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ПОСТАНОВЛЕНИЕ ЕВРОПЕЙСКОГО СУДА ПО ПРАВАМ ЧЕЛОВЕКА ОТ 13.10.2005 ДЕЛО ВАСИЛЬЕВ (VASILYEV) ПРОТИВ РОССИИ [АНГЛ.]

(по состоянию на 20 октября 2006 года)

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                    EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
                                   
                             FIRST SECTION
                                   
                      CASE OF VASILYEV v. RUSSIA
                      (Application No. 66543/01)
                                   
                             JUDGMENT <*>
                                   
                        (Strasbourg, 13.X.2005)
                                   
   --------------------------------
       <*>  This  judgment will become final in the circumstances  set
   out  in  Article  44 з 2 of the Convention. It may  be  subject  to
   editorial revision.
   
       In the case of Vasilyev v. Russia,
       The European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting  as
   a Chamber composed of:
       Mr C.L. Rozakis, President,
       Mrs S. Botoucharova,
       Mr A. Kovler,
       Mrs E. Steiner,
       Mr K. Hajiyev,
       Mr D. Spielmann,
       Mr S.E. Jebens, judges,
       and Mr S. Nielsen, Section Registrar,
       Having deliberated in private on 22 September 2005,
       Delivers  the  following judgment, which was  adopted  on  that
   date:
                                   
                               PROCEDURE
                                   
       1. The case originated in an application (No. 66543/01) against
   the  Russian Federation lodged with the Court under Article  34  of
   the  Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and  Fundamental
   Freedoms  ("the  Convention")  by  a  Russian  national,  Mr   Petr
   Fedotovich Vasilyev ("the applicant"), on 10 January 2001.
       2.  The  Russian Government ("the Government") were represented
   by  Mr  P. Laptev, Representative of the Russian Federation at  the
   European Court of Human Rights.
       3.  The applicant alleged that the award made in his favour had
   been  subsequently  quashed  by way of  supervisory  review,  which
   resulted in a decrease of his pension. He relied on Articles 2,  6,
   8 and 13 of the Convention in this connection.
       4.  The  application was allocated to the First Section of  the
   Court  (Rule  52 з 1 of the Rules of Court). Within  that  Section,
   the  Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 з  1  of  the
   Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 з 1.
       5.  By  a  decision  of  1 April 2004 the  Court  declared  the
   application admissible.
       6.  The  Chamber having decided, after consulting the  parties,
   that  no hearing on the merits was required (Rule 59 з 3 in  fine),
   the parties replied in writing to each other's observations.
                                   
                               THE FACTS
                                   
                   I. The circumstances of the case
                                   
       7.  The  applicant was born in 1935 and lives in  the  Orenburg
   Region.
       8.  As  of 25 August 1995 the applicant has been in receipt  of
   his old-age pension from the social security authorities.
       9. On 23 June 1997 the Federal Law on Calculating and Upgrading
   State  Pensions ("О порядке исчисления и увеличения государственных
   пенсий",  "the  Pensions Law") was adopted.  It  introduced  a  new
   scheme  of  calculating retirement benefits - "Individual Pensioner
   Coefficient" ("IPC").
       10.  On  1 February 1998 the amount of the applicant's  pension
   was  re-assessed  according  to the  Pensions  Law.  The  Sakmarsky
   District   Welfare  Office  of  the  Orenburg  Region   (Управление
   социальной   защиты   населения  Сакмарского  района   Оренбургской
   области)  decided  that the IPC to be applied  in  the  applicant's
   case should be 0.420.
       11.  The applicant, who believed that he was eligible to an IPC
   of   0.641,   sued  the  Sakmarsky  District  Welfare  Office   for
   insufficient increase of his pension.
       12.  On  11 October 1999 the Sakmarskiy District Court  of  the
   Orenburg  Region  found that the defendant had  misinterpreted  the
   Pensions Law. It granted the applicant's claim to apply the IPC  at
   0.641  for calculating his pension, increasing it by RUR  400,  and
   awarded him arrears of RUR 3,647.82.
       13.  On  16 December 1999 the Orenburg Regional Court dismissed
   the  defendant's appeal, and the judgment of 11 October 1999 became
   final.
       14.  On  10  July  2000 the President of the Orenburg  Regional
   Court  lodged  an extraordinary appeal (протест в порядке  надзора)
   against the judgment of 11 October 1999.
       15.  On  17  July  2000 the Presidium of the Orenburg  Regional
   Court  examined the extraordinary appeal in the supervisory  review
   procedure.
       16.  The  Presidium found that the lower courts  misinterpreted
   the  Pensions  Law. It varied the judgment of 11 October  1999  and
   the  decision  of  16 December 1999 by reinstating the  applicant's
   IPC  at 0.420 and annulling the previously awarded increase as well
   as the arrears.
                                   
                       II. Relevant domestic law
                                   
       17.  Under  the Code of Civil Procedure of 1964, which  was  in
   force at the material time, judgments became final as follows:
       Article 208. Coming into force of judgments
       "Court judgments shall become legally binding on the expiration
   of  the time-limit for lodging a cassation appeal if no such appeal
   has  been  lodged.  If  the  judgment is not  quashed  following  a
   cassation  appeal, it shall become legally binding when the  higher
   court delivers its decision..."
       18.  The  only  further  means  of  recourse  was  the  special
   supervisory-review procedure that enabled courts  to  reopen  final
   judgments:
       Article  319.  Judgments,  decisions and  rulings  amenable  to
   supervisory review
       "Final  judgments, decisions and rulings of all Russian  courts
   shall  be  amenable to supervisory review on an application  lodged
   by the officials listed in Article 320 of the Code."
       19.  The  power of officials to lodge an application  (protest)
   depended on their rank and territorial jurisdiction:
       Article 320. Officials who may initiate supervisory review
       "Applications may be lodged by:
       1.  The  Prosecutor General - against judgments, decisions  and
   rulings of any court;
       2.  The President of the Supreme Court - against rulings of the
   Presidium of the Supreme Court and judgments and decisions  of  the
   Civil  Chamber  of  the Supreme Court acting as a  court  of  first
   instance;
       3.  Deputy  Prosecutors General - against judgments,  decisions
   and  rulings  of any court other than rulings of the  Presidium  of
   the Supreme Court;
       4. Vice-Presidents of the Supreme Court - against judgments and
   decisions  of the Civil Chamber of the Supreme Court  acting  as  a
   court of first instance;
       5.  The  Prosecutor  General, Deputy  Prosecutor  General,  the
   President  and  Vice-Presidents of  the  Supreme  Court  -  against
   judgments,  decisions and rulings of any court other  than  rulings
   of the Presidium of the Supreme Court;
       6.  The  President  of  the  Supreme  Court  of  an  autonomous
   republic,  regional  court,  city court,  court  of  an  autonomous
   region  or  court of an autonomous district, the Public  Prosecutor
   of  an  autonomous republic, region, city, autonomous region or  an
   autonomous  district - against judgments and decisions of  district
   (city) people's courts and against decisions of civil chambers  of,
   respectively,   the  Supreme  Court  of  an  autonomous   republic,
   regional court, city court, court of an autonomous region or  court
   of an autonomous district that examined the case on appeal."
       20.  The  power  to lodge such applications was  discretionary,
   that  is to say it was solely for the official concerned to  decide
   whether or not a particular case warranted supervisory review.
       21.  Under  Article  322 officials listed in  Article  320  who
   considered  that  a  case  deserved closer  examination  could,  in
   certain  circumstances, obtain the case file in order to  establish
   whether good grounds for lodging an application existed.
       22. Article 323 of the Code empowered the relevant officials to
   stay  the execution of the judgment, decision or ruling in question
   until the supervisory review proceedings had been completed.
       23.  Courts  hearing  applications for supervisory  review  had
   extensive jurisdiction in respect of final judgments:
       Article 329. Powers of supervisory-review court
       "The  court that examines an application for supervisory review
   may:
       1.  Uphold  the  judgment, decision or ruling and  dismiss  the
   application;
       2.  Quash  all or part of the judgment, decision or ruling  and
   order  a  fresh  examination  of the case  at  first  or  cassation
   instance;
       3.  Quash  all or part of the judgment, decision or ruling  and
   terminate the proceedings or leave the claim undecided;
       4.  Uphold any of the previous judgments, decisions or  rulings
   in the case;
       5.  Quash  or  vary  the  judgment of the  court  of  first  or
   cassation  instance or of a court that has carried out  supervisory
   review  and deliver a new judgment without remitting the  case  for
   re-examination if substantive laws have been erroneously  construed
   and applied."
       41.  The  grounds  for setting aside final  judgments  were  as
   follows:
       Article 330. Grounds for setting aside judgments on supervisory
   review
       "...
       1. wrongful application or interpretation of substantive laws;
       2. significant breach of procedural rules which led to delivery
   of unlawful judgment, decision or ruling..."
       24.  There  was  no time-limit for lodging an  application  for
   supervisory review, and, in principle, such applications  could  be
   lodged at any time after a judgment had become final.
                                   
                                THE LAW
                                   
          I. Alleged violation of Article 6 of the Convention
                                   
       25.  The applicant complained that the award made in his favour
   was  subsequently  quashed  by  way of  supervisory  review,  which
   resulted  in  a  decrease  of his pension.  The  Court  will  first
   examine  this  complaint under Article 6 of the Convention,  which,
   in so far as relevant, provides as follows:
       "1. In the determination of his civil rights and obligations...
   everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing..."
                                   
                      A. Arguments of the parties
                                   
                           1. The Government
                                   
       26.  The respondent Government alleged that the judgment in the
   applicant's  favour  had  been quashed  by  the  Presidium  of  the
   Orenburg  Regional  Court  with a view  to  correcting  a  judicial
   error.  The  Government referred to the fact that  the  applicant's
   dispute  about his pension increase had been a part  of  a  complex
   general  problem  caused by the vagueness of  the  Federal  Law  on
   Calculating  and  Upgrading  State  Pensions.  The  ambiguity   was
   eliminated  by  an instruction passed on 29 December  1999  by  the
   Ministry  of Labour and Social Development to clarify how this  law
   should  be  interpreted and applied. All disputes  similar  to  the
   applicant's  one were resolved in accordance with this  instruction
   thereafter.  Furthermore, the lawfulness  of  the  instruction  was
   later confirmed by the Supreme Court on 24 April 2000.
       27.  The  Government  finally maintained that  the  supervisory
   proceedings  complied  with  the  Code  of  Civil  Procedure,   and
   therefore  the quashing of the subordinate courts' judgments  could
   not be said to have violated the applicant's right to fair trial.
                                   
                           2. The applicant
                                   
       28.  The  applicant contested the Government's allegations  and
   maintained his complaints.
                                   
                       B. The Court's assessment
                                   
       29.  The  Court first notes that the dispute as to the increase
   of  the  applicant's old-age pension was of a pecuniary nature  and
   indisputably concerned a civil right within the meaning of  Article
   6  з  1  of  the  Convention (see Schuler-Zgraggen v.  Switzerland,
   judgment  of 24 June 1993, Series A No. 263, p. 17, з 46; Massa  v.
   Italy,  judgment of 24 August 1993, Series A No. 265-B,  p.  20,  з
   26;  {Submann}  <*>  v.  Germany, judgment of  16  September  1996,
   Reports  of Judgments and Decisions 1996-IV, p. 1170, з 42 and,  as
   a  recent authority, {Trickovic} v. Slovenia, No. 39914/98,  з  40,
   12 June 2001).
   --------------------------------
       <*> Здесь и далее по тексту слова на национальном языке набраны
   латинским шрифтом и выделены фигурными скобками.
   
       30.  The  Court observes that the issue of the present case  is
   whether  the  supervisory  review  procedure  permitting  a   final
   judgment to be quashed can be considered compatible with Article  6
   and,  in  particular, whether on the facts of the present case  the
   principle of legal certainty was respected.
       31.  The  Court finds that this case is similar to the case  of
   Ryabykh v. Russia (No. 52854/99, ECHR 2003-IX), where it was  said,
   in so far as relevant to the instant case:
       "51.  ...the Court reiterates that the right to a fair  hearing
   before  a tribunal as guaranteed by Article 6 з 1 of the Convention
   must   be  interpreted  in  the  light  of  the  Preamble  to   the
   Convention, which declares, in its relevant part, the rule  of  law
   to  be  part of the common heritage of the Contracting States.  One
   of  the fundamental aspects of the rule of law is the principle  of
   legal  certainty,  which requires, among other things,  that  where
   the  courts  have finally determined an issue, their ruling  should
   not be called into question...
       54.  The  Court  notes  that  the  supervisory  review  of  the
   judgment...  was  set in motion by the President  of  the  Belgorod
   Regional  Court - who was not party to the proceedings...  As  with
   the  situation  under  Romanian law examined in  {Brumarescu},  the
   exercise  of  this power by the President was not  subject  to  any
   time-limit,   so   that   judgments  were   liable   to   challenge
   indefinitely.
       55. The Court reiterates that Article 6 з 1 secures to everyone
   the  right  to  have  any claim relating to his  civil  rights  and
   obligations  brought before a court or tribunal.  In  this  way  it
   embodies  the  "right to a court", of which the  right  of  access,
   that  is the right to institute proceedings before courts in  civil
   matters,  constitutes  one aspect. However,  that  right  would  be
   illusory  if a Contracting State's domestic legal system allowed  a
   final,  binding  judicial  decision to remain  inoperative  to  the
   detriment of one party. It would be inconceivable that Article 6  з
   1  should  describe  in  detail procedural guarantees  afforded  to
   litigants  -  proceedings that are fair, public and  expeditious  -
   without  protecting  the implementation of judicial  decisions;  to
   construe Article 6 as being concerned exclusively with access to  a
   court  and  the conduct of proceedings would be likely to  lead  to
   situations  incompatible with the principle  of  the  rule  of  law
   which  the  Contracting  States  undertook  to  respect  when  they
   ratified  the  Convention (see Hornsby v. Greece,  judgment  of  19
   March  1997, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997-II, p. 510,  з
   40).
       56. The Court considers that the right of a litigant to a court
   would  be  equally illusory if a Contracting State's  legal  system
   allowed  a judicial decision which had become final and binding  to
   be  quashed  by a higher court on an application made  by  a  State
   official."
       32.  Furthermore, the Court has found in this  respect  in  its
   above-mentioned judgment Sovtransavto Holding v. Ukraine, з 77:
       "...judicial  systems characterised by the objection  (protest)
   procedure and, therefore, by the risk of final judgments being  set
   aside  repeatedly, as occurred in the instant case, are,  as  such,
   incompatible with the principle of legal certainty that is  one  of
   the  fundamental  aspects of the rule of law for  the  purposes  of
   Article   6  з  1  of  the  Convention,  read  in  the   light   of
   {Brumarescu}..."
       33.  The Court notes that in the instant case in July 2000  the
   President  of  the  Orenburg  Regional  Court  lodged  a  "protest"
   against  the judgment of 11 October 1999 in the applicant's  favour
   that  had  become final and binding. On 17 July 2000 the  Presidium
   of  the  Orenburg Regional Court quashed this decision as erroneous
   and took a new decision to dismiss the applicant's claim.
       34.  The Court does not find any reason for departing from  its
   aforementioned  judgments.  It considers  that  there  has  been  a
   violation of Article 6 з 1 in respect of the quashing of the  final
   and binding judgment given in the applicant's case.
                                   
         II. Alleged violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
                                   
       35. The Court will next examine the applicant's complaint under
   Article 1 of Protocol 1 which provides as follows:
       "Every  natural  or legal person is entitled  to  the  peaceful
   enjoyment  of  his  possessions. No one shall be  deprived  of  his
   possessions  except  in  the public interest  and  subject  to  the
   conditions  provided  for by law and by the general  principles  of
   international law.
       The  preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair
   the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary  to
   control  the  use  of  property  in  accordance  with  the  general
   interest  or  to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions
   or penalties."
                                   
                      A. Arguments of the parties
                                   
                           1. The Government
                                   
       36.  As  to  whether the applicant's property  right  has  been
   violated,  the  Government contended that  the  applicant  had  not
   acquired  property since the judgment which conferred the title  on
   him had been unlawful. They concluded that Article 1 of Protocol  1
   has  not  been  violated  by the quashing of  the  judgment  of  11
   October 1999.
                                   
                           2. The applicant
                                   
       37.  The  applicant contested the Government's allegations  and
   maintained his complaints.
                                   
                       B. The Court's assessment
                                   
       38.  The  Court reiterates first that the Convention  does  not
   guarantee,  as such, the right to an old-age pension or any  social
   benefit  in  a  particular  amount (see,  for  example,  Aunola  v.
   Finland  (dec.), No. 30517/96, 15 March 2001). However a "claim"  -
   even  concerning  a pension - can constitute a "possession"  within
   the  meaning  of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 if it is  sufficiently
   established  to  be  enforceable (see  Stran  Greek  Refineries  v.
   Greece, judgment of 9 December 1994, Series A No. 301, з 59).
       39. The judgment of the Sakmarskiy District Court of 11 October
   1999  as upheld by the Orenburg Regional Court on 16 December  1999
   provided  the  applicant with an enforceable claim  to  receive  an
   increased  pension  with the IPC of 0.641 and the  arrears  of  RUR
   3,647.82.  This judgment became final after it had been  upheld  on
   appeal.
       40.  The Court finds that the decision of the Orenburg Regional
   Court of 17 July 2000 reinstating the applicant's IPC at 0.420  and
   voiding  the  previously awarded increase as well  as  the  arrears
   constituted  an  interference with the  applicant's  right  to  the
   peaceful  enjoyment  of  possessions guaranteed  by  Article  1  of
   Protocol  No. 1 (see {Brumarescu} v. Romania [GC], No. 28342/95,  з
   74,  ECHR 1999-VII and Pravednaya v. Russia, No. 69529/01, з  38  -
   39, 18 November 2004).
       41.  While  the Court accepts that this measure was lawful  and
   pursued  the  public interest (such as, for example,  an  efficient
   and  harmonised  State  pension scheme), its  compliance  with  the
   requirement of proportionality is questionable.
       42.  It  is  true that recalculation of one's pension  and  its
   decrease  does  not, as such, violate Article 1 of Protocol  No.  1
   (Skorkiewicz v Poland (dec.), No. 39860/98, 1 June 1998).  However,
   backdating the recalculation with the effect that the awarded  sums
   already   transferred   (or  overdue)  are  reduced   involves   an
   individual  and  excessive burden for the  applicant  and  is  thus
   incompatible  with Article 1 of the Protocol. In this respect,  the
   Court recalls the aforementioned Pravednaya judgment, where,  in  a
   somewhat similar set of facts, it was said:
       "40.  ...The  "public  interest"  may  admittedly  include   an
   efficient  and  harmonised State pension scheme, for  the  sake  of
   which the State may adjust its legislation.
       41.  However,  the  State's possible  interest  in  ensuring  a
   uniform  application of the Pensions Law should  not  have  brought
   about   the  retrospective  recalculation  of  the  judicial  award
   already  made. The Court considers that by depriving the  applicant
   of  the right to benefit from the pension in the amount secured  in
   a  final  judgment,  the  State upset a fair  balance  between  the
   interests at stake (see, mutatis mutandis Pressos Compania  Naviera
   S.A. and Others v. Belgium, judgment of 20 November 1995, Series  A
   No. 332, з 43)."
       43.  The  Court  does not find any reason to  depart  from  its
   conclusions  in  that  judgment and finds that  there  has  been  a
   violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in the present case too.
                                   
           III. Application of Article 41 of the Convention
                                   
       44. Article 41 of the Convention provides:
       "If  the  Court  finds that there has been a violation  of  the
   Convention  or  the Protocols thereto, and if the internal  law  of
   the   High   Contracting  Party  concerned  allows   only   partial
   reparation  to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford  just
   satisfaction to the injured party."
                                   
                               A. Damage
                                   
       45.  The  applicant claimed USD 30,000 in respect of  pecuniary
   and non-pecuniary damage.
       46.  The  Government  considered this claim  to  be  excessive,
   unreasonable and unsubstantiated.
       47.  The  Court  does not discern any causal link  between  the
   violation  found  and  the  extensive  pecuniary  damage   alleged.
   However,  in respect of the violation of Article 1 of Protocol  No.
   1,  the  Court considers it appropriate to award the applicant  EUR
   230,  representing  the sum the applicant would have  received  had
   the  reduction of the pension ordered by the decision  of  17  July
   2000  not  been  backdated, plus any tax that may be chargeable  on
   that amount.
       48.  As  regards the non-pecuniary damage, the Court takes  the
   view  that the applicant has suffered some non-pecuniary damage  as
   a  result of the violations found which cannot be made good by  the
   Court's  mere  finding  of  a violation. Nevertheless,  the  amount
   claimed is excessive.
       49. Making its assessment on an equitable basis, as required by
   Article  41  of the Convention, the Court awards the applicant  the
   sum  of  EUR 500 in respect of non-pecuniary damage, plus  any  tax
   that may be chargeable on that amount.
                                   
                         B. Costs and expenses
                                   
       50.  The  applicant did not make any claims for the  costs  and
   expenses incurred before the domestic courts and before the Court.
       51.  Accordingly, the Court does not award anything under  this
   head.
                                   
                          C. Default interest
                                   
       52.  The  Court  considers  it  appropriate  that  the  default
   interest  should  be  based on the marginal  lending  rate  of  the
   European  Central  Bank, to which should be added three  percentage
   points.
                                   
               FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
                                   
       1.  Holds that there has been a violation of Article 6 з  1  of
   the Convention;
       2.  Holds  that  there has been a violation  of  Article  1  of
   Protocol No. 1 to the Convention;
       3. Holds
       (a)  that the respondent State is to pay the applicant,  within
   three  months  from  the date on which the judgment  becomes  final
   according  to  Article  44  з  2 of the Convention,  the  following
   amounts,  to  be  converted  into  Russian  roubles  at  the   rate
   applicable at the date of settlement:
       (i)  EUR 230 (two hundred thirty euros) in respect of pecuniary
   damage;
       (ii)  EUR  500 (five hundred euros) in respect of non-pecuniary
   damage;
       (iii) any tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts;
       (b)  that  from the expiry of the above-mentioned three  months
   until  settlement  simple interest shall be payable  on  the  above
   amounts  at  a  rate  equal to the marginal  lending  rate  of  the
   European  Central  Bank  during  the  default  period  plus   three
   percentage points;
       4.  Dismisses the remainder of the applicant's claim  for  just
   satisfaction.
   
       Done  in  English, and notified in writing on 13 October  2005,
   pursuant to Rule 77 зз 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
                                                                      
                                                      Christos ROZAKIS
                                                             President
                                                                      
                                                       {Soren} NIELSEN
                                                             Registrar
   
   

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