H.F. K-F v. GERMANYDISSENTING OPINION OF MRS. LIDDY AND MM. PELLONPÄÄ,
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Document date: September 10, 1996
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DISSENTING OPINION OF MRS. LIDDY AND MM. PELLONPÄÄ,
BUSUTTIL, ROZAKIS, BRATZA, RESS.
To our regret, we cannot follow the reasoning or conclusion of
the majority of the Commission in this case. We recognise that the
period of delay in effecting the applicant's release was short.
However, having regard to the fundamental importance of the right to
liberty in a democratic society grounded on the rule of law, a
scrupulous supervision by the organs of the Convention is called for
wherever there is a deprivation of liberty. We cannot accept that a
short period of detention which is unlawful as a matter of domestic law
can be disregarded either on the grounds that it falls within a certain
margin of appreciation afforded to member States or by the application
of some "de minimis" principle. The maxim "de minimis non curat
praetor" is not part of the legal framework of the Convention and
certainly has no place in the context of the unlawful deprivation of
liberty. To delay the release of a person at a police station for even
a brief period beyond that permitted by domestic law, in circumstances
where there exist no compelling practical or technical reasons for the
delay, raises in our view an issue under Article 5 of the Convention.
On the material before us, we see no reason for the delay in the
applicant's release following his questioning in the morning of
5 July 1991, the questioning of Mrs. S. and the telephone conversation
with the Hanau Public Prosecutor's Office, all of which had ended
before 9.45 a.m., when the period permitted by S. 163 c of the Code of
Criminal Procedure expired. In this regard, we note that the Koblenz
Court of Appeal, in its first decision of 21 May 1992, raised the
question whether the applicant's continued detention until the next
morning had been necessary at all.
It is true that in certain circumstances, some delay in the
release of a detainee may be understandable (cf. Eur. Court HR., Quinn
judgment, loc. cit., p. 17, para. 42), as, for example, where such
delay results from the practical exigencies of the functioning of the
courts (Quinn v. France, Comm. Report 22.10.93, para. 41, Eur. Court
HR., Series A no. 311, pp. 23 et seq.). However, the respondent
Government have not advanced any plausible explanation as to why the
applicant could not have been released at 9.45 a.m. at the latest, but
had to be kept until 10.30 a.m. We note that, under the relevant
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the applicant's release
did not require any formal decision or the completion of any particular
formalities (a contrario, Quinn judgment, loc. cit.). Further, there
is nothing to suggest any tacit agreement on the part of the applicant
to remain in the police station until arrangements could be made to
drive him back from Cochem to Ulmen. Accordingly, the delay in
effecting his release cannot be attributed to the applicant himself.
The majority of the Commission seek to justify the prolonged
detention of the applicant by reference to the court decisions refusing
to order the prosecution of the officers concerned and refer to the
finding of the Koblenz Court of Appeal that there was nothing to
indicate that Police Officer Blang had been aware that the permissible
period of detention had been exceeded. In concluding that there has
been a violation of Article 5 of the Convention, we do not call into
question these decisions of the national authorities. However, the
question whether there was criminal liability as a matter of domestic
law is quite distinct from the question whether the detention complied
with the requirement of lawfulness in the Convention. Article 5
concerns the lawfulness of the detention and not the question whether
persons responsible for the unlawful detention are criminally liable.
In these circumstances, we consider that the applicant's
continued detention on 5 July 1991 between 9.45 and 10.30 a.m. was not
"lawful" and not "in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law"
within the meaning of Article 5 para. 1 (c) of the Convention.
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