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21.5.1997
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF

Application No. 28499/95

by Harald METZGER

against Austria

The European Commission of Human Rights (First Chamber) sitting

in private on 21 May 1997, the following members being present:

Mrs. J. LIDDY, President

MM. E. BUSUTTIL

A. WEITZEL

C.L. ROZAKIS

L. LOUCAIDES

B. MARXER

B. CONFORTI

N. BRATZA

I. BÉKÉS

G. RESS

A. PERENIC

C. BÎRSAN

K. HERNDL

M. VILA AMIGÓ

Mrs. M. HION

Mr. R. NICOLINI

Mrs. M.F. BUQUICCHIO, Secretary to the Chamber

Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection

of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;

Having regard to the application introduced on 7 August 1995 by

Harald METZGER against Austria and registered on 11 September 1995

under file No. 28499/95;

Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules

of Procedure of the Commission;

Having deliberated;

Decides as follows:

THE FACTS

The applicant, born in 1954, is an Austrian citizen. At the time

of the introduction of his application, he was detained at the Graz

Karlau prison. Since January 1997 he is detained at the Garsten prison.

The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant may be

summarised as follows.

On 23 March 1995 the applicant, represented by counsel, requested

that the execution of his sentence be suspended for the purpose of

carrying out a bypass operation.

His request was supported by a medical report of 10 April 1995

by the prison hospital, stating that the applicant had already suffered

a cardiac infarct in 1994. The subsequent medicinal treatment had

proved to be insufficient. In view of the applicant's deteriorating

state of health a number of examinations had been carried out, which

had shown that there was an acute danger of a further heart attack. The

report, referring to consultations with the University Clinic for Heart

Surgery and Cardiology at the Graz Regional Hospital, recommended that

a bypass operation be carried out. A further report of the prison

hospital of 3 May 1995 recommended that an operation, which was

scheduled for autumn, be carried out as soon as possible.

On 22 May 1995 the Graz Regional Criminal Court (Landesgericht

für Strafsachen) dismissed the applicant's request. It noted that the

applicant was serving sentences amounting to a total of twenty-six and

a half years' imprisonment. On the basis of the medical reports before

it, the Court found that the applicant suffered from a serious illness.

Further, it had regard to a report of the prison administration of

17 May 1995, according to which arrangements could be made for the

applicant within the framework of the execution of his sentence, to be

operated at the Graz Regional Hospital and to spend a rehabilitation

period at the Wilhelmshöhe branch of the Vienna Josefstadt prison. In

conclusion it found that the requirements for suspending the execution

of the applicant's prison sentence were not met.

On 6 June 1995 the applicant appealed from this decision. He

claimed that the operation without specific rehabilitation would not

have any positive effect. He alleged that the Wilhelmshöhe branch of

the Vienna Josefstadt prison was a specialised institution for

prisoners suffering from tuberculosis and was not at all equipped and

suited for rehabilitation after a heart operation. On the contrary,

there would even be a higher risk of infection by the other patients.

He criticised in particular the fact that the court only relied on the

report of 17 May 1995, according to which agreement as to his placement

for the rehabilitation period had been reached between the

administrators of the two prisons involved, who lacked the medical

expertise to decide whether the Wilhelmshöhe branch had the facilities

required for treating a heart patient. He suggested that the court

order an expert opinion to clarify this question.

On 30 June 1995 the Graz Court of Appeal (Oberlandesgericht)

dismissed the applicant's appeal. It noted that, in 1979, the applicant

had been convicted of murder and had been sentenced to fourteen years'

imprisonment. In 1984 he had been convicted inter alia of attempted

incitement to murder and aggravated intimidation and had been sentenced

to ten years' imprisonment. In 1989 he had been convicted of selling

drugs and had been sentenced to two and a half years' imprisonment.

The Court of Appeal referring to S. 133 of the Execution of

Sentences Act (Strafvollzugsgesetz), noted that a suspension of the

execution of a sentence had to be granted if a prisoner was seriously

ill and if there were reasons to believe that he was in peril of his

life. However, S. 5 of the said Act excluded a suspension as regards

a prisoner who presented a danger to public security or to other

persons, on account of the nature and motive of the offences of which

he had been convicted or on account of his life conduct: in such cases

a subsidiary detention (Ersatzhaft) had to be ordered, which could be

carried out in a public hospital if necessary. The Court, having

regard to the gravity of the offences for which the applicant had been

sentenced to altogether twenty-six and a half years' imprisonment and

considering the fact that he had even committed serious offences while

being in prison, namely attempted incitement to murder and aggravated

intimidation as well as selling drugs, concluded that he was a

particularly dangerous person within the meaning of S. 5 of the

Execution of Sentences Act. Thus, his request for suspension of the

execution of his sentence could not be granted.

Subsequently, on 5 September 1995, the applicant filed a renewed

request for a suspension of the execution of his sentence for the

purpose of undergoing the bypass operation and subsequent

rehabilitation in a hospital of his own choice. He submitted that he

was, under the psychological strain of being imprisoned, unable to

prepare himself for the operation and in particular to follow the

necessary diet for reducing his weight. Further, he claimed to have

lost all confidence in the doctors of the Graz Regional Hospital as,

according to him, they should insist that the rehabilitation be carried

out in an appropriate specialised rehabilitation centre instead of the

Wilhelmshöhe branch of the Vienna Josefstadt prison. The applicant also

repeated his objections to a rehabilitation at this institution. In

conclusion, the applicant argued that the bypass operation as well as

its preparation and the rehabilitation could only be properly carried

out if he was released from prison.

On 2 October 1995 the Graz Regional Court, referring to the

previous decisions, refused the applicant's request. It reaffirmed that

the operation did not necessitate a suspension of the execution of the

applicant's sentence and noted that, meanwhile, a date for the

operation had been fixed by the University Clinic at the Graz Regional

Hospital.

On 9 November 1995 the Graz Court of Appeal dismissed the

applicant's appeal. It confirmed its decision of 30 June 1995 as

regards the applicant's dangerousness and added that an expert opinion

submitted by the applicant did not show that his aggressiveness had

diminished. The expert mainly claimed that the applicant was so

obsessed with his illness that he was not likely to commit further

offences if released, but did not show that he had undergone a

sustainable change of his personality. As regards the applicant's

allegations that an appropriate preparation for the operation and

subsequent rehabilitation could not be achieved in prison, the Court

referred to S. 71 para. 2 of the Execution of Sentences Act, according

to which a prisoner had to be transferred to a public hospital if

necessary medical treatment could not be carried out in prison. In

particular the type and scope of rehabilitation measures had to be

assessed by the doctors after the operation. The above-mentioned

provision guaranteed that it would be carried out in a hospital if the

doctors in charge considered it necessary.

On 18 January 1996 the Graz Regional Court dismissed a further

request by the applicant for a suspension of the execution of his

sentence. It noted that the applicant had refused to undergo the

operation which had been scheduled for October 1995 at the University

Clinic of the Graz Regional Hospital. According to a report of the

prison hospital of 31 October 1995 the applicant had been informed that

his refusal might increase the risk of a further cardiac infarct. In

any case, the possibility of an operation at the Graz Regional Hospital

was still open to the applicant and, none of the relevant circumstances

having changed, the requirements for a suspension of the execution of

his sentence still were not met.

On 27 December 1996 the Graz Regional Court dismissed the

applicant's renewed request for a suspension of the execution of his

sentence, mainly referring to the previous decisions.

On 6 February 1997 the Graz Court of Appeal confirmed this

decision, adding as regards the applicant's dangerousness that

preliminary investigations on the suspicion of drug dealing were

currently conducted against him.

COMPLAINTS

The applicant complains under Article 3 of the Convention that

he was denied the necessary medical treatment as regards his heart

disease. He submits in particular that the courts, when dismissing his

request for suspension of the execution of his sentence, failed to hear

a medical expert on the question whether the rehabilitation after his

bypass operation could be carried out in prison.

THE LAW

The applicant complains about the alleged denial of medical

treatment in prison. He invokes Article 3 (Art. 3) of the Convention,

which reads as follows:

"No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading

treatment or punishment."

The Commission first recalls the Convention organs' case-law,

according to which ill-treatment must attain a minimum level of

severity if it is to fall within the scope of Article 3 (Art. 3). The

assessment of this minimum is, in the nature of things, relative and

will depend on all the circumstances of the case (see Eur. Court HR,

Ireland v. United Kingdom judgment of 18 January 1978, Series A no. 25,

p. 65, para. 162).

The Commission further recalls that inhuman treatment may be

found to exist, when a person's detention as such causes him ill-

health. In such cases, the Commission examines in particular the

medical treatment at that person's disposal. Moreover, the State has

an obligation to maintain a continuous review of the detention

arrangements employed with a view to ensuring the health and well-being

of all prisoners, having due regard to the ordinary and reasonable

requirements of imprisonment (cf. No. 21915/93, Dec. 12.1.1995,

D.R. 80, p. 108 at p. 128 with further references).

The Commission notes that the applicant is a long-term prisoner

who has apparently been detained since 1979. There is nothing in the

file to suggest that the applicant's heart disease is a direct

consequence of his detention (see Chartier v. Italy, Comm. Report

8.12.82, D.R. 33, p. 41 at p. 58).

According to the medical reports in the file, the applicant

suffered a cardiac infarct in 1994 and, following a deterioration of

his state of health, the prison hospital recommended in spring 1995

that a bypass operation be carried out. Thereupon, the applicant

requested a suspension of the execution of his sentence. In a first set

of proceedings, the courts, having regard to the gravity of the

offences committed by the applicant and his dangerousness refused his

request. They referred in particular to SS. 5 and 133 of the Execution

of Sentences Act which excludes a suspension of the sentence in case

of particularly dangerous prisoners and instead provides for a

subsidiary detention which has to be carried out in a public hospital,

if necessary. More specifically they noted that the authorities of the

Graz Karlau prison, where the applicant was detained at the time,

envisaged an operation at the University Clinic of the Graz Regional

Hospital and an ensuing rehabilitation period at the Wilhelmshöhe

branch of the Vienna Josefstadt prison.

It follows from the documents in the file that the operation was

scheduled for October 1995. However, the applicant refused to undergo

the operation and filed a number of further requests for suspension of

the execution of his sentence in order to have the operation and

rehabilitation carried out in a hospital of his choice. He argued

mainly that he lacked confidence in the doctors of the Graz Regional

Hospital. Moreover, he claimed that he was unable to prepare himself

for the operation while being imprisoned, that in particular the

rehabilitation envisaged at the Wilhelmshöhe branch of the Vienna

Josefstadt prison was unacceptable and that the courts should have

heard a medical expert as regards the question of rehabilitation. The

courts continued to refuse a suspension of the execution of the

applicant's sentence. They mainly reaffirmed the reasoning given in the

first set of proceedings. Further, they noted that the possibility of

being operated at the Graz Regional Hospital remained open to the

applicant. As regards rehabilitation, they expressed the view that its

type and scope would have to be assessed by the doctors in charge after

the operation. Further, S. 71 of the Execution of Sentences Act

guaranteed that it would be carried out in a public hospital if that

was necessary from a medical point of view. Nevertheless, the applicant

continued to refuse the operation.

In these circumstances, the Commission finds that the authorities

made appropriate arrangements for the applicant's medical treatment.

However, this treatment could not be afforded to him on account of his

own continuous refusal to be operated at the University Clinic of the

Graz Regional Hospital. The fact that the applicant's choice of a

hospital is limited appears as an ordinary restriction resulting from

his imprisonment.

In conclusion, the Commission considers that the circumstances

under which the applicant is detained including his opportunities to

have access to medical treatment do not constitute treatment appearing

to be in violation of Article 3 (Art. 3) of the Convention.

It follows that the application is manifestly ill-founded within

the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.

For these reasons, the Commission, unanimously,

DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.

M.F. BUQUICCHIO J. LIDDY

Secretary President

to the First Chamber of the First Chamber