J.J. v. THE NETHERLANDSDISSENTING OPINION OF MR. P. LORENZEN JOINED BY
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Document date: October 15, 1996
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DISSENTING OPINION OF MR. P. LORENZEN JOINED BY
MM. S. TRECHSEL, G. JÖRUNDSSON AND M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
I regret that I am not able to share the conclusion of the
majority that there has been a violation of Article 6 para. 1 of the
Convention in the present case.
The proceedings before the Court of Appeal concerned an
assessment of the applicant's income tax including a 100% surcharge
which had been imposed on the basis that the applicant's failure to pay
sufficient taxes was due to his gross negligence or intent. I agree
with the majority that those proceedings - taken into account the
punitive character of the surcharge - concerned the determination of
a "criminal charge" within the meaning of Article 6 para. 1 of the
Convention (cf. Eur. Court HR, Bendenoun v. France judgment of
24 February 1994, Series A no. 284, p. 20, para. 47). Due to the
applicant's failure to pay a court registration fee of 75 Dutch
guilders his appeal was, however, declared inadmissible. The Court of
Appeal rejected an objection against this decision as ill-founded and
never considered the merits of the criminal proceedings. The appeal in
cassation to the Supreme Court concerned only the legality of the
levying of a court registration fee and the question whether the
applicant, in all circumstances, could be held responsible for the non-
payment of the fee.
In my opinion, a decision of a national court regarding the
formal requirements for the lodging of an appeal in a criminal case do
not involve the determination of a criminal charge within the meaning
of Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention. Whether they concern the
payment of registration fees, the observance of time-limits, the
production of certain documents or other similar requirements should
not be considered decisive. The Commission has constantly held that a
rejection of claims on procedural grounds is neither a determination
of a dispute on civil rights and obligations nor of a criminal charge
(cf. e.g. No. 12624/87, Dec. 10.7.89, D.R. 62 p. 207). I see no reason
to depart from this case-law which is based on careful considerations
with regard to the reasonableness of the safeguards under Article 6
para. 1 of the Convention. There are no valid reasons to widen the
scope of applicability of that provision so as to include preliminary
decisions relating to procedural conditions for court proceedings.
Furthermore, national courts may as a result encounter considerable
difficulties in securing an efficient administration of justice - not
least in respect of the right to a public hearing. In my view, the
Commission and Court of Human Rights also have to bear in mind the
enormous workload of most of the tribunals in the High Contracting
Parties and avoid imposing unnecessary burdens upon them by an
excessive interpretation of Article 6.
The fact that the Dutch Supreme Court was apparently empowered
under Section 25 of the WARB to rule on the merits of the case, if the
non-payment of the registration fee had not been considered a
procedural obstacle, cannot lead to a different result. Even assuming
that the Supreme Court in the circumstances of the present case - where
the Court of Appeal had not ruled on the merits - might in principle
have exercised that power, it did in fact not do so.
For these reasons I do not find a violation of Article 6 para. 1
of the Convention in the present case.
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