In the case of Feldman and Slovyanskyy Bank v. Ukraine,
The European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting
as a Chamber composed of:
��������� Angelika Nu�berger, President,
��������� Andr� Potocki,
��������� Faris Vehabović,
��������� Yonko Grozev,
��������� Carlo Ranzoni,
��������� Lәtif H�seynov, judges,
��������� Sergiy Goncharenko, ad hoc judge,
and Milan Bla�ko, Deputy Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 28 November 2017,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that
date:
PROCEDURE
1. The case originated in an application (no.
42758/05) against Ukraine lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (�the
Convention�) by a Ukrainian national, Mr Borys Mordukhovych Feldman (�the first
applicant�), and Slovyanskyy Commercial Joint-Stock Bank (�the applicant bank�),
on 20 October 2005. In the proceedings before the Court the first applicant
acted on his own behalf and on behalf of the applicant bank.
2. The applicants were represented by Mr V. Ageyev,
a lawyer practising in Kyiv. The Ukrainian Government (�the Government�) were
represented by their Agent, most recently, Mr I. Lishchyna.
3. Relying on Article 6 � 1 of the Convention
and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, the applicants alleged, in particular,
that they had not had access to a court to challenge the decision on the liquidation
of the applicant bank and that that decision had violated their property rights.
4. On 15 November 2006 the application was
communicated to the Government.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
5. The first applicant was born in 1958 and lives
in Dnipro, Ukraine. The applicant bank was a commercial joint-stock bank based in
Ukraine with its registered office in Zaporizhzhya. Its banking licence was
revoked on 11 January 2001 (see paragraph 12 below). Subsequently, the
applicant bank was liquidated (see paragraph 19 below).
6. The first applicant was the vice-president,
founder and majority shareholder of the applicant bank.
7. In February and March 2000 the domestic
authorities instituted two sets of criminal proceedings for tax evasion and
abuse of office by the management of the applicant bank.
8. In March 2000 the first applicant was arrested as
part of the criminal proceedings (for more details see Feldman v. Ukraine,
nos. 76556/01 and 38779/04, 8 April 2010). In April 2000 the Ukrainian news
agency UNIAN reported on a session of the Coordination Committee on Combating
Corruption and Organised Crime. The relevant extract reads:
��It is a matter of honour for the General Prosecutor�s
Office and the State Tax Administration to bring the story of Slovyanskyy Bank
to its logical conclusion,� said the President of Ukraine during his speech at
the session ... He stated that the chairs of the bank had turned it into a
source of uncontrolled personal income. �Such money-makers have powerful
patrons, and there is great pressure on the investigation,� stated the
President.�
9. On 29 June 2000 the National Bank of Ukraine
(�the NBU�) suspended the applicant bank�s licence for some of its operations,
considering that its financial position had deteriorated sharply and that it had
been performing risky operations which threatened its solvency.
10. In July 2000 an investigator from the tax
police of the State Tax Administration, acting in the course of the criminal
proceedings, ordered an attachment of the applicant bank�s securities.
11. On 18 September 2000 the NBU put the applicant
bank under temporary administration, which involved suspending the functions of
some of the bank�s managers.
12. On 11 January 2001 the NBU issued a resolution
�On the Liquidation of Slovyanskyy Commercial Joint-Stock Bank� by which, among
other things, (1) the applicant bank�s operating licence was revoked in full;
(2) the powers of the board, the council and the general shareholders� meetings
were terminated; and (3) the applicant bank was ordered to be liquidated. By
the same resolution the NBU approved the composition of a liquidation
commission for the bank, consisting of eleven officials from the regional
departments of the NBU and two members of staff from the local tax office.
13. On 5 March 2001 the first applicant, who was in
detention at the time, brought a claim under the rules of Chapter 31-A of the
Code of Civil Procedure of 1963 with the Pechersky District Court of Kyiv,
challenging the NBU�s decision. He maintained that the impugned resolution was unlawful
and that the NBU had decided to liquidate the applicant bank owing to its failure
to fulfil its financial obligations, whereas that failure had been caused by
the NBU itself and the tax authorities. The first applicant emphasised that
after the resolution had been adopted, the applicant bank had not been able to
protect its rights and interests on its own. He added that the resolution had
been detrimental to the interests of the applicant bank�s shareholders,
including himself.
14. On 26 June 2001 the court found that the first
applicant could bring a claim, however, it had to be dismissed. The court held
that the NBU had been competent to adopt the impugned resolution, that the
measures taken had been lawful and that they had been made necessary by gross
violations of banking legislation by the applicant bank and its difficult financial
position.
15. The first applicant appealed against that
decision.
16. On 5 July 2002 the Kyiv City Court of Appeal upheld
the decision of 26 June 2001 in part, but changed its reasoning. It held that the
NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001 had not concerned the first applicant and it
had not been established during the determination of the claim that his rights
and freedoms had been violated. For those reasons the court of appeal dismissed
the claim.
17. The first applicant appealed on points of law.
18. On 21 April 2005
the Supreme Court of Ukraine quashed the decisions of 26 June 2001 and 5 July
2002 and terminated the proceedings, considering that the claim was
inadmissible. It found as follows:
�... The first and second-instance courts have
established that Mr B.M. Feldman brought a claim as a
shareholder of Slovyanskyy Bank, however he did not request the protection
of his own rights and freedoms but, in fact, acted in the interests of
Slovyanskyy Bank, without being duly authorised [bold text in the original].
According to Articles 1 and 12 of the Code of Commercial
Proceedings, disputes between a subject of entrepreneurial activities and
enterprises, institutions and organisations concerning the protection of their
rights and freedoms, and their disputes concerning the declaration of legal acts
as invalid, should be examined by the commercial courts.
Given that a shareholder is not entitled to apply to a
court for the examination of such a dispute and that this case is not to be
examined in accordance with civil procedure, the decisions adopted in this case
should be quashed and the proceedings should be terminated, in accordance with
Article 136 � 2 (1) and Article 227 � 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure
...�
19. The liquidation process of the applicant bank
was completed on 30 November 2012. The bank was removed from the legal
entities official database on 4 August 2014.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. Domestic legislation on access to court
20. Chapter 31-A of the Code of Civil Procedure of
1963 (in force at the relevant time) sets out the rules for challenging the
decisions, acts or omissions of a State body, legal entity or official and for
the consideration of such claims before the civil courts.
21. Article
1 of the Code of Commercial Procedure of 1991 provides, inter alia, that
legal entities and citizens who have been registered as private entrepreneurs
are entitled to apply to the commercial courts, in accordance with the rules of
jurisdiction, for the protection of their rights and interests.
B. Domestic legislation on banking supervision
22. Section 62 of the Law �On the National Bank of
Ukraine� of 20 May 1999 provided, among other things, that the National
Bank was entitled to revoke a bank�s operating licence and take decisions about
the reorganisation or liquidation of a bank and the appointing of a liquidator.
It could make such decisions if the bank had violated laws and other
regulations, which had resulted in a significant loss of assets or income and
caused the bank to become insolvent, or if it had inflicted serious damage to
its clients or concealed any accounts, other documents or assets.
23. On 17 January 2001 a new law, the Law �On
Banks and Banking Activities�, came into effect, repealing section 62 of the Law
�On the National Bank of Ukraine�. It also introduced a judicial procedure for
liquidating banks.
THE LAW
24. The applicants complained that it had not been
possible to have the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001 reviewed by a tribunal,
within the meaning of Article 6 � 1 of the Convention. They further
complained that the NBU�s resolution and the measures taken by the tax
authorities concerning the applicant bank�s assets had been contrary to Article
1 of Protocol No. 1. Those provisions, in so far as relevant, read as follows:
Article 6 � 1 of the Convention
�In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ... everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a] ...
tribunal ...�
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
�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.�
I. PRELIMINARY PROCEDURAL POINTS
25. The first applicant lodged the above complaints
on his own behalf and on behalf of the applicant bank. The question arises
whether the first applicant had standing to act before the Court on behalf of
the applicant bank.
26. The Court reiterates that as a general rule a
shareholder of a company cannot claim to be a victim of an alleged violation of
the company�s rights under the Convention (see Agrotexim and Others v. Greece,
24 October 1995, �� 59-72, Series A no. 330-A). The piercing of the �corporate
veil� or the disregarding of a company�s legal personality will be justified
only in exceptional circumstances, in particular where it is clearly
established that it is impossible for the company to apply to the Convention
institutions through the organs set up under its articles of incorporation or -
in the event of liquidation - through its liquidators (ibid., � 66).
27. In Credit and Industrial Bank v. the Czech
Republic (no. 29010/95, ECHR 2003-XI (extracts)) the Court stated that
where the essence of the complaint was the denial of effective access to a court
to oppose or appeal against the appointment of a compulsory administrator, to
hold that the administrator alone was authorised to represent the bank in
lodging an application with the Convention institutions would be to render the
right of individual petition conferred by Article 34 theoretical and illusory
(ibid., � 51).
28. As regards the present case, in lodging the complaints
on behalf of the applicant bank, the first applicant acted in his capacity as
the bank�s majority shareholder and vice-president. At the time of the
application, the shareholders and the executive bodies of the applicant bank had
been deprived of their powers to administer the applicant bank�s business. The bank
was under the control of the liquidation commission, which consisted of officials
from the regional departments of the NBU, who were by far in the majority, and staff
from the local tax office (see paragraph 12 above). Accordingly, having regard
to the situation of the applicant bank and the nature of the present
complaints, the Court finds that there existed exceptional circumstances which
entitled the first applicant to lodge the present application on behalf of the applicant
bank (see Credit and Industrial Bank, cited above, �� 46-52, and Capital
Bank AD v. Bulgaria (dec.), no. 49429/99, 9 September 2004).
29. The Court further considers it appropriate to
continue examination of the present case despite the termination of legal
personality of the applicant bank (see Capital Bank AD v. Bulgaria, no.
49429/99, �� 74-80, ECHR 2005-XII (extracts) and International
Bank for Commerce and Development AD and Others v. Bulgaria, no. 7031/05, � 88, 2 June 2016, with further references therein).
II. ADMISSIBILITY OF THE FIRST APPLICANT�S
COMPLAINTS
30. The Court considers that the first applicant�s
complaints in his personal capacity as a majority shareholder are incompatible ratione
personae with the provisions of the Convention within the meaning of
Article 35 � 3 (a) of the Convention and must be rejected in
accordance with Article 35 � 4 (see Credit and Industrial Bank v. the Czech
Republic, no. 29010/95, Commission decision of 20 May 1998, and Terem
Ltd, Chechetkin and Olius v. Ukraine, no. 70297/01, �� 28-30, 18 October
2005).
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE
6 � 1 OF THE CONVENTION
A. Admissibility
1. The Government�s objection
31. The Government submitted that the applicant
bank had not exhausted the available domestic remedies as it had failed to challenge
the NBU�s impugned resolution before the commercial courts.
32. The applicant bank insisted that it had not
been possible to institute proceedings before the commercial courts to
challenge the measures taken by the NBU because the applicant bank had been
controlled by the liquidation commission, which consisted of officials from NBU
departments and the tax office.
33. The Court notes that the question of the use of
the remedy referred to by the Government is closely linked to the substance of
the applicant bank�s complaint. The Court therefore joins the Government�s
objection to the merits.
2. As to the six-month rule
34. The Court reiterates that as a rule, the
six-month period under Article 35 � 1 of the Convention runs from the
date of the final decision in the process of the exhaustion of domestic
remedies. Where it is clear from the outset, however, that no effective remedy
is available to the applicant, the period runs from the date of the acts or
measures complained of, or from the date of acquiring knowledge of that act or
its effect on or prejudice to the applicant. Where an applicant avails himself
of an apparently existing remedy and only subsequently becomes aware of
circumstances which render the remedy ineffective, it may be appropriate, for
the purposes of Article 35 � 1, to take the start of the six-month period as
the date when the applicant first became or ought to have become aware of those
circumstances (see Varnava and Others v. Turkey [GC], nos. 16064/90,
16065/90, 16066/90, 16068/90, 16069/90, 16070/90, 16071/90, 16072/90 and
16073/90, � 157, ECHR 2009, with further references).
35. The present application was submitted to the
Court within six months of the completion of the domestic proceedings instituted
by the first applicant challenging the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001. The
question of whether or not the first applicant�s claim was admissible had not
been decided in a straightforward way by the courts. In particular, the first-instance
court found that even though the impugned resolution had concerned the
applicant bank, the first applicant was still in position to raise the matter
before the civil courts. The court of appeal did not reject the claim as
inadmissible, but dismissed it after examining it and finding that the matter
did not concern the first applicant�s rights. Lastly, the Supreme Court terminated
the proceedings on the grounds that the first applicant�s claim was
inadmissible. The Supreme Court considered that shareholders could not apply to
the courts in their own capacity on such matters and that, furthermore, the
case should be examined by the commercial courts.
36. In view of this diverse reasoning of the
domestic courts as well as the applicants� specific situation, it cannot be argued
that at the relevant time during the period when the proceedings were pending
it was clear that the remedy tried by the first applicant in the interests of
the applicant bank was ineffective and should not have been pursued. On the
contrary, the Court considers that introduction of the present complaint after
the completion of the domestic proceedings was justified in the circumstances
and it is not appropriate to blame the first applicant for his attempt to
settle the applicant bank�s case at the domestic level (see, mutatis
mutandis, Voloshyn v. Ukraine, no. 15853/08, � 42, 10 October 2013). Accordingly, the present complaint
cannot be dismissed as being submitted out of time (see, mutatis mutandis,
Kaverzin v. Ukraine, no. 23893/03,
� 99, 15 May 2012).
3. Otherwise as to admissibility
37. The Court notes that this complaint is not
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 � 3 (a) of the
Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any other grounds.
It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
38. The applicant bank maintained that it had not
had access to a court to challenge the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001.
39. The Government insisted that the applicant
bank�s right of access to a court had not been infringed because the matter
could still be examined by the commercial courts.
40. The Court notes that the measures introduced
by the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001 had a crucial impact on the
applicant bank�s civil rights and obligations. In particular, the resolution led
to the applicant bank�s licence for all its operations being revoked, the
powers of the applicant bank�s statutory bodies were terminated, and the
applicant bank itself was put into liquidation.
41. The Court notes that where decisions taken by
administrative authorities which determine civil rights and obligations do not
themselves satisfy the requirements of Article 6 of the Convention, it is
necessary that such decisions be subject to subsequent control by a �judicial
body that has full jurisdiction� and that provides the guarantees of that
Article (see Albert and Le Compte v. Belgium, 10 February 1983, Series A
no. 58, � 29; Ortenberg v. Austria, 25 November 1994, Series A no.
295-B, � 31; and Bryan v. the United Kingdom, 22 November 1995, Series A
no. 335-A, � 40).
42. The Court observes that the proceedings before
the civil courts initiated by the first applicant did not ultimately result in any
judicial review of the impugned measures. The Supreme Court terminated the
proceedings, rejecting the claim as inadmissible after finding that the first
applicant had not been empowered to apply on behalf of the applicant bank and
that the claim fell under the jurisdiction of the commercial courts.
43. Further to the Supreme Court�s position, the
Government contended that the applicant bank had failed to apply to the commercial
courts, which had been competent to examine the matter. In that regard the
Court notes that at the relevant time the applicant bank was under the control
of the liquidation commission. The composition of the commission, which mostly consisted
of employees from regional departments of the NBU, clearly indicated that there
was a conflict of interests between the commission and the applicant bank,
making it unfeasible for the latter to lodge a claim with the commercial court
challenging the NBU�s resolution.
44. Similarly, it cannot be reasonably assumed
that the first applicant could lodge such a claim with the commercial courts.
Those courts dealt with claims submitted by legal entities and individuals
could only institute commercial proceedings if they were acting in the capacity
of private entrepreneurs, which was not the first applicant�s case (see
paragraph 21 above). In any event, the position of the Supreme Court in its decision
of 21 April 2005 (see paragraph 18 above) suggested that the first
applicant, as a shareholder, had not been entitled to institute proceedings
before any courts, including the commercial courts.
45. The Court therefore dismisses the Government�s
objection based on the rule of exhaustion of domestic remedies. It further
finds that the applicant bank did not have access to a court in the dispute
concerning its civil rights and obligations.
46. There has therefore been a violation of
Article 6 � 1 of the Convention in respect of the applicant bank.
IV. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL
NO. 1
A. Alleged violation of the applicant bank�s
property rights by the NBU
47. The applicant company complained under Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 that the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001 had been
unlawful and disproportionate and that there had been no opportunity to obtain
an independent review of the measures taken by the NBU because the domestic
courts had failed to deal with the relevant issues.
1. Admissibility
48. The Court notes that this complaint is linked
to the one examined above under Article 6 � 1 of the Convention and
must therefore likewise be declared admissible.
2. Merits
(a) The parties� submissions
49. The applicant bank maintained its complaint.
50. The Government conceded that the NBU�s
resolution of 11 January 2001 had constituted an interference with the
applicant bank�s property rights. However, that decision had been taken in full
compliance with the domestic legislation that was in effect at the relevant
time. The subsequent legislative amendments (see paragraph 23 above) had not
affected the lawfulness of the impugned resolution. The Government also submitted
that the NBU�s measures had been entirely necessary in the circumstances in
order to protect the interests of others.
(b) The Court�s assessment
(i) Applicability of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1
51. It is common ground between the parties that Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 is applicable to the present complaint. The Court
notes that the NBU�s resolution of 11 January 2001 revoked the applicant bank�s
licence and put it into liquidation. Such measures prevented the applicant bank
from pursuing its business and interfered with its right to the peaceful
enjoyment of its possessions.
52. As regards the applicable provision of Article
1 of Protocol No. 1, the Court observes that the NBU�s resolution was taken as
a measure to control the banking sector in the country. It is true that it
involved a deprivation of property, in so far as the banking licence itself
could be considered a possession, but in the circumstances the deprivation
formed part of the mechanism of controlling the banking industry. The Court
therefore considers that it is the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 which is applicable (see Capital Bank AD v. Bulgaria, no. 49429/99, ��
130 - 131, ECHR 2005-XII (extracts)).
(ii) Compliance with Article 1 of Protocol No.
1
53. The Court reiterates that the first and most
important requirement of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is that any interference
by a public authority with the peaceful enjoyment of possessions should be
lawful: the second sentence of the first paragraph authorises a deprivation of
possessions only �subject to the conditions provided for by law�, while the
second paragraph recognises that States have the right to control the use of
property by enforcing �laws�. Moreover, the rule of law, one of the fundamental
principles of a democratic society, is inherent in all the Articles of the
Convention (see Iatridis v. Greece [GC], no. 31107/96, � 58, ECHR
1999-II).
54. The Court�s power to review the compliance of an
impugned measure with national law is limited and it is not its task to take
the place of the domestic authorities in making such an assessment (see Malone
v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 2 August 1984, Series A no.
82, � 79, and Sovtransavto Holding v. Ukraine, no. 48553/99, � 95,
ECHR 2002-VII). This is particularly relevant to the present case, which
concerns a decision aiming, according to the NBU, at ensuring the stability of
the banking system, a delicate area in which the Contracting States enjoy a
wide margin of appreciation (see Olczak v. Poland (dec.), no. 30417/96,
� 85, ECHR 2002 X (extracts), and Capital Bank AD, cited above, � 136).
Nevertheless, that does not dispense the Court of its duty to determine whether
the interference at issue complied with the requirements of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1.
55. The requirement of lawfulness, within the
meaning of the Convention, presupposes, among other things, that domestic law
must provide a measure of legal protection against arbitrary interference by
public authorities with the rights safeguarded by the Convention. Furthermore,
the concepts of lawfulness and the rule of law in a democratic society require
that measures affecting fundamental human rights be, in certain cases, subject
to some form of adversarial proceedings before an independent body competent to
review the reasons for the measures and the relevant evidence. It is true that
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 contains no explicit procedural requirements and
the absence of a judicial review does not amount, in itself, to a violation of
that provision. Nevertheless, it implies that any interference with the
peaceful enjoyment of possessions must be accompanied by procedural guarantees
affording to the individual or entity concerned a reasonable opportunity of
presenting their case to the responsible authorities for the purpose of
effectively challenging the measures interfering with the rights guaranteed by
this provision. In ascertaining whether this condition has been satisfied, a
comprehensive view must be taken of the applicable judicial and administrative procedures
(see Capital Bank AD, cited above, � 134).
56. In the present case the NBU decided to revoke the
applicant bank�s operating licence and opened a liquidation process. The
decision was taken in compliance with the domestic law applicable at the
relevant time. Later amendments to the domestic legislation introduced a
judicial procedure for the liquidation of banks (see paragraph 23 above). While
those amendments applied to subsequent decisions in the course of the applicant
bank�s liquidation, the Government validly submitted that the impugned NBU
decision of 11 January 2001 was not affected by them.
57. In line with the judgment in Capital Bank
AD (cited above), the Court considers further that an act entailing such
grave consequences can only be legitimate if it is carried out after or is
subject to some sort of verification in proceedings that afford a reasonable
opportunity to the bank concerned to present its case to a competent authority with
a view to effectively challenging such measures (ibid., � 135 in fine).
58. The administrative procedure leading to the
impugned measures was entirely entrusted to the NBU, which exercised wide
discretion in that area, and it does not appear that adequate guarantees for an
independent and impartial decision-making process were put in place. Those
guarantees were particularly relevant in the present case in view of the NBU�s
involvement in the applicant bank�s situation by way of the taking of preliminary
control measures before the impugned resolution of 11 January 2001 (see
paragraphs 9 and 11 above) and in view of the other circumstances which
surrounded the applicant bank and the first applicant at the relevant time (see
paragraphs 7 and 8 above). Furthermore, there is nothing to suggest that the
administrative procedure resulting in the NBU�s resolution of 11 January
2001 involved any effective participation by the management of the bank to enable
them to present their position on the situation and to object, if appropriate,
to the contemplated measures before they were carried out. There is nothing to indicate
that the necessity for such effective participation in the procedure was outweighed
by any valid considerations, including those of urgency or emergency (ibid., � 136).
59. Finally, there were no effective retrospective
remedies that could be used by the applicant bank against the NBU�s resolution.
In particular, the above analysis under Article 6 � 1 of the
Convention has shown that the applicant bank did not have access to a court to
challenge the NBU�s measures.
60. In the light of the foregoing, the Court concludes
that the interference with the applicant bank�s possessions was not surrounded
by sufficient guarantees against arbitrariness and was not therefore lawful
within the meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. The above considerations are
sufficient for the Court to find that there has been a violation of that provision.
B. Allegedly unlawful measures concerning the
applicant bank�s assets
61. The
applicant bank complained under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 that in July 2000 an
attachment order had unlawfully been applied to its assets. It further
submitted that the attached assets had been subsequently seized without proper
grounds and that those measures had caused the economic destruction of the bank,
which had eventually resulted in liquidation proceedings.
Admissibility
62. The Government maintained that the applicant
bank had failed to exhaust domestic remedies as it had not challenged the impugned
measures before the domestic courts. The Government specified that in 2001 the
attachment had been lifted and the assets had remained at the disposal of the applicant
bank�s liquidation commission.
63. The applicant bank argued that it had been
controlled by the liquidation commission and that the only available remedy had
been the civil action against the NBU taken by the first applicant.
64. In considering the applicant bank�s contention,
the Court notes that the measures complained of took place when the applicant
bank could still act through its statutory bodies to seek protection of its
property rights before the domestic authorities. As to the subsequent period when
the applicant bank could not effectively operate via its statutory bodies, the
Court does not consider that the action of the first applicant should be taken
into account as regards the present complaint. The first applicant challenged
only the NBU�s resolution, he did not seek to declare the investigator�s impugned
measures unlawful and did not seek any other relief in that regard. The
property issues raised in the present complaint were therefore never examined within
those proceedings.
65. The Court
further notes that, by virtue of the requirements of Article 35 � 1
of the Convention, the applicant bank should have either raised the present
complaint at the domestic level or - if there was no effective remedy to use -
submitted it to the Court within six months of the impugned measures taking place.
That was not done, however. The relevant events took place in 2000, whereas the
applicant bank lodged its complaint with the Court in 2005. It follows that
this part of the application should be rejected as inadmissible, pursuant to
Article 35 �� 1 and 4 of the Convention.
V. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
66. Article 41 of the Convention provides:
�If the Court finds that
there has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if
the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial
reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction
to the injured party.�
A. Damage
67. The applicant bank claimed 1,430,584,319 euros
(EUR) in respect of pecuniary damage, based on the assessment of profitability,
capital and growth rates of the applicant bank at the relevant time.
68. The Government, referring to the Court�s
case-law, submitted that the claim had to be rejected as unfounded.
69. The Court does not discern any causal link
between the violation found and the pecuniary damage alleged. While the
measures taken by the NBU in respect of the applicant bank might have had
adverse financial consequences for it, the Court cannot speculate as to what
the result of the case might have been if the applicant bank had been provided
with access to a court in accordance with the requirements of Article
6 � 1 of the Convention and if the decision-making process by the NBU
had been compatible with procedural safeguards enshrined in Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 (see Tre Trakt�rer AB v. Sweden, 7 July 1989, � 66,
Series A no. 159; Credit and Industrial Bank v. the Czech Republic,
cited above, � 88; Fredin v. Sweden (no. 1), 18 February 1991, �
65, Series A no. 192; Capital Bank AD v. Bulgaria, cited above, �
144, and International Bank for Commerce and Development AD and Others v.
Bulgaria, cited above, � 160).
No award can therefore be made in respect of pecuniary damage.
B. Costs and expenses
70. The applicant bank did not submit any claims
under this head. The Court therefore makes no award.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT, UNANIMOUSLY,
1. Holds that the first applicant has standing
to lodge and pursue the present application on behalf of the applicant bank;
2. Joins to the merits the Government�s
objection concerning the non-exhaustion of domestic remedies in respect of the
applicant bank�s complaint of access to a court and rejects this objection
after an examination of the merits;
3. Declares the applicant bank�s
complaints under Article 6 � 1 of the Convention (as regards the
right of access to a court) and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (the alleged
violation of property rights by the NBU) admissible and the remainder of the
application inadmissible;
4. Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 6 � 1 of the Convention in respect of the applicant bank;
5. Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 concerning the interference with the applicant bank�s
property rights by the NBU;
6. Dismisses the claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 21 December
2017, pursuant to Rule 77 �� 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
��� Milan Bla�ko����������������������������������������������������������������� Angelika Nu�berger
Deputy Registrar���������������������������������������������������������������������� President