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HAKKA v. FINLAND

Doc ref: 758/11 • ECHR ID: 001-112023

Document date: June 18, 2012

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  • Cited paragraphs: 0
  • Outbound citations: 1

HAKKA v. FINLAND

Doc ref: 758/11 • ECHR ID: 001-112023

Document date: June 18, 2012

Cited paragraphs only

FOURTH SECTION

Application no. 758/11 Vaino Rainer HÄKKÄ against Finland lodged on 22 December 2010

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The applicant, Mr Väinö Rainer Häkkä , is a Finnish national, who was born in 1952 and lives in Helsinki . He is represented before the Court by Mr Heikki Uotila , a lawyer practising in Helsinki .

A. The circumstances of the case

The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be summarised as follows.

1. Taxation proceedings

The tax inspector conducted a tax inspection in three different companies in 2006 and 2007.

On 26 March 2007, concerning the first company, the tax authorities considered that the applicant had received, in 2004, 175,433.07 euros and in 2005, 10,351.79 euros as disguised dividends. They imposed on the applicant an additional tax and tax surcharges ( veronkorotus , skatteförhöjning ), amounting to 8,100 euros in respect of the tax year 2004 and to 510 euros in respect of the tax year 2005.

On 2 May 2007 the tax authorities found in respect of the second company that the applicant had received in 2004 78 , 690 euros as disguised dividends and imposed 3 , 900 as tax surcharges. Moreover , the applicant had received in 2005 86 , 936 euros as disguised dividends and 4 , 300 euros were imposed as tax surcharges.

On 11 November 2007 the tax authorities considered that the applicant had received , in respect of the third company , 227 , 994 euros as disguised dividends in 2005 for which a tax surcharge of 11, 000 euros was made.

The applicant apparently did not seek rectification of any of these decisions. Nor were there apparently any appeal proceedings pending. The time-limits for seeking rectification ran until 31 December 2010 and 31 December 2011 respectively.

2. Criminal proceedings

On 3 April 2008 the public prosecutor brought charges against the applicant on , inter alia , four counts of aggravated tax fraud ( törkeä veropetos , grovt skattebedrägeri ) and one count of tax fraud ( veropetos , skattebedrägeri ) concerning the tax years 2004 and 2005. According to the last count , the applicant was accused of aggravated tax fraud as he had under-declared his income. The undeclared income amounted to 240 , 953 euros for the tax year 2004 and 318 , 676 euros for the tax year 2005. Consequently , the tax imposed in 2004 had been 108 , 851 euros too low and in 2005 117 , 036 euros too low. The tax imposed on the applicant had thus been in total 225 , 887 euros too low.

On 27 June 2008 the Helsinki District Court ( käräjäoikeus , tingsrätten ) convicted the applicant as charged and imposed a prison sentence of 2 years and 7 months. He was ordered to pay the taxation authority 225 , 887 euros plus interest in respect of the last count.

By letter dated 18 August 2008 the applicant appealed to the Appeal Court ( hovioikeus , hovrätten ), requesting that the charges be dismissed or at least, as far as aggravated tax fraud was concerned, that he be convicted of tax fraud. He also requested that the sentence be mitigated.

On 12 February 2010 the Helsinki Appeal Court upheld the District Court judgment.

By letter dated 8 April 2010 the applicant appealed to the Supreme Court ( korkein oikeus , högsta domstolen ) requesting , inter alia , that as concerned the last count of aggravated tax fraud , the charges be dismissed without examining the merits and that the compensation for damages be rejected. He claimed that in this respect the ne bis in idem principle had been violated as tax surcharges had already been imposed for the same acts. That count concerned at the earliest the tax year 2004 , in respect of which the time-limit for an appeal in the taxation proceedings was still running until 30 December 2010 , meaning that those proceedings had not yet been finalised. An effective use of the ne bis in idem principle would require a lis pendens effect preventing the pressing of charges if an administrative tax surcharge matter was still pending. Otherwise two separate sets of proceedings concerning the same facts could be pending. Moreover , applicants would be treated unequally if the possibility of pressing charges depended on the finality of the taxation proceedings.

On 23 April 2010 the applicant was granted leave to appeal as far as the last count was concerned.

On 29 June 2010 the Supreme Court upheld the Appeal Court judgment. It found , after a detailed analysis of Article 4 of Protocol No. 7 to the Convention and the Court ’ s case-law , that it was clear since the Jussila -judgment that the imposition of a tax surcharge rendered the case criminal and that the ne bis in idem principle applied to such a case even though , under the domestic law , it fell within the domain of administrative law. Both the taxation and the criminal proceedings concerned the same facts , namely the failure to declare the same income. For the ne bis in idem principle it was relevant whether the proceedings had become final. The principle did not prohibit a situation in which two sets of proceedings concerning the same matter were pending at the same time. There was thus no lis pendens effect attached to this principle. Even if this lack of lis pendens effect was problematic in the sense that it might result in unequal treatment of applicants due to the fact that the point of time when taxation decisions became final varied , its acceptance might create even more profound problems. As the taxation decisions in the present case concerned the tax years 2004 and 2005 , the time-limits for seeking rectification ran until 31 December 2010 and 31 December 2011 respectively. The charges had been pressed on 3 April 2008. The taxation proceedings had thus not become final before the criminal proceedings started. Therefore , there were no impediments to examining the charge concerning aggravated tax fraud. This judgment became a precedent case KKO 2010:46.

B. Relevant domestic law

Section 57, subsection 1, of the Tax Assessment Procedure Act ( laki verotusmenettelystä , lagen om beskattningsförfarande , Act no. 1558/1995, as amended by Act no. 1079/2005) provides that if a person has failed to make the required tax returns or has given incomplete, misleading or false information to taxation authorities and tax has therefore been incompletely or partially levied, the tax payer shall be ordered to pay unpaid taxes together with an additional tax and a tax surcharge.

According to Chapter 29, sections 1 and 2, of the Penal Code ( rikoslaki , strafflagen ; as amended by Acts no. 1228/1997 and no. 769/1990), a person who (1) gives a taxation authority false information on a fact that influences the assessment of tax, (2) files a tax return concealing a fact that influences the assessment of tax, (3) for the purpose of avoiding tax, fails to observe a duty pertaining to taxation, influencing the assessment of tax, or (4) acts otherwise fraudulently and thereby causes or attempts to cause a tax not to be assessed, or too low a tax to be assessed or a tax to be unduly refunded, shall be sentenced for tax fraud to a fine or to imprisonment for a period of up to two years. If by the tax fraud (1) considerable financial benefit is sought or (2) the offence is committed in a particularly methodical manner and the tax fraud is aggravated when assessed as a whole, the offender shall be sentenced for aggravated tax fraud to imprisonment for a period between four months and four years.

COMPLAINT

The applicant complains under Article 4 of Protocol No. 7 to the Convention that the ne bis in idem principle was violated in his case. The charges have been brought for the same acts which were subject to taxation proceedings in which tax surcharges were imposed. The taxation proceedings became final on 31 December 2010 at the earliest. He claims that an effective use of the ne bis in idem principle would require a lis pendens effect preventing the pressing of charges if an administrative tax surcharge matter was still pending. Otherwise two separate sets of proceedings concerning the same facts could be pending. Also applicants would be treated unequally if the possibility of pressing charges depended on the finality of the taxation proceedings.

QUESTION TO THE PARTIES

Has the applicant been tried or punished twice for the same offence in the territory of the respondent State, as prohibit ed by Article 4 § 1 of Protocol No. 7? If so, did the proceedings fall within the exceptions envisaged by Article 4 § 2 of Protocol No. 7? In particular, have the taxation proceedings become final without any appeal being lodged?

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