CEDHCASELAW;JUDGMENTS;CHAMBER;ENG5
CEDH · CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;CHAMBER;ENG — 20 décembre 2016
- ECLI
- ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:1220JUD005863011
- Date
- 20 décembre 2016
- Publication
- 20 décembre 2016
droits fondamentauxCEDH
Source : DILA / Judilibre · open data
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version préliminaireFaits
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Solution
source officielleViolation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 - Protection of property (Article 1 para. 2 of Protocol No. 1 - Control of the use of property)
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CROATIA   (Application no. 58630/11)               JUDGMENT     STRASBOURG   20 December 2016       FINAL   20/03/2017   This judgment has become final under Article 44 § 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.   In the case of Ljaskaj v. Croatia, The European Court of Human Rights (Second Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:   Işıl Karakaş, President,   Nebojša Vučinić,   Paul Lemmens,   Valeriu Griţco,   Ksenija Turković,   Stéphanie Mourou-Vikström,   Georges Ravarani, judges, and Stanley Naismith, Section Registrar, Having deliberated in private on 22 November 2016, Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date: PROCEDURE 1.     The case originated in an application (no. 58630/11) against the Republic of Croatia lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a Croatian national, Mr Prek Ljaskaj (“the applicant”), on 8 September 2011. 2.     The applicant was represented by Mr D. Pedić, an advocate practising in Popovača. The Croatian Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Ms Š. Stažnik. 3.     The applicant alleged that a decision to sell his house in enforcement proceedings for less than one-fifth of its value had been in breach of the Convention. 4.     On 28 May 2014 the complaint concerning the applicant’s right of property was communicated to the Government and the remainder of the application was declared inadmissible, pursuant to Rule 54 § 3 of the Rules of Court. THE FACTS I.     THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE 5.     The applicant was born in 1942 and lives in Kutina. 6.     On 12 February 1989 he concluded a sale contract with Ms M.A., Mr   J.A. and Mr Z.A. whereby they sold him a house in Kutina for 47,000   German marks (DEM). Because the applicant actually paid only DEM 30,000 they brought a civil action against him in the Kutina Municipal Court ( Općinski sud u Kutini ) seeking payment of the remaining DEM 17,000. 7.     By a judgment of the Kutina Municipal Court of 20 May 1994, which became final on 30 November 1994, the applicant was ordered to pay to the sellers (hereinafter “the creditors”) the equivalent of DEM 17,000 in domestic currency, together with accrued statutory default interest (running from 15   December 1989) and the costs of the proceedings. 8.     On 12 March 2003 the creditors applied to the same court (hereinafter “the enforcement court”) for enforcement of that judgment. Specifically, they sought (a) the equivalent of 8,691.96 euros (EUR) in Croatian kunas (HRK), together with accrued statutory default interest running from 15   December 1989, (b) the costs of the above civil proceedings in the amount of HRK 1,860, together with accrued statutory default interest (running from 20 May 1994), and (c) the costs of the enforcement proceedings. 9.     On 18 March 2003 the enforcement court issued a writ of execution ( rješenje o ovrsi ) in respect of the seizure and sale of the applicant’s immovable property, in particular his house, with a view to settling the creditors’ claim. 10.     During the enforcement proceedings a court-appointed expert assessed the value of the applicant’s house at HRK 384,197 [1] . 11.     After two unsuccessful attempts on 16 February and 23   March 2005 to sell it through public auction, the enforcement court on 13 April 2005 at a third public auction sold the house and awarded it to the enforcement creditors for HRK 100,000. In so doing it relied on section 97(4) of the 1996 Enforcement Act, as amended in 1999, (hereinafter “the 1999 Amendments”) under which at a third public auction a debtor’s immovable property could be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price (see paragraphs 25-26 below). 12.     Since the creditors did not pay the purchase price within the set time-limit, on 28 November 2006 the court set aside its decision of 13 April 2005 and re-ran the third public auction. 13.     At a third public auction, held on 10 December 2008, the enforcement court sold the applicant’s house and awarded it to a certain Mr   D.D. for HRK 50,000 [2] . The court again based its decision on section 97(4) of the 1996 Enforcement Act, as amended by the 1999 Amendments (see paragraph 11 above and paragraphs 25-26 below). 14.     Following an appeal by the applicant, on 1 April 2009 the Sisak County Court ( Županijski sud u Sisku ) quashed the decision of 10   December 2008 to award the applicant’s house to Mr D.D. and remitted the case. It held that the enforcement court had misinterpreted section 97(4) and that the contested decision was in breach of section 6 of the Enforcement Act because that court had not sufficiently respected the applicant’s dignity and the requirement that the enforcement be the least onerous for the debtor (see paragraph 30 below). It noted that the purchase price was not sufficient to cover even half of the debt, which on 13   April 2005 had amounted to HRK   107,974.40 [3] , meaning that the sale of the applicant’s house had not achieved the main purpose of the enforcement proceedings – namely, the settlement of the creditors’ claim. The relevant part of that decision reads: “The enforcement debtor ... justly complains about the sale of the property [in question] ... for an amount significantly lower than its established value. ... By having sold for HRK 50,000 a property [worth] HRK 384,197, the first-instance court evidently misinterpreted ... [section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act]. That is so because the rule contained in section 97(4) is not of a mandatory nature [ ius cogens ], as it merely allows that property ... to be sold at a third public auction without restrictions regarding the lowest price ... (the text of that provision literally reads ‘ ... may be sold ...’ ). ... the enforcement court has to interpret the said provision in the light of the basic principles of [enforcement] procedure, as well as in accordance with the purpose sought to be achieved by the proceedings. By selling for HRK 50,000 property [worth] HRK 384,197 and awarding it to the buyer, the first-instance court breached section 6 of the Enforcement Act, which imposes the duty on an enforcement court, in carrying out an enforcement, to respect the debtor’s dignity and make [the enforcement] the least onerous for him or her. Furthermore, the purpose of enforcement proceedings is to settle the claim of an enforcement creditor. Having regard to the fact that the creditors’ claim in these proceedings on 13 April 2005 ... amounted to HRK 107,974.40 and that now, on account of the lapse of time and accrued [default] interest, it is [even] higher ..., given that the established value of the property is three times higher than the debt, and since the price offered at the last public auction would not settle even half of the debt, it is reasonable to conclude that accepting the said offer was in breach of section 6 of the Enforcement Act and that it cannot be held that the sale in question was carried out with a view to achieving the purpose of enforcement proceedings – namely, settling the creditor’s claim.” 15.     In the resumed proceedings the enforcement court again scheduled a third public auction, which was held on 12 May 2009 and at which the applicant’s house was again sold to D.D. but this time for HRK 70,000 [4] . 16.     Accordingly, by a decision of 3 June 2009 the court awarded the applicant’s house to D.D. The applicant appealed against that decision, arguing that his house had been sold for less than one-fifth of its value, which had not been sufficient to settle the creditors’ claim in full. In so doing he referred to the reasons given by the Sisak County Court in its decision of 1   April 2009 (see paragraph 14 above). 17.     On 2 October 2009 the enforcement creditors informed the enforcement court that they considered that their claim had been settled in full. 18.     By a decision of 20 December 2010 the Sisak County Court dismissed the applicant’s appeal and upheld the decision of 3 June 2009 to award the applicant’s house to D.D. (see paragraph 16 above). The relevant part of the County Court’s decision, which was served on the applicant’s representative on 12   January 2011, reads: “It is not disputed that on 3 June 2009 a third public auction was held, at which the debtor’s property was sold for HRK 70,000. The third public auction was carried out in accordance with section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, which provides that if a property is not sold at a second auction, the court shall, within 15   to 30 days [of the second auction], schedule a third auction at which the property may be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price [calculated in proportion to its] established value.” 19.     On 11 February 2011 the applicant lodged a constitutional complaint alleging violations of his right to equality before the law and his right of ownership, as guaranteed by Article 14 paragraph 2 and Article 48 of the Croatian Constitution (see paragraph 22 below). In so doing he repeated, in substance, the arguments raised in his appeal. 20.     On 19 May 2011 the Constitutional Court ( Ustavni sud Republike Hrvatske ) declared the applicant’s constitutional complaint inadmissible on the grounds that the contested decision was not open to constitutional review. That decision was served on the applicant’s representative on 6   June 2011. 21.     Meanwhile, by a decision of 14 February 2011 the enforcement court distributed the proceeds of the sale to the enforcement creditors, and by a decision of 18 May 2011 ordered the applicant’s eviction from the house. The applicant’s appeals against those decisions were dismissed by the Sisak County Court. II.     RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW A.     The Constitution 22.     The relevant Articles of the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia ( Ustav Republike Hrvatske , Official Gazette no. 56/90, with subsequent amendments) read: Article 16 “(1) Rights and freedoms may be only restricted by law in order to protect the rights and freedoms of others, the legal order, public morals or health. (2) Each restriction of rights and freedoms should be proportionate to the nature of the necessity for such a restriction in each particular case.” Article 14(2) “Everyone shall be equal before the law.” Article 29(1) “Everyone has the right that an independent and impartial court established by law decides fairly and within a reasonable time on his rights or obligations, or as regards suspicion or accusation of a criminal offence.” Article 48 “The right of ownership shall be guaranteed. Ownership entails obligations. Owners and users of property shall contribute to the general welfare.” B.     Relevant legislation 1.     The Constitutional Court Act 23.     The relevant provision of the 1999 Constitutional Act on the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia ( Ustavni zakon o Ustavnom sudu Republike Hrvatske , Official Gazette no. 99/99, with subsequent amendments – hereinafter “the Constitutional Court Act”), which has been in force since 15 March 2002, reads: V.     PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS Section 62(1) “(1)     Anyone may lodge a constitutional complaint with the Constitutional Court if he or she deems that the decision of a State authority, local or regional government, or a legal person vested with public authority, on his or her rights or obligations or in respect of a suspicion or accusation regarding [such person having committed] a criminal offence, has violated his or her human rights or fundamental freedoms ..., as guaranteed by the Constitution (‘constitutional rights’) ...” 2.     Enforcement legislation (a)     Provisions limiting the sale of immovable property for less than a certain price 24.     Section 163 of the Enforcement Procedure Act ( Zakon o izvršnom postupku , Official Gazette of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, no. 20/78, with subsequent amendments, and Official Gazette of the Republic of Croatia nos. 53/91 and 91/92), which Act was in force between 1 October 1978 and 10 August 1996, provided that immovable property could not be sold in enforcement proceedings for less than two-thirds of its value, as established by a court-appointed expert. 25.     Section 97 of the Enforcement Act of 1996 ( Ovršni zakon , Official Gazette, no. 57/96, with subsequent amendments, hereinafter “the 1996 Enforcement Act”), which Act was in force between 11   August 1996 and 14   October 2012, originally provided that immovable property could not be sold in enforcement proceedings at a first public auction for less than four-fifths of its value, and at a second public auction for less than half of its value, as established by a court-appointed expert. 26.     That provision was first amended by the 1999 Amendments to the 1996 Enforcement Act ( Zakon o izmjenama i dopunama Ovršnog zakona , Official Gazette, no. 29/99), which entered into force on 20 March 1999. Under those Amendments immovable property could not be sold in enforcement proceedings at a first public auction for less than three-quarters of its value and at a second public auction for less than half of its value, as established by a court-appointed expert. Those amendments also provided for a third public auction at which such immovable property might be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price. 27.     The provision in question was further amended by the 2003 Amendments to the 1996 Enforcement Act ( Zakon o izmjenama i dopunama Ovršnog zakona , Official Gazette, no. 173/03) (hereinafter “the 2003 Amendments”), which entered into force on 8 November 2003. Those Amendments abolished the possibility of a third public auction by repealing the paragraph introduced by the previous amendments under which immovable property might be sold at such a third auction without restrictions. The 2003 Amendments also provided that if a property could not be sold at a second public auction (for no less than half of its value) then the enforcement proceedings had to be discontinued. The relevant transitional provision of those Amendments provided as follows: Section 102 (1) The provisions of this Act shall apply to ongoing [enforcement] proceedings in cases where the first-instance decision has not been adopted before its entry into force. (2) The provisions of this Act shall also apply to other [enforcement] proceedings instituted before the date of its entry into force, if in those proceedings the first-instance decision was quashed after that date and the case remitted to the first-instance court for fresh proceedings.” 28.     Section 97 of the 1996 Enforcement Act was last amended by the 2005 Amendments ( Zakon o izmjenama i dopunama Ovršnog zakona , Official Gazette, no. 88/05), which entered into force on 28 July 2005. Under those amendments immovable property could not be sold in enforcement proceedings at a first public auction for less than two-thirds of such property’s value, and at a second public auction for less than one-third of its value, as established by a court-appointed expert. If the property could not be sold at a second public auction (for no less than one-third of its value) then the enforcement proceedings had to be discontinued. The relevant transitional provision of those Amendments provided as follows: Section 123 (1) The provisions of this Act shall apply to enforcement ... proceedings instituted after its entry into force. (2) The provisions of this Act shall also apply to other enforcement ... proceedings instituted before the date of its entry into force if in those proceedings the first-decision was quashed after that date and the case was remitted to the first-instance court for fresh proceedings.” 29.     Section 102 of the Enforcement Act of 2012 (Official Gazette, nos. 112/12 and 25/13), which Act entered into force on 15   October 2012, provides that immovable property cannot be sold in enforcement proceedings for less than half of its value, as established by a court-appointed expert. (b)     Other relevant provisions 30.     Section 6 of the Enforcement Act of 1996 provided as follows: Protection of the enforcement debtor’s dignity Section 6 “In carrying out enforcement... [the enforcement court] shall respect the enforcement debtor’s dignity ... and [shall ensure] that the enforcement ... is the least onerous for him or her.” 31.     Sections 69, 70 and 89 of the Enforcement Act of 1996 provided as follows: Extent of the enforcement of financial claims Section 69 “The enforcement of financial claims shall be ordered and carried out to the extent necessary to settle those claims.” Protection of an enforcement debtor who is a natural person Section 70(1) and (5) “(1)     The enforcement of financial claims cannot be carried out in respect of those assets (property or rights) of a natural person ... that are necessary to meet the basic living needs of the enforcement debtor and the persons whom he or she has a statutory duty to support. (5)     Residential property ... shall not be considered as assets necessary to meet the basic living needs of the enforcement debtor and the persons whom he or she has a statutory duty to support ...” The complaint of insufficient [resale] value Section 89(3) “The court shall, depending on the circumstances, assess whether a sale is worthwhile in view of the anticipated extent of the partial settlement [of the claim] of the enforcement creditor who applied for enforcement.” 3.     Civil Procedure Act 32.     The relevant provision of the Civil Procedure Act ( Zakon o parničnom postupku , Official Gazette of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia no. 4/77, with subsequent amendments, and Official Gazette of the Republic of Croatia no. 53/91, with subsequent amendments), which has been in force since 1 July 1977, reads as follows: Section 3(3) “The court shall not give effect to the dispositions of the parties which are contrary to mandatory rules and ... public morals.” C.     Relevant practice 1.     The Constitutional Court’s case-law 33.     By decision no. U-III-488/2001 of 22 January 2004 the Constitutional Court quashed the decisions of the enforcement court whereby the debtor’s (complainant’s) house (home) and two plots of land worth HRK 62,267 [5] had been sold to the enforcement creditor at a third public auction for HRK 1 [6] in order to settle a debt of HRK 19,708 [7] . The Constitutional Court found violations of the complainant’s rights to equality before the law and the right to fair proceedings, as guaranteed by Article   14   § 2 and Article 29 § 1 of the Croatian Constitution (see paragraph 22 above). It held as follows: “By the sale of the complainant’s immovables for only HRK 1 and their acquisition by the enforcement creditor, the principle of enforcement procedure provided in section 6 of the Enforcement Act was seriously breached. The enforcement carried out by the impugned decisions did not satisfy the basic demand of enforcement proceedings – [namely,] the enforced settlement of the creditor’s claim ..., but amounts [instead] to a punishment of the enforcement debtor ... The complainant rightly points out that in the present case section 3(3) of the Civil Procedure Act, under which a court must not give effect to the dispositions of the parties which are contrary to mandatory rules and ... public morals, was also breached. In particular, even though section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act provides that at a third auction immovable property may be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price, that provision in and of itself cannot exclude the application of section 3 of the Civil Procedure Act as a general rule that applies to all the dispositions of the parties in civil proceedings. In particular, the court points to the erroneous interpretation of section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act [by] the second-instance court, [which] attributes to that provision a mandatory character ( jus cogens ), despite its clear and undisputed non-mandatory nature (‘the immovable property may be sold’). ... [Given] the fact that the value of the complainant’s property is three times higher than the enforcement creditor’s claim, it is therefore obvious that the enforcement courts allowed dispositions on the part of the enforcement creditor [which were] contrary to public morals and the purpose sought to be achieved by that sale (the settlement of the debt by the complainant as a joint guarantor). ... In the opinion of this court, the errors [made] by the enforcement courts during the proceedings were of such seriousness that the complainant, as an enforcement debtor, was put in a disadvantageous position compared to the other party to the proceedings (the enforcement creditor), and that these errors have led to a situation in which the decisions adopted in the present case may, given the way in which the relevant law was applied, be considered arbitrary. Consequently, the court finds that the complainant’s constitutional rights, as guaranteed by Articles 14 paragraph 2 and 29 paragraph 1 of the Constitution have been violated by the contested decisions.” 34.     The Constitutional Court advanced the same reasons in its decision no. U-III-1112/2001 of 19 February 2004, which quashed the decision of the enforcement court whereby the debtor’s (complainant’s) one-third share in the ownership of a house (home) and in three plots of land worth DEM   65,000 had been sold to the enforcement creditor at a third public auction for HRK 1 [8] in order to settle a debt of DEM 4,167. In that case the Constitutional Court found a violation of the complainant’s right to fair proceedings, as guaranteed by Article 29 § 1 of the Croatian Constitution (see paragraph 22 above). 35.     By its decision no. U-III-2674/2004 of 16 February 2005 the Constitutional Court dismissed a constitutional complaint lodged by the enforcement creditor against the decisions of the enforcement courts whereby they refused to sell at a third public auction the enforcement debtor’s share in property worth HRK 281,700.35 [9] to the enforcement creditor for HRK 15,650 [10] in order to settle claims of EUR 2,070.07 and HRK   2,100 [11] . 36.     Likewise, in case no. U-III-74/2003 the Constitutional Court in its decision of 15 June 2005 dismissed a constitutional complaint lodged by the enforcement creditor against the decision of the second-instance court whereby that court had reversed the decision of the first-instance enforcement court and discontinued the enforcement. By the first-instance decision the enforcement court had sold the debtor’s house (which was worth HRK 388,426.80 [12] ) to the enforcement creditor at a third public auction for HRK   10,000 [13] in order to settle a debt of HRK 600,000 [14] . The Constitutional Court endorsed the reasoning of the second-instance court that by selling the debtor’s house for a symbolic price the purpose of enforcement had not been achieved because the debtor had lost his property while the creditor’s claim had remained unsettled. 37.     By decision no. U-III-1297/2006 of 5 March 2009 the Constitutional Court quashed the decision of the enforcement court whereby the debtor’s (complainant’s) house and a plot of land worth HRK 410,300 [15] had been sold to the enforcement creditor at a third public auction for HRK 10,000 [16] in order to settle a debt of HRK 195,757.78 [17] . The court found a violation of the complainant’s right to fair proceedings, as guaranteed by Article 29 § 1 of the Croatian Constitution, and referred to its earlier decisions (see paragraphs 22 and 33-34 above). It held as follows: “The sale of the complainant’s immovable property, which was – despite its established value of HRK 410,300 – sold at public auction for HRK 10,000, does not comply with the principle of proportionality, or with the aim and purpose of enforcement proceedings. ... The Constitutional Court notes that under section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act [as amended by the 1999 Amendments] at a third public auction an [enforcement] court may sell immovable property without restrictions regarding the lowest price ..., but does not have to do so because that provision is not of a mandatory nature. The Constitutional Court emphasises that this statutory authority does not exclude the principle of proportionality. [That means that] when selling immovable property at a third public auction without restrictions regarding the lowest price ... the court should take into account the purpose of enforcement, which is to settle the enforcement creditor’s claim. The Constitutional Court finds that in this case, by carrying out enforcement in the manner described, the [enforcement] courts violated the principle of proportionality enunciated in Article 16 of the Constitution, because by selling the complainant’s immovable property at a third public auction at a price that is far below [its] established value ... the purpose of enforcement proceedings – that is to say the enforced settlement of the enforcement creditor’s claim – was not achieved. In this way the constitutional right to fair proceedings guaranteed by Article 29 paragraph 1 of the Constitution has ... been violated.” 38.     In its decision no. U-III-5072/2013 of 9 January 2014 the Constitutional Court found a violation of the complainant’s right to fair proceedings, as guaranteed by Article 29 § 1 of the Croatian Constitution (see paragraph 22 above), and quashed the decisions of the enforcement court, inter alia because the debtor’s (complainant’s) house (worth HRK   604,878 [18] ) had been sold to the enforcement creditor in order to settle a debt of 14,000 DEM and HRK   4,645.50 [19] . 2.     The Supreme Court’s practice 39.     By judgment no. Gzz 265/03-2 of 22 April 2004 the Supreme Court ( Vrhovni sud Republike Hrvatske ) dismissed a request for the protection of legality (an extraordinary remedy) lodged by the Principal State Attorney of Croatia and upheld the lower courts’ decisions whereby they had refused to sell the enforcement debtor’s immovable property (worth HRK   485,846.96 [20] ) for HRK   1 [21] with a view to settling the enforcement creditor’s claim of HRK   121,509.92 [22] , and discontinued the enforcement proceedings. The Supreme Court held as follows: “In the request for the protection of legality it is argued that the decision to discontinue the enforcement is contrary to section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, as amended by the 1999 Amendments, because at a third auction the debtor’s immovable property could be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price ... It is argued that the creditor’s claim, which exceeds half of the established value of the debtor’s property, would be settled by such a sale. [That section] stipulates that if the property is not sold at a second public auction, the court has to ... schedule a third public auction, at which the property may be sold without restrictions regarding the lowest price ... The phrase that the property may be sold “without restrictions” is, in view of this court, to be [interpreted in the light of] the principle ... enunciated in section 6 of the Enforcement Act, under which in carrying out enforcement [the enforcement court] must respect the enforcement debtor’s dignity and [ensure] that the enforcement is the least onerous for him or her. The main purpose of enforcement is the settlement of the creditor’s claim and, consequently, the fulfillment of the debtor’s obligations. Carrying out an enforcement which does not lead to even the partial settlement of the creditor’s claim is contrary to the purpose for which enforcement is being carried out, because the debtor still has to settle the creditor’s claim, but is at the same time left without the object in respect of which the enforcement was ordered and carried out. Having regard to the foregoing, the lower courts did not misapply the provisions of the Enforcement Act when they refused the creditor’s offer made at the public auction of 8 October 2001, which resulted in the discontinuation of the enforcement.” 40.     By decision no. Rev 701/14-2 of 4 November 2014 the Supreme Court ruled in favour of the heirs of the enforcement debtor and declared enforcement inadmissible in the case (in which the house of the enforcement debtor, the value of which had been assessed at HRK   201,748.80 [23] , had been sold to the enforcement creditor – a bank – for HRK 1 [24] ). It held as follows: “Having regard to the purpose of and the rationale behind the public auction of mortgaged immovable property – namely, settling the creditor’s claim from the proceeds of the sale – it cannot but be concluded that [this] purpose was not achieved by selling [the debtor’s] mortgaged property at public auction for HRK 1 only ... and by awarding the property sold in this way to the [creditor], ... [T]he creditor’s claim has remained unsettled, despite the sale of the mortgaged property. It is true that the legal basis for doing so existed in section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, as in force at the time. However, given the effects of the application of that provision in the present case, namely: - that the purpose of the enforcement was not achieved by selling the property at public auction for only HRK 1, - that the [creditor] for the amount of HRK 1 bought the property that constituted [the debtor’s] family home, the value of which had been previously established in the enforcement proceedings at HRK 201,748.80, it cannot but be concluded that such purchase of the immovable property was based on a provision which by its very nature was contrary to public morals and as such socially unacceptable. That this is [indeed] so is witnessed by the fact that the legislature, recognising the negative effects of section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, amended the said provision by [passing] the 2003 Amendments, which stipulated that if property was not sold at a second public auction, the court had to discontinue the proceedings. ... under section 6 of the Enforcement Act an enforcement court is required for the duration of the entire enforcement proceedings to respect the dignity of the debtor [in question], and by applying section 3 of the Civil Procedure Act must not give effect to [parties’] dispositions which are contrary to public morals. To sell in enforcement proceedings someone’s house for the amount of HRK 1, which for him and his family has the character of a family home, [and] where the value of the house being sold has been set at over HRK 200,000, is not only demeaning for that person but actually amounts to a violation of that person’s dignity to the point of it being degrading. That is certainly contrary to section 6 of the Enforcement Act. Therefore, regardless of the fact that section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act was in force at the time that the [the enforcement] creditor bought the [the debtor’s] property, the said provision was essentially an immoral legal institution, which is why a sale based on such an immoral institution results in nullity, within the meaning of section 103 of the Obligations Act.” D.     Other relevant documents 41.     The relevant part of the explanatory report on the final version of the draft amendments to the Enforcement Act of August 2003 which the Government of Croatia presented to the Croatian Parliament, which led to the adoption of the 2003 Amendments to the Enforcement Act (see paragraph   27 above), reads as follows: “The provisions [of section 97 of the Enforcement Act] proposed to be repealed allow the sale of immovable property at a third public auction even for the sum of 1   HRK. That is unjust and unreasonable, and at the same time [gives scope for] various abuses. If at a third public auction the enforcement creditor buys the immovable property, the enforcement debtor will lose it but will not free himself of the debt. ... Any provision which allows that someone, without the consent of the owner, almost for free, acquires ownership of [that owner’s] property is contrary to Article 48 of the Croatian Constitution.” THE LAW I.     ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL No. 1 TO THE CONVENTION 42.     The applicant complained, under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, that his house had been sold in the enforcement proceedings for less than one-fifth of its value. The Court, being master of the characterisation to be given in law to the facts of the case, considers, having regard to its case-law (see, for example, Kanala v. Slovakia, no. 57239/00, 10 July 2007, Zehentner v. Austria, no. 20082/02, §§ 33 and 70-79, 16   July 2009, and Rousk v. Sweden, no. 27183/04, 25 July 2013), that this complaint falls to be examined under Article   1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention, which reads as follows: “Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law. The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties.” 43.     The Government contested that argument. A.     Admissibility 1.     The submissions of the parties 44.     The Government submitted that the applicant had failed to comply with the six-month rule because he had mistakenly believed that the constitutional complaint he had lodged against the second-instance decision of 20 December 2010 (see paragraphs 18 above) had constituted an effective remedy to be used for the purposes of Article 35 § 1 of the Convention, and had thus been capable of interrupting the running of the six-month time-limit prescribed in that Article. 45.     They explained that, according to the established practice of the Constitutional Court, decisions adopted in the context of enforcement proceedings whereby a debtor’s property sold at a public auction was awarded to the highest bidder were not open to constitutional review by means of an individual constitutional complaint. That practice had been further publicised by the Constitutional Court’s publication on its website of the instructions for filling out a constitutional complaint form – a document containing a list of decisions not open to constitutional review. Decisions adopted in the context of enforcement proceedings whereby a debtor’s property sold at a public auction was awarded to the highest bidder had been on that list. In the Government’s view, the applicant, who had been represented by an advocate, should have been aware of that practice. 46.     Consequently, the final decision within the meaning of Article 35 § 1 of the Convention for the purposes of calculating the six-month time-limit in the applicant’s case was not the Constitutional Court’s decision of 19   May 2011 (see paragraph 20 above), but the Sisak County Court’s decision of 20 December 2010, which had been served on his representative on 12   January 2011 (see paragraph 18 above). However, he had lodged his application with the Court on 8 September 2011 (see paragraph 1 above) – that is to say, more than six months later. 47.     The applicant did not comment on this issue. 2.     The Court’s assessment 48.     The Court first notes that in the case of Vrtar v. Croatia (no.   39380/13, §§ 71-85, 7 January 2016), it has already rejected a similar objection raised by the Government and sees no reason to reach a different conclusion in the present case. That is so because under section 62 of the Constitutional Court Act, anyone who considers that his or her rights, as guaranteed by the Constitution, have been infringed by a decision of a State or public authority determining any of his rights or obligations may lodge a constitutional complaint against such a decision (see paragraph 23 above), it being understood that the right of ownership (on which the applicant relied in his constitutional complaint – see paragraph 19 above) is, like the right to a hearing within a reasonable time in the Vrtar case, guaranteed by the Croatian Constitution (see paragraph 22 above). 49.     In any event, the Court notes that the Constitutional Court has examined on the merits more than a few constitutional complaints similar to that of the applicant and quashed a number of decisions delivered by enforcement courts whereby debtors’ immovable property had been sold at third public auctions without restrictions regarding the lowest price (see paragraphs 19, 33-34 and 37-38 above). 50.     In view of the above, the Government’s objection regarding the applicant’s alleged non-compliance with the six-month rule must be dismissed. 51.     The Court further notes that this complaint is not manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention. It also notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible. B.     Merits 1.     The submissions of the parties (a)     The applicant 52.     The applicant argued that the decision to sell his house in the enforcement proceedings for less than one-fifth of its value had been contrary to the Enforcement Act and the consistent case-law of the domestic courts, which had prohibited the sale of immovable property in enforcement proceedings for such low amounts (see paragraphs 33-34 and 37-40 and above). 53.     The applicant submitted that the sale of his house had indeed been based on section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, as in force at the material time (see paragraph 26 above). However, that did not mean that the sale had been lawful. He emphasised that the provision in question had not been of a mandatory nature ( jus cogens ) and had only allowed for the possibility to sell immovable property without restrictions regarding the lowest price. That provision had had to be interpreted in the light of other provisions of the Enforcement Act, especially in the light of the principle enunciated in its section 6, under which the enforcement court had had to respect the enforcement debtor’s dignity and ensure that the enforcement would be the least onerous for him or her (see paragraph 30 above). In support of his arguments he relied on the views expressed in the Sisak County Court’s decision of 1 April 2009 (see paragraph 14 above). 54.     The applicant further argued that the purpose of enforcement proceedings was to settle creditors’ claims in a manner that ensures that debtors’ dignity is respected and the enforcement was the least onerous for them. In the present case the applicant’s house (worth HRK   384,197) had been sold for only HRK 70,000 to settle the creditors’ claim of HRK   107,974.40. This had meant that his debt had not been paid but that he had nevertheless lost his house. His dignity had thus been severely violated while the purpose of the enforcement proceedings had not been achieved. (b)     The Government 55.     The Government argued that the decisions of the domestic courts to sell the applicant’s house had not been unlawful, arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable. 56.     As regards lawfulness, the Government first submitted that the domestic courts had applied the correct version of section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act, namely, the one amended by the 1999 Amendments (see paragraph 26 above). The Government explained that the impugned enforcement proceedings had been instituted and the writ of execution issued on 12 and 18 March 2003 respectively (see paragraphs 8-9 above). That had been before the entry into force of the later 2003 Amendments on 8   November 2003, under which immovable property could be sold at the latest at a second public auction and for a minimum of one-third of its value. Having regard to the transitional provisions of the 2003 Amendments (see section 102 of the 2003 Amendments in paragraph 27 above), that meant that the earlier 1999 Amendments had applied. Those earlier amendments had allowed the sale of immovable property at a third public auction at any price, it being understood that that had been a possibility rather than an obligation, as stated by the Sisak County Court in its decision of 1 April 2009 (see paragraph 14 above). 57.     As regards the issue of whether the domestic courts’ decisions to sell the applicant’s house had been arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable, the Government first submitted that the applicant’s debt had stemmed from his failure to pay part of the purchase price for his house; that debt had been incurred back in 1989 (see paragraph 6 above). This meant the applicant had had twenty years to settle that debt voluntarily and thereby prevent the sale of his house in enforcement proceedings. He had not done so, even after the attempts to sell the house at the first and the second public auctions had failed (see paragraph 11 above), which had opened the possibility of the house being sold at a third public auction without restrictions regarding the lowest price. 58.     It was true that on 1 April 2009 the Sisak County Court had quashed the first-instance decision whereby the applicant’s house had been sold at a third public auction for HRK 50,000. It had held that by allowing that sale the enforcement court had not, contrary to section   6 of the Enforcement Act, sufficiently respected the applicant’s dignity and the requirement that the enforcement be the least onerous for him. The County Court had come to that conclusion, inter alia , because the amount for which the applicant’s house had been sold had not been sufficient to settle even half of the debt, which had frustrated the very purpose of the enforcement, namely, the settlement of the creditors’ claim (see paragraph 14 above). 59.     However, these concerns had been addressed in the subsequent course of the enforcement proceedings. In particular, the applicant’s house had been sold for a higher amount (see paragraph 15 above) and it had been evident that it could not have been sold for more. Moreover, the purpose of enforcement had been achieved because the creditors had stated that in receiving that amount they considered their claim to have been settled in full (see paragraph 17 above). 60.     Having regard to the foregoing and the fact that the creditors’ claim had had to be settled, the Government argued that the decision to sell the applicant’s house in the enforcement proceedings in question could not be considered arbitrary, manifestly unreasonable or otherwise contrary to his right to peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. 2.     The Court’s assessment 61.     The Court notes at the outset that the enforcement proceedings in the present case concern a civil-law dispute between private parties. Relevant principles emerging from the Court’s case-law in such type of cases are summarised in Anheuser-Busch Inc. v. Portugal ([GC], no. 73049/01, § 83, ECHR 2007 ‑ I), and, in more detail, in Zagrebačka banka d.d. v. Croatia (no.   39544/05, §§ 250-251, 12 December 2013). 62.     As its case-law bears out, the Court’s task in the present case is therefore to assess whether the domestic courts’ decision to sell the applicant’s house was in accordance with domestic law and, if so, whether it was not arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable. 63.     In this connection the Court first notes that the domestic courts’ decision in the present case to sell the applicant’s house had a legal basis in domestic law as it was based on section 97(4) of the Enforcement Act. Even though transitional provisions of the 2003 and 2005 Amendments to that Act (see paragraphs 27-28 above) may give rise to different interpretations as to which version of that provision was applicable at the material time, the parties seem to agree that it was the one amended by the 1999 Amendments (see paragraphs 25-26 above). The Court sees no reason to hold otherwise. 64.     However, the Court also notes that in a number of cases the Croatian Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court have expressed the view that applying the said provision mechanically and selling debtors’ immovable property for a symbolic price (ranging from HRK 1 to HRK 15,650) not sufficient to settle the creditors’ claims was contrary to the Constitution and the law (see paragraphs 33-40 above). What is more, in its decision no.   Rev   701/14-2 of 4   November 2014 the Supreme Court even went so far as to conclude that the provision in question was “by its very nature contrary to public morals and as such socially unacceptable” and that, regardless of the fact that it had been in force, “it was an essentially immoral legal institution, which is why a sale based on such an immoral institution results in nullity” (see paragraph 40 above). Lastly, in tArticles de loi cités
Article P1-1 CEDHArticle P1-1-2 CEDH
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Synthèse
- Juridiction
- CEDH
- Chambre
- CASELAW;JUDGMENTS;CHAMBER;ENG
- Formation
- 5
- Date
- 20 décembre 2016
- Matière
- droits fondamentaux
Référence
ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:1220JUD005863011
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