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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF

Application No. 22531/93

by Arie MANTEL and MANTEL HOLLAND BEHEER B.V.

against the Netherlands

The European Commission of Human Rights (Second Chamber) sitting

in private on 15 May 1996, the following members being present:

Mr. H. DANELIUS, President

Mrs. G.H. THUNE

MM. G. JÖRUNDSSON

J.-C. SOYER

H.G. SCHERMERS

F. MARTINEZ

L. LOUCAIDES

J.-C. GEUS

M.A. NOWICKI

I. CABRAL BARRETO

J. MUCHA

D. SVÁBY

P. LORENZEN

Ms. M.-T. SCHOEPFER, 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 13 July 1993 by

Arie MANTEL and MANTEL HOLLAND BEHEER B.V. against the Netherlands and

registered on 26 August 1993 under file No. 22531/93;

Having regard to :

- the reports provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules of Procedure of

the Commission;

- the observations submitted by the respondent Government on

22 April 1995 and the observations in reply submitted by the

applicant on 3 July 1995;

Having deliberated;

Decides as follows:

THE FACTS

The first applicant is a Dutch national, born in 1943, and

currently resides at Andijk, the Netherlands. The applicant company is

a Dutch company with limited liability, having its registered seat at

Andijk, the Netherlands. The first applicant is one of the directors

of the applicant company. Before the Commission the applicants are

represented by Mr. F. van Schaik, a lawyer practising at Berkel en

Rodenrijs, the Netherlands.

The facts, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as

follows.

Within the context of a joint investigation by the Inspection of

Direct Taxes (Inspectie der Directe Belastingen), the Agricultural

Social Funds (Agrarische Sociale Fondsen) and the Social Security

Common Administrative Office (Gemeenschappelijk Administratiekantoor),

the public prosecutor ordered a preliminary judicial investigation

(gerechtelijk vooronderzoek) on 8 November 1985 into the salary

administration of the applicant company, a company which cultivates and

trades in flower bulbs. This investigation formed part of a large-scale

investigation of tax fraud by five bulb-producing companies and their

respective directors.

On 2 December 1985 the home of the first applicant and the

premises of the applicant company were searched.

On 7 May 1986 the public prosecutor ordered an extension of the

preliminary judicial investigation into the salary administration of

the applicant company and some interviews were conducted by the

investigating judge (rechter-commissaris). The applicants allege that

the actual investigations were completed by the middle of 1986.

On 21 April 1987 the applicant company was notified in writing

by the investigating judge of the closure of the preliminary judicial

investigation. On 27 May 1987 the applicant company was notified of the

prosecution's decision to commit the applicant company for trial

(kennisgeving van verdere vervolging).

On 1 June 1987 the applicant company lodged an objection against

this decision with the Regional Court (Arrondissementsrechtbank) of

Alkmaar, claiming that the prosecution had become inadmissible because

the Public Prosecutions Department (Openbaar Ministerie) had waited too

long with giving notice of the committal for trial after it had

notified the applicant company of the closure of the preliminary

judicial investigation.

On 25 June 1987 a hearing took place before the Alkmaar Regional

Court in chambers and on 30 July 1987 the Court in chambers decided to

discontinue the proceedings (buitenvervolgingstelling) against the

applicant company. The public prosecutor appealed against this decision

on the same day.

Meanwhile, on 8 July 1987, the first applicant was summoned to

appear before the Alkmaar Regional Court on 4 August 1987 on charges

of ordering and directing forgery, committed by the applicant company,

in his capacity as director of the applicant company.

On 13 July 1987 the first applicant lodged an objection against

the summons with the Alkmaar Regional Court. He claimed that it would

only have been possible for the Public Prosecutions Department to

prosecute him if it had conducted the prosecution proceedings against

him at the same time as they were being conducted against the applicant

company. As the first applicant had neither received a notification of

closure of the preliminary judicial investigation nor been notified of

the decision to commit the case for trial, he considered that the

Public Prosecutions Department could not decide at this stage to

prosecute him.

Following a hearing on 4 August 1987, the Alkmaar Regional Court

in chambers decided on 13 August 1987 to discontinue the proceedings

against the first applicant. The public prosecutor appealed against

this decision on 14 August 1987.

On 11 December 1987 hearings took place before the Court of

Appeal (Gerechtshof) of Amsterdam in chambers in the cases of both

applicants. On 25 February 1988 the Court of Appeal quashed the

decisions to discontinue the proceedings and ruled that the applicants

should stand trial. The Court considered in respect of the first

applicant that he could not have deduced from the facts that he would

not be prosecuted.

The applicants' appeals in cassation against the Court of

Appeal's decisions were rejected by the Supreme Court (Hoge Raad) on

6 December 1988.

On 13 June 1989 hearings took place before the Alkmaar Regional

Court in the cases concerning the criminal charges against the

applicants.

On 27 June 1989 the Alkmaar Regional Court acquitted the

applicants, holding that the searches of the first applicant's house

and the applicant company's premises had been unlawful. On 11 July 1989

the public prosecutor appealed against these judgments.

Following a hearing in both cases on 25 April 1991, the Amsterdam

Court of Appeal quashed the judgments of the Alkmaar Regional Court on

6 May 1991 and convicted the applicant company of forgery and the first

applicant of ordering and directing this forgery in his capacity as

director.

The Court of Appeal found that both sets of proceedings had taken

an undesirably long time ("onwenselijk lang"). It held, however, that

they had not exceeded the reasonable period of time within the meaning

of Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention since the cases were complicated

and formed part of a number of connected cases. Also, some time had

been taken up by the preliminary proceedings concerning the

admissibility of further prosecution by the Public Prosecutions

Department. The Court stated that it would take into account the

duration of the proceedings in the determination of the sentences.

When it imposed its sentence on the first applicant, the Court

of Appeal held:

<Dutch>

"De valsheid in geschrift en de wijze waarop deze werden gepleegd

zijn als geraffineerd aan te merken en slechts moeizaam te

achterhalen. Op zich zelf is daarin reden gelegen aan verdachte

een hoge geldboete op te leggen. Slechts in de onwenselijk lange

duur van de procedure en de omstandigheid dat verdachte niet

eerder strafrechtelijk is veroordeeld vindt het hof aanleiding

de op zich zelf passend geachte geldboete aanzienlijk te matigen

en vast te stellen op het hierna te noemen beperkte bedrag."

<Translation>

"The fraudulent acts and the manner in which they have been

committed may be qualified as cunning and difficult to detect.

This in itself is sufficient reason to impose a severe fine on

the accused. Only in the undesirably long duration of the

proceedings and the circumstance that the accused has not

previously been convicted does the Court find reason to lower

substantially the fine it finds in itself appropriate and to fix

it at the limited sum mentioned below."

The Court of Appeal used the same reasoning when it imposed its

sentence on the applicant company; it did not, however, refer to the

fact that the applicant company had no previous convictions.

The first applicant was sentenced to a fine of 10,000 Dutch

guilders or, in case of non-payment, 100 days' imprisonment, of which

5,000 Dutch guilders or, in case of non-payment, 50 days' imprisonment

were suspended pending a probationary period of two years. The

applicant company was sentenced to a fine of 50,000 Dutch guilders.

On 10 May 1991 both applicants filed an appeal in cassation.

On 8 March 1992 the lawyer of both applicants requested the

President of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal to transmit the case-files

at issue to the Supreme Court. On 21 September 1992 the Registry of the

Supreme Court received the case-files.

The procurator general (Procureur-Generaal) at the Supreme Court

advised this Court to quash the judgments of the Court of Appeal of

Amsterdam on the ground that the period of time between the filing of

the appeals in cassation and the judgments of the Supreme Court had

exceeded the reasonable time referred to in Article 6 para. 1 of the

Convention. He proposed that the cases be referred back to the

Amsterdam Court of Appeal to have the consequences of this excess

determined.

Following hearings in both cases on 19 January 1993 the Supreme

Court, however, rejected the applicants' appeals in cassation on 25 May

1993. It held, inter alia, that the Court of Appeal had correctly found

no violation of Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention. As regards the

period of time between the lodging of the appeals in cassation and the

judgments of the Supreme Court, that court found that neither this

delay in itself nor the delay as a part of the entire proceedings had

exceeded a reasonable time.

COMPLAINTS

The applicants complain under Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention

that the criminal charges against them have not been determined within

a reasonable time. The complaint concerns both the total duration of

the proceedings of almost seven and a half years and the time taken

between the various courts concerned, in particular the period between

the applicants' acquittal by the Alkmaar Regional Court on 27 June 1989

and the appeal proceedings before the Court of Appeal of Amsterdam on

25 April 1991, and the period between the appeals in cassation lodged

by the applicants on 10 May 1991 and the hearing of these appeals

before the Supreme Court on 19 January 1993.

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION

The application was introduced on 13 July 1993 and registered on

23 August 1993.

On 11 January 1995 the Commission decided to communicate the

application to the respondent Government, pursuant to Rule 48

para. 2 (b) of the Rules of Procedure.

The Government's written observations were submitted on 22 April

1995, after an extension of the time-limit fixed for that purpose. The

applicants replied on 3 July 1995.

THE LAW

The applicants complain of the length of the criminal proceedings

against them. They invoke Article 6 para. 1 (Art. 6-1) of the

Convention, which provides, insofar as relevant:

"1. In the determination of ... any criminal charge against

him, everyone is entitled to a ... hearing within a reasonable

time by a ... tribunal ..."

1. The respondent Government argue in the first place that the

applicants can no longer be regarded as victims within the meaning of

Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention in view of the reduction of the

sentences imposed on the applicants by the Court of Appeal in

connection with the undesirably protracted length of the criminal

proceedings.

In this respect they submit that the maximum sentences which may

be imposed for the offences concerned are a six year term of

imprisonment or a fine of 100,000 Dutch guilders. In the opinion of the

Government, considerable leniency was exercised in sentencing, which

provided a substantial level of compensation for any damage the

applicants may have suffered as a result of the length of the criminal

proceedings.

The applicants refute this argument, arguing that the Court of

Appeal gave no indication of the extent to which the duration of the

proceedings played a part. Furthermore, the fine imposed on the first

applicant was also tempered because he had no previous criminal

convictions. The applicants further submit that criminal courts in the

Netherlands almost never impose maximum penalties, and certainly not

on first offenders. In addition, they allege that the improprieties

which were ultimately declared proven were of such minor importance

that, if certain guidelines which came into force in 1993 had already

been applicable in 1985, they would not even have led to a prosecution.

The applicants conclude that there is no question of the penalties

having genuinely been reduced because the reasonable time requirement

had been exceeded.

The Commission recalls that an applicant can no longer claim to

be a victim of the failure to observe the "reasonable time" requirement

in Article 6 para. 1 (Art. 6-1) of the Convention if his sentence has

been reduced in an express and measurable manner after a judicial

finding concerning the undue length of the proceedings (cf. No.

17661/91, Dec. 31.3.93, D.R. 74 p. 156).

The Commission notes, however, that the Court of Appeal in the

present case expressly denied a violation of Article 6 para. 1

(Art. 6-1) of the Convention in respect of the applicants' complaint

of the length of the proceedings. The Supreme Court endorsed this view.

Consequently, there is no acknowledgement, either expressly or in

substance, of a violation of the Convention and in these circumstances

the Commission finds it unnecessary to examine whether the sentences

imposed by the Court of Appeal may be considered as constituting

redress (cf. No. 21961/93, Dec. 28.2.96, unpublished).

Moreover, in respect of the time which had elapsed following the

lodging of the appeals in cassation the Supreme Court found that

neither this delay in itself nor the proceedings as a whole had

exceeded a reasonable time.

Accordingly, the applicants can still claim to be a victim within

the meaning of Article 25 (Art. 25) of the Convention of a breach of

Article 6 para. 1 (Art. 6-1) of the Convention.

2. As regards the substance of the applicants' complaint, the

Government observe in relation to the period of the preliminary

judicial investigation that a massive investigation into tax fraud by

five bulb-producing companies and their respective directors had taken

place. The investigation and prosecution called for a meticulous

checking of the records in the extensive files of the suspect companies

and the questioning of many witnesses.

The Government, furthermore, do not believe that the proceedings

in chambers concerning the applicants' objections in relation to the

committal for trial and the summons respectively took an unreasonably

long time. They reiterate that adequate redress was provided by the

reduction of the sentences imposed by the Court of Appeal. The

Government submit, taking into account the fact that the first

applicant was not being held in detention, that it cannot be said that

there was any contravention of the provisions of the Convention as a

result of the passage of time between the lodging of the appeals in

cassation and the hearing of these appeals.

The applicants concede that the cases at issue were originally

complex in terms both of the facts and of the law. They argue, however,

that the delays which occurred cannot principally be ascribed to this

complexity, since, in its judgment of 6 December 1988, the Supreme

Court answered the legal issues involved, and after the preliminary

judicial investigation had been closed no further factual enquiries

were made, with the exception of the customary factual enquiry at the

hearings. Having regard, inter alia, to the unnecessarily long and

unexplained periods of inactivity between the first instance

proceedings and the appeal and between the appeal and the cassation

proceedings, the applicants maintain their contention that the total

duration of the proceedings was such that it exceeded a reasonable

time.

After an examination of the complaint in the light of the

parties' submissions, the Commission considers that it raises issues

of fact and law requiring an examination of the merits. The application

cannot, therefore, be declared manifestly ill-founded within the

meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention. No other

grounds for inadmissibility have been established.

For these reasons, the Commission, by a majority,

DECLARES THE APPLICATION ADMISSIBLE, without prejudging the

merits of the case.

Secretary to the Second Chamber President of the Second Chamber

(M.-T. SCHOEPFER) (H. DANELIUS)