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GOLUBEV v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 53612/10 • ECHR ID: 001-146541

Document date: August 26, 2014

  • Inbound citations: 0
  • Cited paragraphs: 0
  • Outbound citations: 4

GOLUBEV v. RUSSIA

Doc ref: 53612/10 • ECHR ID: 001-146541

Document date: August 26, 2014

Cited paragraphs only

FIRST SECTION

DECISION

Application no . 53612/10 Nikolay Rudolfovich GOLUBEV against Russia

The European Court of Human Rights ( First Section ), sitting on 26 August 2014 as a Committee composed of:

Khanlar Hajiyev , President, Julia Laffranque , Erik Møse, judges, and Søren C. Prebensen , Acting Deputy Section Registrar ,

Having regard to the above application lodged on 5 October 2009,

Having regard to the comments submitted by the parties,

Having deliberated, decides as follows:

THE FACTS

1 . The applicant, Mr Nikolay Rudolfovich Golubev, is a Russian national, who was born in 1960 and lived in Nizhniy Novgorod before his arrest.

2 . The Russian Government (“the Government”) were represented by Mr G. Matyushkin, the Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of Human Rights.

3 . Between 18 December 2003 and 10 April 2007 the applicant was held in remand prison IZ-52/1 in the Nizhniy Novgorod Region. The facility was overcrowded. Thus, cell 11 measuring 40 sq. m was equipped with twenty sleeping places and accommodated up to twenty inmates; cell 98 measuring 8 sq. m was designed for two detainees but housed up to three individuals; finally, cell 252 measuring 7 sq. m presented two sleeping places and up to three persons who occupied them.

4 . The applicant subsequently brought a civil claim for compensation in connection with inadequate conditions of detention in the remand prison. By final judgment of 21 September 2010, the Nizhniy Novgorod Regional Court granted the claim and awarded the applicant 3,000 Russian roubles.

COMPLAINTS

5. The applicant complained under Article 3 of the Convention about the conditions of his detention in the remand prison.

6. The applicant further alleged under Article 5 that a number of judicial decisions extending his detention in 2005 and 2006 had been unlawful.

THE LAW

7. The applicant ’ s first complaint is related to the conditions of his detention in the remand prison. Having regard to the fact that the respective period of his detention had ended more than six months before his application was lodged with the Court, the Court must determine whether the applicant complied with the six-month requirement imposed by Article 35 of the Convention.

8. The Government submitted that, since the adoption of the Kalashnikov judgment (see Kalashnikov v. Russia , no. 47095/99, ECHR 2002 ‑ VI), the Court had consistently maintained its position that there had been no effective remedy in the Russian legal system for the complaints relating to inadequate conditions of detention. That case-law was accessible to the applicant and he should have been aware of its existence. In those circumstances, he should have lodged his application within six months of the end of the situation he complained about, that is, the period of his detention in the remand prison.

9. The applicant replied that he had lodged his application within six months of the domestic courts ’ final decision on his compensation claims. Accordingly, it was not belated.

10. The Court reiterates that the six-month period normally runs from the final decision in the process of exhaustion of domestic remedies. Where it is clear from the outset however that no effective remedy is available to the applicant, the period runs from the date of the acts or measures complained of (see Artyomov v. Russia , no. 14146/02 , § 108, 27 May 2010, with further references).

11. The Court further recalls its constant position that given the present state of Russian law, a civil action for compensation for inadequate conditions of detention has not been considered an effective remedy (see, most recently, Ananyev and Others v. Russia , nos. 42525/07 and 60800/08 , §§ 113-118, 10 January 2012, with further references). T he Court ’ s case ‑ law on the absence of an effective remedy for complaints concerning inadequate conditions of detention being sufficiently established, the applicant had at his disposal a period of six months following his departure from the remand prison, during which he should have ascertained the conditions on the admissibility of an application to the Court and, if necessary, obtained appropriate legal advice. However, he did not submit his application within that time period.

12. The Court has examined a similar situation and reached the conclusion that the complaint about the inadequate conditions of detention should have been introduced within six months of the day following the applicant ’ s transfer out of the detention facility (see Norkin v. Russia (dec.), no. 21056/11, 5 February 2013 ) . There are no arguments or factual information in the present case that would warrant a departure from the Court ’ s findings in that decision . The applicant should have been aware of the ineffectiveness of the judicial avenue he had made use of, before he lodged his application with the Court. The final disposal of his claims for compensation cannot be relied upon as starting a fresh time-limit for his complaint s.

13. It follows that his complaints about allegedly inadequate conditions of detention are inadmissible for non-compliance with the six -month rule set out in Article 35 § 1 of the Convention, and must be rejected pursuant to Article 35 § 4.

14. The Court has examined the remainder of the applicant ’ s complaints. However, having regard to all the material in its possession, it finds that these complaints do not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms set out in the Convention or its Protocols. It follows that this part of the application must be rejected as being manifestly ill-founded, pursuant to Article 35 §§ 3 (a) and 4 of the Convention.

For these reasons, the Court , unanimously ,

Declares the application inadmissible.

Søren C. Prebensen Khanlar Hajiyev Acting Deputy Registrar President

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998 - 2026

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