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Case
of Stanev v. Bulgaria
(Application
no. 36760/06)
Judgment
Strasbourg,
17 January 2012
GRAND
CHAMBER
CASE OF
STANEV v. BULGARIA
(Application
no. 36760/06)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
17 January 2012
This judgment is final
but may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Stanev v. Bulgaria,
The
European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed
of:
Nicolas
Bratza,
President,
Jean-Paul
Costa,
Françoise
Tulkens,
Josep
Casadevall,
Nina
Vajić,
Dean
Spielmann,
Lech
Garlicki,
Khanlar
Hajiyev,
Egbert
Myjer,
Isabelle
Berro-Lefèvre,
Luis
López Guerra,
Mirjana
Lazarova Trajkovska,
Zdravka
Kalaydjieva,
Ganna
Yudkivska,
Vincent
A. de Gaetano,
Angelika
Nußberger,
Julia
Laffranque,
judges,
and
Vincent Berger, Jurisconsult,
Having
deliberated in private on 9 February and 7 December 2011,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 36760/06)
against the Republic of Bulgaria lodged with the Court
under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a
Bulgarian national, Mr Rusi Kosev Stanev (“the applicant”),
on 8 September 2006.
- The
applicant, who had been granted legal aid, was represented by
Ms A. Genova, a lawyer practising in Sofia, and Ms V. Lee
and Ms L. Nelson, lawyers from the Mental Disability
Advocacy Center, a non governmental organisation based in
Budapest. The Bulgarian Government (“the Government”)
were represented by their Agents, Ms N. Nikolova
and Ms R. Nikolova, of the Ministry of Justice.
3. The
applicant complained about his placement in a social care home for
people with mental disorders and his inability to obtain permission
to leave the home (Article 5 §§ 1, 4 and 5 of the
Convention). Relying on Article 3, taken alone and in conjunction
with Article 13, he further complained about the living conditions in
the home. He also submitted that he had no access to a court to seek
release from partial guardianship (Article 6 of the Convention).
Lastly, he alleged that the restrictions resulting from the
guardianship regime, including his placement in the home, infringed
his right to respect for his private life within the meaning of
Article 8, taken alone and in conjunction with Article 13 of the
Convention.
4. The
application was allocated to the Fifth Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). On 29 June 2010, after a
hearing on admissibility and the merits had been held on 10 November
2009 (Rule 54 § 3), it was declared admissible by a Chamber
of that Section composed of Peer Lorenzen, President, Renate
Jaeger, Karel Jungwiert, Rait Maruste, Isabelle Berro-Lefèvre,
Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska and Zdravka Kalaydjieva, judges, and also
of Claudia Westerdiek, Section Registrar. On
14 September 2010 a Chamber of the same Section, composed of Peer
Lorenzen, President, Renate Jaeger, Rait Maruste, Mark Villiger,
Isabelle Berro-Lefèvre, Mirjana Lazarova Trajkovska and
Zdravka Kalaydjieva, judges, and also of Claudia Westerdiek,
Section Registrar, relinquished jurisdiction in favour of the Grand
Chamber, neither of the parties having objected to relinquishment
(Article 30 of the Convention and Rule 72).
5. The
composition of the Grand Chamber was determined in accordance with
the provisions of Article 26 §§ 4 and 5 of the Convention
and Rule 24.
6. The
applicant and the Government each filed written observations on the
merits.
7. In
addition, third-party comments were received from the
non governmental organisation Interights, which had been given
leave by the President to intervene in the written procedure (Article
36 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 44 § 3).
- A
hearing took place in public in the Human Rights Building,
Strasbourg, on 9 February 2011 (Rule 59 § 3).
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the Government
Ms N. Nikolova, Ministry
of Justice,
Ms R. Nikolova, Ministry of Justice, Co-Agents;
(b) for the applicant
Ms A.
Genova, Counsel,
Ms V. Lee,
Ms L. Nelson, Advisers.
The
Court heard addresses by them. The applicant was also present.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1956 in Ruse, where he lived until December
2002 and where his half-sister and his father’s second wife,
his only close relatives, also live. On 20 December 1990 a panel of
occupational physicians declared him unfit to work. The panel found
that as a result of having been diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1975,
the applicant had a 90% degree of disablement but did not require
assistance. He is in receipt of an invalidity pension on that
account.
A. The applicant’s placement under partial
guardianship and placement in a social care home for people with
mental disorders
- On
an unspecified date in 2000, at the request of the applicant’s
two relatives, the Ruse regional prosecutor applied to the Ruse
Regional Court (Окръжен
съд) for a declaration of total legal
incapacity in respect of the applicant. In a judgment of 20 November
2000 the court declared the applicant to be partially incapacitated
on the ground that he had been suffering from simple schizophrenia
since 1975 and his ability to manage his own affairs and interests
and to realise the consequences of his own acts had been impaired.
The court found that the applicant’s condition was not so
serious as to warrant a declaration of total incapacity. It observed,
in particular, that during the period from 1975 to 2000 he had been
admitted to a psychiatric hospital on several occasions. The court
took into account an expert medical report produced in the course of
the proceedings and interviewed the applicant. Furthermore, according
to certain other people it interviewed, the applicant had sold all
his possessions, begged for a living, spent all his money on alcohol
and became aggressive whenever he drank.
- That
judgment was upheld in a judgment of 12 April 2001 by the Veliko
Tarnovo Court of Appeal (Апелативен
съд) on an appeal by the applicant, and was
subsequently transmitted to the Ruse Municipal Council on 7 June 2001
for the appointment of a guardian.
- Since
the applicant’s family members had refused to take on any
guardianship responsibilities, on 23 May 2002 the Municipal Council
appointed Ms R.P., a council officer, as the applicant’s
guardian until 31 December 2002.
- On
29 May 2002 R.P. asked the Ruse social services to place the
applicant in a social care home for people with mental disorders. She
appended to the application form a series of documents including a
psychiatric diagnosis. The social services drew up a welfare report
on the applicant, noting on 23 July 2002 that he was suffering from
schizophrenia, that he lived alone in a small, run-down annexe to his
half-sister’s house and that his half-sister and his father’s
second wife had stated that they did not wish to act as his guardian.
The requirements for placement in a social care home were therefore
deemed to be fulfilled.
- On
10 December 2002 a welfare placement agreement was signed between
R.P. and the social care home for adults with mental disorders near
the village of Pastra in the municipality of Rila (“the Pastra
social care home”), an institution under the responsibility of
the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy. The applicant was not
informed of the agreement.
- Later
that day, the applicant was taken by ambulance to the Pastra social
care home, some 400 km from Ruse. Before the Court, he stated that he
had not been told why he was being placed in the home or for how
long; the Government did not dispute this.
- On
14 December 2002, at the request of the director of the Pastra social
care home, the applicant was registered as having his home address in
the municipality of Rila. The residence certificate stated that his
address had been changed for the purpose of his “permanent
supervision”. According to the most recent evidence submitted
in February 2011, the applicant was still living in the home at that
time.
- On
9 September 2005 the applicant’s lawyer requested the Rila
Municipal Council to appoint a guardian for her client. In a letter
dated 16 September 2005 she was informed that the Municipal
Council had decided on 2 February 2005 to appoint the director of the
Pastra social care home as the applicant’s guardian.
B. The applicant’s stay in the Pastra social care
home
1. Provisions of the placement agreement
- The
agreement signed between the guardian R.P. and the Pastra social care
home on 10 December 2002 (see paragraph 14 above) did not mention the
applicant’s name. It stated that the home was to provide food,
clothing, medical services, heating and, obviously, accommodation, in
return for payment of an amount determined by law. It appears that
the applicant’s entire invalidity pension was transferred to
the home to cover that amount. The agreement stipulated that 80% of
the sum was to be used as payment for the services provided and the
remaining 20% put aside for personal expenses. According to the
information in the case file, the applicant’s invalidity
pension, as updated in 2008, amounted to 130 Bulgarian levs (BGN –
approximately 65 euros (EUR)). The agreement did not specify the
duration of the provision of the services in question.
2. Description of the site
- The
Pastra social care home is located in an isolated area of the Rila
mountains in south-western Bulgaria. It is accessible via a dirt
track from the village of Pastra, the nearest locality 8 km away.
- The
home, built in the 1920s, comprises three buildings, where its
residents, all male, are housed according to the state of their
mental health. According to a report produced by the Social
Assistance Agency in April 2009, there were seventy-three people
living in the home, one was in hospital and two had absconded. Among
the residents, twenty-three were entirely lacking legal capacity, two
were partially lacking capacity and the others enjoyed full legal
capacity. Each building has a yard surrounded by a high metal fence.
The applicant was placed in block 3 of the home, reserved for
residents with the least serious health problems, who were able to
move around the premises and go alone to the nearest village with
prior permission.
- According
to the applicant, the home was decaying, dirty and rarely heated in
winter, and as a result, he and the other residents were obliged to
sleep in their coats during winter. The applicant shared a room
measuring 16 square metres with four other residents and the beds
were practically side by side. He had only a bedside table in which
to store his clothes, but he preferred to keep them in his bed at
night for fear that they might be stolen and replaced with old
clothes. The home’s residents did not have their own items of
clothing because clothes were not returned to the same people after
being washed.
3. Diet and hygiene and sanitary conditions
- The
applicant asserted that the food provided at the home was
insufficient and of poor quality. He had no say in the choice of
meals and was not allowed to help prepare them.
- Access
to the bathroom, which was unhealthy and decrepit, was permitted once
a week. The toilets in the courtyard, which were unhygienic and in a
very poor state of repair, consisted of holes in the ground covered
by dilapidated shelters. Each toilet was shared by at least eight
people. Toiletries were available only sporadically.
4. Recent developments
- In
their memorial before the Grand Chamber the Government stated that
renovation work had been carried out in late 2009 in the part of the
home where the applicant lived, including the sanitary facilities.
The home now had central heating. The diet was varied and regularly
included fruit and vegetables as well as meat. Residents had access
to television, books and games. The State provided them all with
clothes. The applicant did not dispute these assertions.
5. Journeys undertaken by the applicant
- The
home’s management kept hold of the applicant’s identity
papers, allowing him to leave the home only with special permission
from the director. He regularly went to the village of Pastra. It
appears that during the visits he mainly provided domestic help to
villagers or carried out tasks at the village restaurant.
- Between
2002 and 2006 the applicant returned to Ruse three times on leave of
absence. Each trip was authorised for a period of about ten days. The
journey cost BGN 60 (approximately EUR 30), which was paid to the
applicant by the home’s management.
- Following
his first two visits to Ruse, the applicant returned to Pastra before
the end of his authorised period of leave. According to a statement
made by the director of the home to the public prosecutor’s
office on an unspecified date, the applicant came back early because
he was unable to manage his finances and had no accommodation.
- The
third period of leave was authorised from 15 to 25 September 2006.
After the applicant failed to return on the scheduled date, the
director of the home wrote to the Ruse municipal police on 13 October
2006, asking them to search for the applicant and transfer him to
Sofia, where employees of the home would be able to collect him and
take him back to Pastra. On 19 October 2006 the Ruse police
informed the director that the applicant’s whereabouts had been
discovered but that the police could not transfer him because he was
not the subject of a wanted notice. He was driven back to the social
care home on 31 October 2006, apparently by staff of the home.
6. Opportunities for cultural and recreational
activities
- The
applicant had access to a television set, several books and a
chessboard in a common room at the home until 3 p.m., after which the
room was kept locked. The room was not heated in winter and the
residents kept their coats, hats and gloves on when inside. No other
social, cultural or sports activities were available.
7. Correspondence
- The
applicant submitted that the staff at the social care home had
refused to supply him with envelopes for his correspondence and that
as he did not have access to his own money, he could not buy any
either. The staff would ask him to give them any sheets of paper he
wished to post so that they could put them in envelopes and send them
off for him.
8. Medical treatment
- It
appears from a medical certificate of 15 June 2005 (see paragraph 37
below) that following his placement in the home in 2002, the
applicant was given anti-psychotic medication (carbamazepine
(600mg)), under the monthly supervision of a psychiatrist.
- In
addition, at the Grand Chamber hearing the applicant’s
representatives stated that their client had been in stable remission
since 2006 and had not undergone any psychiatric treatment in recent
years.
C. Assessment of the applicant’s social skills
during his stay in Pastra and conclusions of the psychiatric report
drawn up at his lawyer’s request
- Once
a year, the director of the social care home and the home’s
social worker drew up evaluation reports on the applicant’s
behaviour and social skills. The reports indicated that the applicant
was uncommunicative, preferred to stay on his own rather than join in
group activities, refused to take his medication and had no close
relatives to visit while on leave of absence. He was not on good
terms with his half-sister and nobody was sure whether he had
anywhere to live outside the social care home. The reports concluded
that it was impossible for the applicant to reintegrate into society,
and set the objective of ensuring that he acquired the necessary
skills and knowledge for social resettlement and, in the long term,
reintegration into his family. It appears that he was never offered
any therapy to that end.
- The
case file indicates that in 2005 the applicant’s guardian asked
the Municipal Council to grant a social allowance to facilitate his
reintegration into the community. Further to that request, on 30
December 2005 the municipal social assistance department carried out
a “social assessment” (социална
оценка) of the applicant,
which concluded that he was incapable of working, even in a sheltered
environment, and had no need for training or retraining, and that in
those circumstances, he was entitled to a social allowance to cover
the costs of his transport, subsistence and medication. On 7 February
2007 the municipal social assistance department granted the applicant
a monthly allowance of BGN 16.50 (approximately EUR 8). On 3 February
2009 the allowance was increased to BGN 19.50 (approximately EUR 10).
- In
addition, at his lawyer’s request, the applicant was examined
on 31 August 2006 by Dr V.S., a different psychiatrist from the one
who regularly visited the social care home, and by a psychologist, Ms
I.A. The report drawn up on that occasion concluded that the
diagnosis of schizophrenia given on 15 June 2005 (see paragraph 37
below) was inaccurate in that the patient did not display all the
symptoms of that condition. It stated that, although the applicant
had suffered from the condition in the past, he had not shown any
signs of aggression at the time of the examination, but rather a
suspicious attitude and a slight tendency towards “verbal
aggression”, that he had not undergone any treatment for the
condition between 2002 and 2006 and that his health had visibly
stabilised. The report noted that no risk of deterioration of his
mental health had been observed and stated that, in the opinion of
the home’s director, the applicant was capable of reintegrating
into society.
- According
to the report, the applicant’s stay in the Pastra social care
home was very damaging to his health and it was desirable that he
should leave the home; otherwise, he was at risk of developing
“institutionalisation syndrome” the longer he stayed
there. The report added that it would be more beneficial to his
mental health and social development to allow him to integrate into
community life with as few restrictions as possible, and that the
only aspect to monitor was his tendency towards alcohol abuse, which
had been apparent prior to 2002. In the view of the experts who had
examined the applicant, the behaviour of an alcohol-dependent person
could have similar characteristics to that of a person with
schizophrenia; accordingly, vigilance was required in the applicant’s
case and care should be taken not to confuse the two conditions.
D. The applicant’s attempts to obtain release
from partial guardianship
- On
25 November 2004 the applicant, through his lawyer, asked the public
prosecutor’s office to apply to the Regional Court to have his
legal capacity restored. On 2 March 2005 the public prosecutor
requested the Pastra social care home to send him a doctor’s
opinion and other medical certificates concerning the applicant’s
disorders in preparation for a possible application to the courts for
restoration of his legal capacity. Further to that request, the
applicant was admitted to a psychiatric hospital from 31 May to 15
June 2005 for a medical assessment. In a certificate issued on the
latter date, the doctors attested that the applicant showed symptoms
of schizophrenia. As his health had not deteriorated since he had
been placed in the home in 2002, the regime to which he was subject
there had remained unchanged. He had been on maintenance medication
since 2002 under the monthly supervision of a psychiatrist. A
psychological examination had revealed that he was agitated, tense
and suspicious. His communication skills were poor and he was unaware
of his illness. He had said that he wanted to leave the home at all
costs. The doctors did not express an opinion either on his capacity
for resettlement or on the need to keep him in the Pastra social care
home.
- On
10 August 2005 the regional prosecutor refused to bring an action for
restoration of the applicant’s legal capacity on the grounds
that, in the opinion of the doctors, the director of the Pastra
social care home and the home’s social worker, the applicant
was unable to cope on his own, and that the home, where he could
undergo medical treatment, was the most suitable place for him to
live. The applicant’s lawyer challenged the refusal to bring
the action, arguing that her client should have the opportunity to
assess by himself whether or not, having regard to the living
conditions at the home, it was in his interests to remain there. She
pointed out that the enforced continuation of his stay in the home,
on the pretext of providing him with treatment in his own interests,
amounted in practice to a deprivation of liberty, a situation that
was unacceptable. A person could not be placed in an institution
without his or her consent. In accordance with the legislation in
force, anyone under partial guardianship was free to choose his or
her place of residence, with the guardian’s agreement. The
choice of residence was therefore not a matter within the competence
of the prosecution service. Despite those objections, the regional
prosecutor’s refusal was upheld on 11 October 2005 by the
appellate prosecutor, and subsequently on 29 November 2005 by the
chief public prosecutor’s office at the Supreme Court of
Cassation.
- On
9 September 2005 the applicant, through his lawyer, asked the mayor
of Rila to bring a court action for his release from partial
guardianship. In a letter of 16 September 2005 the mayor of Rila
refused his request, stating that there was no basis for such an
action in view of the medical certificate of 15 June 2005, the
opinions of the director and the social worker and the conclusions
reached by the public prosecutor’s office. On 28 September 2005
the applicant’s lawyer applied to the Dupnitsa District Court
for judicial review of the mayor’s decision, under Article 115
of the Family Code (see paragraph 49 below). In a letter of 7 October
2005 the District Court stated that since the applicant was partially
lacking legal capacity, he was required to submit a valid form of
authority certifying that his lawyer was representing him, and that
it should be specified whether his guardian had intervened in the
procedure. On an unspecified date the applicant’s lawyer
submitted a copy of the form of authority signed by the applicant.
She also requested that the guardian join the proceedings as an
interested party or that an ad hoc representative be
appointed. On 18 January 2006 the court held a hearing at which
the representative of the mayor of Rila objected that the form of
authority was invalid as it had not been countersigned by the
guardian. The guardian, who was present at the hearing, stated that
he was not opposed to the applicant’s application, but that the
latter’s old-age pension was insufficient to meet his needs and
that, accordingly, the Pastra social care home was the best place for
him to live.
- The
Dupnitsa District Court gave judgment on 10 March 2006. As to the
admissibility of the application for judicial review, it held that
although the applicant had instructed his lawyer to represent him,
she was not entitled to act on his behalf since the guardian had not
signed the form of authority. However, it held that the guardian’s
endorsement of the application at the public hearing had validated
all the procedural steps taken by the lawyer, and that the
application was therefore admissible. As to the merits, the court
dismissed the application, finding that the guardian had no
legitimate interest in contesting the mayor’s refusal, given
that he could apply independently and directly for the applicant to
be released from partial guardianship. Since the judgment was not
subject to appeal, it became final.
- Lastly,
the applicant asserted that he had made several oral requests to his
guardian to apply for his release from partial guardianship and to
allow him to leave the home. However, his requests had always been
refused.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
A. Legal status of persons placed under partial
guardianship and their representation before the courts
- Section
5 of the Persons and Family Act of 9 August 1949 provides that
persons who are unable to look after their own interests on account
of mental illness or mental deficiency must be entirely deprived of
legal capacity and declared legally incapable. Adults with milder
forms of such disorders are to be partially incapacitated. Persons
who are entirely deprived of legal capacity are placed under full
guardianship (настойничество),
whereas those who are partially incapacitated are placed under
partial guardianship (попечителство
– literally “trusteeship”). In accordance with
sections 4 and 5 of the Act, persons under partial guardianship may
not perform legal transactions without their guardian’s
consent. They may, however, carry out ordinary acts forming part of
everyday life and have access to the resources obtained in
consideration for their work. Accordingly, the guardian of a
partially incapacitated person cannot independently perform legal
transactions that are binding on that person. This means that
contracts signed only by the guardian, without the consent of the
person partially lacking legal capacity, are invalid.
- Under
Article 16, paragraph 2, of the Code of Civil Procedure (“the
CCP”), persons under full guardianship are represented before
the courts by their guardian. Persons under partial guardianship,
however, are entitled to take part in court proceedings, but require
their guardian’s consent. Accordingly, the guardian of a
partially incapacitated person does not perform the role of a legal
representative. The guardian cannot act on behalf of the person under
partial guardianship, but may express agreement or disagreement with
the person’s individual transactions (Сталев,
Ж., Българско
гражданско
процесуално
право, София,
2006 г., стр. 171). In particular, a
person under partial guardianship may instruct a lawyer provided that
the form of authority is signed by the guardian (ibid., стр. 173).
B. Procedure for placement under partial guardianship
- There
are two stages to the procedure for placing a person under partial
guardianship: the declaration of partial incapacity and the
appointment of a guardian.
1. Declaration of partial incapacity by the courts
- The
first stage involves a judicial procedure which at the material time
was governed by Articles 275-277 of the 1952 CCP, which have been
reproduced unchanged in Articles 336-340 of the new 2007 CCP. A
declaration of partial incapacity may be sought by the person’s
spouse or close relatives, by the public prosecutor or by any other
interested party. The court reaches its decision after examining the
person concerned at a public hearing – or, failing that, after
forming a first-hand impression of the person’s condition –
and interviewing the person’s close relatives. If the
statements thus obtained are insufficient, the court may have
recourse to other evidence, such as an expert medical assessment.
According to domestic case-law, an assessment must be ordered where
the court is unable to conclude from any other information in the
file that the request for deprivation of legal capacity is unfounded
(Решение
на ВС № 1538 от
21.VIII.1961 г. по гр. д. № 5408/61 г.;
Решение
на ВС № 593 от
4.III.1967 г. по гр. д. № 3218/1966 г.).
2. Appointment of a guardian by the administrative
authorities
- The
second stage involves an administrative procedure for the appointment
of a guardian, which at the material time was governed by Chapter X
(Articles 109-128) of the 1985 Family Code (“the FC”);
these provisions have been reproduced, with only minor amendments, in
Articles 153-174 of the new 2009 FC. The administrative stage is
conducted by an authority referred to as “the guardianship
authority”, namely the mayor or any other municipal council
officer designated by him or her.
- The
guardian should preferably be appointed from among the relatives of
the person concerned who are best able to defend his or her
interests.
C. Review of measures taken by the guardian and
possibility of replacement
- Measures
taken by the guardian are subject to review by the guardianship
authority. At the authority’s request, the guardian must report
on his or her activities. If any irregularities are observed, the
authority may request that they be rectified or may order the
suspension of the measures in question (see Article 126, paragraph 2,
and Article 125 of the 1985 FC, and Article 170 and Article 171,
paragraphs 2 and 3, of the 2009 FC). It is unclear from domestic law
whether persons under partial guardianship may apply to the mayor
individually or through another party to suspend measures taken by
the guardian.
- Decisions
by the mayor, as the guardianship authority, and any refusal by the
mayor to appoint a guardian or to take other steps provided for in
the FC are, for their part, amenable to judicial review. They may be
challenged by interested parties or the public prosecutor before the
district court, which gives a final decision on the merits (Article
115 of the 1985 FC). This procedure allows close relatives to request
a change of guardian in the event of a conflict of interests (Решение
на ВС № 1249 от
23.XII.1993 г. по гр. д. №
897/93 г.). According to domestic case-law, fully incapacitated
persons are not among the “interested parties” entitled
to initiate such proceedings (Определение
№ 5771 от 11.06.2003 г. на ВАС
по адм. д. № 9248/2002).
There is no domestic case-law showing that a partially incapacitated
person is authorised to do so.
- Furthermore,
the guardianship authority may at any time replace a guardian who
fails to discharge his or her duties (Article 113 of the 1985 FC).
By Article 116 of the 1985 FC, a person cannot be appointed as a
guardian where there is a conflict of interests between that person
and the person under partial guardianship. Article 123 of the 1985 FC
provides that a deputy guardian is to be appointed where the guardian
is unable to discharge his or her duties or where there is a conflict
of interests. In both cases, the guardianship authority may also
appoint an ad hoc representative.
D. Procedure for restoration of legal capacity
- By
virtue of Article 277 of the 1952 CCP, this procedure is similar to
the partial guardianship procedure. It is open to anyone entitled to
apply for a person to be placed under partial guardianship, and also
to the guardianship authority and the guardian. The above-mentioned
provision has been reproduced in Article 340 of the 2007 CCP. On 13
February 1980 the Plenary Supreme Court delivered a decision (no.
5/79) aimed at clarifying certain questions concerning the procedure
for deprivation of legal capacity. Paragraph 10 of the decision
refers to the procedure for restoration of legal capacity and reads
as follows:
“The rules applicable in the procedure for
restoration of legal capacity are the same as those governing the
procedure for deprivation of capacity (Article 277 and Article 275,
paragraphs 1 and 2, of the CCP). The persons who requested the
measure or the close relatives are treated as respondent parties in
the procedure. There is nothing to prevent the party that applied for
a person to be deprived of legal capacity from requesting the
termination of the measure if circumstances have changed.
Persons under partial guardianship may request, either
individually or with the consent of their guardian, that the measure
be lifted. They may also ask the guardianship authority or the
guardianship council to bring an action under Article 277 of the
CCP in the regional court which deprived them of legal capacity. In
such cases, they must show that the application is in their interests
by producing a medical certificate. In the context of such an action,
they will be treated as the claimant. Where the guardian of a
partially incapacitated person, the guardianship authority or the
guardianship council (in the case of a fully incapacitated person)
refuses to bring an action for restoration of legal capacity, the
incapacitated person may ask the public prosecutor to do so
(Постановление
№ 5/79 от 13.II.1980 г., Пленум
на ВС).”
- In
addition, the Government cited a case in which proceedings for the
review of the legal status of a person entirely deprived of legal
capacity had been instituted at the guardian’s request and the
person had been released from guardianship (Решение
№ 1301 от 12.11.2008 г. на ВКС
по гр. Д. № 5560/2007 г., V
г.о.).
E. Validity of contracts signed by representatives of
incapacitated persons
- Section 26(2) of the Obligations and Contracts Act
1950 provides that contracts that are in breach of the law or have
been entered into in the absence of consent are deemed null and void.
- In
accordance with section 27 of the same Act, contracts entered into by
representatives of persons deprived of legal capacity in breach of
the applicable rules are deemed voidable. A ground of incurable
nullity may be raised on any occasion, whereas a ground of
voidability may be raised only by means of a court action. The right
to raise a ground of voidability becomes time-barred after a period
of three years from the date of release from partial guardianship if
a guardian is not appointed. In other cases, the period in question
begins to run from the date on which a guardian is appointed (section
32(2), in conjunction with section 115(1)(e), of the above-mentioned
Act; see also Решение
на ВС
№ 668 от 14.III.1963 г.
по гр.
д. № 250/63 г.,
I г. о.,
Решение
на Окръжен съд
– Стара Загора
от 2.2.2010 г.
по т.
д. № 381/2009 г.
на I състав,
Решение на
Районен съд
Стара Загора
№ 459 от 19.5.2009 г. по гр.
д. № 1087/2008).
F. Place of residence of legally incapacitated persons
- By
virtue of Article 120 and Article 122, paragraph 3, of the 1985 FC,
persons deprived of legal capacity are deemed to reside at the home
address of their guardian, unless “exceptional reasons”
require them to live elsewhere. Where the place of residence is
changed without the guardian’s consent, the guardian may
request the district court to order the person’s return to the
official address. By Article 163, paragraphs 2 and 3, of the 2009 FC,
before reaching a decision in such cases, the court is required to
interview the person under guardianship. If it finds that there are
“exceptional reasons”, it must refuse to order the
person’s return and must immediately inform the municipal
social assistance department so that protective measures can be
taken.
- The
district court’s order may be appealed against to the president
of the regional court, although its execution cannot be stayed.
G. Placement of legally incapacitated persons in social
care homes for adults with mental disorders
- Under
the Social Assistance Act 1998, social assistance is available to
people who, for medical and social reasons, are incapable of meeting
their basic needs on their own through work, through their own assets
or with the help of persons required by law to care for them (section
2 of the Act). Social assistance consists of the provision of various
financial benefits, benefits in kind and social services, including
placement in specialised institutions. Such benefits are granted on
the basis of an individual assessment of the needs of the persons
concerned and in accordance with their wishes and personal choices
(section 16(2)).
- By
virtue of the implementing regulations for the Social Assistance Act
1998 (Правилник
за прилагане
на Закона за
социално
подпомагане),
three categories of institutions are defined as “specialised
institutions” for the provision of social services: (1)
children’s homes (homes for children deprived of parental care,
homes for children with physical disabilities, homes for children
with a mental deficiency); (2) homes for adults with disabilities
(homes for adults with a mental deficiency, homes for adults with
mental disorders, homes for adults with physical disabilities, homes
for adults with sensory disorders, homes for adults with dementia),
and (3) old people’s homes (regulation 36(3)). Social services
are provided in specialised institutions where it is no longer
possible to receive them in the community (regulation 36(4)). Under
domestic law, placement of a legally incapacitated person in a social
care home is not regarded as a form of deprivation of liberty.
- Similarly,
in accordance with Decree no. 4 of 16 March 1999 on the conditions
for obtaining social services, adopted on 16 March 1999 (Наредба
№ 4 за условията
и реда за извършване
на социални
услуги), adults with mental
deficiencies are placed in specialised social care homes if it is
impossible to provide them with the necessary medical care in a
family environment (section 12, point (4), and section 27 of the
Decree). Section 33(1), point (3), of the Decree provides that
when a person is placed in a social care home, a medical certificate
concerning the person’s state of health must be produced. By
section 37(1) of the Decree, a placement agreement for the provision
of social services is signed between the specialised institution and
the person concerned or his or her legal representative, on the basis
of a model approved by the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy. The
person may be transferred to another home or may leave the
institution in which he or she has been placed: (1) at his or her
request or at the request of his or her legal representative,
submitted in writing to the director of the institution; (2) if there
is a change in the state of his or her mental and/or physical health
such that it no longer corresponds to the profile of the home; (3) in
the event of failure to pay the monthly social-welfare contribution
for more than one month; (4) in the event of systematic breaches of
the institution’s internal rules; or (5) in the event of a
confirmed addiction to narcotic substances.
- Furthermore,
the system governing admission to a psychiatric hospital for
compulsory medical treatment is set out in the Health Act 2005, which
replaced the Public Health Act 1973.
H. Appointment of an ad hoc representative in
the event of a conflict of interests
- Article
16, paragraph 6, of the CCP provides that, in the event of a conflict
of interests between a person being represented and the
representative, the court is to appoint an ad hoc
representative. The Bulgarian courts have applied this provision in
certain situations involving a conflict of interests between minors
and their legal representative. Thus, the failure to appoint an ad
hoc representative has been found to amount to a substantial
breach of the rules governing paternity proceedings (Решение
на ВС № 297 от 15.04.1987
г. по гр. д. № 168/87 г.,
II г. о.), disputes between adoptive and biological
parents (Решение на
ВС № 1381 от 10.05.1982 г. по
гр. д. № 954/82 г., II г. о.)
or property disputes (Решение
№ 643 от 27.07.2000 г. на ВКС
по гр. д. № 27/2000 г., II
г. о.; Определение
на ОС – Велико
Търново от
5.11.2008 г. по в. ч. гр.
д. № 963/2008).
I. State liability
- The
State and Municipalities Responsibility for Damage Act 1988 (Закон
за отговорността
на държавата
и общините за
вреди – title amended in
2006) provides in section 2(1) that the State is liable for damage
caused to private individuals as a result of a judicial decision
ordering certain types of detention where the decision has been set
aside as having no legal basis.
- Section
1(1) of the same Act provides that the State and municipalities are
liable for damage caused to private individuals and other legal
entities as a result of unlawful decisions, acts or omissions by
their own authorities or officials while discharging their
administrative duties.
- In
a number of decisions, various domestic courts have found this
provision to be applicable to the damage suffered by prisoners as a
result of poor conditions or inadequate medical treatment in prison
and have, where appropriate, partly or fully upheld claims for
compensation brought by the persons concerned (реш.
от 26.01.2004 г. по гр. д. № 959/2003,
ВКС, IV г. о. and реш.
№ 330 от 7.08.2007 г. по
гр. д. № 92/2006,
ВКС, IV г. о.).
- There
are no court decisions in which the above position has been found to
apply to allegations of poor living conditions in social care homes.
- Moreover,
it appears from the domestic courts’ case-law that under
section 1(1) of the Act in question, anyone whose health has
deteriorated because bodies under the authority of the Ministry of
Health have failed in their duty to provide a regular supply of
medication may hold the administrative authorities liable and receive
compensation (реш. № 211 от
27.05.2008 г. по гр. д. №
6087/2007, ВКС, V г. о.).
- Lastly,
the State and its authorities are subject to the ordinary rules on
tortious liability for other forms of damage resulting, for example,
from the death of a person under guardianship while absconding from a
social care home for adults with a mental deficiency, on the ground
that the staff of the home had failed to discharge their duty of
permanent supervision (реш. № 693 от
26.06.2009 г. по гр. д. №
8/2009, ВКС, III г. о.).
J. Arrest by the police under the Ministry of the
Interior Act 2006
- Under
this Act, the police are, inter alia, authorised to arrest
anyone who, on account of severe mental disturbance and through his
or her conduct, poses a threat to public order or puts his or her own
life in manifest danger (section 63(1)-(3)). The person concerned may
challenge the lawfulness of the arrest before a court, which must
give an immediate ruling (section 63(4)).
- Furthermore,
the police’s responsibilities include searching for missing
persons (section 139(3)).
K. Information submitted by the applicant about
searches for persons who have absconded from social care homes for
adults with mental disorders
- The
Bulgarian Helsinki Committee conducted a survey of police stations
regarding searches for people who had absconded from social care
homes of this type. It appears from the survey that there is no
uniform practice. Some police officers said that when they were asked
by employees of a home to search for a missing person, they carried
out the search and took the person to the police station, before
informing the home. Other officers explained that they searched for
the person but, not being empowered to perform an arrest, simply
notified the staff of the home, who took the person back themselves.
L. Statistics submitted by the applicant on judicial
proceedings concerning deprivation of legal capacity
- The
Bulgarian Helsinki Committee obtained statistics from eight regional
courts on the outcome of proceedings for restoration of legal
capacity between January 2002 and September 2009. During this period
677 persons were deprived of legal capacity. Proceedings to restore
capacity were instituted in thirty-six cases: ten of them ended with
the lifting of the measure; total incapacitation was changed to
partial incapacitation in eight cases; the applications were rejected
in four cases; the courts discontinued the proceedings in seven
cases; and the other cases are still pending.
III. RELEVANT INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS
A. Convention
on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, adopted by the United
Nations General Assembly on 13 December 2006 (Resolution
A/RES/61/106)
- This
Convention entered into force on 3 May 2008. It was signed by
Bulgaria on 27 September 2007 but has yet to be ratified. The
relevant parts of the Convention provide:
Article 12
Equal recognition before the law
“1. States Parties reaffirm that
persons with disabilities have the right to recognition everywhere as
persons before the law.
2. States Parties shall recognize that
persons with disabilities enjoy legal capacity on an equal basis with
others in all aspects of life.
3. States Parties shall take appropriate
measures to provide access by persons with disabilities to the
support they may require in exercising their legal capacity.
4. States Parties shall ensure that all
measures that relate to the exercise of legal capacity provide for
appropriate and effective safeguards to prevent abuse in accordance
with international human rights law. Such safeguards shall ensure
that measures relating to the exercise of legal capacity respect the
rights, will and preferences of the person, are free of conflict of
interest and undue influence, are proportional and tailored to the
person’s circumstances, apply for the shortest time possible
and are subject to regular review by a competent, independent and
impartial authority or judicial body. The safeguards shall be
proportional to the degree to which such measures affect the person’s
rights and interests.
5. Subject to the provisions of this article,
States Parties shall take all appropriate and effective measures to
ensure the equal right of persons with disabilities to own or inherit
property, to control their own financial affairs and to have equal
access to bank loans, mortgages and other forms of financial credit,
and shall ensure that persons with disabilities are not arbitrarily
deprived of their property.”
Article 14
Liberty and security of person
“1. States Parties shall ensure that
persons with disabilities, on an equal basis with others:
(a) Enjoy the right to liberty and security of
person;
(b) Are not deprived of their liberty unlawfully
or arbitrarily, and that any deprivation of liberty is in conformity
with the law, and that the existence of a disability shall in no case
justify a deprivation of liberty.
2. States Parties shall ensure that if
persons with disabilities are deprived of their liberty through any
process, they are, on an equal basis with others, entitled to
guarantees in accordance with international human rights law and
shall be treated in compliance with the objectives and principles of
the present Convention, including by provision of reasonable
accommodation.”
B. Recommendation No. R (99) 4 of the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe on principles concerning the legal
protection of incapable adults (adopted on 23 February 1999)
- The
relevant parts of this Recommendation read as follows:
Principle 2 – Flexibility in legal response
“1. The measures of protection and
other legal arrangements available for the protection of the personal
and economic interests of incapable adults should be sufficient, in
scope or flexibility, to enable suitable legal response to be made to
different degrees of incapacity and various situations.
...
4. The range of measures of protection should
include, in appropriate cases, those which do not restrict the legal
capacity of the person concerned.”
Principle 3 – Maximum reservation of capacity
“1. The legislative framework should,
so far as possible, recognise that different degrees of incapacity
may exist and that incapacity may vary from time to time.
Accordingly, a measure of protection should not result automatically
in a complete removal of legal capacity. However, a restriction of
legal capacity should be possible where it is shown to be necessary
for the protection of the person concerned.
2. In particular, a measure of protection
should not automatically deprive the person concerned of the right to
vote, or to make a will, or to consent or refuse consent to any
intervention in the health field, or to make other decisions of a
personal character at any time when his or her capacity permits him
or her to do so. ...”
Principle 6 – Proportionality
“1. Where a measure of protection is
necessary it should be proportional to the degree of capacity of the
person concerned and tailored to the individual circumstances and
needs of the person concerned.
2. The measure of protection should interfere
with the legal capacity, rights and freedoms of the person concerned
to the minimum extent which is consistent with achieving the purpose
of the intervention. ...”
Principle 13 – Right to be heard in person
“The person concerned should have the right to be
heard in person in any proceedings which could affect his or her
legal capacity.”
Principle 14 – Duration, review and appeal
“1. Measures of protection should,
whenever possible and appropriate, be of limited duration.
Consideration should be given to the institution of periodical
reviews.
...
3. There should be adequate rights of
appeal.”
C. Reports on visits to Bulgaria by the European
Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (CPT)
1. The CPT’s report on its visit from 16 to 22
December 2003, published on 24 June 2004
- This
report outlines the situation of persons placed by the public
authorities in social care homes for people with mental disorders or
mental deficiency, which are under the authority of the Ministry of
Labour and Social Policy. Part II.4 of the report is devoted to the
Pastra social care home.
- The
CPT noted that the home’s official capacity was 105; it had 92
registered male residents, of whom eighty-six were present at the
time of the visit. Two residents had absconded and the others were on
home leave. Some 90% of the residents were suffering from
schizophrenia and the remainder had a mental deficiency. The majority
had spent many years in the institution, discharges being quite
uncommon.
- According
to the CPT’s findings, the premises of the Pastra social care
home were in a deplorable state of repair and hygiene and the home
was inadequately heated.
- In
particular, the buildings did not have running water. The residents
washed in cold water in the yard and were often unshaven and dirty.
The bathroom, to which they had access once a week, was rudimentary
and dilapidated.
- The
toilets, likewise located in the yard, consisted of decrepit shelters
with holes dug in the ground. They were in an execrable state and
access to them was dangerous. Furthermore, basic toiletries were
rarely available.
- The
report notes that the provision of food was inadequate. Residents
received three meals a day, including 750 g of bread. Milk and eggs
were never on offer, and fresh fruit and vegetables were rarely
available. No provision was made for special diets.
- The
only form of treatment at the home consisted of the provision of
medicines. The residents, who were treated as chronic psychiatric
patients in need of maintenance therapy, were registered as
outpatients with a psychiatrist in Dupnitsa. The psychiatrist visited
the home once every two to three months, and also on request. In
addition, residents could be taken to the psychiatrist – who
held weekly surgeries in the nearby town of Rila – if changes
in their mental condition were observed. All residents underwent a
psychiatric examination twice a year, which was an occasion for them
to have their medication reviewed and, if necessary, adjusted. Nearly
all residents received psychiatric medication, which was recorded on
a special card and administered by the nurses.
- Apart
from the administration of medication, no therapeutic activities were
organised for residents, who led passive, monotonous lives.
- The
CPT concluded that these conditions had created a situation which
could be said to amount to inhuman and degrading treatment. It
requested the Bulgarian authorities to replace the Pastra social care
home as a matter of urgency. In their response of 13 February 2004
the Bulgarian authorities acknowledged that the home was not in
conformity with European care standards. They stated that it would be
closed as a priority and that the residents would be transferred to
other institutions.
- The
CPT further observed, in part II.7 of its report, that in most cases,
placement of people with mental disabilities in a specialised
institution led to a de facto deprivation of liberty. The
placement procedure should therefore be surrounded by appropriate
safeguards, among them an objective medical, and in particular
psychiatric, assessment. It was also essential that these persons
should have the right to bring proceedings by which the lawfulness of
their placement could be decided speedily by a court. The CPT
recommended that such a right be guaranteed in Bulgaria (see
paragraph 52 of the report).
2. The CPT’s report on its visit from 10 to 21
September 2006, published on 28 February 2008
- In
this report the CPT again recommended that provision be made for the
introduction of judicial review of the lawfulness of placement in a
social care home (see paragraphs 176-177 of the report).
- It
also recommended that efforts be made to ensure that the placement of
residents in homes for people with mental disorders and/or deficiency
conformed fully to the letter and spirit of the law. Contracts for
the provision of social services should specify the legal rights of
residents, including the possibilities for lodging complaints with an
outside authority. Furthermore, residents who were incapable of
understanding the contracts should receive appropriate assistance
(see paragraph 178 of the report).
- Lastly,
the CPT urged the Bulgarian authorities to take the necessary steps
to avoid conflicts of interests arising from the appointment of an
employee of a social care home as the guardian of a resident of the
same institution (see paragraph 179 of the report).
- The
CPT made a further visit to the Pastra social care home during its
periodic visit to Bulgaria in October 2010.
IV. COMPARATIVE LAW
A. Access to a court for restoration of legal capacity
- A
comparative study of the domestic law of twenty Council of Europe
member States indicates that in the vast majority of cases (Croatia,
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Luxembourg, Monaco, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Sweden,
Switzerland and Turkey) the law entitles anyone who has been deprived
of legal capacity to apply directly to the courts for discontinuation
of the measure.
- In
Ukraine, people who have been partially deprived of legal capacity
may themselves apply for the measure to be lifted; this does not
apply to those who have been declared fully incapable, who may
nevertheless challenge before a court any measures taken by their
guardian.
- Judicial
proceedings for the discontinuation of an order depriving a person of
legal capacity cannot be instituted directly by the person concerned
in Latvia (where an application may be made by the public prosecutor
or the guardianship council) or Ireland.
B. Placement of legally incapacitated persons in a
specialised institution
- A
comparative-law study of the legislation of twenty States Parties to
the Convention shows that there is no uniform approach in Europe to
the question of placement of legally incapacitated persons in
specialised institutions, particularly as regards the authority
competent to order the placement and the guarantees afforded to the
person concerned. It may nevertheless be observed that in some
countries (Austria, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Poland, Portugal and Turkey) the decision to place a person in a home
on a long-term basis against his or her will is taken directly or
approved by a judge.
- Other
legal systems (Belgium, Denmark, Hungary, Ireland, Latvia,
Luxembourg, Monaco and the United Kingdom) authorise the guardian,
close relatives or the administrative authorities to decide on
placement in a specialised institution without a judge’s
approval being necessary. It also appears that in all the
above-mentioned countries, the placement is subject to a number of
substantive requirements, relating in particular to the person’s
health, the existence of a danger or risk and/or the production of
medical certificates. In addition, the obligation to interview or
consult the person concerned on the subject of the placement, the
setting of a time-limit by law or by the courts for the termination
or review of the placement, and the possibility of legal assistance
are among the safeguards provided in several national legal systems.
- In
certain countries (Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Ireland, Latvia, Poland, Slovakia, Switzerland and Turkey) the
possibility of challenging the initial placement order before a
judicial body is available to the person concerned without requiring
the guardian’s consent.
- Lastly,
several States (Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Greece, Ireland,
Latvia, Poland, Switzerland and Turkey) directly empower the person
concerned to apply periodically for judicial review of the lawfulness
of the continued placement.
- It
should also be noted that many countries’ laws on legal
capacity or placement in specialised institutions have recently been
amended (Austria: 2007; Denmark: 2007; Estonia: 2005; Finland: 1999;
France: 2007; Germany: 1992; Greece: 1992; Hungary: 2004; Latvia:
2006; Poland: 2007; Ukraine: 2000; United Kingdom: 2005) or are in
the process of amendment (Ireland). These legislative reforms are
designed to increase the legal protection of persons lacking legal
capacity by affording them either the right of direct access to court
for a review of their status or additional safeguards when they are
placed in specialised institutions against their will.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant submitted that his placement in the Pastra social care home
was in breach of Article 5 § 1 of the Convention.
Article
5 § 1 provides:
“1. Everyone has the right to liberty
and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save
in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed
by law:
(a) the lawful detention of a person after
conviction by a competent court;
(b) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person for non-compliance with the lawful order of a court or in
order to secure the fulfilment of any obligation prescribed by law;
(c) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person effected for the purpose of bringing him before the competent
legal authority on reasonable suspicion of having committed an
offence or when it is reasonably considered necessary to prevent his
committing an offence or fleeing after having done so;
(d) the detention of a minor by lawful order
for the purpose of educational supervision or his lawful detention
for the purpose of bringing him before the competent legal authority;
(e) the lawful detention of persons for the
prevention of the spreading of infectious diseases, of persons of
unsound mind, alcoholics or drug addicts or vagrants;
(f) the lawful arrest or detention of a
person to prevent his effecting an unauthorised entry into the
country or of a person against whom action is being taken with a view
to deportation or extradition.”
A. Preliminary remarks
- The
Grand Chamber observes that the Government maintained before it the
objection they raised before the Chamber alleging failure to exhaust
domestic remedies in respect of the complaint under Article 5 §
1.
- The
objection was based on the following arguments. Firstly, the
applicant could at any time have applied personally to a court for
restoration of his legal capacity, under Article 277 of the CCP, and
release from guardianship would have allowed him to leave the home of
his own accord. Secondly, his close relatives had not availed
themselves of the possibility open to some of them, under Articles
113 and 115 of the FC, of asking the guardianship authority to
replace his guardian. According to the Government, in the event of a
refusal the applicants’ relatives could have applied to a
court, which would have considered the merits of the request and, if
appropriate, appointed a new guardian, who would then have been able
to terminate the placement agreement. The Government also submitted
in substance that the applicant’s close relatives could have
challenged the contract signed between the guardian R.P. and the
Pastra social care home. Lastly, they indicated that the applicant
himself could have requested the guardianship authority to appoint an
ad hoc representative on account of his alleged conflict of
interests with his guardian, with a view to requesting to leave the
institution and establish his home elsewhere (Article 123, paragraph
1, of the FC).
- The
Grand Chamber observes that in its admissibility decision of 29 June
2010 the Chamber found that this objection raised questions that were
closely linked to those arising in relation to the applicant’s
complaint under Article 5 § 4 and therefore joined the objection
to its examination of the merits under that provision.
- In
addition, finding that the question whether there had been a
“deprivation of liberty” within the meaning of Article 5
§ 1 in the present case was closely linked to the merits of the
complaint under that provision, the Chamber likewise joined that
issue to its examination of the merits. The Grand Chamber sees no
reason to call into question the Chamber’s findings on these
issues.
B. Whether the applicant was deprived of his liberty
within the meaning of Article 5 § 1
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicant
- The
applicant contended that although under domestic law, placement of
people with mental disorders in a social care institution was
regarded as “voluntary”, his transfer to the Pastra
social care home constituted a deprivation of liberty. He maintained
that, as in the case of Storck v. Germany (no. 61603/00, ECHR
2005 V), the objective and subjective elements of detention were
present in his case.
- With
regard to the nature of the measure, the applicant submitted that
living in a social care home in a remote mountain location amounted
to physical isolation from society. He could not have chosen to leave
on his own initiative since, having no identity papers or money, he
would soon have faced the risk of being stopped by the police for a
routine check, a widespread practice in Bulgaria.
- Absences
from the social care home were subject to permission. The distance of
approximately 420 km between the institution and his home town and
the fact that he had no access to his invalidity pension had made it
impossible for him to travel to Ruse any more than three times. The
applicant further submitted that he had been denied permission to
travel on many other occasions by the home’s management. He
added that, in accordance with a practice with no legal basis,
residents who left the premises for longer than the authorised period
were treated as fugitives and were searched for by the police. He
stated in that connection that on one occasion the police had
arrested him in Ruse and that, although they had not taken him back
to the home, the fact that the director had asked for him to be
located and transferred back had amounted to a decisive restriction
on his right to personal liberty. He stated that he had been arrested
and detained by the police pending the arrival of staff from the home
to collect him, without having been informed of the grounds for
depriving him of his liberty. Since he had been transferred back
under duress, it was immaterial that those involved had been
employees of the home.
- The
applicant further noted that his placement in the home had already
lasted more than eight years and that his hopes of leaving one day
were futile, as the decision had to be approved by his guardian.
- As
to the consequences of his placement, the applicant highlighted the
severity of the regime to which he was subject. His occupational
activities, treatment and movements had been subject to thorough and
practical supervision by the home’s employees. He had been
required to follow a strict daily routine, getting up, going to bed
and eating at set times. He had had no free choice as to his
clothing, the preparation of his meals, participation in cultural
events or the development of relations with other people, including
intimate relationships as the home’s residents were all men. He
had been allowed to watch television in the morning only.
Accordingly, his stay in the home had caused a perceptible
deterioration in his well-being and the onset of institutionalisation
syndrome, in other words the inability to reintegrate into the
community and lead a normal life.
- With
regard to the subjective element, the applicant submitted that his
situation differed from that examined in H.M. v. Switzerland
(no. 39187/98, ECHR 2002 II), in which the applicant had
consented to her placement in a nursing home. He himself had never
given such consent. His guardian at the time, Ms R.P. (see paragraph
12 above), had not consulted him on the placement and, moreover, he
did not even know her; nor had he been informed of the existence of
the placement agreement of 10 December 2002 (see paragraph 14 above),
which he had never signed. Those circumstances reflected a widespread
practice in Bulgaria whereby once people were deprived of legal
capacity, even partially, they were deemed incapable of expressing
their wishes. In addition, it was clear from the medical documents
that the applicant’s desire to leave the home had been
interpreted not as a freely expressed wish, but rather as a symptom
of his mental illness.
- Lastly,
in the case of H.M. v. Switzerland (cited above) the
authorities had based their decision to place the applicant in a
nursing home on a thorough examination showing that the living
conditions in her own home had severely deteriorated as a result of
her lack of cooperation with a social welfare authority. By contrast,
the applicant in the present case had never been offered and had
never refused alternative social care at home.
(b) The Government
- In
their written observations before the Chamber, the Government
accepted that the circumstances of the case amounted to a
“deprivation of liberty” within the meaning of Article 5
§ 1 of the Convention. However, at the hearing and in the
proceedings before the Grand Chamber, they contended that Article 5
was not applicable. They observed in that connection that the
applicant had not been compulsorily admitted to a psychiatric
institution by the public authorities under the Public Health Act,
but had been housed in a social care home at his guardian’s
request, on the basis of a civil-law agreement and in accordance with
the rules on social assistance. Thus, persons in need of assistance,
including those with mental disorders, could request various social
and medical services, either directly or through their
representatives, under the Social Assistance Act 1998 (see paragraphs
57-60 above). Homes for adults with mental disorders offered a wide
range of services of this kind and placement in such institutions
could not be seen as a deprivation of liberty.
- As
to the particular circumstances of the case, the Government
emphasised that the applicant had never expressly and consciously
objected to his placement in the home, and it could not therefore be
concluded that the measure had been involuntary. Furthermore, he had
been free to leave the home at any time.
- In
addition, the applicant had been encouraged to work in the village
restaurant to the best of his abilities and had been granted leave of
absence on three occasions. The reason why he had twice returned from
Ruse before the end of his authorised period of leave (see paragraph
27 above) was his lack of accommodation. The Government further
submitted that the applicant had never been brought back to the home
by the police. They acknowledged that in September 2006 the director
had been obliged to ask the police to search for him because he had
not come back (see paragraph 28 above). However, it was clear from
the case of Dodov v. Bulgaria (no. 59548/00, 17 January
2008) that the State had a positive obligation to take care of people
housed in social care homes. In the Government’s submission,
the steps taken by the director had formed part of this duty of
protection.
- The
Government further observed that the applicant had lacked legal
capacity and had not had the benefit of a supportive family
environment, accommodation or sufficient resources to lead an
independent life. Referring in that connection to the judgments in
H.M. v. Switzerland (cited above) and Nielsen v. Denmark
(28 November 1988, Series A no. 144), they submitted that
the applicant’s placement in the home was simply a protective
measure taken in his interests alone and constituted an appropriate
response to a social and medical emergency; such a response could not
be viewed as involuntary.
(c) The third party
- Interights
made the following general observations. It stated that it had
carried out a survey of practices regarding placement of people with
mental disorders in specialised institutions in central and east
European countries. According to the conclusions of the survey, in
most cases placement in such institutions could be regarded as
amounting to a de facto deprivation of liberty.
- Social
care homes were often located in rural or mountainous areas which
were not easily accessible. Where they were situated near urban
areas, they were surrounded by high walls or fences and the gates
were kept locked. As a rule, residents were able to leave the
premises only with the express permission of the director of the
home, and for a limited period. In cases of unauthorised leave, the
police had the power to search for and return the persons concerned.
The same restrictive regime applied to all residents, without any
distinction according to legal status – whether they had full,
partial or no legal capacity – and in the view of Interights,
this was a decisive factor. No consideration at all was given to
whether the placement was voluntary or involuntary.
- Regarding
the analysis of the subjective aspect of the placement, Interights
submitted that the consent of the persons concerned was a matter
requiring careful attention. Thorough efforts should be made to
ascertain their true wishes, notwithstanding any declaration of legal
incapacity that might have been made in their case. Interights
contended that in reality, when faced with a choice between a
precarious, homeless existence and the relative security offered by a
social care home, incapable persons in central and east European
countries might opt for the latter solution, simply because no
alternative services were offered by the State’s social welfare
system. That did not mean, however, that the persons concerned could
be said to have freely consented to the placement.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
- The
Court reiterates that the difference between deprivation of liberty
and restrictions on liberty of movement, the latter being governed by
Article 2 of Protocol No. 4, is merely one of degree or intensity,
and not one of nature or substance. Although the process of
classification into one or other of these categories sometimes proves
to be no easy task in that some borderline cases are a matter of pure
opinion, the Court cannot avoid making the selection upon which the
applicability or inapplicability of Article 5 depends (see Guzzardi
v. Italy, 6 November 1980, §§ 92-93, Series A
no. 39). In order to determine whether someone has been deprived of
his liberty, the starting point must be his concrete situation and
account must be taken of a whole range of criteria such as the type,
duration, effects and manner of implementation of the measure in
question (see Storck, cited above, § 71, and Guzzardi,
cited above, § 92).
- In the context of deprivation of liberty on
mental-health grounds, the Court has held that a person could be
regarded as having been “detained” even during a period
when he was in an open hospital ward with regular unescorted access
to the unsecured hospital grounds and the possibility of unescorted
leave outside the hospital (see Ashingdane v. the United Kingdom,
28 May 1985, § 42, Series A no. 93).
- Furthermore,
in relation to the placement of mentally disordered persons in an
institution, the Court has held that the notion of deprivation of
liberty does not only comprise the objective element of a person’s
confinement in a particular restricted space for a not negligible
length of time. A person can only be considered to have been deprived
of his liberty if, as an additional subjective element, he has not
validly consented to the confinement in question (see Storck,
cited above, § 74).
- The
Court has found that there was a deprivation of liberty in
circumstances such as the following: (a) where the applicant, who had
been declared legally incapable and admitted to a psychiatric
hospital at his legal representative’s request, had
unsuccessfully attempted to leave the hospital (see Shtukaturov v.
Russia, no. 44009/05, § 108, 27 March 2008); (b) where the
applicant had initially consented to her admission to a clinic but
had subsequently attempted to escape (see Storck, cited
above, § 76); and (c) where the applicant was an adult
incapable of giving his consent to admission to a psychiatric
institution which, nonetheless, he had never attempted to leave (see
H.L. v. the United Kingdom, no. 45508/99, §§ 89-94,
ECHR 2004 IX).
- The
Court has also held that the right to liberty is too important in a
democratic society for a person to lose the benefit of Convention
protection for the single reason that he may have given himself up to
be taken into detention (see De Wilde, Ooms and Versyp v. Belgium,
18 June 1971, §§ 64-65, Series A no. 12), especially when
it is not disputed that that person is legally incapable of
consenting to, or disagreeing with, the proposed action (see H.L.
v. the United Kingdom, cited above, § 90).
- In
addition, the Court has had occasion to observe that the first
sentence of Article 5 § 1 must be construed as laying down a
positive obligation on the State to protect the liberty of those
within its jurisdiction. Otherwise, there would be a sizeable gap in
the protection from arbitrary detention, which would be inconsistent
with the importance of personal liberty in a democratic society. The
State is therefore obliged to take measures providing effective
protection of vulnerable persons, including reasonable steps to
prevent a deprivation of liberty of which the authorities have or
ought to have knowledge (see Storck, cited above, § 102).
Thus, having regard to the particular circumstances of the cases
before it, the Court has held that the national authorities’
responsibility was engaged as a result of detention in a psychiatric
hospital at the request of the applicant’s guardian (see
Shtukaturov, cited above) and detention in a private
clinic (see Storck, cited above).
(b) Application of these principles in the
present case
- The
Court observes at the outset that it is unnecessary in the present
case to determine whether, in general terms, any placement of a
legally incapacitated person in a social care institution constitutes
a “deprivation of liberty” within the meaning of Article
5 § 1. In some cases, the placement is initiated by families who
are also involved in the guardianship arrangements and is based on
civil-law agreements signed with an appropriate social care
institution. Accordingly, any restrictions on liberty in such cases
are the result of actions by private individuals and the authorities’
role is limited to supervision. The Court is not called upon in the
present case to rule on the obligations that may arise under the
Convention for the authorities in such situations.
- It
observes that there are special circumstances in the present case. No
members of the applicant’s family were involved in his
guardianship arrangements, and the duties of guardian were assigned
to a State official (Ms R.P.), who negotiated and signed the
placement agreement with the Pastra social care home without any
contact with the applicant, whom she had in fact never met. The
placement agreement was implemented in a State-run institution by the
social services, which likewise did not interview the applicant (see
paragraphs 12-15 above). The applicant was never consulted about his
guardian’s choices, even though he could have expressed a valid
opinion and his consent was necessary in accordance with the Persons
and Family Act 1949 (see paragraph 42 above). That being so, he was
not transferred to the Pastra social care home at his request or on
the basis of a voluntary private-law agreement on admission to an
institution to receive social assistance and protection. The Court
considers that the restrictions complained of by the applicant are
the result of various steps taken by public authorities and
institutions through their officials, from the initial request for
his placement in an institution and throughout the implementation of
the relevant measure, and not of acts or initiatives by private
individuals. Although there is no indication that the applicant’s
guardian acted in bad faith, the above considerations set the present
case apart from Nielsen (cited above), in which the
applicant’s mother committed her son, a minor, to a psychiatric
institution in good faith, which prompted the Court to find that the
measure in question entailed the exercise of exclusive custodial
rights over a child who was not capable of expressing a valid
opinion.
- The
applicant’s placement in the social care home can therefore be
said to have been attributable to the national authorities. It
remains to be determined whether the restrictions resulting from that
measure amounted to a “deprivation of liberty” within the
meaning of Article 5.
- With
regard to the objective aspect, the Court observes that the applicant
was housed in a block which he was able to leave, but emphasises that
the question whether the building was locked is not decisive (see
Ashingdane, cited above, § 42). While it is true that the
applicant was able to go to the nearest village, he needed express
permission to do so (see paragraph 25 above). Moreover, the time he
spent away from the home and the places where he could go were always
subject to controls and restrictions.
- The
Court further notes that between 2002 and 2009 the applicant was
granted leave of absence for three short visits (of about ten days)
to Ruse (see paragraphs 26-28 above). It cannot speculate as to
whether he could have made more frequent visits had he asked to do
so. Nevertheless, it observes that such leave of absence was entirely
at the discretion of the home’s management, who kept the
applicant’s identity papers and administered his finances,
including transport costs (see paragraphs 25-26 above). Furthermore,
it would appear to the Court that the home’s location in a
mountain region far away from Ruse (some 400 km) made any
journey difficult and expensive for the applicant in view of his
income and his ability to make his own travel arrangements.
- The
Court considers that this system of leave of absence and the fact
that the management kept the applicant’s identity papers placed
significant restrictions on his personal liberty.
- Moreover,
it is not disputed that when the applicant did not return from leave
of absence in 2006, the home’s management asked the Ruse police
to search for and return him (see paragraph 28 above). The Court can
accept that such steps form part of the responsibilities assumed by
the management of a home for people with mental disorders towards its
residents. It further notes that the police did not escort the
applicant back and that he has not proved that he was arrested
pending the arrival of staff from the home. Nevertheless, since his
authorised period of leave had expired, the staff returned him to the
home without regard for his wishes.
- Accordingly,
although the applicant was able to undertake certain journeys, the
factors outlined above lead the Court to consider that, contrary to
what the Government maintained, he was under constant supervision and
was not free to leave the home without permission whenever he wished.
With reference to the Dodov case (cited above), the Government
maintained that the restrictions in issue had been necessary in view
of the authorities’ positive obligations to protect the
applicant’s life and health. The Court notes that in the
above-mentioned case, the applicant’s mother suffered from
Alzheimer’s disease and that, as a result, her memory and other
mental capacities had progressively deteriorated, to the extent that
the nursing home staff had been instructed not to leave her
unattended. In the present case, however, the Government have not
shown that the applicant’s state of health was such as to put
him at immediate risk, or to require the imposition of any special
restrictions to protect his life and limb.
- As
regards the duration of the measure, the Court observes that it was
not specified and was thus indefinite since the applicant was listed
in the municipal registers as having his permanent address at the
home, where he still remains (having lived there for more than eight
years). This period is sufficiently lengthy for him to have felt the
full adverse effects of the restrictions imposed on him.
- As
to the subjective aspect of the measure, it should be noted that,
contrary to the requirements of domestic law (see paragraph 42
above), the applicant was not asked to give his opinion on his
placement in the home and never explicitly consented to it. Instead,
he was taken to Pastra by ambulance and placed in the home without
being informed of the reasons for or duration of that measure, which
had been taken by his officially assigned guardian. The Court
observes in this connection that there are situations where the
wishes of a person with impaired mental faculties may validly be
replaced by those of another person acting in the context of a
protective measure and that it is sometimes difficult to ascertain
the true wishes or preferences of the person concerned. However, the
Court has already held that the fact that a person lacks legal
capacity does not necessarily mean that he is unable to comprehend
his situation (see Shtukaturov, cited above, § 108). In
the present case, domestic law attached a certain weight to the
applicant’s wishes and it appears that he was well aware of his
situation. The Court notes that, at least from 2004, the applicant
explicitly expressed his desire to leave the Pastra social care home,
both to psychiatrists and through his applications to the authorities
to have his legal capacity restored and to be released from
guardianship (see paragraphs 37-41 above).
- These
factors set the present case apart from H.M. v. Switzerland
(cited above), in which the Court found that there had been no
deprivation of liberty as the applicant had been placed in a nursing
home purely in her own interests and, after her arrival there, had
agreed to stay. In that connection the Government have not shown that
in the present case, on arrival at the Pastra social care home or at
any later date, the applicant agreed to stay there. That being so,
the Court is not convinced that the applicant consented to the
placement or accepted it tacitly at a later stage and throughout his
stay.
- Having
regard to the particular circumstances of the present case,
especially the involvement of the authorities in the decision to
place the applicant in the home and its implementation, the rules on
leave of absence, the duration of the placement and the applicant’s
lack of consent, the Court concludes that the situation under
examination amounts to a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of
Article 5 § 1 of the Convention. Accordingly, that provision is
applicable.
C. Whether the applicant’s placement in the
Pastra social care home was compatible with Article 5 §
1
1. The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicant
- The
applicant submitted that, since he had not consented to his placement
in the Pastra social care home and had not signed the agreement drawn
up between his guardian and the home, the agreement was in breach of
the Persons and Family Act. He added that he had not been informed of
the agreement’s existence at the time of his placement and that
he had remained unaware of it for a long time afterwards. Nor had he
had any opportunity to challenge this step taken by his guardian.
Although the guardian had been required by Article 126 of the Family
Code to report on her activities to the guardianship authority (the
mayor), the latter was not empowered to take any action against her.
Furthermore, no report had ever been drawn up in respect of the
applicant, and his guardians had never been called to account for
that shortcoming.
- The
applicant further argued that his placement in a home for people with
mental disorders did not fall within any of the grounds on which
deprivation of liberty could be justified for the purposes of Article
5. The measure in question had not been justified by the need to
ensure public safety or by the inability of the person concerned to
cope outside the institution. In support of that contention, the
applicant argued that the director of the home had deemed him capable
of integrating into the community and that attempts had been made to
bring him closer to his family, albeit to no avail. Accordingly, the
authorities had based their decision to place him in the home on the
simple fact that his family were not prepared to take care of him and
he needed social assistance. They had not examined whether the
necessary assistance could be provided through alternative measures
that were less restrictive of his personal liberty. Such measures
were, moreover, quite conceivable since Bulgarian legislation made
provision for a wide range of social services, such as personal
assistance, social rehabilitation centres and special allowances and
pensions. The authorities had thus failed to strike a fair balance
between the applicant’s social needs and his right to liberty.
It would be arbitrary, and contrary to the purpose of Article 5, for
detention to be based on purely social considerations.
- Should
the Court take the view that the placement fell within the scope of
Article 5 § 1 (e), by which persons of unsound mind could be
deprived of their liberty, the applicant submitted that the national
authorities had not satisfied the requirements of that provision. In
the absence of a recent psychiatric assessment, it was clear that his
placement in the home had not pursued the aim of providing him with
medical treatment and had been based solely on medical documents
produced in the context of the proceedings for his legal
incapacitation. The documents had been issued approximately a year
and a half beforehand and had not strictly concerned his placement in
an institution for people with mental disorders. Relying on Varbanov
v. Bulgaria (no. 31365/96, § 47, ECHR 2000-X), the applicant
stated that he had been placed in the Pastra social care home without
having undergone any assessment of his mental health at that time.
(b) The Government
- The
Government submitted that the applicant’s placement in the home
complied with domestic law as the guardian had signed an agreement
whereby the applicant was to receive social services in his own
interests. She had therefore acted in accordance with her
responsibilities and had discharged her duty to protect the person
under partial guardianship.
- Bearing
in mind that the sole purpose of the placement had been to provide
the applicant with social services under the Social Assistance Act
and not to administer compulsory medical treatment, the Government
submitted that this measure was not governed by Article 5 § 1
(e) of the Convention. In that connection, the authorities had taken
into account his financial and family situation, that is to say, his
lack of resources and the absence of close relatives able to assist
him on a day-to-day basis.
- The
Government noted at the same time that the applicant could in any
event be regarded as a “person of unsound mind” within
the meaning of Article 5 § 1 (e). The medical assessment carried
out during the proceedings for his legal incapacitation in 2000
showed clearly that he was suffering from mental disorders and that
it was therefore legitimate for the authorities to place him in an
institution for people with similar problems. Lastly, relying on the
Ashingdane judgment (cited above, § 44), the Government
submitted that there was an adequate link between the reason given
for the placement, namely the applicant’s state of health, and
the institution in which he had been placed. Accordingly, they
contended that the measure in issue had not been in breach of Article
5 § 1 (e).
(c) The third party
- On
the basis of the study referred to in paragraphs 112-114 above,
Interights submitted that in central and east European countries, the
placement of mentally disordered persons in a social care home was
viewed solely in terms of social protection and was governed by
contractual law. Since such placements were not regarded as a form of
deprivation of liberty under domestic law, the procedural safeguards
available in relation to involuntary psychiatric confinement were not
applicable.
- Interights
contended that situations of this nature were comparable to that
examined in the case of H.L. v. the United Kingdom (cited
above), in which criticism had been levelled at the system prior to
2007 in the United Kingdom, whereby the common-law doctrine of
necessity had permitted the “informal” detention of
compliant incapacitated persons with mental disorders. The Court had
held that the lack of any fixed procedural rules on the admission and
detention of such persons was striking. In its view, the contrast
between this dearth of regulation and the extensive network of
safeguards applicable to formal psychiatric committals covered by
mental health legislation was significant. In the absence of a
formalised admission procedure, indicating who could propose
admission, for what reasons and on what basis, and given the lack of
indication as to the length of the detention or the nature of
treatment or care, the hospital’s health-care professionals had
assumed full control of the liberty and treatment of a vulnerable
incapacitated person solely on the basis of their own clinical
assessments completed as and when they saw fit. While not doubting
that those professionals had acted in good faith and in the
applicant’s best interests, the Court had observed that the
very purpose of procedural safeguards was to protect individuals
against any misjudgments and professional lapses (H.L. v. the
United Kingdom, cited above, §§ 120 121).
- Interights
urged the Court to remain consistent with that approach and to find
that in the present case the informal nature of admission to and
continued detention in a social care home was at odds with the
guarantees against arbitrariness under Article 5. The courts had not
been involved at any stage of the proceedings and no other
independent body had been assigned the task of monitoring the
institutions in question. The lack of regulation coupled with the
vulnerability of mentally disordered persons facilitated abuses of
fundamental rights in a context of extremely limited supervision.
- The
third party further submitted that in most cases of this kind,
placements were automatic as there were few possibilities of
alternative social assistance. It contended that the authorities
should be under a practical obligation to provide for appropriate
measures that were less restrictive of personal liberty but were
nonetheless capable of ensuring medical care and social services for
mentally disordered persons. This would be a means of applying the
principle that the rights guaranteed by the Convention should not be
theoretical or illusory but practical and effective.
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
- The
Court reiterates that in order to comply with Article 5 § 1, the
detention in issue must first of all be “lawful”,
including the observance of a procedure prescribed by law; in this
respect the Convention refers back essentially to national law and
lays down the obligation to conform to the substantive and procedural
rules thereof. It requires in addition, however, that any deprivation
of liberty should be consistent with the purpose of Article 5, namely
to protect individuals from arbitrariness (see Herczegfalvy v.
Austria, 24 September 1992, § 63, Series A no. 244).
Furthermore, the detention of an individual is such a serious measure
that it is only justified where other, less severe measures have been
considered and found to be insufficient to safeguard the individual
or public interest which might require that the person concerned be
detained. That means that it does not suffice that the deprivation of
liberty is in conformity with national law; it must also be necessary
in the circumstances (see Witold Litwa v. Poland, no.
26629/95, § 78, ECHR 2000 III).
- In
addition, sub-paragraphs (a) to (f) of Article 5 § 1 contain an
exhaustive list of permissible grounds of deprivation of liberty;
such a measure will not be lawful unless it falls within one of those
grounds (ibid., § 49; see also, in particular, Saadi v. the
United Kingdom [GC], no. 13229/03, § 43, 29 January
2008, and Jendrowiak v. Germany,
no. 30060/04, § 31, 14 April 2011).
- As
regards the deprivation of liberty of mentally disordered persons, an
individual cannot be deprived of his liberty as being of “unsound
mind” unless the following three minimum conditions are
satisfied: firstly, he must reliably be shown to be of unsound mind;
secondly, the mental disorder must be of a kind or degree warranting
compulsory confinement; thirdly, the validity of continued
confinement depends upon the persistence of such a disorder (see
Winterwerp v. the Netherlands, 24 October 1979, § 39,
Series A no. 33; Shtukaturov, cited above, § 114; and
Varbanov, cited above, § 45).
- As
to the second of the above conditions, the detention of a mentally
disordered person may be necessary not only where the person needs
therapy, medication or other clinical treatment to cure or alleviate
his condition, but also where the person needs control and
supervision to prevent him, for example, causing harm to himself or
other persons (see Hutchison Reid v. the United Kingdom,
no. 50272/99, § 52, ECHR 2003 IV).
- The
Court further reiterates that there must be some relationship between
the ground of permitted deprivation of liberty relied on and the
place and conditions of detention. In principle, the “detention”
of a person as a mental-health patient will be “lawful”
for the purposes of Article 5 § 1 (e) only if effected
in a hospital, clinic or other appropriate institution authorised for
that purpose (see Ashingdane, cited above, § 44, and
Pankiewicz v. Poland, no. 34151/04, §§ 42-45, 12
February 2008). However, subject to the foregoing, Article 5 § 1
(e) is not in principle concerned with suitable treatment or
conditions (see Ashingdane, cited above, § 44, and
Hutchison Reid, cited above, § 49).
(b) Application of these principles in the
present case
- In
examining whether the applicant’s placement in the Pastra
social care home was lawful for the purposes of Article 5 § 1,
the Court must ascertain whether the measure in question complied
with domestic law, whether it fell within the scope of one of the
exceptions provided for in sub paragraphs (a) to (f) of Article
5 § 1 to the rule of personal liberty, and, lastly, whether it
was justified on the basis of one of those exceptions.
- On
the basis of the relevant domestic instruments (see paragraphs 57-59
above), the Court notes that Bulgarian law envisages placement in a
social care institution as a protective measure taken at the request
of the person concerned and not a coercive one ordered on one of the
grounds listed in sub-paragraphs (a) to (f) of Article 5 § 1.
However, in the particular circumstances of the instant case, the
measure in question entailed significant restrictions on personal
freedom giving rise to a deprivation of liberty with no regard for
the applicant’s will or wishes (see paragraphs 121 132
above).
- As
to whether a procedure prescribed by law was followed, the Court
notes firstly that under domestic law, the guardian of a person
partially lacking legal capacity is not empowered to take legal steps
on that person’s behalf. Any contracts drawn up in such cases
are valid only when signed together by the guardian and the person
under partial guardianship (see paragraph 42 above). The Court
therefore concludes that the decision by the applicant’s
guardian R.P. to place him in a social care home for people with
mental disorders without having obtained his prior consent was
invalid under Bulgarian law. This conclusion is in itself sufficient
for the Court to establish that the applicant’s deprivation of
liberty was contrary to Article 5.
- In
any event, the Court considers that that measure was not lawful
within the meaning of Article 5 § 1 of the Convention since
it was not justified on the basis of any of sub-paragraphs (a) to
(f).
- The
applicant accepted that the authorities had acted mainly on the basis
of the arrangements governing social assistance (see paragraph 134
above). However, he argued that the restrictions imposed amounted to
a deprivation of liberty which had not been warranted by any of the
exceptions provided for in sub-paragraphs (a) to (f) of Article 5 §
1 to the rule of personal liberty. The Government contended that the
applicant’s placement in the home had been intended solely to
protect his interest in receiving social care (see paragraphs 136-137
above). However, they stated that should the Court decide that
Article 5 § 1 was applicable, the measure in question should be
held to comply with sub-paragraph (e) in view of the applicant’s
mental disorder (see paragraph 138 above).
- The
Court notes that the applicant was eligible for social assistance as
he had no accommodation and was unable to work as a result of his
illness. It takes the view that, in certain circumstances, the
welfare of a person with mental disorders might be a further factor
to take into account, in addition to medical evidence, in assessing
whether it is necessary to place the person in an institution.
However, the objective need for accommodation and social assistance
must not automatically lead to the imposition of measures involving
deprivation of liberty. The Court considers that any protective
measure should reflect as far as possible the wishes of persons
capable of expressing their will. Failure to seek their opinion could
give rise to situations of abuse and hamper the exercise of the
rights of vulnerable persons. Therefore, any measure taken without
prior consultation of the interested person will as a rule require
careful scrutiny.
- The
Court is prepared to accept that the applicant’s placement in
the home was the direct consequence of the state of his mental
health, the declaration of his partial incapacity and his placement
under partial guardianship. Some six days after being appointed as
the applicant’s guardian, Ms R.P., without knowing him or
meeting him, decided on the strength of the file to ask the social
services to place him in a home for people with mental disorders. The
social services, for their part, likewise referred to the applicant’s
mental health in finding that the request should be granted. It seems
clear to the Court that if the applicant had not been deprived of
legal capacity on account of his mental disorder, he would not have
been deprived of his liberty. Therefore, the present case should be
examined under sub-paragraph (e) of Article 5 § 1.
- It
remains to be determined whether the applicant’s placement in
the home satisfied the requirements laid down in the Court’s
case-law concerning the detention of mentally disordered persons (see
the principles outlined in paragraph 145 above). In this connection,
the Court reiterates that in deciding whether an individual should be
detained as a “person of unsound mind”, the national
authorities are to be recognised as having a certain discretion since
it is in the first place for them to evaluate the evidence adduced
before them in a particular case; the Court’s task is to review
under the Convention the decisions of those authorities (see
Winterwerp, cited above, § 40, and Luberti v. Italy,
23 February 1984, § 27, Series A no. 75).
- In
the instant case it is true that the expert medical report produced
in the course of the proceedings for the applicant’s legal
incapacitation referred to the disorders from which he was suffering.
However, the relevant examination took place before November 2000,
whereas the applicant was placed in the Pastra social care home on 10
December 2002 (see paragraphs 10 and 14 above). More than two years
thus elapsed between the expert psychiatric assessment relied on by
the authorities and the applicant’s placement in the home,
during which time his guardian did not check whether there had been
any change in his condition and did not meet or consult him. Unlike
the Government (see paragraph 138 above), the Court considers that
this period is excessive and that a medical opinion issued in 2000
cannot be regarded as a reliable reflection of the state of the
applicant’s mental health at the time of his placement. It
should also be noted that the national authorities were not under any
legal obligation to order a psychiatric report at the time of the
placement. The Government explained in that connection that the
applicable provisions were those of the Social Assistance Act and not
those of the Health Act (see paragraphs 57-60 and 137 above).
Nevertheless, in the Court’s view, the lack of a recent medical
assessment would be sufficient to conclude that the applicant’s
placement in the home was not lawful for the purposes of Article 5
§ 1 (e).
- As
a subsidiary consideration, the Court observes that the other
requirements of Article 5 § 1 (e) were not satisfied in the
present case either. As regards the need to justify the placement by
the severity of the disorder, it notes that the purpose of the 2000
medical report was not to examine whether the applicant’s state
of health required his placement in a home for people with mental
disorders, but solely to determine the issue of his legal protection.
While it is true that Article 5 § 1 (e) authorises the
confinement of a person suffering from a mental disorder even where
no medical treatment is necessarily envisaged (see Hutchison Reid,
cited above, § 52), such a measure must be properly justified by
the seriousness of the person’s condition in the interests of
ensuring his or her own protection or that of others. In the present
case, however, it has not been established that the applicant posed a
danger to himself or to others, for example because of his
psychiatric condition; the simple assertion by certain witnesses that
he became aggressive when he drank (see paragraph 10 above) cannot
suffice for this purpose. Nor have the authorities reported any acts
of violence on the applicant’s part during his time in the
Pastra social care home.
- The
Court also notes deficiencies in the assessment of whether the
disorders warranting the applicant’s confinement still
persisted. Although he was under the supervision of a psychiatrist
(see paragraph 31 above), the aim of such supervision was not to
provide an assessment at regular intervals of whether he still needed
to be kept in the Pastra social care home for the purposes of Article
5 § 1 (e). Indeed, no provision was made for such an assessment
under the relevant legislation.
- Having
regard to the foregoing, the Court observes that the applicant’s
placement in the home was not ordered “in accordance with a
procedure prescribed by law” and that his deprivation of
liberty was not justified by sub-paragraph (e) of Article 5 § 1.
Furthermore, the Government have not indicated any of the other
grounds listed in sub paragraphs (a) to (f) which might have
justified the deprivation of liberty in issue in the present case.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 5 § 1.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 4 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that he had been unable to have the lawfulness
of his placement in the Pastra social care home reviewed by a court.
He
relied on Article 5 § 4 of the Convention, which provides:
“Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest
or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the
lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and
his release ordered if the detention is not lawful.”
A. The parties’ submissions
1. The applicant
- The
applicant submitted that domestic law did not provide for any
specific remedies in respect of his situation, such as a periodic
judicial review of the lawfulness of his placement in a home for
people with mental disorders. He added that, since he was deemed
incapable of taking legal action on his own, domestic law did not
afford him the possibility of applying to a court for permission to
leave the Pastra social care home. He stated that he had likewise
been unable to seek to have the placement agreement terminated, in
view of the conflict of interests with his guardian, who at the same
time was the director of the home.
- The
applicant further noted that he had not been allowed to apply to the
courts to initiate the procedure provided for in Article 277 of the
CCP (see paragraph 51 above) and that, moreover, such action would
not have led to a review of the lawfulness of his deprivation of
liberty but solely to a review of the conditions justifying partial
guardianship in his case.
- He
further submitted that the procedure provided for in Articles 113 and
115 of the FC (see paragraphs 49-50 above) in theory afforded his
close relatives the right to ask the mayor to replace the guardian or
to compel the mayor to terminate the placement agreement. However,
this had been an indirect remedy not accessible to him, since his
half-sister and his father’s second wife had not been willing
to initiate such a procedure.
2. The Government
- The
Government submitted that, since the purpose of the applicant’s
placement in the home had been to provide social services, he could
at any time have asked for the placement agreement to be terminated
without the courts needing to be involved. In their submission, in so
far as the applicant alleged a conflict of interests with his
guardian, he could have relied on Article 123, paragraph 1, of the FC
(see paragraph 50 above) and requested the guardianship authority to
appoint an ad hoc representative, who could then have
consented to a change of permanent residence.
- The
Government further contended that the applicant’s close
relatives had not availed themselves of the possibility open to some
of them under Articles 113 and 115 of the FC of requesting the
guardianship authority to replace his guardian or of challenging
steps taken by the latter. They added that in the event of a refusal,
his relatives could have appealed to a court, which would have
considered the merits of the case and, if appropriate, appointed a
new guardian, who could then have terminated the placement agreement.
This, in the Government’s submission, would have enabled them
to challenge in substance the agreement signed between Ms R.P.
and the Pastra social care home.
- Lastly,
the Government submitted that an action for restoration of legal
capacity (under Article 277 of the CCP – see paragraph 51
above) constituted a remedy for the purposes of Article 5 § 4
since, if a sufficient improvement in the applicant’s health
had been observed and he had been released from guardianship, he
would have been free to leave the home.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. General principles
- The
Court reiterates that Article 5 § 4 entitles detained persons to
institute proceedings for a review of compliance with the procedural
and substantive conditions which are essential for the “lawfulness”,
in Convention terms, of their deprivation of liberty. The notion of
“lawfulness” under paragraph 4 of Article 5 has the same
meaning as in paragraph 1, so that a detained person is entitled to a
review of the “lawfulness” of his detention in the light
not only of the requirements of domestic law but also of the
Convention, the general principles embodied therein and the aim of
the restrictions permitted by Article 5 § 1. Article 5 § 4
does not guarantee a right to judicial review of such a scope as to
empower the court, on all aspects of the case including questions of
pure expediency, to substitute its own discretion for that of the
decision-making authority. The review should, however, be wide enough
to bear on those conditions which are essential for the “lawful”
detention of a person according to Article 5 § 1 (see E. v.
Norway, 29 August 1990, § 50, Series A no. 181-A). The
reviewing “court” must not have merely advisory functions
but must have the competence to “decide” the “lawfulness”
of the detention and to order release if the detention is unlawful
(see Ireland v. the United Kingdom, 18 January 1978, §
200, Series A no. 25; Weeks v. the United Kingdom, 2 March
1987, § 61, Series A no. 114; Chahal v. the United Kingdom,
15 November 1996, § 130, Reports of Judgments and Decisions
1996 V; and A. and Others v. the United Kingdom [GC], no.
3455/05, § 202, 19 February 2009).
- The
forms of judicial review satisfying the requirements of Article 5
§ 4 may vary from one domain to another, and will depend on the
type of deprivation of liberty in issue. It is not the Court’s
task to inquire into what would be the most appropriate system in the
sphere under examination (see Shtukaturov, cited above, §
123).
- Nevertheless,
Article 5 § 4 guarantees a remedy that must be accessible to the
person concerned and must afford the possibility of reviewing
compliance with the conditions to be satisfied if the detention of a
person of unsound mind is to be regarded as “lawful” for
the purposes of Article 5 § 1 (e) (see Ashingdane, cited
above, § 52). The Convention requirement for an act of
deprivation of liberty to be amenable to independent judicial
scrutiny is of fundamental importance in the context of the
underlying purpose of Article 5 of the Convention to provide
safeguards against arbitrariness. What is at stake is both the
protection of the physical liberty of individuals and their personal
security (see Varbanov, cited above, § 58). In the case
of detention on the ground of mental illness, special procedural
safeguards may be called for in order to protect the interests of
persons who, on account of their mental disabilities, are not fully
capable of acting for themselves (see, among other authorities,
Winterwerp, cited above, § 60).
- Among
the principles emerging from the Court’s case-law under Article
5 § 4 concerning “persons of unsound mind” are the
following:
(a) a
person detained for an indefinite or lengthy period is in principle
entitled, at any rate where there is no automatic periodic review of
a judicial character, to take proceedings “at reasonable
intervals” before a court to put in issue the “lawfulness”
– within the meaning of the Convention – of his
detention;
(b) Article
5 § 4 requires the procedure followed to have a judicial
character and to afford the individual concerned guarantees
appropriate to the kind of deprivation of liberty in question; in
order to determine whether proceedings provide adequate guarantees,
regard must be had to the particular nature of the circumstances in
which they take place;
(c) the
judicial proceedings referred to in Article 5 § 4 need not
always be attended by the same guarantees as those required under
Article 6 § 1 for civil or criminal litigation. Nonetheless, it
is essential that the person concerned should have access to a court
and the opportunity to be heard either in person or, where necessary,
through some form of representation (see Megyeri v. Germany,
12 May 1992, § 22, Series A no. 237-A).
2. Application of these principles in the present case
- The
Court observes that the Government have not indicated any domestic
remedy capable of affording the applicant the direct opportunity to
challenge the lawfulness of his placement in the Pastra social care
home and the continued implementation of that measure. It also notes
that the Bulgarian courts were not involved at any time or in any way
in the placement and that the domestic legislation does not provide
for automatic periodic judicial review of placement in a home for
people with mental disorders. Furthermore, since the applicant’s
placement in the home is not recognised as a deprivation of liberty
in Bulgarian law (see paragraph 58 above), there is no provision for
any domestic legal remedies by which to challenge its lawfulness in
terms of a deprivation of liberty. In addition, the Court notes that,
according to the domestic courts’ practice, the validity of the
placement agreement could have been challenged on the ground of lack
of consent only on the guardian’s initiative (see paragraph 54
above).
- In
so far as the Government referred to the procedure for restoration of
legal capacity under Article 277 of the CCP (see paragraph 167
above), the Court notes that the purpose of this procedure would not
have been to examine the lawfulness of the applicant’s
placement per se, but solely to review his legal status (see
paragraphs 233-246 below). The Government also referred to the
procedures for reviewing steps taken by the guardian (see paragraphs
165-166 above). The Court considers it necessary to determine whether
such remedies could have given rise to a judicial review of the
lawfulness of the placement as required by Article 5 § 4.
- In
this connection, it notes that the 1985 FC entitled close relatives
of a person under partial guardianship to challenge decisions by the
guardianship authority, which in turn was required to review steps
taken by the guardian – including the placement agreement –
and to replace the latter in the event of failure to discharge his or
her duties (see paragraphs 48-50 above). However, the Court notes
that those remedies were not directly accessible to the applicant.
Moreover, none of the persons theoretically entitled to make use of
them displayed any intention of acting in Mr Stanev’s
interests, and he himself was unable to act on his own initiative
without their approval.
- It
is uncertain whether the applicant could have requested the mayor to
demand explanations from the guardian or to suspend the
implementation of the placement agreement on the ground that it was
invalid. In any event, it appears that since he had been partially
deprived of legal capacity, the law did not entitle him to apply of
his own motion to the courts to challenge steps taken by the mayor
(see paragraph 49 above); this was not disputed by the Government.
- The
same conclusion applies as regards the possibility for the applicant
to ask the mayor to replace his guardian temporarily with an ad
hoc representative on the basis of an alleged conflict of
interests and then to apply for the termination of the placement
agreement. The Court observes in this connection that the mayor has
discretion to determine whether there is a conflict of interests (see
paragraph 50 above). Lastly, it does not appear that the applicant
could have applied of his own motion to the courts for a review on
the merits in the event of the mayor’s refusal to take such
action.
- The
Court therefore concludes that the remedies referred to by the
Government were either inaccessible to the applicant or were not
judicial in nature. Furthermore, none of them can give rise to a
direct review of the lawfulness of the applicant’s placement in
the Pastra social care home in terms of domestic law and the
Convention.
- Having
regard to those considerations, the Court dismisses the Government’s
objection of failure to exhaust domestic remedies (see paragraphs
97-99 above) and finds that there has been a violation of Article 5
§ 4 of the Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 5 § 5 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant submitted that he had not been entitled to compensation for
the alleged violations of his rights under Article 5 §§ 1
and 4 of the Convention.
He
relied on Article 5 § 5, which provides:
“Everyone who has been the victim of arrest or
detention in contravention of the provisions of this Article shall
have an enforceable right to compensation.”
A. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant submitted that the circumstances in which unlawful
detention could give rise to compensation were exhaustively listed in
the State Responsibility for Damage Act 1988 (see paragraphs 62-67
above) and that his own situation was not covered by any of them. He
further complained that there were no legal remedies by which
compensation could be claimed for a violation of Article 5 § 4.
- The
Government maintained that the compensation procedure under the 1988
Act could have been initiated if the applicant’s placement in
the home had been found to have no legal basis. Since the placement
had been found to be consistent with domestic law and with his own
interests, he had not been able to initiate the procedure in
question.
B. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court reiterates that Article 5 § 5 is complied with where it is
possible to apply for compensation in respect of a deprivation of
liberty effected in conditions contrary to paragraphs 1, 2, 3 or 4
(see Wassink v. the Netherlands, 27 September 1990, § 38,
Series A no. 185-A, and Houtman and Meeus v. Belgium, no.
22945/07, § 43, 17 March 2009). The right to compensation set
forth in paragraph 5 therefore presupposes that a violation of one of
the other paragraphs has been established, either by a domestic
authority or by the Convention institutions. In this connection, the
effective enjoyment of the right to compensation guaranteed by
Article 5 § 5 must be ensured with a sufficient degree of
certainty (see Ciulla v. Italy, 22 February 1989, § 44,
Series A no. 148; Sakık and Others v. Turkey, 26 November
1997, § 60, Reports 1997-VII; and N.C. v. Italy [GC],
no. 24952/94, § 49, ECHR 2002 X).
- Turning
to the present case, the Court observes that, regard being had to its
finding of a violation of paragraphs 1 and 4 of Article 5,
paragraph 5 is applicable. It must therefore ascertain whether,
prior to the present judgment, the applicant had an enforceable right
at domestic level to compensation for damage, or whether he will have
such a right following the adoption of this judgment.
- The
Court reiterates in this connection that in order to find a violation
of Article 5 § 5, it has to establish that the finding of a
violation of one of the other paragraphs of Article 5 could not give
rise, either before or after the Court’s judgment, to an
enforceable claim for compensation before the domestic courts (see
Brogan and Others v. the United Kingdom, 29 November
1988, §§ 66-67, Series A no. 145 B).
- Having
regard to the case-law cited above, the Court considers that it must
first be determined whether the violation of Article 5 §§ 1
and 4 found in the present case could have given rise, before the
delivery of this judgment, to an entitlement to compensation before
the domestic courts.
- As
regards the violation of Article 5 § 1, the Court observes that
section 2(1) of the State Responsibility for Damage Act 1988 provides
for compensation for damage resulting from a judicial decision
ordering certain types of detention where the decision has been set
aside as having no legal basis (see paragraph 62 above). However,
that was not the case in this instance. It appears from the case file
that the Bulgarian judicial authorities have not at any stage found
the measure to have been unlawful or otherwise in breach of Article 5
of the Convention. Moreover, the Government’s line of argument
has been that the applicant’s placement in the home was in
accordance with domestic law. The Court therefore concludes that the
applicant was unable to claim any compensation under the
above-mentioned provision in the absence of an acknowledgment by the
national authorities that the placement was unlawful.
- As
to the possibility under section 1 of the same Act of claiming
compensation for damage resulting from unlawful acts by the
authorities (see paragraph 63 above), the Court
observes that the Government have not produced any domestic decisions
indicating that that provision is applicable to cases involving the
placement of people with mental disorders in social care homes on the
basis of civil-law agreements.
- Furthermore,
since no judicial remedy by which to review the lawfulness of the
placement was available under Bulgarian law, the applicant could not
have invoked State liability as a basis for receiving compensation
for the violation of Article 5 § 4.
- The
question then arises whether the judgment in the present case, in
which violations of paragraphs 1 and 4 of Article 5 have been found,
will entitle the applicant to claim compensation under Bulgarian law.
The Court observes that it does not appear from the relevant
legislation that any such remedy exists; nor, indeed, have the
Government submitted any arguments to prove the contrary.
- It
has therefore not been shown the applicant was able to avail himself
prior to the Court’s judgment in the present case, or will be
able to do so after its delivery, of a right to compensation for the
violation of Article 5 §§ 1 and 4.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 5 § 5.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ARTICLE 3 OF THE CONVENTION,
TAKEN ALONE AND IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 13
- The
applicant complained that the living conditions in the Pastra social
care home were poor and that no effective remedy was available under
Bulgarian law in respect of that complaint. He relied on Article 3,
taken alone and in conjunction with Article 13 of the Convention.
These provisions are worded as follows:
Article 3
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
Article 13
“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. Preliminary objection of failure to exhaust domestic
remedies
- In
their memorial before the Grand Chamber the Government for the first
time raised an objection of failure to exhaust domestic remedies in
respect of the complaint under Article 3 of the Convention. They
submitted that the applicant could have obtained compensation for the
living conditions in the home by bringing an action under the State
Responsibility for Damage Act 1988.
- The
Court reiterates that, in accordance with Rule 55 of the Rules of
Court, any plea of inadmissibility must, in so far as its character
and the circumstances permit, be raised by the respondent Contracting
Party in its written or oral observations on the admissibility of the
application (see N.C. v. Italy, cited above, § 44). Where
an objection of failure to exhaust domestic remedies is raised out of
time for the purposes of Rule 55, an estoppel arises and the
objection must accordingly be dismissed (see Velikova v. Bulgaria,
no. 41488/98, § 57, ECHR 2000 VI, and Tanrıbilir
v. Turkey, no. 21422/93, § 59, 16 November 2000).
- In
the present case the Government have not cited any circumstances
justifying their failure to raise the objection in question at the
time of the Chamber’s examination of the admissibility of the
case.
- That
being so, the Court observes that the Government are estopped from
raising this objection, which must accordingly be dismissed.
B. Merits of the complaint under Article 3 of the
Convention
1. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant submitted that the poor living conditions in the Pastra
social care home, in particular the inadequate food, the deplorable
sanitary conditions, the lack of heating, the enforced medical
treatment, the overcrowded bedrooms and the absence of therapeutic
and cultural activities, amounted to treatment prohibited by Article
3.
- He
observed that the Government had already acknowledged in 2004 that
such living conditions did not comply with the relevant European
standards and had undertaken to make improvements (see paragraph 82
above). However, the conditions had remained unchanged, at least
until late 2009.
- In
their observations before the Chamber, the Government acknowledged
the deficiencies in the living conditions at the home. They explained
that the inadequate financial resources set aside for institutions of
this kind formed the main obstacle to ensuring the requisite minimum
standard of living. They also stated that, following an inspection by
the Social Assistance Agency, the authorities had resolved to close
the Pastra social care home and to take steps to improve living
conditions for its residents. In the Government’s submission,
since the living conditions were the same for all the home’s
residents and there had been no intention to inflict ill-treatment,
the applicant had not been subjected to degrading treatment.
- Before
the Grand Chamber the Government stated that renovation work had been
carried out in late 2009 in the part of the home where the applicant
lived (see paragraph 24 above).
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
- Article
3 enshrines one of the most fundamental values of democratic society.
It prohibits in absolute terms torture or inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, irrespective of the circumstances and the
victim’s behaviour (see, among other authorities, Kudła
v. Poland [GC], no. 30210/96, § 90, ECHR 2000-XI,
and Poltoratskiy v. Ukraine, no. 38812/97, § 130,
ECHR 2003 V).
- Ill-treatment
must attain a minimum level of severity if it is to fall within the
scope of Article 3. The assessment of this minimum is, in the nature
of things, relative; it depends on all the circumstances of the case,
such as the nature and context of the treatment, the manner and
method of its execution, its duration, its physical or mental effects
and, in some instances, the sex, age and state of health of the
victim (see Kudła, cited above, § 91, and
Poltoratskiy, cited above, § 131).
- Treatment
has been held by the Court to be “inhuman” because, inter
alia, it was premeditated, was applied for hours at a stretch and
caused either actual bodily injury or intense physical or mental
suffering (see Labita v. Italy [GC], no. 26772/95, § 120,
ECHR 2000 IV). Treatment has been considered “degrading”
when it was such as to arouse in its victims feelings of fear,
anguish and inferiority capable of humiliating and debasing them and
possibly breaking their physical or moral resistance or driving them
to act against their will or conscience (see Jalloh v. Germany
[GC], no. 54810/00, § 68, ECHR 2006 IX). In this
connection, the question whether such treatment was intended to
humiliate or debase the victim is a factor to be taken into account,
although the absence of any such purpose does not inevitably lead to
a finding that there has been no violation of Article 3 (see Peers
v. Greece, no. 28524/95, §§ 67, 68 and 74, ECHR
2001-III, and Kalashnikov v. Russia, no. 47095/99, § 95,
ECHR 2002-VI).
- The
suffering and humiliation involved must in any event go beyond that
inevitable element of suffering or humiliation connected with a given
form of legitimate treatment or punishment. Measures depriving a
person of his liberty may often involve such an element. Yet it
cannot be said that deprivation of liberty in itself raises an issue
under Article 3 of the Convention. Nevertheless, under that Article
the State must ensure that a person is detained in conditions which
are compatible with respect for his human dignity, that the manner
and method of the execution of the measure do not subject him to
distress or hardship of an intensity exceeding the unavoidable level
of suffering inherent in detention and that, given the practical
demands of imprisonment, his health and well-being are adequately
secured by, among other things, providing him with the requisite
medical assistance (see Kudła, cited above, §§
92-94).
- When
assessing the conditions of a deprivation of liberty under Article 3
of the Convention, account has to be taken of their cumulative
effects and the duration of the measure in question (see Kalashnikov,
cited above, §§ 95 and 102; Kehayov v. Bulgaria, no.
41035/98, § 64, 18 January 2005; and Iovchev v. Bulgaria,
no. 41211/98, § 127, 2 February 2006). In this connection, an
important factor to take into account, besides the material
conditions, is the detention regime. In assessing whether a
restrictive regime may amount to treatment contrary to Article 3 in a
given case, regard must be had to the particular conditions, the
stringency of the regime, its duration, the objective pursued and its
effects on the person concerned (see Kehayov, cited above, §
65).
(b) Application of these principles in the
present case
- In
the present case the Court has found that the applicant’s
placement in the Pastra social care home – a situation for
which the domestic authorities must be held responsible –
amounts to a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of Article 5
of the Convention (see paragraph 132 above). It follows that Article
3 is applicable to the applicant’s situation, seeing that it
prohibits the inhuman and degrading treatment of anyone in the care
of the authorities. The Court would emphasise that the prohibition of
ill-treatment in Article 3 applies equally to all forms of
deprivation of liberty, and in particular makes no distinction
according to the purpose of the measure in issue; it is immaterial
whether the measure entails detention ordered in the context of
criminal proceedings or admission to an institution with the aim of
protecting the life or health of the person concerned.
- The
Court notes at the outset that, according to the Government, the
building in which the applicant lives was renovated in late 2009,
resulting in an improvement in his living conditions (see paragraph
200 above); the applicant did not dispute this. The Court therefore
considers that the applicant’s complaint should be taken to
refer to the period between 2002 and 2009. The Government have not
denied that during that period the applicant’s living
conditions corresponded to his description, and have also
acknowledged that, for economic reasons, there were certain
deficiencies in that regard (see paragraphs 198-199 above).
- The
Court observes that although the applicant shared a room measuring 16
square metres with four other residents, he enjoyed considerable
freedom of movement both inside and outside the home, a fact likely
to lessen the adverse effects of a limited sleeping area (see
Valašinas v. Lithuania, no. 44558/98, § 103,
ECHR 2001-VIII).
- Nevertheless,
other aspects of the applicant’s physical living conditions are
a considerable cause for concern. In particular, it appears that the
food was insufficient and of poor quality. The building was
inadequately heated and in winter the applicant had to sleep in his
coat. He was able to have a shower once a week in an unhygienic and
dilapidated bathroom. The toilets were in an execrable state and
access to them was dangerous, according to the findings by the CPT
(see paragraphs 21, 22, 23, 78 and 79 above). In addition, the home
did not return clothes to the same people after they were washed (see
paragraph 21 above), which was likely to arouse a feeling of
inferiority in the residents.
- The
Court cannot overlook the fact that the applicant was exposed to all
the above-mentioned conditions for a considerable period of
approximately seven years. Nor can it ignore the findings of the CPT,
which, after visiting the home, concluded that the living conditions
there at the relevant time could be said to amount to inhuman and
degrading treatment. Despite having been aware of those findings,
during the period from 2002 to 2009 the Government did not act on
their undertaking to close down the institution (see paragraph 82
above). The Court considers that the lack of financial resources
cited by the Government is not a relevant argument to justify keeping
the applicant in the living conditions described (see Poltoratskiy,
cited above, § 148).
- It
would nevertheless emphasise that there is no suggestion that the
national authorities deliberately intended to inflict degrading
treatment. However, as noted above (see paragraph 203), the absence
of any such purpose cannot conclusively rule out a finding of a
violation of Article 3.
- In
conclusion, while noting the improvements apparently made to the
Pastra social care home since late 2009, the Court considers that,
taken as a whole, the living conditions to which the applicant was
exposed during a period of approximately seven years amounted to
degrading treatment.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention.
C. Merits of the complaint under Article 13 in
conjunction with Article 3
1. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant submitted that no domestic remedies, including the claim
for compensation envisaged in the State Responsibility for Damage Act
1988, had been accessible to him without his guardian’s
consent. He pointed out in that connection that he had not had a
guardian for a period of more than two years, between the end of Ms
R.P.’s designated term on 31 December 2002 (see paragraph
12 above) and the appointment of a new guardian on 2 February 2005
(see paragraph 17 above). Moreover, his new guardian was also the
director of the social care home. There would therefore have been a
conflict of interests between the applicant and his guardian in the
event of any dispute concerning the living conditions at the home and
the applicant could not have expected the guardian to support his
allegations.
- In
the Government’s submission, an action for restoration of legal
capacity (see paragraphs 51-52 above) constituted a remedy by which
the applicant could have secured a review of his status, and in the
event of being released from partial guardianship, he could have left
the social care home and ceased to endure the living conditions of
which he complained.
- The
Government added that the applicant could have complained directly
about the living conditions at the Pastra social care home by
bringing an action under section 1 of the State Responsibility for
Damage Act 1988 (see paragraphs 62-67 above).
2. The Court’s assessment
- The
Court refers to its settled case-law to the effect that Article 13
guarantees the existence of a domestic remedy to deal with the
substance of an “arguable complaint” under the Convention
and to grant appropriate relief. Contracting States are afforded some
discretion as to the manner in which they conform to their
obligations under this provision. The scope of the obligation under
Article 13 varies depending on the nature of the applicant’s
complaint under the Convention. Nevertheless, the remedy required by
Article 13 must be “effective” in practice as well as in
law (see McGlinchey and Others v. the United Kingdom, no.
50390/99, § 62, ECHR 2003 V).
- Where,
as in the present case, the Court has found a breach of Article 3,
compensation for the non-pecuniary damage flowing from the breach
should in principle be part of the range of available remedies
(ibid., § 63; and Iovchev, cited above, § 143).
- In
the instant case the Court observes that section 1(1) of the State
Responsibility for Damage Act 1988 has indeed been interpreted by the
domestic courts as being applicable to damage suffered by prisoners
as a result of poor detention conditions (see paragraphs 63-64
above). However, according to the Government’s submissions, the
applicant’s placement in the Pastra social care home is not
regarded as detention under domestic law (see paragraphs 108-111
above). Therefore, he would not have been entitled to compensation
for the poor living conditions in the home. Moreover, there are no
judicial precedents in which this provision has been found to apply
to allegations of poor conditions in social care homes (see paragraph
65 above), and the Government have not adduced any arguments to prove
the contrary. Having regard to those considerations, the Court
concludes that the remedies in question were not effective within the
meaning of Article 13.
- As
to the Government’s reference to the procedure for restoration
of legal capacity (see paragraph 215 above), the Court considers
that, even assuming that, as a result of that remedy, the applicant
had been able to have his legal capacity restored and to leave the
home, he would not have been awarded any compensation for his
treatment during his placement there. Accordingly, the remedy in
question did not afford appropriate redress.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 13 of the Convention, taken
in conjunction with Article 3.
V. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION
- The
applicant alleged that Bulgarian law had not afforded him the
possibility of applying to a court for restoration of his legal
capacity. He relied on Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, the
relevant parts of which read:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ... everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a]
... tribunal ...”
A. Preliminary remarks
- The
Grand Chamber observes that the Government have maintained before it
the objection they raised before the Chamber alleging failure to
exhaust domestic remedies. The objection was based on Article 277
of the CCP, which, according to the Government, entitled the
applicant to apply personally to the courts for restoration of his
legal capacity.
- The
Grand Chamber notes that in its admissibility decision of 29 June
2010 the Chamber observed that the applicant disputed the
accessibility of the remedy which, according to the Government, would
have enabled him to obtain a review of his legal status and that that
argument underpinned his complaint under Article 6 § 1. The
Chamber thus joined the Government’s objection to its
examination of the merits of the complaint in question. The Grand
Chamber sees no reason to depart from the Chamber’s conclusion.
B. Merits
1. The parties’ submissions
- The
applicant maintained that he had been unable personally to institute
proceedings for restoration of his legal capacity under Article 277
of the CCP and that this was borne out by the Supreme Court’s
decision no. 5/79 (see paragraph 51 above). In support of that
argument, he submitted that the Dupnitsa District Court had declined
to examine his application for judicial review of the mayor’s
refusal to bring such proceedings, on the ground that the guardian
had not countersigned the form of authority (see paragraphs 39-40
above).
- In
addition, although an action for restoration of legal capacity had
not been accessible to him, the applicant had attempted to bring such
an action through the public prosecutor’s office, the mayor and
his guardian (the director of the home). However, since no
application to that end had been lodged with the courts, all his
attempts had failed. Accordingly, the applicant had never had the
opportunity to have his case heard by a court.
- The
Government submitted that Article 277 of the CCP had offered the
applicant direct access to a court at any time to have his legal
status reviewed. They pointed out that, contrary to what the
applicant alleged, the Supreme Court’s decision no. 5/79 had
interpreted Article 277 of the CCP as meaning that persons partially
deprived of legal capacity could apply directly to the courts to be
released from guardianship. The only condition for making such an
application was the production of evidence of an improvement in their
condition. However, as was indicated by the medical assessment
carried out at the public prosecutor’s request (see paragraph
37 above), which had concluded that the applicant’s condition
still persisted and that he was incapable of looking after his own
interests, it was clear that the applicant had not had any such
evidence available. The Government thus concluded that the applicant
had not attempted to apply to the court on his own because he had
been unable to substantiate his application.
- The
Government further observed that the courts regularly considered
applications for restoration of legal capacity submitted, for
example, by a guardian (see paragraph 52 above).
2. The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
- The
Court reiterates that Article 6 § 1 secures to everyone the
right to have any claim relating to his or her civil rights and
obligations brought before a court or tribunal (see Golder v. the
United Kingdom, 21 February 1975, § 36, Series A
no. 18). This “right to a court”, of which the right of
access is an aspect, may be relied on by anyone who considers on
arguable grounds that an interference with the exercise of his or her
civil rights is unlawful and complains that no possibility was
afforded to submit that claim to a court meeting the requirements of
Article 6 § 1 (see, inter alia, Roche v. the United
Kingdom [GC], no. 32555/96, § 117, ECHR 2005 X, and
Salontaji-Drobnjak v. Serbia, no. 36500/05, § 132,
13 October 2009).
- The
right of access to the courts is not absolute but may be subject to
limitations; these are permitted by implication since the right of
access “by its very nature calls for regulation by the State,
regulation which may vary in time and in place according to the needs
and resources of the community and of individuals” (see
Ashingdane, cited above, § 57). In
laying down such regulation, the Contracting States enjoy a certain
margin of appreciation. Whilst the final decision as to observance of
the Convention’s requirements rests with the Court, it is no
part of the Court’s function to substitute for the assessment
of the national authorities any other assessment of what might be the
best policy in this field. Nonetheless, the limitations applied must
not restrict the access left to the individual in such a way or to
such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired.
Furthermore, a limitation will not be compatible with Article 6 §
1 if it does not pursue a legitimate aim and if there is not a
reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed
and the aim sought to be achieved (ibid.; see also, among many other
authorities, Cordova v. Italy (no. 1), no. 40877/98,
§ 54, ECHR 2003-I, and the recapitulation of the relevant
principles in Fayed v. the United Kingdom, 21 September 1994,
§ 65, Series A no. 294-B).
- Furthermore,
the Convention is intended to guarantee not rights that are
theoretical or illusory but rights that are practical and effective.
This is particularly true for the guarantees enshrined in Article 6,
in view of the prominent place held in a democratic society by the
right to a fair trial with all the guarantees under that Article (see
Prince Hans-Adam II of Liechtenstein v. Germany [GC],
no. 42527/98, § 45, ECHR 2001-VIII).
- Lastly,
the Court observes that in most of the cases before it involving
“persons of unsound mind”, the domestic proceedings have
concerned their detention and were thus examined under Article 5 of
the Convention. However, it has consistently held that the
“procedural” guarantees under Article 5 §§ 1
and 4 of the Convention are broadly similar to those under Article 6
§ 1 (see, for instance, Winterwerp, cited above, § 60;
Sanchez-Reisse v. Switzerland, 21 October 1986, §§
51 and 55, Series A no. 107; Kampanis v. Greece, 13 July
1995, § 47, Series A no. 318-B; and Ilijkov v. Bulgaria,
no. 33977/96, § 103, 26 July 2001). In the Shtukaturov
case (cited above, § 66), in determining whether or not the
incapacitation proceedings had been fair, the Court had regard,
mutatis mutandis, to its case-law under Article 5 §§
1 (e) and 4 of the Convention.
(b) Application of these principles in the
present case
- The
Court observes at the outset that in the present case, none of the
parties disputed the applicability of Article 6 to proceedings for
restoration of legal capacity. The applicant, who has been partially
deprived of legal capacity, complained that Bulgarian law did not
afford him direct access to a court to apply to have his capacity
restored. The Court has had occasion to clarify that proceedings for
restoration of legal capacity are directly decisive for the
determination of “civil rights and obligations” (see
Matter v. Slovakia, no. 31534/96, § 51,
5 July 1999). Article 6 § 1 of the Convention is therefore
applicable in the instant case.
- It
remains to be determined whether the applicant’s access to
court was restricted and, if so, whether the restriction pursued a
legitimate aim and was proportionate to it.
- The
Court notes firstly that the parties differed as to whether a legally
incapacitated person had locus standi to apply directly to the
Bulgarian courts for restoration of legal capacity; the Government
argued that this was the case, whereas the applicant maintained the
contrary.
- The
Court accepts the applicant’s argument that, in order to make
an application to a Bulgarian court, a person under partial
guardianship is required to seek the support of the persons referred
to in Article 277 of the 1952 CCP (which has become Article 340 of
the 2007 CCP). The list of persons entitled to apply to the courts
under Bulgarian law does not explicitly include the person under
partial guardianship (see paragraphs 45 and 51 above).
- With
regard to the Supreme Court’s 1980 decision (see paragraph 51
above), the Court observes that although the fourth sentence of
paragraph 10 of the decision, read in isolation, might give the
impression that a person under partial guardianship has direct access
to a court, the Supreme Court explains further on that where the
guardian of a partially incapacitated person and the guardianship
authority refuse to institute proceedings for restoration of legal
capacity, the person concerned may request the public prosecutor to
do so. In the Court’s view, the need to seek the intervention
of the public prosecutor is scarcely reconcilable with direct access
to court for persons under partial guardianship in so far as the
decision to intervene is left to the prosecutor’s discretion.
It follows that the Supreme Court’s 1980 decision cannot be
said to have clearly affirmed the existence of such access in
Bulgarian law.
- The
Court further notes that the Government have not produced any court
decisions showing that persons under partial guardianship have been
able to apply of their own motion to a court to have the measure
lifted; however, they have shown that at least one application for
restoration of legal capacity has been successfully brought by the
guardian of a fully incapacitated person (see paragraph 52 above).
- The
Court thus considers it established that the applicant was unable to
apply for restoration of his legal capacity other than through his
guardian or one of the persons listed in Article 277 of the CCP.
- The
Court would also emphasise that, as far as access to court is
concerned, domestic law makes no distinction between those who are
entirely deprived of legal capacity and those who, like the
applicant, are only partially incapacitated. Moreover, domestic
legislation does not provide for any possibility of automatic
periodic review of whether the grounds for placing a person under
guardianship remain valid. Lastly, in the applicant’s case the
measure in question was not limited in time.
- Admittedly,
the right of access to the courts is not absolute and requires by its
very nature that the State should enjoy a certain margin of
appreciation in regulating the sphere under examination (see
Ashingdane, cited above, § 57). In addition, the
Court acknowledges that restrictions on a person’s procedural
rights, even where the person has been only partially deprived of
legal capacity, may be justified for the person’s own
protection, the protection of the interests of others and the proper
administration of justice. However, the importance of exercising
these rights will vary according to the purpose of the action which
the person concerned intends to bring before the courts. In
particular, the right to ask a court to review a declaration of
incapacity is one of the most important rights for the person
concerned since such a procedure, once initiated, will be decisive
for the exercise of all the rights and freedoms affected by the
declaration of incapacity, not least in relation to any restrictions
that may be placed on the person’s liberty (see also
Shtukaturov, cited above, § 71). The Court therefore
considers that this right is one of the fundamental procedural rights
for the protection of those who have been partially deprived of legal
capacity. It follows that such persons should in principle enjoy
direct access to the courts in this sphere.
- However,
the State remains free to determine the procedure by which such
direct access is to be realised. At the same time, the Court
considers that it would not be incompatible with Article 6 for
national legislation to provide for certain restrictions on access to
court in this sphere, with the sole aim of ensuring that the courts
are not overburdened with excessive and manifestly ill-founded
applications. Nevertheless, it seems clear that this problem may be
solved by other, less restrictive means than automatic denial of
direct access, for example by limiting the frequency with which
applications may be made or introducing a system for prior
examination of their admissibility on the basis of the file.
- The
Court further observes that eighteen of the twenty national legal
systems studied in this context provide for direct access to the
courts for any partially incapacitated persons wishing to have their
status reviewed. In seventeen States such access is open even to
those declared fully incapable (see paragraphs 88-90 above). This
indicates that there is now a trend at European level towards
granting legally incapacitated persons direct access to the courts to
seek restoration of their capacity.
- The
Court is also obliged to note the growing importance which
international instruments for the protection of people with mental
disorders are now attaching to granting them as much legal autonomy
as possible. It refers in this connection to the United Nations
Convention of 13 December 2006 on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities and to Recommendation No. R (99) 4 of the Committee
of Ministers of the Council of Europe on principles concerning the
legal protection of incapable adults, which recommend that adequate
procedural safeguards be put in place to protect legally
incapacitated persons to the greatest extent possible, to ensure
periodic reviews of their status and to make appropriate remedies
available (see paragraphs 72-73 above).
- In
the light of the foregoing, in particular the trends emerging in
national legislation and the relevant international instruments, the
Court considers that Article 6 § 1 of the Convention must be
interpreted as guaranteeing in principle that anyone who has been
declared partially incapable, as is the applicant’s case, has
direct access to a court to seek restoration of his or her legal
capacity.
- In
the instant case the Court has observed that direct access of this
kind is not guaranteed with a sufficient degree of certainty by the
relevant Bulgarian legislation. That finding is sufficient for it to
conclude that there has been a violation of Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention in respect of the applicant.
- The
above conclusion dispenses the Court from examining whether the
indirect legal remedies referred to by the Government provided the
applicant with sufficient guarantees that his case would be brought
before a court.
- The
Court therefore dismisses the Government’s objection of failure
to exhaust domestic remedies (see paragraph 223 above) and concludes
that there has been a violation of Article 6 § 1 of the
Convention.
VI. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION,
TAKEN ALONE AND IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 13
- The
applicant alleged that the restrictive guardianship regime, including
his placement in the Pastra social care home and the physical living
conditions there, had amounted to unjustified interference with his
right to respect for his private life and home. He submitted that
Bulgarian law had not afforded him a sufficient and accessible remedy
in that respect. He relied on Article 8 of the Convention, taken
alone and in conjunction with Article 13.
Article
8 provides:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
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.”
- The
applicant maintained in particular that the guardianship regime had
not been geared to his individual case but had entailed restrictions
automatically imposed on anyone who had been declared incapable by a
judge. He added that the fact of having to live in the Pastra social
care home had effectively barred him from taking part in community
life and from developing relations with persons of his choosing. The
authorities had not attempted to find alternative therapeutic
solutions in the community or to take measures that were less
restrictive of his personal liberty, with the result that he had
developed “institutionalisation syndrome”, that is, the
loss of social skills and individual personality traits.
- The
Government contested those allegations.
- Having
regard to its conclusions under Articles 3, 5, 6 and 13 of the
Convention, the Court considers that no separate issue arises under
Article 8 of the Convention, taken alone and/or in conjunction with
Article 13. It is therefore unnecessary to examine this complaint.
VII. ARTICLES 46 AND 41 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Article 46 of the Convention
- The
relevant parts of Article 46 of the Convention read as follows:
“1. The High Contracting Parties
undertake to abide by the final judgment of the Court in any case to
which they are parties.
2. The final judgment of the Court shall be
transmitted to the Committee of Ministers, which shall supervise its
execution. ...”
- The
Court reiterates that by Article 46 of the Convention the Contracting
Parties have undertaken to abide by the final judgments of the Court
in any case to which they are parties, execution being supervised by
the Committee of Ministers. It follows, inter alia, that a
judgment in which the Court finds a breach of the Convention or the
Protocols thereto imposes on the respondent State a legal obligation
not just to pay those concerned the sums awarded by way of just
satisfaction, but also to choose, subject to supervision by the
Committee of Ministers, the general and/or, if appropriate,
individual measures to be adopted in their domestic legal order to
put an end to the violation found by the Court and to redress as far
as possible the effects (see Menteş and Others v.
Turkey (Article 50), 24 July 1998, § 24, Reports 1998 IV;
Scozzari and Giunta v. Italy [GC], nos. 39221/98
and 41963/98, § 249, ECHR 2000-VIII; and Maestri v. Italy
[GC], no. 39748/98, § 47, ECHR 2004-I). The Court further
notes that it is primarily for the State concerned to choose, subject
to supervision by the Committee of Ministers, the means to be used in
its domestic legal order to discharge its obligation under Article 46
of the Convention (see Scozzari and Giunta, cited above;
Brumărescu v. Romania (just satisfaction) [GC],
no. 28342/95, § 20, ECHR 2001-I; and Öcalan v.
Turkey [GC], no. 46221/99, § 210, ECHR 2005 IV).
- However,
with a view to helping the respondent State to fulfil its obligations
under Article 46, the Court may seek to indicate the type of
individual and/or general measures that might be taken in order to
put an end to the situation it has found to exist (see Broniowski
v. Poland [GC], no. 31443/96, § 194, ECHR 2004-V, and
Scoppola v. Italy (no. 2) [GC], no. 10249/03, § 148,
ECHR 2009 ...).
- In
the instant case the Court considers that it is necessary, in view of
its finding of a violation of Article 5, to indicate individual
measures for the execution of this judgment. It observes that it has
found a violation of that Article on account of the failure to comply
with the requirement that any deprivation of liberty must be “in
accordance with a procedure prescribed by law” and the lack of
justification for the applicant’s deprivation of liberty under
sub-paragraph (e) or any of the other sub paragraphs of
Article 5 § 1. It has also noted deficiencies in the
assessment of the presence and persistence of any disorders
warranting placement in a social care home (see paragraphs 148-160
above).
- The
Court considers that in order to redress the effects of the breach of
the applicant’s rights, the authorities should ascertain
whether he wishes to remain in the home in question. Nothing in this
judgment should be seen as an obstacle to his continued placement in
the Pastra social care home or any other home for people with mental
disorders if it is established that he consents to the placement.
However, should the applicant object to such placement, the
authorities should re-examine his situation without delay in the
light of the findings of this judgment.
- The
Court notes that it has also found a violation of Article 6 § 1
on account of the lack of direct access to a court for a person who
has been partially deprived of legal capacity with a view to seeking
its restoration (see paragraphs 233-248 above). Having regard to that
finding, the Court recommends that the respondent State envisage the
necessary general measures to ensure the effective possibility of
such access.
B. Article 41 of the Convention
- Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
1. Damage
- The
applicant did not submit any claims in respect of pecuniary damage
but sought EUR 64,000 for non-pecuniary damage.
- He
asserted in particular that he had endured poor living conditions in
the social care home and claimed a sum of EUR 14,000 on that account.
In respect of his placement in the Pastra social care home, he stated
that he had experienced feelings of anxiety, distress and frustration
ever since that measure had begun to be implemented in December 2002.
His enforced placement in the home had also had a significant impact
on his life as he had been removed from his social environment and
subjected to a very restrictive regime, making it harder for him to
reintegrate into the community. He submitted that although there was
no comparable case-law concerning unlawful detention in a social care
home for people with mental disorders, regard should be had to the
just satisfaction awarded by the Court in cases involving unlawful
detention in psychiatric institutions. He referred, for example, to
the judgments in Gajcsi v. Hungary (no. 34503/03, §§
28-30, 3 October 2006) and Kayadjieva v. Bulgaria (no.
56272/00, § 57, 28 September 2006), while noting that he had
been deprived of his liberty for a considerably longer period than
the applicants in the above-mentioned cases. He submitted that a sum
of EUR 30,000 would constitute an equitable award on that
account. Lastly, he added that his lack of access to the courts to
seek a review of his legal status had restricted the exercise of a
number of freedoms in the sphere of his private life, causing
additional non pecuniary damage, for which an award of EUR
20,000 could provide redress.
- The
Government submitted that the applicant’s claims were excessive
and unfounded. They argued that if the Court were to make any award
in respect of non-pecuniary damage, it should not exceed the amounts
awarded in judgments against Bulgaria concerning compulsory
psychiatric admission. The Government referred to the judgments in
Kayadjieva (cited above, § 57), Varbanov (cited
above, § 67), and Kepenerov v. Bulgaria (no. 39269/98,
§ 42, 31 July 2003).
- The
Court observes that it has found violations of several provisions of
the Convention in the present case, namely Articles 3, 5 (paragraphs
1, 4 and 5), 6 and 13. It considers that the applicant must have
endured suffering as a result of his placement in the home, which
began in December 2002 and is still ongoing, his inability to secure
a judicial review of that measure and his lack of access to a court
to apply for release from partial guardianship. This suffering
undoubtedly aroused in him a feeling of helplessness and anxiety. The
Court further considers that the applicant sustained non-pecuniary
damage on account of the degrading living conditions he had to endure
for more than seven years.
- Ruling
on an equitable basis, as required by Article 41 of the Convention,
the Court considers that the applicant should be awarded an aggregate
sum of EUR 15,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage.
2. Costs and expenses
- The
applicant did not submit any claims in respect of costs and expenses.
3. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest rate should
be based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank,
to which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Dismisses, unanimously, the Government’s
preliminary objections of failure to exhaust domestic remedies;
- Holds, unanimously, that there has been a
violation of Article 5 § 1 of the Convention;
- Holds, unanimously, that there has been a
violation of Article 5 § 4 of the Convention;
- Holds, unanimously, that there has been a
violation of Article 5 § 5 of the Convention;
- Holds, unanimously, that there has been a
violation of Article 3 of the Convention, taken alone and in
conjunction with Article 13;
- Holds, unanimously, that there has been a
violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention;
- Holds, by thirteen votes to four, that it is not
necessary to examine whether there has been a violation of Article 8
of the Convention, taken alone and in conjunction with Article 13;
- Holds, unanimously,
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant,
within three months, EUR 15,000 (fifteen thousand euros) in respect
of non pecuniary damage, to be converted into Bulgarian levs at
the rate applicable at the date of settlement, plus any tax that may
be chargeable;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amount at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses, unanimously, the remainder of the
applicant’s claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at
a public hearing in the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 17
January 2012.
Vincent Berger Nicolas Bratza
Jurisconsult President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the following separate opinions are
annexed to this judgment:
(a) joint
partly dissenting opinion of Judges Tulkens, Spielmann and
Laffranque;
(b) partly
dissenting opinion of Judge Kalaydjieva.
N.B.
V.B.
JOINT PARTLY DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGES TULKENS,
SPIELMANN AND LAFFRANQUE
(Translation)
We
had no hesitation in voting in favour of finding a violation of
Article 5 and of Article 3, taken alone and in conjunction with
Article 13. We also voted in favour of finding a violation of Article
6 of the Convention, and we believe that the judgment is likely to
strengthen considerably the protection of persons in a similarly
vulnerable situation to the applicant. However, we do not agree with
the majority’s finding that no separate issue arises under
Article 8 of the Convention, taken alone and/or in conjunction with
Article 13, and that it is therefore unnecessary to examine this
complaint (see paragraph 252 of the judgment and point 7 of the
operative provisions).
We
wish to point out that the applicant alleged that the restrictive
guardianship regime, including his placement in the Pastra social
care home and the physical living conditions there, amounted to
unjustified interference with his right to respect for his private
life and home (see paragraph 249 of the judgment). He submitted that
Bulgarian law had not afforded him a sufficient and accessible remedy
in that respect. He also maintained that the guardianship regime had
not been geared to his individual case but had entailed restrictions
automatically imposed on anyone who had been declared incapable by a
judge. He added that the fact of having to live in the Pastra social
care home had effectively barred him from taking part in community
life and from developing relations with persons of his choosing. The
authorities had not attempted to find alternative therapeutic
solutions in the community or to take measures that were less
restrictive of his personal liberty, with the result that he had
developed “institutionalisation syndrome”, that is, the
loss of social skills and individual personality traits (see
paragraph 250 of the judgment).
In
our opinion, these are genuine issues that deserved to be examined
separately. Admittedly, a large part of the allegations submitted
under Article 8 are similar to those raised under Articles 3, 5 and
6. Nevertheless, they are not identical and the answers given in the
judgment in relation to those provisions cannot entirely cover the
complaints brought under Articles 8 and 13.
More
specifically, an issue that would also have merited a separate
examination concerns the scope of a periodic review of the
applicant’s situation. He submitted that domestic law did not
provide for an automatic periodic assessment of the need to maintain
a measure restricting legal capacity. It might have been helpful to
consider whether States have a positive obligation to set up a review
procedure of this kind, especially in situations where the persons
concerned are unable to comprehend the consequences of a regular
review and cannot themselves initiate a procedure to that end.
PARTLY DISSENTING OPINION
OF JUDGE KALAYDJIEVA
I had
no hesitation in reaching the conclusions concerning Mr Stanev’s
complaints under Articles 5, 3 and 6 of the Convention. However, like
Judges Tulkens, Spielmann and Laffranque, I regret the majority’s
conclusion that in view of these findings it was not necessary to
examine separately his complaints under Article 8 concerning “the
[partial guardianship] system, including the lack of regular reviews
of the continued justification of such a measure, the appointment of
the director of the Pastra social care home as his [guardian] and the
alleged lack of scrutiny of the director’s decisions, and also
about the restrictions on his private life resulting from his
admission to the home against his will, extending to the lack of
contact with the outside world and the conditions attached to
correspondence” (see paragraph 90 of the decision as to
admissibility of 29 June 2010). In my view the applicant’s
complaints under Article 8 of the Convention remain the primary issue
in the present case.
In
its earlier case-law the Court has expressed the view that an
individual’s legal capacity is decisive for the exercise of all
the rights and freedoms, not least in relation to any restrictions
that may be placed on the person’s liberty (see Shtukaturov
v.Russia, no. 44009/05, § 71,
27 March 2008; Salontaji-Drobniak v. Serbia, no. 36500/05, §§
140 et seq.; and the recent judgment in X and Y v. Croatia,
no. 5193/09, §§ 102-104).
There
is hardly any doubt that restrictions on legal capacity constitute
interference with the right to private life, which will give rise to
a breach of Article 8 of the Convention unless it can be shown that
it was “in accordance with the law”, pursued one or more
legitimate aims and was “necessary” for their attainment.
Unlike
the situation of the applicants in the cases mentioned above,
Mr Stanev’s capacity to perform ordinary acts relating to
everyday life and his ability to validly enter into legal
transactions with the consent of his guardian were recognised. The
national law and the domestic courts’ decisions entitled him to
request and obtain social care in accordance with his needs and
preferences if he so wished, or to refuse such care in view of the
quality of the services offered and/or any restrictions involved
which he was not prepared to accept. There was nothing in the
domestic law or the applicant’s personal circumstances to
justify any further restrictions, or to warrant the substitution of
his own will with his guardian’s assessment of his best
interests.
However,
once declared partially incapacitated, he was divested of the
possibility of acting in his own interests and there were
insufficient guarantees to prevent his de facto treatment as a
fully incapacitated individual. It has not been contested that he was
not consulted as to whether he wished to avail himself of placement
in a social care institution and that he was not even entitled to
decide independently how to spend his time or the remaining part of
his pension, and whether and when to visit his friends or relatives
or other places, to send and receive letters or to otherwise
communicate with the outside world. No justification was offered for
the fact that Mr Stanev was stripped of the ability to act in
accordance with his preferences to the extent determined by the
courts and the law and that, instead of due assistance from his
officially appointed guardian, the pursuit of his best interests was
made completely dependent on the good will or neglect shown by the
guardian. In this regard the lack of respect for the applicant’s
recognised personal autonomy violated Mr Stanev’s right to
personal life and dignity as guaranteed by Article 8 and failed to
meet contemporary standards for ensuring the necessary respect for
the wishes and preferences he was capable of expressing.
The
applicant’s situation was further aggravated by his inability
to trigger any remedy for the independent protection of his rights
and interests. Any attempt to avail himself of such remedies depended
on the initial approval of Mr Stanev’s guardian, who also acted
as the director and representative of the social care institution. In
this regard the majority’s preference not to consider
separately the applicant’s complaints under Article 8 resulted
in a failure to subject to separate scrutiny the absence of
safeguards for the exercise of these rights in the face of a
potential or even evident conflict of interests, a factor which
appears to be of central importance for the requisite protection of
vulnerable individuals against possible abuse and is equally
pertinent to the applicant’s complaints under Article 8 and
Article 6.
While
both parties submitted information to the effect that proceedings for
the restoration of capacity were not only possible in principle, but
had also been successful in a reasonable percentage of cases, Mr
Stanev rightly complained that the institution of such proceedings in
his case depended on his guardian’s approval. It appears that
the guardian’s discretion to block any attempt to take
proceedings in court affected not only the applicant’s right of
access to court for the purposes of restoration of capacity, but also
prevented the institution of any proceedings in pursuit of the
applicant’s interests and rights, including those protected
under Article 5 of the Convention. As was also submitted by his
representatives before the national authorities, Mr Stanev “should
have had the opportunity to assess by himself whether or not, having
regard to the living conditions at the home, it was in his interests
to remain there” (see paragraph 38 of the judgment).