CEDHCASELAW;JUDGMENTS;GRANDCHAMBER;ENG8
CEDH · CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;GRANDCHAMBER;ENG — 19 juin 2006
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:0619JUD003501497
- Date
- 19 juin 2006
- Publication
- 19 juin 2006
droits fondamentauxCEDH
Source : DILA / Judilibre · open data
Mes notes
privées · visibles par vous seulRésumé structuré
version préliminaireFaits
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Procédure
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Question juridique
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Solution
source officiellePreliminary objection rejected (ratione temporis);Violation of P1-1;Pecuniary damage - reserved;Non-pecuniary damage - financial award
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margin-bottom:0pt; text-align:center } .s7ED160F0 { text-decoration:none } .s33165EBA { font-family:Arial; font-size:8pt; vertical-align:super; color:#0069d6 } .s23860FF7 { margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt; text-indent:14.2pt; text-align:center } .sCA1147F8 { margin-top:12pt; margin-bottom:12pt; text-align:center; page-break-inside:avoid; page-break-after:avoid } .sF6A12959 { width:33%; height:1px; text-align:left } .s85226119 { margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt; text-align:justify; font-size:10pt } .s4DDA3AA3 { font-family:Arial; font-weight:bold; font-style:italic } .s3133A7C8 { font-family:Arial; color:#0069d6 }     GRAND CHAMBER             CASE OF HUTTEN-CZAPSKA v. POLAND   (Application no. 35014/97)                     JUDGMENT     STRASBOURG   19 June 2006       In the case of Hutten-Czapska v. Poland, The European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed of:   Luzius Wildhaber, President ,   Christos Rozakis,   Jean-Paul Costa,   Boštjan M. Zupančič,   Giovanni Bonello,   Françoise Tulkens,   Peer Lorenzen ,   Kristaq Traja ,   Snejana Botoucharova ,   Mindia Ugrekhelidze ,   Vladimiro Zagrebelsky ,   Khanlar Hajiyev ,   Egbert Myjer ,   Sverre Erik Jebens ,   Davíd Thór Björgvinsson ,   Ineta Ziemele, judges ,   Anna Wyrozumska, ad hoc judge , and Lawrence Early, Section Registrar , Having deliberated in private on 11 January 2006 and on 17 May 2006, Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on the last ‑ mentioned date: PROCEDURE 1.     The case originated in an application (no. 35014/97) against the Republic of Poland lodged with the European Commission of Human Rights (“the Commission”) under former Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a French national, Mrs Maria Hutten-Czapska (“the applicant”), on 6 December 1994. 2.     The applicant was represented by Mr B. Sochański, a lawyer practising in Szczecin. The Polish Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mr J. Wołąsiewicz, of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 3.     The applicant alleged, in particular, that the situation created by the implementation of the laws imposing on landlords restrictions in respect of rent increases and the termination of leases amounted to a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. 4.     The application was transmitted to the Court on 1 November 1998, when Protocol No. 11 to the Convention came into force (Article 5 § 2 of Protocol No. 11). 5.     The application was allocated to the Fourth Section of the Court (Rule   52 § 1 of the Rules of Court). On 16 September 2003, following a hearing on admissibility and the merits, it was declared partly admissible by a Chamber of that Section, composed of Nicolas Bratza, President, Matti Pellonpää, Viera Strážnická, appointed to sit in respect of Poland, Josep Casadevall, Rait Maruste, Stanislav Pavlovschi, Javier Borrego Borrego, judges, and Michael O’Boyle, Section Registrar. 6.     In a judgment of 22 February 2005 (“the Chamber judgment”), the Court held that there had been a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. It further held that the above violation had originated in a systemic problem connected with the malfunctioning of domestic legislation in that it had imposed, and continued to impose, on individual landlords restrictions on increases in rent for their dwellings, making it impossible for them to receive rent reasonably commensurate with the general costs of property maintenance. In that connection, the Court directed that in order to put an end to the systemic violation identified in the present case the respondent State had, through appropriate legal or other measures, to secure a reasonable level of rent to the applicant and other persons in a similar position, or provide them with a mechanism mitigating the above-mentioned consequences of the State control of rent increases for their right of property. In respect of an award to the applicant for any pecuniary or non-pecuniary damage resulting from the violation found, the Court held that the question of the application of Article 41 of the Convention was not ready for decision and reserved the said question as a whole, inviting the Government and the applicant to submit, within six months from the date on which the judgment became final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, their written observations on the matter and, in particular, to notify the Court of any agreement that they might reach. More specifically, as regards Article 41, the Court considered that that issue should be resolved not only having regard to any agreement that might be reached between the parties but also in the light of such individual or general measures as might be taken by the Government in execution of the judgment. Pending the implementation of the relevant general measures, the Court adjourned its consideration of applications deriving from the same general cause (see paragraph 196 of the Chamber judgment). 7.     On 20 May 2005 the Government requested, in accordance with Article 43 of the Convention and Rule 73, that the case be referred to the Grand Chamber. A panel of the Grand Chamber accepted that request on 6   July 2005. 8.     The composition of the Grand Chamber was determined according to the provisions of Article 27 §§ 2 and 3 of the Convention and Rule 24. Viera Strážnická, the judge appointed to sit in respect of Poland, withdrew from sitting in the Grand Chamber (Rule 28). The Government accordingly appointed Anna Wyrozumska to sit as an ad hoc judge (Article 27 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 29 § 1). 9.     The applicant and the Government each filed observations on the merits. Subsequently, the parties replied in writing to each other’s observations. 10.     A hearing took place in public in the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 11 January 2006 (Rule 59 § 3).   There appeared before the Court: (a)     for the Government Mr   P. Styczeń,   Counsel , Mr   J. Wołąsiewicz ,   Agent , Mr   Z. Żydak , Mr   J. Bajor , Mr   S. Jackowski , Ms   A. Mężykowska ,   Advisers ; (b)     for the applicant Mr   B. Sochański ,   Counsel , Mr   P. Paszkowski ,   Adviser .   The Court heard addresses by Mr Sochański, Mr Wołąsiewicz and Mr   Styczeń. THE FACTS I.     THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE 11.     The applicant, who is a French national of Polish origin, was born in 1931. She lived for a long time in Andrésy, France. At present, she lives in Poznań, Poland. She owns a house and a plot of land in Gdynia, Poland. The property previously belonged to her parents. A.     General situation 12.     Polish legislation on rent control is the result of many historical and recent factors. Legislative schemes restricting the rights of landlords and regulating increases in rent were already in operation before the Second World War. The description below of the general situation is based on the findings of the Polish Constitutional Court ( Trybunał Konstytucyjny ) which, on 12 January 2000, in one of its judgments concerning the constitutionality of certain aspects of the legislation on rent control, gave thorough consideration to the historical background of this legislation and the factors contributing to the preservation of restrictions dating back to an early stage of the communist regime in Poland. 13.     The rent-control scheme was the consequence of the introduction of the so-called “State management of housing matters” ( publiczna gospodarka lokalami ) by the former communist authorities (see paragraphs   67-70 below). It was accompanied by provisions drastically restricting the amount of rent chargeable. The applicable provisions originated in the exceptionally rigid distribution of housing resources which characterised the first thirty years of the communist regime in Poland. 14.     The circumstances did not change significantly after the end of the communist rule in 1989. Indeed, at the beginning of the 1990s the housing situation of Poland was particularly difficult, as was demonstrated, on the one hand, by a shortage of dwellings and, on the other hand, by the high cost of acquiring a flat. The State-controlled rent, which also applied to privately owned buildings, covered just 30% of the actual costs of maintenance of the buildings. In 1994 those social and economic factors prompted the legislature not only to maintain elements of the so-called “special lease scheme” ( szczególny tryb najmu ) (see paragraph 69 below) in respect of State-owned dwellings but also to continue to apply that scheme – temporarily, for a period of ten years expiring on 31 December 2004 – to privately owned buildings and dwellings. In short, the system was a combination of restrictions on the amount of rent chargeable and of limitations on the termination of leases, even in respect of tenants who did not comply with the terms of the contract. 15.     The material collected by the Constitutional Court in 2000 included a report prepared by the Office for Housing and Town Development ( Urząd Mieszkalnictwa i Rozwoju Miast ). According to that report, in 1998, after four years of the operation of the 1994 rent-control scheme, the average rent as fixed under that scheme covered only 60% of the costs of maintenance of residential buildings. The shortfall was to be covered by landlords. The scale of the problem was considered to have been very large, since at that time 2,960,000 dwellings (25.5% of the country’s entire housing resources) were let under the rent-control scheme. That number comprised some 600,000 flats in buildings owned by private individuals. The total number of flats in Poland was estimated at about 11,600,000. Flats in privately owned buildings subject to the rent-control scheme constituted 5.2% of the country’s housing resources. The report stated, among other things: “Before ... [1994], statutory rent determined by the Cabinet covered about 30% of running maintenance costs. At present, after four years of operation of the [1994] rent-control scheme, municipalities set levels of rent covering on average 60% of maintenance costs. ... In respect of buildings owned by municipalities, the shortfall is covered by the municipalities, which frequently use for that purpose surplus derived from letting commercial premises. As regards privately owned buildings where tenants pay controlled rent, the shortfall is covered by the owners of the buildings.” 16.     In 2003-04 the government, in the course of preparation of its bill amending the legislation on rent control (see paragraphs 114 et seq. below), collected a considerable amount of data describing the current general housing situation in Poland. The situation is characterised by a serious shortage of residential dwellings. According to the 2002 national population and housing census, the deficit, defined as the difference between the number of households and the number of flats, amounts to 1,500,000 flats. There is a particularly acute shortage of flats to let. 17.     Data collected by the Central Statistical Office ( Główny Urząd Statystyczny ) on the overall financial situation of households, indicate that in the years 1998-2003 household expenses such as rent and electricity bills amounted to 14.5%-15.4% of total expenses (18.6%-19% in pensioners’ households). During the same period, between 7% and 10% of Polish households were in rent arrears (1998: 7.5%; 1999: 7%; 2000: 7%; 2002:   10%; 2003: 9%). In 2000 about 54% of the population lived below the poverty line, of which 8% were below the abject poverty line. In 2002 some 58% of the population lived below the poverty line, of which 11% were below the abject poverty line. 18.     Various reports received by the Office for Housing and Town Development confirmed that the provisions relating to the protection of tenants as applicable until 31 December 2004 (see paragraphs 85-89 below) limited the availability of flats to let. In the authorities’ view, the introduction of the so-called “commercial lease” ( najem komercyjny ) – in other words a market-related lease – by lifting restrictions on rent increases for privately owned buildings and freeing private landlords from their obligation to provide indigent tenants with alternative accommodation upon the termination of their lease, should encourage private investors to build tenement houses designated solely for letting. 19.     The Government gave various figures to indicate the number of persons potentially affected by the operation of the rent-control scheme. They stated that, according to information supplied by the Office for Housing and Town Development, the operation of the relevant legislation affected approximately 100,000 landlords and 600,000 tenants. Other sources cited by the Government indicated that the total number of persons concerned was around 100,000 landlords and 900,000 tenants. B.     The facts of the case up to the adoption of the Chamber judgment 1.     Events before 10 October 1994 20.     The applicant’s house was built in 1936 as a one-family home. It originally consisted of a duplex flat, a basement and an attic. 21.     During the Second World War, the house was occupied by officers of the German army. In May 1945 it was taken over by the Red Army, which quartered some of its officers there for a while. 22.     On 19 May 1945 the head of the housing department of Gdynia City Council ( Kierownik Wydziału Mieszkaniowego Magistratu Miasta Gdynia ) issued a decision assigning the first-floor level of the duplex flat to a certain A.Z. 23.     In June 1945 the Gdynia City Court ( Sąd Grodzki ) ordered the return of the house to the applicant’s parents. They began to renovate it but, shortly afterwards, were ordered to leave. A.Z. moved into the house in October 1945. 24.     On 13 February 1946 the Decree of 21 December 1945 on the State management of housing and lease control ( Dekret o publicznej gospodarce lokalami i kontroli najmu ) came into force. Under its provisions, the house became subject to the so-called “State management of housing matters” (see paragraph 13 above). 25.     In 1948, at a public auction, the authorities unsuccessfully tried to sell the house to A.Z., who was at that time employed by Gdynia City Council, an authority responsible for the State management of housing matters at the material time. At about the same time, the applicant’s parents, likewise unsuccessfully, tried to recover their property. 26.     On 1 August 1974 the Housing Act ( Prawo lokalowe ) (“the 1974 Housing Act”) came into force. It replaced the State management of housing matters with the so-called “special lease scheme” (see paragraphs 14 above and 69 below). 27.     On an unknown date in 1975 a certain W.P., who was at that time head of the housing department of Gdynia City Council ( Kierownik Wydziału Spraw Lokalowych Urzędu Miejskiego ), tried to buy the house from the applicant’s brother. 28.     On 8 July 1975 the mayor of Gdynia issued a decision allowing W.P. to exchange the flat he was renting in another building under the special lease scheme for the ground-floor flat in the applicant’s house. That decision was signed on behalf of the mayor of Gdynia by a civil servant who was subordinate to W.P. On 28 January 1976 Gdynia City Council issued a decision confirming that under the provisions governing the special lease scheme the flat had been let to W.P. for an indefinite period. Later, in the 1990s, the applicant tried to have that decision declared null and void but succeeded only in obtaining a decision declaring that it had been issued contrary to the law (see paragraphs 44-49 below). 29.     On 24 October 1975 the head of the local management and environment office of Gdynia City Council ( Kierownik Wydziału Gospodarki Terenowej i Ochrony Środowiska Urzędu Miejskiego w Gdyni ) ordered that the house become subject to State management ( przejęcie w zarząd państwowy ). That decision took effect on 2 January 1976. 30.     On 3 August 1988 the Gdynia District Court ( Sąd Rejonowy ), ruling on an application by A.Z.’s relatives, gave judgment, declaring that, after A.Z.’s death, her daughter (J.P.) and son-in-law (M.P.) had inherited the right to rent the first-floor flat in the applicant’s house. 31.     On 18 September 1990 the Gdynia District Court gave a decision declaring that the applicant had inherited her parents’ property. On 25   October 1990 the Gdynia District Court entered her title in the relevant land register. 32.     On 26 October 1990 the mayor of Gdynia issued a decision restoring the management of the house to the applicant. On 31 July 1991, acting through her representative, she took over the management of the house from Gdynia City Council. Shortly afterwards, she began to refurbish the house. 33.     On an unknown date in the 1990s the applicant set up a private foundation called the Amber Trail Foundation ( Fundacja Bursztynowego Szlaku ). Since 1991 she has been trying to make her house the seat of the foundation. 2.     Events after 10 October 1994 34.     After taking over the management of the house, the applicant initiated several sets of proceedings – civil and administrative – in order to annul the previous administrative decisions and regain possession of the flats in her house. (a)     Proceedings before the civil courts (i)     Eviction proceedings 35.     On 16 June 1992 the applicant asked the Gdynia District Court to order the eviction of her tenants. In April 1993, on an application by the defendants, those proceedings were stayed. On 26 April 1996 the applicant’s claim was dismissed. (ii)     Proceedings concerning the relocation of tenants and compensation 36.     In April 1995 the applicant asked the Gdańsk Regional Court ( Sąd Wojewódzki ) to order Gdynia City Council to relocate the tenants living in her house to dwellings owned by the municipality. She also asked the court to award her compensation, inter alia , for the fact that the authorities had deprived her parents and herself of any possibility of living in their own house, for damage to the property and arbitrary alteration of its use, and for mental suffering. On 5 July 1996 the Regional Court ruled that, under the Lease of Dwellings and Housing Allowances Act of 2 July 1994 ( Ustawa o najmie lokali mieszkalnych i dodatkach mieszkaniowych ) (“the 1994 Act”), the defendant authority had no obligation to relocate the tenants to accommodation owned by the municipality. It dismissed the remainder of the claims. The applicant appealed. 37.     On 17 January 1997 the Gdańsk Court of Appeal ( Sąd Apelacyjny ) heard, and dismissed, her appeal. It observed that no provision of the 1994 Act obliged the municipal authorities to relocate the applicant’s tenants or, at her request, to provide them with alternative accommodation ( lokal zastępczy ). The relevant provisions of the 1994 Act, namely section 56(4) and (7) (see paragraph 77 below), stipulated that a tenant had to vacate a dwelling only if the owner had offered him another flat he owned or the municipality had agreed to provide the tenant with alternative accommodation owned or administered by it. As regards the applicant’s claim for damages for financial loss sustained as a result of the administrative decisions, the Court of Appeal observed that such claims could be determined by the courts of law only if a claimant had first applied for compensation to the administrative authorities and the outcome of the relevant administrative proceedings had been unfavourable. It referred the applicant to the Code of Administrative Procedure ( Kodeks postępowania administracyjnego ), which set out the rules governing the liability of public authorities for issuing wrongful decisions. In so far as the applicant sought compensation for damage to the house and for the alteration of its use, the Court of Appeal considered that the defendant authority could not be held liable for the consequences of the laws which had previously been in force. In particular, it was not liable for the enactment of the post-war legislation which had introduced restrictive rules concerning the lease of dwellings in privately owned houses and the State management of housing matters. Nor was it liable for the implementation of the special lease scheme introduced by the 1974 Housing Act and the operation of the 1994 Act, which incorporated certain similar rules for the protection of tenants whose right to rent flats in privately owned houses had been conferred on them by administrative decisions (see paragraphs 71-72 below). Lastly, the court noted that the defendant could not be liable for any damage caused by the applicant’s tenants. 38.     Subsequently, the applicant lodged a cassation appeal ( kasacja ) with the Supreme Court ( Sąd Najwyższy ). On 13 November 1997 the Supreme Court dismissed that appeal on procedural grounds. The court held that the applicant had not complied with the relevant formal requirements; in particular, she had not specified the errors of substantive civil law allegedly committed by the lower courts. (b)     Administrative proceedings (i)     Proceedings concerning the annulment of the decision of 19 May 1945 39.     In October 1995 the applicant asked the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal ( Samorządowe Kolegium Odwoławcze ) to declare null and void the decision of the head of the housing department of Gdynia City Council of 19 May 1945. By virtue of that decision, the first-floor flat in the house had been assigned to A.Z. It had also formed a basis for granting the right to lease that flat in the applicant’s house to A.Z.’s successors (see paragraphs 22-23 and 30 above). 40.     On 26 June 1997 the Board rejected her application. It noted that the impugned decision had been taken pursuant to the Decree on housing commissions issued by the Polish Committee of National Liberation on 7   September 1944 ( Dekret Polskiego Komitetu Wyzwolenia Narodowego o komisjach mieszkaniowych ), a provision which had at the relevant time governed all housing matters. It found that the decision had not been issued by the competent public authority and, in consequence, had not been lawful. Yet the Board could not declare the decision null and void ( stwierdzić nieważność decyzji ) because, pursuant to Article 156 § 2 of the Code of Administrative Procedure, if more than ten years had elapsed from the date on which the unlawful decision had been made, the Board could only declare that the decision “had been issued contrary to the law” ( została wydana z naruszeniem prawa ). 41.     The applicant appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court ( Naczelny Sąd Administracyjny ). On 15 January 1998 the court dismissed her appeal because she had not availed herself of an obligatory legal remedy in that she had not made an application to the Board for the matter to be reconsidered ( wniosek o ponowne rozpatrzenie sprawy ). 42.     The applicant subsequently made such an application. On 23 June 1998 the Board upheld its decision of 26 June 1997. The applicant appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court. The Gdańsk Regional Prosecutor ( Prokurator Wojewódzki ) joined the proceedings and lodged an appeal on the applicant’s behalf. 43.     On 8 June 1999 the Supreme Administrative Court dismissed both appeals. It confirmed that the impugned decision had been unlawful. It added that there had been several procedural shortcomings (for instance, the applicant’s parents had not been notified of the proceedings and had never had any opportunity to challenge the decision; in addition, no legal basis had been given for it). However, in accordance with Article 156 § 2 of the Code of Administrative Procedure, the court could not annul the decision but could only declare that it had been issued contrary to the law. In passing, the court observed that the above-mentioned procedural shortcomings could be rectified by means of reopening the proceedings. (ii)     Proceedings concerning the annulment of the decision of 8 July 1975 44.     In 1992 the applicant asked the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal to declare null and void the decision of the mayor of Gdynia of 8   July 1975. By virtue of that decision, W.P. had been granted the right to lease the ground-floor flat in the applicant’s house (see paragraph 28 above) 45.     On 27 January 1994 the Board rejected her application. The applicant appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court. 46.     On 14 June 1995 the court dismissed her appeal. It found that the flats in the applicant’s house had been let under the special lease scheme introduced by the 1974 Housing Act and that, accordingly, the mayor had been competent to issue the decision in question. It further observed that, despite some procedural errors committed by the mayor of Gdynia (which could be rectified by means of reopening the proceedings), the decision had had a legal basis and could not, therefore, be declared null and void. 47.     On 17 September 1994 the applicant asked the mayor of Gdynia to reopen the relevant proceedings and to declare the impugned decision null and void. The mayor rejected her application as being lodged out of time. 48.     On 29 December 1995 the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal, of its own motion, reopened the proceedings. It found that the contested decision had been made on behalf of the mayor of Gdynia by a civil servant who had been W.P.’s subordinate and that that fact in itself constituted a sufficient ground for reopening the proceedings pursuant to Article   145 § 1 (3) of the Code of Administrative Procedure. That fact had also rendered the decision unlawful. However, since more than five years had elapsed from the date on which the decision had been given, the Board could not annul it. It could merely declare that it had been issued contrary to the law, as laid down in Article 146 § 1 of the Code of Administrative Procedure. 49.     The applicant appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court, alleging that the decision had never been served on the owners of the house and that it should have been declared null and void. On 28 November 1996 her appeal was dismissed. (iii)     Proceedings concerning the annulment of the decision of 24 October 1975 50.     On 4 October 1994 the applicant asked Gdynia City Council to reopen the administrative proceedings that had been terminated on 24   October 1975 by the decision of the head of the local management and environment office of Gdynia City Council. By virtue of that decision, the applicant’s house had become subject to State management (see paragraph   29 above). She further asked to have the decision declared null and void, submitting that it had lacked a legal basis. In particular, the house had incorrectly been classified as a “tenement house” ( dom wielorodzinny ), whereas in reality it was, and always had been, a one-family house and, as such, should not have become subject to State management. The decision, the applicant added, had been made solely for the personal benefit and gain of W.P., who had at that time been the head of the housing department of Gdynia City Council. In her view, it had been made to sanction the prior – and likewise unlawful – decision of 8 July 1975 whereby W.P. had acquired the right to lease the flat in her house. 51.     On 7 December 1994 the mayor of Gdynia rejected her application, finding that she had lodged it outside the prescribed time-limit. On 12 June 1995 the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal upheld the mayor’s decision. Subsequently, the applicant appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court. On 14 November 1996 the court quashed both decisions because the mayor of Gdynia had not been competent to rule on the application. 52.     On 27 February 1997 the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal reopened the proceedings terminated by the decision of 24 October 1975. On 28 April 1997 the Board declared that that decision had been issued contrary to the law because the owners of the house had not been notified of the proceedings. It found that Gdynia City Council had not acted with due diligence. In particular, it had made no effort to establish who had been the rightful successors to the owners of the house, while at the material time the applicant and her brother had – on a regular basis – paid the relevant taxes on the property to the City Council. Relying on Article 146 § 1 of the Code of Administrative Procedure, the Board refused to annul the decision because more than five years had elapsed from the date on which it had been given. 53.     On an unspecified date in 2002 the applicant asked the Governor of Pomerania ( Wojewoda Pomorski ) to declare the decision of 24 October 1975 null and void. The application was referred to the Gdańsk Self-Government Board of Appeal, a body competent to deal with the matter. The Board rejected the application on 13 May 2002. It held that the matter was res judicata . 3.     The situation of the applicant’s tenants (a)     The surface area of the flats 54.     The parties gave differing information as to the actual usable surface area of the flats in the applicant’s house, a factor relevant for the determination of the chargeable rent. (i)     The Government 55.     The Government submitted that the usable surface area of the applicant’s house was 196 square metres. They produced an inventory done on 1 August 1991 in connection with the transfer of management of the house from Gdynia City Council to the applicant (see also paragraph 32 above). The usable surface area of the house was estimated at 196 sq. m; no net living area was indicated. There were four flats and no commercial premises. The number of habitable rooms in the flats was twelve. The surface area of those flats was estimated at 148 sq. m. The total surface area of the house was indicated as 255 sq. m. (ii)     The applicant 56.     The applicant stated that the total surface area of the house occupied by the tenants and for which they paid rent was about 250 sq. m. In that connection, she supplied a declaration of 28 May 2001, issued by the Gdynia Association of Landlords and Managing Agents ( Zrzeszenie Właścicieli i Zarządców Domów ), an agency that apparently administered her property. According to the declaration, since at least the 1950s the applicant’s house had been divided into three flats leased by means of the agreements originating in the administrative decisions described above. 57.     The usable surface areas of those flats for the purposes of fixing rent were as follows: flat no. 1 = 127.38 sq. m; flat no. 3 = 67.90 sq. m; and flat   no.   4   =   54.25 sq. m. Accordingly, the total usable surface area occupied by the tenants was 249.53 sq. m. (b)     Documentary evidence relating to rent paid by the applicant’s tenants 58.     On an unspecified date in 1995 W.P. asked the Gdynia District Court to determine the amount of the rent to be paid by him. On 20 March 1996 the District Court gave judgment and determined the amount of rent at 33.66 Polish zlotys (PLN) per month. It ordered the applicant to pay costs in the amount of PLN 528.90. 59.     According to the Gdynia Association of Landlords and Managing Agents’ declaration of 28 May 2001 (see paragraph 56 above), the amounts of rent to be paid by the applicant’s tenants were as follows: for flat no. 1 (usable surface area of 127.38 sq. m), occupied by J.P. and M.P.: PLN   500.60; for flat no. 3 (usable surface area of 67.90 sq. m), occupied by   W.P.: PLN 322.65; for flat no. 4 (former attic; usable surface area 54.25   sq. m.), occupied by J.W.: PLN 188.25. Dwelling no. 2 (apparently originally the bedroom of the applicant’s parents, later used as a drying room), which had previously been used by W.P. without any legal title or authorisation and for which he had paid no rent, was at that time locked and sealed by the managing agent. W.P. was served with a notice ordering him to pay PLN 2,982.46 for the unauthorised use of the dwelling on pain of being evicted. At the hearing before the Chamber on 27 January 2004, the Government informed the Court that the rent paid by J.P. and M.P. on that date was PLN   531.63. (c)     The tenants’ financial situation 60.     Following a request by the Chamber to produce evidence establishing the situation of the applicant’s tenants, the Government supplied a certificate issued by the Gdynia District Centre for Social Services ( Dzielnicowy Ośrodek Pomocy Społecznej ) on 19 February 1993. The certificate stated that W.P. had received assistance from the centre as from January 1993. He was to obtain a periodical social welfare benefit for March and May 1993. In 1992 he had received assistance for housing purposes. The certificate further stated that W.P. had earlier been assessed as having a “disability of the second degree”, the disability and its degree being subject to a medical verification in May 1993. 61.     On 12 February 2004, in reply to an enquiry by the Government in connection with the present case, the Gdynia City Centre for Social Services ( Miejski Ośrodek Pomocy Społecznej ) stated that the applicant’s tenants, W.P., J.P., M.P. and J.W., were not receiving any assistance from the centre and they had not received any assistance from social services for the past few years, that is from 1995 onwards. 4.     Amounts of controlled rent per square metre in Gdynia in 1994 ‑ 2004, as supplied by the Government 62.     In reply to a question from the Chamber as to the amount of controlled rent received by the applicant from 10 October 1994 onwards, the Government stated that they had no details of the rent received by the applicant at the relevant time. However, they supplied indicators relevant for the fixing of a controlled rent, as determined by Gdynia City Council for similar houses. 63.     According to this information, in December 1994 the rent per square metre was 9,817 old Polish zlotys; from January to November 1995, PLN   1.04; from December 1995 to October 1996, PLN 2.11; from November 1996 to December 1997, PLN 2.63; from January 1998 to January 1999, PLN 3.37; from February 1999 to January 2000, PLN 4.01; from February 2000 to February 2001, PLN 4.37; and from April 2002 to October 2002, PLN 4.61. 64.     On 10 October 2002, following the coming into effect of the Constitutional Court’s judgment of 2 October 2002, it became possible for landlords to increase the rent up to 3% of the reconstruction value of the dwelling (see paragraphs 86, 102-04 and 113 below). From December 2002 to 30 June 2003 the relevant conversion index of the reconstruction value of the dwelling (see paragraphs 75 and 85 below) was PLN 2,525.30. From 1 July to 31 December 2003 it amounted to PLN   2,471.86. In 2004 the conversion index was fixed at PLN 2,061.21. The Government submitted that the reconstruction value of the dwellings in the applicant’s house was calculated on the basis of the following three elements: the 3% mentioned above, the usable surface area of the flats and the relevant conversion index (PLN 2,061.21). The monthly rent per square metre in the applicant’s house corresponded to 3% of the conversion index of the reconstruction value of a square metre divided by 12 months (3% x PLN   2,061.21 = PLN 61.83/12). It accordingly amounted to approximately PLN   5.15 per square metre. Having regard to the usable surface area of the house as indicated by the Government, the maximum monthly chargeable rent was PLN 1,009.40 (PLN 5.15 x 196 sq. m). Taking into account the surface area as indicated by the applicant, the relevant amount was PLN   1,285.08 (PLN 5.15 x 249.53 sq. m). 5.     Levels of free-market rent in Gdynia in 1994-2004 as supplied by the applicant 65.     According to the applicant, in the years 1994-99 the free-market rent for the three flats in her house would have amounted to 1,700 United States dollars (USD) per month (USD 800 + USD 500 + USD 400 respectively, depending on the size of the flat). In the years 2000-02 the rent would have decreased to USD 1,250 per month (USD 600 + USD 350 + USD 300). In 2003 it would have been further reduced to USD 900 per month (USD 450 + USD 250 + USD 200). She stated that her prognosis as to the decrease in rent was based on such factors as the devaluation of the house owing to its age and the decreasing demand and increasing supply of flats to let on the market. C.     Facts supplied by the Government after the adoption of the Chamber judgment 66.     In their referral request of 20 May 2005, the Government informed the Court that two of the applicant’s flats had become vacant because W.P. had moved out on 2 June 2003 and J.P. and M.P. had moved out on 6   September 2004. They also stated that J.W. had recently been offered a council flat by the authorities and was about to move out. At the oral hearing, the Government said that J.W. was still living in the flat but that she was to move out in the coming weeks. On 18 April 2006 the Government informed the Court that J.W. had moved to a council flat on 15 February 2006. II.     RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE A.     “State management of housing matters” and the “special lease scheme” 67.     The Cabinet Decree of 21 December 1945 on the State management of housing and lease control ( Dekret z 21 grudnia 1945 r. o publicznej gospodarce lokalami i kontroli najmu ), which came into force on 13   February 1946, introduced “State management of housing matters”, which also applied to dwellings or commercial premises in privately owned buildings (see paragraph 13 above). 68.     Later, on 1 September 1948, the Decree of 28 July 1948 on the lease of dwellings ( Dekret o najmie lokali ) came into force. Under its provisions, the State authorities administered all housing matters in the public and private sectors alike. The authorities were given power to issue a decision assigning to a tenant a particular flat in a privately owned building. Those provisions also laid down rules concerning rent control. 69.     The 1974 Housing Act introduced the “special lease scheme”, which replaced “State management of housing matters”, although it did not significantly change the principles on which the right to lease was based. For instance, the right to lease a flat in a building subject to “State management” did not originate in a civil contract but was conferred on a tenant by an administrative decision. The owner of sucCitations
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;GRANDCHAMBER;ENG
- Formation
- 8
- Date
- 19 juin 2006
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:0619JUD003501497
Données disponibles
- Texte intégral