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European Court of Human Rights |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> Smith And Grady v United Kingdom (Article 41) - 33985/96; 33986/96 [2000] ECHR 384 (25 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2000/384.html Cite as: (2001) 31 EHRR 24, [2000] ECHR 384, [2001] 31 EHRR 24, 31 EHRR 24 |
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In the case of Smith and Grady v. the United Kingdom,
The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Mr J.-P. Costa, President,
Mr W. Fuhrmann,
Mr L. Loucaides,
Mr P. Kuris,
Sir Nicolas Bratza,
Mrs H.S. Greve,
Mr K. Traja, judges,
and Mrs S. Dollé, Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 4 July 2000,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE AND FACTS
THE LAW
"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. Non-pecuniary damage
The first applicant submitted that both the investigation of her sexual orientation and her consequent discharge from the armed forces on the sole ground of her homosexuality were profoundly degrading and humiliating events. These events had, according to the first applicant, a significant, continuing and negative impact on her mental health. Her service discharge medical report dated 4 October 1994 recorded that she had depression and anxiety problems and was taking antidepressant medication. She also submitted the report of a consultant psychiatrist dated 31 March 1999, which described her ongoing and substantial anxiety and connected depression problems. The report indicated that those problems, which had not arisen prior to 1993, were related to her difficulties with the armed forces whose actions "appear[ed] to be casual". A medical report, also dated 31 March 1999, described her psychological difficulties dating from July 1994 when she was first prescribed antidepressant medication and noted various continuing stress symptoms, the report indicating that certain of the first applicant's symptoms were related to her treatment by the armed forces.
The second applicant described himself as a resilient person but submitted that, nevertheless, he found the investigation process humiliating and degrading, the questions put to him intrusive and insulting and his consequent discharge from the armed forces, on the sole ground of his sexual orientation, inherently degrading, injurious to his feelings and extremely painful. Moreover, and as a result of the above, he cannot now pursue a career in a profession which he enjoyed and in which he excelled.
B. Pecuniary damage
As to her service prospects, she submitted that she intended to obtain and complete a full 22-year engagement with the armed forces (her statement on discharge dated 10 August 1994 indicated that this was her intention). She argued that she would have been promoted to junior technician at the end of her conversion course in January 1995, to corporal in January 1996 and to sergeant in January 1998, that it normally takes a further five to eight years to become a flight sergeant and a further five years to become a warrant officer, and that she would have become a warrant officer (or attained the equivalent commissioned post as an officer) prior to retirement in 2011. She maintained that her exemplary service record, her abilities and her acceptance for the enrolled nurse conversion course in 1992 all favoured a prolonged engagement and excellent service promotional prospects. She submitted her station commander's discharge report which indicated that her performance on the conversion course was satisfactory and that "she could have successfully completed the course".
As regards civilian employment since her discharge, she referred to the significant and ongoing psychological and medical impact of the investigation and her consequent dismissal (see paragraph 10 above), arguing that she had therefore only been able to work on a factory production line for approximately eighteen months since her discharge. She submitted that those psychological and medical problems meant that she was likely to be unemployed and to be in receipt of social-welfare benefits until May 2001, when she could foresee beginning work as a carer.
Apart from this and the obvious difficulties in transferring from service to civilian employment, she argued that her search for civilian employment was hampered by a number of additional matters. In the first place, she was obliged to explain her certificate of discharge which read "services no longer required being unable to meet service obligations through circumstances beyond her control". Secondly, she had applied to ten different employment agencies and for twenty different jobs as an enrolled nurse but, as shown by the correspondence submitted, there were significant delays on the part of the Ministry of Defence in releasing references and information to potential employers, which she alleges caused her to lose certain employment possibilities. Thirdly, she argued that her employment and earning options were curtailed by the fact that the armed forces did not allow her to complete the conversion course examinations in September 1994, which would have allowed her to work as a civilian staff nurse. She submitted that there had been few positions available for enrolled nurses whose positions will, in any event, be replaced from 2000 by care assistants earning GBP 7,000 to 9,000 per annum.
Her assessment of the pension losses claimed was based on her reaching the rank of warrant officer and she assumed that she would live until she was 80 years old. Her calculation of the future loss of earnings claimed was based on her promotion only as far as sergeant in January 1998, on salaries applicable in April 1999 (provided by the Government) without any account being taken of likely salary increases or bonuses thereafter and on social-welfare benefits applicable in 1998.
He claimed the sum of GBP 185,497.09 in compensation since his service earnings after 1 April 1999 (based on service salary figures for April 1999 provided by the Government) would have exceeded his potential civilian income. As regards the service pension scheme, he claimed compensation in the sum of GBP 599,217, being the difference between the retirement benefits offered by the service pension scheme and his current civilian pension scheme. Although his current pension scheme is also non-contributory, it is significantly less lucrative than the service pension scheme.
In calculating the above losses, he made the assumption that he would retire from service in 2018. He also argued that, in the meantime, he would have been promoted to flight sergeant by 1997, and that he would have obtained branch commission posts of flight lieutenant by 1999, of squadron leader by 2004 and of wing commander by 2010. He used service salary figures supplied by the Government for 1999, and pointed out that no service salary increases or bonuses were factored into his calculations, and that he erred on the side of caution as regards the speed of his potential promotions. He argued that his exemplary service records and evaluations were consistent with the above forecasted service promotions. As to his current civilian employment, he had assumed an annual earnings increase of 3.35% per annum, there being no promotion options given the staff structure of the office in which he works.
As to the first applicant, the Government referred to a service career forecast completed in April 1999 by the armed forces and accepted that her service career would have taken her to sergeant by January 1998, but that further promotion was uncertain in the extreme. However, and while they accepted some emotional impact relating to her discharge, they did not accept that she had been unable to work save for the eighteen-month period mentioned and could not work until 2001. They argued that she should have taken further steps to secure employment and the transfer of her nursing skills, including further study. As to her pension claims, the Government confirmed that on discharge she had accrued a terminal grant of GBP 2,968.62 and a pension of GBP 989.54 per annum, which benefits were indexed and payable at the age of 60. Had she left the armed forces in January 1999 as a sergeant, those benefits would have been GBP 8,524.32 and GBP 2,841.44 per annum, respectively. They pointed out that no allowance had been made by the applicant for the possibility of obtaining pension benefits had she qualified as a nurse.
As to the second applicant, the Government also referred to a service career forecast prepared by the armed forces in April 1999. They accepted that there were reasonable prospects of his selection for promotion to flight sergeant at the end of 2001, and that the average time for promotion thereafter was 8.6 years, which promotion was in no sense guaranteed and difficult to predict. The submitted forecast, accordingly, indicated significantly lower service prospects than had been relied upon by the second applicant.
As regards his pension claims, the Government confirmed that on discharge he had accrued a terminal grant of GBP 10,121.55 and a pension of GBP 3,373.85 per annum (again indexed and payable at the age of 60). Had he remained in service until, for example, April 1999 and attained the rank of flight sergeant, his accrued benefits would have been GBP 18,535.95 and GBP 6,178.65 per annum respectively. However, the Government considered that pension loss should be treated as future loss, and should be calculated on the basis of contributions the armed forces would have made to the service pension scheme on the second applicant's behalf, and not on the basis of the loss of a lump sum and annual payments on retirement. They considered, moreover, that the second applicant had the opportunity to fund a pension at least up to the level of benefits which would have been provided by the service scheme.
In sum, the Government submitted that, given the uncertainty involved in the above assessments, a broad approach to the applicants' claims for pecuniary loss was both inevitable and desirable. A maximum award to the first applicant for any pecuniary damage sustained was proposed in the sum of GBP 10,000 to 15,000. They also proposed that no award be made to the second applicant or, alternatively, a maximum award of GBP 5,000 to 10,000.
However, in the present case, a precise calculation of the sums necessary to make complete reparation (restitutio in integrum) in respect of the pecuniary losses suffered by the applicants is prevented by the inherently uncertain character of the damage flowing from the violations (see the Young, James and Webster v. the United Kingdom judgment of 18 October 1982 (Article 50), Series A no. 55, pp. 6-7, § 11). While the Court does not accept the Government's contention that no award should be made in respect of future losses given the large number of imponderables involved in their assessment, it is nevertheless the case that the greater the interval since the discharge of the applicants the more uncertain the damage becomes.
The Court went on to note (ibid., § 92) the unique nature of the armed forces, a matter which had been underlined by the Government in their pleadings before the Court, and the consequent difficulty in directly transferring essentially military qualifications and experience to civilian life. It recalled that one of the reasons why it considered Mrs Vogt's dismissal from her post as a schoolteacher to be a "very severe measure", was the finding that schoolteachers in her situation would "almost certainly be deprived of the opportunity to exercise the sole profession for which they have a calling, for which they have been trained and in which they have acquired skills and experience" (Vogt v. Germany, judgment of 26 September 1995, Series A no. 323, p. 29, § 60).
The Court is of the opinion that the significant differences between service and civilian life and qualifications, together with the emotional and psychological impact of the investigations and of the consequent discharges (see paragraph 13 above), rendered it difficult for the applicants to find civilian careers which were, and would continue to be, equivalent to their service careers. Both applicants had access to certain armed forces' resettlement services. However, the first applicant submitted that she was too psychologically affected by the events surrounding her discharge to take immediate and full advantage of those services. The second applicant did participate in a resettlement programme and he received a resettlement grant of GBP 5,583. However, he did not make any claim for past pecuniary loss.
However, it is not disputed that the first applicant began her service career in 1989 when she was 23 years old, enlisting for the maximum engagement available to her of nine years. She was promoted to senior aircraftwoman and then recommended for promotion in 1991-93 to junior technician, the latter promotion being subject to her completing the enrolled nurse conversion course. In 1992 she obtained a place on that course and was due to take her final examinations in September 1994, about two months prior to her discharge. It is also not contested that, on the date of discharge, her gross salary was approximately GBP 34.22 per day.
While the Government argued that the first applicant should have promoted her nursing career by further study, they did not dispute that she was not allowed to take the enrolled nurse conversion course examinations prior to her discharge in September 1994, and it is noted that her station commander considered that she could have successfully completed that course (see paragraph 15 above). Moreover, the Government accepted that successful completion of that course meant that she would probably have become a sergeant by January 1998. The Government also questioned her efforts to find civilian employment, but did not comment on her detailed submissions about the difficulties she encountered in obtaining necessary references and information from the Ministry of Defence.
It is also not disputed that the second applicant joined the armed forces in 1980 when he was 17 years old. By 1991 he had attained the rank of sergeant, at which stage he began work as chief clerk in Washington, leading the support staff team of the British Defence Intelligence Staff (Washington). On the date of discharge he had completed almost fourteen years' service, his gross salary was GBP 48.71 per day and the Government accepted that there were reasonable prospects of his promotion to flight sergeant at the end of 2001. In addition, the career forecast relied upon by the Government indicated that, had the offer of promotion to flight sergeant, together with the associated posting, been accepted by the second applicant and been approved by his commanding officer, he would have received an offer to extend his service to the age of 55, giving him a revised retirement date of 2018. Although promotion above flight sergeant was "by no means guaranteed", the career forecast accepted that the average time for such promotion was 8.6 years, which was prior to the last-mentioned retirement date.
The lump sum and service pension which the first applicant will receive on retirement are substantially less than the amounts she would have received had she not been discharged, even if she had not achieved her predicted promotions before retirement. Although no precise figures have been provided, the Court accepts that the contributions which would be required in order to achieve an equivalent level of pension from a private pension scheme are likely to be considerable. The same holds true, but to a lesser extent, for the second applicant. It is true that his current employment offers a non-contributory pension scheme. However, he submitted that the benefits of that scheme are significantly less advantageous than the service pension scheme.
The Court is of the view that the applicants can reasonably claim some compensation for the loss associated with the termination of their participation in the non-contributory service pension scheme from the date of their discharges in November and December 1994 respectively. The amount of the loss is necessarily speculative, depending as it does on, inter alia, the period during which the applicants would have remained in service and on their rank at the time of leaving service.
On the same basis, the Court awards compensation (inclusive of interest claimed) to the second applicant in the sums of GBP 25,000 in respect of future loss of earnings and GBP 15,000 for the loss of the benefit of the non-contributory service pension scheme, making a total award of compensation for pecuniary damage of GBP 40,000.
C. Costs and expenses
In describing the financial demands on him after discharge, the second applicant referred to a solicitor's bill of costs in the sum of GBP 808.83 relating to his proceedings before the Industrial Tribunal. However, he claimed reimbursement of only GBP 200, being the cost of filing certain documents in the High Court and in the Court of Appeal, which he had paid and which were not covered by domestic legal aid.
In addition, and contrary to the Government's position, the Court does not consider that its conclusions in the principal judgment on the applicants' complaints under Articles 3, 10 and 14 imply that the associated legal costs and expenses were unnecessarily incurred or were unreasonable as to quantum (see Jordan v. the United Kingdom, no. 30280/96, § 42, 14 March 2000, unreported). This is particularly so since all these complaints were declared admissible, detailed reasons led to the Court's finding of no violation of Article 3, and the parties' submissions on the complaints under Articles 10 and 14 were not extensive.
Moreover, the Court notes that, apart from the initial introduction of the first applicant's case under the Convention, the applicants shared legal representatives.
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the legal costs and expenses for which the applicants claim reimbursement, pursuant to Article 41 of the Convention, cannot all be considered to have been "necessarily" incurred or to be "reasonable as to quantum" (see the Observer and Guardian v. the United Kingdom judgment of 26 November 1991, Series A no. 216, pp. 37-38, § 80).
D. Default interest
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the first applicant, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following amounts:
(i) GBP 19,000 (nineteen thousand pounds sterling) in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) GBP 59,000 (fifty-nine thousand pounds sterling) in respect of pecuniary damage; and
(b) that simple interest at an annual rate of 8% shall be payable from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement;
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the second applicant, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following amounts:
(i) GBP 19,000 (nineteen thousand pounds sterling) in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) GBP 40,000 (forty thousand pounds sterling) in respect of pecuniary damage;
(iii) GBP 200 (two hundred pounds sterling) for the costs and expenses of the domestic proceedings; and
(b) that simple interest at an annual rate of 8% shall be payable from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement;
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicants, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, GBP 32,000 (thirty-two thousand pounds sterling) for the costs and expenses of the proceedings before the Convention organs (inclusive of value-added tax), less the amounts paid by the Council of Europe in legal aid to the first applicant; and
(b) that simple interest at an annual rate of 8% shall be payable from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement;
Done in English, and notified in writing on 25 July 2000, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
S. dollé J.-P. Costa
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules of Court, the partly dissenting and partly concurring opinion of Mr Loucaides is annexed to this judgment.
J.-P.C.
S.D.
I beg to differ from the judgment of the Court on just satisfaction under Article 41 of the Convention. In that judgment, the majority based their award of compensation to the applicants on all of the violations found in the principal judgment of 27 September 1999. However, my view was that there had not been a violation of Article 8 as a result of the applicants' discharge from the armed forces on the ground of their homosexuality. Moreover, that discharge element was, in my opinion, the most substantial part of the applicants' cases. I cannot, therefore, agree with the Article 41 judgment. Furthermore, I do not think that, in these circumstances, it would serve any useful purpose for me to estimate separately the just satisfaction to award to the applicants for those violations in respect of which I did agree with the majority.
I should add, however, that in my opinion the assessment of non-pecuniary damage in this case should have taken account of the fact that, on their enlistment, the applicants were aware of the risk of their being discharged from the armed forces on the ground of their homosexuality in pursuance of the relevant official policy of the Ministry of Defence, which had been brought to their attention. In so far as this prior knowledge was not taken into account by the majority, I consider the amount awarded in respect of non-pecuniary damage to be excessive. Even apart from this latter point, I am of the view that the award for non-pecuniary damage is, in any event, excessive.