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FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF MICHAEL THEODOSSIOU LTD. v. CYPRUS
(Application
no. 31811/04)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
15 January 2009
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Michael Theodossiou Ltd v. Cyprus,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Christos Rozakis,
President,
Anatoly Kovler,
Elisabeth
Steiner,
Dean Spielmann,
Sverre Erik
Jebens,
Giorgio Malinverni,
George Nicolaou,
judges,
and Søren
Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 11 December 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application
(no. 31811/04) against the
Republic of Cyprus lodged with the Court
under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”)
by a Cypriot registered company,
Michael Theodossiou Ltd (“the applicant company”), on 4
August 2004.
2. The
applicant company was represented by Mr G. Savvides, a lawyer
practising in Cyprus. The Cypriot Government (“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mr P. Clerides,
Attorney-General of the Republic of Cyprus.
- On
11 January 2006 the
Court decided to give notice of the application to the Government.
Applying Article 29 § 3 of the Convention, it decided to rule on
the admissibility and merits of the application at the same time.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant company was the registered owner of 4,462 square metres of
immovable property located in the seaside area of Limassol, on which
a complex of stores had been used as bonded warehouses since 1965.
A. The compulsory acquisition proceedings
- On
10 July 1972 the municipality of Limassol decided to acquire the
applicant company’s seaside properties for public benefit
purposes which included “town planning” and
“construction, maintenance and development of land
communications” in furtherance of a municipal plan to rid the
Limassol seafront of privately owned buildings. On 1 December 1972 a
notice of acquisition of the relevant property was published in the
Official Gazette of the Republic. The notice referred to the
applicant’s property, which constituted part of the relevant
Land Registry plan, and having total area approximately 4,462 square
meters. On 26 January 1973, an order for compulsory acquisition
was published in the Official Gazette.
- On
14 February 1973 the applicant company lodged judicial review
proceedings with the Supreme Court (case no. 47/73) to contest
the order. On 31 May 1975 judgment was delivered by the Supreme Court
dismissing the applicant company’s application. The land in
question was one of the few remaining plots for the completion of a
project that had been implemented in stages for more than two
decades. From the evidence adduced it was clear that the financial
implications of the project had been carefully considered by the
municipality having due regard to whether it was the opportune moment
to proceed with the acquisition.
- On
5 May 1977 the municipality requested the Lands and Surveys Office
(LSO) to provide an evaluation of the property so as to determine the
amount of compensation to be paid to the applicant company. On
7 September 1978, the LSO concluded that the value of the
property amounted to 100,000 Cypriot pounds (CYP). On 3 September
1980 the municipality informed the applicant company that they would
pay CYP 70,000 as compensation. It added that given that the
applicant company’s own evaluation was excessive, a friendly
settlement could not be concluded.
- On
1 March 1984 a meeting was held between the applicant’s
representatives and the municipality. The latter disclosed the
estimated value of the property and offered CYP 190,000, including
interest, as compensation.
- On
23 February 1985 the applicant company requested the municipality to
make a new offer of compensation within seven days. It notified the
municipality that in the event that no such offer was made, it would
consider that there was no longer an interest in the compulsory
acquisition, which would be taken as abandoned.
- The
municipality offered to pay the applicant company by 28 February
1985 the amount of CYP 200,000, which included compensation as
assessed by the LSO and interest. This was not accepted by the
applicant company which made a counter-offer of CYP 250,000 including
interest. The municipality agreed to the amount of CYP 230,000, an
offer which was, however, not approved by the Government.
- On
8 May 1985 the applicant company filed application for judicial
review no. 517/85 with the Supreme Court, requesting a
declaration that the omission of the municipality to revoke the
acquisition order of 1973 was contrary to section 7 of Compulsory
Acquisition of Property Law no. 15 of 1962 and/or section 8 of
Compulsory Acquisition of Property (Amendment) Law no. 35 of 1983,
and Article 23 of the Constitution. Moreover, a declaration was
requested that the acquisition order was null and void as a result of
the non-compliance by the respondents with the requirements under the
aforementioned legislation to offer compensation.
- On
28 November 1987 the Supreme Court delivered its judgment, dismissing
the application. An omission of the municipality did not lead to the
nullification of the acquisition: the requirement for prompt payment
of compensation aimed only at safeguarding the financial interests of
the owner and any omission in this respect had only financial
consequences on the municipality. The financial interests of the
applicant company were safeguarded by the provision for payment of
interest and the possibility of applying to the courts for assessment
of the amount of compensation. Moreover, the owner of property
subject to acquisition had no right to demand the revocation of an
acquisition order on the ground that the property was not required
for the purpose of the acquisition or that the purpose for which it
was to be acquired had become unattainable, or for failure of the
municipality to offer compensation.
B. The building permit applications
- On
10 November 1972 the applicant company submitted to the municipality
an application for a building permit concerning the relevant property
for the construction of three blocks of flats consisting of 32 shops
and 13 three-bedroom and 32 two-bedroom flats. The application for a
building permit was refused due to the decision for the compulsory
acquisition of the property (see paragraph 5 above).
- On
5 January 1973 the applicant company brought an application before
the Supreme Court of Cyprus contesting this refusal (case no. 11/73),
which was joined with case no. 47/73 (see paragraph 6 above). On 31
May 1975 it was held that the refusal was contrary to law and null
and void, as a building permit could not be refused given that the
applicant company remained the owner of the property and would only
cease to be the owner upon payment of compensation for the property
under acquisition.
- Approximately
fifteen years later, on 30 December 1988 the applicant company
applied again for a building permit. On 30 March 1989 the applicant
company lodged application for judicial review no. 229/89 contesting
the municipality’s failure to reply. On 3 February 1990
the municipality refused the building permit application emphasising
that the acquisition order was still valid. Given the municipality’s
reply the applicant company withdrew its application for review.
- On
10 February 1990 the applicant company lodged new judicial review
proceedings contesting the refusal and maintaining that Law no. 84 of
1988 amending the Compulsory Acquisition Law of 1962 rendered the
acquisition order void. On 18 February 1993 the Supreme Court
found the amending law by virtue of which acquisition orders could be
annulled as contravening the principle of separation of powers and,
as such, unconstitutional. Hence, the acquisition order was found to
be valid and the application was dismissed.
C. The proceedings concerning compensation
- On
4 January 1994 the applicant company filed an application with the
District Court of Limassol requesting payment of compensation for its
property under compulsory acquisition.
- On
25 November 1994 a requisition order was published in the Official
Gazette pursuant to section 4 of Requisition of Property
Law 21/62 as amended. The order concerned the requisition of the
entire property covering an area of approximately 4,447 square meters
for a period of two years.
- On
29 December 1994 the municipality made an offer for compensation to
the applicant company, in accordance with section 8 (2) of Law no. 15
of 1962 as amended by Law no. 35 of 1983, amounting to CYP 100,000
plus statutory interest. The applicant company accepted the offer,
without prejudice (in accordance with section 8 of Law 25 of 1983,
see paragraph 31 below), and withdrew its application pending before
the district court for payment of compensation.
- On
16 January 1995 the applicant accepted payment of the amount of
CYP 277,994.51 and ownership of the property was transferred to
the municipality. The amount paid corresponded to CYP 100,000 for the
value of the plot, plus CYP 177,994.51 annual interest at the rate of
seven per cent from 1 December 1972 until 27 May 1983, then at a
rate of nine per cent until the date of payment.
- On
15 February 1995 the applicant company lodged proceedings with the
District Court of Limassol concerning the determination of the amount
of fair and reasonable compensation for the compulsory acquisition of
its property (see paragraph 30 below). According to its expert
evidence the value of its property at the time of notification of the
acquisition amounted to CYP 336,368. The parties agreed that the
market value of the property in 1994 was CYP 2,150,000. The applicant
company’s main argument in the proceedings was that
compensation should be based on the value of the property in 1994.
Following approximately twenty appearances before the court, the
hearing commenced on 27 March 2000. It appears that there had
been sixteen adjournments of the case at least one of which was
requested by the applicant company. The hearing was completed after
at least seven sessions and judgment was reserved on 12 April 2001
and was delivered on 11 March 2002.
- The
court found that the municipality had made at some unspecified time
before 1980 an offer of CYP 70,000 as compensation and then on
1 March 1984 a new offer of CYP 190,000 including interest, both
of which had been rejected by the applicant company. Given the
previous offers, the court could not agree with the applicant company
that the amount of compensation should be based on the value of the
property in 1994, when the municipality’s offer was made. Under
section 10 (a) of Compulsory Acquisition Law no. 15 of 1962, the time
relevant for determination of the amount of compensation was that of
notification of the order of acquisition. The applicant company’s
argument that a fair amount had to be based on the market value of
the property in 1994 was not justified by law. Turning to whether the
actual compensation paid on the basis of the value of the applicant
company’s property in 1972 was equitable, the court noted that
it could not accept the applicant company’s expert evidence,
which had been based on an inappropriate comparison with properties
having different building density coefficients from the applicant
company’s property and other important differences in their
legal and factual characteristics. Having thoroughly examined the
suggestions of the applicant company’s expert witness
concerning his evaluation, the court dismissed his evidence, finding
that he had merely tried to serve the financial interests of the
applicant company and not to assist the court. The expert evidence
submitted on behalf of the municipality had been accurate, used
comparators that had similar legal, physical and real characteristics
to those of the applicant company’s property and had accurate
adjustments of the value of the property based on adequate and
well-substantiated explanations. The court accepted therefore that,
on the basis of the evaluation, the value of the applicant company’s
property on 1 December 1972 was CYP 103,056. The court awarded the
latter sum (minus the amount of CYP 100,000 already paid by the
municipality) plus different taxes and other expenses paid by the
applicant company.
- On
17 April 2002 the applicant company filed an appeal with the Supreme
Court contesting the district court’s judgment. It maintained
that the LSO had estimated the value of its property in January 1980
as CYP 735,000 which, by simple deduction, suggested that the
value of the property in 1972 was approximately CYP 350,000, as
confirmed by its expert evidence. Further, it maintained that the
municipality’s obligation to provide it with just compensation
as required by Article 23 (3) of the Constitution and the relevant
jurisprudence of this Court could not be considered to have been
fulfilled by an offer of compensation made 22 years after the
acquisition notification and estimated on the basis of the value of
the property at the time of the notification.
- The
appeal was heard on 18 February 2004 and on 19 March 2004 it was
dismissed. The court noted that the fact that the value of the
property had been estimated by the LSO to be CYP 735,000 was a non
sequitur, as both expert witnesses appearing before the district
court had used the comparative method of valuation to determine the
property’s value at the relevant time and any subsequent
evaluation was based on different grounds and could not confirm or
disprove an outcome reached by using the comparative method in
respect of a particular point in time, which was acceptable per se
and could not be falsified by a subsequent estimation based on
different grounds. Further, the court found the applicant company’s
argument under Article 23 of the Constitution to be misconceived:
firstly, the municipality had made offers for compensation on at
least two occasions before 1994, and any delay in payment of
compensation was attributable to the applicant company, which had
chosen repeatedly to contest the lawfulness of the acquisition
procedure instead of referring the matter of compensation to the
district court for determination. The applicant company knew at all
times that the value of the property, as at 1972, had been estimated
as CYP 100,000 and that its own evaluation was substantially higher.
It was further aware that the relevant law provided that compensation
must be based on the market value of the property at the time of
notification of the compulsory acquisition. The applicant company
should therefore have applied to the courts to obtain determination
of the amount of compensation, as provided by law, or could have
challenged the municipality’s offer of 1 March 1984 before the
courts. Instead, it only contested the same old valuation in 1995
when it challenged the new offer which was made on its basis.
- Lastly,
it added that section 10 (a) of the Compulsory Acquisition Law (see
paragraph 30 below) providing that the relevant date for
determination of the amount of compensation should be that of
notification of the acquisition did not contravene Article 23 of the
Constitution or Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention. The
latter provision explicitly accepted the regulation of acquisition
proceedings by the conditions provided for in domestic law. It was
added that:
“The relevant case-law of the Court was referred
to, not to dispute the time relevant for determination of
compensation, a point which was clearly determined by the law, but
rather to emphasise that, given that the delay in payment was
attributed to the applicant company for not using the proceedings
available to have it determined, and while the municipality had
consistently offered to provide compensation on the basis of the
value at the time of notification of the acquisition, the core of the
applicant company’s claim had vanished.”
- On
2 October 2006 the Government paid the applicant company in
accordance with the district court’s judgment CYP 3,056 plus
interest amounting to CYP 8,670.25 (calculated on the basis of the
statutory rate of seven per cent from 1 December 1972 until 26 May
1983 and then nine per cent from 28 May 1983 until 2 October 2006).
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
- Article
23 of the Cyprus Constitution provides as follows:
“(1) Every person, alone or jointly
with others, has the right to acquire, own, possess, enjoy or dispose
of any movable or immovable property and has the right to respect for
such a right...
(2) No deprivation or restriction or
limitation of any such right shall be made except as provided in
this Article.
(3) Restrictions or limitations which
are absolutely necessary in the interests of public safety or
public health or public morals, or town and country planning or
the development and use of any property for the promotion of the
public benefit or for the protection of the rights of others, may be
imposed by law on the exercise of such a right.
Just compensation shall be promptly paid for any such
restrictions or limitations which materially decrease the economic
value of the property; in the event of disagreement, such
compensation is to be determined by a civil court.
(4) Any movable or immovable property or any
right over or interest in any such property may be compulsorily
acquired by the Republic, or by a municipal corporation or by
a commune for educational, religious, charitable or sporting
institutions, bodies or establishments within its competence and only
from the persons belonging to its respective community, or by a
public corporation or a public utility body on which such a right has
been conferred by law and only
(a) for a purpose which is to the public
benefit and shall be specially provided by a general law for
compulsory acquisition which shall be enacted
within a year from the date of the coming into operation of this
Constitution;
(b) when such purpose is established by a
decision of the acquiring authority and made under the
provisions of such law stating clearly the reasons for such
acquisition;
(c) upon payment in cash and in advance of
just and equitable compensation, to be determined in
case of disagreement by a civil court.”
- Section
7 of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15 of 1962 provides,
in so far as relevant, as follows:
“(1) At any time after the publication
of a notice of acquisition and before the payment or the deposit of
compensation as in this Law provided, the acquiring authority may, by
an order published in the Official Gazette of the Republic, revoke
such notice and any relative order of acquisition that may have been
published, either generally or in respect of any particular property
or part of property referred to therein; and thereupon all
proceedings consequential to such notice or order of acquisition
shall abate and the acquisition shall be deemed to have been
abandoned either generally or in respect of such particular property
or part of property, as the case may be.
....
(3) Where the acquisition of any property or
any part of any property is deemed to have been abandoned under the
provisions of sub-section (1) or subsection (2), the acquiring
authority shall pay to any person interested in such property any
costs or expenses reasonably incurred by such person, and shall
compensate him for any loss he has suffered since the publication of
the notice of acquisition and in consequence of such notice or of any
relative order of acquisition that may have been published; and in
the event of any dispute as to the amount to be paid as aforesaid,
such amount shall be determined by the Court.”
- Section
8 of Part III of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15
of 1962 provides as follows:
“The acquiring authority, within 10 months after
the publication of a notice of acquisition, shall enter into
negotiations for the acquisition of the property to which such notice
relates by private treaty and the determination, by agreement, of the
compensation payable therefor and of its apportionment amongst the
persons interested.”
In the event that no such agreement is reached the
acquiring authority shall proceed with payment of compensation as
assessed by itself.”
- Section
9 of Part III of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15
of 1962 as applicable in 1972 provided as follows:
“If, within one month of the publication of an
order of acquisition, no agreement as in section 8 has been reached,
or if, notwithstanding that the said period of one month has not
elapsed, no such agreement can in the circumstances be foreseen, the
acquiring authority or any person interested may apply to the Court
for the determination of the compensation payable for the acquisition
of the property or, where appropriate, for the apportionment of such
compensation amongst the persons interested.”
- Section
8 of Law 25 of 1983 amending Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law
no. 15 of 1962 provided, in so far as relevant, as follows:
“In the event that the procedure of compulsory
acquisition of immovable property was not completed by the time of
entry into force of the present Law the following provisions shall
apply:
(a) The acquiring authority shall, within ten
months from the day of entry into force of the present Law, commence
negotiations for acquisition of the property subject to compulsory
acquisition and, if no agreement is reached within the
afore-mentioned period, the acquiring authority shall proceed to
offer the amount it had estimated as compensation.
(b) the owner is not estopped from accepting
the offered compensation reserving his right to seek determination of
the amount of compensation by an appropriate court, .... In such a
case the owner must refer the case to the court within seventy-five
days at the latest for determination of the amount of compensation;
following the lapse of such period it will be presumed that the owner
and the acquiring authority have reached an agreement.
For the purposes of determination of compensation
referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) above an annual interest of
seven per cent from the date of publication of the notification of
acquisition shall be estimated until the date of entry into force of
the present Law ...and interest of nine per cent from the date of
entry into force of the present Law until such time as the relevant
compensation is paid.”
- Section
10 of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15 of 1962, as
amended by Law No. 25/83, sets out the criteria and principles for
determining fair and equitable compensation for the expropriation of
property. Paragraph (a) of that section provides as follows:
“the value of the property, shall, subject as
hereinafter provided, be taken to be the amount which the property,
if sold in the open market on the date of the publication of the
relative notice of acquisition by a willing seller, might be expected
to realise”.
- Paragraph
(g) of that section, as amended by section 6 of Law No. 25/83,
provides as follows:
“(g) in the case of acquisition of
immovable property the value of which has been affected by the
imposition of any restrictions or limitations under the provisions of
the Antiquities Law or any other Law, account shall be taken of any
compensation which may be deemed payable in accordance with the
provisions of Article 23 of the Constitution”.
- Paragraph
(n) of that section, as amended by section 6 of Law No. 25/83,
provides as follows:
“an annual interest rate of nine per cent is
included in the amount of payable compensation, assessed from the
date of notification of the acquisition until the date of payment of
the relevant compensation”.
- In
the same section it is also provided that:
“for the assessment of compensation in accordance
with paragraphs (f) and (g) of the present section, the circumstances
of the case existing at the time of notification of the acquisition
are taken into account.”
- Section
12 of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15 of 1962 provides,
in so far as relevant, as follows:
“Upon being agreed or determined under the
provisions of this Law, the compensation payable shall be paid
promptly and in cash to the person or persons interested.”
- Section
13 of Compulsory Acquisition of Property Law No. 15 of 1962 provides,
in so far as relevant, as follows:
“On payment ... of the sum agreed or determined to
be paid as compensation for the acquisition of any property, such
property shall vest in the acquiring authority free from all
encumbrances; and where the property is immovable property,
production of satisfactory evidence of such payment or deposit shall
be sufficient authority to the Chief Lands and Surveys Officer of the
Republic to cause registration of such property to be made in the
name of the acquiring authority on payment of any fees or charges
which, under the provisions of any Law in force, are leviable on such
registration.”
- In
the case of Andreas Mina Christophides v. The Republic of
Cyprus (1984) 1 C.L.R. 796, the Supreme Court
held that interest should be awarded to a claimant in the event of
compulsory acquisition of his property in order to compensate him for
the loss that he has suffered as a result of being deprived of rights
over his property, for instance the right to sell it at such time as
he chooses to do so or the chance to improve his property.
Compensation is paid in order to make sure that the person whose
property is expropriated receives no less than what he would be
entitled to receive at the time that the acquisition notice was
published and, by receiving interest, he is considered to have been
paid at the time of acquisition.
- In
the case of Thekla Panaretou and another v. The Republic
(judgment of 10 October 2002) the Supreme Court stated the following:
“In the event that payment of compensation is not
made at the same time as publication of the acquisition notice, which
under the law is the critical time for assessment of payable
compensation, the owner of property continues to possess it and
enjoys the possibility to use it and even take a mortgage on its
basis. At the same time, he is aware that the property will at some
time pass to the acquiring authority and ought to know that the
critical time for assessment of its value is the time of publication
of the notice of acquisition. Therefore, if his intention is to
replace it with another property of equal value he should not
delay... We find that the provision for payment of interest until the
date of payment of compensation, constitutes a just measure for
preserving the value of the amount that would have been received by
the owner had he accepted the offer outright, or had the parties
reached an agreement concerning the value of the property at the
material time of publication of the notice.... The plaintiffs’
claim that they are additionally entitled to compensation by the
total amount of yearly increase of the value of the property, is
equated in essence to a claim for compensation equal to the value of
the property as on the day of payment instead of the time of
publication of the notice of acquisition. This is an unrealistic
claim which does not accord either with the letter or the spirit of
the law. Should it be adopted, it would encourage all sorts of
delaying tactics by owners aiming to receive compensation amounting
to the yearly increase of their property while at the same time
enjoying the use and benefit of the property.”
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant company complained that the length of each of the different
sets of proceedings it had instituted was incompatible with the
“reasonable time” requirement, laid down in Article 6 §
1 of the Convention, which reads as follows:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a ... hearing within a
reasonable time by [a] ... tribunal...”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
- The
Court must first determine the issue of compliance with the six-month
time-limit for the introduction of the application within the meaning
of Article 35 § 1 of the Convention. Thus, the question arises
whether and to what extent the different sets of proceedings can be
considered in toto for the purposes of Article 6 § 1 of
the Convention. In the Government’s view there were different
sets of proceedings, none of which was excessive, whereas the
applicant company maintained that the different proceedings up until
19 March 2004 related to its rights over its property and should be
considered as a whole.
- The
Court has only considered such proceedings in toto where they
are indissociable and concern essentially the same dispute
(“contestation”); for example, where proceedings
on the merits of a claim are followed by enforcement proceedings (see
Di Pede v. Italy, 26 September 1996, §§ 22 24,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-IV, and Hornsby
v. Greece, 19 March 1997, § 40, Reports 1997-II)
or where compensation proceedings follow proceedings concerning
expropriation (see Bhandari v. the United Kingdom,
no. 42341/04, § 17, 2 October 2007; Kukkola
v. Finland, no. 26890/95, § 41, 15 November
2005; and Saarenpään Loma Ky v. Finland,
no. 54508/00, § 28, 13 February 2007).
- The
Court notes that in Kukkola the parties had agreed that the
period to be taken into account should be counted for the
expropriation proceedings and the compensation proceedings in toto
and that the Court found no reason to hold otherwise. It further
notes that in Saarenpään Loma Ky it considered that
the expropriation and compensation proceedings could be counted in
toto as the applicant company’s property was the subject of
judicial proceedings throughout the period.
- The
Court finds in the instant case that the expropriation proceedings
began on 1 December 1972, when the notice of acquisition of the
applicant company’s property was published. The applicant
company contested the municipality’s order of acquisition
before the Supreme Court. In the meantime, the applicant company
applied for a building permit on 10 November 1972 and its
application was refused. On 5 January 1973 it lodged a new
application for judicial review with the Supreme Court contesting the
refusal of its application for a building permit. The two sets of
proceedings were joined and ended on 31 May 1975 when the court
dismissed the applicant company’s application for judicial
review of the decision to expropriate its property and upheld its
application challenging the refusal of a building permit.
Negotiations then took place for determination of the amount of
reasonable compensation for the compulsory acquisition of the
applicant company’s property, but were unsuccessful.
- On
8 May 1985 the applicant company requested a declaration from the
Supreme Court that the acquisition order was null and void given that
the municipality had not proceeded to offer compensation for the
acquisition. On 28 November 1987 the Supreme Court dismissed the
application.
- On
30 December 1988 the applicant company made a new request for a
building permit in relation to which it did not receive a reply. On
30 March 1989 it lodged another application for judicial review
with the Supreme Court concerning the omission of the municipality to
reply. On 3 February 1990 the municipality refused the request
for a building permit and the applicant company withdrew its
application for judicial review.
- On
10 February 1990, the applicant company lodged new judicial review
proceedings contesting the refusal and maintaining that an amendment
enacted in 1988 to the Compulsory Acquisition Law rendered the
acquisition order void. These proceedings were dismissed by the
Supreme Court on 18 February 1993.
- On
4 January 1994 the applicant company filed an application with the
district court requesting payment of compensation for its property.
On 25 November 1994 a requisition order was issued. On 29
December 1994 the municipality made an offer of compensation which
the applicant company accepted without prejudice. On 15 February 1995
the applicant company then lodged proceedings with the district court
seeking determination of fair and reasonable compensation for the
compulsory acquisition. The hearing commenced on 27 March 2000,
judgment was reserved on 12 April 2001 and was delivered on 11 March
2002. On 17 April 2002 the applicant company filed an appeal
with the Supreme Court which was heard on 18 February 2004 and was
dismissed on 19 March 2004. The applicant received the amount
awarded by the district court on 2 October 2006.
- The
Court observes that while the subject matter of all these proceedings
was the applicant company’s property, the dispute was not the
same in each set of them: the administrative proceedings lodged
before the Supreme Court contested various and different
administrative decisions concerning the property or its development
and the civil proceedings lodged purported to determine the amount of
equitable compensation for the compulsory acquisition. Moreover,
there were significant lapses of time in which there were no ongoing
court proceedings and the parties engaged in negotiations or were
inactive. In the present circumstances, the various judicial
proceedings which were associated with the acquisition of the
relevant property cannot be counted in toto for the purposes
of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention as they were different in
nature and purpose.
- The
Court finds that the only set of proceedings falling within its
six-month temporal jurisdiction are the civil proceedings introduced
before the District Court of Limassol and ending with the Supreme
Court’s judgment of 19 March 2004. All previous sets of
proceedings are out of time for the purposes of Article 35 § 1
of the Convention.
- The
Court notes that the complaint, in so far as it relates to the last
set of proceedings, is not manifestly ill-founded within the meaning
of Article 35 § 3 of the Convention. It further notes that it is
not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared
admissible.
B. Merits
- The
Court reiterates that the last set of proceedings began on
15 February 1995 and ended with the Supreme Court’s
judgment of 19 March 2004. The Court notes in this respect that
the period to be taken into account for these purposes ends at the
moment when the applicant’s civil right actually became
effective (see Di Pede, cited above, § 22). Accordingly,
the Court finds that the dispute between the parties was only
resolved, on a domestic level, with the payment of the award of
compensation made by the district court which was given to the
applicant in October 2006. Hence, the period to be taken into
consideration in this regard lasted approximately 11 years and 7
months for two levels of jurisdiction.
- The
Court reiterates that the reasonableness of the length of proceedings
must be assessed in the light of the circumstances of the case and
with reference to the following criteria: the complexity of the case,
the conduct of the applicant and the relevant authorities and what
was at stake for the applicant in the dispute (see, among many other
authorities, Frydlender v. France [GC], no. 30979/96, §
43, ECHR 2000-VII).
- Having
examined all the material submitted to it, the Court considers that
the Government have not put forward any fact or argument capable of
justifying the length of the proceedings in the present case. Having
regard to its case-law on the subject, the Court considers that in
the instant case the length of the proceedings was excessive and
failed to meet the “reasonable time” requirement.
- There
has accordingly been a breach of Article 6 § 1.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF
ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 TO THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant company further complained that it suffered a
disproportionate interference with its property rights as a result of
the acquisition proceedings and the amount of compensation eventually
paid by the authorities, in breach of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1,
which reads as follows:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The Government
- The
Government maintained, concerning the applicant company’s
complaint under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, that the applicant
company had failed to exhaust the available effective domestic
remedies. Relying on Azinas v. Cyprus ([GC], no. 56679/00,
ECHR 2004 III), they contended that the Convention formed an
integral part of the Cyprus legal system and Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 was directly applicable in Cyprus. The applicant
company could have relied on that provision, or on Article 23 of the
Constitution guaranteeing the right to property, before the Supreme
Court, but failed to do so. Furthermore, the applicant company should
have referred the determination of the amount of compensation to the
district court at an earlier stage.
(b) The applicant company
- The
applicant company replied that it was under no obligation to apply to
the courts to have the amount of compensation determined at an
earlier point and it could not be said that it had failed to exhaust
the available domestic remedies for not doing so. It had spent the
last 32 years trying to defend its rights over its property by using
all available legal means before the domestic courts, to no avail.
Throughout such proceedings it had raised all the arguments presented
before this Court either explicitly or in substance before the
domestic courts. The applicant company referred, in particular, to
its address to the district court, its grounds of appeal to the
Supreme Court in which it had cited the relevant case-law of this
Court, and its counsel’s pleadings before that court. The
Supreme Court in its judgment had made clear why in its view no
violation of the Convention had taken place, given that the applicant
company had been responsible for taking steps for the determination
of compensation.
(c) The Court’s assessment
- Having
regard to the applicant company’s pleadings and skeleton
arguments used in the domestic proceedings and submitted before the
Court in reply to the Government’s objection, the Court finds
that the applicant company did raise the issue of disproportionate
interference with its rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the
Convention with reference to the Court’s relevant case-law
before the district court and Supreme Court. That being so, it cannot
be disputed that the domestic courts were given ample opportunity to
address the issues raised before the Court. Moreover, the Court notes
that the Supreme Court in its judgment of 19 March 2004 considered
that there had been no breach of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention as incorporated into the domestic legal order.
- Lastly,
the Court notes that the applicant company referred the issue of
determination of equitable compensation to the district court and
subsequently challenged the district court’s findings on appeal
before the Supreme Court. As such, it has exhausted the domestic
remedies available to it.
- The
Court therefore dismisses the Government’s objection. It
moreover finds that no other grounds for declaring this part of the
application inadmissible have been established and therefore declares
it admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The Government
- The
Government submitted that the main issue in this case was whether
payment of compensation in 1994, on the basis of the market value of
the property at the time of publication of the notice of acquisition
in 1972 plus interest, laid a disproportionate burden on the
applicant company. They maintained that responsibility for the delay
between the notice of acquisition and the actual payment of
compensation was attributable to the applicant company since despite
its rights, under the relevant domestic legislation, to refer the
issue of compensation to the district court for determination
following the evident failure to reach an agreement in this respect,
or to contest the municipality’s first offer for compensation
made on 1 March 1984, the applicant company only chose to apply
to the courts for determination of the offer made in 1984 in 1995.
- A
determination of the amount of compensation would have resulted in
immediate payment and transfer of ownership to the municipality.
Instead of applying to the civil courts for determination of the
amount of compensation for the acquisition, the applicant company
pursued various other judicial proceedings challenging the
acquisition.
- Despite
the fact that the acquiring authority also had the right to apply to
the civil courts for determination of the amount of compensation, it
was the applicant company who was claiming that the value of its
property was substantially more than what the municipality had
offered and therefore it was the applicant company who should have
made such an application and not wait until 1995 to institute the
relevant proceedings. Had the applicant company done so at an earlier
stage, no issue of loss of capital gain or difference between the
market value of the property taken into account for the determination
of compensation and actual market value at the time of payment would
have arisen. Hence, the applicant company could have avoided any
burden which was described before the Court as disproportionate, and
a finding of violation under the circumstances would suggest that
owners could delay the institution of legal proceedings under
domestic law knowing that in the end such delay would be to their
benefit.
- The
relevant domestic law provided that in the event of compulsory
acquisition the acquiring authority should provide compensation which
was reasonably related to the value of the property acquired, and the
applicant company had not discharged the burden of showing that that
had not been the case. The applicant company’s expert evidence
as to the property’s evaluation had been extensively criticised
by the first-instance court, which had pointed out its deficiencies
as well as its main expert witness’s contradictions in his
testimony before the court. Moreover, the Government maintained that
the domestic courts rejected the applicant company’s suggestion
that compensation ought to have been assessed on the basis of the
market value of the property in 1994 when allegedly an offer of
compensation was made to them for the first time: previous offers had
been made and the law was clear that the relevant time for assessment
of compensation was the time of publication of the acquisition
notification.
- As
for the applicant company’s argument that while only part of
its property had been subjected to the compulsory acquisition order
in 1972, the whole property was subjected to the requisition order,
the Government noted that the plans indicated in the notice of
acquisition had made it clear that it covered the whole of the
applicant company’s property. Moreover, the argument was
superfluous given that the expert reports had been prepared on the
assumption of compulsory acquisition of the whole property in 1972
and thus this made no difference to the actual amount of compensation
paid to the applicant company. The requisition order of 1994 gave the
requisitioning authority only a right of temporary possession of the
whole property for two years and was issued so as to enable the
commencement of the public works for which the property had been
compulsorily acquired before the official transfer of ownership took
place.
(b) The applicant company
- The
applicant company maintained that the delay in payment of
compensation for decades following the order of acquisition was
disproportionate, especially since the amount of compensation
eventually paid was based on the market value of the property as it
was in 1972, which had multiplied in the meantime, leaving the
applicant company with no possibility of replacing its property with
another of equivalent value.
- Such
delay could not reasonably be attributed to the applicant company
given that the municipality did not seek to have the amount of
compensation determined by the courts, as was its right under the
relevant domestic legislation, and thus complete the act of
compulsory acquisition. Given that the applicant company was trying
to contest the acquisition, which was not a voluntary choice but one
imposed on it by the municipality, which wanted to acquire the
property, it was the municipality that should have applied to the
courts to determine the amount of compensation. The fact that the
applicant company did not exercise its right under domestic law to
take steps to have the compensation assessed as soon as it became
possible could not be held against it. The acquisition was a
compulsory one, and it was quite natural for the applicant company
which owned it to want to keep its land and not part with it at any
price if it could help it. Exercising its legal right to ask the
courts for determination of compensation would have resulted in its
dispossession by the acquiring authority, while it could not be
excluded that the acquisition order might be set aside at some future
stage either because the acquiring authority decided not to go on, or
because, as a result of unreasonable delay, it was deemed to have
abandoned its project.
- The
applicant company added that 31 years had elapsed between the
publication of the notice of acquisition of 1 December 1972 and
the final judgment of the Supreme Court of 19 February 2004, during
which time the municipality had remained for the most part totally
inactive. The municipality had written a letter to the LSO in January
1977 – four years after the publication of the notice of
acquisition – to request the valuation of the property. They
had only proceeded with the negotiations when they had received a
letter from the applicant company on 19 June 1980. They had then had
a meeting with the applicant company on 1 March 1984 and made an
offer of compensation. The applicant company’s subsequent
letter of 23 February 1985 had gone unanswered and after nine
years a requisition notice had been published in the Official Gazette
on 25 November 1994. Throughout these years of little if any activity
being taken with a view to acquisition, the applicant company’s
property had been kept in reserve until it was actually needed, while
its value had substantially increased. The applicant company had
therefore been unfairly deprived of capital gain generated by the
property. The actual compensation which was paid in 1995, namely the
amount of CYP 277,944.51, constituted merely 12.92% of the actual
value of the property in 1994 as agreed between the parties. The
interest imposed by Cypriot law was clearly inadequate for the
compensation reasonably to reflect the property’s market value.
Furthermore, the acquisition notice and order of 1972 and 1973 had
concerned part of the property, while the 1994 requisition order had
concerned the whole property, yet the amount of compensation paid
reflected the value of only part of the property as estimated in
1972.
- The
applicant company further observed that it could not be held
responsible for the delay because throughout the period when the
municipality had remained inactive the applicant company had pursued
judicial proceedings seeking to annul the acquisition or obtain a
building permit, given that it remained the owner of the property
until such time as the municipality paid compensation and completed
the acquisition. It was certainly entitled to protect its property by
all legal means available and could not be blamed or penalised for
doing so. The legal right provided for by the relevant legislation
did not entail an obligation to apply to the civil courts for
determination of compensation.
- The
Cypriot courts refused to remedy this situation, finding that the
relevant time for valuation of the property was that of the partial
acquisition notice in 1972 and not the date of the actual acquisition
of the whole property in 1995, and that the interest rate of 9 per
cent had adequately compensated the applicant company for the
difference in value between the two dates.
- The
applicant company claimed that it was entitled to the value of the
relevant property as at the end of 1994, when the requisition,
official offer by the municipality, payment and actual transfer of
ownership of the property took place. It recalled that the parties
had agreed before the district court that the value of the property
at that time was CYP 2,150,000, a figure based on the Government’s
LSO valuation. The actual compensation paid was merely a small
fraction of the actual value of the property and moreover the
applicant company had been unfairly deprived of capital gain for all
the years that it had been unable to use its property and take full
advantage of its financial potential.
(c) The Court’s assessment
- The
Court reiterates that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, which guarantees
the right to the protection of property, contains three distinct
rules: “the first rule, set out in the first sentence of the
first paragraph, is of a general nature and enunciates the principle
of the peaceful enjoyment of property; the second rule, contained in
the second sentence of the first paragraph, covers deprivation of
possessions and subjects it to certain conditions; the third rule,
stated in the second paragraph, recognises that the Contracting
States are entitled, amongst other things, to control the use of
property in accordance with the general interest ... The three rules
are not, however, ‘distinct’ in the sense of being
unconnected. The second and third rules are concerned with particular
instances of interference with the right to peaceful enjoyment of
property and should therefore be construed in the light of the
general principle enunciated in the first rule” (see, as a
recent authority with further references, J.A. Pye (Oxford) Ltd
and J.A. Pye (Oxford) Land Ltd v. the United Kingdom [GC],
no. 44302/02, § 52, ECHR 2007 ...).
- In
order to be compatible with the general rule set forth in the first
sentence of the first paragraph of Article 1, an interference with
the right to the peaceful enjoyment of possessions must strike a
“fair balance” between the demands of the general
interest of the community and the requirements of the protection of
the individual’s fundamental rights (see Beyeler v. Italy
[GC], no. 33202/96, § 107, ECHR 2000-I).
- A
taking of property under the second sentence of the first paragraph
of Article 1 without payment of an amount reasonably related to its
value will normally constitute a disproportionate interference that
cannot be justified under Article 1. The provision does not, however,
guarantee a right to full compensation in all circumstances, since
legitimate objectives of “public interest” may call for
less than reimbursement of the full market value (see Papachelas
v. Greece [GC], no. 31423/96, § 48, ECHR 1999-II, again
with further references).
- The
Court will generally respect the domestic authorities’ judgment
as to what is in the general interest unless that judgment is
manifestly without reasonable foundation (see Immobiliare Saffi v.
Italy [GC], no. 22774/93, § 49, ECHR 1999-V). However,
it cannot remain passive, in exercising the European supervision
incumbent on it, where a domestic court’s interpretation of a
legal act appears “unreasonable, arbitrary or ... inconsistent
... with the principles underlying the Convention” (see Pla
and Puncernau v. Andorra, no. 69498/01, § 59, ECHR
2004-VIII). The State has obligations under Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 to take measures necessary to protect the right of property and it
is the Court’s duty to ensure the observance of the engagements
undertaken by the Contracting Parties to the Convention, and not to
deal with errors of fact or law allegedly committed by a national
court unless Convention rights and freedoms may have been infringed
(see Anheuser-Busch Inc. v. Portugal, cited above,
§ 83).
i. The nature of the interference
- The
Court notes that it is undisputed that the applicant company used to
be the owner of the relevant property until 1995 when ownership was
transferred to the acquiring authority, the municipality of Limassol,
in accordance with the order for compulsory acquisition and under the
relevant provisions of the Compulsory Acquisition Law (see paragraph
26 et seq. above). The interference with the applicant company’s
property rights commenced with the publication of the notice of
compulsory acquisition in 1972 and subsequent acquisition order
issued in 1973 and continued throughout the period terminating with
the final transfer of ownership to the municipality. During that
period the applicant company’s use of its property was
significantly reduced until the final acquisition took place. In
domestic law compulsory acquisition is a permanent measure of
deprivation of property (see Kolona v. Cyprus, no. 28025/03,
§ 73, 27 September 2007). The statutory provisions
which resulted in the applicant company’s loss of ownership
were thus intended to permanently transfer ownership to the State for
the public benefit. The Court finds, therefore, that following an
extensive period of control of the use of the applicant company’s
possessions, there was a deprivation of property within the meaning
of the second sentence of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention.
- The
Court must therefore determine whether such deprivation was justified
in accordance with the requirements of that provision and, therefore,
whether it was in accordance with the law, in the public interest and
struck a fair balance between the demands of the general interest of
the community and the requirements of the protection of the
individual’s fundamental rights.
ii. The lawfulness of the interference
- The
Court recalls in this connection that an essential condition for an
interference to be deemed compatible with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
is that it should be lawful. The rule of law, one of the fundamental
principles of a democratic society, is inherent in all the Articles
of the Convention (see Iatridis v. Greece [GC],
no. 31107/96, § 58, ECHR 1999-II). The principle of
lawfulness also presupposes that the applicable provisions of
domestic law be sufficiently accessible, precise and foreseeable in
their application (see, among other authorities, Hentrich
v. France, 22 September 1994, § 42, Series A
no. 296-A, and Lithgow and Others v. the United Kingdom,
8 July 1986, § 110, Series A no. 102).
- In
this connection the Court reiterates that it is in the first place
for the domestic authorities, notably the courts, to interpret and
apply domestic law (see Jahn and Others v. Germany [GC]
nos. 46720/99, 72203/01 and 72552/01, § 86, ECHR 2005
- ). It observes that the interference with the applicant company’s
property rights was based on the provisions of the Compulsory
Acquisition Law. It further notes that the Supreme Court, in its
judgment of 2004, found that the acquisition in question was in
compliance with the applicable laws and that it was always clear on
the basis of domestic law that the amount of compensation to be
eventually paid for the compulsory acquisition was the property’s
market value as at the time of publication of the notification of
acquisition.
- The
Court therefore concludes that the interference complained of
satisfied the requirement of lawfulness within the meaning of Article
1 of Protocol No. 1.
iii. The aim of the interference
- Any
interference with a right of property can only be justified if it
serves a legitimate public interest. The Court reiterates that,
because of their direct knowledge of their society and its needs, the
national authorities are in principle better placed than the
international judge to decide what is “in the public interest”.
Under the system of protection established by the Convention, it is
thus for the national authorities to make the initial assessment as
to the existence of public concern warranting measures interfering
with the peaceful enjoyment of possessions (see Terazzi S.r.l.
v. Italy, 17 October 2002, § 85, and Elia
S.r.l. v. Italy, no. 37710/97, § 77, ECHR
2001-IX).
- In
the present case the Court is prepared to accept that the compulsory
acquisition pursued the legitimate aim of furthering a municipal plan
intended to improve access to the beach, widen the adjacent street
and provide a better view of the sea, which was deemed crucial for
the development of the city of Limassol.
iv. The proportionality of the
interference
- The
second sentence of Article 1 is to be construed in the light of the
general principle enunciated in the opening sentence. There must
exist a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means
employed and the aim sought to be realised. In determining whether a
fair balance exists, the Court recognises that the State enjoys a
wide margin of appreciation, with regard both to choosing the means
of enforcement and to ascertaining whether the consequences of
enforcement are justified in the general interest for the purpose of
achieving the object of the law in question (see Jahn and Others,
cited above, § 93).
- The
Court must next examine whether the interference with the applicant
company’s right to peaceful enjoyment of its possessions struck
the requisite fair balance between the demands of the general
interest of the public and the requirements of the protection of the
individual’s fundamental rights, or whether it imposed a
disproportionate and excessive burden on them (see, among many other
authorities, Jahn and Others v. Germany, cited above,
§ 93).
- The
Court reiterates that, in the area of town planning, the Contracting
States should enjoy a wide margin of appreciation in order to
implement their policies (see
Terazzi S.r.l., cited above; Elia S.r.l., cited above;
and Skibińscy v. Poland cited above, § 59).
Nevertheless, in the exercise of its power of review, the Court must
determine whether the requisite balance was maintained in a manner
consonant with the applicant company’s right of property (see,
mutatis mutandis, Sporrong and Lönnroth v. Sweden,
23 September 1982, § 69, Series A no. 52).
- The
Court observes that the Compulsory Acquisition Act provided for ex
lege expropriation on the date on which payment of compensation
for the compulsory acquisition was made. While both the applicant
company and the authorities had the right to apply to the courts to
determine the amount of compensation following the publication of the
notification of acquisition, the acquisition was not formally
completed until the payment of compensation. As for the amount of
compensation payable, the relevant law provided that it had to
correspond to the market value of the acquired property as at the
time of publication of the notification of compulsory acquisition.
- While
the Court considers that, in principle, the rule of domestic law
concerning the date which is relevant for estimation of the market
value of the property in determining the amount of compensation for
compulsory acquisition is not in itself inconsistent with the
principles established in its case-law concerning Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1, its application in the present case raises concern
given that such a long time elapsed between the date of notification
and the actual payment of compensation. It is noted that, at the time
of actual transfer of title to the applicant company’s
property, the amount of compensation provided by the State
authorities proved to be approximately ten times less than the
property’s market value as agreed by the parties in the
domestic and present proceedings.
- The
Court notes that the district court accepted that the value of the
property as at the time of publication of the relevant notification
of acquisition in 1972 was CYP 103,056. The Court accepts that, on
the basis of the documents submitted by the parties and in particular
the relevant valuation reports, this amount reflected the value at
the relevant time of the entire property affected by the acquisition
order. It moreover takes note of the fact that on that amount annual
interest was added on the basis of the applicable statutory rate of
seven per cent until 1983 and nine per cent subsequently and until
the date of payment in 1995.
Accordingly, at the time of loss of ownership in 1995, the applicant
company was awarded the amount of CYP 277, 994. 51.
- The
Court recalls that while compensation for deprivation of property
does not necessarily have to constitute payment by the acquiring
authority of full market value for the acquired property, the amount
of compensation must be reasonably linked to the market value at the
time of deprivation. In the present case the parties had clearly
agreed that the market value at the time of deprivation was CYP
2,150,000. The Court considers that the amount of compensation paid
to the applicant company in the present circumstances was not
reasonably connected to the value of the property. Indeed, it notes
that the Government did not provide any reason for paying less than
the full market value for the property, other than relying on a
domestic law provision which did not allow for any concession in the
event of excessive delay in the completion of the compulsory
acquisition procedure, as in the present case.
- The
Court takes note of the Government’s submission that it was not
responsible for the delay in the completion of the acquisition
procedure because the applicant company could have accelerated the
proceedings by applying to the district courts at any point to have
the amount of equitable compensation determined or contest any
earlier offer made by the acquiring authority. While the Court notes
that, the possibility to have the amount determined by a court and
thus have the acquisition procedure concluded, was a safety valve
offered by the domestic system to protect the property rights of
owners against excessively lengthy acquisition procedures, the Court
is not persuaded that because of this possibility the actual delay
and its consequences should be attributed in its entirety to the
applicant company.
- Firstly,
it notes that the applicant company, being the owner of property
subject to compulsory acquisition, had every right to seek to
challenge the lawfulness of any interference with its property rights
by all legal means available to it. The initiation of proceedings to
have the amount of compensation determined would effectively have
meant acceptance of the interference and would have been inconsistent
with, or even undermined, other proceedings that were pending
challenging the legitimacy and finality of the acquisition. The Court
finds particularly important in this respect that following the
domestic court’s decision that the refusal of the applicant
company’s building permit application was unlawful because the
company remained the owner of the relevant property, the applicant
company had an expectation that it might obtain a building permit
until 1993, when its contestation of a second refusal was rejected.
Secondly, it is clear that long periods of inactivity elapsed in
which the acquiring authority failed to take any action concerning
the acquisition and for which the Government did not submit any
justification or reasonable explanation. Lastly, the acquiring
authority had the same possibility to accelerate the proceedings by
applying to the civil courts for determination of the award of
compensation but failed to do so. The Court notes that no explanation
was provided by the Government as to why the municipality took no
such action, while it considers it more reasonable for the
municipality to have sought to obtain determination of the amount of
compensation, given the very nature of the compulsory acquisition
order issued to enable the municipality to pursue its policies.
- That
being so, the Court considers that the delay in the proceedings,
responsibility for which lay rather more with the acquiring
authorities than with the applicant company and the absolute nature
of the relevant domestic rule concerning determination of
compensation, which did not allow for the eventuality of excessive
delay between the notification of the acquisition and the actual
payment of compensation, imposed a disproportionate burden on the
applicant company.
- Accordingly,
the Court finds that there has been a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 to the Convention.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant company claimed that it was entitled to the market value of
the relevant property as in 1995 when the transfer of ownership took
place. According to the parties’ agreement in the proceedings
before the district court that value amounted to CYP 2,150,000. Given
that in early 1995 the amount of CYP 277,994.51 was paid to the
applicant company, it claimed that it should be awarded the
difference as pecuniary damage, namely the amount of
CYP 1,872,005.49, plus interest at the rate of 9 per cent per
annum, representing the statutory rate of interest in compulsory
acquisition cases, from 1994 until the date of payment.
- The
applicant company also claimed CYP 100,000 in respect of
non-pecuniary damage for all the anxiety, distress and feelings of
helplessness, frustration and mistrust for public authorities caused
by the long delay and its lack of success in the numerous and costly
attempts before the various domestic courts.
- Lastly,
the applicant company claimed CYP 22,341.65 for costs and expenses
incurred before the domestic courts plus an annual interest rate of
eight per cent, the rate applicable under domestic law. It submitted
detailed schedules and receipts setting out its claims. It further
claimed CYP 15,000 for costs and expenses incurred in the present
proceedings.
- The
Government contested these claims. Although they accepted that the
market value of the property in 1994 was that agreed between the
parties in the domestic proceedings, they submitted that a finding of
a violation did not mean that the Court would have to determine the
year that should be taken into account for assessing the value of the
property or the year in which compensation ought to have been paid.
The applicant company’s claim for pecuniary loss could not be
said to have been caused by the violation. Nor did it take into
account the fact that from 1972 until 1995 it had continued to enjoy
the use of the property as bonded warehouses.
B. The Court’s decision
- Having
regard to the information in its possession, the Court considers that
the question of the application of Article 41 is not ready for
decision. It is therefore necessary to reserve the matter in its
entirety, and to fix further procedure with due regard to the
possibility of an agreement being reached between the respondent
Government and the applicant.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the application admissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 § 1 of the Convention;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention;
- Holds that:
(a) the question on the application of Article 41 is not ready for
decision; accordingly,
(b) it reserves the said question;
(c) invites the Cypriot Government and the applicant company to
submit, within the forthcoming three months, their written
observations on the matter and, in particular, to notify the Court of
any agreement they may reach;
(d) reserves the further procedure and delegates to the President of
the Chamber power to fix same if need be.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 15 January 2009, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President