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Prince Hans-Adam II of Liechtenstein v. Germany [GC]

Doc ref: 42527/98 • ECHR ID: 002-11466

Document date: July 12, 2001

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Prince Hans-Adam II of Liechtenstein v. Germany [GC]

Doc ref: 42527/98 • ECHR ID: 002-11466

Document date: July 12, 2001

Cited paragraphs only

Information Note on the Court’s case-law 32

July 2001

Prince Hans-Adam II of Liechtenstein v. Germany [GC] - 42527/98

Judgment 12.7.2001 [GC]

Article 6

Civil proceedings

Article 6-1

Access to court

Exclusion of jurisdiction of German courts with regard to claim for return of property confiscated in Czechoslovakia for the purpose of post-war reparations: no violation

Article 1 of Protocol No. 1

Article 1 para. 1 of Protocol No. 1

Possessions

Claim by heir for return of work of art confiscated for the purpose of post-war reparations: no violation

(Extract from press release)

Facts – Prince Hans-Adam II of Liechtenstein, monarch of Liechtenstein, was born in 1945 and lives in Vaduz.

A painting - “ Szene an einem römischen Kalkofen ”, by Pieter van Laer - owned by the applicant’s father, was confiscated by former Czechoslovakia, while it was on Czechoslovak territory, under Decree No. 12 on the “confiscation and accelerated allocation of agricultural property of German and Hungarian persons and of those having committed treason and acted as enemies of the Czech and Slovak people”, issu ed by the President of former Czechoslovakia on 21 June 1945.

When, in 1991, the Municipality of Cologne received the painting on loan from the Czech Republic, the applicant instituted court proceedings against the Municipality in order to gain possession of the painting.

The German civil courts declared his application inadmissible on the ground that they did not have jurisdiction. The inadmissibility decision was made under Chapter 6, Article 3 §§ 1 and 3 of the Convention on the Settlement of Matters a rising out of the War and the Occupation, signed in 1952, as amended in 1954, according to which claims or actions against persons having acquired or transferred title to property on the basis of measures carried out with regard to German external assets o r other property, seized for the purpose of reparation or restitution, or as a result of the state of war, or on the basis of specific agreements, are not admissible. The courts considered that the confiscation of the applicant’s father’s property under th e Decree No. 12 constituted a measure within the meaning of Chapter 6, Article 3.

The Federal Constitutional Court refused to entertain the applicant’s constitutional complaint on the ground that it offered no prospect of success, considering, among other things, that the exclusion of jurisdiction did not amount to a violation of the right to property as these clauses and the Settlement Convention as a whole served to settle matters dating back to a time before the entry into force of the German Basic Law. The court also confirmed that Chapter 6, Article 3 §§ 1 and 3, of the Settlement Convention had not been set aside by the Treaty on the Final Settlement with respect to Germany.

The painting was subsequently returned to the Czech Republic.

The applicant alleged, in particular, that he had had no effective access to court concerning his claim for restitution of the painting at issue. He also complained that the German courts’ decisions to declare his action inadmissible, and the return of the painting to the Czech Republic, violated his right to property.  He relied on Article 6 § 1 and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, taken alone and together with Article 14.

Law

Article 6 § 1

(a) Access to court – In the Court’s view, the exclusion of German jurisdiction und er Chapter 6, Article 3 of the Settlement Convention was a consequence of the particular status of Germany under public international law after the Second World War. The Court found that it was only as a result of the 1954 Paris Agreements with regard to t he Federal Republic of Germany and the Treaty on the Final Settlement with respect to Germany of 1990 that the Federal Republic obtained the authority of a sovereign State over its internal and external affairs for a united Germany. In these unique circums tances, the limitation on access to a German court, as a consequence of the Settlement Convention, had a legitimate objective.

Moreover, in the Court’s view, it could not be said that the interpretation of Chapter 6 Article 3 of the Settlement Convention in the applicant’s case was inconsistent with previous German case-law or that its application was manifestly erroneous or was such as to reach arbitrary conclusions.

The Court further concluded that the applicant’s interest in bringing litigation in the Federal Republic of Germany was not sufficient to outweigh the vital public interests in regaining sovereignty and unifying Germany. Accordingly, there was no breach of the applicant’s right of access to a court within the meaning of the Court’s case-law.

(b) Fairness of the Federal Constitutional Court proceedings – The Court found that the applicant had the benefit of adversarial proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court and that he was able to submit the arguments he considered relevant to his case. There was no indication of unfairness in the manner in which the proceedings at issue were conducted.

Conclusion : no violation (unanimously).

Article 1 of Protocol No. 1: The Court, considering that it was not competent to examine the circumstances of the expropriation in 1946 or the continuing effects produced by it up to the present date, found that the applicant as his father’s heir could not, for the purposes of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, be deemed to have retained a title to property nor a cla im to restitution against the Federal Republic of Germany amounting to a “legitimate expectation” in the sense of the Court’s case-law. Consequently, there had been no interference with the applicant’s “possessions” within the meaning of Article 1 of Proto col No. 1.

Conclusion : no violation (unanimously).

Article 14: The Court found that Article 14 did not apply to the present case, as the facts of which the applicant complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, namely the German court decisions and the re turn of the painting to the Czech Republic, did not amount to an interference with any of his rights under that provision.

Conclusion : no violation (unanimously).

© Council of Europe/European Court of Human Rights This summary by the Registry does not bin d the Court.

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