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GRAND
CHAMBER
CASE OF
PERDIGÃO v. PORTUGAL
(Application
no. 24768/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
16
November 2010
This
judgment is final but may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Perdigão v. Portugal,
The
European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed
of:
Jean-Paul
Costa,
President,
Christos
Rozakis,
Nicolas
Bratza,
Peer
Lorenzen,
Josep
Casadevall,
Ireneu
Cabral Barreto,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Elisabet
Fura,
Alvina
Gyulumyan,
Sverre
Erik Jebens,
Ján
Šikuta,
Ineta
Ziemele,
Mark
Villiger,
Giorgio
Malinverni,
George
Nicolaou,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva,
Mihai
Poalelungi, judges,
and
Johan Callewaert, Deputy
Grand Chamber Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 17 March 2010 and on 6 October 2010,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 24768/06) against the
Portuguese Republic lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) by two Portuguese nationals,
Mr João José Perdigão and Mrs Maria José
Queiroga Perdigão (“the applicants”), on 19 June
2006.
- The
applicants were represented by Mr A.C. Miranda and Mr J. Perdigão,
lawyers practising in Lisbon. The Portuguese Government (“the
Government”) were represented until 23 February 2010 by their
Agent, Mr J. Miguel, Deputy Attorney-General, and thereafter by
Mrs M.F. Carvalho, also Deputy Attorney-General.
- The
applicants complained in particular of a violation of their property
rights because the compensation for expropriation awarded to them had
ultimately been fully absorbed by the amount they had to pay to the
State in court fees.
- The
application was allocated to the Second Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). On 24 April 2008 the Court
decided to give notice of the application to the Government. It also
decided to examine the merits of the application at the same time as
its admissibility (Article 29 § 3).
- On
4 August 2009, ruling on admissibility and the merits, a Chamber of
that Section composed of Françoise Tulkens, Ireneu Cabral
Barreto, Vladimiro Zagrebelsky, Danutė Jočienė,
Dragoljub Popović, András Sajó and Işıl
Karakaş, judges, and also of Françoise Elens-Passos,
Deputy Section Registrar, declared, by a majority, the application
admissible in respect of the complaints under Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 and the remainder of the application inadmissible. It held by
five votes to two that there had been a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1. Judge Zagrebelsky expressed a dissenting opinion, in
which he was joined by Judge Sajó.
- On
10 December 2009 a panel of the Grand Chamber decided, on an
application by the Government, to refer the case to the Grand
Chamber, as provided for in Article 43 of the Convention.
- The
composition of the Grand Chamber was determined according to the
provisions of Article 27 §§ 2 and 3 of the Convention and
Rule 24. At the final deliberations, Mihai Poalelungi, substitute
judge, replaced Giovanni Bonnello, who was unable to attend (Rule 24
§ 3).
- On
19 January 2010 the Grand Chamber decided to dispense with a hearing
in this case, being of the opinion that the discharging of its
functions under Article 38 § 1 (a) of the Convention did
not require one to be held (Rule 59 § 3 in fine).
The parties were invited to file memorials on the merits of the case,
but only the Government did so.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants were born in 1932 and 1933 respectively and live in
Lisbon.
A. The expropriation
- The
applicants owned a piece of land measuring 128,619 m² in the
region of Evora. By order of the Ministry of Public Works, published
in the Official Gazette on 11 September 1995, the land was
expropriated in favour of BRISA – Auto-Estradas de Portugal
S.A. (“BRISA”), a publicly owned company at the time, to
build a motorway.
- As
no agreement was reached between the applicants and the authorities,
the case was submitted, in accordance with the applicable
legislation, to the President of the Evora Court of Appeal, who
appointed an arbitration committee to value the land. The committee
assessed its value at 177,987.17 euros (EUR).
- On
3 March 1997 the Evora first-instance court issued an order notifying
the applicants of the arbitration committee's decision.
- On
21 March 1997 the applicants lodged an appeal against the arbitration
decision with the Evora court. In their opinion the experts had
underestimated the value of their farmland and omitted to place a
value on a quarry located on the land. They argued that the potential
profit from exploiting the quarry should be taken into account when
calculating the amount to be paid in compensation for the
expropriation. In their opinion they were entitled to EUR 20,864,292
in compensation.
- BRISA
also challenged the arbitration value, which they considered too
high. They thought the value should not exceed EUR 72,643. Their
appeal was initially rejected by the Evora court as being out of
time, but it was later admitted after the Evora Court of Appeal had
delivered a judgment on 11 December 1997 setting aside the initial
decision.
- On
7 April 1997 the Evora court registry calculated the total court fees
due in the applicants' case to be EUR 158,381.
- On
24 April 1998 the Evora court decided that no compensation should yet
be paid to the applicants as the court fees might well be higher than
the minimum sum that might be awarded to the applicants in
compensation according to the appeals lodged by the parties, BRISA
having requested that the sum be fixed at EUR 72,643. The court
then appointed a new arbitration committee made up of three experts
appointed by the court and two appointed by the parties (one each).
On 11 March 1999, by a majority, the arbitrators set the compensation
at EUR 191,116. The arbitrator appointed by the applicants
expressed the view that they should be paid EUR 4,040,897.
- By
an order of 25 March 1999 the court, of its own motion, requested a
new expert report, restricted this time to the question of the
economic potential of the quarry located on the land. Three
geologists from the University of Evora were accordingly appointed as
experts. They submitted their report on 9 February 2000, concluding
that the maximum amount the exploitation of the quarry could be
expected to yield was EUR 9,704,113.
- By
a judgment of 30 June 2000 the court dismissed both parties' appeals.
Considering that the potential gain from the quarry was not to be
taken into account, it fixed the compensation for the expropriation
at EUR 197,236.25.
- On
14 July 2000 the applicants lodged an appeal against that judgment
with the Evora Court of Appeal.
- In
a judgment of 10 July 2003 the Court of Appeal upheld the judgment in
full.
- On
11 November 2003 the applicants appealed to the Supreme Court but, in
an order dated 30 September 2004, the judge rapporteur of the Supreme
Court declared the appeal inadmissible.
- On
26 October 2004 the applicants lodged a constitutional appeal, which
the Constitutional Court declared inadmissible by a summary decision
on 20 December 2004.
- On
26 January 2005 the file was transmitted to the Evora court.
B. Court fees
- On
4 February 2005 the applicants received notice from the Evora court
of the court fees owed for the expropriation proceedings. The sum
they were expected to pay amounted to EUR 489,188.42.
- On
22 February 2005 the applicants filed a complaint about the fees,
alleging in particular that they violated the principles of fair
compensation and the right of access to a court. They considered that
the sum to be paid, if it was to be proportionate, should not exceed
EUR 15,000. They also pointed out what they considered to be various
inaccuracies and miscalculations in the court fees. They challenged
the basis used before the Evora court to calculate the court tax
(which they claimed should have been that stipulated in Article 18 §
2 of the Court Fees Code), as well as the legitimacy of being
required to pay anything at all in respect of costs and expenses
(custas de parte) to BRISA, which, as a State enterprise, was
exempt from paying court fees.
- On
1 April 2005, acting on information provided by the registry, the
Evora court judge acknowledged the mistakes the applicants had
pointed out and ordered their rectification. The amount owed was thus
reduced to EUR 309,052.71 so, once the compensation awarded to
the applicants had been deducted, they still owed the State EUR
111,816.46. The judge dismissed the applicants' complaint regarding
the alleged violations of the principles of fair compensation and the
right of access to a court.
- The
applicants appealed to the Evora Court of Appeal. In a judgment of 13
December 2005, of which they were notified on 19 December 2005, the
court dismissed the appeal.
- On
12 May 2006 the applicants lodged a constitutional appeal against
that decision, alleging that the interpretation of the relevant
provisions of the Court Fees Code, particularly Article 66 § 2,
was contrary to the principles of fair compensation and the right of
access to a court guaranteed in the Constitution. In their view,
court fees should on no account exceed the sum awarded in
compensation for an expropriation.
- In
a judgment of 28 March 2007 the Constitutional Court dismissed their
appeal. After noting that it could only examine the constitutionality
of Article 66 § 2 of the Court Fees Code, the only provision the
courts below had applied, it went on to hold that the provision
concerned was not contrary to Articles 20 (access to a court) and 62
§ 2 (fair compensation) of the Constitution. Concerning access
to a court, it pointed out that while excessively high court fees
could in some circumstances be an obstacle to access to a court, this
was not the case in this instance as the applicants had been required
to pay only EUR 15,000, a sum it considered reasonable. On the
subject of fair compensation, the Constitutional Court found that
compensation for the loss suffered as a result of expropriation was
quite unrelated to the matter of court fees, and that there was
accordingly no reason why court fees should not exceed the sum
awarded in compensation.
- On
20 April 2007 the applicants filed a request to have that judgment
rectified, claiming that the Constitutional Court had made a factual
mistake, in so far as it had considered in its reasoning that the
applicants owed EUR 15,000 in court fees when they were in fact
expected to pay EUR 111,816.46.
- In
a judgment of 25 September 2007 the Constitutional Court acknowledged
its mistake and the need to rectify the judgment in respect of
Article 20 of the Constitution. It found that EUR 111,816.46 was
a large enough sum to have affected the right of access to a court.
It accordingly declared Article 66 § 2 of the Court Fees Code,
as interpreted by the lower courts, contrary to Article 20 of the
Constitution. In respect of Article 62 § 2 of the Constitution
concerning fair compensation, however, it held that its earlier
decision needed no rectification.
- On
6 November 2007 the applicants, wishing to know the exact sum they
owed in court fees, filed a request for clarification of the judgment
of 25 September 2007.
- In
a judgment of 13 November 2007 the Constitutional Court rejected that
request, considering that it was for the lower court to determine the
sum to be paid.
- In
an order of 4 January 2008, the Evora court, to which the case had
been referred back, decided, without giving reasons, that the fees
should not exceed the compensation awarded by more than EUR 15,000.
- On
20 February 2008 the applicants paid the outstanding sum of
EUR 15,000.
C. Application no. 12849/05 to the European Court of
Human Rights
- On
7 April 2005 the applicants lodged an application (no. 12849/05) with
the Court complaining about the lack of compensation in respect of
the quarry. The application was rejected by a committee on 30 August
2005, as being out of time.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. The Constitution
- Article
20 of the Constitution guarantees the right of access to a court.
Article 62 of the Constitution guarantees the right of property and
the right to fair compensation in the event of expropriation.
B. The Code of Civil Procedure
- The
general rule governing court fees is set forth in Article 446 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, under the terms of which it is in principle
for the unsuccessful party to pay the court fees.
C. The Expropriations Code
- At
the time of the expropriation in issue, the applicable Expropriations
Code was that introduced by Legislative Decree no. 438/91 of 9
November 1991.
- The
expropriation procedure at the time took the following form: if no
agreement could be reached between the expropriating authority and
the expropriated owner, the President of the Court of Appeal with
jurisdiction over the area in which the property to be expropriated
was located appointed an arbitration committee to value the property.
The owner could appeal against the arbitration decision before the
court of first instance, and a new valuation would be ordered if
necessary. The decision of the first-instance court was open to
appeal before the Court of Appeal, whose decision was final
(legislative precedent (assento) of the Supreme Court of 30
May 1995, binding on all courts and published in the Official Gazette
of 15 May 1997).
D. Court fees
- In
Portugal court fees are likened to taxes. The Supreme Court considers
that the obligation for litigants to pay court fees is the same as
the obligation for taxpayers to pay taxes. The State, as the “active
subject” of the fiscal obligation concerned, thus has the right
to collect the fees; in exchange, it must give people (the “passive
subjects”) access to judicial services (judgment of the Supreme
Court of 5 February 2004, in case no. 03B3809).
- At
the material time court fees were regulated by the Court Fees Code,
as embodied in Legislative Decree no. 224-A/96, of 26 November 1996,
before it was amended by Legislative Decree no. 324/2003, of
27 December 2003.
- The
relevant provisions of the Code read as follows:
Article 1 (Notion of court fees)
“1. Court fees shall include the court
tax (taxa de justiça) and the other charges (encargos).
2. Unless otherwise prescribed by law, all
proceedings are subject to court fees.”
Article 2 (Subjective exemptions)
“1. Without prejudice to the provisions
of special laws, the following shall be exempted from court fees:
a) The State and all its services and bodies,
even if they have their own legal personality;
...”
Article 6 (Special rules)
“1. In the cases mentioned below, the
value of the litigation, for the purposes of calculating court fees,
shall be as follows:
...
s) in appeals concerning expropriations, the
difference between the compensation for expropriation fixed by the
arbitration committee and the sum claimed by [the expropriated party]
...
...”
Article 13 (Court tax calculation scale)
“1. Without prejudice to the following
provisions, procedural costs shall be taxed on the basis of the table
below and calculated according to the value of the actions,
applications and appeals.
...
-
Value
up to ... euros
|
Court
tax (in euros)
|
149.64
|
29.93
|
299.28
|
39.90
|
498.80
|
49.88
|
784.20
|
59.86
|
997.60
|
69.83
|
1,246.99
|
79.81
|
1,496.39
|
89.78
|
1,745.79
|
99.76
|
1,995.19
|
109.74
|
2,244.59
|
119.71
|
2,493.99
|
129.69
|
2,743.39
|
139.66
|
2,992.79
|
149.64
|
3,242.19
|
159.62
|
3,491.59
|
169.59
|
3,740.
98
|
179.57
|
3,990.38
|
189.54
|
4,239.78
|
199.52
|
4,489.18
|
209.50
|
4,738.58
|
219.47
|
4,987.98
|
229.45
|
5,985.57
|
239.42
|
6,983.17
|
249.40
|
7,980.77
|
259.37
|
8,978.36
|
269.35
|
9,975.96
|
279.33
|
11,472.35
|
299.28
|
12,968.75
|
319.23
|
14,465.14
|
339.18
|
15,961.53
|
359.13
|
17,457.93
|
379.09
|
18,954.32
|
399.04
|
20,450.71
|
418.99
|
21,947.11
|
438.14
|
23,443.50
|
458.89
|
24,939.89
|
478.85
|
27,433.88
|
498.80
|
29,927.87
|
518.75
|
32,421.86
|
538.70
|
34,915.85
|
558.65
|
37,409.84
|
578.61
|
39,903.83
|
598.56
|
42,397.82
|
618.51
|
44,891.81
|
638.46
|
47,385.80
|
658.41
|
49,879.79
|
678.37
|
In
excess of 49,879.79
|
49.88 per
step of 4,987.98 euros
|
Article 18 (Court tax in appeal courts)
“...
2. In all types of appeals against decisions
pronounced in any action or application ... the court tax shall be
half the amount shown in the tax column in the table [in Article 13].
...”
Article 29 (Dispensation from advance and subsequent
payments)
“...
2. No advance payment shall be required in
expropriation proceedings ...”
Article 66 (Payment of fees out of sums payable to
the party
concerned by order of the court)
“1. A party ordered to pay court fees
who is awarded a sum of money by decision of the court may request,
within the time-limit for voluntary payment, that the court fees owed
be deducted from the sum awarded.
2. Court fees owed by an expropriated party
shall be deducted from the compensation awarded for the
expropriation.”
- The
custas de parte (costs and expenses) are sums
payable to the successful party at the end of the proceedings. Under
Article 33 of the Court Fees Code as applicable at the material time,
they included the sums the successful party had been obliged to spend
in connection with the proceedings.
E. The new Court Fees Code
- On
24 February 2008 a new Court Fees Code was introduced (Legislative
Decree no. 34/2008). The explanatory memorandum includes the
following passage:
“According to the new scale, the court tax is not
calculated simply on the basis of the value in dispute. It has been
found that the sum in dispute is not a decisive factor in assessing
the complexity of the proceedings or in the costs generated for the
legal system. The search for a better way to calculate the court tax
has led to the establishment of a mixed system based on the value in
dispute up to a certain limit, with the possibility of correcting the
amount where the proceedings are complex, independently of the
economic value considered to be at stake.”
- Under
the new system there is therefore an upper limit on the amount that
can be charged in court fees. At present, for proceedings at first
instance, that amount equals 60 units of account
for ordinary proceedings or 90 units of account if the proceedings
are particularly complex. The charge for appeals is 20 units of
account. Applications made during the proceedings continue to be
taxed, of course, at a rate of up to 20 units of account, depending
on the type of application (see tables appended to Legislative Decree
no. 34/2008 and Articles 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13 and 17 of that text).
III. COMPARATIVE LAW
- The
Court undertook a comparative law study concerning the payment of
court fees in a number of member States of the Council of Europe.
- The
study revealed that, generally speaking, the court fees charged vary
according to the sum claimed (except in countries where fees charged
are not based on the sum in dispute). The fees may represent a
percentage of that sum, a lump sum, or a combination of the two. In
many States where the fees charged are linked to the value of the
claim, there is an upper limit on how much one party can be charged,
but in some States there is no such limit.
- In
general the unsuccessful party is required to pay the costs of the
other party. Where a claim is allowed only in part, most of the
States covered by the study leave it to the discretion of the courts
to decide who pays what fees. In some States special rules apply to
expropriation proceedings. In one such State, for example, when fees
are calculated as a percentage of the compensation offered, the
principle is that the expropriated owner must nevertheless be repaid
in full; in other words, all the costs effectively incurred by that
party must be reimbursed, as he normally has a right to full
reparation for the prejudice suffered.
- In
many States there is no guarantee that a complainant will not be
charged costs and expenses in excess of the sum likely to be awarded
in respect of his claim, especially when only a small part of the
claim is allowed. No such risk exists in those States where court
fees are calculated only at the end of the proceedings and based on
the sum effectively awarded by the court.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 TO THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that the compensation for expropriation awarded
to them had ultimately been fully absorbed by the amount they had to
pay to the State in court fees. They considered this to be a
violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, which reads as follows:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
A. The Chamber judgment
- In
its judgment the Chamber noted that the lack of compensation the
applicants complained of was caused by the application of the rules
governing court fees, which were “contributions” within
the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1,
and that this provision concerned particular instances of
interference with the right to peaceful enjoyment of property. In
this case, however, the Chamber considered it more appropriate to
examine the situation complained of in the light of the rule set
forth in the first sentence of paragraph 1 of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1, which was a general rule guaranteeing the right to peaceful
enjoyment of property. It noted that the applicants disputed neither
the lawfulness of the expropriation as such nor that of the
regulations governing court fees as applied to them. Nor was there
anything to indicate that the impugned interference was at all
arbitrary, the applicants having had the opportunity, inter alia,
to put their arguments to the domestic courts. Unlike the Government,
the Chamber considered that the applicants could not be blamed for
trying, by the procedural means available to them, to persuade the
court to include in the compensation figure elements they considered
essential. It considered that it was not the Chamber's role to
examine, generally, Portugal's method of calculating and fixing court
fees, but noted that in the instant case the concrete application of
that method had led to a complete lack of compensation for the
expropriation of the applicants' property. It found that, in the
circumstances, the compensation conditions – or more precisely
the lack of compensation – had placed an excessive burden on
the applicants, upsetting the fair balance which must be struck
between the general interest of the community and the fundamental
rights of the individual.
B. The Government's submissions to the Grand Chamber
- Concerning
the subject of the application, the Government pointed out that it
was not the expropriation as such that the Court was required to
examine. The applicants had lodged an application in that respect,
but the Court had rejected it as being out of time. The only issue
here was the compatibility with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the
sum the applicants had been expected to pay in court fees.
- Next,
turning to the Portuguese method of calculating court fees applicable
at the time and that in place since 2008, the Government pointed out
that the Convention did not require judicial services to be provided
free of charge. It did, on the other hand, provide for the States to
exercise their margin of appreciation in introducing legislation to
secure the payment of “taxes” or other “contributions”
within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and, according
to the well-established case-law of the European Commission of Human
Rights, court fees were just such “contributions” (Agis
Antoniades v. the United Kingdom, no. 15434/89, Commission
decision of 15 February 1990, Decisions and Reports (DR) 64, p.
237).
- The
Government criticised the Chamber judgment, considering it
methodologically inappropriate and legally incorrect to confuse
compensation for an expropriation and the court fees to be paid.
Referring to the dissenting opinion attached to the judgment (see
paragraph 5 above), the Government considered that the Chamber's
conclusions confused two legally different things: “the credit
and the debt, [which were] two completely separate things”. The
Government gave the example of a situation where a creditor lodged a
claim to recover a certain sum, and the debtor filed a counter claim
for a sum higher than that claimed by the creditor; if the court
allowed the counterclaim, the creditor would receive nothing and, in
addition, would have to pay the costs, without there being, the
Government argued, any interference with the peaceful enjoyment of
possessions.
- According
to the Government, the alleged violation of the applicants' rights
related only to the court fees they were ordered to pay. However,
those fees had been fixed in accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure and the Court Fees Code, on
the one hand, and with the principle of proportionality on the other.
The total amount the applicants had paid – amounting to 1.02%
of the amount they had claimed – had been calculated, the
Government argued, taking into account the considerable procedural
activity in which they had engaged and the actual amount claimed,
which had clearly been unrealistic.
C. The Court's assessment
1. Applicability of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
- The
Court reiterates that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 comprises 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, among other authorities, James
and Others v. the United Kingdom, 21 February 1986, § 37,
Series A no. 98, which reproduces in part the analysis
given by the Court in its judgment in Sporrong and Lönnroth
v. Sweden (23 September 1982, § 61, Series A no.
52), and Depalle v. France [GC], no. 34044/02, § 77, 29
March 2010).
- It
is not in dispute between the parties that in the instant case the
situation complained of falls within the scope of that provision. The
Government disagreed with the Chamber's conclusion, however, that the
applicants' complaint was to be examined in the light of the general
rule enunciated in the first sentence. Stressing that the
expropriation as such was not in issue, they contended that the only
question to be examined was whether the sum the applicants were
ordered to pay in court fees was compatible with Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1.
- While
it is true that there is no need for the Court to examine the
expropriation as such (see paragraphs 36 and 53 above), the fact
remains that it was because the applicants were deprived of their
property by the State that the dispute over court fees at the origin
of the present application arose. This has a definite effect on the
way in which the alleged interference with the applicants' right must
be analysed: the Court's case-law requires that in the event of
deprivation of property in the public interest, the owners be paid
compensation bearing a reasonable relation to the value of the
expropriated property (see Papachelas v. Greece [GC], no.
31423/96, § 48, ECHR 1999 II). The Court reiterates in this
connection that when it examines whether there has been a violation
of the right to the peaceful enjoyment of possessions guaranteed by
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, it must look beyond appearances and
investigate the realities of the situation complained of, since the
Convention is intended to guarantee rights that are “practical
and effective” (see Depalle, cited above, § 78).
- That
said, there is no denying that the applicants' complaint concerns the
way in which the regulations governing court fees were applied in
their case. The Government emphasised that the second paragraph of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 acknowledged the right of the States, in
exercising their margin of appreciation, to enforce laws to secure
the payment of “taxes” and other “contributions”.
They referred to the well-established case-law of the European
Commission of Human Rights, according to which the costs to be paid
in connection with judicial proceedings are “contributions”
within the meaning of that provision (see Agis Antoniades,
cited above; see also Aires v. Portugal, no. 21775/93,
Commission decision of 25 May 1995, DR 81, p. 48, cited in the
Chamber judgment; X. and Y. v. Austria, no. 7909/74,
Commission decision of 12 December 1978, DR 15, p. 160; and X.
v. F.R.G., no. 7544/76, Commission decision of 12 July 1978, DR
14, p. 60).
- Like
the Chamber, the Grand Chamber considers it necessary to confirm the
decisions of the Commission to the effect that court fees are to be
considered as “contributions” within the meaning of
the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Indeed,
charging litigants court fees pursues various aims, including
financing the judicial system and increasing public revenue. And
although collecting these fees in Portugal is not the role of the tax
authorities, the obligation to pay them is clearly one of a fiscal
nature (see paragraph 41 above). According to the information
available to the Court, that also seems to be the case in other
Council of Europe member States. So, the obligation to pay court fees
– and the corresponding regulations – is covered by the
second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, as the fees are
“contributions” within the meaning of that provision. In
the circumstances of the instant case this raises the question
whether and to what extent the order to pay the court fees concerned
can be considered to have amounted to an interference with the
applicants' right to the peaceful enjoyment of their possessions
(see, mutatis mutandis, Aires, cited above), as
the money the applicants were required to pay in court fees absorbed
fully the compensation awarded for the expropriation, which
amounted to a “possession”
within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
- In
the light of the foregoing, the Grand Chamber considers that the
applicants' complaint should be examined under Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 taken as a whole, especially as the situations envisaged in the
second sentence of the first paragraph and in the second paragraph
are only particular instances of interference with the right to
peaceful enjoyment of property as guaranteed by the general rule set
forth in the first sentence (see Beyeler v. Italy [GC], no.
33202/96, § 106, ECHR 2000 I). However, this approach, made
necessary by the particular circumstances of the case, does not alter
the fact that court fees are “contributions” within the
meaning of the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (see
paragraph 61 above).
2. Compliance with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
- The
Court reiterates that to be compatible with Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 any interference with the peaceful enjoyment of possessions should
be lawful and not arbitrary (see Iatridis v. Greece [GC],
no. 31107/96, § 58, ECHR 1999-II). A “fair balance”
must also be struck between the demands of the general interest of
the community and the requirements of the protection of the
individual's fundamental rights (see Sporrong and Lönnroth,
cited above, § 69).
- This
“fair balance” must exist even when States exercise their
right “to enforce such laws as they deem necessary ... to
secure the payment of taxes or other contributions”. Indeed, as
the second paragraph is to be construed in the light of the general
principle enunciated in the opening sentence of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1, there must also exist a reasonable relationship of
proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be
realised; in other words, the Court must determine whether a fair
balance has been struck between the demands of the general interest
and the interest of the individuals concerned (see Gasus Dosier-
und Fördertechnik GmbH v. the Netherlands, 23 February
1995, § 60, Series A no. 306 B; see also AGOSI v. the
United Kingdom, 24 October 1986, § 52, Series A no. 108).
a) Requirement of lawfulness
- The
Grand Chamber notes that the applicants disputed neither the
lawfulness of the expropriation as such, nor that of the regulations
governing court fees as applied to them. The Chamber, moreover, found
no indication of arbitrariness as the applicants had had the
opportunity, inter alia, to put their arguments to the
domestic courts.
- Even
without knowing the reasons behind the Evora court order of 4 January
2008 fixing the court fees at a level that exceeded the compensation
awarded for the expropriation by no more than EUR 15,000, the Court
considers that there is no need for it to examine this question
further, bearing in mind, inter alia, the considerations set
out below concerning the question of a “fair balance”.
b) Fair balance
- The
Court reiterates that the search for this balance is reflected in the
structure of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 as a whole, regardless of
which paragraphs are concerned in each case; there must always be a
reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed
and the aim pursued. In determining whether this requirement is met,
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 the measures taken
are justified in the general interest for the purpose of achieving
the object of the interference in question. The requisite balance
will not be achieved if the person concerned has had to bear an
individual and excessive burden (see Depalle, cited above, §
83).
- Ascertaining
whether such a balance existed requires an overall examination of the
various interests in issue. The Court considers that two important
factors must be taken into account. First, as the Court has already
pointed out, the situation complained of arose because the applicants
were deprived of their property. In such situations, a “fair
balance” requires the payment of a sum reasonably related to
the value of the property, failing which there is an excessive
interference with the individual's rights. The Court further points
out that the Convention is intended to guarantee rights that are
“practical and effective” rather than theoretical and
illusory (see paragraph 59 above). The Court must also examine the
conduct of the parties to the dispute, including the means employed
by the State and their implementation (see Beyeler, cited
above, § 114).
- In
the instant case the applicants were awarded EUR 197,236.25 in
compensation for the expropriation. However, when the amount they
owed in court fees was determined, they in fact received nothing.
Instead, they had to pay the State an additional EUR 15,000, even
after the initial sum had been substantially reduced.
- The
Grand Chamber notes that its task is not to examine in the abstract
the Portuguese method of calculating and fixing court fees. As the
Chamber pointed out, the States must be able to take the measures
they consider necessary to protect the balanced funding of their
justice systems in the general interest. In such matters, the States
enjoy a wide margin of appreciation.
- The
Court must therefore consider how that method was applied in the
concrete case before it. Clearly the intended outcome of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 was not achieved here: not only were the applicants
deprived of their land, but in addition they had to pay the State EUR
15,000.
- The
Government stressed that the obligation for the State to pay
compensation for expropriation and the obligation for litigants to
pay court fees were legally two different things. Court fees had
nothing to do with expropriation proper and, as such, they had no
bearing on the question of compliance with Article 1 of Protocol No.
1. The Court accepts that the legal purpose of each of the above
obligations is not the same. Indeed, the Court takes this difference
into account when it classifies court fees as “contributions”
within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 (see paragraph 61 above). It notes, however, that in the
present case the applicants were parties to legal proceedings against
the State concerning the fixing of compensation for an expropriation
carried out by the State in the exercise of its public-authority
functions. The Court considers that this case is to be distinguished,
when examining the question of proportionality, from those where
court fees are charged in private-law disputes. In the particular
circumstances of the case it might appear paradoxical that the State
should take away with one hand – in court fees – more
than it has awarded with the other. In such a situation, the
difference in legal nature between the obligation for the State to
pay compensation for expropriation and the obligation of litigants to
pay court fees does not constitute an obstacle to the overall
examination of the proportionality of the impugned interference.
- Concerning
the proportionality of the interference, the Government also
described the applicants' behaviour in the proceedings as reckless,
contending that the sum the applicants had been required to pay was
the consequence of the manifestly unrealistic sum they had claimed,
and of the considerable procedural activity they had set in motion.
- The
Court notes that the applicants did indeed claim a sum well in excess
of the sums suggested in the various expert reports produced in the
course of the proceedings. Having regard to the relevant Portuguese
legislation, of which the applicants were aware, claiming such a
large sum affected the final amount of the court fees. However, the
Court points out that the question was, inter alia, whether
the potential profits from the economic exploitation of the quarry
located on the property should be taken into account in the
compensation for the expropriation. When the applicants put the
question to the domestic courts it was given in-depth consideration,
the Evora court going as far as to order a third expert report of its
own motion, after the reports required by law had already been
produced. While the applicants' conduct certainly contributed to the
high court fees, that was not sufficient justification for the fees
to be so high as to result in a total lack of compensation,
particularly in a case involving expropriation.
- As
to the applicants' conduct, which the Government criticised, the
Court notes that the proceedings were indeed marked by a large number
of appeals and applications. It observes, however, that not all the
procedural steps were attributable to the applicants, and that the
conduct concerned related mainly to the determination of the court
fees. The matter of the actual deprivation of property had been
resolved by the Evora first-instance court and Court of Appeal, even
if the Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court did deliver
inadmissibility decisions in respect of appeals lodged by the
applicants. What gave rise to the subsequent decisions of the Evora
first-instance court and Court of Appeal and also, on three
occasions, of the Constitutional Court, was the fact that the
applicants challenged the quantum of the court fees they were ordered
to pay by the domestic courts.
- The
Court accordingly finds that neither the applicants' conduct nor the
procedural activity set in motion can justify such high court fees,
having regard to the amount awarded in respect of the expropriation.
- Lastly,
the Court notes the enactment, on 24 February 2008, of the new Court
Fees Code, which placed an upper limit on the sums that could be
charged in court fees. If the new rules had been applied in the
instant case, the court fees imposed would have been considerably
lower (see paragraphs 45 and 46 above). The new rules thus seem less
likely to give rise to a situation such as that which arose in the
present case.
- In
view of the above, the Court considers that the applicants had to
bear an excessive burden which upset the fair balance which must be
struck between the general interest of the community and the
fundamental rights of the individual.
- There
has accordingly been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
1. The Chamber judgment
- When
fixing the level of compensation for the pecuniary damage sustained,
the Chamber took into account the court fees the applicants had been
ordered to pay. It accordingly considered it equitable to award the
sum of EUR 190,000 in respect of pecuniary damage.
2. The parties' submissions
- Before
the Chamber the applicants claimed EUR 197,236.25 in respect of
pecuniary damage, corresponding to the compensation awarded by the
Portuguese courts for the expropriation of their land. They also
claimed EUR 100 in respect of non-pecuniary damage.
- The
Government had considered that the sum claimed in respect of
pecuniary damage had no bearing on the subject of the application,
arguing that to award such a sum would deprive the national justice
system of payment for the considerable procedural activity to which
the applicants' case had given rise. Concerning the claim in respect
of non-pecuniary damage, the Government had left the matter to the
Court's discretion.
3. The Court's assessment
- As
the applicants have submitted no additional claims, the Grand Chamber
will examine those made before the Chamber.
- It
reiterates in this connection that a judgment in which it finds a
breach imposes on the respondent State a legal obligation to put an
end to the breach and make reparation for its consequences in such a
way as to restore as far as possible the situation existing before
the breach (see Iatridis v. Greece (just satisfaction) [GC],
no. 31107/96, § 32, ECHR 2000-XI). If domestic law does not
allow – or allows only partial – reparation to be made
for the consequences of the breach, Article 41 empowers the Court to
afford the injured party such satisfaction as it deems appropriate.
The Court enjoys a certain discretion in the exercise of that power,
as the adjective “just” and the phrase “if
necessary” attest. Among the matters which the Court takes into
account when assessing compensation are pecuniary damage, that is the
loss actually suffered as a direct result of the alleged violation,
and non-pecuniary damage, that is reparation for the anxiety,
inconvenience and uncertainty caused by the violation. In addition,
if one or more heads of damage cannot be calculated precisely or if
the distinction between pecuniary and non-pecuniary damage proves
difficult, the Court may decide to make a global assessment (see
Comingersoll S.A. v. Portugal
[GC], no. 35382/97, § 29, ECHR 2000 IV).
- In
the Court's opinion the situation in dispute here calls for an
assessment on an equitable basis, as provided for in Article 41. In
making its assessment, the Court takes into account the fact that the
applicants have had to pay court fees, and have indeed already paid
out EUR 15,000 under that head. It considers it reasonable to award
the applicants a total of EUR 190,000 in respect of all heads of
damage combined.
B. Costs and expenses
- As
the applicants made no claim for costs and expenses, the Court makes
no award under this head.
C. 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 by fourteen votes to three that there has
been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1;
- Holds by fourteen votes to three
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicants, within three months,
EUR 190,000 (one hundred and ninety thousand euros) in respect of all
heads of damage, plus any tax that may be chargeable;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three
months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above
amount at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European
Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
3.. Dismisses unanimously the remainder of the
applicants' claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public hearing in
the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 16 November 2010.
Johan Callewaert Jean-Paul Costa
Deputy to the
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) Joint
concurring opinion of Judges Ziemele and Villiger;
(b) Joint
dissenting opinion of Judges Lorenzen, Casadevall and Fura.
J.-P.C.
J.C.
JOINT CONCURRING OPINION OF JUDGES ZIEMELE
AND
VILLIGER
- We
voted with the majority in this case, finding a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 on the understanding that, on the
one hand, States continue to enjoy a large margin of appreciation in
determining their systems of court fees and, on the other hand, that
the case is rather exceptional.
- Indeed,
as the judgment makes it quite clear, the European Commission of
Human Rights explained in the Aires v. Portugal case
(no. 21775/93, Commission decision of 25 May 1995, Decisions and
Reports no. 81, p. 48) that the costs of judicial proceedings are
'contributions' within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1,
and the question may arise 'whether and to what extent the order to
pay the court fees concerned can be considered to have amounted to an
interference with the applicants' right to the peaceful enjoyment of
their possessions' (paragraphs 60-61). Taking into consideration that
the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 cannot be applied
in isolation from the whole Article, and having regard in particular
to the general principle enunciated in the first sentence, i.e., the
peaceful enjoyment of possessions, the question whether the amount of
court fees as determined in this particular case was disproportionate
can be answered only by having due regard to all the circumstances of
the case. For us, it was decisive that the dispute over the sum
charged in court fees arose in the context of expropriation
proceedings between a State and the applicants in which the State not
only expropriated the property but also ended up paying no
compensation, as the full amount awarded in compensation plus EUR
15,000 was paid by the applicants in court fees. This is not to say
that from now on States cannot have systems in which court fees
exceed the level of damages claimed. We do not think that this
particular judgment deals with that issue. It is, however,
established case-law that expropriation requires adequate
compensation (Former King of Greece and Others v. Greece [GC],
no. 25701/94, § 89, ECHR 2000 XII; Platakou v.
Greece, no. 38460/97, § 55, ECHR 2001), and this is
something the structure of Article 1 requires the Court to take
into account also when assessing claims about court fees.
- Finally,
we would note that issues of disproportionate court fees have
typically been considered by the Court in the context of Article 6,
as an element of access to court. Interestingly, in the present case
the Portuguese Constitutional Court did consider that the court fees
interfered with the applicants' access to court (paragraph 31). In
our view, this also shows the disproportionate character of the court
fees charged.
JOINT DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGES LORENZEN, CASADEVALL
AND FURA
In
the present case the majority found a violation of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1. We are unable to agree with this conclusion for the
following reasons:
It
may be useful first to recall that the factual background of the case
began with the expropriation of a piece of land belonging to the
applicants. The value of the land was assessed by an arbitration
committee at about EUR 178,000. As the applicants were not satisfied
with the amount – mainly because it did not include
compensation for the possible exploitation of a quarry located on the
land – they instituted court proceedings claiming almost EUR
21,000,000. Shortly after the proceedings were initiated, they were
informed by the court that the court fees would amount to a little
more than EUR 158,000. During the proceedings various expert opinions
were commissioned, and if the quarry was to be taken into account the
expertise most favourable to the applicants concluded that the
maximum amount the exploitation of the quarry could be expected to
yield was some EUR 9,700,000. The expert appointed by the applicants
estimated that the compensation should be fixed at approximately EUR
4,000,000. The Portuguese courts all found that the potential gain
from the quarry should not be taken into account, and fixed the
compensation at a little more than EUR 197,000.
The
case before the Court does not concern whether the compensation was
incorrectly fixed because it excluded the possible earnings from the
quarry, because a complaint of a violation of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 on that ground was rejected as being out of time (§ 35 of
the judgment). The issue to be decided is solely whether the court
fees the applicants had to pay – about EUR 212,000 – were
so excessive as to amount to a breach of the Convention.
The
Court has often found that high court fees may in the particular
circumstances of a case constitute a restriction to “the right
to a court” in a manner contrary to Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention (cf. the leading case Kreuz v. Poland, no.
28249/95, ECHR 2001-II, followed by many later judgments). It was
also on that ground that the Portuguese Constitutional Court
considered it necessary to reduce the amount of the court fees the
applicants had been ordered to pay (§ 16 of the judgment).
However, the applicants have never made a complaint before this Court
that their right to a court under Article 6 § 1 was violated,
and we can agree that it is not for the Court to examine a possible
violation of that Article of its own motion.
The
question whether court fees may be so excessive as to amount to a
violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 has not been addressed by
the Court before (cf. §§ 60 and 61 of the judgment). The
majority endorses the opinion of the Commission that Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 is applicable to court fees, which must be considered
as contributions within the meaning of the second sentence of §
1 of that Article. In our opinion this conclusion is not obvious –
at least not as a general one. It can be argued that the obligation
to pay court fees is linked to the voluntary use of a public service
– the court system – and that this distinguishes it from
the obligation to pay taxes and various other charges. We have noted
that court fees under Portuguese law are of a fiscal nature (§
41 of the judgment), but the majority seems not to have limited the
applicability of Article 1 of Protocol No 1 to situations where this
is the case. The judgment leaves it open to what extent other
payments for public services must similarly be considered as
“contributions” within the meaning of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1, and thus gives rise to uncertainty about its scope.
Furthermore, the judgment does not clearly indicate whether the
applicability of that Article is limited to court fees in
expropriation proceedings or whether such fees in all kinds of
proceedings may now give rise to complaints about an interference
with property rights.
However,
we need not enter further into these questions as in any event –
even assuming that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is applicable and
there was an interference with the applicants' possession –
there has in our opinion been no violation of that Article.
The
majority accepts in principle the Government´s argument that
the obligation for the State to pay compensation for expropriation
and the obligation for the applicants to pay court fees were legally
two different things and that “court fees had nothing to do
with expropriation proper and, as such, they had no bearing on the
question of compliance with Article 1 of Protocol no 1” (§
72 of the judgment). However, the majority failed, in our opinion, to
draw the right conclusion from this acceptance.
It is
clear from the judgment that the majority, when assessing the court
fees the applicants had been ordered to pay, placed considerable
weight on the fact that they concerned expropriation proceedings (§§
68 and 72, for example). Like the dissenting opinion to the Chamber
judgment, we find that the majority of the Grand Chamber too has
confused two different things: the compensation for the expropriation
and the court fees the applicants had to pay.
The
Court has in its case-law so far maintained that the imposition of
taxes as a general rule is for the States to decide and that only if
the system or the way it has been applied in a particular case is
arbitrary should the Court interfere. Similarly, the calculation of
court fees must be for the States to decide and in that field they
should have a large margin of appreciation. As the comparative study
shows, the revenue from court fees is used for a variety of purposes,
and it must in our opinion be left to each State to decide how it
chooses to finance its court system, as long as it does not become a
hindrance to access to court, or put an unacceptable burden on a
specific category of litigants, in which case it would become
discriminatory. Such situations must, however, as stated above, be
assessed under Article 6 of the Convention or Article 14 combined
with Article 6. This judgment can therefore be interpreted as a first
step towards abandoning a principle which has so far been followed
constantly in our case-law, namely that the imposition of taxes and
contributions cannot as a rule be challenged under Article 1 of
Protocol No 1. In our opinion such a development is not
recommendable.
In
the present case it has not been argued that the Portuguese rules on
court fees lacked clarity or foresee ability. Article 6 § 1.s)
taken together with Article 13 of the former Court Fees Code thus
gave precise guidelines on how court fees in expropriation cases were
to be calculated. The applicants have not disputed that. The only
reason they had to pay court fees that exceeded the compensation they
had been awarded was that they claimed an exorbitant amount in the
court proceedings which was not supported by any of the expert
opinions commissioned. Furthermore the applicants were informed by
the first-instance court at an early stage in the proceedings that
the court fees would be close to the amount awarded by the
arbitration committee. Their situation was in no way different from
that of any other litigant claiming an amount largely exceeding what
is found justified. We fail to see that litigants in expropriation
proceedings should be treated more favourably than, for example,
litigants claiming excessive compensation for an accident or a breach
of contract – be it against the State or a private defendant.
Finally,
unlike the majority, we cannot attach any importance to the fact that
the Portuguese legislature later changed the system of calculation of
court fees. There is no evidence that this was based on any
recognition that the earlier system did not comply with Article 1 of
Protocol No 1.
In
conclusion, we find that there has been no violation of that Article.