Case
No.:
CH/97/104, CH/97/106, CH/97/107, CH/98/374,
CH/98/386, CH/99/2997, and CH/00/4358
Applicant:
Brankica TODOROVIĆ, Smaila HODŽIĆ, Azra HADŽIĆ,
Remsa MULALIĆ-PAPO, Žanka ILIĆ, Milenko VIŠNJEVAC and Mihailo
JANKOVIĆ
Respondent Party: Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 11 October 2002
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The
applicants are citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Before the
dissolution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
they deposited foreign currency with commercial banks in that
country. Because of a growing shortage of such currency and
other economic problems, the withdrawal of money from these
"old" foreign currency savings accounts was progressively
restricted by legislation enacted during the 1980s and early
1990s.
Following the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the applicants'
requests to withdraw money from their foreign currency savings
accounts were all rejected, either without stated reasons or
with reference to legislation enacted by the SFRY, the
Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, or the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Some of the applicants initiated court
proceedings to obtain access to their foreign currency
savings, but these actions have all been unsuccessful so far.
Although one applicant did obtain a judgement in his favour,
he was subsequently informed by the Minister of Finance of the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina that the judgement could
not be enforced.
According to legislation enacted by the Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina in 1997 and 1998, in particular the Law on
Determination and Settlement of Citizen's Claims in the
privatisation Process, claims based on the old foreign
currency savings accounts were to be resolved in the process
of privatisation of socially and publicly owned property.
Under this law, the Federation issued certificates that could
be used in the privatisation process to purchase apartments,
municipal business premises, shares of enterprises, or other
assets. This procedure was designed to settle citizen's claims
in a way that would protect the public debt payment system and
the banking system from collapse.
On 9 June 2000, in case no. CH/97/48 et al., Poropat and
Others v. Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina, involving similarly situated applicants, the
Chamber previously decided that, with regard to frozen foreign
currency savings accounts, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina had violated the
applicants' rights to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions
under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the European Convention
on Human Rights. The Chamber ordered, among other remedies,
that the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina should "amend
the privatisation programme so as to achieve a fair balance
between the general interest and the protection of the
property rights of the applicants as holders of old foreign
currency savings accounts."
Between 2 November 2000 and 8 February 2002, the Federation
amended various provisions of the Citizens' Claims Law in an
effort to comply with the Chamber's order in Poropat and
Others. On 8 January 2001, the Constitutional Court of the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina determined that Articles
3, 7, 11, and 18 of the Citizens' Claims Law -provisions
essential to the scheme of conversion of old foreign currency
savings into certificates -were not in accordance with the
Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The applicants complained that their right to peaceful
enjoyment of their possessions, as guaranteed by Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 to the European Convention on Human Rights, and
their right to a fair hearing within a reasonable time before
an independent and impartial tribunal, as guaranteed by
Article 6 of the Convention, had been violated.
Admissibility
The Chamber held that the applications were admissible against
Bosnia and Herzegovina insofar as they related to Article of
Protocol No. 1 to the Convention, but declared the complaints
as directed against Bosnia and Herzegovina concerning the lack
of access to the courts as guaranteed by Article 6 of the
Convention inadmissible ratione personae. The Chamber held
that it was competent ratione personae to consider the
applications against the Federation in their entirety.
Having regard to the attempts by the applicants to achieve
redress through the court system, the Chamber considered that
there were no effective remedies available that the applicants
should be required to exhaust. Additionally, the failure of
Ms. Mulalic-Papo, Ms. Ilic, and Mr. Jankovic to initiate
proceedings, and the withdrawal by Ms. Hodžic of her action,
do not preclude the Chamber from examining their applications.
The respondent Parties raised the objection res judicata as
the claims were substantially the same as a matter which had
already been examined by the Chamber. The Chamber concluded
that its decision in Poropat and Others did not involve any of
the present applicants; thus, the principle of res judicata
could not attach to it. Additionally, the Chamber considered
that the current state of the law affecting old foreign
currency savings, following the decision of the Federation
Constitutional Court, raised new issues that have neither been
considered nor resolved by the Chamber.
Finally, the Chamber considered whether the application in
respect of Mr. Višnjevac was inadmissible under the six-month
rule. The Chamber concluded that as the alleged violation
consists of a continuing situation, the six-month limit can
have no application until the situation comes to an end, which
it has not.
Merits
The Chamber recognized the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina's amendments to the relevant laws in an effort to
comply with the Chamber's earlier decision in Poropat and
Others. However, due to the 8 January 2001 decision of the
Federation Constitutional Court declaring some of these laws
unconstitutional, the continued application of the laws, the
lack of a legislative response, and the apparent
unavailability of relief in the domestic courts, the Chamber
found a state of legal uncertainty causing an ongoing
interference with the applicants' property rights. While
noting that the Federation's legislative measures had been
pursued in accordance with the general interest, the Chamber
found no justification for the respondent Parties' failure to
address the prevailing legal uncertainty and the resulting
interference with the applicants' property rights. The current
situation places a disproportionate burden on individual
account holders, and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
has therefore violated the applicants' rights guaranteed by
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention. Because of its
general responsibility for issues related to old foreign
currency savings, the Chamber also found a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention by Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
The Chamber also found a violation of Article 6 of the
Convention by the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina because
of the de facto denial of access to court to the applicants.
In the case of Milenko Višnjevac, the Chamber found a specific
violation of Article 6 of the Convention for the Federation's
failure to enforce the applicant's valid court judgment.
Remedies
The Chamber ordered the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to remove the prevailing legal uncertainty surrounding old
foreign currency savings accounts by enacting, within six
months from the date of delivery of its decision, relevant and
binding laws or regulations that clearly address this problem
in a manner compatible with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention, as interpreted in the Chamber's decision in
Poropat and Others and the present decision. The actual method
of resolving the situation and eliminating the prevailing
legal uncertainty shall be determined by the Federation. The
Chamber also reserved the right to order additional remedies
in these cases six months after the date of its decision.
Decision adopted 7 October 2002
Decision delivered 11 October 2002 |