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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> GEROVSKA POPCEVSKA v. "THE FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA" - 53249/08 - Communicated Case [2014] ECHR 916 (28 August 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2014/916.html Cite as: [2014] ECHR 916 |
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Communicated on 28 August 2014
FIRST SECTION
Application no. 53249/08
Snežana GEROVSKA POPČEVSKA against the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia
lodged on 1 November 2008
STATEMENT OF FACTS
The applicant, Ms Snežana Gerovska Popčevska, is a
Macedonian national, who was born in 1954 and lives in Skopje. She is
represented before the Court by Ms A. Begova, a lawyer practising in Skopje.
A. The circumstances of the case
The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicant, may be
summarised as follows.
1. Background of the case
During the events described below and until 2007, the
applicant was a judge at the Skopje Court of First Instance.
At the relevant time there was an obligation for the
applicant under the applicable law to report any increase in the applicant’s or
her family members’ assets.
On 5 November 2004 a sum of 38,000 euros (EUR) was deposited
to the applicant’s personal savings account.
On 8 July 2006 the applicant reported a change in her state
of assets (промена
во имотната
состојба) to the
State Commission for Prevention of Corruption (Државна
комисија за
спречување
на корупцијата)
(“the Commission”), namely that she had acquired an apartment worth
EUR 45,000. She also reported a debt, namely a bank loan for purchase of
an apartment in the amount of 620,000 Macedonian denars (MKD). She further
submitted a bank statement attesting that she withdrew EUR 35,000 from her
savings account.
2. Administrative proceedings against the applicant
On an unspecified date, the Commission lodged a request with
the Public Revenue Office (Управа
за Јавни
Приходи) (“the Office”) for
examination of the applicant’s state of assets in respect of the funds she had
obtained in 2004.
After holding public hearings on 1 and 5 December 2006, by a
decision of 26 December 2006 the Office ordered the applicant to pay the amount
of MKD 1,627,712 on the ground of unreported and untaxed income. It found that
it had not been proven during the proceedings that the amount of EUR 38,000
had been legally acquired by the applicant. It did not find credible the
applicant’s and her brother’s statements that her brother had deposited the
money to her account as a compensation for her part of the property inherited
by their parents, as the applicant had not submitted a contract with her
brother in support of that assertion.
The applicant appealed. On 26 December 2006 the Minister of
Finance dismissed her appeal. It endorsed the conclusion of the Office that the
applicant had not proven that the money in question had been lawfully acquired.
The decision stated, inter alia, that:
“...Although in accordance with section 35 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, [the applicant] was obliged to report the change of assets within 30 days, she did not fulfil this statutory obligation. ...
... In deciding, it was taken into account that the appellant had not acted in accordance with section 35 of the Prevention of Corruption Act and had not reported within 30 days the change in assets [made] by the transfer to her account of the amount of EUR 38,000.00 on 5 November 2004. ...”
The applicant lodged an administrative-dispute claim (тужба за
управен спор)
against the Minister’s decision, seeking that the Supreme Court held a public
hearing and that it adduced a financial expert opinion, the latter in order to
establish whether the disputed amount of money was unlawfully acquired. She
argued that she had indirectly reported the increase of her assets by reporting
the acquisition of the apartment in July 2006. She further argued that the
deadline of 30 days for reporting the change of assets was introduced in 2006
and that there had been no such deadline at the moment of the increase of her
assets in 2004.
On 16 January 2008 the applicant made a written submission to
the Administrative Court (which in the meantime had become competent to
adjudicate the case) asking that the proceedings were sped up. She reiterated
her request for a public hearing, arguing that there had existed no legal
positions on the particular issue arising in the case and that it was a complex
case which required evidence to be adduced for the sake of correct
establishment of the facts. She further requested, pursuant to section 31 of
the Administrative Disputes Act (see Relevant domestic law below) that the
court allowed her to be assisted at the public hearing by a competent expert –
a certified auditor.
On 4 April 2008 the Administrative Court dismissed the
applicant’s claim. In its judgment it stated that, in his reply to the
applicant’s claim, the Minister reiterated the reasoning given in the impugned
decision. The court endorsed the reasoning of the administrative bodies in
dismissing the applicant’s and her brother’s statements as regards the way in
which the applicant had obtained the money. The court did not specifically
address the applicant’s requests for an oral hearing and for a financial expert
opinion. In respect of the deadline for reporting the changes of assets, the court
quoted section 35 of the 2004 consolidated text of the Prevention of Corruption
Act. In the reasoning it stated the following:
“... The court assessed the applicant’s arguments... but it finds them unfounded. This is so because there was an obligation [for her] as an elected public official – a judge, to report this change. Her judicial awareness and conscience obliged her to do that within a reasonable deadline, and that is 30 days, which was determined for submitting the declaration of assets (анкетен лист), at the moment of election or taking up the duty of the public official. ...”
3. Criminal proceedings against the applicant
On 18 February 2009 the public prosecutor rejected the
criminal complaint against the applicant for the offence of “non-disclosure of
the origin of disproportionally acquired assets” (прикривање
на потеклото
на
несразмерно
стекнат имот). The prosecutor found that the applicant had not concealed the
funds, as they had been lawfully transferred from her brother’s savings account
to hers on the basis of an oral agreement with her brother as compensation for
property inherited by their parents.
On 5 February 2010, upon the applicant’s freedom of
information request, the prosecutor’s decision was served on her.
B. Relevant domestic law
Administrative Disputes Act
Section 30 of the Act, applicable at the material time,
provided that the court decided, in principle, at a private session. It could
hold a public hearing if the case was complex; in order to clarify the issues;
when it established facts and adduced evidence. A party to the proceedings
could request the court to hold a public hearing.
Section 31 provided that the party to the
administrative-dispute proceedings would be allowed to bring an expert to
provide him or her advice on issues related to the subject of the proceedings
which required specific expertise.
Prevention of Corruption Act (“the 2002 Act”)
Under section 34, an elected or appointed official, or a responsible person (одговорно
лице) of a public institution
or enterprise, or another legal entity which deals with state funds, was
obliged to report an increase of his or her assets, or the assets of the
members of his or her family, such as the construction of a house or other
buildings, purchase of immovable property, securities, car or other movable
property the value of which exceeds the amount of twenty average salaries in
the previous trimester.
Act of 2004 amending the Prevention of Corruption Act (“the 2004 Act”, published in the Official Gazette no. 46/04 of 12 July 2004)
Section 36 provided that proceedings
for examination of the state of assets could be initiated against an elected or appointed public official, or a responsible person of
a public institution or enterprise, or another legal entity which deals with
state funds, if that person did not provide any information of provided false
or incomplete information in the declaration of assets, or if he or she did not
report a change of assets or provided false or incomplete information when
reporting a change of assets.
Under section 37 (which added section 36-a to the Prevention
of Corruption Act) if during the proceedings for examination of assets it had
not been proven that the assets had been acquired or increased as a result of
regular income (редовни
примања) which had been
reported and taxed, the Office would adopt a tax decision. It would take as
taxation base the difference between the established regular, reported and
taxed income of the person concerned and the members of his family and the estimated
market value of the assets in question. The taxation base so determined would
then be subject to a tax rate of 70% of the difference of the taxed and
reported income and the market value of the assets.
Consolidated text of the Prevention of Corruption Act (published in the Official Gazette no. 83/04 of 24 November 2004)
Section 34 of the 2002 Act was renumbered as section 35 in
the consolidated text.
Act of 2006 amending the Prevention of Corruption Act (“the 2006 Act”, published in the Official Gazette no. 126/06 of 1 December 2006)
Section 12 amending section 34 of the 2002 Act introduced a
30-day deadline for reporting the change of assets.
Act of 2008 amending the Prevention of Corruption Act (“the 2008 Act” published in the Official Gazette no. 10/08 of 21 January 2008)
Section 3 amended section 36-a of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, as follows: if during the proceedings for
examination of assets it has not been proven that the assets have been acquired
or increased as a result of income which had been reported and taxed, the
Public Revenue Office will adopt a decision for personal income tax. The tax to
the unreported income will be calculated at a 70% rate.
Act of 2001 amending the Personal Income Tax Act
Under section 2 (amending section 12 of the Personal Income
Tax Act), there were two personal income tax rates, namely of 15% and 18% of
the income.
COMPLAINTS
The applicant complains under Article 6 of the Convention
that there was no public hearing before the Administrative Court despite her
explicit request and about a violation of the principle of equality of arms, in
that the Minister’s reply to her administrative dispute-claim was not served on
her and that her proposal for a financial expert opinion was dismissed. She
further complains that the domestic authorities applied a provision that had
not existed at the moment of the increase of the applicant’s assets.
QUESTIONS TO THE PARTIES
1. Was Article 6 § 1 of the Convention under its criminal head applicable to the impugned proceedings in the present case? If so, did the applicant have a fair hearing in accordance with Article 6 § 1 of the Convention? In particular,
- has there been an oral hearing in the present case as required by Article 6 § 1 of the Convention?
- were the principles of equality of arms and adversarial hearing respected in view of the applicant’s allegation that the Ministry’s reply to her administrative-dispute claim was not communicated to her?
- was the principle of equality of arms respected by the domestic courts in view of their refusal to admit in evidence the financial expert opinion proposed by the applicant?
3. Was Article 7 of the Convention applicable to the impugned proceedings in the present case? If so, was the relevant domestic law applied retroactively in the applicant’s case, in contravention to Article 7 of the Convention? The Government are invited to provide copies of any relevant domestic case-law concerning the manner in which the relevant domestic law is applied.