A.P., M.P. and T.P. v. SWITZERLANDDISSENTING OPINION OF MR. K. HERNDL
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Document date: April 18, 1996
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DISSENTING OPINION OF MR. K. HERNDL
(regarding Article 6 para. 2 of the Convention)
I voted against the finding that there was no violation of
Article 6 para. 2 of the Convention, and in that respect share entirely
and wholeheartedly the reasoning of my colleagues MM. E. Busuttil,
A.S. Gözübüyük, J.-C. Soyer, F. Martinez, L. Loucaides, B. Marxer,
G. Ress and A. Perenic.
I wish, however, to add some further elements to that reasoning.
It is obvious that the Swiss Tax authorities, at the cantonal
level and again at the Federal level, imposed on the applicants a fine
and thus a criminal sanction. The reasoning of the Zürich Tax Office
is worth recalling: "By incorrectly declaring his income [the deceased]
became guilty of tax evasion ... His heirs must therefore pay a fine
of the fourfold amount in addition to the tax withheld." And in view
of the correct attitude of the heirs (the applicants) which the
authorities expressly recognised, the fine was reduced to 1/4.
This decision was taken after the Zürich Administrative Court had
quashed a prior decision of the tax authorities on the ground that the
responsibility of heirs in matters of criminal taxes contradicted
fundamental principles of criminal law in a State governed by the rule
of law (rechtsstaatliches Strafrecht).
It is indeed this very issue which was at stake in the present
proceedings before the Commission. I fail to see any reason for the
tax authorities not taking into account the above view expressed by the
Zürich Administrative Court. Instead, the tax authorities continued
to strictly apply the letter of a law which, by the way, has been
repelled in the meantime and replaced by a provision which
unequivocally states that if tax evasion proceedings are not concluded
at the time of the death of the person owing the tax, and if no guilt
falls upon the heirs in connection with the tax evasion, no fine can
be imposed ("... entfällt die Erhebung einer Busse ...") (Federal
Taxation Act, in force since 1 January 1995).
In acting as they did, the Swiss tax authorities, at all levels,
were thus clearly disregarding the presumption of innocence, one of the
fundamental principles enshrined in the Convention.
(Or. English)
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