FISCHER v. AUSTRIACONCURRING OPINION OF Mr. F. ERMACORA
Doc ref: • ECHR ID:
Document date: September 9, 1993
- Inbound citations: 0
- •
- Cited paragraphs: 0
- •
- Outbound citations: 0
CONCURRING OPINION OF Mr. F. ERMACORA
I agree with the opinion that the absence of an oral hearing
before the Administrative Court was in violation of Article 6 para. 1
of the Convention. However, I have difficulties with the reasons of
this decision. The Report refers in its paragraph 50 to the Austrian
reservation which states, as to the application of Article 6 of the
Convention, that there shall be no prejudice to the principles
governing public court hearings laid down in Article 90 of the Federal
Constitutional Law. However the Commission later on has not dealt with
this reservation and its impact as to the application of
Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention. This reservation - in my opinion
- does not apply to proceedings before the Administrative and
Constitutional Court. It applies only to proceedings in civil and
penal matters (Zivil- und Strafrechtssachen) before the ordinary courts
(there might be an exception in proceedings before the Constitutional
Court in cases of Article 137 of the Constitution, but such a problem
does not arise in the present case). The reservation must be
interpreted in accordance with the understanding of the High
Contracting Party at the time of ratification. In Austrian
Constitutional law the "Zivil- und Strafrechtssachen" referred to in
Article 90 of the Federal Constitutional Law relate to matters which
are solely dealt with by ordinary courts (at the time of the
ratification of the Convention Austria could not have considered the
European jurisprudence referred to in para. 52 of the Report) and not
by extraordinary courts. This is clear from the wording of Article 90
of the Federal Constitutional Law, from the systematic position of
Article 90 within the Constitution (it figures in the section entitled
"Gerichtsbarkeit" which excludes the Constitutional Court and the
Administrative Court), and from the absence of any interpretation
supporting a contrary view at the time of the drafting of the
Constitution. Therefore the Austrian reservation as to Article 6 of
the Convention is not applicable in the present case. Accordingly, as
the Administrative Court refused the applicant's request for a hearing,
I consider that there was a violation of Article 6 in this respect.
(Or. English)
LEXI - AI Legal Assistant
