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FIFTY-EIGHT CASES AGAINST FRANCE

Doc ref: 37565/97, 41358/98, 43719/98, 43969/98, 45256/99, 46098/99, 46820/99, 46215/99, 46659/99, 48954/99, ... • ECHR ID: 001-69929

Document date: July 18, 2005

  • Inbound citations: 3101
  • Cited paragraphs: 16
  • Outbound citations: 0

FIFTY-EIGHT CASES AGAINST FRANCE

Doc ref: 37565/97, 41358/98, 43719/98, 43969/98, 45256/99, 46098/99, 46820/99, 46215/99, 46659/99, 48954/99, ... • ECHR ID: 001-69929

Document date: July 18, 2005

Cited paragraphs only

Resolution ResDH(2005)63 concerning the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in 58 cases against France (see Appendix to this Resolution) of excessive length of certain proceedings concerning civil rights and obligations or the determination of criminal charges before the administrative courts

(Adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 18 July 2005 at the 933rd meeting of the Ministers ' Deputies)

The Committee of Ministers, under the terms of Article 46, paragraph 2, of the Convention for the P rotection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, as amended by P rotocol No. 11 (hereinafter referred to as “the Convention”),

Having regard to the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in 58 cases, details of which appear in the Appendix to this Resolution, delivered between 4 June 1999 and 5 October 2004 and transmitted to the Committee of Ministers once they had become final under Articles 44 and 46 of the Convention;

Recalling that the cases originated in applications against France (see Appendix), lodged either with the European Commission of Human Rights under former Article 25 of the Convention, or with the European Court under Article 34 of the Convention, and that the Court (seised of the cases lodged before the Commission under Article 5, paragraph 2, of P rotocol No. 11) declared admissible the complaints relating to the excessive length of certain proceedings concerning civil rights and obligations or the determination of criminal charges before administrative courts;

Recalling that in the cases of SA P L and Théry, the Court also declared admissible the applicants ' complaints regarding the violation of their right to the peaceful enjoyment of their possessions as a result of the excessive length of the proceedings, but found that it was not necessary to examine these complaints in the light of its findings regarding the length of proceedings;

Whereas in its judgments Court:

- held that there had been a violation of Article 6, paragraph 1, of the Convention;

- held that the government of the respondent state was to pay the applicants, within three months from the date at which the judgments become final, certain sums (see Appendix) and that simple interest at an annual rate (set by the Court in each judgment) would be payable on those sums from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement;

- dismissed the remainder of the applicants ' claim for just satisfa c tion;

Having regard to the Rules adopted by the Committee of Ministers concerning the application of Article 46, paragraph 2, of the Convention;

Having invited the government of the respondent state to inform it of the mea s ures which had been taken in consequence of the judgments, having regard to France ' s obligation under Article 46, paragraph 1, of the Conve n tion to abide by them;

Whereas during the examination of the cases by the Committee of Ministers, the government of the respondent state indicated that the judgments of the European Court had been transmitted to the authorities concerned and in order to remedy, as far as possible, the consequences of the violations for the applicants ( restitutio in integrum) , the Committee asked for the proceedings, still pending at the time of the Court ' s judgments to be accelerated,

Whereas during the examination of the case by the Committee of Ministers, the government of the respondent state gave the Committee information about the general measures taken to prevent new violations of the same kind as those found in the present judgment; this information appears in the appendix to this resolution;

Having satisfied itself that on the dates mentioned in the Appendix, the government of the respondent state had paid the a p plicants the sums provided for in the judgments as well as default interest in cases paid after expiry of the time limit set (see Appendix),

Declares, after having examined the information supplied by the Government of France, that it has exe r cised its functions under Article 46, paragraph 2, of the Convention in this case.

Appendix to Resolution ResDH((2005)63

Concerning fifty eight cases against France relating to the excessive length of proceedings concerning civil rights and obligations or the determination of criminal charges before the administrative courts

1. Details of just satisfaction awarded to the applicants

CASES CONCERNING THE EXCESSIVE LENGTH OF P ROCEEDINGS BEFORE ADMINISTRATIVE COURTS

Cases brought before the European Commission of Human Rights

(former Article 25 of the Convention)

Case

Judgment of

Final on

Non-pecuniary damages and/or costs

P ayment on

SA P L          37565/97

18/12/2001

18/03/2002

10 500 euros

23/05/2002

DESMOTS André        41358/98

02/07/2002

06/11/2002

6 000 euros

23/05/2003 + interest

SCOTTI Jean ‑ Claude        43719/98

07/01/2003

21/05/2003

500 euros

12/08/2003

KROLICZEK Mieczyslaw           43969/98

02/07/2002

21/05/2003

7 800 euros

07/07/2003

RICHEUX Alain          45256/99

12/06/2003

12/09/2003

2 800 euros

27/11/2003

CLINIQUE MOZART SARL

46098/99

08/06/2004

08/09/2004

9 000 euros

03/12/2004

ZUILI Hector et Dominique            46820/99

22/07/2003

22/10/2003

9 543,46 euros

19/11/2003

Applications brought before the European Court of Human Rights

(Article 34 of the Convention)

Case

Judgment of

Final on

Non-pecuniary damages and/or costs

P ayment on

FAIVRE Jacques       46215/99

17/12/2002

21/05/2003

12 000 euros

01/07/2003

VERRERIE DE BIOT S.A.      46659/99

27/05/2003

27/08/2003

11 700 euros

01/10/2003

TRAORE Assa       48954/99

17/12/2002

17/03/2003

11 943,50 euros

23/05/2003

BUTEL P atrice     49544/99

12/11/2002

12/02/2003

10 100 euros

11/04/2003

HEIDECKER-CAR P ENTIER Christine   50368/99

17/12/2002

17/03/2003

15 525 euros

23/05/2003

RAITIERE P aul       51066/99

04/02/2003

04/05/2003

5 000 euros

27/06/2003

SOLANA Henri       51179/99

19/03/2002

04/09/2002

3 048,98 euros

22/04/2003 + interest

VIEZIEZ Jacques       52116/99

15/10/2002

21/05/2003

6 180 euros

23/04/2003

RACINET Guy

53544/99

23/09/2003

24/03/2004

8 275,46 euros

03/12/2004 + interest

MOUFFLET Claude       53988/00

03/02/2004

14/06/2004

7 500 euros

22/11/2004 + interest

BUFFERNE Béatrice       54367/00

11/02/2003

09/07/2003

2 000 euros

06/10/2003

MAIGNANT Hélène

54618/00

21/09/2004

21/12/2004

10 000 euros

04/03/2005

A P P IETTO Michel      56927/00

25/02/2003

09/07/2003

6 200 euros

23/09/2003

RAITIERE Michel          57734/00

17/06/2003

24/09/2003

6 000 euros

12/01/2004 + interest

BENHAIM Max      58600/00

04/02/2003

04/05/2003

7 000 euros

03/07/2003

P LOT Serge       59153/00

17/06/2003

17/09/2003

6 100 euros

01/10/2003

P ERHIRIN Jean      60545/00

04/02/2003

21/05/2003

3 500 euros

06/10/2003 + interest

SELLIER Françoise       60992/00

23/09/2003

23/12/2003

6 750 euros

09/04/2004 + interest

JARLAN Christophe      62274/00

15/04/2003

15/07/2003

5 100 euros

12/08/2003

MUSTAFA Raoul      63056/00

17/06/2003

17/09/2003

6 000 euros

01/10/2003

MIRAILLES Robert      63156/00

09/03/2004

09/06/2004

5 991 euros

09/08/2004

P OILLY Jean-Claude     68155/01

29/07/2003

29/10/2003

5 000 euros

12/11/2003

CARRIES Roger      74628/01

20/07/2004

20/10/2004

6 000 euros

22/11/2004

CAILLE Alain

3455/02

05/10/2004

05/01/2005

4 773 euros

02/03/2005

REISSE Roland

24051/02

05/10/2004

05/01/2005

3 000 euros

02/03/2005

ONNIKIAN Kervork

15816/02

05/10/2004

05/01/2005

4 000 euros

22/04/2005 + interest

MITRE Jacques

44010/02

05/10/2004

05/01/2005

5 000 euros

02/03/2005

CASES CONCERNING THE EXCESSIVE LENGTH OF P ROCEEDINGS BEFORE AMINISTRATIVE COURTS AND IN P ARTICULAR THE CONSEIL D ' ETAT

Cases brought before the European Commission of Human Rights

(former Article 25 of the Convention)

Case

Judgment of

Final on

Non-pecuniary damages and costs

P ayment on

CAILLOT Simone      36932/97

04/06/1999

04/09/1999

25 000 French francs

01/03/2000 + interest

BALLESTRA Albin     28660/95

12/12/2000

12/03/2001

100 300 French francs

01/03/2001

FRYDLENDER Nicolas     30979/96

27/06/2000

27/06/2000

110 000 French francs

28/08/2000

BLAISOT Charles et Marie     33207/96

25/01/2000

25/04/2000

50 000 French francs

06/06/2000

THERY Hubert       33989/96

01/02/2000

01/05/2000

40 000 French francs

03/08/2000

LAMBOURDIERE Rodolphe    37387/97

02/08/2000

02/11/2000

50 000 French francs

28/11/2000

ZANATTA Aldo et Jean-Baptiste      38042/97

28/03/2000

28/06/2000

40 000 French francs

19/06/2000

ARVOIS Armel       38249/97

23/11/1999

23/02/2000

35 000 French francs

02/06/2000 + interest

OUENDENO Alexis     39996/98

16/04/2002

10/07/2002

6 500 euros

11/10/2002 (applicant waived interest in view of small amount)

GARCIA Joseph ‑ Gilbert      41001/98

26/09/2000

26/12/2000

52 200 French francs

21/05/2001 + interest

DURAND Louis (n o 1)            41449/98

13/11/2001

13/02/2002

40 000 French francs

03/04/2002 + interest

DURAND Louis (n o 2)      42038/98

13/11/2001

13/02/2002

40 000 French francs

12/07/2002

H.L.             42189/98

07/02/2002

07/05/2002

12 200 euros

07/07/2002

JULIEN Lucien       42276/98

14/11/2002

21/05/2003

-

-

CAM P S Gabriel      42401/98

24/10/2000

04/04/2001

30 000 French francs

17/12/2001 + interest

GRASS Serge       44066/98

09/11/2000

09/02/2001

40 000 French francs

18/04/2001

LERAY Stéphane et autres       44617/98

20/12/2001

20/03/2002

640 000 French francs

21/06/2002 (applicant waived interest in view of small amount)

GENTILHOMME Sylvette, SCHAF-BENHADJI Jeanine et ZEROUKI France       48205/99

48207/99

48209/99

14/05/2002

14/08/2002

25 829.40 euros

11/10/2002

Applications brought before the European Court of Human Rights

(Article 34 of the Convention)

Case

Judgment of

Final on

Non-pecuniary damages and costs

P ayment on

BAILLARD Michel         51575/99

26/03/2002

04/09/2002

7 000 euros

18/12/2002 + interest

E P OUX GOLETTO     54596/00

04/02/2003

04/05/2003

8 000 euros

03/07/2003

CHAUFOUR Hubert     54757/00

19/03/2002

19/06/2002

6 500 euros

12/07/2002

ASNAR Claude           57030/00

17/06/2003

03/12/2003

20 000 euros

01/10/2003

BARTRE Georges        70753/01

12/11/2003

12/02/2004

13 500 euros

01/04/2004

GOBRY P ascal           71367/01

06/07/2004

06/10/2004

10 500 euros

27/10/2004

2. Information provided by the government of France during the detailed examination of these cases by the Committee of Ministers

In 1995, in final Resolution DH(95)254 in the Beaumartin case, the Committee of Ministers noted the measures adopted at the time by the respondent state to reduce the length of proceedings before administrative courts and the Conseil d ' Etat in particular. Since that time, the European Court of Human Rights has found new violations of Article 6, paragraph 1, of the Convention on account of excessive length of proceedings before the administrative courts in general and/or before the Conseil d ' Etat in particular. The respondent state has therefore adopted further measures to avoid new, similar violations.

Measures adopted

Structural measures

The main measure has been the “orientation and planning for justice Act” adopted on 9 September 2002, which aims at providing swifter justice, not least in the administrative sector, by reducing the time required for judgments to one year at every level of jurisdiction. This act defines the orientations and the scheduling of the judicial apparatus for the period 2003 – 2007 and is accompanied by texts on implementation.

To attain its objectives, the Act lays down programmes for the increase of courts ' human resources, both judges (210 posts – i.e. 25% of the level existing when the Act was adopted) and registry staff (270 posts) and authorises the recruitment of assistants de justice appointed to assist members of courts as well as the Conseil d ' Etat . Implementation of this recruitment programme was initiated in accordance with the Act: 59 administrative court advisors were recruited in 2002, 74 in 2003 and 85 in 2004. To date, 183 assistants de justice have been recruited.

The Act also sets up three new courts: an 8th administrative court of appeal established in Versailles on 1 September 2004 and administrative courts in Nîmes and Toulon. These new courts are additional to those already set up in Cergy- P ontoise and Melun.

It also allocates to the Conseil d ' Etat and administrative courts 114 million euros for normal expenditure and 60 million in the form of authorised programmes to be consecrated principally to improving court computer services and premises.

Among other innovations, the Act makes it possible to conclude “contracts of objectives” between the Conseil d ' Etat and P residents of administrative courts of appeal or even administrative courts which so wish. These contracts specify the additional resources allocated to the court, in return for which the court commits itself, in the form of exit objectives, to improve the efficiency of its working methods and the promptness with which it deals with cases.

P rocedural measures

Several measures have been taken to reduce both the number of old cases pending and the flow of new ones.

- With regard to administrative courts of appeal , Decree No. 2003-543 was adopted on 24 June 2003, modifying the regulatory part of the Code of Administrative Justice in two significant ways as regards appeal procedure: first compulsory representation by counsel at appeal, and secondly the suppression of appeals for certain kinds of proceedings involving small claims.

- Concerning disputed proceedings before the Conseil d ' Etat , steps have been taken among other things to reduce the workload associated with appeals by foreigners (appeals against denial of visas and against decisions of return to the frontier, appeals on points of law against decisions of the Refugees ' appeals board) which in 2001 amounted to more than 40% of the net intake of appeals before the Conseil d ' Etat. Under the terms of the Decree of 10 November 2000, appeals against visa refusals must be preceded by an administrative appeal to a board specially set up for this purpose, thus curtailing the volume of such appeals. In application of the 2002 Act mentioned above, jurisdiction for appeals against administrative court judgements on return to the frontier has been transferred, as from 1 January 2005, from the Conseil d ' Etat to administrative courts of appeal, the resources of which have been reinforced accordingly. Appeals of this kind previously represented practically a fifth of all appeals pending before the Conseil d ' Etat . For the future, a system whereby appeals may be introduced using new communications technologies, throughout the investigatory phase, put in place experimentally at first but ultimately generally, will also contribute to improving the promptness of judgments.

Results

- With regard to administrative courts , positive results have been registered to the extent that the number of cases judged by administrative courts has increased perceptibly in recent years (increase of 15% net between 2002 and 2004) but, taking into account the considerable increase in the volume of litigation (32% net in two years) more effort is needed and will be made. At the end of 2004, the ratio of cases judged as against cases registered was 90%. Thanks to the increase in productivity, the average time to judge a case in 2004 remained close to that of 2003, i.e. 18 months, 10 days.

- With regard to administrative courts of appeal , the situation has improved notably, in particular thanks to the implementation of the reform of appeals provided in Decree No. 2003-543 (reduction in input) and the efforts undertaken in the context of the “contracts of objectives” (all objectives fixed in 2003 and 2004 were attained or, in most cases, exceeded). For the first time ever in 2003 and subsequently in 2004, the courts judged more cases than had been lodged. Thus between 2002 and 2004 the rate of coverage of new cases by cases disposed of increased by nearly 50 percentage points, from 92% to 141%, allowing a perceptible decrease in pending cases and paving the way for progress towards reducing the time required for a judgment to one year, as provided in the 2002 Act. The forecast average time is at present 1 year, 9 months and 6 days net. The results are thus encouraging, even if the rate of progress risks being affected in the future by budgetary constraints and the effect of transferring jurisdiction for some kinds of cases to administrative courts of appeal.

- With regard to disputes before the Conseil d ' Etat , developments are also positive. When the final resolution in the Beaumartin case was adopted in 1995, the average time for judging cases was already less than two years, compared with 36 months in 1987 and 26 months in 1990. In 2003, for the first time ever, the objective of a number of pending cases less than the courts ' annual capacity to judge them was realised and the average duration fell below the symbolic threshold of 12 months, to 10 months, 15 days, which is the target fixed in the Act of 2002. In 2004, given the sharp rise in intake (26%) the average fell back to 12½ months but the relationship between the number of pending cases and the productive capacity reached in 2003 was maintained.

Effective remedy for complaints concerning the excessive length of administrative proceedings

It should also be noted that applicants consider that their case is taking too long to be settled, they have an effective remedy at their disposal, for both pending and completed proceedings (appeal founded on the state ' s responsibility for defective functioning of the public justice service). The European Court has itself so found (for example in its judgment of 21 October 2003 in the case of Broca and Texier-Micault against France).

The French government is of the view that all the above shows that it has acknowledged the difficulties confronting administrative courts in the exercise of their functions and taken measures to deal with them. The government will continue to make all the necessary efforts so as to avoid new violations similar to those found in these cases.

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998 - 2024
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