Court to
extend the applicant's detention. The court submitted that the trial
was not likely to be completed by 30 November 1999 because
the experts in psychiatry had recommended that Z.R.R.'s psychiatric
observation be continued for another six weeks. The court emphasised
that hearings had already been scheduled for 14, 16 and 20
December 1999 and that the trial would continue through January 2000.
However, given the extensive volume of evidence and the fact that the
judges sitting in the applicant's case had also been assigned to try
other cases, the trial could not be accelerated. Lastly, the court
stated that the grounds for the applicant's detention were defined in
Article 249 § 1 of the 1997 Code and they still applied.
- At
the hearing held before the trial court on 16 November 1999 the
applicant asked for release. The Warsaw Regional Court rejected that
request. The court found that the applicant ought to be kept in
custody in view of the existence of a reasonable suspicion that he
had committed the offences with which he had been charged and the
severity of the likely sentence. The court further held that there
were no circumstances, as defined in Article 259 § 1 (1) and (2)
of the 1997 Code, which would justify his release.
- On
25 November 1999 the Warsaw Regional Court rejected the applicant's
application of 2 November 1999 for release. The court referred to the
reasons previously relied on. Moreover, as to the applicant's family
situation, the court observed that, while admittedly it was indeed
“not too good”, it was not exceptionally harsh, as
defined in Article 259 of the 1997 Code.
- Meanwhile,
on 16 November 1999 the applicant asked the Supreme Court to dismiss
the request of the Warsaw Regional Court to extend the preventive
measure in question. He argued that his pre-trial detention had
lasted three years and that he should be released in view of the
difficult situation facing his family. His daughter suffered from a
staphylococcal infection. Because his partner's income was very low
and the medical expenses and the rent were high the family lived in
poverty. The applicant referred to the Regional Court's decision of
22 October 1999, in which it had been acknowledged that his family
situation was difficult.
- On
the same date the Supreme Court scheduled its hearing for review of
the applicant's detention for 30 November 1999. The defendants'
lawyers were successfully summoned.
- On
30 November 1999 the Supreme Court, having heard the submissions of
the State Prosecutor and of defence counsel, extended the detention
of the applicant and other co-defendants until 31 January 2000.
The court held that the grounds for keeping them in custody were
still valid and that no exceptional circumstances existed to justify
the applicant's release.
- On
1, 2 and 5 December 1999 the applicant complained to different
domestic courts that his basic constitutional and Convention rights,
in particular his right to liberty and to a trial within a reasonable
time, had been violated.
- On
13 December 1999 the applicant lodged a constitutional complaint
(skarga konstytucyjna) with the Constitutional Court (Trybunał
Konstytucyjny), asserting that the rules governing pre-trial
detention were contrary to the principles of the presumption of
innocence and judicial impartiality in that they authorised detention
if there was a degree of probability of guilt and a likelihood that a
severe penalty would be imposed. It appears that the applicant's
complaint was rejected for non-compliance with procedural
requirements, namely for failure to have the complaint filed and
signed by a lawyer.
- Between
14 December 1999 and 31 January 2000 the Warsaw Regional Court
scheduled hearings for 14, 16 and 20 December 1999 and 4, 10,
18, 25, 26 and 28 January 2000. The court held hearings on
14 December 1999 and 10, 18, 25 and 26 January 2000, the
remaining hearings being cancelled.
- At
the hearing held on 14 December 1999 the applicant asked to be
released. The court refused his request relying on the reasons
previously given.
- On
10 January 2000 the Regional Court asked the Supreme Court to extend
the applicant's detention until 31 March 2000, submitting that the
proceedings could not be terminated because the experts in psychiatry
had submitted their report on Z.R.R. late, a witness had been ill,
Z.R.R. had challenged the trial judges and hearings scheduled for 16
and 20 December 1999 had been cancelled.
- On
17 January 2000 the Supreme Court scheduled its hearing for review of
the applicant's detention for 25 January 2000 at 9 a.m. The
applicant's lawyer was summoned.
- On
25 January 2000 the Supreme Court held the hearing as scheduled with
the State Prosecutor present and the defendants' lawyers absent. The
court agreed to extend the applicant's detention. The reasons put
forward by the Warsaw Regional Court were found to be convincing.
Moreover, it was noted that the trial had reached the final stage and
there were grounds for believing that the judgment would be delivered
by 31 March 2000.
- At
the hearing on 26 January 2000 the applicant asked the trial court to
lift his detention. His request was refused on the same date.
- The
next hearing was scheduled for 25 February 2000.
- On
29 March 2000 the Warsaw Regional Court acquitted the applicant of
aggravated robbery, convicted him of false imprisonment and sentenced
him to four years' imprisonment. It appears that the court held that
the applicant had not acted as a member of an organised criminal
gang. By the time the judgment was delivered the applicant had
already spent three years, four months and nine days in detention,
which meant that he had acquired the right to be released on
probation. As a result, the court released him from detention.
- On
22 February 2001 the Warsaw Court of Appeal heard the applicant's
appeal and upheld the first-instance judgment.
- The
applicant did not lodge a cassation appeal.
- On
22 October 2001 the Radom Regional Court ordered that the applicant
be put on probation for two years as he had already served most of
his sentence.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
- The
relevant domestic law and practice concerning the imposition of
detention on remand (aresztowanie tymczasowe), the grounds for
its prolongation, release from detention and rules governing other,
so-called “preventive measures” (środki
zapobiegawcze) are stated in the Court's judgments in the cases
of Kudła v. Poland [GC], no. 30210/96, §§
75-79, ECHR 2000-XI; Bagiński v. Poland,
no. 37444/97, §§ 42-46, 11 October 2005;
Celejewski v. Poland, no. 17584/04, §§ 22-23,
4 August 2006; and G.K. v. Poland, no. 38816/97,
§§ 64-67, 20 January 2004.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 3 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the length of his detention on remand had
been excessive. He relied on Article 5 § 3 of the
Convention, which, in so far as relevant, reads as follows:
“Everyone arrested or detained in accordance with
the provisions of paragraph 1 (c) of this Article shall be
... entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release pending
trial. Release may be conditioned by guarantees to appear for trial.”
A. Admissibility
- The Court notes that this complaint is not manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any other
grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. Period to be taken into consideration
- The
applicant's detention started on 20 November 1996, when he was
arrested on suspicion of inter alia aggravated robbery and false
imprisonment. On 29 March 2000 the Warsaw Regional Court convicted
him of false imprisonment and sentenced him to four years'
imprisonment. On the same day the applicant was released from
detention and put on probation. On 22 February 2001 the Warsaw Court
of Appeal upheld the applicant's conviction.
-
Accordingly, the period to be taken into consideration amounts to
three years, four months and eight days.
2. The parties' submissions
(a) The applicant
- The
applicant argued that the domestic authorities, namely the Supreme
Court, had extended his pre-trial detention automatically, without
assessing the need for the measure in the light of the changing
circumstances. He also submitted that in its decisions ordering the
measure to be continued, the Supreme Court had relied mainly on the
likelihood that a severe penalty would be imposed on him for the
offence of aggravated robbery. However, he was eventually acquitted
of that charge. Finally, the applicant challenged the domestic
courts' argument that it had been necessary to extend his pre trial
detention because of the lengthy psychiatric observation of a
co defendant. He submitted that the authorities should have
ordered the psychiatric observation during the investigation and not
at the final stage of the trial.
(b) The Government
- The
Government argued that the applicant's pre-trial detention had been
duly justified by relevant and sufficient grounds. The Government
stressed that the applicant's criminal case had been complex and that
it had been conducted with due diligence both by the prosecutor and
the trial courts. The Government noted that the applicant had been
charged with numerous serious offences and that the prosecutor had
twice amended his decision concerning the charges against the
applicant. They stressed that the applicant had initially been
suspected of having committed two offences as a member of an
organised criminal gang and that he was a habitual offender. That, in
the Government's submission, justified the courts' fear that the
applicant would obstruct the proceedings and would attempt to induce
witnesses to give false testimony. The Government also observed that
there had been six defendants in the applicant's case, over one
hundred witnesses had been examined and several expert reports had
been obtained. The Government concluded that all the above
circumstances had been duly considered by the authorities when
deciding whether to continue the applicant's pre-trial detention.
That being said, the Government noted that the authorities had not
always expressly stated all the grounds on which they had relied.
3. The Court's assessment
(a) General principles
- The
Court notes that the general principles regarding the right to a
trial within a reasonable time or to release pending trial, as
guaranteed by Article 5 § 3 of the Convention, have been stated
in a number of its previous judgments (see, among many other
authorities, Kudła v. Poland [GC], no. 30210/96,
§ 110 et seq, ECHR 2000 XI, and McKay v. the
United Kingdom [GC], no. 543/03, §§ 41-44, ECHR
2006-..., with further references).
(b) Application of the above principles in
the present case
- In
their detention decisions, the authorities, in addition to the
reasonable suspicion against the applicant, relied principally on two
grounds, namely (1) the serious nature of the offences with which he
had been charged and (2) the severity of the penalty to which he was
liable. The applicant was charged with aggravated robbery,
kidnapping, false imprisonment and other related offences. Two of the
alleged offences were considered to have been committed as a member
of an organised criminal gang (see paragraph 6 above).
- The
Court accepts that the reasonable suspicion against the applicant of
having committed serious offences could initially warrant his
detention. The need to obtain voluminous evidence in order to
determine the degree of the alleged responsibility of each of the
defendants also constituted valid grounds for the applicant's initial
detention. Likewise, in the Court's view, the fact that the case
concerned a member of an organised criminal gang should be taken into
account in assessing compliance with Article 5 § 3
(see Bąk v. Poland, no. 7870/04, § 57, 16
January 2007).
- Indeed,
in cases such as the present, concerning an organised criminal gang,
the risk that a detainee, if released, might bring pressure to bear
on witnesses or other co-accused or might otherwise obstruct the
proceedings often is, by the nature of things, high. According to the
authorities, the likelihood of a severe sentence being imposed on the
applicant and the fact that he had previous criminal convictions
created a presumption that he would obstruct the proceedings.
However, the Court notes that it does not transpire from the material
submitted that the applicant made any attempts to intimidate
witnesses during the proceedings or showed any obstructive behaviour.
Moreover, the Court would reiterate that, while the severity of the
sentence faced is a relevant element in the assessment of the risk of
absconding or re-offending, the gravity of the charges cannot by
itself justify long periods of detention on remand (see, for
instance, Ilijkov v. Bulgaria, no. 33977/96, §§
80-81, 26 July 2001).
While
all the above factors could justify even a relatively long period of
detention, they did not give the domestic courts a unlimited power to
prolong this measure. In this context, the Court would observe that
by the date of his first-instance conviction the applicant had
already spent three years and four months in pre-trial detention.
- Having
regard to the foregoing, the Court concludes that the grounds given
by the domestic authorities could not justify the overall period of
the applicant's detention. In these circumstances it is not necessary
to examine whether the proceedings were conducted with special
diligence.
There
has accordingly been a violation of Article 5 § 3 of the
Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 4 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant further complained that the procedure for review of his
pre-trial detention had not been adversarial in that it had not
allowed him or his lawyer to participate in sessions at which the
trial court decided to apply for an extension of his detention beyond
the statutory time-limit, or at which the Supreme Court decided to
extend the measure. Moreover, he complained that his lawyer had been
misinformed about the date and time of the court sessions for review
of his detention under the regime of the 1997 Code. Lastly, the
applicant complained that he could not take any proceedings to
contest the Regional Court's applications to the Supreme Court for
the extension of his detention or to appeal against the decisions of
the Supreme Court to extend the measure in question.
He
relied on Article 5 § 4 of the Convention, which provides:
“4. Everyone who is deprived of his liberty
by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which
the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court
and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful.”
-
These complaints fall to be examined under Article 5 § 4.
However,
pursuant to Article 35 § 1 of the Convention:
“1. The Court may only deal with the matter
... within a period of six months from the date on which the final
decision was taken
...
3. The Court shall declare inadmissible any
individual application submitted under Article 34 which it
considers incompatible with the provisions of the Convention or the
Protocols thereto, manifestly ill-founded...”
- The Court notes that the impugned procedure for review
of the applicant's pre-trial detention was regulated until 1
September 1998 by the 1969 Code, and from 1 September 1998
until the end of the applicant's pre-trial detention by the 1997
Code.
For
the most part, the relevant provisions of both codes had the same or
similar wording. Both codes provided that detention which exceeded
the relevant statutory period could, on the application of the trial
court, be extended by the Supreme Court. Such an application took the
form of a decision which, as long as the Supreme Court had not given
a ruling, served as a basis for the continued detention (see G.K.
v. Poland, no. 38816/97, § 92, 20 January 2004).
However,
under the regime of the 1969 Code a detainee did not have the right
to participate, whether in person or through his counsel, in any
court session concerning his pre-trial detention (see Bagiński
v. Poland, no. 37444/97, § 46, 11 October 2005). The
1997 Code brought about a significant change to the legislation and
from 1 September 1998, when the new code entered into force, a
detainee or his counsel could be summoned to attend the court
sessions.
In
addition, neither the 1969 Code nor the 1997 Code, as applicable
throughout the applicant's detention, provided for any opportunity to
appeal against a decision whereby the trial court applied for
extension of detention beyond the statutory time-limit or against the
decisions of the Supreme Court extending the detention under that
provision.
- In
the present case the applicant's pre-trial detention was extended
beyond its statutory time-limit under the regime of the 1969 Code by
two decisions of the Supreme Court given on 20 November 1997 and
29 January 1998 (see paragraphs 10 and 12 above).
Subsequently, the measure in question was extended under the regime
of the 1997 Code by six decisions of the Supreme Court delivered from
19 November 1998 onwards (see paragraphs 14-15; 19-20;
23-26; 29-30; 37-38; and 43-45 above).
A. Proceedings under the 1969 Code
- The
Court holds that the complaints under Article 5 § 4
of the Convention concerning the proceedings for review of the
applicant's detention, as regulated by the 1969 Code, cannot be
examined because the events complained of had taken place more than
six months before the date on which this complaint was submitted to
the Court.
- It
follows that this part of the application has been introduced out of
time and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 1
and 4 of the Convention.
B. Subsequent proceedings under the 1997 Code
- In
connection with the proceedings for review of the applicant's
detention under the regime of the 1997 Code, the Court observes that
the relevant principles had been stated in a number of its previous
judgments (see mutatis mutandis, Telecki v. Poland,
(dec.), no. 56552/00, 3 July 2003 and Celejewski v.
Poland, no. 17584/04, § 47, 4 May 2006; Depa
v. Poland, no. 62324/00, § 49, 12 December
2006). To reiterate, the Court notes that while Article 5 § 4
guarantees no right, as such, to an appeal against decisions ordering
or extending detention – as it speaks of “proceedings”
and not of appeals – a domestic procedure relating to those
matters must, in order to be compatible with that provision, satisfy
two indispensable conditions. First, the judicial procedure followed
must be adversarial and must always ensure “equality of arms”
between the parties, the prosecutor and the detained person. Second,
it must give to the individual concerned guarantees appropriate to
the kind of deprivation of liberty in question (G.K. v.
Poland, cited above, § 91).
- The
Court observes that it transpires from the minutes of the hearings in
question as submitted by the Government that the applicant's counsel
was duly summoned to the six Supreme Court's sessions (held on
19 November 1998 and subsequent dates) at which the
applicant's pre-trial detention was reviewed at a public hearing and
eventually extended. The lawyer, although duly convened, was however
absent from one session (see paragraph 19 above). However, the
applicant has not furnished any explanation for the lawyer's absence.
The applicant also contends that it was impossible for him to appeal
against the rulings of the Supreme Court extending the period of his
detention. However, the Court reiterates that Article 5 § 4 of
the Convention does not guarantee as such a right to appeal against
decisions ordering or extending detention – as it speaks of
“proceedings” and not of appeals (see G.K. v. Poland,
cited above, § 91).
- In
so far as the applicant contests the fairness of the procedure before
the sessions of the Regional Court at which the latter court applied
to the Supreme Court to have the applicant's pre-trial detention
extended beyond the statutory two-year time-limit, it is to be noted
that the Regional Court had no power to decide on the matter. It fell
to the Supreme Court, in the presence of the applicant's lawyer and
in the context of adversarial proceedings (see above), to rule on
whether to lift or to extend the measure in question on the basis of
the Regional Court's application. Accordingly, to the extent that the
applicant is critical of the fact that at its session held on 5 March
1999 the Regional Court applied to the Supreme Court for an extension
of the applicant's pre-trial detention in the absence of the
applicant's lawyer, the Court would once again stress that the power
to do so ultimately lay with the Supreme Court. It would further add
that, in any event, the fact that the lawyer could not make
submissions at that session was a result of an error on the part of
the Regional Court rather than an indication that the authorities had
departed from the general rule allowing detainees to attend or to be
represented in those proceedings. Finally, despite the lack of any
specific remedy to contest the application made to the Supreme Court
by the trial court, it was open to the applicant at all stages to
challenge the legality of holding him in custody by making an
application for release. Recourse to that remedy as regulated by the
1997 Code would have enabled him to have the lawfulness of his
detention examined in a procedure satisfying the requirements of
Article 5 § 4 of the Convention.
- The Court recalls that in its above-mentioned G.K.
judgment, it found a violation of Article 5 § 4 of the
Convention on account of a number of defects in the review of the
lawfulness of detention inherent in the procedure laid down in the
1969 Code. For example, at the material time neither the applicant
nor his counsel could be present and heard by the courts dealing with
the matter. Nor was the applicant able to react, orally or in
writing, to the prosecutor's submissions or contest the grounds for
his continued detention given by the Regional Court. (§§
92-94).
- However,
the Court observes that in the instant case the procedure in
question, as regulated by the 1997 Code, in force from
1 September 1998 until the end of the applicant's pre-trial
detention, had been adversarial and ensured the principle of equality
of arms (a contrario G.K., cited above, § 94).
- In view of the above, the Court is of the opinion that
there are no grounds on which to find that the proceedings concerning
the review of the lawfulness of the applicant's detention, examined
as a whole, fell short of the requirements of Article 5 § 4 (see
Telecki v. Poland, (dec.) cited above and
Kozimor v. Poland, no. 10816/02, § 41, 12 April
2007).
- It
follows that this complaint must be rejected as being manifestly
ill-founded pursuant to Article 35 §§ 3 and 4 of the
Convention.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- The applicant did not submit any claims under Article
41 of the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares unanimously the complaint under Article
5 § 3 of the Convention regarding the length of the applicant's
pre-trial detention admissible and the remainder of the application
inadmissible;
- Holds unanimously that there has been a
violation of Article 5 § 3 of the Convention.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 3 June 2008, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Lawrence Early Nicolas
Bratza
Registrar President