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GRAND
CHAMBER
CASE OF
SCOPPOLA v. ITALY (No. 2)
(Application
no. 10249/03)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
17
September 2009
This
judgment is final but may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Scoppola v. Italy (no. 2),
The
European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed
of:
Jean-Paul Costa,
President,
Nicolas Bratza,
Peer
Lorenzen,
Françoise Tulkens,
Josep
Casadevall,
Ireneu Cabral Barreto,
Rait
Maruste,
Alvina Gyulumyan,
Danutė
Jočienė,
Ján Šikuta,
Dragoljub
Popović,
Mark Villiger,
Giorgio
Malinverni,
George Nicolaou,
András
Sajó,
Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska,
judges,
Vitaliano Esposito, ad hoc judge,
and
Michael O'Boyle, Deputy
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 7 January and 8 July 2009,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 10249/03) against the Italian
Republic lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by an Italian national, Mr Franco Scoppola (“the
applicant”), on 24 March 2003.
- The
applicant was represented by Mr N. Paoletti, Mrs A. Mari and Mrs G.
Paoletti, lawyers practising in Rome. The Italian Government (“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mrs E. Spatafora
and their co-deputy Agent, Mr N. Lettieri.
- The
applicant alleged in particular that his sentence to life
imprisonment had breached Articles 6 and 7 of the Convention.
- The
application was allocated to the Second Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). On 13 May 2008 it was declared
partly admissible by a Chamber of that Section composed of the
following judges: Françoise Tulkens, Antonella Mularoni,
Ireneu Cabral Barreto, Danutė Jočienė, Dragoljub
Popović, András Sajó and Vitaliano Esposito, and
also of Sally Dollé, Section Registrar. On 2 September 2008
the Chamber relinquished jurisdiction in favour of the Grand Chamber.
The applicant did not object to relinquishment; after having made
such an objection, the Government withdrew it (Article 30 of the
Convention and Rule 72).
- The
composition of the Grand Chamber was determined according to the
provisions of Article 27 §§ 2 and 3 of the Convention and
Rule 24 of the Rules of Court. Following the withdrawal of Vladimiro
Zagrebelsky, the judge elected in respect of Italy, the Government
appointed Vitaliano Esposito to sit as an ad hoc judge
(Article 27 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 29 § 1).
- The
applicant and the Government each filed a memorial on the merits.
- A
hearing took place in public in the Human Rights Building,
Strasbourg, on 7 January 2009 (Rule 59 § 3).
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the Government
Mr N. Lettieri, of the
State legal service, Agent;
(b) for the applicant
Mr N. Paoletti, lawyer,
Mrs A. Mari, lawyer, Counsel,
Mrs G.
Paoletti, lawyer, Adviser.
The
Court heard addresses by Mr Paoletti, Mr Lettieri and Mrs Mari, and
their replies to questions from the Court.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicant was born in 1940 and is at present
imprisoned in Parma.
- On
2 September 1999, after a fight with his two sons, the applicant
killed his wife and injured one of his sons. He was arrested on
3 September.
- At
the end of the preliminary investigation the Rome prosecution service
asked for the applicant to be committed to stand trial for murder,
attempted murder, ill-treatment of his family and unauthorised
possession of a firearm
- At
a hearing on 18 February 2000 before the Rome preliminary hearings
judge (giudice dell'udienza preliminare – “the
GUP”) the applicant asked to be tried under the summary
procedure, a simplified process which entailed a reduction of
sentence in the event of conviction. In the version in force at that
time Article 442 § 2 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (“the
CCP”) provided that, if the crime committed by the defendant
was punishable by life imprisonment, the appropriate sentence should
be thirty years. (see paragraph 29 below).
- The
GUP agreed to follow the summary procedure. Further hearings were
held on 22 September and 24 November 2000. The last-mentioned
hearing began at 10.19 a.m.
- On
24 November 2000 the GUP found the applicant guilty and noted that he
was liable to a sentence of life imprisonment; however, as the
applicant had elected to stand trial under the summary procedure, the
judge sentenced him to a term of 30 years.
- On
12 January 2001 the Public Prosecutor's Office at the Rome Court
of Appeal appealed on points of law against the Rome GUP's judgment
of 24 November 2000. The prosecution argued that the GUP should have
applied Article 7 of Legislative Decree no. 341 of 24 November
2000, which entered into force on the very day when the applicant was
convicted. After being amended by parliament, Legislative Decree no.
341 was converted into Law no. 4 of 19 January 2001.
- The
prosecution contended in particular that Article 7 of Legislative
Decree no. 341 had amended Article 442 of the CCP and now
provided that, in the event of trial under the summary procedure,
life imprisonment was to be substituted for life imprisonment with
daytime isolation if there were “cumulative offences”
(concorso di reati) or a “continuous offence”
(reato continuato – see paragraph 31 below). The GUP's
failure to apply Legislative Decree no. 341 amounted to “a
manifest error of law” (evidente errore di diritto).
- On
5 and 22 February 2001 the applicant appealed. His chief
submission was that he should be acquitted on the ground that his
conduct had not been intentional or that, at the time when the
offences were committed, he was incapable of understanding the
wrongful nature of his acts and of forming the intent to commit them
(incapacità
de intendere e volere).
In the alternative, he requested a reduction of his sentence.
- As
there were now two appeals, at two different levels of jurisdiction,
the Public Prosecutor's appeal on points of law was changed to
an appeal on both facts and law and the Rome Assize Court of Appeal
was declared to have jurisdiction to hear the case (Article 580 of
the CCP).
- The
hearing in private before the Rome Assize Court of Appeal was held on
10 January 2002. The applicant was not present and was tried in
absentia. He alleged that, as he had difficulty in walking, he
had asked to be taken to the courtroom by ambulance or some other
suitably adapted vehicle but that, as the prison management
had refused his request, he had been deprived of the
possibility of participating in the appeal proceedings.
- In
a judgment of 10 January 2002, deposited with the registry on
23 January 2002, the Assize Court of Appeal sentenced the
applicant to life imprisonment.
- It
observed that before the entry into force of Legislative Decree
no. 341 Article 442 § 2 of the CCP had been interpreted to
mean that life imprisonment was to be replaced by a term of thirty
years, whether or not it was to be accompanied by daytime isolation
on account of an accumulation of offences with the most serious one.
In following that approach, the GUP had fixed the sentence in
relation to the most serious offence, without considering whether to
order the applicant's daytime isolation on account of his conviction
on the other charges against him.
- However,
Legislative Decree no. 341 of 24 November 2000 had entered into
force on the very day of the GUP's decision. As its provisions were
classed as procedural rules, it was applicable to pending
proceedings, according to the tempus regit actum principle.
The Assize Court of Appeal further observed that under the terms of
Article 8 of Legislative Decree no. 341 the applicant could have
withdrawn his request to be tried under the summary procedure and
have stood trial under the ordinary procedure. As he had not done so,
the first-instance decision ought to have taken account of the change
in the rules on penalties which had taken place in the meantime.
- On
18 February 2002 the applicant appealed on points of law. He argued
in the first place that the appeal proceedings should be declared
null and void because he had not been able to participate, as
defendant, in the appeal hearing on 10 January 2002. In his second
and third grounds of appeal the applicant asserted that the trial
courts had not given sufficient reasons either for ruling that he had
intended to commit murder or for their finding that he knew what he
was doing and had acted intentionally when committing the offences.
Lastly, he contested the finding of an aggravating circumstance (that
he had acted for futile reasons) and complained of the refusal to
grant him extenuating circumstances.
- On
31 July 2002 the applicant submitted further grounds of appeal. He
contended that a fresh expert opinion should have been produced on
his mental state at the time when the offences were committed and
presented new arguments on the question of aggravating and
extenuating circumstances. Lastly, he submitted that the penalty
deemed to be applicable in his case (life imprisonment with
isolation) was excessive.
- In
a judgment deposited with its registry on 20 January 2003, the Court
of Cassation dismissed the applicant's appeal.
- On
18 July 2003 the applicant lodged an extraordinary appeal on the
ground of a factual error (Article 625a of the CCP). He asserted in
the first place that the domestic courts' finding that he could have
been taken to the appeal hearing by an ordinary means of transport
and did not need an ambulance had been the result of an erroneous
reading of the documents in the file. In addition, his absence, as
the defendant, from that hearing had breached Article 6 of the
Convention. The applicant further alleged that the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed on him following the changes made by Legislative
Decree no. 341 of 2000, and thus through a retrospective criminal-law
provision, had breached Article 7 of the Convention and the
principles of fair trial. He submitted that his waiver of procedural
safeguards as a result of electing to stand trial under the summary
procedure had not been compensated for by the reduction of his
sentence promised by the State at the time when he made that choice.
Lastly, he maintained that life imprisonment was an inhuman and
degrading punishment and as such contrary to Article 3 of the
Convention.
- In
a judgment of 14 May 2004, deposited with its registry on 28 October
2004, the Court of Cassation declared the applicant's extraordinary
appeal inadmissible. It observed that he was not complaining of
factual errors committed by the domestic courts but essentially
attempting to challenge the Court of Cassation's assessment on points
of law.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. The summary procedure
- The
summary procedure is governed by Articles 438 and 441 to 443 of the
CCP. It is based on the assumption that the case can be decided as
the file stands (allo stato degli atti) at the preliminary
hearing. A request to be tried under the summary procedure may be
made orally or in writing at any time before the parties have made
their submissions at the preliminary hearing. If the summary
procedure is followed, the hearing takes place in private and is
given over to the parties' oral submissions; in principle, they must
base their arguments on the documents included in the prosecution's
file, even though, exceptionally, oral evidence may be allowed. If
the judge finds the defendant guilty, the sentence imposed is reduced
by one-third (Article 442 § 2). The relevant domestic provisions
are described in the Hermi v. Italy judgment ([GC], no.
18114/02, §§ 27-28, ECHR 2006-...).
- The
Court also gave an overview of the provisions governing the summary
procedure in its Fera v. Italy judgment (no. 45057/98, 21
April 2005). At the time of the events which gave rise to the Fera
case the summary procedure was not available to persons accused of
crimes punishable by life imprisonment. In judgment no. 176 of 23
April 1991 the Constitutional Court had quashed the provision of the
Code of Criminal Procedure making that possibility available because
it went beyond the powers parliament had delegated to the government
with a view to the adoption of the new Code of Criminal Procedure
(“the CCP”).
B. The amendment of Article 442 of the CPP by Law no.
479 of 16 December 1999
- By
Law no. 479 of 16 December 1999, which came into force on 2 January
2000, parliament reintroduced the possibility of allowing a defendant
liable to a sentence of life imprisonment to opt for the summary
procedure. Section 30 provides:
Section 30
“The following changes shall be made to Article
442 of the Code of Criminal Procedure:
...
(b) in paragraph 2, after the first
sentence is added the following [second and last sentence]: 'life
imprisonment shall be replaced by thirty years' imprisonment'”.
C. Legislative Decree no. 341 of 24 November 2000
- Legislative
Decree no. 341 of 24 November 2000, which came into force on the same
day and was converted into Law no. 4 of 19 January 2001, purported to
give an authentic interpretation of the second sentence of paragraph
2 of Article 442 of the CCP and added a third sentence.
- Legislative
Decree no. 341 included, under the chapter entitled “Authentic
interpretation of Article 442 paragraph 2 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and provisions regarding the summary procedure in trials
for offences punishable by life imprisonment”, Articles
7 and 8, which provide:
Article 7
“1. In Article 442, paragraph 2,
[second and] last sentence, of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the
words 'life imprisonment' should be taken to mean life imprisonment
without daytime isolation.
2. In Article 442, paragraph 2, of the Code
of Criminal Procedure is added, in fine, the following
sentence: “Life imprisonment with daytime isolation, in the
event of cumulative offences or a continuous offence, shall be
replaced by life imprisonment.”
Article 8
“1. In criminal proceedings pending on
the date of the entry into force of the present legislative decree,
where the defendant is liable to or has been sentenced to life
imprisonment with daytime isolation, and has opted for the summary
procedure ..., he or she may withdraw his or her request within
thirty days of the date on which the legislation implementing the
present legislative decree enters into force. In that case, the
proceedings shall be resumed under the ordinary procedure at the
stage they had reached when the request was made. Any investigative
findings which may have been reached may be used within the limits
laid down by Article 511 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
2. Where, on account of an appeal by the
prosecution, it is possible to apply the provisions of Article 7, the
accused may withdraw the request referred to in paragraph 1 within
thirty days of the time when he or she learns of the appeal by the
prosecution or, if such an appeal was lodged before the entry into
force of the legislation to implement the present legislative decree,
within thirty days' of the latter date. The provisions of the second
and third sentences of paragraph 1 shall apply...”
D. Article 2 of the Criminal Code
- Article
2 of the 1930 Criminal Code, entitled “Succession of
criminal laws”, reads as follows:
“1. No one may be punished for an act
which, under the law in force at the time when it was committed, was
not an offence.
2. No one may be punished for an act which,
under a subsequent law, does not constitute an offence; if the
defendant has been sentenced, execution of his sentence and its
criminal effects shall cease.
3. If the law in force at the time when the
offence was committed and later [laws] differ, the law to be applied
is the one whose provisions are most favourable to the defendant,
except where a final sentence has already been imposed.
4. The provisions of the [two] preceding
paragraphs shall not apply when the later laws are exceptional and
temporary.
5. The provisions of the present article
shall also apply where a legislative decree's conversion into
statute-law is time barred [decadenza] or does not take place,
and where a legislative decree has been converted into statute-law
with amendments.”
E. Publication in the Official Gazette
- Royal
Decree no. 1252 of 7 June 1923 provides that the Official
Gazette (Gazzetta ufficiale) is published by the Ministry of
Justice. Article 2 of the decree reads as follows:
“Publication shall take place every working day
during the hours of the afternoon (nelle ore pomeridiane).”
- By
judgment no. 132 of 19 May 1976 the Constitutional Court ruled that
publication of a law in the Official Gazette was the “essential
and decisive moment” among the steps taken to promulgate a
legislative text. Moreover, the expression “publication in the
Official Gazette” presupposed that the latter was placed in
circulation and therefore accessible to the public. The
Constitutional Court observed in particular: “[the terms]
publication of laws 'in the' Official Gazette [could] only mean ...
also publication 'of the' Official Gazette ...: otherwise there would
be a negation of the very procedure of publishing laws, which,
historically speaking, was designed to create an objective situation
effectively permitting every individual to be aware of the acts in
question (situazione oggettiva di effettiva conoscibilità,
da parte di tutti, degli atti medesimi).”
III. INTERNATIONAL TEXTS AND DOCUMENTS
A. The United Nations Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights
- Article
15 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in Resolution
2200 A (XXI) of 16 December 1966, which entered into force on 23
March 1976, is worded as follows:
“1. No one shall be held guilty of any
criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not
constitute a criminal offence, under national or international law,
at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be
imposed than the one that was applicable at the time when the
criminal offence was committed. If, subsequent to the commission of
the offence, provision is made by law for the imposition of the
lighter penalty, the offender shall benefit thereby.
2. Nothing in this article shall prejudice
the trial and punishment of any person for any act or omission which,
at the time when it was committed, was criminal according to the
general principles of law recognized by the community of nations.”
B. The American Convention on Human Rights
- Article
9 of the American Convention on Human Rights, which was adopted on 22
November 1969 at the Inter-American Specialised Conference on Human
Rights and came into force on 18 July 1978, reads as follows:
“No one shall be convicted of any act or omission
that did not constitute a criminal offense, under the applicable law,
at the time it was committed. A heavier penalty shall not be imposed
than the one that was applicable at the time the criminal offense was
committed. If subsequent to the commission of the offense the law
provides for the imposition of a lighter punishment, the guilty
person shall benefit therefrom.”
C. The European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights
and the case-law of the Court of Justice of the European Communities
- At
the European Council meeting in Nice on 7 December 2000 the European
Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the European
Union proclaimed the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European
Union. Article 49 of the Charter, entitled “Principles of
legality and proportionality of criminal offences and penalties”
is worded as follows:
“1. No one shall be held guilty of any
criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not
constitute a criminal offence under national law or international law
at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be
imposed than that which was applicable at the time the criminal
offence was committed. If, subsequent to the commission of a criminal
offence, the law provides for a lighter penalty, that penalty shall
be applicable.
2. This Article shall not prejudice the trial
and punishment of any person for any act or omission which, at the
time when it was committed, was criminal according to the general
principles recognised by the community of nations.
3. The severity of penalties must not be
disproportionate to the criminal offence.”
- In
the case of Berlusconi and Others, the Court of Justice of the
European Communities held that the principle of the retroactive
application of the more lenient penalty formed part of the
constitutional traditions common to the member States (see the
judgment of 3 May 2005 in joined cases C-387/02, C-391/02 and
C-403/02). The relevant passages of the judgment (§§ 66 to
69) read as follows:
“66. Setting aside the applicability of
Article 6 of the First Companies Directive to the failure to publish
annual accounts, it should be noted that, under Article 2 of the
Italian Criminal Code, which sets out the principle that the more
lenient penalty should be applied retroactively, the new Articles
2621 and 2622 of the Italian Civil Code ought to be applied even if
they entered into force only after the commission of the acts
underlying the prosecutions brought in the cases in the main
proceedings.
67. It must be pointed out in this regard
that, according to settled case-law, fundamental rights form an
integral part of the general principles of law, the observance of
which the Court ensures. For that purpose, the Court draws
inspiration from the constitutional traditions common to the Member
States and from the guidelines supplied by international treaties for
the protection of human rights on which the Member States have
collaborated or to which they are signatories (see, inter alia, Case
C 112/00 Schmidberger [2003] ECR I 5659, paragraph 71 and the
case-law there cited, and Joined Cases C 20/00 and C 64/00 Booker
Aquaculture and Hydro Seafood [2003] ECR I 7411, paragraph 65 and the
case-law there cited).
68. The principle of the retroactive
application of the more lenient penalty forms part of the
constitutional traditions common to the Member States.
69. It follows that this principle must be
regarded as forming part of the general principles of Community law
which national courts must respect when applying the national
legislation adopted for the purpose of implementing Community law
and, more particularly in the present cases, the directives on
company law.”
- The
principles affirmed by the Court of Justice were repeated in a
judgment of the Criminal Division of the French Court of Cassation
given on 19 September 2007 (dismissal of appeal no. 06-85899). The
relevant passages of the judgment read as follows:
“... in any event the general principles of
Community law take precedence over national law. In a judgment of 3
May 2005 the Court of Justice of the European Communities observed
that the principle of the retroactive application of the more lenient
penalty forms part of the constitutional traditions common to the
member States and it follows that the said principle must be
considered one of the general principles of Community law which
national courts must comply with when applying the national law
adopted with a view to implementing Community law (paragraphs 68 and
69 of the judgment of 3 May 2005). In the present case, consequently,
it was in breach of that principle taking precedence over national
law that the Paris Court of Appeal sentenced [the accused] on the
basis of a national law adopted with a view to implementing Community
law, having unlawfully disregarded the principle of the retroactive
application of the more lenient penalty.
... Article 15 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights provides, without any exception, that where,
subsequent to the commission of an offence, the law provides for the
application of a more lenient penalty, the offender must be given the
benefit thereof. That text takes precedence over French law by virtue
of Article 55 of the Constitution of 4 October 1958. It follows that
the Paris Court of Appeal could not disregard the new more lenient
law on the sole ground that the later law had expressly excluded any
retroactive effect in contravention of the principle laid down by the
text referred to above. ...”
D. The statute of the International Criminal Court
- Under
the terms of Article 24 § 2 of the Statute of the International
Criminal Court,
“In the event of a change in the law applicable to
a given case prior to a final judgement, the law more favourable to
the person being investigated, prosecuted or convicted shall apply.”
E. The case-law of the International Tribunal for the
Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of
International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the
Former Yugoslavia since 1991 (“the ICTY”)
- In
a judgment of 4 February 2005, given in the Dragan Nikolic
case (no. IT-94-2-A), the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY held that the
principle of the applicability of the more lenient criminal law (lex
mitior) applied to its statute. The relevant parts of the
judgment (§§ 79 to 86) read as follows:
“79. The Trial Chamber first considered
whether the principle of lex mitior had been applicable in the
former Yugoslavia and whether it was part of the law of the
International Tribunal and then addressed the question of whether the
lex mitior principle was applicable in the present case.
80. The contentious part of the Sentencing
Judgement is the finding of the Trial Chamber that “the
principle of lex mitior applies only to cases in which the
commission of a criminal offence and the subsequent imposition of a
penalty took place within one and the same jurisdiction” and
that, because this Tribunal exercises a different jurisdiction from
the national jurisdiction in which the crimes were committed, the
principle does not apply. The Appeals Chamber notes that the question
of the applicability of the principle is not one of jurisdiction, but
rather one of whether differing criminal laws are relevant and
applicable to the law governing the sentencing consideration of the
International Tribunal.
81. The principle of lex mitior is
understood to mean that, if the law relevant to the offence of the
accused has been amended, the less severe law should be applied. It
is an inherent element of this principle that the relevant law must
be binding upon the court. Accused persons can only benefit from the
more lenient sentence if the law is binding, since they only have a
protected legal position when the sentencing range must be applied to
them. The principle of lex mitior is thus only applicable if a
law that binds the International Tribunal is subsequently changed to
a more favourable law by which the International Tribunal is also
obliged to abide.
82. The International Tribunal is clearly
bound by its own Statute and Rules, and thus to the sentencing range
of a term up to and including the remainder of the convicted person's
life as provided for in Rule 101(A) of the Rules and Article 24(1) of
the Statute. The Appeals Chamber notes that there has not been a
change in the laws of the International Tribunal regarding sentencing
ranges.
83. The sentencing range in the former
Yugoslavia would be restricted to a fixed term of imprisonment. The
Appeals Chamber notes that, since the establishment of the
International Tribunal, an accused before it can receive a maximum
sentence that is not limited to a fixed term of imprisonment.
84. The Appeals Chamber, however, reiterates
its finding that the International Tribunal, having primacy, is not
bound by the law or sentencing practice of the former Yugoslavia. It
has merely to take it into consideration. Allowing the principle of
lex mitior to be applied to sentences of the International
Tribunal on the basis of changes in the laws of the former Yugoslavia
would mean that the States of the former Yugoslavia have the power to
undermine the sentencing discretion of the International Tribunal's
judges. In passing a national law setting low maximum penalties for
the crimes mentioned in Articles 2 to 5 of the International
Tribunal's statute, States could then prevent their citizens from
being properly sentenced by this Tribunal. This is not compatible
with the International Tribunal's primacy enshrined in Article 9(2)
of the Statute and its overall mandate.
85. In sum, properly understood, lex
mitior applies to the Statute of the International Tribunal.
Accordingly, if ever the sentencing powers conferred by the Statute
were to be amended, the International Tribunal would have to apply
the less severe penalty. So far as concerns the requirement of
Article 24(1) that “the Trial Chambers shall have recourse to
the general practice regarding prison sentences in the courts of the
former Yugoslavia”, these words have to be construed in
accordance with the principles of interpretation applicable to the
Statute of which they form part. So construed, they refer to any
pertinent laws of the former Yugoslavia which were in force at the
time of commission of the crime in question; subsequent changes in
those laws are not imported.
86. For the foregoing reasons, the fifth
ground of appeal is dismissed.”
THE LAW
I. SCOPE OF THE CASE AND PRELIMINARY QUESTIONS RAISED BY
THE GOVERNMENT
A. Whether the Court may examine the case under Article
6 of the Convention
1. The question raised by the Government
- On
a preliminary point, the Government contested the decision of 13 May
2008 in which the Court's Second Section declared admissible the
complaint under Article 6 of the Convention. They observed that,
previously, in its partial decision of 8 September 2005, the Court's
Third section had rejected a complaint similar to the one examined
under that provision. The relevant parts of the Third Section's
reasoning read as follows:
“The applicant further alleged a two-fold
violation of Article 6 of the Convention... He argued that the
proceedings had been unfair because he had been sentenced under the
summary procedure and in his absence.
As regards the first limb of the complaint, he noted
that in consequence of choosing the summary procedure he had waived
certain rights guaranteed by Article 6. He added, however, that his
waiver had not been voluntary but had been conditioned by an
agreement entered into with the sole purpose of securing a reduction
of his sentence. He contended that the respondent State – which
had been repeatedly found by the European Court to be in breach of
the reasonable-time requirement – had introduced a system aimed
at rewarding defendants who waived fundamental safeguards instead of
reorganising the administration of justice.
The Court notes that it was the applicant himself who
requested application of the summary procedure. Although opting for
the summary procedure has the effect of weakening procedural
safeguards, the applicant may waive the safeguards of the ordinary
procedure provided that the waiver is unequivocal and that no.
public-interest considerations militate against it (see Kwiatkowska
v. Italy (dec.), no. 52868/99, 30 November 2000).
There is no doubt that the applicant was aware of the
consequences of his request for application of the summary procedure
and that he unequivocally waived the rights guaranteed under the
ordinary procedure. The Court does not consider that the possibility
of securing a reduction of his sentence meant that the applicant was
forced to request application of the summary procedure. Furthermore,
Article 8 of the 2000 legislative decree gave him the possibility of
withdrawing his request to forgo the ordinary procedure. Lastly,
there was no public-interest consideration which militated against
such a waiver.
The Court therefore finds that this limb of the
complaint is ill-founded.
...”
- At
the same time, the Third Section decided to give notice to the
Government of the complaint concerning the applicant's life sentence,
asking them a question relating to compliance with the principles set
forth in Article 7 of the Convention (“Was the applicant
sentenced, in breach of Article 7 of the Convention, to a heavier
penalty than the one applicable at the time when the offence was
committed?”). The operative part of the partial decision of 8
September 2005 reads as follows:
“For these reasons, the Court, unanimously,
Adjourns its examination of the applicant's
complaint under Article 7 of the Convention;
Declares the remainder of the application
inadmissible.”
- However,
in its final decision on admissibility of 13 May 2008 the Second
Section said:
“The Court notes first of all that the applicant's
complaints do not exclusively concern the alleged infringement of the
nulla poena sine lege principle, as enshrined in Article 7 of
the Convention, but also the question whether the provisions
introduced by Legislative Decree no. 341 of 24 November 2000
infringed the principles of fair trial as guaranteed by Article 6 §
1 of the Convention. ...
The Court considers, in the light of all the arguments
of the parties, that these complaints raise serious questions of fact
and of law which cannot be settled at this stage of the examination
of the application but require an examination of the merits; it
follows that these complaints cannot be declared manifestly
ill-founded, within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention. No other ground of inadmissibility has been found.”
- The
Government argued that the two decisions cited above were in
contradiction with each other in that the complaint under Article 6
about the fact that the applicant had been convicted under the
summary procedure had been rejected by means of a decision against
which no appeal lay, that being surely incompatible with the Court's
intention to look into “the question whether the provisions
introduced by Legislative Decree no. 341 of 24 November 2000
infringed the principles of fair trial”. Moreover, before the
decision on admissibility no specific question relating to compliance
with Article 6 of the Convention had been put to the Government by
the Court's Registry, so that the Government had been prevented from
submitting detailed observations on the admissibility and merits of
the complaint in question.
- In
the light of the foregoing considerations, the Government submitted
that the merits of the complaint relating to Article 6 of the
Convention should not be examined.
2. The applicant's reply
- The
applicant rejected the Government's argument. He observed that the
Court was master of the characterisation to be given in law to the
facts and could decide to examine the complaints submitted to it
under more than one of the Convention's provisions.
3. The Court's assessment
- The
Grand Chamber recalls first of all that the scope of its jurisdiction
in cases submitted to it is limited only by the Chamber's decision on
admissibility (see Perna v. Italy [GC], no. 48898/99,
§ 23, ECHR 2003-V, and Azinas v. Cyprus [GC], no.
56679/00, § 32, ECHR 2004-III).
Within the compass thus delimited, the Grand Chamber may deal with
any issue of fact or law that arises during the proceedings before it
(see, among many other authorities, Philis v. Greece (no. 1),
27 August 1991, § 56, Series A no. 209, and Guerra and Others
v. Italy, 19 February 1998, § 44 in fine,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-I).
- In
its partial decision of 8 September 2005 on the admissibility
of the application the Court's Third Section declared inadmissible
three complaints under Article 6 of the Convention. These
related in particular to:
(a) the
fact that the applicant had been unable to meet his lawyer in the
premises intended for that purpose;
(b) the
fact that the applicant had not been able to take part in the appeal
hearing; and
(c) the
applicant's allegation that his choice of the summary procedure,
entailing the waiver of certain procedural rights, had not been
voluntary.
50. The
Grand Chamber observes that none of the above complaints was
ultimately declared admissible and that the Government's fears in
that respect are unfounded. Those aspects of the applicant's right to
a fair trial are therefore not part of the “case”
submitted to it.
51. It
should be noted, however, that the partial decision of 8 September
2005 also mentioned a fourth complaint under Article 6, concerning
the fact that the applicant had been sentenced to life imprisonment.
The Court's Third Section took the view that that complaint
“relate[d] to the same matter as the complaint
concerning Article 7 of the Convention and must therefore be examined
under the latter provision”.
52. When
notice of the application was given to the Government the parties
were therefore asked to submit observations on whether the
applicant's life sentence had breached Article 7 of the Convention.
Subsequently, in the applicant's observations in reply to those of
the Government, he put forward arguments relating to a violation of
the principles of fair trial. In particular, he alleged that when he
opted for the summary procedure he entered into an
agreement with the State whereby he waived part of his procedural
safeguards in exchange for the substitution of a thirty-year sentence
for life imprisonment in the event of his conviction. He contended
that the State's failure to honour that agreement had been
incompatible with Article 6 of the Convention.
- The
Court observes that under the terms of Article 32 of the Convention
its jurisdiction “[extends] to all matters concerning the
interpretation and application of the Convention and the protocols
thereto which are referred to it as provided in Articles 33,
34 and 47” and that “in the event of dispute as to
whether the Court has jurisdiction”, the decision is a matter
for the Court.
- Since
the Court is master of the characterisation to be given in law to the
facts of the case, it does not consider itself bound by the
characterisation given by the applicant or the Government. By virtue
of the jura novit curia principle, it has, for example,
considered of its own motion complaints under Articles or paragraphs
not relied on by the parties and even under a provision in respect of
which the Commission had declared the complaint to be inadmissible
while declaring it admissible under a different one. A complaint is
characterised by the facts alleged in it and not merely by the legal
grounds or arguments relied on (see Powell and Rayner v. the
United Kingdom, 21 February 1990, § 29, Series A no. 172,
and Guerra and Others, cited above, § 44).
- It
follows that by taking the view that it was appropriate to examine
whether the provisions introduced by Legislative Decree no. 341 of
24 November 2000 had also “infringed the principles of
fair trial as guaranteed by Article 6 § 1 of the Convention”,
the Court's Second Section did no more than use its right to
characterise the applicant's complaint and to examine it under more
than one Convention provision. Such a reclassification, which took
into account, among other considerations, the applicant's new
arguments, cannot be considered arbitrary. Moreover, given that the
complaint concerning the applicant's life sentence was never
rejected, it is not caught by the principle that a decision to
declare a complaint inadmissible is final and that no appeal lies
against it.
56. Lastly,
with regard to the Government's argument that there had been a breach
of the adversarial nature of the procedure before the Court (see
paragraph 45 above), it should be noted that the applicant's
observations and the final decision on admissibility were
communicated to the Government. They therefore had the opportunity
before the Grand Chamber to submit any argument to the effect that
the complaint relating to Article 6 was inadmissible or ill-founded.
In that connection, the Grand Chamber reiterates that even after a
Chamber decision to declare a complaint admissible it
may, where appropriate, examine issues relating to its admissibility,
for example by virtue of Article 35 § 4 in fine of the
Convention, which empowers the Court to “reject any application
which it considers inadmissible ... at any stage of the proceedings”,
or where such issues have been joined to the merits or where they are
otherwise relevant at the merits stage (see K. and T. v. Finland
[GC], no. 25702/94, §§ 140-141, ECHR 2001-VII, and
Perna, cited above, §§ 23-24). Thus, even at the
merits stage, subject to Rule 55 of the Rules of Court, the Grand
Chamber may reconsider a decision to declare an application
admissible where it concludes that it should have been declared
inadmissible for one of the reasons given in the first three
paragraphs of Article 35 of the Convention (see Azinas, cited
above, § 32).
57. It
follows that there is no reason why the Grand Chamber should not
examine the case submitted to it from the standpoint of Article 6
also. The Government's preliminary objection must therefore be
rejected.
B. Whether the Court's
Second Section was entitled to relinquish jurisdiction in favour of
the Grand Chamber
- The
Government further submitted that the intention expressed by the
Second Section on 13 May 2008 to relinquish jurisdiction in favour of
the Grand Chamber was hard to reconcile with the adoption of a final
decision on admissibility. In addition, they argued, that decision
contradicted the partial decision and was capable of “prejudicing
whatever view of the case the Grand Chamber might take”.
- The
Court observes that, under the terms of Article 30 of the Convention,
“where a case pending before a Chamber raises a serious
question affecting the interpretation of the Convention ... the
Chamber may, at any time before it has rendered its judgment,
relinquish jurisdiction in favour of the Grand Chamber”. At the
time when the Court's Second Section expressed its intention to
relinquish jurisdiction in the present case it had not yet rendered
its judgment. Moreover, it is not for the Grand Chamber to return to
the issue whether the case raises a “serious question affecting
the interpretation of the Convention”. In any event, it is hard
to understand how the decision to declare the application admissible
could “prejudice the assessment” of the Grand Chamber. In
that connection, it should be pointed out that, as mentioned above,
the Grand Chamber may examine issues relating to the admissibility of
the complaints submitted to it (see paragraph 56 above). Lastly,
if the Government were of the opinion that the proposal to relinquish
jurisdiction was not correct, they could have objected by virtue of
Article 30 in fine of the Convention. However, after lodging
such an objection, they withdrew it of their own accord (see
paragraph 4 in fine above).
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court considers that the Second
Section's decisions to declare the application admissible and to
relinquish jurisdiction in favour of the Grand Chamber were adopted
in accordance with the Convention and its Rules and do not prejudice
the further examination of the case.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 7 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant considered that his life sentence had breached Article 7 of
the Convention, which provides:
“1. No one shall be held guilty of any
criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not
constitute a criminal offence under national or international law at
the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be
imposed than the one that was applicable at the time the criminal
offence was committed.
2. This article shall not prejudice the trial
and punishment of any person for any act or omission which, at the
time when it was committed, was criminal according to the general
principles of law recognised by civilised nations.”
A. The Government's plea of non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies
- The
Government repeated the objection of non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies which they had raised before the Chamber. They alleged that
in the Court of Cassation the applicant did not rely on the principle
of non-retrospectiveness of the criminal law but merely asserted that
the penalty applicable to the offences with which he had been charged
was not life imprisonment.
1. The Chamber's decision
- In
its final decision of 13 May 2008 on the admissibility of the
application, the Court's Second Section dismissed the Government's
preliminary objection, observing that in his appeal on points of law
the applicant had contended that the penalty of life imprisonment
should not have been imposed on him; in addition, in his
extraordinary appeal on the ground of factual error he had alleged
that his sentence breached Articles 6 and 7 of the Convention. That
being so, the Chamber ruled that the applicant had raised before the
Court of Cassation, at least in substance, the complaints he intended
to make subsequently at international level, and that he had made
normal use of the remedies which he considered effective.
2. Arguments of the parties
(a) The Government
- The
Government observed in the first place that in
its partial admissibility decision of 8 September 2005 the Third
Section, when summarising the applicant's arguments regarding the
alleged breach of Article 7 of the Convention, expressed itself as
follows:
“After asserting that in his case the prosecution
was not even empowered to appeal, because Article 443 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure provided for such a possibility only in the event
of a conviction by the preliminary investigations judge following an
amendment of the charge, the applicant – who did not include
this point in his grounds of appeal on points of law against the
judgment of the Assize Court of Appeal – noted that ultimately
he had been sentenced to a penalty which was not provided for at the
time when he agreed to be tried under the summary procedure.”
- In
the Government's opinion, it was difficult to see how the applicant
could have raised his complaint under Article 7 “at least in
substance” if he had not presented any argument to the Court of
Cassation concerning the imposition of a heavier penalty than the one
provided for at the time when he agreed to stand trial under the
summary procedure. In dismissing their plea of non-exhaustion the
Second Section had therefore contradicted the Third Section's finding
in its partial decision.
- Moreover,
the arguments put forward by the applicant in the Court of Cassation
concerned the nature of the offences he had been charged with, the
way the offences had been committed, aggravating or extenuating
circumstances and the state of his physical and mental health. Those
matters had nothing whatever to do with the allegedly unfair
application of Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000. The same applied
to the extraordinary appeal on the ground of a factual error, which
essentially concerned the alleged illegality of the decision to try
the applicant in absentia in the appeal proceedings. On the other
hand, he had neglected to rely in his submissions to the Court of
Cassation on Article 2 § 3 of the Criminal Code, which provides
that where there is a difference between the law in force at the time
of the commission of an offence and later laws the law applied is the
one most favourable to the accused (see paragraph 32 above).
(b) The applicant
- The
applicant agreed with the Chamber's decision.
3. The Court's assessment
(a) General principles
- The Court reiterates that the purpose of the rule on
exhaustion of domestic remedies is to afford the Contracting States
the opportunity of preventing or putting right the violations alleged
against them before those allegations are submitted to the Court
(see, among many other authorities, Remli v. France, 23 April
1996, § 33, Reports 1996-II, and Selmouni v.
France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 74, ECHR 1999-V). The rule is
based on the assumption, reflected in Article 13 of the Convention
(with which it has a close affinity), that there is an effective
domestic remedy available in respect of the alleged violation (see
Kudła v. Poland [GC], no. 30210/96, § 152,
ECHR 2000-XI). In this way, it is an important aspect of the
principle that the machinery of protection established by the
Convention is subsidiary to the national systems safeguarding human
rights (see Akdivar and Others v. Turkey, 16 September
1996, § 65, Reports 1996-IV).
69. The
rule of exhaustion of domestic remedies must be applied with some
degree of flexibility and without excessive formalism. At the same
time, it normally requires that the complaints intended to be made
subsequently at the international level should have been aired
before the appropriate national courts, at least in substance and in
compliance with the formal requirements and time-limits laid down in
domestic law (see, among many other authorities, Fressoz and Roire
v. France [GC], no. 29183/95, § 37, ECHR 1999-I, and
Azinas, cited above, § 38).
- However, the obligation under Article 35 requires only
that an applicant should have normal recourse to the remedies likely
to be effective, adequate and accessible (see Sofri and Others v.
Italy (dec.), no. 37235/97, ECHR 2003-VIII). In particular,
the only remedies which the Convention requires to be exhausted are
those that relate to the breaches alleged and are at the same time
available and sufficient. The existence of such remedies must be
sufficiently certain not only in theory but also in practice, failing
which they will lack the requisite accessibility and effectiveness
(see Dalia v. France, 19 February 1998, § 38,
Reports 1998-I). In addition, according to the “generally
recognised rules of international law”, there may be special
circumstances which absolve applicants from the obligation to exhaust
the domestic remedies at their disposal (see Aksoy v. Turkey,
18 December 1996, § 52, Reports 1996-VI). However, the
existence of mere doubts as to the prospects of success of a
particular remedy which is not obviously futile is not a valid reason
for failing to exhaust domestic remedies (see Brusco v. Italy
(dec.), no. 69789/01, ECHR 2001-IX, and Sardinas Albo v.
Italy (dec.), no. 56271/00, ECHR 2004-I).
- Lastly, Article 35 § 1 of the Convention provides
for a distribution of the burden of proof. As far as the Government
is concerned, where it claims non-exhaustion it must satisfy the
Court that the remedy was an effective one available in theory and in
practice at the relevant time, that is to say, that it was
accessible, was capable of providing redress in respect of the
applicant's complaints and offered reasonable prospects of success
(see Akdivar and Others, cited above, § 68, and
Sejdovic v. Italy [GC], no. 56581/00, § 46, ECHR
2006-II).
(b) Application of the above principles in
the present case
- The Court observes
first of all that, contrary to the Government's assertion (see
paragraphs 64-65 above), the Third Section in its partial
admissibility decision did not prejudge the question whether domestic
remedies had been exhausted. It did no more than make a brief remark,
when summarising the applicant's arguments under Article 7 of the
Convention, concerning the fact that his grounds of appeal contained
no argument on a specific point. It should also be noted that, in the
event, it decided to give notice of this complaint to the Government.
That decision does not support the Government's contention that this
complaint should be rejected for failure to comply with the
obligations arising from Article 35 § 1 of the Convention.
73. As
regards the question whether remedies were exhausted, the Court
observes that, in his appeal against his conviction at first instance
the applicant's chief submission was that he should be acquitted on
the ground that his conduct had not been intentional or that, at the
time when the offences were committed, he was incapable of
understanding the wrongful nature of his acts and of forming the
intent to commit them. In the alternative, he requested a reduction
of his sentence (see paragraph 16 above).
In his appeal on points of law the applicant complained of being
convicted in his absence, repeated his arguments
concerning the absence of criminal intent and his mental state,
contested an aggravating circumstance and asked the Court of
Cassation to acknowledge the existence of extenuating circumstances
(see paragraphs 22-23 above).
- The Court takes the view that the applicant presented
argument, in accordance with the formalities prescribed by Italian
law, in support of his contention, among other complaints, that the
sentence imposed on him was excessive. On the other hand, he did not
contest, either in his first appeal or in his appeal on points of
law, the allegedly retrospective application of Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000. The Government rightly pointed to that fact (see
paragraph 66 above). It is true that the applicant did present
arguments in support of the contention that the application of
Legislative Decree no. 341 to his detriment had breached Articles 6
and 7 of the Convention in the context of his extraordinary appeal on
the ground of a factual error (see paragraph 25 above); nevertheless,
an extraordinary appeal is a means of obtaining, as an exceptional
measure, the reopening of proceedings that have been terminated by a
final decision on account of a manifest factual error on the part of
the Court of Cassation. It was, therefore, not capable of remedying
the applicant's complaints concerning the incompatibility between the
provisions of Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000 and his Convention
rights (see, mutatis mutandis, Çinar v. Turkey
(dec.), no. 28602/95, 13 November 2003).
75. It
remains to be determined, however, whether grounds of appeal on
questions of fact or law that
the
applicant might possibly have relied on with regard to the allegedly
retrospective imposition of life imprisonment and its negative
repercussions on the fairness of the proceedings had any prospects of
success. In that connection, Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000
had the force of law in the Italian legal system and that the judges
of the Court of Appeal and the Court of Cassation were required to
apply it in proceedings before them. It should also be pointed out
that, in the Italian system, an individual is
not entitled to apply directly to the Constitutional Court: only a
court which is hearing the merits of a case has the possibility of
making a reference to the Constitutional Court, at the request of a
party or of its own motion. Accordingly, such an application cannot
be a remedy whose exhaustion is required under the Convention (see
Brozicek v. Italy, 19 December 1989, § 34, Series A
no. 167, and C.I.G.L. and Cofferati v. Italy, no. 46967/07,
§ 48, 24 February 2009).
76. The
Court observes that the Government submitted that the applicant could
have relied on Article 2 § 3 of the Criminal Code, which set
forth the principle of the retrospective application of the criminal
law more favourable to the accused (see paragraphs 32 and 66 above).
However, even supposing that such a principle could apply to the
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, it should be noted that
Article 2 of the Criminal Code
is only a provision of ordinary law, set out in a code adopted in
1930. Under Italian law, more recent laws may, as a general rule,
derogate from previous laws. The Government did not argue that such a
rule was not applicable in the present case, and have failed to
explain why a subsequent law, such as Legislative
Decree no. 341, might not have legitimately derogated from
Article 2 of the Criminal Code. Moreover, they did not produce any
example of cases in which that provision had been successfully relied
on in a situation
comparable with that of the applicant. Nor have the Government
established that it was possible to avoid application of Legislative
Decree no. 341 on the ground that it was incompatible
with the Convention.
77. In
the light of the foregoing, the Court considers that the Government
have not established that the remedies the applicant could have used
to contest the application of Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000 had
any prospects of success.
78. It
follows that the Government's preliminary objection on the ground of
non-exhaustion cannot be accepted.
B. Merits of the complaint
1. Arguments of the parties
- The
applicant alleged that Article 7 of the Convention had been breached
in three different respects, summarised below.
(a) Allegedly retrospective application of
criminal law
(i) The applicant's argument
- The
applicant noted in the first place that, according to the case-law of
the Italian courts (Court of Cassation, combined divisions, judgment
of 6 March 1992 in the Merletti case), Article 442 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, which sets out the penalty to be imposed
when the summary procedure has been adopted is – despite its
inclusion in the CCP – a provision of substantive criminal law.
He argued that, unlike the provisions examined by the Grand Chamber
in the Kafkaris v. Cyprus case (no. 21906/04,
12 February 2008), that clause did not concern the procedure for
execution of sentence but the fixing of the sentence. It should
therefore be considered a “criminal law” for the purposes
of Article 7 of the Convention.
- The
applicant emphasised that the last hearing before the Rome
preliminary hearings judge began on 24 November 2000 at 10.19 a.m.
(see paragraph 12 above). The preliminary hearings judge gave
judgment immediately after the hearing. On the same day Legislative
Decree no. 341 was published in the Official Gazette and came into
force. The Official Gazette appeared during the afternoon (see
paragraph 33 above). The applicant argued on that basis that when the
preliminary hearings judge gave judgment Legislative Decree no. 341
was not yet in force and could not have been known of.
- The
applicant accordingly submitted that he had been the victim of a
retrospective application of the criminal law since he had first been
sentenced to thirty years' imprisonment and then, pursuant to
Legislative Decree no. 341, to life imprisonment.
(ii) The Government's arguments
- The
Government rejected that argument, observing that Article 7 of the
Convention did no more than prohibit any retrospective application of
criminal law in relation to “the time the criminal offence was
committed”. They observed that the provisions of the Criminal
Code which established penalties for the offences of which the
applicant was convicted had not been amended after 2 September 1999,
the date when they were committed. They noted in particular that the
offences concerned were punishable by life imprisonment with daytime
isolation and that the penalty imposed by the national courts had not
exceeded that limit.
- The
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure should not be taken into
account when examining the term penalty contained in Article 7, as it
would be inappropriate to enable an individual to weigh up the
consequences of a crime he might commit by calculating what reduction
of sentence he might be entitled to depending on his choice of
procedure. Such an approach would make it impossible to amend the
CCP. The nullum crimen sine lege principle concerned only the
provisions of substantive criminal law, whereas procedural provisions
were normally retrospective, being governed by the tempus regit
actum principle. Any other finding would amount to granting a
reduction of sentence every time the provisions of the CCP were
repealed or amended. Moreover, unlike Article 6, which applied to
criminal matters (“matière pénale”
in the French version), Article 7 of the Convention referred to “the
criminal offence”. That showed that Article 7 concerned only
criminal law, not procedural rules.
- In
any event, the procedural rules had not been applied retrospectively
to the applicant's detriment. The Government observed in that
connection that at the time when the crimes were committed (on
2 September 1999), the law did not provide for the possibility
of requesting the summary procedure when the offences charged were
punishable with life imprisonment. That possibility had been
introduced only by Law no. 479 of 16 December 1999. The
purpose of the principle enshrined in Article 7 of the Convention was
to ensure that offenders knew in advance what acts engaged their
criminal responsibility and what penalties they might make themselves
liable to, and it could not be accepted that an individual should
also be able to take decisions about whether to commit an offence
with an eye to what might happen subsequently.
(b) Alleged infringement of the principle
of the retrospective application of the more lenient criminal law
(i) The applicant's argument
- The
applicant submitted that Article 7 of the Convention guaranteed not
only the non-retrospectiveness of the criminal law but also the
principle – set forth explicitly in Article 15 of the United
Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, by Article 49 of the
European Union's Charter of Fundamental rights and by Article 9 of
the American Convention on Human Rights (see paragraphs 35-37 above)
– that, in the event of a difference between the law in force
at the time of the commission of an offence and later laws, the law
to be applied was the law more favourable to the accused. That meant
that Article 7 was breached whenever courts imposed a heavier penalty
than the one prescribed by the law in force at any time between the
commission of the offence and the delivery of judgment. The applicant
referred on that point to the dissenting opinion of Judge Popović
annexed to the Achour v. France judgment ([GC], no 67335/01,
ECHR 2006-..).
- He
pointed out that in the present case the Code of Criminal Procedure,
as amended by Law no. 479 of 1999, provided from 2 January 2000 that
where the summary procedure was adopted for offences punishable by
life imprisonment (with or without isolation), that penalty was to be
replaced with thirty years' imprisonment. However, Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000 had changed the applicable penalty to the defendant's
detriment, requiring a sentence of life imprisonment without
isolation. As a result, following an appeal on points of law by the
Principal Public Prosecutor, the penalty imposed at first instance
had been increased to life imprisonment, which was not the penalty
prescribed by the law in force at the time when the applicant had
agreed to be tried under the summary procedure.
- The
applicant submitted that the retrospective application of a provision
imposing a “heavier penalty” could not be justified by
the fact that the Italian parliament had described Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000 as a “law of authentic interpretation”.
Any other conclusion would be incompatible with the principle of the
rule of law. Moreover, Legislative Decree no. 341 had not provided an
interpretation of the CCP, whose provisions were clear; they had
previously been interpreted in the sense that the words “life
imprisonment” designated any sentence of imprisonment for life,
whether with or without daytime isolation. In reality parliament had
used a subterfuge in order to change the rules on the severity of
sentence in the context of trial under the summary procedure. That
was evidenced by the numerous criticisms made of Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000 at the time when it was converted into statute law.
(ii) The Government's arguments
- The
Government rejected that argument. They observed that, unlike Article
15 of the United Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
Article 7 of the Convention did not set forth the right to
retrospective application of the more lenient criminal law.
(c) Alleged lack of clarity of the law on
the basis of which the sentence of life imprisonment was imposed
(i) The applicant's argument
- The
applicant observed that, if the Court were to accept the Government's
argument that Article 442 of the CCP, as amended by Law no. 479
of 1999, was an unclear provision requiring official interpretation,
it would have to find a violation of the Convention on the ground
that the relevant criminal law lacked clarity and foreseeability.
That much was proved by the fact that, in his case, the preliminary
hearings judge had interpreted it in the sense that the appropriate
sentence was thirty years' imprisonment, whereas the Assize Court of
Appeal, with the assistance of the “authentic interpretation”
provided by the Government, had decided that life imprisonment was
the correct sentence.
(ii) The Government's arguments
- The
Government submitted that Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000 was a
genuine law of interpretation, meaning a law intended to settle a
contested point in domestic law, on which the national courts had
given different rulings.
2. The Court's assessment
(a) Interpretation of Article 7 of the
Convention in the Court's case-law
(i) The
nullum
crimen, nulla poena sine lege
principle
- The
guarantee enshrined in Article 7, which is an essential element of
the rule of law, occupies a prominent place in the Convention system
of protection, as is underlined by the fact that no derogation from
it is permissible under Article 15 of the Convention in time of war
or other public emergency. It should be construed and applied, as
follows from its object and purpose, in such a way as to provide
effective safeguards against arbitrary prosecution, conviction and
punishment (see S.W. v. the United Kingdom and C.R.
v. the United Kingdom, 22 November 1995, § 34 and
§ 32 respectively, Series A nos. 335-B and 335-C, and
Kafkaris,
cited above, § 137).
- Article
7 § 1 of the Convention goes beyond prohibition of the
retrospective application of criminal law to the detriment of the
accused. It also sets forth, more generally, the principle that only
the law can define a crime and prescribe a penalty (nullum crimen,
nulla poena sine lege). While it prohibits in particular
extending the scope of existing offences to acts which previously
were not criminal offences, it also lays down the principle that the
criminal law must not be extensively construed to an accused's
detriment, for instance by analogy (see, among other authorities,
Coëme and Others v. Belgium, nos. 32492/96,
32547/96, 32548/96, 33209/96 and 33210/96, § 145, ECHR
2000 VII).
94. It
follows that offences and the relevant penalties must be
clearly defined by law. This requirement is satisfied where the
individual can know from the wording of the relevant provision and,
if need be, with the assistance of the courts' interpretation of it,
what acts and omissions will make him criminally liable
(see Kokkinakis v. Greece, 25 May 1993, § 52,
Series A no. 260-A; Achour, cited above, § 41; and
Sud Fondi Srl and Others v. Italy,
no. 75909/01, § 107, 20 January 2009).
- The
Court must therefore verify that at the time when an accused person
performed the act which led to his being prosecuted and convicted
there was in force a legal provision which made that act punishable,
and that the punishment imposed did not exceed the limits fixed by
that provision (see Coëme and Others, cited above, § 145,
and Achour, cited above, § 43).
(ii) The notion of “penalty”
96. The
notion of “penalty” in Article 7 § 1 of the
Convention, like those of “civil rights and obligations”
and “criminal charge” in Article 6 § 1, has an
autonomous meaning (see in particular, regarding “civil
rights”, X v. France,
31 March 1992, § 28, Series A no. 234-C, and, on the subject of
“criminal charges”, Demicoli
v. Malta,
27 August 1991, § 31, Series A no. 210). To
render the protection offered by Article 7 effective, the Court must
remain free to go behind appearances and assess for itself whether a
particular measure amounts in substance to a “penalty”
within the meaning of this provision (see Welch
v. the United Kingdom,
9 February 1995, § 27, Series A no. 307-A).
97. The
wording of Article 7 § 1, second sentence, indicates that the
starting-point in any assessment of the existence of a penalty is
whether the measure in question is imposed following conviction for a
“criminal offence”. Other factors that may be taken into
account as relevant in this connection are the nature and purpose of
the measure in question; its characterisation under national law; the
procedures involved in the making and implementation of the measure;
and its severity (see Welch,
cited above, § 28).
- Both
the Commission and the Court in their case-law have drawn a
distinction between a measure that constitutes in substance a
“penalty” and a measure that concerns the “execution”
or “enforcement” of the “penalty”. In
consequence, where the nature and purpose of a measure relates to the
remission of a sentence or a change in a regime for early release,
this does not form part of the “penalty” within the
meaning of Article 7 (see Kafkaris,
cited above, § 142).
(iii) Foreseeability of the criminal law
99. When
speaking of “law” Article 7 alludes to the very same
concept as that to which the Convention refers elsewhere when using
that term, a concept which comprises statute law as well as case-law
and implies qualitative requirements, including those of
accessibility and foreseeability (see Kokkinakis, cited above,
§§ 40-41, Cantoni
v. France, 15 November 1996, § 29, Reports
1996 V, Coëme and
Others, cited above, §
145, and E.K. v. Turkey,
no. 28496/95, § 51, 7 February 2002).
- In
consequence of the principle that laws must be of general
application, the wording of statutes is not always precise. One of
the standard techniques of regulation by rules is to use general
categorisations as opposed to exhaustive lists. That means that many
laws are inevitably couched in terms which, to a greater or lesser
extent are vague, and their interpretation and application depend on
practice (see Cantoni, cited above, § 31, and Kokkinakis,
cited above, § 40). Consequently, in any system of law, however
clearly drafted a legal provision may be, including a criminal
law provision, there is an inevitable element of judicial
interpretation. There will always be a need for elucidation of
doubtful points and for adaptation to changing circumstances. Again,
whilst certainty is highly desirable, it may bring in its train
excessive rigidity and the law must be able to keep pace with
changing circumstances.
- The
role of adjudication vested in the courts is precisely to dissipate
such interpretational doubts as remain (see Kafkaris,
cited above, § 141). Moreover, it is a firmly
established part of the legal tradition of the States party to the
Convention that case-law, as one of the sources of the law,
necessarily contributes to the gradual development of the criminal
law (see Kruslin v. France, 24 April 1990, § 29, Series A
no. 176 A). Article 7 of the Convention cannot be read as
outlawing the gradual clarification of the rules of criminal
liability through judicial interpretation from case to case, provided
that the resultant development is consistent with the essence of the
offence and could reasonably be foreseen (see Streletz, Kessler
and Krenz v. Germany [GC], nos. 34044/96, 35532/97 and
44801/98, § 50, ECHR 2001 II).
- Foreseeability
depends to a considerable degree on the content of the law concerned,
the field it is designed to cover and the number and status of those
to whom it is addressed. A law may still satisfy the requirement of
“foreseeability” where the person concerned has to take
appropriate legal advice to assess, to a degree that is reasonable in
the circumstances, the consequences which a given action may entail
(see Achour, cited above, § 54).
- In
1978 the European Commission of Human Rights expressed the opinion
that, unlike Article 15 § 1 in fine of the United Nations
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 7 of the Convention
did not guarantee the right to a more lenient penalty provided for in
a law subsequent to the offence (see X v. Germany, no.
7900/77, Commission decision of 6 March 1978, Decisions and
Reports (DR) 13, pp. 70-72). It accordingly declared
manifestly ill-founded the complaint of an applicant who alleged
that, after their commission, some of the offences he had been
charged with had been decriminalised. That ruling has been repeated
by the Court, which has reiterated that Article 7 does not afford the
right of an offender to application of a more favourable criminal law
(see Le Petit v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no. 35574/97,
5 December 2000, and Zaprianov v. Bulgaria (dec.),
no. 41171/98, 6 March 2003).
- While
the Court is not formally bound to follow any of its previous
judgments, it is in the interests of legal certainty, foreseeability
and equality before the law that it should not depart, without cogent
reason, from precedents laid down in previous cases (see, for
example, Chapman v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 27238/95,
§ 70, ECHR 2001-I). Since the Convention is first and foremost a
system for the protection of human rights, the Court must however
have regard to the changing conditions in the respondent State and in
the Contracting States in general and respond, for example, to any
emerging consensus as to the standards to be achieved (see, among
other judgments, Cossey v. the United Kingdom, 27
September 1990, § 35, Series A no. 184, and Stafford v. the
United Kingdom [GC], no. 46295/99, §§ 67-68,
ECHR-2002-IV). It is of crucial importance that the Convention is
interpreted and applied in a manner which renders its rights
practical and effective, not theoretical and illusory. A failure by
the Court to maintain a dynamic and evolutive approach would risk
rendering it a bar to reform or improvement (see Stafford, cited
above, § 68, and Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom
[GC], no. 28957/95, § 74, ECHR
2002-VI).
- The
Court considers that a long time has elapsed since the Commission
gave the above-mentioned X v. Germany decision and that during
that time there have been important developments internationally. In
particular, apart from the entry into force of the American
Convention on Human Rights, Article 9 of which guarantees the
retrospective effect of a law providing for a more lenient penalty
enacted after the commission of the relevant offence (see paragraph
36 above), mention should be made of the proclamation of the European
Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights. The wording of Article 49 §
1 of the Charter differs – and this can only be deliberate
(see, mutatis mutandis, Christine Goodwin, cited above,
§ 100 in fine) – from that of Article 7 of the
Convention in that it states: “If, subsequent to the commission
of a criminal offence, the law provides for a lighter penalty, that
penalty shall be applicable” (see paragraph 37 above). In the
case of Berlusconi and Others, the Court of Justice of the
European Communities, whose ruling was endorsed by the French Court
of Cassation (see paragraph 39 above), held that this principle
formed part of the constitutional traditions common to the member
States (see paragraph 38 above). Lastly, the applicability of the
more lenient criminal law was set forth in the statute of the
International Criminal Court and affirmed in the case-law of the ICTY
(see paragraphs 40 and 41 above).
- The
Court therefore concludes that since the X v. Germany
decision a consensus has gradually emerged in Europe and
internationally around the view that application of a criminal law
providing for a more lenient penalty, even one enacted after the
commission of the offence, has become a fundamental principle of
criminal law. It is also significant that the legislation of the
respondent State had recognised that principle since 1930 (see
Article 2 § 3 of the Criminal Code, cited in paragraph 32
above).
- Admittedly,
Article 7 of the Convention does not expressly mention an obligation
for Contracting States to grant an accused the benefit of a change in
the law subsequent to the commission of the offence. It was precisely
on the basis of that argument relating to the wording of the
Convention that the Commission rejected the applicant's complaint in
the case of X v. Germany. However, taking into account
the developments mentioned above, the Court cannot regard that
argument as decisive. Moreover, it observes that in prohibiting the
imposition of “a heavier penalty ... than the one that was
applicable at the time the criminal offence was committed”,
paragraph 1 in fine of Article 7 does not exclude granting the
accused the benefit of a more lenient sentence, prescribed by
legislation subsequent to the offence.
- In
the Court's opinion, it is consistent with the principle of the rule
of law, of which Article 7 forms an essential part, to expect a trial
court to apply to each punishable act the penalty which the
legislator considers proportionate. Inflicting a heavier penalty for
the sole reason that it was prescribed at the time of the commission
of the offence would mean applying to the defendant's detriment the
rules governing the succession of criminal laws in time. In addition,
it would amount to disregarding any legislative change favourable to
the accused which might have come in before the conviction and
continuing to impose penalties which the State – and the
community it represents – now consider excessive. The Court
notes that the obligation to apply, from among several criminal laws,
the one whose provisions are the most favourable to the accused is a
clarification of the rules on the succession of criminal laws, which
is in accord with another essential element of Article 7, namely
the foreseeability of penalties.
- In
the light of the foregoing considerations, the Court takes the view
that it is necessary to depart from the case-law established by the
Commission in the case of X v. Germany and affirm that
Article 7 § 1 of the Convention guarantees not only the
principle of non-retrospectiveness of more stringent criminal laws
but also, and implicitly, the principle of retrospectiveness of the
more lenient criminal law. That principle is embodied in the rule
that where there are differences between the criminal law in force at
the time of the commission of the offence and subsequent criminal
laws enacted before a final judgment is rendered, the courts must
apply the law whose provisions are most favourable to the defendant.
(c) Whether Article 442 of the CCP
contains provisions of substantive criminal law
- The
Court reiterates that the rules on retrospectiveness set out in
Article 7 of the Convention apply only to provisions defining
offences and the penalties for them; on the other hand, in other
cases, the Court has held that it is reasonable for domestic
courts to apply the tempus regit actum principle with regard
to procedural laws (see, with reference to new regulations on
time-limits for appeals, Mione v. Italy (dec.), no. 7856/02,
12 February 2004, and Rasnik v. Italy (dec.),
no. 45989/06, 10 July 2007; see also Martelli v. Italy
(dec.), no. 20402/03, 12 April 2007, concerning
implementation of a law containing new rules on the assessment of
evidence, and Coëme and Others, cited above, §§
147-149, on the immediate application to pending proceedings of laws
amending the rules on limitation). The Court must therefore determine
whether the text which, in the present case, underwent the
legislative changes complained of, namely Article 442 § 2 of the
CCP, contained provisions of substantive criminal law, and in
particular provisions influencing the length of the sentence to be
imposed.
- The
Court notes that Article 442 is part of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, whose provisions normally govern the procedure for the
prosecution and trial of offenders. However, the classification in
domestic law of the legislation concerned cannot be decisive.
Although it is true that Articles 438 and 441 to 443 of the CCP
describe the scope and procedural stages of the summary procedure,
paragraph 2 of Article 442 is entirely concerned with the length of
the sentence to be imposed when the trial is conducted in accordance
with that simplified process. In particular, at the time when the
applicant committed the offences, Article 442 § 2 provided that,
in the event of conviction, the penalty fixed by the court was to be
reduced by one-third. Law no. 479 of 1999, which came into force
before the preliminary hearing in the applicant's case, then
specified that life imprisonment was to be replaced by thirty years'
imprisonment (see paragraph 29 above).
- There
is no doubt that the penalties mentioned in Article 442 § 2
of the CCP were those to be imposed
following conviction for a criminal offence (see Welch,
cited above, § 28), that they were qualified as “criminal”
in domestic law and that their purpose was both deterrent and
punitive. In addition, they constituted the “penalty”
imposed for the acts with which the defendant was charged, and not
measures concerning the “execution” or “enforcement”
of a penalty (see Kafkaris,
cited above, § 142).
113. In
the light of the foregoing, the Court considers that Article 442 § 2
of the CCP is a provision of substantive criminal law concerning the
length of the sentence to be imposed in the event of conviction
following trial under the summary procedure. It therefore falls
within the scope of the last sentence of Article 7 § 1 of the
Convention.
(d) Whether the applicant was granted the
benefit of the more lenient criminal law
- The
applicant did not dispute that at the time when he committed the
offences (on 2 September 1999) the acts he stood accused of were
punishable by life imprisonment with daytime isolation and that, in
view of the Constitutional Court's judgment no. 176 of 1991 (see
paragraph 28 above), that was an impediment to adoption of the
summary procedure.
- However,
the impediment was removed four months later, on 2 January 2000,
while the criminal proceedings against the applicant were pending at
the preliminary investigations stage, through the entry into force of
Law no. 479 of 1999. As noted above, section 30 of Law no. 479
amended Article 442 of the CCP by providing that in the event of
conviction following trial
under the summary procedure, “life
imprisonment [was to be] replaced by thirty years' imprisonment”
(see paragraph 29 above). Having regard to the fact that, at the
applicant's request, the preliminary hearings judge subsequently
agreed to apply the summary procedure (see paragraphs 11 and 12
above), the Court considers that section 30 of Law no. 479 of
1999 is a subsequent criminal-law provision prescribing a more
lenient penalty. Article 7 of the Convention, as interpreted in the
present judgment (see paragraph 109 above), therefore required the
applicant to be granted the benefit thereof.
- That,
moreover, is what happened in the first-instance proceedings. In a
judgment of 24 November 2000 the Rome preliminary hearings judge
sentenced the applicant to thirty years' imprisonment, granting him
the reduction of sentence provided for in Article 442 § 2 of the
CCP, as amended by Law no. 479 of 1999 (see paragraph 13 above).
- However,
that application in favour of the accused of a provision prescribing
a more lenient penalty which had come into force after the commission
of the offences was set aside by the Rome Court of Appeal and by the
Court of Cassation. Those courts took the view that it was necessary
to apply Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000, which specified that,
where there were cumulative offences, if an offender was liable –
like the applicant – to life imprisonment with daytime
isolation, that penalty was to be replaced not by thirty years'
imprisonment but by life imprisonment without isolation (see
paragraphs 19-21, 24, 30 and 31 above).
- The
Court cannot accept the Government's argument that Legislative Decree
no. 341 was not a provision introducing new rules on the penalty
applicable in the context of the summary procedure but a law
interpreting earlier legislation (see paragraph 91 above). In that
connection, it observes that, as amended by Law no. 479 of 1999,
Article 442 § 2 of the CCP did not contain any particular
ambiguity; it clearly stated that life imprisonment was to be
replaced by thirty years' imprisonment, and made no distinction
between life imprisonment with and life imprisonment without daytime
isolation. Moreover, the Government have not produced any examples of
judicial decisions which could be alleged to have been based on
conflicting interpretations of Article 442.
- It
follows that the applicant was given a heavier sentence than the one
prescribed by the law which, of all the laws in force during the
period between the commission of the offence and delivery of the
final judgment, was most favourable to him.
(e) Conclusion
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Court considers that the respondent
State failed to discharge its obligation to grant the applicant the
benefit of the provision prescribing a more lenient penalty which had
come into force after the commission of the offence.
- It
follows that in this case there has been a violation of Article 7 §
1 of the Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
Court reiterates its finding that it has jurisdiction to examine the
facts that gave rise to the complaint declared admissible from the
standpoint of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention also (see
paragraph 57 above).
- The
relevant parts of that provision read as follows:
“In the determination of ... any criminal charge
against him, everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a]
... tribunal ...”
- The Government rejected this complaint.
A. The Government's plea of non-exhaustion of domestic
remedies
125. The
Government observed that the applicant had not availed himself of the
possibility of withdrawing his request for adoption of the summary
procedure, provided for in Article 8 § 2 of Legislative Decree
no. 341 of 2000 (see paragraph 31 above). Under
the terms of Article 8 § 2 the applicant had until 21 February
2001 to exercise his right to withdraw his request, and if he had
done so he would have been entitled to an ordinary trial attended by
all the safeguards enshrined in Article 6 of the Convention.
126. The
Court considers that the Government's objection raises questions
closely bound up with those raised by the applicant's complaint under
Article 6 of the Convention. It therefore decides to join the plea of
non-exhaustion of domestic remedies to the merits (see, mutatis
mutandis and
among
many other authorities, Isaak
v. Turkey,
no. 44587/98, § 78, 24 June 2008).
B. Merits of the complaint
1. Arguments of the parties
(a) The applicant
- The
applicant submitted that the circumstances that had led to the
violation of Article 7 of the Convention had also breached the
principles of fair trial. In February 2000 he had opted for the
summary procedure, and in doing so had waived a number of procedural
safeguards, because he knew, on the basis of the Code of Criminal
Procedure in force at the time, that in the event of his conviction
he would be punished by thirty years' imprisonment and not a life
sentence. However, the CCP had been amended unfavourably, and in
exchange for his waiver he had not been granted a reduction of his
sentence (the only advantage being that he had avoided daytime
isolation). But adoption of the summary procedure implied a
“public-law contract” between the defendant and the
State; once entered into, that “contract” could not be
rescinded or varied unilaterally.
- The
applicant observed that when Legislative Decree no. 341 came into
force and when it was converted into statute law, he was in prison.
He was therefore not aware of the possibility of withdrawing his
request for adoption of the summary procedure, which related to the
exercise of a personal right of the defendant. The possibility had
not been mentioned in the prosecution's appeal on points of law. As
he was not familiar with the finer points of judicial proceedings, he
had not had the real possibility of reconsidering his procedural
choices. The assertion in the Hermi v. Italy judgment ([GC],
no. 18114/02, § 92, ECHR 2006-...), to the effect that the State
could not be required to spell out in detail, at each step in the
procedure, the defendant's rights and entitlements, were not relevant
in the present case, which concerned the retrospective application of
a heavier penalty.
(b) The Government
- The
Government accepted that, at the time when the applicant requested
adoption of the summary procedure (on 18 February 2000), Article
442 § 2 of the CCP provided that, if the penalty to be imposed
was life imprisonment, the judge should reduce it to thirty years'
imprisonment. Moreover, it was possible that when the applicant was
found guilty in the first-instance judgment (24 November 2000) he was
not aware of the existence of Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000,
which had come into force that very day. However, parliament had
foreseen that eventuality and had given defendants the right to
withdraw a request for adoption of the summary procedure and to elect
to stand trial under the ordinary procedure instead (see Article 8 of
Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000, cited in paragraph 31 above).
- The
right in question had to be exercised within thirty days, beginning
either with the entry into force of the Act of parliament converting
Legislative Decree no. 341 into statute law (that is by 21 February
2001) or with notification of an appeal on points of law by the
prosecution. The applicant had therefore had almost three months to
reconsider his decision to stand trial under the summary procedure
but had chosen not to avail himself of that possibility. If he had
done so, the proceedings would have reverted to the preliminary
hearing stage and the trial would have been conducted in accordance
with the ordinary rules.
- As
Legislative Decree no. 341 had been published in the Official
Gazette, it had to be considered to be known to everyone. As the
Grand Chamber had held in the Hermi case (cited above), the
applicant's lawyer had a statutory and professional obligation to
inform his client on this subject. Moreover, the prosecution's appeal
on points of law, copies of which had been sent to both the applicant
and his lawyer, mentioned the new legislation.
2. The Court's assessment
- The
Court observes first of all that, in the context of civil disputes,
it has repeatedly ruled that although, in principle, the legislature
is not prevented from regulating, through new retrospective
provisions, rights derived from the laws in force, the principle of
the rule of law and the notion of fair trial enshrined in Article 6
preclude, except for compelling public-interest reasons, interference
by the legislature with the administration of justice designed to
influence the judicial determination of a dispute (see, among many
other authorities, Stran Greek Refineries and Stratis Andreadis v.
Greece, 9 December 1994, § 49, Series A no. 301 B,
National & Provincial Building Society, Leeds Permanent
Building Society and Yorkshire Building Society v. the United
Kingdom, 23 October 1997, § 112, Reports 1997 VII,
Zielinski and Pradal and Gonzalez and Others v. France
[GC], nos. 24846/94 and 34165/96 to 34173/96, § 57,
ECHR 1999 VII, and Scordino v. Italy (no. 1) [GC],
no. 36813/97, § 126, ECHR
2006-...). The Court considers that those principles, which are
essential elements of the concepts of legal certainty and protection
of litigants' legitimate trust (see Unedic v. France,
no. 20153/04, § 74, 18 December 2008), are applicable,
mutatis mutandis, to criminal proceedings.
- In
the present case the applicant complained that, although he had opted
for a simplified trial – the summary procedure – he had
been deprived of the most important advantage stemming from that
choice under the law in force at the time when he had made it, namely
the replacement of life imprisonment with a thirty-year sentence.
- The
Court has already had occasion to examine the particular features of
the summary procedure provided for in the Italian Code of Criminal
Procedure. It has noted that the procedure entails undoubted
advantages for the defendant: if convicted, he receives a
substantially reduced sentence, and the prosecution cannot lodge an
appeal against a decision to convict which does not alter the legal
characterisation of the offence (see
Hermi,
cited above, § 78, and Hany v. Italy (dec.),
no. 17543/05, 6 November 2007).
However, the summary procedure also entails a
diminution of the procedural safeguards afforded by domestic law,
particularly public hearings and the possibility to adduce evidence
and have witnesses summoned (see Kwiatkowska v. Italy (dec.),
no. 52868/99, 30 November 2000). In a trial under the
summary procedure the production of new evidence is in principle
ruled out, as the court's decision has to be taken, subject to
exceptions, on the basis of the documents contained in the file held
by the Public Prosecutor's Office (see Hermi, cited above,
§ 87; see also paragraph 27 above).
- The
safeguards mentioned above are fundamental aspects of the right to a
fair trial enshrined in Article 6 of the Convention. Neither the
letter nor the spirit of Article 6 prevents a person from waiving
them of his own free will, either expressly or tacitly. However, such
a waiver must, if it is to be effective for Convention purposes, be
established in an unequivocal manner and be attended by minimum
safeguards commensurate with its importance (see Poitrimol v.
France, 23 November 1993, § 31, Series A no. 277-A,
and Hermi, cited above, § 73). In addition, it must
not run counter to any important public interest (see Håkansson
and Sturesson v. Sweden, 21 February 1990, § 66,
Series A no. 171-A, and Sejdovic, cited above, §
86).
- The
Court considers that by requesting the adoption of the summary
procedure the applicant – who was assisted by a lawyer of his
choice, and was therefore in a position to ascertain what the
consequences of his request would be – unequivocally waived his
rights to a public hearing, to have witnesses called, to produce new
evidence and to examine prosecution witnesses. Nor does it appear
that the case raised any public-interest issues militating against
such a waiver (see, mutatis mutandis, Kwiatkowska,
decision cited above).
- However,
as pointed out above, the waiver was made in exchange for certain
advantages, which included non-imposition of life imprisonment, as it
was clear from the text of Article 442 of the CCP, as amended by Law
no. 479 of 1999, that in the event of conviction under the summary
procedure the sentence to be imposed was to be reduced by one-third
and life imprisonment replaced by a thirty-year sentence. On the
basis of that legal framework, in force at the time when he requested
adoption of the simplified procedure, the applicant could
legitimately expect that, thanks to the procedural choice he had
made, the maximum sentence to which he was liable was a term of
imprisonment not exceeding thirty years.
- But
that legitimate expectation on the applicant's part was frustrated by
Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000, which provided that, where a
judge considered that the appropriate sentence should be life
imprisonment with daytime isolation, the penalty to be imposed should
be life imprisonment without isolation. From the date of the entry
into force of Legislative Decree no. 341 (24 November 2000), it was
clear that that penalty could be imposed even on defendants tried
under the summary procedure. Yet, the change in the rules on fixing
of sentence was applied not only to defendants making new requests
for trial under the summary procedure but also to persons who, like
the applicant, had made that request and stood trial at first
instance before the publication of Legislative Decree no. 341 in the
Official Gazette.
- The
Court considers that a person charged with an offence must be able to
expect the state to act in good faith and take due account of the
procedural choices made by the defence, using the possibilities made
available by law. It is contrary to the principle of legal certainty
and the protection of the legitimate trust of persons engaged in
judicial proceedings for a State to be able to reduce unilaterally
the advantages attached to the waiver of certain rights inherent in
the concept of fair trial. As such a waiver is made in exchange for
the advantages mentioned, it cannot be regarded as fair if, once the
competent domestic authorities have agreed to adopt a simplified
procedure, a crucial element of the agreement between the State and
the defendant is altered to the latter's detriment without his
consent. In that connection, the Court notes that, although the
Contracting States are not required by the Convention to provide for
simplified procedures (see Hany, decision cited above), where
such procedures exist and have been adopted, the principles of fair
trial require that defendants should not be deprived arbitrarily of
the advantages attached to them.
- In
the present case application of the provisions of Legislative Decree
no. 341 after the end of the first-instance proceedings deprived the
applicant of an essential advantage which was guaranteed by law and
which had prompted his decision to elect to stand trial under the
summary procedure. That is incompatible with the principles embodied
in Article 6 of the Convention.
- It
remains to be determined whether the applicant's right under Article
8 of Legislative Decree no. 341 to withdraw his request for adoption
of the summary procedure was capable of remedying the prejudice he
suffered.
- The
Court observes first of all that it cannot accept the applicant's
argument that because the authorities did not inform him of this
right he had no real possibility of availing himself of it. It
reiterates that the State cannot be made responsible for spelling out
in detail, at each step in the procedure, the defendant's rights and
entitlements, and that it is for the legal counsel of the accused to
inform his client as to the progress of the proceedings against him
and the steps to be taken in order to assert his rights (see Hermi,
cited above, § 92). Although deprived of his liberty, at the
time of the publication of Legislative Decree no. 341 and the
appeal on points of law lodged by the prosecution, the applicant was
assisted by two lawyers of his choice who, moreover, on 5 February
2001, had appealed against the first-instance judgment (see paragraph
16 above). As the Government rightly pointed out, those lawyers had
received a copy of the prosecution's appeal in which Legislative
Decree no. 341 was expressly mentioned. They therefore had the
opportunity to inform their client about it and discuss with him the
most appropriate defence against the prosecution's submissions. In
addition, they had enough time (thirty days from the entry into force
of the Act of parliament converting the legislative decree into
statute law or from notification of the prosecution's appeal on
points of law) to study the question.
- However,
it should be pointed out that if the applicant had withdrawn his
request for adoption of the summary procedure, the result would have
been the reopening of the proceedings against him under the ordinary
procedure and the resumption of his trial at the preliminary hearing
stage. He would thus have had the benefit of the rights he had waived
by opting for the summary procedure, but would not have been able to
compel the State to honour the agreement previously entered into,
whereby the waiver of procedural safeguards was to be offered in
exchange for a reduced sentence.
- In
the Court's opinion it would be excessive to require a defendant to
give up the possibility of a simplified procedure accepted by the
authorities which had resulted at first instance in his obtaining the
advantages he had hoped for. In that connection, the Court observes
that for more than nine months (from 18 February to 24 November
2000), the applicant legitimately believed that, as he had opted to
stand trial under the summary procedure, the maximum sentence to
which he was liable was thirty years' imprisonment, and that that
legitimate expectation was frustrated by factors beyond his control,
such as the length of the domestic proceedings and the adoption of
Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000.
- It
follows that the Government's preliminary objection on the ground of
non-exhaustion (see paragraphs 125-126 above) cannot be accepted and
that there has been a violation of Article 6 of the Convention.
IV. APPLICATION OF ARTICLES 46 AND 41 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Article 46 of the Convention
- Article 46 provides:
“1. The High Contracting Parties
undertake to abide by the final judgment of the Court in any case to
which they are parties.
2. The final judgment of the Court shall be
transmitted to the Committee of Ministers, which shall supervise its
execution.”
- By Article 46 of the Convention the High Contracting
Parties undertake to abide by the final judgments of the Court in any
case to which they are parties, execution being supervised by the
Committee of Ministers. It follows, inter alia, that a
judgment in which the Court finds a breach imposes on the respondent
State a legal obligation not just to pay those concerned the sums
awarded by way of just satisfaction under Article 41, but also
to choose the general and/or, if appropriate, individual measures to
be adopted. As the Court's judgments are essentially declaratory, the
respondent State remains free, subject to the supervision of the
Committee of Ministers, to choose the means by which it will
discharge its legal obligation under Article 46 of the Convention,
provided that such means are compatible with the conclusions set out
in the Court's judgment (see Scozzari and Giunta v. Italy
[GC], nos. 39221/98 and 41963/98, § 249, ECHR 2000-VIII;
Sejdovic, cited above, § 119; and Aleksanyan v. Russia,
no. 46468/06, § 238, 22 December 2008).
- However, exceptionally, with a view to helping the
respondent State to fulfil its obligations under Article 46, the
Court will seek to indicate the type of measure that might be taken
in order to put an end to a situation it has found to exist (see, for
example, Broniowski v. Poland [GC], no. 31443/96, §
194, ECHR 2004-V). In other exceptional cases, where the very nature
of the violation found is such as to leave no real choice between
measures capable of remedying it, the Court may decide to indicate
only one such measure (see Aleksanyan, cited above, §
239, and Abbasov v. Azerbaijan, no. 24271/05, §
37, 17 January 2008).
- In
the present case, the Court does not consider it necessary to
indicate general measures required at national level for the
execution of its judgment.
- As
regards individual measures, the Court observes that in many cases in
which it found a violation of Article 6 of the Convention because an
applicant had not been tried by an independent and impartial tribunal
(see, among other judgments, Gençel v. Turkey, no.
53431/99, § 27, 23 October 2003, and Tahir Duran v. Turkey,
no. 40997/98, § 23, 29 January 2004), or because of an
interference with the right to participate in the trial (see Somogyi
v. Italy, no. 67972/01, § 86, ECHR 2004-IV, and R.R. v.
Italy, no. 42191/02, § 76, 9 June 2005) or with the
right to examine prosecution witnesses (see Bracci v.
Italy, no. 36822/02, § 75, 13 October 2005) the Court
indicated in Chamber judgments that in principle the most appropriate
remedy would be for the applicant to be given a retrial without delay
if he or she so requested. The Grand Chamber has endorsed the general
approach taken in the cases cited above (see Öcalan v. Turkey
[GC], no. 46221/99, § 210, ECHR 2005-IV, and Sejdovic,
cited above, §§ 126-127).
- Nevertheless,
the aim of individual measures should be to put the applicant, as far
as possible, in the position he would have been in had the
requirements of the Convention not been disregarded (see Piersack
v. Belgium (Article 50), 26 October 1984, § 12, Series
A no. 85). A judgment in which the Court finds a
violation imposes on the respondent State a legal obligation under
Article 46 of the Convention to put an end to the violation found and
make reparation for its consequences in such a way as to restore as
far as possible the situation existing before the breach (see
Menteş and Others v. Turkey (just satisfaction), 24 July
1998, § 24, Reports 1998-IV; Scozzari and Giunta,
cited above, § 249; Maestri v. Italy [GC], no. 39748/98,
§ 47, ECHR 2004-I; and Assanidze v. Georgia [GC],
no. 71503/01, § 198, ECHR 2004-II).
- The
State preserves discretion as to the manner of execution of a
judgment, provided that it discharges its primary obligation under
the Convention, which is to secure the rights and
freedoms guaranteed (see Assanidze, cited above, §
202). At the same time, in ratifying the Convention the Contracting
States undertake to ensure that their domestic legislation is
compatible with it, so that it is for the respondent State to remove
any obstacles in its domestic legal system that might prevent the
applicant's situation from being adequately redressed (see
Maestri, cited above, § 47, and Assanidze, cited
above, § 198).
- The
Court has found in the present case that the retrospective
application to the applicant's detriment of the provisions of
Legislative Decree no. 341 of 2000 infringed the rights guaranteed by
Articles 6 and 7 of the Convention. In particular, after a trial that
the Court has found to have been unfair (see paragraph 145 above),
the applicant received a sentence (life imprisonment) heavier than
the maximum sentence to which he was liable at the time when he
requested and was granted the right to be tried under the
summary procedure (thirty years' imprisonment).
- Having
regard to the particular circumstances of the case and the urgent
need to put an end to the breach of Articles 6 and 7 of the
Convention, the Court therefore considers that the respondent State
is responsible for ensuring that the applicant's sentence of life
imprisonment is replaced by a penalty consistent with the principles
set out in the present judgment, which is a sentence not exceeding
thirty years' imprisonment.
B. Article 41 of the Convention
- Article
41 provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
1. Damage
- The
applicant claimed 250,000 euros (EUR) for non-pecuniary damage. He
observed that in the present case his sentence of thirty years'
imprisonment had been replaced with a life sentence, which amounted
to “a moral death sentence”, and moreover one imposed on
him although he was seriously ill.
- The
Government did not submit observations on this point.
- The
Court considers that the applicant undoubtedly sustained
non-pecuniary damage. Ruling on an equitable basis, as required by
Article 41 of the Convention, it awards him EUR 10,000 under this
head.
2. Costs and expenses
- Relying
on a bill of costs made out by his lawyer, the applicant requested
EUR 15,623.50 for the costs and expenses he had incurred before the
Court.
- The
Government did not submit observations on this point.
- According
to the Court's established case-law, an award can be made in respect
of costs and expenses incurred by the applicant only in so far as
they have been actually and necessarily incurred and are reasonable
as to quantum (see Belziuk v. Poland, 25 March 1998, §
49, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998-II).
- The
Court considers the amount requested in respect of costs and expenses
for the proceedings before it excessive and decides to award
EUR 10,000 under this head.
3. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Holds unanimously that it has jurisdiction to
examine the case submitted to it from the standpoint of Article 6 of
the Convention also;
- Dismisses unanimously the Government's plea of
non-exhaustion of domestic remedies grounded on the fact that the
applicant did not raise before the national courts his complaints
under Article 7 of the Convention;
- Holds by eleven votes to six that there has been
a violation of Article 7 of the Convention;
- Joins to the merits unanimously the Government's
plea of non-exhaustion of domestic remedies grounded on the fact that
the applicant did not avail himself of the possibility of withdrawing
his request for adoption of the summary procedure and rejects it;
- Holds unanimously that there has been a
violation of Article 6 of the Convention;
- Holds
(a) unanimously
that the respondent State is responsible for ensuring that the
sentence of life imprisonment imposed on the applicant is replaced by
a penalty consistent with the principles set out in the present
judgment (see paragraph 154 above);
(b)
by sixteen votes to one that the respondent State is to pay the
applicant, within three months, EUR 10,000 (ten thousand euros), plus
any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(c) unanimously
that the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three
months, EUR 10,000 (ten thousand euros), plus any tax that may be
chargeable to the applicant, in respect of costs and expenses;
(d) unanimously that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses unanimously the remainder of the
applicant's claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public hearing in
the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 17 September 2009.
Michael O'Boyle Jean-Paul Costa
Deputy
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the following separate opinions are
annexed to this judgment:
(a) concurring
opinion of Judge Malinverni, joined by judges Cabral Barreto and
Šikuta;
(b) partly
dissenting opinion of Judge Nicolaou, joined by judges, Bratza,
Lorenzen, Jočiené, Villiger and Sajó.
J.-P.
C.
M. O.B.
CONCURRING OPINION OF JUDGE MALINVERNI, JOINED BY JUDGES
CABRAL BARRETO AND ŠIKUTA
(Translation)
I
agree with all the arguments that led the Grand Chamber to find a
violation of Article 7 of the Convention. I regret, however, that the
judgment does not look more deeply into what to my mind constitutes
the particularity of this case, namely the circumstances surrounding
the prosecution's appeal on points of law.
Those
circumstances are as follows. The first-instance judgment was
delivered on 24 November 2000, that is, on the same day as the entry
into force of Legislative Decree no. 341 (see paragraph 13 of the
judgment). According to the applicant's assertions, which the
Government did not contest, the trial before the Rome preliminary
hearings judge began at 10.19 a.m. As judgment was delivered
immediately after the trial hearing (see paragraph 81), it is very
probable that the decision of the preliminary hearings judge was
given during the morning of 24 November 2000.
Legislative
Decree no. 341 was published in the Official Gazette on the same day,
but during the afternoon (see paragraph 33). It follows that at the
time when the first-instance judgment was delivered the decree in
question could not have been known of by anyone, and the fact is that
a legislative instrument cannot take effect before its publication in
the Official Gazette (see paragraph 34).
In
the appeal on points of law of 12 January 2001 the public
prosecutor's office at the Rome Court of Appeal argued that the
preliminary hearings judge should have applied Article 7 of
Legislative Decree no. 341 and that that omission should be
considered a “manifest error of law”. The prosecution
service accordingly asked for the sentence imposed on the applicant –
thirty years' imprisonment – to be replaced by life
imprisonment (see paragraphs 14 and 15). That application, as we
know, was allowed by the Rome Assize Court of Appeal.
In my
opinion, the principles of legal certainty, the rule of law and the
non-retrospective application of a harsher law require the
authorities not to apply, to a defendant's detriment, a law which
could not have been known of at the time when judgment was delivered.
When
he requested adoption of the summary procedure, and right up to the
end of the first-instance proceedings, the applicant could not have
foreseen the consequences of the application of Legislative Decree
no. 341. Accordingly, in the particular circumstances described
above, the penalty imposed by the appellate court at the
prosecution's request had no legal basis whatsoever and was
therefore, on that account too, contrary to Article 7 of the
Convention.
PARTLY DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE NICOLAOU, JOINED BY
JUDGES BRATZA, LORENZEN, JOČIENÉ, VILLIGER AND SAJÓ
The
Grand Chamber is unanimously in agreement that in the present case
there has been a violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
The reasoning set out in the part of the judgment dealing
specifically with Article 6 § 1, with which we are in full
agreement, should in our view be read in the light also of the
principles already recognised by the Court and discussed by the
majority in connection with Article 7 § 1, for it is in the
broader context that the fairness issue under Article 6 § 1
acquires its full significance.
At
the time when the offences were committed the penalty was life
imprisonment with daytime isolation. For offences carrying this
penalty the summary procedure, which entailed a reduced sentence, did
not apply. It did, however, subsequently become available. On 19
February 2000 the applicant opted for it and, with the consent of the
prosecution, the criminal court agreed that it should follow it. The
case was twice adjourned and it was not dealt with until 24 November
2000, which was more than eight months later, even though for both
trial and sentence less than a morning's sitting was required. The
law-decree providing for a higher penalty, published later on the
same day, meant to undo what had already been done. Having met with
judicial approval, it resulted in an increase in the applicant's
sentence. It is in these circumstances that we
have concluded that there was a lack of fairness.
However,
although the needs of the present case are fully met by Article 6
§ 1, the majority are not content with that. They take the view
that the matter should primarily be treated under Article 7 § 1.
They not only regard the terms of Article 7 § 1 as encompassing
the more favourable law – the lex mitior - principle;
they also consider that the case warrants the complete reversal of
the Court's case-law by a new interpretation of Article 7 § 1
more consonant with the times. In our opinion Article 7 § 1 does
not admit of such interpretation.
Although
there is, seemingly, a thematic link between the legality principle
of Article 7 § 1 and the more favourable law principle, a link
which is, perhaps, strengthened by the fact that subsequent human
rights instruments treat the two together, there is a vital
difference between them. The former principle works at a higher level
than the latter. It represents an integral part of the rule of law.
Nullum crimen nulla poena sine praevia lege poenali: no one is
to be convicted or punished without a pre-existing criminal law in
force. Nothing is more fundamental than that. It is peremptory and
inevitable. It is an essential condition of freedom. That is why
Article 15 does not allow derogation from Article 7 § 1. The lex
mitior principle does not form part of nor can it be considered
an extension or a corollary of this rule of law requirement. It is a
different kind of norm. It
expresses a choice that reflects the development of a social process
in the context of criminal law. It circumscribes the scope of
criminal law by preserving benefits accruing to defendants as a
result of substantive laws subsequent to the commission of the
offence and applicable while the case was pending. It remains, in the
absence of some specific provision, a matter of policy or choice in
the discretionary area enjoyed by the State in criminal matters.
It is
clear that when Article 7 § 1 was adopted the lex mitior
principle was not included in it; and it has not been suggested that
anyone had then thought that it was covered by the nullum crimen
nulla poena sine lege principle, often stated in this shortened
form. Article 7 § 1 of the Convention, adopted in 1950, was
modelled on Article 11 § 2 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, with which it is almost identical, adopted by the General
Assembly of the United Nations in 1948. The Travaux Preparatoires of
Article 7 § 1 reveal (at page 7, item (5)) that the possibility
had been canvassed of adding to it the lex mitior principle
but that it was abandoned. It is significant that when the
corresponding provision of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights was being prepared, the draft at the initial phase
contained only the nullum crimen nulla poena sine lege
principle, the same as Article 7 § 1 of the Convention. The
proposal to include the lex mitior principle came later,
whereupon the following third sentence was added to give effect to
it:
“If, subsequent to the commission of the offence,
provision is made by law for the imposition of the lighter penalty
the offender shall benefit thereby”.
Views
differed on whether it was right to do that. The Guide to the Travaux
Préparatoires of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, by Marc J. Bossuyt, contains an interesting account
of the various considerations involved:
“Commission on Human Rights, 5th
Session (1949) 6th Session (1950), 8th Session
(1952)
A/2929, Chapt. VI, § 95: It was argued that the
third sentence of paragraph 1 contradicted the assumption underlying
the second sentence, namely that a penalty must be that which was
authorized by the law in force at the time of its imposition [E/
CN.4/SR.159, §§ 46-48 (USA); E/CN.4/SR.324, p. 4 & p. 7
& p. 15 (GB), p. 5 (USA), p. 9 (IND)]. It was also said that,
notwithstanding the praiseworthiness of the goal at which the third
sentence aimed, it was not appropriate to make provision for it in
the covenant, since it would seem to mean that convicted persons
would be enabled as of right to demand that they should benefit from
any change made in the law after their conviction [E/CN.4/SR.112, p.
3 (GB), p. 5 (GCA); E/CN.4/SR.324, p. 5 (USA)]. It was asserted that
the executive authority of States parties to the covenant should
retain an absolute discretion in applying the benefits of
subsequently enacted legislation to such persons [E/CN.4/SR. 159, §§
61-62 (USA), § 65 (GB), § 72 (RCH); E/CN.4/SR.324, p. 16
(GB)]. In opposition to these views it was observed that the tendency
in modern criminal law was to allow a person to enjoy the benefit of
such lighter penalties as might be imposed after the commission of
the offence with
which he was charged [E/CN.4/SR.112, p. 4 (USA), p. 6
(RCH) p. 7 (SU); E/CN.4SR.159, § 83 (ET), § 86 (U), §
88 (F); E/CN.4/SR.199, § 151 (GB), § 153 (F), § 156
(ET); E/CN.4/SR.324, pp. 4-5 & p. 8 (SU), p. 5(B), p. 9 (YU), p.
11 (RCH) & (F), p. 12 (PL), p. 14 (IL)]; the laws imposing new
and lighter penalties were often the concrete expression of some
change in the attitude of the community towards the offence in
question [E/CN.4/SR.112, p. 8 (F); E/CN.4/SR.324, p. 7 (RCH)].”
The
argument that Article 7 § 1 of the Convention should be
interpreted as including the most favourable law principle was
examined and dismissed by the Commission in X. v. the Federal
Republic of Germany, no. 7900/77, decision of 6 March 1978,
Decisions and Reports no. 13, pp.70-72. The applicant was found
guilty of the breach of a fiscal provision and a fine was imposed on
him. He appealed. Before the appeal was heard the provision on which
his conviction had been based was repealed. He submitted that he
should be given the benefit of that change. He alleged a violation of
Article 7 and he referred, in support, to Article 15 of the United
Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It may be useful to
note in this connection that the American Convention on Human Rights,
already adopted in 1969 though it came into force on 18 July 1978, a
few months after the decision in that case, also contained a sentence
embodying the more favourable law principle. In a short decision the
Commission pointed out what was obvious and expressed it in this way:
“However, Article 7 of the Convention does not
contain a provision similar to Article 15, paragraph 1 in fine of the
United Nations Covenant which is, moreover, based on a different
hypothesis because it guarantees the convicted person the right to
benefit from the application of a lighter penalty imposed by a law
enacted subsequent to the commission of the offence. In the present
case, some of the charges against the applicant are to a certain
extent no longer criminal offences. Nevertheless, at the time that
the offence was committed the action of the applicant constituted a
crime according to national law within the meaning of Article 7,
paragraph 1, so that this complaint is (also) manifestly
ill-founded...”
The
decision in X. v. the Federal Republic of Germany (above) was,
relatively recently, followed by the Court in Ian Le Petit v. the
United Kingdom (dec.), no. 35574/97, 5 December 2000, and in
Zaprianov v. Bulgaria, (dec.), no. 41171/98, 6 March
2003, where it was categorically stated that:
“Article 7 does not guarantee the right to have a
subsequent and favourable change in the law applicable to an earlier
offence”.
The
conflict of opinion in the present case should not be attributed to a
difference in our interpretative approach to Article 7 § 1 of
the Convention. We all profess adherence to the relevant
international rules embodied in Articles 31 and 32 of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969 and the view that we, as
minority, take of Article 7 § 1 does not call in question the
Court's case-law, to which the majority briefly refer, either on
reversing previous decisions, where necessary, or of adapting to
changing conditions and responding to some emerging consensus on new
standards since, as is often emphasised, the Convention is a living
instrument requiring a dynamic and evolutive approach that renders
rights practical and effective, not theoretical and illusory. But no
judicial interpretation, however creative, can be entirely free of
constraints. Most importantly it is necessary to keep within the
limits set by Convention provisions. As the Court pointed out in
Johnston and Others v. Ireland (18 December 1986, § 53,
Series A no.112):
“It is true that the Convention and its Protocols
must be interpreted in the light of present- day conditions (see,
amongst several authorities the above-mentioned Marckx judgment,
Series A no. 31, p. 26, para. 58). However, the Court cannot, by
means of an evolutive interpretation, derive from these instruments a
right which was not included therein at the outset. This is
particularly so here, where the omission was deliberate.”
This
is a matter on which the Court should be particularly sensitive. And
yet, although the present case does not require it, the majority has
gone on to examine the case under Article 7 § 1 and, in order to
apply it, has had it re-written in order to accord with what they
consider it ought to have been. This, with respect, oversteps the
limits.