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THIRD
SECTION
CASE OF DIAMANTE AND PELLICCIONI v. SAN MARINO
(Application
no. 32250/08)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
27
September 2011
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 Diamante and
Pelliccioni v. San Marino,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Corneliu Bîrsan,
President,
Josep Casadevall, ad hoc judge,
Egbert
Myjer,
Ján Šikuta,
Ineta
Ziemele,
Luis López Guerra,
Nona
Tsotsoria, judges,
and Santiago Quesada,
Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 30 August 2011,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 32250/08) against the Republic
of San Marino lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) on 7 July 2008 by Ms Augusta
Diamante, an Italian national born in 1973, who is also acting on
behalf of her child, Ms Greta Pelliccioni, who has dual nationality,
Italian and San Marinese, and was born in 2004 (“the
applicants”).
- The
applicants were represented by Mr E. Borghesi, a lawyer practising in
Rimini. The San Marino Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Mr Lucio Daniele, and their Co-Agent,
Mr Guido Bellatti Ceccoli.
- The
applicants alleged a violation of Articles 6 and 8 of the Convention,
on account of the decisions delivered by the domestic courts in the
custody and contact proceedings. The second applicant further alleged
a violation of Article 2 of Protocol No. 4 to the Convention.
- On
14 June 2010 the Court decided to give notice of the application to
the Government. It was also decided to rule on the admissibility and
merits of the application at the same time (Article 29 § 1).
- The
Government of Italy, who had been notified by the Registrar of their
right to intervene in the proceedings (Article 36 § 1 of the
Convention and Rule 44 § 1 (a)), indicated their intention to do
so.
- The
applicants and the Government each submitted observations.
Observations were also received from the Government of Italy and the
Associazione Pro Bimbi, an independent non-profit
organisation, which had
been given leave by the
President to intervene in the written procedure (Article 36 § 2
of the Convention and Rule 44 § 2 of the Rules of Court).
- Ms Kristina Pardalos, the judge elected in respect
of San Marino, was unable to sit in the case (Rule 28). Accordingly
Judge Josep Casadevall was appointed to sit as an ad hoc
judge (Article 26 § 4 of the Convention and Rule 29 § 1).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
first applicant, while resident in San Marino, had a relationship and
was cohabiting with Mr X. in San Marino.
- On
9 December 2004 the second applicant was born of this relationship,
in Rimini, Italy. She was granted dual nationality, Italian and San
Marinese. The family lived in X.’s villa in San Marino.
- Mr
X. left the villa in July 2006 and allegedly stopped sending the
applicants any financial allowances.
A. The custody proceedings
- On
8 November 2006 Mr X. lodged a request with the San Marino Tribunal
for sole custody and restitution of the villa.
- Following
a deferral request by Mr X., the first hearing was held on 4 December
2006, the date when the first applicant intervened in the
proceedings, and demanded custody of the child, the right to remain
living in the family home and maintenance.
1. The first custody decree
- By
a decree of 4 December 2006, the relevant court, namely the
Commissario della Legge of San Marino, granted custody to the
first applicant. Mr X. was entitled to visiting rights as follows:
Mondays and Wednesdays from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. and one day (Saturday or
Sunday) on alternate weekends from 10.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. It refused to
decide on maintenance, inviting the parents to reach an agreement. It
further ordered the intervention of the “servizio minori”
(children’s services) to verify each parent’s aptitude
and the quality of the relationship with the child.
2. The decisions on the respect of contact rights, maintenance,
schooling and the second custody decree
- On
14 December 2006 the first applicant requested children’s
services to decide on the transfer of the second applicant to a
kindergarten in Rimini, Italy. The aim of this request was to allow
the applicants to live with the second applicant’s grandmother
for economic reasons, since Mr X. had allegedly failed to pay them
any allowances.
- On
18 December 2006 Mr X. requested an urgent hearing, complaining that
for the last two weekends the first applicant had denied him contact
rights and had changed the arrangements. Consequently, the
Commissario della Legge, considering that the father had a
right to see his daughter every weekend, requested children’s
services to intervene in order to ensure that contact rights were
respected.
- On
21 December 2006 the first applicant reiterated that on 4 December
2006 the court had ordered visits on the Saturday or Sunday of
alternate weekends, and not every weekend as interpreted on 18
December 2006.
- On
22 December 2006 the first applicant requested to take the child on a
five-day holiday. The Commissario della Legge ordered the
relevant notification.
- On
1 March 2007 the Commissario della Legge ordered children’s
services to consider whether transfer to the Rimini institution would
be in the interest of the minor.
- On
15 March 2007 children’s services filed their first report,
stating that it was important to consider the needs of the child who
“will probably reside in San Marino”. The report noted
that the institution in Rimini hosted older children, and that Mr X.
showed his availability to pick up the child from school if it were
in San Marino. It advised that attending a nursery in San Marino
would allow better monitoring on the part of the children’s
services.
- On
10 April 2007, in view of the announced holiday, children’s
services temporarily amended the visiting schedule, in agreement with
the parties.
- On
12 April 2007 the first applicant informed the Commissario della
Legge that she had found a job in Rimini, where she
planned to move, and therefore she was ready to leave the villa.
- On
17 April 2007 the Commissario della Legge, having regard to
the children’s services’ report (above) and after
soliciting further reports, held that, until children services gave
different advice, the child should remain in San Marino. It referred
the case back to children’s services.
- Following
further submissions, on 5 May 2007 the first applicant requested an
urgent hearing as she was having difficulty taking care of the child
since Mr X. was not paying the maintenance due.
- On
18 May 2007 the Commissario della Legge, having regard
to the economic situation of the parents and to the fact that the
first applicant remained living in the villa, decided that Mr X. had
to pay the applicants maintenance amounting to 500 euros (EUR), as
from November 2006.
- On
31 May 2007 children’s services drew up another report, finding
that although conflict between the parents persisted, the father had
an excellent relationship with the daughter. It advised that there be
joint custody of the child, who should be placed prevalently with the
mother in view of her tender age; it proposed two possible contact
schedules, both eventually including two overnight stays per week. It
further suggested maintaining the current schooling situation.
- On
14 June 2007 the first applicant, having signed a lease agreement for
an apartment in Rimini the previous month, informed the Commissario
della Legge that she intended to move there with her daughter,
while maintaining their official residence in San Marino.
- On
21 June 2007 the first applicant made further submissions. It appears
that the applicants moved to Rimini on the same day.
- By
a decree of 25 June 2007 the Commissario della Legge granted
joint custody, holding that the child should remain living in Rimini,
where she was settled with the mother, and should continue to attend
the Rimini kindergarten for the following school year, as this
appeared to be in the best interests of the child. It further ordered
children’s services to monitor the situation. This decision was
based on the children’s services report of 31 May 2007
(see above).
3. The residence order
- On
9 August 2007 children’s services submitted a new report, which
found that the first father-child visits were held in an untroubled
atmosphere and that Mr X. was spending all the appropriate time with
the child. It noted that between 13 and 16 July the first applicant
went on holiday with the child without informing Mr X. of the
destination and that thereafter she had frequently informed
children’s services that visits could not take place because of
her or her daughter’s alleged illnesses or because she refused
to give up the daughter.
- In
August 2007 Mr X. lodged various submissions, including a complaint
that the first applicant was denying his rights to visit their
daughter and requesting that the relevant orders be executable in the
Italian State.
- By
an order of 20 August 2007 the Commissario della Legge
specified that the order of 25 June 2007 must be considered
“provisionally executable”.
- On
22 August 2007 children’s services drafted a report, which
found that the first applicant was obstructing visiting arrangements
which had not been previously arranged and was refusing to cooperate
with children’s services.
- Both
parties continued to make regular submissions.
- By
an order of 21 September 2007, the Commissario della Legge
held that unilateral changes to scheduled visits had no effect, since
the arrangements had been established by prior orders, which were
subject to alteration by future court orders. It held that Mr X. had
the right to have his child by his side, unsupervised, and that the
child should maintain residence in San Marino. It further explained
that residence meant “a situation of permanent stay in a
territory”.
- A
children’s services report of 17 October 2007 related that the
first applicant was failing to take the second applicant to
children’s services and that monitoring had become difficult
since 9 August 2007.
4. The order regarding the court’s competence and the third
custody decree
- On
24 October 2007 the first applicant challenged the competence of the
San Marino Tribunal, namely the Commissario della Legge, in so
far as proceedings were pending before the Tribunal of Bologna, Italy
(see below). The parties informed the tribunal that the relevant ex
parte counsellors had been appointed and meetings had started.
- On
12 November 2007 the Commissario della Legge rejected the
objection. It held that the first applicant had accepted the San
Marino jurisdiction throughout all the proceedings and various
decrees; in effect this request had been made out of time.
- On
the merits of the pending case, the Commissario della Legge
found no reason to alter the current custody order. Joint custody had
been opted for to protect the child from the unhappy situation in
which the mother excluded the father from any decision-making. Joint
custody and support from children’s services allowed the
creation of an educational programme for the parents to allow for the
growth and well-being of the child. This was what the parents had to
aim for during the current joint custody regime. Welcoming the
appointment of ex parte experts/counsellors, it reiterated the
need for supervision by children’s services. Only upon further
reports by children’s services and experts would the tribunal
be able to establish whether any modifications to the regime were
necessary or whether schooling in San Marino would be more
appropriate.
5. The fourth custody decree
- On
15 November 2007 Mr X. requested that the child be returned to San
Marino, offering the mother lodgings with the daughter. On 9 January
2008 Mr X. enrolled the child in a nursery in San Marino,
notwithstanding that she was still living in Rimini.
- On
24 January 2008 Mr X. made a request for sole custody and for the
child to be moved to a school in San Marino.
- On
28 January 2008 the Commissario della Legge requested
children’s services to draw up a report on the merits of
schooling in San Marino.
- The
ensuing report of 8 February 2008 considered that Mr X. was having
difficulty seeing the child, as for a while the mother had
unilaterally interrupted the father’s visits (for example, nine
out of fourteen overnight stays with the father had not occurred and
six consecutive Sunday visits had been missed), and that the mother
was not cooperating with children’s services. Consequently, the
establishment of an educational programme had not been successful. It
found on the one hand that the first applicant’s anger towards
the father was persistent and involved the child. On the other hand
the father had shown consideration and put the needs of the child
first. He sincerely loved his daughter and was cooperating with
children’s services. The father and the child had a warm and
caring relationship, and the child felt comfortable and happy in his
presence. It appeared however that the child might have fears of
losing her loved ones, probably due to the various moves, which had
also detached her from members of her extended family. The report
therefore advised the grant of temporary sole custody to the father,
with regular supervised visits by the mother, until this could be
reversed. It concluded that schooling should be in accordance with
the custody decision, as this would be favourable to the child’s
emotional stability, notwithstanding the unfortunate moves of house.
It also advised psychotherapeutic and parental education support for
the parents, together with further monitoring by children’s
services.
- On
12 February 2008 the Commissario della Legge ordered that an
extraordinary hearing of the parties (comparizione delle parti)
be held on 19 February 2008. The order was notified on 14
February 2008. The next day the first applicant’s main lawyer
communicated his inability to attend and requested an adjournment.
The opposing party opposed this request, but no notification reached
the first applicant’s legal counsel.
(a) A period of absence
- On
13 February 2008 Mr X. collected the child and did not return her. On
the same day Mr. X’s lawyer sent the first applicant a fax
informing her that the child would not return home to the mother as
the father was availing himself of the time accumulated from the
missed visits. The child could, however, be contacted by telephone at
specific times.
- On
15 February 2008 the first applicant’s representatives
requested X.’s lawyers to inform them where the child had been
taken, the date of return, and arrangements as to the handing over of
the child. X.’s lawyers’ reply was immediate but
inconclusive, in that, no details had been given. Thus, the first
applicant’s representatives informed children’s services
about what had happened and complained about the father’s
lawyers. In reply, Mr X.’s lawyers explained that the child was
on holiday with her father and that they did not know where they had
gone. On the same day, the first applicant’s lawyers requested
that the hearing set for 19 February be deferred due to the inability
of her regular lawyer, who had dealt with the relevant experts, to
attend the hearing for professional reasons. Mr X.’s lawyers
opposed this, however, it appears that no notification of this
opposition took place.
- The
following day, the first applicant lodged written submissions,
reiterating that in accordance with the decree of 25 June 2007 the
child had been placed with the mother for the school year.
Complaining about Mr X.’s actions and those of children’s
services, she requested the tribunal to restore the status quo
ante.
- On
18 February 2008, while the child was still missing, Mr X.’s
representatives requested that the minor be placed in San Marino.
They emphasised that the second applicant’s presence outside
San Marino limited the San Marino courts’ power over the second
applicant’s rights abroad. The first applicant objected,
maintaining that the child should return to Rimini. She further
insisted that any missed paternal visits in the summer of 2007 had
not been malicious but had been the result of physical circumstances.
(b) The custody decree of 19 February 2008
- On
19 February 2008 a substitute judge sat as the Commissario della
Legge. The first applicant, through her co-lawyer, referred to
their request for a brief postponement in view of the absence of the
habitual judge and her habitual co-lawyer, who was more aware of the
case details. Moreover, there had been a lack of collaboration on the
part of children’s services and counsellors, her counsellors
had not been summoned, and the child had been kidnapped by the
father. Her request was refused without detailed reasons. The
substitute judge considered it opportune to take a decision urgently.
Consequently, the first applicant’s co-lawyer withdrew from the
case. A further request by the first applicant for a short suspension
in order for another lawyer to be appointed was refused.
- The
case was therefore heard without representation for the first
applicant. Mr X. was represented by his lawyers and enjoyed the
assistance of a counsellor. After the cross-examination was over, the
substitute judge delivered his decision on the same date.
- He
found that, in view of the report by children’s services of
17 October 2007 and 8 February 2008, the child risked being
denied the benefit of her father’s presence, as the first
applicant had prevented the father’s visits and obstructed
children’s services’ meetings. Any argumentation by the
first applicant presented in her written pleadings had not been
persuasive. Consequently, while upholding joint custody, it was
ordered that the child live with her father in San Marino and that
she be transferred to the San Marino nursery from 20 February 2008.
The mother was entitled to supervised visits from Monday to Friday
from 13.15 to 15.00, or as children’s services deemed
opportune.
6. The continuation of proceedings
- On
22 February 2008 the Commissario della Legge, acknowledging
that there were no obstacles to acceding to the first applicant’s
request to spend a weekend with her daughter at the father’s
house, requested the children’s services to draw up a new
calendar of visits. On the same date, following Mr X.’s request
for an authorisation (“nullaosta”) for the child’s
passport, the tribunal solicited the first applicant’s
agreement, noting that expatriation of the minor would in any case
require the tribunal’s authorisation.
- On
25 February 2008 children’s services submitted a report stating
that the child frequently reiterated her wish to stay with the mother
and was showing a certain reluctance to be with the father. The
report concluded that persistent pressure by the mother may lead to
Parental Alienation Syndrome.
- On
26 February 2008 the first applicant submitted that the
unavailability of the child for certain paternal visits while she was
in the mother’s care was for medical reasons.
- On
27 February 2008 Mr X. requested the suspension of the time-limits
for appeal, pending friendly settlement negotiations. On the same day
children’s services reported that mother-child visits should
take place at the father’s house. It proposed a new schedule of
visits, which would eventually include an overnight stay. It also
included visits with the maternal extended family.
- The
following day, Mr X. pointed out that the first applicant had not
been favourable to the return of the second applicant to San Marino.
He alleged that she was in bad faith and reiterated that, according
to The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction (“The Hague Convention”),
visits with a parent who had removed a child required special
precautionary measures. On the same day children’s services
prepared a calendar of supervised visits up to August 2008, the date
of the entry into force of The Hague Convention.
7. The appeal proceedings
- On
6 March 2008 an appeal was lodged against the interim order of 19
February 2008 before the “Giudice delle Appellazioni
Civili”. Lamenting that in the absence of treaties
safeguarding repatriation the child remained susceptible to removal
by the mother, Mr X.’s representatives proposed a favourable
calendar for visits, namely Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 6.30
p.m. to 9..30 p.m., alternate Saturdays from 4.30 to 7.30 p.m. and
alternate Sundays from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, plus other visits by the
extended family and in due course overnight stays by the mother. On
the same day the first applicant accepted the proposed schedules,
complaining that children’s services were in practice reducing
her visit times by half an hour and at times by one hour due to other
engagements, but objected to the suspension of the proceedings. She
further submitted one of the second applicant’s passports to
the court.
- On
17 March 2008 the first applicant appealed, complaining of procedural
irregularities pertaining to the interim decree of 19 February 2008.
In particular she alleged a breach of her right to defence, since she
had not been represented. Unlike her, Mr X. had had the benefit of
counsel. Moreover, there had not been adequate notification, and
therefore the hearing had not been in accordance with the law.
Furthermore, the substitute judge should have abstained, as he had
decided another case between the same parties.
- On
19 March 2008 Mr X. cross-appealed.
- On
27 March 2008 Mr X., in his cross-appeal, lodged a request for sole
custody and contended that the first applicant had breached her
judicial obligations, having allegedly taken the child away, and had
attempted to evade San Marino jurisdiction. He emphasised that in
view of Italy’s delay in accepting San Marino’s accession
to The Hague Convention dated 14 December 2006, the latter had
not yet entered into force between the two states. In accordance with
the treaty, transfer of the minor to Italy would be unlawful.
- On
the same date the first applicant submitted that she was having
difficulty visiting her daughter due to her working hours. On 22
April 2008 the first applicant’s psychological counsellor wrote
to children’s services offering the first applicant as
available for discussion and collaboration. She further requested
children’s services to provide her with a copy of the
educational project to be undertaken and relevant information and
video clips taken in respect of the child’s supervision. On 23
April 2008 the mother again made a request for information and to see
the relevant video recordings of her visits to her daughter.
- On
24 April 2008 it was established that cross-examination was necessary
for the purposes of the case.
- On
30 April 2008 children’s services informed the first applicant
that her request had been sent to the relevant judicial authorities,
since information about minors was covered by professional secrecy.
- In
the meantime various email exchanges took place between April and
June in an attempt to negotiate an agreement so that the first
applicant would agree to withdraw the pending criminal charges (see
below) against Mr X. Meetings with counsellors and a psychologist
were held.
- Following
a request from the first applicant, on 6 May 2008 the Commissario
della Legge ordered the urgent transmission of the file to the
appeal judge.
- On
12 May 2008 the Giudice delle Appellazioni Civili remitted
Mr X.’s appeal of 27 March 2008 to the Commissario
della Legge, who was competent to revise the matter and give any
other determination in respect of the placement of the child.
- On
16 May 2008 the primo termine probatorio was opened in
relation to the original appeal. Hearings and/or submissions were
made on 23 October 2008, 12 and 19 March, 23 April, 18 and 13 June, 3
July and 26 October 2009 and 18 January 2010. Following the
requests and the consequent submission of rogatory letters, it was
established that the first applicant’s lawyer had judicial
engagements in Rimini, explaining his absence from the hearing in
question.
- The
appeal proceedings against the decision of 19 February 2008 were
eventually decided on 7 March 2011 (see paragraph 137 below).
8. Judicial and non-judicial isolation in San Marino
- On
15 April 2008 the first applicant’s representatives complained
to children’s services that the child was isolated, in that she
was constantly supervised.
- In
a report dated 22 April 2008 children’s services requested the
judge to prohibit the legal representatives of the parties from
attending the child’s visits.
- On
5 June 2008 the first applicant’s lawyers made submissions in
reply, highlighting the importance of re-establishing mother-child
relations. On the same day Mr X. reiterated his request for temporary
sole custody (see above 27 March 2008). Although not intending to
travel with the child, he requested a San Marino passport for the
second applicant.
- On
6 June 2008 the Commissario della Legge noted that revision of
the decree could only take place if new events took place subsequent
to the decree, in order to avoid any overlap with the appeal
judgment. He further requested the parties to agree on the mother’s
visiting schedule, on further cooperation for the benefit of the
child, and lastly asked whether the mother agreed to the issue of a
San Marino passport, which would be retained by the court together
with the Italian passport, any travel having to be agreed by the
parents or authorised by the court.
- On
19 June 2008 Mr X. reiterated that the prohibition on the child’s
leaving the country needed to be maintained until the entry into
force of the Hague Convention. He further requested a definitive
judgment in favour of sole custody to be executable immediately on
Italian territory.
- In
the meantime, further submissions were made, together with the
reports of the parents’ psychologists.
- On
11 July 2008, in an apparently informal way, the Commissario della
Legge confirmed that the child could not leave San Marino.
- On
15 July 2008 the Commissario della Legge nominated an expert
and ordered an expert opinion (“consulenza tecnica
d’ufficio” – “CTU”) in respect of:
the child’s relationship with the parents, the personal
characters of the parents, their ability to take on parental
functions, in particular vis-a-vis granting the other parent
contact with the minor, and any proposals in respect of the
situation.
(a) order related to video recordings
- On
16 July 2008 the first applicant made an urgent request to be allowed
to take her child to Italy before The Hague Convention entered into
force, namely from 21 to 28 July 2008. She further requested the
release of the information and related videotapes of mother-child
meetings before the child services, and that children’s
services and the San Marino hospital issue a report on the
psycho-physical health of the child.
- Following
a request by Mr X., by a decree of 17 July 2008, the Commissario
della Legge noted that the second applicant’s San Marino
passport had been submitted to the authorities, and requested the
first applicant to submit the latter’s Italian passport. It
further held that the decree of 19 February 2008 fell within the
competence of the Giudice delle Appellazioni Civili. It then
held that the CTU’s opinion was required to define an
educational project and the advice of children’s services was
necessary to determine the suitability of any permanent visiting
schedule between the mother and child. It refused the pending request
for the video recordings of their visits, on the basis that they had
no right to such materials, children’s services acting as an
assistant to the judge in this connection and not as a court expert.
(b) Continued isolation
- On
22 July 2008 the first applicant contacted children’s services
to inform them as regards her availability to discuss the forthcoming
holiday calendar. The following day a new calendar of visits,
together with a short report, was submitted to the judge by
children’s services.
- On
23 July 2008 children’s services presented another report in
respect of the request relating to the period of 19 to 28 July 2008,
during which the first applicant would have been on leave. They
suggested daily visits from Tuesday 22 to Monday 28 July 2008,
ranging from two to six hours per day, including hour-long visits
with the extended family.
- Following
a request by the mother, on 24 July 2008 the CTU requested children’s
services to issue instructions for the period after 28 July
2008.
- On
29 July 2008 children’s services drafted a new calendar of
visits, ranging from three to six hours per day (no visit on
Saturday), until Sunday 3 August. The latter was acknowledged by the
judge.
- On
1 August 2008 the first applicant’s submissions included a
request for a continuous period of mother-child care to allow her to
take the child on holiday, after she had been confined to San Marino
for nearly six months. On the same day the Commissario della
Legge, noting that children’s services had not had enough
time to deal with all the requests in view of their dates of
submission and that the first applicant had for the third time
altered the dates of her leave, ordered an immediate reply to the
pending, urgent request for the extended period of the child’s
placement with the mother from 9 to 17 August 2008.
9. Release and period of agreement
- By
emails dated 1 July 2008 the first applicant requested children’s
service to allow a more flexible calendar of visits. On 8 August 2008
children’s services issued a new calendar for the relevant
period, only allowing one overnight visit and permitting most of the
remaining visits to take place outside San Marino, but they had to be
in the presence of the father. It suggested that changes should be
made gradually. The latter was acknowledged by the judge.
- Following
the mother’s objection, on 12 August 2008 the previous
arrangement was reiterated by the judge.
- On
18 August 2008 Mr X. gave his consent for an extended visit between
mother and child. On the same date the Commissario della Legge
asked for a report from children’s services on the development
of the visits in the preceding week, and for a new calendar to be
issued.
- On
19 August 2008 children’s services reported that the visits had
been regular, organised and fruitful. The child was happy to spend
time with the mother and it was clear that she needed to be by the
side of both parents. They issued a new calendar of visits,
suggesting entire alternate weekends with each parent, with weekend
intervals when each parent had the child for one day, together with
overnight stays during the week at her mother’s home.
- By
a decree of the same date the Commissario della Legge
confirmed that, the disputes having been resolved, the visits should
remain in accordance with the children’s services report of the
same day. Moreover, since Mr X. was able to visit the child in Italy,
prohibition on the parents’ taking the child outside the
country remained valid only in respect of States other than Italy and
San Marino.
10. Insight into medical conditions during the continuation of
proceedings
- By
an order of 12 September 2008, a substitute judge for the Commissario
della Legge held that the frequency of visits with the minor
would be in accordance with the agreed specific indications
submitted.
- On
16 September 2008 the CTU met the parents’ technical
counsellors (“CTPs”).
- On
23 October 2008 Mr X. submitted that he was the subject of ongoing
criminal proceedings in Italy (see below) and reiterated that the
first applicant had not submitted the second applicant’s
Italian passport.
- On
30 November 2008 psychological reports on both parents were drawn up.
The report about the mother which, inter alia, mentioned
depressive and impulsive attitudes, appeared less favourable than
that of the father, although it appeared from the reports that Mr X.
was immature.
- Following
further submissions, by a decree of 19 December 2008, the Commissario
della Legge acknowledged that the second applicant would spend
the week of 24 December to the morning of 31 December 2008 with the
father and from the afternoon of 31 December 2008 to 7 January
2009 with the mother. Travel details had to be exchanged between the
parents and the child had to be visited by a doctor to confirm that
she was in good health and to determine whether there were any
contraindications to her travelling. He further authorised the father
to travel with the child during the relevant period and allowed the
release of the passport.
- According
to a children’s services report of 20 December 2008, the second
applicant was having difficulty adjusting to (her parents’) two
different environments.
- Negotiations
between the parents continued: however, the first applicant refused
to drop the pending criminal charges against Mr X.
- On
22 December 2008, Mr X. requested to stop paying maintenance, stating
that each parent should be financially responsible for the child for
the period in which she was with them.
- On
2 and 12 February 2009 the Commissario della Legge, confirmed
the qualifications of the first applicant’s CTP. On 24 February
2009 a meeting with the parties’ CTPs took place.
- A
children’s services report dated 25 February 2009 found that
the second applicant’s character had deteriorated compared to
the previous year. She was less tranquil, naughtier and at times
mischievous. She appeared to be more loyal to the mother and had
difficulty in facing up to the conflict between her parents. Although
the child had a good relationship with the father, she also showed
hostility towards him which appeared to have been induced by the
mother. If such psychological pressure persisted there existed the
risk of Parental Alienation Syndrome.
- Upon
request, on 6 March 2009 the Commissario della Legge granted
an extension to the relevant expert.
- On
17 March 2009 the Commissario della Legge postponed a decision
in respect of maintenance and ordered both parties to submit the
second applicant’s passport, reiterating the prohibition on the
child’s expatriation.
- On
20 March 2009 the parties’ experts submitted their report.
- On
30 March 2009 the CTU finalised the report which had been
commissioned on 15 July 2008 (see above). The report was a result of
various meetings with the parties which had been recorded. The report
concluded that there were no particular problems with the parent’s
diverse personalities or with their relationship with their child.
However, it established that Mr X. was more aware of the second
applicant’s need to have adequate time with both parents, and
was thus more likely to allow regular contact with the child by the
mother, always under strict supervision by children’s services.
Moreover, the mother’s intention of persisting with criminal
proceedings against the father did not strike a note in her favour.
It suggested psychological therapy to resolve the existing conflict
and to allow them to fully assume their roles as parents.
- On
16 April 2009 the first applicant made a request before the
Commissario della legge for copies of the recordings of the
meetings attached to the CTU’s report.
- On
23 April 2009 the same request was made by Mr X., who further
requested copies of all relevant communications mentioned in the
report, between the parties, their experts, the lawyers and
children’s services.
- On
the same day the court ordered those recordings and communications to
be provided to the parties, subject to the payment of costs by those
parties.
- Following
Mr X.’s request of 30 April 2009 to order a new report by
children’s services, in view of the psychological pressure to
which the second applicant was being subjected by her mother, the
Commissario della legge ordered the said report on 4 May 2009.
- On
14 May 2009 further submissions were made by the mother, together
with a report regarding the second applicant drawn up by the first
applicant’s CTP. It was reported that the second applicant’s
situation was stress-related; because of her young age she needed and
wanted the presence of her mother. She was therefore suffering as a
result of the mother’s absence, and constant requests for the
child to be removed from her mother could only worsen the child’s
situation. It was in favour of requesting specialised medical advice
for the child.
- On
18 May 2009 children’s services submitted a report indicating
that the child’s psychological condition was deteriorating,
that she was refusing to take part in games representing the family,
and that she had become more isolated at school. Moreover, the child
had developed a tic and frequent belching, probably due to anxiety.
- On
the same day and on 25 May 2009 respectively, the first applicant
requested the court to allow a specialised doctor to diagnose the
child and to prescribe treatment, as well as a neuropsychiatric
examination.
- On
27 May 2009 and 1 June 2009 Mr X.’s expert submitted his
report.
- On
5 June 2009 Mr X. objected to the first applicant’s requests.
On the same day the Commissario della legge held, noting
that Mr X. had suggested that another doctor (Mr C.) should conduct
therapy with his daughter, that she was being carefully monitored by
reliable experts from children’s services, and that any
psychological diagnosis should be included in the treatment already
in place, which should be continued.
- On
22 July 2009 the Commissario della legge held that the
psychotherapy was to be conducted by Mr C., who should also verify
whether the child was experiencing any discomfort.
- On
5 August 2009 the court acknowledged two experts on behalf of Mr X.
and authorised them to assist in the drawing up of the reports.
- On
14 September 2009 Mr C. accepted his appointment.
- Following
further submissions, and the first applicant’s complaints about
Mr X.’s absences, on 24 November 2009 the Commissario della
legge held that, when one of the parents could not take care of
the child, it was for the other parent to so do and not the
grandparents, and that the parents should collaborate when taking
decisions regarding the minor.
- On
2 February 2010 further reports were requested from the CTU.
- Proceedings
were still under way on the date of communication of the present
application to the respondent Government.
B. Parallel proceedings
1. Proceedings instituted by the first applicant before
the Bologna Juvenile Tribunal
- By
an application of 1 August 2007, the first applicant requested the
Juvenile Tribunal of Bologna to intervene in the custody proceedings
in favour of sole custody of the mother.
- On
10 August 2007 the Public Prosecutor’s Office advised against
this action for lack of Italian jurisdiction. On 23 October 2007 the
first applicant made a request for urgent measures.
- By
a decree of 29 October 2007, the Juvenile Tribunal suspended
proceedings in view of the fact that proceedings were pending in San
Marino.
2. Proceedings instituted by the father before the
Bologna Juvenile Tribunal
- It
appears that in 2008 Mr X. requested the Juvenile Tribunal of Bologna
to return the child to San Marino. The first applicant was not
informed of these proceedings. On 14 March 2008 the Public
Prosecutor’s Office advised the court to refuse the request.
- By
a decree of 6 June 2008, the Juvenile Tribunal refused the request to
return the child to San Marino. It noted that, as Italy had not yet
accepted San Marino’s adhesion to the Hague Convention that
Convention could not apply to the present case.
3. Criminal Proceedings against the first applicant in
San Marino
- Mr
X. pressed charges against the first applicant on 4 September 2007,
for failure to make the child available for one of his visits. On
4 December 2007 it was considered that these proceedings should
be archived since relevant certificates proving the child’s
illness at the time were submitted. The following day the case was
archived by the Procuratore del Fisco (Attorney General). On 6
December 2007 the case was archived by the Commissario della
Legge.
4. Criminal proceedings against Mr X. in San Marino
- On
19 February 2008 the first applicant pressed charges against Mr X.,
with the Gendarmeria di San Marino, for international
kidnapping.
- Following
the first applicant’s testimony, on 29 May 2009 the Commissario
della Legge held that there had not been the prerequisites for
the accusation. Mr X. had not had the intention to kidnap the child.
He could not be held responsible since he had only planned to take
the child on a short holiday, which in some way or other could be
said to have been agreed to by children’s services, in order to
allow the father to recover the unilaterally impeded and therefore
lost visits. The case was therefore sent for an opinion to the
Procuratore del Fisco. With the latter’s agreement, on
10 June 2009 the Commissario della Legge ordered that the case
be archived.
5. Criminal proceedings against Mr X. in Italy
- On
10 May 2008 the first applicant pressed charges against Mr X. with
the Rimini police headquarters for international kidnapping.
- On
23 February 2009 the Commissario della Legge ordered the
judicial police of San Marino to carry out the identification of Mr
X.
- By
a summons of 19 July 2010 Mr X was informed that he was being
indicted and that the trial would start on 24 October 2011.
6. Consular requests
- Consular
visits with the parties concerned were only successful in respect of
the first applicant. Meanwhile diplomatic attempts by the Italian
Government, seeking an adequate solution from the San Marino
authorities, remained unfruitful.
C. The continuation of proceedings following
communication of the application to the respondent Government.
- Following
notification of the pending application before the Court by the
Government Agent, on 26 July 2010, by reason of the inferences as to
the impartiality of the relevant judge in the application pending
before the Court, the Commissario della Legge hearing the
ordinary custody and contact proceedings withdrew.
- Proceedings
continued under a new judge appointed by the former judge. According
to the applicants, this choice had been arbitrary, as the new judge,
who did not usually practise in the civil sphere, was a professor at
the same university as the former judge and X’s legal counsel.
This choice highlighted the former judge’s partiality.
- Submissions
were made regarding several issues, inter alia the child’s
presence at Mr X.’s wedding, schooling, exclusive custody, and
urgent measures related to the child’s medical needs. Where
necessary, decrees were delivered upon the information submitted by
the parties, the experts and children’s services.
- Subsequently,
on 13 September 2010 an updated CTU was submitted. The CTU
acknowledged that his initial conclusions (of July 2008) had to be
altered, having regard to the application lodged before the Court by
the first applicant; as such the action reflected her contradictory
behaviour. After hearing the parties he concluded that the second
applicant should be placed with the father for the coming school
year, that schooling should be in San Marino and that the mother
should maintain her previously established visiting rights. The same
was confirmed by a children’s services report.
- On
20 September 2010, following an adjournment because Mr X. was still
on honeymoon, the first applicant made further submissions, focusing
on the protection of her rights under Article 8 of the Convention.
She submitted a favourable report by her CTP and requested that i)
the child be placed with her, ii) the child be put into the Rimini
elementary school, iii) a neuropsychiatric report be drawn up by the
Rimini hospital iv) monitoring of visits be withdrawn, or in the
alternative that San Marino children’s services be replaced by
neuropsychiatric services or that the psychologist be replaced.
- Having
heard all the relevant parties and submissions the Commissario
della Legge delivered its decision on 21 September 2010. Noting
the high level of conflict persisting between the parties and their
representatives, it considered that the decision must be temporary
and subject to further change. It ordered joint custody, that the
child be schooled in San Marino, that she be placed with the father
during the week and with the mother at weekends, that Christmas and
Easter festivities would be spent with the mother with the exception
of Christmas Eve, Epiphany and the weekend after, which would be
spent with the father, and that the parents continue to follow
psychotherapy for another twelve months. It further ordered
children’s services to continue monitoring the child’s
progress, the expert to submit information about the child-parent
relationship, particularly in view of the father’s remarriage,
and any relevant medical needs.
- Feeling
aggrieved by the comments in the above-mentioned decision in relation
to the parties’ representatives, legal counsel for the first
applicant gave up their mandate. Proceedings are still pending and
the first applicant has no longer been represented during these
proceedings.
- Meanwhile,
the appeal proceedings against the decision of 19 February 2008
continued and were decided on 7 March 2011.
- The
Giudice per le Appellazioni Civili rejected the first
applicant’s appeal. The court considered that Article 6 of the
Convention had detailed provisions regarding criminal proceedings,
but nothing in relation to civil proceedings. Thus, it was a matter
subject solely to ordinary law. That being stated, he considered that
in the instant case there had not been a breach of the right to
defence or to the right to cross-examination (contraddittorio).
Indeed, the first applicant had originally been represented at the
opening of the hearing, thus, the prerequisites existed to hear the
case and to cross-examine. It was only following the rejection of the
request for an adjournment that the first applicant’s co-lawyer
forfeited her mandate. Moreover, when the latter forfeited her
mandate she was not forfeiting her colleague’s mandate, who
therefore remained counsel to the applicant. The court further noted
that there existed no law recognising a right to defer a case. The
decision in relation to the existence of a legitimate impairment was
subject to the judge’s discretion after hearing the relevant
arguments. In the present case, the results of the investigation and
rogatory enquiry with the Rimini Tribunal could not lead to the
existence either of a legitimate impediment or of an ex post
one. The Commissario della Legge had according to his
prerogatives considered it opportune to decide the case speedily in
view of the urgency and gravity of the matter. Indeed, it shared the
view that, there not being any legal and binding procedural
requirements in this respect, in the urgent circumstances of the case
the decision could have been taken even in the absence of one of the
parties (audi alteram partem). Moreover, the appeal judge
considered perplexing the fact that the first applicant was
contesting a situation she had created herself. Lastly, as to the
impartiality complaint, the first applicant had not challenged or
requested the withdrawal of the Commissario della Legge at the
relevant time.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. The 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction “the Hague Convention”
- The
preamble of the Convention includes the following statement as to its
purpose:
“ ...to protect children internationally from the
harmful effects of their wrongful removal or retention and to
establish procedures to ensure their prompt return to the State of
their habitual residence, ...”
- The
object of such a return is that, following the restoration of the
status quo ante, the conflict between the custodian and the
person who has removed or retained the child can be resolved in the
State where the child is habitually resident.
- Article
3 of the Convention reads as follows:
“The removal or the retention of a child is to be
considered wrongful where
(a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a
person, an institution or any other body, either jointly or alone,
under the law of the State in which the child was habitually resident
immediately before the removal or the retention; and
(b) at the time of the removal or retention those rights
were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been
so exercised but for the removal or retention. ...”
B. Law of 17 June 2008 amending criminal procedure
- Section
7 (1) of the law of 17 June 2008 amending criminal procedure “the
Criminal Procedure Act”) provided that an order that the case
be archived must promptly be notified to the Attorney General
(procuratore del fisco), the person charged, the victim, and
the person who had pressed the charges. It must further be
communicated to the executive magistrate (“magistrato
dirigente”). An appeal can be lodged against such an order,
by the person charged or the victim, within thirty days of its
notification. The appeal shall be lodged with the Giudice delle
Appellazioni Civili, who must be a different judge than the one
who originally decided the merits of the cause. He or she should
deliver a reasoned decision within thirty days. An order upholding
the appeal application must require the investigation stage to be
reopened and the magistrato dirigente must assign the case
file to a new investigating judge.
- Its
section 10 regarding transitional measures provided that this law was
applicable to all criminal proceedings in which notice of the crime
had reached the inquiring magistrate at a date following its entry
into force. The law did not apply to proceedings pending at the date
of its entry into force if they were published and archived within
the following nine months of its entry into force.
THE LAW
I. PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS
The Government’s preliminary objection regarding the first
applicant’s standing also to act on her child’s behalf
1. The parties submissions
- The
Government submitted that the second applicant did not have standing
to act in the proceedings given her young age. In order to act on
behalf of her child, the first applicant should have obtained the
father’s authorisation and/or that of the judge (giudice
tutelare), but she had not done so. Awarding her that status
could create a conflict situation in that even her father could lodge
an application before the Court on her behalf. Moreover, certain
aspects of her complaints, such as those relating to procedural
aspects of the proceedings, could clearly have no effect on the
second applicant, as she was not a party to the domestic proceedings.
- Referring
to the court’s case-law, the applicants submitted that the
second applicant had locus standi. This was even clearer,
considering that the first applicant was not only the biological
mother, but also had joint custody of the child and enjoyed parental
rights.
2. The third-party Government
- The
Italian Government submitted that the second applicant had full locus
standi in the proceedings, on the basis of the Court’s
case-law regarding representation by parents, particularly when the
representing parent is in conflict with the authorities and is
contesting their decisions in the light of the Convention provisions.
3. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court points out that in principle a person who is not entitled under
domestic law to represent another may nevertheless, in certain
circumstances, act before the Court in the name of the other person.
In particular, minors can apply to the Court even, or indeed
especially, if they are represented by a mother who is in conflict
with the authorities and who criticises their decisions and conduct
as not consistent with the rights guaranteed by the Convention. In
the event of a conflict over a minor’s interests between a
natural parent and a person appointed by the authorities to act as
the child’s guardian, there is a danger that some of those
interests will never be brought to the Court’s attention and
that the minor will be deprived of effective protection of his or her
rights under the Convention. Consequently, even where a mother has
been deprived of parental rights - and indeed that is one of the
causes of the dispute which she has referred to the Court - her
standing as the natural mother suffices to afford her the necessary
power to apply to the Court on the child’s behalf, too, in
order to protect his or her interests. Moreover, the conditions
governing individual applications are not necessarily the same as
national criteria relating to locus standi. National rules in
this respect may serve purposes different from those contemplated by
Article 34 of the Convention and, whilst those purposes may sometimes
be analogous, they need not always be so (see Scozzari and Giunta
v. Italy [GC], nos. 39221/98 and 41963/98, §§ 138-39,
ECHR 2000 VIII).
- The
Court accordingly concludes that the first applicant, the natural
mother who still has parental rights, the exercise/limitations
of which she is disputing before the Court, has standing to act on
behalf of her child, and therefore the Government’s preliminary
objection must be dismissed.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLES 8 AND 6 OF THE
CONVENTION
-
The applicants complained under Article 8 about the custody
proceedings, in particular about the order of 19 February 2008, and
in general about the restrictions imposed on the applicants’
visits. Under Article 6 they complained that the hearing leading to
the latter decision had been unfair, and about the length of the
entire proceedings.
The
relevant Articles, in so far as relevant, read as follows:
Article 8
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his ... family life ...
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
Article 6
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ... everyone is entitled to a fair hearing within a
reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established
by law.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
- The
Court reiterates that it is the master of the characterisation to be
given in law to the facts of the case (see Guerra and Others v.
Italy, 19 February 1998, § 44, Reports of Judgments
and Decisions 1998 I). While Article 6 affords a procedural
safeguard, namely the “right to court” in the
determination of one’s “civil rights and obligations”,
Article 8 serves the wider purpose of ensuring proper respect for,
inter alia, family life. In this light, the decision-making
process leading to measures of interference must be fair and such as
to afford due respect to the interests safeguarded by Article 8 (see
Iosub Caras v. Romania, no. 7198/04, § 48, 27 July 2006,
and Moretti and Benedetti v. Italy, no. 16318/07, § 27,
ECHR 2010 ... (extracts)).
- In
the instant case the Court considers that the complaint raised by the
applicants under Article 6 is closely linked to their complaint under
Article 8, and may accordingly be examined as part of the latter
complaint.
A. Admissibility
- The
Government originally objected that the complaint against the
decision of 19 February 2008 was inadmissible for non-exhaustion of
domestic remedies since the appeal against that decision was still
pending. However, pending these proceedings, the Government informed
the Court that the proceedings had ended.
- In
this light the Court considers that the objection has been withdrawn,
or in any event that it is to be dismissed. The Court notes that the
complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article
35 § 3 of the Convention. It further notes that it is not
inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared
admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties’ and third parties’
submissions
(a) The applicants’ submissions
- The
applicants complained that they had suffered a breach of their rights
under Articles 8 and 6 and of the Convention, in particular in view
of the decree of 19 February 2008, where the first applicant had not
been duly represented and in which the judge had based his decision
solely on statements by children’s services and the father,
notwithstanding the latter’s abduction of the minor. As a
result, the restrictions imposed on the first applicant, together
with the six-month period of isolation in San Marino, were contrary
to Article 8 and the entire proceedings were unreasonably lengthy,
more than four years, and that no final decision had yet been taken,
contrary to Article 6.
- In
the applicants’ view, the judicial authorities and children’s
services were biased, as it appeared from, for example, social
services’ foregone conclusion that the second applicant would
have resided in San Marino (paragraph 19 above), the decision of 18
December 2006, in favour of Mr X., containing an erroneous
interpretation of a previously crystal-clear order (paragraph 15
above) and the decision of 19 February 2008 which had been arbitrary
and discriminatory. They considered it inconceivable that an
abduction planned with children’s services would have been
endorsed by the judge. Similarly, the restrictions placed on the
mother on the basis of her alleged intention of removing the child
were unfounded, as the first applicant had shown reasons, by means of
the relevant certification, why the child could not attend certain
visits with Mr X. As a result of the impugned decision which found
for joint custody, the first applicant could only see her daughter
for a few hours (up to 11 August 2008), having every time
to make a trip to San Marino from Italy, and unlike the father she
was not able to take the child on holiday for a few days.
-
The applicants explained that during the domestic proceedings the
first applicant was represented by two lawyers, only one of whom was
familiar with the meeting with children’s services and the
party’s experts, while the other representative had withdrawn.
They submitted that, bearing in mind the issue of the child’s
abduction and other evidence which came to light only after the date
of the hearing had been fixed, of which the judge was made aware, it
was crucial to have her lawyer present at that hearing. In the
absence of that lawyer, the judge should at least have appointed a
lawyer to represent her. Thus, the decision in question had been
given in breach of the adversarial principle.
- As
to children’s services the applicants submitted that the person
responsible for their case file only had a degree in pedagogy and not
in psychology, thus could not sign in that capacity, and could not
properly assess the child’s medical condition. Moreover,
children’s services had not acted in such a way as to foster
joint parenting, and had repeatedly refused the first applicant’s
expert access to relevant documents and video recordings of meetings
with the child. It followed that the domestic court did not exercise
any supervision of the work of children’s services in that
respect. Another supposedly independent expert, the psychologist in
charge of monitoring the meetings held at X.’s house, was the
psychologist of a committee with which relatives of X. were involved.
They further submitted that their expert, a psychological consultant
for the Council of the Order of Psychologists of San Marino (“the
Order”), had not been in accordance with the reports drawn up
by children’s services, which, in her view, had not been
supported by scientific evidence. In this respect the expert
complained to the Order, in particular about the procedures used by
children’s services, the lack of training, their omissions and
lack of co-operation.
- Lastly,
the applicants submitted that the authorities’ actions
following the lodging of the application with the European Court of
Human Rights had been inappropriate. The applicants contended that
following the introduction of their case before the Court, the judge
in charge of the domestic proceedings had refused to continue to hear
the case. She had however appointed another judge, an action which in
the applicants’ view was not consonant with her refusal to hear
the case. Indeed, the unusual choice of the judge who would have been
her successor in hearing the case raised doubts as to his
impartiality. They noted that once they became aware of the
application to the court, the CTU’s reports had been altered in
their disfavour, and the content of the subsequent decrees had
tastelessly made reference to the same.
(b) The Government’s submissions
- The
Government submitted that the impugned decision of 19 February
2008, granting joint custody and holding that the second applicant
should live with the father, was based on the fact that, as appeared
from the expert evidence submitted by children’s services,
there was a high level of conflict between the parents and the mother
was reluctant to allow contact with the father. The Government
pointed out that in June 2007 the mother had taken the child to
Italy, notwithstanding the decision of 17 April 2007, which
held that the child should remain in San Marino (see paragraph 22
above), and from 2007 the first applicant had repeatedly refused to
allow contact with the father, contrary to the decree of 25 June 2007
(paragraph 29 above). Thus, the impugned decision had been taken in
the best interest of the child, having considered that the father was
the parent who would have allowed contact with the other parent. The
court’s conclusion had been based on the objective findings by
children’s services following their monitoring of the
parent-child relationships, which repeatedly found that the mother
was hindering the child’s contact with the father, to the
extent that in 2009 they feared the second applicant was suffering
from Parental Alienation Syndrome (paragraph 97 above).
- As
to the child services, the Government submitted that according to law
their function included providing residential care services
(assistenza domiciliare) in all cases where there existed
difficulties in parent-child relationships. They were judge
auxiliaries/assistants, representing the institutional instrument
allowing the court to acquire all the necessary elements to correctly
evaluate any decision related to custody and adoption. Children’s
services, as public employees, were subject to Public Employment Law
and to supervision by the Social Security Institute. Failure to abide
by the duties imposed could lead to disciplinary sanctions as imposed
by law through the Disciplinary Board. Children’s services
personnel were qualified individuals, with degrees in psychology
and/or pedagogy with a two year specialisation course in Psychology
or with at least five years’ service in the health sector, who
have been successful in a public competition and whose profession
therefore guaranteed their independence and impartiality. Moreover,
such qualities had often been confirmed by L.C., a court expert,
whose authority in child therapy was indisputable. In reply to the
third-party intervener, the Government considered that the dual role
carried out by children’s services was functional, enabling
parents to reach agreements in the best interest of the child. Thus,
the claims in that connection were completely unfounded and
unsubstantiated.
- The
Government highlighted that the applicant had exercised all her
contact rights punctually as ordered by the impugned decree, within
the agreed arrangements, irrespective of her reluctance to allow
contact with the father. Any cautionary measures adopted, such as the
presence of the psychologist or children’s services, had been
deemed necessary to avoid any risk of child removal, bearing in mind
the first applicant’s prior behaviour. Such measures were in
accordance with the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction.
- The
Government further submitted that the proceedings leading to the
decree had been duly notified and conducted in the presence of both
parties, who were allowed to make all the relevant submissions, and
the fact that one of the applicant’s lawyers was not able to
attend was irrelevant. They further noted that one of her lawyers,
who had previously relinquished his mandate, had been reinstated. The
lack of organisation of the first applicant’s defence could not
weigh against the judge’s decision to proceed with urgency, as
had been requested by the first applicant.
- As
to the alleged impartiality of the judge, the Government submitted
that notification of the application to the domestic judge and the
attachment of the documents to the domestic case file served the
purposes of a procedure for the abstention of the judge from the
case. The judge appointed subsequently was an administrative judge,
who in terms of law could also be assigned to civil cases, as also
confirmed by the decision of the executive magistrate (“magistrato
dirigente”) of 1 December 2010. His impartiality was
crystal clear, as could be seen from the fact that he even increased
the time period during which the minor was to be placed with the
mother. Moreover, according to the Government, no argument could be
made in relation to the father’s alleged kidnapping, since this
issue did not appear from the children’s services reports or
any judicial decisions. Moreover, they insisted that the father had
not abducted the child but was simply on holiday with her.
(c) The third-party Government’s
submissions
- The
Italian Government firstly noted that Mr X.’s behaviour
amounted to kidnapping, in so far as his action to take away the
child and not return her to her mother according to stipulated
conditions had not been authorised by a judge. They further submitted
that the allegation that the first applicant had attempted to kidnap
the child was not substantiated, as it was clear from the decree of
25 June 2007 (see paragraph 28 above) that the applicants were
authorised to reside in Rimini, Italy. In consequence, it could not
be acceptable that the first applicant’s contact rights were
hindered by the application of the Hague Convention conditions, which
did not apply to the first applicant’s situation. Moreover,
when Mr X. started requesting that these conditions apply (February
2008) the Hague Convention was not yet applicable to issues between
the two states, as it had entered into force only on 1 August 2008.
- The
Italian Government considered it deplorable that the hearing leading
to the impugned decision had taken place without legal representation
for the first applicant, and that the refusal of the judge to grant
an adjournment for this purpose raised issues as to the fairness of
the proceedings under Article 6 § 1. They reiterated that the
domestic jurisdictions had to make a detailed examination of the
family’s situation and take into consideration other elements,
such as the emotional, psychological, material and medical needs of
the child, as well as undertaking an overall assessment of the
balance between competing interests, bearing in mind the best
interests of the child. In their view a violation of Article 6 §
1 persisted, in that after nearly three years the appeal proceedings
against the impugned decision had not yet been terminated. This delay
was not understandable in view of the delicate situation, the best
interest of the child and her rights under Article 8. Moreover, the
Italian Government were of the view that the deterioration in the
second applicant’s health from 2009 onwards could have been due
to incompetence on the part of children’s services, as
evidenced by the Associazione Pro Bimbi’s submissions
(see below). They therefore requested the Court to examine the role
played by children’s services in so far as they appeared to
have put aside the interests of the child in favour of those of the
father.
- Lastly,
they considered that the first applicant must have suffered distress
at seeing her child being moved from one place of residence to
another. However, her good faith towards Mr X. had been evident even
by her recent agreement to allow the child to attend Mr X.’s
wedding. The Italian Government considered that a joint custody
regime should have been accompanied by a decision to have the child
reside with the mother, which according to child psychology studies
was a fundamental period in children of such a young age. Moreover,
bearing in mind that it appeared that the second applicant was often
left in the care of her paternal grandparents, the Government had
trouble understanding the choice of the San Marino authorities to
order residence with the father.
- In
the light of the circumstances of the case the Italian Government was
of the view that the San Marino Government had violated the
applicant’s rights under Article 8 in conjunction with Article
6.
(d) The third-party intervener’s
submissions
- The
Associazione Pro Bimbi provides, through its activities,
support for parenting and the well-being of minors. It receives
support from, inter alia, the Ministries of Public
Instruction, Health, Justice, and Foreign Affairs. They submitted
that in 2009 they had received a number of requests from separated
parents in respect of their loss of parental rights and/or joint
custody. Some of these cases had turned out to be extremely alarming
from the point of view of the right to joint parenting and regular
contact rights. These complaints mainly concerned children’s
services. During the association’s discussions on child
custody, strong criticisms of children’s services were voiced
by parents, in particular in respect of their lack of qualifications
and ineffective support for parents. Many spoke about their
distressing experiences in trying to see their children, particularly
in cases of parents with dual nationality, who publicly complained
that they had faced discriminatory treatment from the services. The
association therefore invited children’s services and the
Council of the Order of Psychologists of San Marino (“the
Council”) to attend subsequent sessions. Unlike the Council,
children’s services did not send any representatives. The
Council’s representative, in reply to questions set, confirmed
that in San Marino it sufficed to have a degree in pedagogy without a
further professional qualification to be employed by children’s
services. Moreover, they were not subject to monitoring by the
Council and were not bound by a code of conduct.
- The
association further cited a letter from children’s services in
which they acknowledged that, with a total of only seven staff
members and a lack of resources and funding, they were not in a
position to carry out effectively their role of support for judges
and protection of minors of 150 families, of whom fifty were cases of
high-conflict separations which were often hard to mediate. The
association also considered that it was anomalous for the staff of
children’s services to assume conflicting roles, namely the
function of public officials reporting to judges and also as
mediators providing support for families and children. Concerned
about the above matter, the association had sent letters to the head
of the Institute for Social Security, who was in charge of children’s
services. The latter responded that a commission of enquiry would be
set up and investigations carried out. Up to the date of submissions
no response had been received.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
- The
mutual enjoyment by parent and child of each other’s company
constitutes a fundamental element of family life even when the
relationship between the parents has broken down (see Keegan v.
Ireland, 26 May 1994, § 50, Series A no. 290). Family life
in the Contracting States encompasses a broad range of parental
rights and responsibilities in regard to care and custody of minor
children. The care and upbringing of children normally and
necessarily require that the parents or an only parent decide where
the child must reside and also impose, or authorise others to impose,
various restrictions on the child’s liberty. Thus, the children
in a school or other educational or recreational institution must
abide by certain rules which limit their freedom of movement and
their liberty in other respects. Likewise a child may have to be
hospitalised for medical treatment. Family life in this sense, and
especially the rights of parents to exercise parental authority over
their children, having due regard to their corresponding parental
responsibilities, is recognised and protected by the Convention, in
particular by Article 8 (see Nielsen v. Denmark, 28 November
1988, § 61, Series A no. 144).
171. Domestic measures hindering enjoyment of family life
such as a decision granting custody over children to a parent
constitutes an interference with the right to respect for family life
(see, for example, Hoffmann v. Austria, judgment of
23 June 1993, Series A no. 255-C, p. 58, § 29, and
Palau-Martinez v. France, no. 64927/01, § 30, ECHR
2003-XII).
- Any
such interference constitutes a violation of this Article unless it
is “in accordance with the law”, pursues an aim or aims
that are legitimate under paragraph 2 and can be regarded as
“necessary in a democratic society”. Necessity implies
that the interference corresponds to a pressing social need and, in
particular, that it is proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued
(see W. v. the United Kingdom, 8 July 1987, § 60,
Series A no. 121.)
- Although
the essential object of Article 8 is to protect the individual
against arbitrary interference by the public authorities, there may
in addition be positive obligations inherent in an effective
“respect” for family life. These obligations may involve
the adoption of measures designed to secure respect for family life
even in the sphere of relations between individuals, including both
the provision of a regulatory framework of adjudicatory and
enforcement machinery protecting individuals’ rights and the
implementation, where appropriate, of specific steps (see Zawadka
v. Poland, no. 48542/99, § 53, 23 June 2005). The Court has
repeatedly held that Article 8 includes a right for parents to have
measures taken with a view to their being reunited with their
children, and an obligation on the national authorities to take such
measures. This also applies to cases where contact and residence
disputes concerning children arise between parents (see Kosmopoulou
v. Greece, no. 60457/00, § 44, 5 February 2004).
- In
both the negative and positive contexts, regard must be had to the
fair balance which has to be struck between the competing interests
of the individual and the community, including other concerned third
parties, and the State’s margin of appreciation (see W. v.
the United Kingdom, cited above, § 59, and Keegan,
cited above, § 49).
- The
margin of appreciation to be accorded to the competent national
authorities will vary in accordance with the nature of the issues and
the importance of the interests at stake. Thus, the Court recognises
that the authorities enjoy a wide margin of appreciation when
deciding on custody (see, inter alia, C. v. Finland,
no. 18249/02, § 53, 9 May 2006 and Wildgruber v. Germany,
(dec.) nos. 42402/05 and 42423/05, 29 January 2008). However, a
stricter scrutiny is called for in respect of any further
limitations, such as restrictions placed by those authorities on
parental rights of contact, and of any legal safeguards designed to
secure an effective protection of the right of parents and children
to respect for their family life. Such further limitations entail the
danger that the family relations between the parents and a young
child would be effectively curtailed (see T.P. and K.M. v. the
United Kingdom [GC], no. 28945/95, § 71, ECHR 2001 V
(extracts).
- Where
the measures in issue concern parental disputes over their children,
it is not for the Court to substitute itself for the competent
domestic authorities in regulating contact and residence disputes,
but rather to review under the Convention the decisions that those
authorities have taken in the exercise of their power of
appreciation. Undoubtedly, consideration of what lies in the best
interest of the child is of crucial importance (see Zawadka,
cited above, § 54, and Hokkanen v. Finland, 23 September
1994, § 55, Series A no. 299-A). Moreover, lack of cooperation
between separated parents is not a circumstance which can by itself
exempt the authorities from their positive obligations under Article
8. It rather imposes on the authorities an obligation to take
measures to reconcile the conflicting interests of the parties,
keeping in mind the paramount interests of the child (see Zawadka,
cited above, § 67) which, depending on their nature and
seriousness, may override those of the parent (see Hoppe v.
Germany, no. 28422/95, § 49, 5 December 2002).
- Article
8 contains no explicit procedural requirements, but this is not
conclusive of the matter. The local authority’s decision-making
process clearly cannot be devoid of influence on the substance of the
decision, notably by ensuring that it is based on relevant
considerations and is not one-sided, and hence neither is, nor
appears to be, arbitrary. Accordingly, the Court is entitled to have
regard to that process to determine whether it has been conducted in
a manner that, in all the circumstances, is fair and affords due
respect to the interests protected by Article 8. What has to be
determined is whether, having regard to the particular circumstances
of the case and notably the serious nature of the decisions to be
taken, the parents have been involved in the decision-making process,
seen as a whole, to a degree sufficient to provide them with the
requisite protection of their interests. If they have not, there will
have been a failure to respect their family life and the interference
resulting from the decision will not be capable of being regarded as
“necessary” within the meaning of Article 8 (see W. v.
the United Kingdom, cited above, § 62 and 64 in fine).
In conducting its review in the context of Article 8 the Court may
also have regard to the length of the local authority’s
decision-making process and of any related judicial proceedings. An
effective respect for family life requires that future relations
between parent and child be determined solely in the light of all
relevant considerations and not by the mere passage of time (ibid., §
65; see also H. v. the United Kingdom, 8 July 1987, § 90,
Series A no. 120).
- It
is of paramount importance for parents always to be placed in a
position enabling them to put forward all arguments in favour of
obtaining contact with the child and to have access to all relevant
information which is at the disposal of the domestic courts (see
Sahin v. Germany [GC], no. 30943/96, § 71, 8 July
2003, and Kosmopoulou, cited above, § 49). It is,
moreover, for the authorities to show that there are compelling
reasons for refusing a data subject’s request to be provided
with a copy of their personal data files (see Tsourlakis v.
Greece, no. 50796/07, § 44, 15 October 2009).
(b) Application of the above principles to
the present case
- In
the present case the Court notes that in December 2006 the competent
national courts granted sole custody of the child to the first
applicant. Six months later, in June 2007 the domestic court ordered
joint custody and that the child should live and attend school for
the following school year in Rimini, Italy, where she had established
herself with the mother. However, by an order of 21 September 2007
the domestic courts decided that the second applicant should reside
in San Marino, as Mr X. had the right to easy and unsupervised
contact with his child. On 12 November 2007 joint custody
was upheld as being in the best interest of the child. By a decision
of 19 February 2008, the court, again upheld joint custody and
ordered the child to be returned to San Marino to live with her
father and to attend school there. This decision was confirmed on
appeal three years later. In the meantime a number of orders had been
issued on the matter, upholding joint custody and residence with the
father, in San Marino.
- The
Court observes that from 2007 onwards, the first applicant’s
rights had diminished from full custody, to a right to supervised
contact, to be held in San Marino, of nearly two hours per day.
Subsequently, contact hours changed to three hours on alternate days,
including an overnight stay, and remained subject to the same
conditions up to August 2008. Following that date contact hours
increased to two to six hours per day, overnight stays, and alternate
weekends with the parents, up to entire weeks over the Christmas
holiday period. Most of these visits were nevertheless supervised
either by the father or his legal representatives, children’s
services or CTU experts, who videoed the meetings.
- It
has not been contested by the parties that the domestic decisions
related to the applicants’ custody and contact rights
constituted interference with the applicants’ family life which
was in accordance with the law, and the Court considers that the
measures pursued the legitimate aims of the protection of health or
morals and/or the protection of the rights and freedoms of others,
namely the child and her parents. It remains to be ascertained
whether the measures were necessary in a democratic society.
- The
Court notes that in this sphere its review is not limited to
ascertaining whether a respondent State exercised its discretion
reasonably, carefully and in good faith. In exercising its
supervisory jurisdiction, the Court cannot confine itself to
considering the impugned decisions in isolation, but must look at
them in the light of the case as a whole; it must determine whether
the reasons adduced by the domestic courts were relevant and
sufficient (see Olsson v. Sweden (no. 1), 24 March 1988, §
68, Series A no. 130).
- In
reviewing whether the domestic courts based their decisions on
relevant grounds, the Court observes that the domestic courts
persistently reiterated the best interests of the child. They based
their decisions on a number of further considerations, such as the
relationship between the parents, the inherent problems of joint
custody in such cases, particularly were it transpired that one
parent was, for the most part, hostile towards the other and hindered
contact rights, the attitude and availability of the parents and the
specific environments involved. In each of their decisions they
relied on detailed and complete reports from the children’s
services (see, for example, paragraphs 22, 28, 38, 50 and 77) which
were drawn up following constant and specific requests by the
domestic courts. These reports were a result of the constant
monitoring performed by the service. From 2007 onwards the courts
further had the benefits of reports by ex-parte counsellors
and experts, and from 2008 onwards also reports by the CTU. Moreover,
the parties had regularly made written and oral submissions before
the court and were allowed to air all their requests and concerns,
which the courts undoubtedly took into consideration.
- In
this light, the Court finds it reasonable, that the courts considered
it necessary - for the protection of the child’s interests -
not to maintain in place a sole custody order in favour of the first
applicant but to award the parents’ joint custody, neither does
it appear illogical to have opted for residence with the father. It
is also noted that the domestic courts did not exclude a change in
regime if circumstances so required. Furthermore, the domestic courts
took due care to recommend education programmes for the family and to
foster the parents’ reconciliation and co-operation in the best
interest of their daughter.
- As
to contact rights, the Court has already observed the details of the
regime applied (see paragraph 180 above). It reiterates that the
national authorities having the benefit of direct contact with all
the persons concerned are better placed than the international judge
to assess such needs. The Court considers that the measures adopted
do not appear manifestly arbitrary or unfair. In consequence, it is
not for the Court to enter into a detailed assessment of the most
appropriate contact arrangements. It suffices for the Court to note
that these rights were not denied or suppressed at any moment, the
applicants having maintained constant and regular contact with each
other, and the first applicant having retained joint custody over the
second applicant. While supervision and often limitation as to the
venue of contact meetings (the father’s residence), must have
restricted the purpose of visits between mother and child, limiting
to some extent their contact and the opportunity to develop their
relationship - a matter which was in both of their interests and
particularly the child’s, whose interest is paramount - the
Court considers that monitoring by the child services was necessary
to allow the domestic courts to make informed decisions as to custody
and contact rights. Moreover, such monitoring also served to ensure
the child’s well being. The Court is ready to accept that while
there was no threat of violence or serious health issues (see, a
contrario, Gluhaković v. Croatia, no.
21188/09, § 63, 12 April 2011) there
could have been a risk of psychological abuse as evidenced by the
suggestions that the child might develop Parent Alienation Syndrome,
thus justifying the father’s presence at meetings. This having
been said, the Court refutes the Government’s argument that
such limitations were necessary as a precautionary measure against a
possible abduction by the first applicant. The Court notes that when
the first applicant moved to San Marino, she had informed the judge
(see paragraph 26), similarly, when requested to submit the second
applicant’s passport she did so (see paragraph 56). While she
appeared to be more hesitant to submit the second passport, the Court
notes that in the meantime it was Mr X. who had requested a second
passport and who was allowed to travel with the child (see paragraphs
70 and 92). Moreover, it had been repeatedly stated by the courts
that travel was banned unless authorised by it (see paragraphs 51, 70
and 99), a measure which in principle deterred unilateral decisions
to take the child away. Furthermore, the Court notes that there is
nothing in the case file which gives objective grounds for any fear
of the applicants’ absconding, particularly since the first
applicant’s family lived in Rimini, not far from San Marino,
and indeed any mere suspicions or fears which Mr X. might have had
had neither been substantiated nor confirmed by the courts. Lastly,
the Court notes that the presence of the parties’ lawyers had
not been court ordered, and indeed it was the children’s
services that requested the court to prohibit such a practice (see
paragraph 69 above). Thus, any discomfort caused in this respect
could have easily been avoided by the parties’ good will.
- As
to the applicants’ contention that the children’s
services were biased and unqualified, the Court considers that quite
apart from the submissions made by the third-party intervener
association, the matter remains unsubstantiated, and in any event the
Court has not discerned any proof of the lack of effectiveness of
such a service, particularly where, as in the present case, the
proposals made by the service do not appear to be manifestly
arbitrary or discriminatory. While it is true that the domestic
courts have a duty to exercise constant vigilance, particularly as
regards action taken by social services, to ensure the latter’s
conduct does not defeat the authorities’ decisions (see
Scozzari and Giunta v. Italy [GC], cited above, § 179),
the Court notes that in the present case, the applicants had ample
possibilities to criticise and contest the children’s services
qualifications, actions and findings in the contentious proceedings,
as in fact the first applicant had done in relation to the children’s
services failure to facilitate her contact rights (see paragraphs 46,
48 and 56 above). Moreover, when at issue, the domestic courts
considered that the children’s services were made up of
reliable experts (see paragraph 110 above).
- The
Court reiterates that, whilst Article 8 of the Convention contains no
explicit procedural requirements, the decision-making process
involved in measures of interference must be fair and such as to
ensure due respect for the interests safeguarded by Article 8. In
assessing whether the domestic courts’ reasons were also
sufficient for the purposes of Article 8 § 2, the
Court will notably have to determine whether the decision-making
process, seen as a whole, provided the first applicant with the
requisite protection of her interest.
- The
Court notes that, throughout the proceedings, the applicant,
represented by counsel, had the opportunity to present her arguments
in writing and orally. Indeed she had presented ample submissions to
the domestic courts as evidenced by the voluminous documentation
submitted to the Court. As to the hearing of 19 February 2008 on the
merits of her and Mr X.’s requests, the Court considers that
given the fact that the first applicant’s representative had
been duly notified of the date of the hearing (see paragraph 43
above), that at the actual hearing she had originally been
represented by co-counsel, and that she had had the opportunity to
submit written pleadings, it cannot be said that her involvement had
not been effective at that stage. This is more so in view of the fact
that in cases concerning a person’s relationship with his or
her child there is a duty to exercise exceptional diligence in view
of the risk that the passage of time may result in a de facto
determination of the matter. In this light, and bearing in mind that
the decision of 19 February 2008 only confirmed the retention of a
joint custody regime which had previously been decided (see
paragraphs 28 and 38 above) the Court finds reasonable the refusal of
the domestic court to adjourn the hearing.
- As
to the applicants’ complaint that the proceedings were
unreasonably lengthy, while the Court finds reprehensible that the
appeal against this decision took three years to be decided (6 March
2008 to 7 March 2011), it notes that various orders were
delivered and arrangements made in the meantime, and that the first
applicant’s access rights have been regularly maintained, the
calendar of visits being changed regularly by agreement of the
parties and the assistance of children’s services. As to the
overall length of the proceedings the Court notes that the first
applicant intervened in the custody and contact proceedings in
December 2006 and the proceedings are to date still pending. However,
it is evident from the facts of the case that there have not been any
significant lapses of inactivity, or adjournments for reasons related
to internal organisation (see, a contrario Veljkov v.
Serbia, no. 23087/07, § 88, 19 April 2011
and Wildgruber v. Germany, nos. 42402/05 and 42423/05,
§ 61, 21 January 2010). Indeed it also
transpires that the parties’ requests for urgent hearings had
been immediately followed up, with the domestic courts calling on
extraordinary hearings of their own motion when necessary (see, for
example, paragraph 43 above). Thus, although parallel proceedings and
the fact that the courts had to decide a number of ancillary matters
simultaneously must have detracted from the required speediness of
custody proceedings, the Court considers that overall the domestic
courts appear to have dealt with the proceedings with the requisite
diligence.
- In
so far as the applicant argued that she had been denied access to the
proper documentation, namely that by a decision of 17 July 2008, the
first applicant was denied access to the video recordings of her
visits with the second applicant, the Court considers that the
information contained in those recordings was pertinent to the
applicants’ relationship and could have allowed the first
applicant to become aware of any apparent negative points which could
have influenced the judge against her and if necessary take them into
account, in future, with a view to improving the relationship with
her child. The only reason given by the domestic court for such a
refusal was that the applicant had no right to such materials,
children’s services being the judge’s auxiliary (see
paragraph 77 above). The Court is not persuaded by this reasoning and
no other compelling reasons supporting their refusal to provide the
video recordings have been put forward. However, it notes that nine
months later the parties’ requests for CTU recordings and all
relevant documentation had been granted (see paragraph 104 above),
thus, the first applicant could make use of such relevant information
for the purposes of the proceedings which were still ongoing. Thus,
the initial refusal cannot suffice to conclude that the State failed
to comply with its positive obligations to ensure respect for the
first applicant’s private and family life.
- Lastly,
as to the claims, raised in the applicants’ observations,
regarding the impartiality of the relevant judges, the Court
observes, as did the appeal court, that no request for the withdrawal
of such judges had been made at the relevant time.
- Having
regard to the state’s margin of appreciation in this sphere,
and having considered the case as a whole, the Court is satisfied
that the domestic courts’ procedural approach provided adequate
material on which to reach decisions based on relevant and sufficient
reasons while adequately involving the first applicant in the
decision-making process.
- It
follows that there has not been a violation of Article 8 of the
Convention in respect of the applicants.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 13 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that they did not have an effective domestic
remedy in respect of the second applicant’s abduction as a
result of the tribunal’s decision to archive the case against
Mr X. They relied on Article 13 of the Convention,
which reads as follows:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth
in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy
before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has
been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant’s submitted that the law referred to by the
Government which came into force on 1 September 2008, provided in its
Article 10 of the transitional and final rules as follows –“the
present law applies to all criminal proceedings for which notice of
the crime reached the investigating judge in the period after the law
came into force. The present law does not apply to cases pending on
the date when it came into force if they are published and filed
within the following nine months.” In the present case, the
proceedings against Mr X. were filed on the last possible day, thus
excluding any possibility of an appeal.
- The
Government submitted that the first applicant could have lodged an
appeal before the Judge of Criminal Appeals (Giudice delle
Appelazioni Penali), against the Commissario della Legge’s
decision of 10 June 2009 to archive the case, which, if upheld,
could order the reopening of the preliminary investigation and assign
it to a different inquiring magistrate. Such an action was provided
for by Article 135 of the Code of Criminal Procedure as amended in
2008 and which came into force on 1 September 2008. The latter
provided the accused and the injured party with the possibility of
lodging an appeal within thirty days of notification of the order
that no further action would be taken. The Government further
submitted that the transitional provisions mentioned by the
applicants were not applicable to the case in question. However, even
if this were so, the decision to archive the case was delivered
several days after the expiration of the nine months from its entry
into force.
- The
Italian Government supported the observations submitted by the San
Marino Government.
B. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court notes that the parties disagreed as to the application of the
relevant law and they have not submitted any information as to the
functioning of the legal amendment in practice. Nor did the
Government give an explanation as to why the transitional measures
did not apply to the present case. However, the Government contended
that even if they had the applicants would still have been in time to
appeal.
- Indeed,
the Court observes that the transitional provisions clearly stated
that the new law, providing for a right to appeal, would not apply to
cases which were archived within nine months of its coming into
force. It notes that the amendment to the law came into force on 1
September 2008 and the case was archived on 10 June 2009, thus more
than nine months after the entry into force of the amendment. It
therefore appears that in principle an appeal was available to the
applicants. In the present circumstances and in the light of the
submissions on the matter, the Court considers that since the
applicants failed to even attempt an appeal, it would be speculative
to examine whether such a remedy would have been effective.
- It
follows that this part of the complaint must be rejected as
manifestly ill-founded, pursuant to Article 35 §§ 3 and 4
of the Convention.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 2 OF PROTOCOL No. 4 TO
THE CONVENTION
- The
first applicant complained that from February to August 2008 the
second applicant was not allowed to leave the State of San Marino,
contrary to Article 2 of Protocol No. 4, which reads as follows:
“1. Everyone lawfully within the
territory of a State shall, within that territory, have the right to
liberty of movement and freedom to choose his residence.
2. Everyone shall be free to leave any
country, including his own.
3. No restrictions shall be placed on the
exercise of these rights other than such as are in accordance with
law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of
national security or public safety, for the maintenance of ordre
public, for the prevention of crime, for the protection of health
or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of
others.
4. The rights set forth in paragraph 1 may
also be subject, in particular areas, to restrictions imposed in
accordance with law and justified by the public interest in a
democratic society.”
- The
Government contested that argument.
A. Admissibility
- The
Government submitted that the second applicant, as a minor, did not
have an autonomous right to freedom of movement, and therefore could
not be considered a victim.
- The
Court makes reference to its conclusion about the second applicant’s
victim status, above. Moreover, it notes that the rights guaranteed
by this provision apply to any person, and not solely to adults. In
the present case, the first applicant and Mr X. had joint custody
over the second applicant. In consequence, they were in principle
both authorised and capable of enabling the second applicant’s
travel, had it not been for any restrictions imposed by the national
courts.
- It
follows that the Government’s objection in this respect must be
dismissed.
- The
Court further notes that this complaint is linked to the one examined
above under Article 8 and must therefore likewise be declared
admissible.
B. Merits
1. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicants submitted that although the first applicant had joint
custody the second applicant’s movements were restricted as a
result of the limitations imposed on her by the court. Indeed from 13
February 2008 up to 11 August 2008 the second applicant was confined
to the territory of San Marino, for no legitimate reason. It was
clear that such a measure had been granted in order to prevent
Italian courts from having the jurisdiction to decide on the case.
- The
Government submitted that the applicant’s restrictions arose
from the court decisions ordering the child to be resident with the
father in San Marino and the mother’s contact rights to be
exercised in San Marino and such a decision could not constitute a
violation of the said provision.
- The
Italian Government considered that the limitations imposed on the
second applicant’s freedom of movement, namely prohibiting her
from going to Italy, had the aim of distancing the second applicant
from her mother and her maternal family. They stated that the reasons
put forward by children’s services and the CTU had been
contradictory and no specific reasons had been given for the decision
to keep the second applicant with the father and not with the mother,
particularly in view of her tender age and needs. In consequence, in
their view, there had been a violation of the second applicant’s
rights under Article 2 of Protocol No. 4.
2. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court reiterates that the right of freedom of movement as guaranteed
by paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 2 of Protocol No. 4 is intended to
secure to any person the right to liberty of movement within a
territory and the right to leave that territory, which implies a
right to leave for any country of the person’s choice to which
he or she may be admitted. Thus, freedom of movement prohibits any
measure liable to infringe that right or to restrict the exercise
thereof which is not “in accordance with the law” and
does not satisfy the requirement of a measure which can be considered
“necessary in a democratic society” in the pursuit of the
legitimate aims referred to in the third and fourth paragraph of the
above-mentioned Article (see Baumann v. France, no. 33592/96,
§ 61, ECHR 2001 V (extracts). As regards the
proportionality of the interference, the Court has particular regard
to the duration of the measure in question (see Nikiforenko v.
Ukraine, no. 14613/03, § 56, 18 February 2010).
- The
Court reiterates that an obligation to ask the authorities permission
to leave each time does not correspond to the sense of the concept
“freedom of movement” (see Ivanov v. Ukraine, no.
15007/02, § 85, 7 December 2006). The Court considers that
the series of domestic decisions banning travel, and dispossessing
the second applicant of her passport, in the present case, restricted
the second applicant’s right to liberty of movement in a manner
amounting to an interference, within the meaning of Article 2 of
Protocol No. 4 to the Convention (see Roldan Texeira v. Italy
(dec.), no. 40655/98, 26 October 2000, and Baumann, cited
above, § 62).
- The
parties did not dispute that the decisions banning travel from the
territory of San Marino in the present case were compatible with
domestic procedural law and had a basis in the national legal order.
- As
to the legitimate aim cited by the Government, the Court reiterates
its earlier assessment that there were no objective grounds founding
any fear of the second applicant being kidnapped by her mother.
Nevertheless, bearing in mind that at the relevant time San Marino
was not a party to the Hague Convention, the Court recognises that
the domestic courts felt bound to issue directions which could
provide alternative protection against any such eventuality. In these
circumstances, the Court therefore is ready to accept that the
measure pursued the maintenance of “ordre public” and the
protection of the rights of others.
- The
Court observes that in the present case the second applicant was
confined to the territory of San Marino from at least 22 February
2008 to 11 August 2008. Bearing in mind the short duration of the
restriction, the Court considers that the measure at issue was
proportionate to the aim pursued (see, mutatis mutandis,
Roldan Texeira, (dec.), cited above).
-
Accordingly, there has not been a violation of Article 2 of Protocol
No. 4 to the Convention.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants further complained that the circumstances created by the
judicial authorities, the CTU and the children services amounted to
inhuman and degrading treatment, particularly as a result of the
period of isolation in San Marino. Indeed, as a result, the second
applicant suffered psychological distress. Moreover, the first
applicant had been pressured by these entities into withdrawing her
complaints against Mr X., which were eventually archived. They cited
Article 3 of the Convention, which reads as follows:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
- The
Court reiterates that, to fall within the scope of Article 3, the
treatment in question must attain a minimum level of severity. The
assessment of that minimum level is, in the nature of things,
relative, and depends on all the circumstances of the case, and in
particular on the nature and context of the treatment, how long it
lasted, the physical and mental effects and, in some cases, on the
sex, age and state of health of the person concerned. On this basis,
it is not sufficient for the treatment to include some unpleasant
aspects (see Bove v. Italy, (dec.) no. 30595/02, 18 November
2004).
- The
Court considers that, while the proceedings and related events have
surely been a source of stress and anxiety to the applicants in the
light of the circumstances of the present case, it cannot be said
that they have reached the threshold proscribed by Article 3.
- It
follows that this complaint is inadmissible as manifestly ill-founded
within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 and must be rejected
pursuant to Article 35 § 4 of the Convention.
VI. OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF THE CONVENTION
- Lastly,
the applicants complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, about
the amount of maintenance awarded by the order of 18 May 2007, which
erroneously considered that the first applicant did not need to pay
rent.
- The Court reiterates that, in accordance with Article
35 § 1 of the Convention, it can only deal with the matter if
the relevant complaint is raised within a period of six months from
the date on which the final decision was taken (see Debono v.
Malta, (dec.) no. 34539/02, 3 May 2005). In the
present case the final decision in relation to this complaint was
delivered on 18 May 2007 and was therefore taken more than six months
before the lodging of this application with the Court on 7 July 2008.
- It follows that this complaint is inadmissible for
non-compliance with the six-month rule set out in Article 35 §
1 of the Convention, and must be rejected pursuant to Article 35 §
4.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Declares unanimously the complaint concerning
Article 8 of the Convention and Article 2 of Protocol No. 4 to the
Convention admissible and the remainder of the application
inadmissible;
- Holds by five votes to two that there has not
been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention;
- Holds by five votes to two that there has not
been a violation of Article 2 of Protocol No. 4 to the Convention.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 27 September 2011,
pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Santiago Quesada Corneliu
Bîrsan
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the
Convention and Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules of Court, the dissenting
opinion of Judge Ziemele joined by judge Tsotsoria is annexed to this
judgment.
C.B.
S.Q.
DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE ZIEMELE
JOINED BY JUDGE TSOTSORIA
1. I
do not share the opinion of the majority in this case. I note that
the Court’s case-law has crystallised the following principles
that the national authorities have to follow in striking a balance
between the competing interests of the child and the parents. First
of all, in the balancing process particular importance must be
attached to the best interests of the child which, depending on their
nature and seriousness, may override those of the parents (see
Maumousseau
and Washington
v. France,
no. 39388/05, §§ 66 and 67, 6 December 2007, and
Sommerfeld v.
Germany [GC], no.
31871/96, § 64, ECHR 2003 VIII). Secondly, the
observance of the procedural requirements implicitly enshrined in
Article 8 of the Convention means that the persons concerned must be
guaranteed sufficient involvement in the decision-making process and
that the domestic courts must conduct an in-depth examination of the
entire family situation and of a whole series of factors, in
particular of a factual, emotional, psychological, material and
medical nature (see Maumousseau
and Washington,
cited above, paragraph 74, and more recently, Neulinger
and Shuruk, [GC],
no. 41615/07, § 139, 6 July 2010).
- I note that
while the applicant and the child had moved to Rimini in Italy with
the permission of the relevant authorities in San Marino (paragraph
28 of the judgment), problems started to emerge in August 2007 which
seem to have led to the adoption of the new order whereby San Marino
was made the child’s residence (paragraph 34). It is unclear
how the parents’ submissions were represented in these
proceedings and the majority does not refer to this problem either
(paragraph 179). In January 2008 Mr X asked for sole custody of the
child. It is because of this request that a more extensive expert
report on the situation was drawn up, noting also the state of mind
of the child (paragraph 42). It appears to me that this was a
particularly crucial moment in the proceedings. However, the first
applicant’s legal representation was not ensured since the
immediate notification by her lawyer of his inability to attend the
extraordinary hearing was not accepted. Furthermore, at that meeting
the applicant’s submissions were refused without detailed
reasoning. In the meantime, Mr X had arbitrarily retained the child
in San Marino (paragraphs 43, 44 and 48).
- I do not
share the view of the majority that the applicant’s involvement
in the above-mentioned crucial hearing was effective (paragraph 188).
In my view, the domestic courts did not conduct an in-depth
examination of the entire family situation.
4. Moreover,
the child was taken away from the mother on 13 February 2008.
When a year later, on 25 February 2009, a report on the child was
drawn up, it was noted that her character had deteriorated (paragraph
97), and it continued to deteriorate (paragraph 107). The Court has
repeatedly stated in similar cases that the domestic authorities
should, above all, keep the best interests of the child in mind. I
fail to see – and the medical reports seem to confirm this view
– how the course of action taken by the San Marino authorities
served the best interests of the child. Certainly, I do not see in
the reasoning of the domestic authorities how the principle of the
best interests of the child affected one decision or another. It is
surprising that Mr X was allowed to effectively kidnap the child and
that more in-depth reports on the child’s well-being only
appeared in the later stages of the proceedings.
5. I
believe that the Court’s case-law does not merely require
abundant activity on the part of the domestic authorities in such
sensitive cases. It actually requires that the State take the kind of
steps capable of leading to a better appraisal of what is in the best
interests of the child. I fail to see that this was the guiding
principle behind the actions taken by the authorities in San Marino
and for that reason I would have found a violation in this case.