KOVÁCS v. HUNGARY
Doc ref: 50135/12 • ECHR ID: 001-147654
Document date: September 30, 2014
- Inbound citations: 2
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- Cited paragraphs: 1
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- Outbound citations: 16
SECOND SECTION
DECISION
Application no . 50135/12 Béla KOVÁCS and Béláné KOVÁCS against Hungary
The European Court of Human Rights ( Second Section ), sitting on 30 September 2014 as a Chamber composed of:
Guido Raimondi , President, Işıl Karakaş , András Sajó , Nebojša Vučinić , Egidijus Kūris , Robert Spano , Jon Fridrik Kjølbro , judges, and Abel Campos , Deputy Section Registrar ,
Having regard to the above application lodged on 31 July 2012 ,
Having regard to the observations submitted by the respondent Government and the observations in reply submitted by the applicants,
Having deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
1 . The applicants, Mr Béla Kovács and Mrs Béláné Ková cs , are Hungarian nationals, who were born in 1954 and 1956 respectively and live in Budapest. They were represented before the Court by Mr A. Cech , a lawyer practising in Budapest.
The Hungarian Government (“the Government”) were represented by Mr Z. Tallódi, Agent, Ministry of Public Administration and Justice.
A. The circumstances of the case
2. The applicants are a married couple.
3 . On 4 October 2007 criminal proceedings were initiated against the applicants on charges of copyright infringement. The investigation was terminated on 28 February 2011. A bill of indictment was preferred on 9 January 2012.
4 . The court geographically competent to try the applicants was the Budapest High Court. However, on 17 January 2012 the President of this court proposed to the President of the National Judicial Office (“the NJO”) to appoint another court, because the workload of the Budapest High Court did not allow for a hearing within a reasonable time.
5 . The President of the Budapest High Court specified the facts underlining the complexity of the case, a high priority case in which very strict procedural time-limits were applicable for the court. He identified the obstacles to the timely adjudication of the case and gave detailed information on the workload of the criminal bench of the Budapest High Court. It was stated that the applicants ’ case involved 28 defendants, 27 counsels, 28 witnesses, an interpreter and experts. The investigation file amounted to 84 file-boxes, and the bill of indictment consisted of 50 pages with an annex of 50 pages. The counts on charges of copyright infringement committed between 2002 and 2009 amounted to 418 in respect of some of the defendants, and the charges in respect of some of the defendants included money laundering and participation in a criminal organisation as well. According to information provided by the President of the Budapest High Court, his court had reached the limits of its administrative and infrastructural capacities, because of other on-going high-profile cases.
6 . On 23 January 2012 the President of the NJO requested additional information from the President of the Budapest High Court in accordance with the guidelines for requesting reassignment, then under elaboration. (These guidelines were then sent to the presidents of the high courts, courts of appeals and the Kúria for consultation on 9 February 2012. As of 17 September 2012, they were included in decision no. 58/2012 of the National Judicial Council entitled “the guidelines to be observed in respect of case reassignment”.)
Accordingly, further extensive staff and case-load information was provided on 31 January 2012.
7. Meanwhile, the NJO identified six high courts which were in the best position as regards their workload statistics. The President of the NJO requested the opinions of the presidents of those courts on 7 February 2012. She also requested the opinion of the Attorney General, who proposed reassignment to the Kecskemét High Court.
The Balassagyarmat High Court, as well as two other courts, declared themselves ready to try the applicants ’ case.
8 . On 16 February 2012 the President of the NJO appointed, in application of section 62 (1) of Act no. CLXI of 2011 on the Organisation and Administration of Courts, the Balassagyarmat High Court to proceed with the case, as the latter had capacity to deal with it in due time (while another case was reassigned to the Kecskemét High Court ) . There was no remedy available to the applicants against this decision at the material time.
9 . Between 12 November 2012 and 12 October 2013 the Balassagyarmat High Court held several hearings.
The trial is still pending at first instance.
10 . Meanwhile, on 29 March 2012 the applicants filed a constitutional complaint about the reassignment and its legal background.
11 . On 2 December 2013 the Constitutional Court adopted decision no. 36/2013. (XII.5.) AB in the matter. It held that the regulation which entitled the President of the NJO to reassign cases among courts (notably, sections 62 and 63 of Act no. CLXI of 2011 on the Organisation and Administration of Courts, as in force between 1 January and 16 July 2012, as well as section 20/A of Act no. XIX of 1998 on Criminal Procedure, as in force between 7 January 2011 and 31 July 2013, see paragraphs 19 and 20 below) had been unconstitutional and in violation of Article 6 of the Convention. According to the Constitutional Court, the right for one ’ s “natural” (lawful) judge flows from the right to be tried by a court “established by law” and requires that a case be heard by a judge belonging to the court with competence and jurisdiction and designated by the pre-established objective rules of case assignment of that court. In the Constitutional Court ’ s view, the impugned regulation, which had conferred responsibility for the reassignment of cases, at least in the material period, entirely on the President of the NJO, had been in breach of those principles. Moreover, it had violated the requirement of the appearance of impartiality.
The Constitutional Court also held that the lack of a remedy against the decision of the President of the NJO had violated the Fundamental Law, as well as Article 13 of the Convention.
Considering that its finding of unconstitutionality excluded, by the force of law, the application of the impugned regulation in the cases which had been at the origin of its proceedings (that is, the applicants ’ case and another one), the Constitutional Court did not specify the legal consequences of its finding in the operative part of the decision. However, it dismissed the applicants ’ request for the examination of the reassignment decision itself (as adopted by the President of the NJO), considering that the Constitutional Court did not have competence to inspect such decisions of a managerial nature, which did not affect the outcome of the judicial proceedings.
12 . The day after the Constitutional Court ’ s decision, the President of the NJO expressed her opinion in a press release, saying that the decision concerned “some rules no longer in force [and] does not affect the validity of the case reassignment decision of the President of the NJO. [It] therefore does not have direct influence on cases still pending before assignee courts”.
13 . Pursuant to the Constitutional Court ’ s decision, the Balassagyarmat High Court transferred the applicants ’ case back to the Budapest High Court on 10 December 2013.
This latter court declared, on 7 January 2014, that it had no jurisdiction in the case and transferred the case file to the Budapest Court of Appeal so that it should assign the competent court.
The Court of Appeal remitted the case to the Balassagyarmat High Court on 24 April 2014.
14 . The Balassagyarmat High Court refused jurisdiction on 14 May 2014.
On 23 July 2014 the Court of Appeal finally appointed the Balassagyarmat High Court to try the applicants. No remedy lay against this decision.
15 . As appears from a similar case (see paragraph 24 below), which both the originally competent and the assignee court refused to hear and – unlike the present case – had already been referred to the Kúria for the designation of a court for the trial, the Kúria considered that the declaration of unconstitutionality of the impugned – and already repealed – legislation did not affect the validity of the case reassignment decision of the President of the NJO itself, given that the Constitutional Court did not specify any legal consequence for its finding outlined above and because ordinary courts are not entitled to substitute the Constitutional Court ’ s decision in this respect .
16 . In another case (see paragraph 25 below), the Kúria came to a similar conclusion, albeit with a slightly different reasoning: it held that the decision of the Constitutional Court was immaterial in the circumstances and designated the assignee court with reference to the principle of pre-emption.
B . Relevant domestic law
17. The Act on the Transitional Provisions of the Fundamental Law [1] provided as follows:
Section 11
“(3) In order to guarantee the right to trial within a reasonable timeframe, as provided in Article XXVIII(1) of the Fundamental Law, the President of the National Judicial Office may assign any case to a court at an equal level but outside the normal court ’ s jurisdiction, if the caseload across courts is not balanced.
(4) In order to guarantee the right to trial within a reasonable timeframe, as provided in Article XXVIII( 1) of the Fundamental Law, the Public Prosecutor, as the leader and manager of the Office of the Prosecutor based on Article 29 of the Fundamental Law, may assign any case to a court at an equal level but outside the normal court ’ s jurisdiction, if the caseload across courts is not balanced. This does not impact the right of the President of the National Judicial Office as granted in paragraph (3) and the right of the prosecution to assign a case to any court within their jurisdiction.”
18 . The Fundamental Law, as in force between 1 April and 1 October 2013 [2] , provided as follows:
Article 27
“(4) In the interest of the enforcement of the fundamental right to a court decision within a reasonable time and a balanced distribution of caseload between the courts, the President of the National Judicial Office may designate a court, for cases defined in a cardinal Act and in a manner defined also in a cardinal Act, other than the court of general competence but with the same jurisdiction to adjudicate the case.”
19 . Act no. CLXI of 2011 on the Organisation and Administration of Courts provides as follows:
Section 8
“(1) No one may be deprived of his lawfully appointed judge.
(2) A lawfully appointed judge is the judge assigned to a specific case under the work schedule of the court having competence and jurisdiction in the case.”
Section 62 [3]
“(1) A case may exceptionally be reassigned by the President of the National Judicial Office ( Országos Bírósági Hivatal , “NJO”) to another court having the same competence as the competent court if the adjudication of the case or a specific group of cases filed with the court in a given period of time cannot otherwise be ensured within a reasonable length of time due to the court ’ s extraordinary and disproportionate caseload, provided that such reassignment does not impose a disproportionate burden on the court to which the case is reassigned.”
Section 63 [4]
(1) [ By relying on the principles determined by the National Judicial Council ( Országos Bírói Tanács )] [5] the President of the NJO shall, within 8 days from receipt of the motion, examine whether in light of the case flow, the personnel and other data and of the specific features of the case affected by the reassignment, the motion is well-founded and shall examine to which court the case may be reassigned. The President of the NJO shall consult the court to which the case is reassigned – in criminal cases the Chief Public Prosecutor, if the motion has been filed not by the Chief Public Prosecutor – and may request data or opinion from any court; such requests shall be complied with immediately.
(2) The President of the NJO shall, within 8 days from receipt of the opinions and data referred to in subsection (1) decide on the reassignment by refusing the motion in case it is ill-founded or by reassigning the case to another court in case the motion is well-founded. In the decision, the President of the NJO shall explain how the principles determined by the NJO were applied.
(3) A party affected by the reassignment may file an appeal against the decision on the reassignment within 8 days from the publication of the decision on the courts ’ official website and on the central website. ...
(4 ) ... The appeal shall be adjudicated by the Kúria in non-litigious proceedings within 8 days. ...
(5 ) ... If the decision on the reassignment is not in conformity with those rules of this Act which govern the reassignment of cases, the Kúria shall quash the decision. A decision on the reassignment of a case may not be modified by the Kúria .” [6]
20 . Act no. XIX of 1998 on Criminal Procedure provides as follows:
Section 20/A [7]
“(1) A case may, exceptionally, be reassigned by the President of the National Judicial Office (“NJO”) to another court having the same competence as the competent court if the adjudication of the case cannot otherwise be ensured within a reasonable length of time due to the court ’ s extraordinary caseload, provided that such reassignment does not impose a disproportionate burden on the court to which the case is reassigned.”
Section 21
“(1) No one may act as a judge ...
e) if he or she cannot be expected to form an unbiased opinion for other reasons.”
Section 23
“(1) The judge affected by a ground for exclusion and the presiding judge gaining knowledge of the existence of a ground for exclusion against a member of the court committee shall immediately notify the President of the court thereof.
(2) The ground for exclusion may also be reported by ... the defendant, or the counsel for the defence ... .
(3) Following the commencement of the trial the persons specified in subsection (2) may only invoke the ground for exclusion regulated in section 21 (1) e), if they substantiate that they gained knowledge of the fact underlying the notification only after the commencement of the trial and reported it immediately.”
Section 348
“(1) Unless an exception is made under this Act, the second instance court shall review the judgment challenged in the appeal and the entire court proceedings having led to the judgment.”
Section 373
“(1) The second instance court ...
II. shall quash the judgment challenged in the appeal and remit the case to the first instance, if
a) the court was not lawfully formed,
b) a judge excluded under the law took part in adopting the judgment ... ”
21 . Constitutional Court decision no. 36/2013. (XII.5.) AB of 2 December 2013 (adopted by seven votes to seven with the casting vote of the President) contains the following passages:
“[32] According to Article XXVIII (1) of the Fundamental Law and Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, everyone is entitled to a hearing by a tribunal established by law. The requirement of a tribunal “established by law” incorporates the right to a lawful judge, ... [who is] the judge belonging to the court with competence and jurisdiction and designated by the pre-established objective rules of case-assignment of that court. ...
[34 ] ... The designation of a court for the trial – and this entirely at the discretion of the President of the NJO – resulted in the violation of the right to a lawful judge, flowing from Article XXVIII (1) of the Fundamental Law that enshrines the requirement of a fair trial ...
[38] ‘ ... The requirement of timeliness is only one of the elements of a fair trial and its enforcement cannot be taken to the extreme; it cannot prevail over other elements of fair trial and, most importantly, cannot be applied to the detriment of other fundamental rights ’ [Constitutional Court decision no. 20/2005. (V.26.) AB]. ...
[41] In its decision no. 166/2011. (XII.20.) AB concerning, among other issues, the principle of nullum iudicium sine lege , the Constitutional Court emphasised (having regard to the case-law of the [European] Court [of Human Rights] that ‘ the reassignment of a particular group of cases from a court proceeding under the general jurisdiction rules to the jurisdiction of another court may only be compatible with the Convention if the substantive and procedural rules and preconditions of such a reassignment are laid down by the lawmaker in transparent, pre-determined, clear and objective parameters leaving no (or minimal) room for discretion and ensuring that the actual decision is taken by the own institutions of the independent, impartial court system. ’ ...
[43] Therefore, the Constitutional Court held that the [impugned provisions] were also incompatible with Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.
[61] Since in the present case the lawmaker did not allow appeal against a decision which affected the fundamental rights of the persons concerned (in particular, their rights to a fair trial, as explained above), the Constitutional Court held that the provision was unconstitutional and also violated an international treaty, in that it was neither compatible with Article XXVIII (7) of the Fundamental Law nor with Article 13 of the Convention.
[62] As a matter of principle, a declaration of unconstitutionality results, by the force of law, in the non-applicability of [the impugned provisions] in the cases which were at the origin of the Constitutional Court ’ s proceedings. For this reason, the Constitutional Court did not have to rule on this question separately.”
22 . On 17 September 2012 the Nati onal Judicial Council decided (r esolution no. 58/2012. (IX.17.) OBT) that only those courts were entitled to request reassignment whose workload exceeded the national average from three perspectives conjointly (number of cases per judge, the proportion of cases pending over two years and the proportion of high-profile/priority cases).
23 . The Government submitted three cases, in which the Kúria decided on appeals against reassignments.
Decision no. Kpkf.37.584/2012/2 contains the following passages:
“ ... [The law] specifies reassignment as an exceptional institution which may only affect courts having the same competence in respect of cases making the effective and timely adjudication of court proceedings pending before a court difficult, due to their complexity.
In the decision affected by the remedy, the President of the NJO may, and did, take into account only courts having the same competence and fitting the forum system. ... Thus the decision ... did not create a so-called separate court for the adjudication of the individual case which might have resulted in a fundamental breach of the right to a lawfully appointed court.
... Based on numbers and statistical data it can be established that the “high-priority” caseload of judges of the Budapest Regional Court is several times higher than at other tribunals.
Since the challenged decision was taken prior to the assignment of the case to the judge actually adjudicating the case, ... the defendant ’ s right to his “natural” judge could obviously not be limited by the decision of the President of the NJO. Following the reassignment, the assignment of the case to the judge proceeding in the case took place according to the pre-arranged work schedule accessible to clients.”
24 . The summary of case no. Bkk.I.519/2014., published by the Kúria on 16 May 2014, contains the following passages:
“ ... [A] bove all, the question to decide was whether the ordinary court, whose jurisdiction is based on an already repealed provision that had been found, by the Constitutional Court, unconstitutional and in breach of [the Convention], can itself conclude that the unconstitutional provision had not been applicable in the ongoing proceedings, even if neither the Constitutional Court nor the lawmaker specified a consequence of that kind. ... Annulation of a law [by the Constitutional Court] ... does not prejudice legal relationships and ensuing rights and obligations established before or on the day of the decision ’ s publication – except when the Constitutional Court explicitly orders the review of the criminal ... proceedings. ... In the absence of any specific Constitutional Court instructions in this respect, the declaration of unconstitutionality of the (already repealed) provisions that made possible for the President of the NJO to designate the competent court does not affect the validity of the decisions adopted on the basis of those provisions.”
25 . Decision no. Bkk.III.494/2014/4. of the Kúria , adopted on 23 April 2014, contains the following passages:
“[The Kúria shall decide on the question of jurisdiction] if two courts both refuse to hear the case for want of jurisdiction, but they do not consider the other court competent reciprocally and it is only one of them who deems the other one competent. ... According to section 20 (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, a court shall be designated by the Kúria to hear/try the case if the circumstances defining the jurisdiction are unclear. ... In that case, jurisdiction will be based on the decision of the Kúria . ... In the present case, the Kúria adopted its decision [assigning the case to the court designated previously by the President of the NJO] with regard to [the principle of pre-emption]. The former assignment decision of the President of the NJO and the decision of the Constitutional Court are both immaterial in this procedural situation. ... The existence of a procedural act may only be set aside ... if the invalidation was explicitly directed on it. ... Thus, the fact that the [court designated by the President of the NJO] already conducted a part of the proceedings cannot be ignored; it forms the basis for the application of the principle of pre-emption.”
C . Work of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (“the Venice Commission”)
26 . Document CDL- AD( 2012)001 [8] contains the following passages:
“The Commission fully acknowledges the need to establish an efficient and operational administration of justice. However, the Commission has serious doubts about the reform model chosen, which concentrates these very large competences in the hand of one individual person, the President of the newly established National Judicial Office (NJO) [9] .
States enjoy a wide margin of appreciation when establishing a system for the administration of justice and a variety of models exist in Europe. However, in none of the member states of the Council of Europe have such important powers been vested in a single person, lacking sufficient democratic accountability. In countries where the Minister for Justice appoints judges, the Minister is directly accountable to Parliament, has a shorter mandate and tends to be personally involved only in the most important cases.
Even if most of the competences of the President of the NJO do not relate to decision-making in individual cases, many of the powers listed above are closely related to the position of the judge who makes these decisions. The President of the NJO is not only a strong court “administrator”, he or she also intervenes very closely in judicial decision making through the right of transferring cases to another court, his or her influence on individual judges and on the internal structure of the judiciary.
In contrast, the President of the NJO has abundant competences and, hence, is the main actor in judicial administration. However, the mere fact that only judges are eligible as President of the NJO, does not make the latter an organ of judicial self-government. Instead, this would imply that the judges have a decisive vote in his/her election. Since the President of the NJO is elected by Parliament, i.e. an external actor from the viewpoint of the judiciary, it cannot be regarded as an organ of judicial self-government.
Allocation of cases
The allocation of cases is one of the elements of crucial importance for the impartiality of the courts. With respect to the allocation of cases, the Venice Commission - in line with Council of Europe standards [10] - holds that “the allocation of cases to individual judges should be based on objective and transparent criteria established in advance by the law. [11] According to the ECtHR ’ s case-law, the object of the term “established by law” in Article 6 ECHR is to ensure “that the judicial organisation in a democratic society [does] not depend on the discretion of the Executive, but that it [is] regulated by law emanating from Parliament”. [12] Nor, in countries where the law is codified, can the organisation of the judicial system be left to the discretion of the judicial authorities, although this does not mean that the courts do not have some latitude to interpret the relevant national legislation. [13] Together with the express words of Article 6 ECHR, according to which “the medium” through which access to justice under fair hearing should be ensured must not only be a tribunal established by law, but also one which is both “independent” and “impartial” in general and specific terms [ ... ], this implies that the judges or judicial panels entrusted with specific cases should not be selected ad hoc and/or ad personam , but according to objective and transparent criteria. [14]
The order in which the individual judge (or panel of judges) within a court is determined in advance, meaning that it is based on general objective principles, is essential. It is desirable to indicate clearly where the ultimate responsibility for proper case allocation is being placed . In national legislation, it is sometimes provided that the court Presidents should have the power to assign cases among the individual judges. However, this power involves an element of discretion, which could be misused as a means of putting pressure on judges by overburdening them with cases or by assigning them only low-profile cases. It is also possible to direct politically sensitive cases to certain judges and to avoid allocating them to others. This can be a very effective way of influencing the outcome of the process. [15]
Furthermore, Section 76.4.b AOAC enables the President of the NJO to designate another court based on the vague criterion of “adjudicating cases within a reasonable period of time”. This relates to Articles 11.3 and 11.4 of the Act on Transitional Provisions of 30 December 2011, which were adopted on the constitutional level in order to overcome the annulment of a similar provision on the legislative level by Constitutional Court judgment no. 166/2011 of 20 December 2011. The Constitutional Court had found that provision contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights. The fact, that some courts in Hungary are so small that the designation of such a court would effectively amount to the designation of a single judge or a special chamber, further adds to this. Even though the reasonable time requirement is part of both Article XXVIII Fundamental Law and Article 6.1 ECHR, it is not absolute, but forms a field of tension with the often conflicting right to a fair trial with respect to the fact that having and exercising more procedural rights necessarily goes hand in hand with a longer duration of the proceedings. [16] Taking into account the importance of the right to a lawful judge for a fair trial, the state has to resort to other less intrusive means, in particular to provide for a sufficient number of judges and court staff. Solutions by means of arbitrary designation of another court cannot be justified at all.
In order to prevent the risk of an abuse of the power to allocate and to bring the provisions in line with Article 6 ECHR, the Venice Commission recommends that the Hungarian authorities use other mechanisms for the distribution of cases, especially those outlined by the Venice Commission as follows: “In order to enhance impartiality and independence of the judiciary it is highly recommended that the order in which judges deal with the cases be determined on the basis of general criteria. This can be done for example on the basis of alphabetical order, on the basis of a computerised system or on the basis of objective criteria such as categories of cases. The general rules (including exceptions) should be formulated by the law or by special regulations on the basis of the law, e.g. in court regulations laid down by the presidium or President. It may not always be possible to establish a fully comprehensive abstract system that operates for all cases, leaving no room to decisions regarding allocation in individual cases.
There may be circumstances requiring a need to take into account the workload or the specialisation of judges. ... The criteria for making such decisions by the court President or presidium should, however, be defined in advance [17] on the basis of objective criteria. Workload statistics provide objective statistical data, but they are not sufficient as a basis for the decision on transferral, since they do not contain criteria for the selection of certain cases for transferral or for the selection of the individual receiving court. In order to prevent any risk of abuse, court Presidents and the President of the NJO should not have the discretion to decide which cases should be transferred or to select the ‘ sending ’ or ‘ receiving ’ courts . In addition, any such case allocation should be subject to review in order to take into account possible harsh situations where persons without the means to come to a court that is far away from their home town.
There may therefore be a basis for an objective system (even though it seems that in the present case, the nine cases were not assigned to one of the least burdened courts). The real problem lies in the selection of some cases, which are transferred, and in the lack of any justification, why it was just these cases that were selected. The Commission delegation was indeed informed that one of the cases transferred was a highly sensitive one of alleged political corruption.”
27 . Document no. CDL( 2009)055 contains the following passage:
“68. Many European constitutions contain a subjective right to a lawful judge. As a rule, the guarantee is worded in a negative way, such as in the Constitution of Belgium: “No one can be separated, unwillingly, from the judge that the law has assigned to him.” (Article 13) or Italy: “No one may be removed from the normal judge predetermined by law ” . [18] Other constitutions state the “right to the lawful judge” in a positive way such as the Constitution of Slovenia: “Everyone has the right to have any decision regarding his rights, duties and any charges brought against him made without undue delay by an independent, impartial court constituted by law. Only a judge duly appointed pursuant to rules previously established by law and by judicial regulations may judge such an individual.” [19]
COMPLAINTS
28 . The applicants complained under Article 6 of the Convention, read alone and in conjunction with Article 14 , that the transfer of their case to an assignee court amounted to the discriminatory removal of their lawful judge and undermined the impartiality of the trial court , itself not being “a tribunal established by law”. The arguably deliberate protraction of the case enabled the reassignment; and in the proceedings leading up to this measure, the principle of equality of arms was not respected . For want of any remedy against the assignment, they also invoked Article 13 read in conjunction with Article 6.
THE LAW
29. The applicants complained that the assignee court in which they are standing trial was not a tribunal established by law in terms of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention. The requirement of equality of arms was not observed as the Attorney General had been requested to express his views on the reassignment motion while they could neither know of the contents thereof nor comment on it. The trial was as such unfair given that there was an unlawful, and possibly deliberate, delay in the submission of the indictment which enabled the application of the reassignment measure, introduced during the delay. Moreover, they had no effective domestic remedy in respect of the reassignment. Lastly, although their situation was analogous to other accused persons tried by the normally competent courts, their case was one of the few that were transferred, discriminatorily, to another court in a different region of the country.
They relied on Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, read alone and in conjunction with Articles 13 and 14 of the Convention.
30. The Court considers that the case falls to be examined under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention alone, which provides as follows:
“In the determination of ... any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law.”
31 . The Government contested the applicants ’ views as regards both admissibility and merits . They argued in particular that the application was inadmissible for failure to exhaust domestic remedies, the trial being still in progress. The applicants contested this argument .
32. Article 35 § 1 of the Convention provides as follows:
“The Court may only deal with the matter after all domestic remedies have been exhausted, according to the generally recognised rules of international law, and within a period of six months from the date on which the final decision was taken.”
33 . The Court observes that in the present case, the trial conducted against the applicants is still pending. It reiterates that the fairness of criminal proceedings as such is normally examined with regard to the proceedings taken as a whole, including any appeal procedures (see, among many authorities, Helmers v. Sweden , 29 October 1991, § 31, Series A no. 212 ‑ A; Edwards v. the United Kingdom , 16 December 1992, § 34, Series A no. 247 ‑ B; Stanford v. the United Kingdom , 23 February 1994, § 24, Series A no. 282 A; Dallos v. Hungary , no. 29082/95, § 52, ECHR 2001 ‑ II; and Taxquet v. Belgium [GC], no. 926/05, § 84, ECHR 2010); and that an accused ’ s acquittal, in general, precludes that person from claiming to be a victim of a violation of the procedural guarantees of Article 6 (see, for example, Heaney and McGuinness v. Ireland , no. 34720/97, § 43, ECHR 2000 ‑ XII; Byrn v. Denmark , no. 13156/87, Commission decision of 1 July 1992, Decisions and Reports 73, p. 5 ). It is only in special circumstances, pertaining in particular to the presumption of innocence and thus Article 6 § 2, that the Court embarked on a scrutiny of fairness although the case against the accused was not concluded (see Quinn v. Ireland , no. 36887/97, §§ 39 to 46, 21 December 2000).
34 . In the present case, the applicants ’ case is pending at first instance; and it cannot be excluded that they will be acquitted. Even if they are convicted at first instance, their case will subsequently be susceptible to appeals. Bearing in mind that the appellate proceedings, if any, may not necessarily cure the alleged defect (see De Cubber v. Belgium , 26 October 1984, § 33 in fine , Series A no. 86), the Court considers nevertheless that, in the circumstances, it is not in a position to assess the fairness of the proceedings considered in their entirety – but this without prejudice to any finding as to the severability of similar complaints in applications where the applicants are convicted.
It follows that the application is premature and must be rejected, pursuant to Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the Convention.
For these reasons, the Court, by a majority,
Declares the application inadmissible.
Abel Campos Guido Raimondi Deputy Registrar President
[1] This Act entered into force on 1 January 2012, but was declared unconstitutional and annulled on 29 December 2012 (Constitutional Court decision no. 45/2012. (XII. 29.) AB), with retroactive effect as of 31 December 2011.
[2] Article 27(4) of the Fundamental Law was enacted by the Fourth Amendment of the Fundamental Law as of 1 April 2013, but was repealed by the Fifth Amendment with effect from 1 October 2013.
[3] In force until 31 July 2013 , when the possibility of case reassignment was abolished .
[4] In force until 31 July 2013.
[5] This amendment entered into force on 17 July 2012.
[6] The text in italics was enacted as of 17 July 2012.
[7] This provision was repealed with effect from 1 August 2013.
[8] Opinion on Act CLXII of 2011 on the Legal Status and Remuneration of Judges and Act CLXI of 2011 on the Organisation and Administration of Courts in Hungary .
[9] The NJO has no real powers in itself, but is regarded by the Hungarian authorities as “the work organization under him [i.e. the President]”.
[10] Recommendation CM( 2012)12, paragraph 24.
[11] CDL- AD( 2010)004, paragraph 81, 82.16.
[12] See Zand v. Austria , application no. 7360/76, Commission report of 12 October 1978, Decisions and Reports (DR) 15, pp. 70 and 80.
[13] See Coëme and Others v. Belgium , nos. 32492/96, 32547/96, 32548/96, 33209/96 and 33210/96, paragraph 98, ECHR 2000-VII.
[14] CDL-AD (2010)004, paragraph 77
[15] CDL- AD( 2010)004, paragraph 79.
[16] Cf. König v. Germany , ECtHR judgment of 28 June 1978, paragraph 100 .
[17] CDL- AD( 2010)004, paragraph 80.
[18] See also § 24 of the Constitution of Estonia: “No one shall be transferred, against his or her free will, from the jurisdiction of the court specified by law to the jurisdiction of another court.”; Article 8 of the Constitution of Greece: “No person shall be deprived of the judge assigned to him by law against his will.”; Article 33 of the Constitution of Liechtenstein: “ Nobody may be deprived of his proper judge; special tribunals may not be instituted. ” ; Article 13 of the Constitution of Luxemb o urg: “No one may be deprived, against his will, of the Judge assigned to him by the law.”; Article 17 of the Constitution of the Netherlands: “No one may be prevented against his will fr o m being heard by the courts to which he is entitled to apply under the law.”, Article 83 of the Constitution of Austria: “No one may be deprived of his lawful judge. ” ; Article 32 para. 9 of the Constitution of Portugal: “No case shall be withdrawn from a court that already had jurisdiction under an earlier law. ”, Article 48 of the Constitution of Slovakia: “No one must be removed from the jurisdiction of his law-assigned judge. The jurisdiction of the court is established by law. ” ; Article 101 of the German Grundgesetz : “No one may be removed from the jurisdiction of his lawful judge.”
[19] See also Article 30 of the Constitution of Switzerland: “Every person whose case is to be judged in judicial proceedings has the right to a court established by law, with jurisdiction, independence, and impartiality.”; Article 24 of the Constitution of Spain : “ Likewise, all have the right to the ordinary judge predetermined by law”.
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