Trevisanato v. Italy
Doc ref: 32610/07 • ECHR ID: 002-11333
Document date: September 15, 2016
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Information Note on the Court’s case-law 199
August-September 2016
Trevisanato v. Italy - 32610/07
Judgment 15.9.2016 [Section I]
Article 6
Civil proceedings
Article 6-1
Access to court
Inadmissibility of appeal on points of law due to failure to comply with statutory requirement to formulate a “legal question” at the end of a ground of appeal: no violation
Facts – In 2007, having lost an appeal in an employmen t dispute, the applicant wished to take his case to the Court of Cassation. But that court declared his appeal inadmissible for failure to formulate the point of law ( quesito di diritto ) underlying his ground of appeal, as then required by the Code of Civi l Procedure*.
Law – Article 6 § 1: The domestic provision in question had pursued a legitimate aim, in seeking to reconcile the requirements of legal certainty and of the proper administration of justice. According to the case-law of the Court of Cassation prior to the applicant’s appeal, the point of law to be set out represented the meeting-point between the solution in the specific case and the formulation of a general legal principle applicable to similar cases. The aim pursued was thus to preserve the role of the Court of Cassation in ensuring a uniform interpretation of the law, while preserving the appellant’s interest in obtaining, if appropriate, the quashing of the decision appealed against.
As to the proportionality of the measure in relation to t he aim pursued, the formal requirement imposed on the applicant had not been excessive.
The rule applied by the Court of Cassation was not judge-made but had been introduced by the legislature through the Code of Civil Procedure, in fact well before the lo dging of the appeal in question. The applicant’s lawyer should thus have been aware of the relevant obligations and could have foreseen the consequences of failure to comply with the rule, based on the wording of the statutory provision and the Court of Ca ssation’s interpretation, which had been sufficiently clear and coherent.
To have required the applicant to conclude his ground of appeal with a paragraph summing up the reasoning and explicitly identifying the legal principle alleged to have been breached had not entailed any particular effort on the part of the applicant’s law yer. It was moreover pointed out that only lawyers registered on a special list on the basis of certain qualifications were entitled to represent parties before the Italian Court of Cassation.
Accordingly, the decision could not be regarded as an excessiv ely formalistic interpretation of the ordinary rules such as to preclude an examination on the merits of the applicant’s case.
Conclusion : no violation (unanimously).
* Article 366 bis , which was repealed in 2009.
© Council of Europe/European Court of Human Rights This summary by the Registry does not bind the Court.
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