SCHIEHSER v. AUSTRIA
Doc ref: 15321/89 • ECHR ID: 001-2622
Document date: October 16, 1991
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 15321/89
by Franz SCHIEHSER
against Austria
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on
16 October 1991, the following members being present:
MM. C.A. NØRGAARD, President
J.A. FROWEIN
S. TRECHSEL
F. ERMACORA
E. BUSUTTIL
G. JÖRUNDSSON
A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
A. WEITZEL
J.-C. SOYER
H.G. SCHERMERS
H. DANELIUS
Sir Basil HALL
MM. F. MARTINEZ RUIZ
C.L. ROZAKIS
Mrs. J. LIDDY
MM. L. LOUCAIDES
A.V. ALMEIDA RIBEIRO
M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
Mr. H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 21 April 1989
by Franz Schiehser against Austria and registered on 31 July 1989 under
file No. 15321/89;
Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the
Rules of Procedure of the Commission;
Having regard to :
- the Commission's decision of 1 October 1990 to bring
the application to the notice of the respondent Government
and invite them to submit written observations on its
admissibility and merits;
- the observations submitted by the respondent Government on
6 February 1991 and the observations in reply submitted
by the applicant on 27 March 1991;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant, a retired civil servant, is an Austrian citizen,
born in 1920 and living in Vienna. He is represented by Mr. F.C.
Obendorfer, a lawyer in Vienna.
The facts as agreed between the parties may be summarised as
follows.
On 20 March 1980 a search and seizure was effected by the
prosecution branch of the Austrian tax authorities (Finanzstraf-
behörde) on the premises of the enterprise M.K., a construction firm.
It followed from the documents seized that the enterprise had paid
bribe money (Schmiergeldzahlungen) to various civil servants, inter
alia two payments in 1976 and 1978 to the applicant.
On 24 October 1980 the police laid charges against the
applicant and on 7 July 1981 an indictment was filed accusing the
applicant of two counts of taking bribes (Geschenkannahme).
On 17 October 1981 the investigating judge submitted the case
to the trial court (Schöffengericht) in order to fix a date for the
hearing. Fifty other cases were disconnected from the proceedings
against the applicant.
On 15 November 1981 the Public Prosecution (Staatsanwaltschaft)
in Vienna requested supplementary preliminary investigations as there
was then suspicion that the applicant had been corrupted by taking the
bribes (pflichtwidrige Vornahme oder Unterlassen von Amtsgeschäften).
The request was granted and the files retransmitted to the
investigating judge on 26 November 1981.
On 12 November 1985 another indictment was filed against the
applicant and twelve other civil servants.
The trial was fixed to take place between 6 November and 12
December 1986. However, on 6 November 1986 the proceedings against the
applicant had to be severed from those against the others due to his
illness.
The trial against the applicant started on 2 December 1987 and
had to be postponed sine die because of a request made by the defence
for the taking of further evidence. On 16 June 1988 the applicant was
convicted by the Vienna Regional Court (Landesgericht) on two counts
of taking bribes (Geschenkannahme durch Beamte) and sentenced to two
months' imprisonment. He was granted a two-year period of probation.
He was acquitted of a further charge of taking bribes.
According to the findings of the trial court, based on the
testimony of several witnesses and documentary evidence, the applicant
had, when working as a civil servant in the Federal Administration of
Public Buildings (Bundesgebäudeverwaltung), accepted bribes on 16
December 1976 in the amount of 7,100 AS and a further sum of 1,050 AS
in the course of 1978. The money was paid by the construction firm
M.K. which had received construction orders from the Federal
Administration of Public Buildings. These payments had been entered
in a notebook in which the owner of the firm, Mrs. K., had recorded
cash payments made to various civil servants, inter alia the applicant.
In most cases she had also noted the percentage figure which the
payment represented in relation to the value of the order received.
Mrs. K. could not be heard before the trial court because she had
suffered a depression. During the pre-trial proceedings she had stated
that the entries in the notebook corresponded in reality to private
withdrawals for her own purposes which, however, she wanted to conceal
from her employee dealing with the bookkeeping. The trial court
considered these allegations to be incredible as Mrs. K., as owner of
the firm, had no reason to conceal private withdrawals in this manner.
In particular the notebook did not form part of the firm's official
bookkeeping but was intended only to keep Mrs. K. informed of her
private spending. She had no obligation to render account to her
employee of her expenditures.
Having regard to a medical expert opinion, the trial court
further considered that Mrs. K. was not mentally ill at the time when
the relevant payments were effected and recorded in her notebook.
Insofar as witness N., Mrs. K.'s employee, had confirmed that
in her opinion the entries in Mrs. K.'s notebook did not relate to
bribe money but to private expenditures, the trial court considered
that this was a mere assumption of N. which, in the light of all the
circumstances, was absurd and unrealistic.
On the other hand the trial court considered credible the
statements of witness E. Kl. who had effected the payments and had
incriminated the applicant in the pre-trial proceedings. At the trial
he had declared that he no longer remembered all the details of the
various bribe payments but he could confirm that his former statements
relating to the applicant were correct.
The trial court took into account as mitigating circumstance
that the offences in question had been committed a long time ago and
that the applicant's conduct before the offences as well as thereafter
had been correct.
The applicant lodged an appeal (Berufung) and a plea of nullity
(Nichtigkeitsbeschwerde) arguing that his conviction was unfounded,
that relevant facts had been disregarded, that the medical expert
opinion had to be interpreted as indicating that the witness, Mrs. K.,
had been mentally ill for about thirty years, and that circumstances
discharging him had not been considered.
On 24 November 1988 the Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof)
dismissed both remedies. The Court stated inter alia that the judgment
appealed from was in line with the expert opinion in which it was
unequivocally stated that the expert had found nothing to show that
Mrs. K. was mentally ill at the time when she recorded the payments in
question.
The chronology of the events is listed in the attached
time-table.
COMPLAINTS
The applicant complains that he was convicted on the basis of
vague documents written by a mentally insane person whom he did not
have the opportunity to cross-examine at the trial. He further
complains of the length of the criminal proceedings.
He invokes Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
The application was introduced on 2 April 1989 and registered
on 31 July 1989.
On 1 October 1990 the Commission decided to communicate the
complaint on the length of the proceedings for observations on
admissibility and merits. After an extension of the time-limit the
respondent Government submitted their observations on 6 February 1991
and the applicant replied on 27 March 1991.
THE LAW
1. The applicant mainly complains of the length of the criminal
proceedings against him and alleges a violation of Article 6 para. 1
(Art. 6-1) of the Convention, which provides that:
"In the determination of any criminal charge
against him everyone is entitled to a ...
hearing within a reasonable time by ... [a]
tribunal."
The Commission first observes that according to the
Government's submissions the criminal proceedings in question were
initiated with the Vienna Regional Court by the police on 24 October
1980. They ended with the Supreme Court's decision of 24 November 1988
and thus lasted eight years and one month.
The Commission notes that the sentence was mitigated on account
of the fact that the offences had been committed a long time ago.
However, the mitigation of the sentence alone does not deprive the
applicant of the status as "victim" (Eur. Court H.R., Eckle judgment
of 15 July 1982, Series A No. 51, p. 30, para. 66).
The Commission has taken into account the parties' observations
as to the reasonableness of the period in question. A preliminary
examination of the application does not disclose sufficient
justification for the delays that occurred in the proceedings. The
Commission therefore considers that the question of whether the length
of the proceedings in the present case exceeded the reasonable time
provided for in Article 6 para. 1 (Art. 6-1) of the Convention raises
serious points of fact and law which cannot be resolved at this stage
in the proceedings, but necessitate a thorough examination of the
merits of the case.
The Commission further observes that there are no other grounds
for considering this complaint inadmissible.
2. The Commission has examined the applicant's remaining
complaint, but finds that the applicant's submissions do not disclose
any appearance of a violation of the Convention. The Commission notes
in particular that the applicant's conviction was not only based on
Mrs. K.'s pre-trial statements but also on documentary evidence and the
statements of the witness E. Kl.
It follows that to this extent the application has to be
rejected in accordance with Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the
Convention as being manifestly ill-founded.
For these reasons, the Commission unanimously
DECLARES THE APPLICATION ADMISSIBLE INSOFAR
AS IT CONCERNS THE LENGTH OF THE PROCEEDINGS,
without prejudging the merits;
DECLARES INADMISSIBLE THE REMAINDER OF THE APPLICATION.
Secretary to the Commission President of the Commission
(H.C. KRÜGER) (C.A. NØRGAARD)
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