The ECHR finds arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable judgments unfair - violations of Convention Article 6.1. Domestic court judgments that misinterpret ECHR judgments are considered arbitrary and unfair and violations of Convention Article 6.1.
There is great relevance to the AK-RS case where arbitrary court judgments are found in the Massei motivation report, the CSC quashing of the Hellmann acquittal, and the Nencini motivation report.
Bochan v. Ukraine (No. 2) (application no. 22251/08) [Grand Chamber]
The Court {ECHR} reiterated that it was not its role to act as a fourth instance and to question under Article 6 § 1 the judgments of the national courts, unless their findings had been arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable. However in Ms Bochan’s case, the Supreme Court, in its decision of 14 March 2008, had grossly misrepresented the Court’s findings in its judgment of 3 May 2007. Indeed, the Supreme Court had found that Ukrainian courts’ decisions in Ms Bochan’s case had been lawful and well-founded and that she had been awarded just satisfaction for the violation of the “reasonable-time” guarantee, when the Court had in fact found a violation of the Convention on account of the unfairness of the original domestic proceedings.
The Court observed that the Supreme Court’s reasoning could not be considered as a different reading of a legal text but rather as being “grossly arbitrary” or as entailing a “denial of justice”, as the distorted presentation of the Court’s 2007 judgment in the first Bochan case had defeated Ms Bochan’s attempt to have her property claim examined in the framework of the cassation-type procedure provided for under Ukrainian law in the light of the Court’s judgment in her previous case.
As a consequence, there had been a violation of Article 6 § 1 on account of the unfairness of the proceedings culminating in the decision of the Supreme Court of 14 March 2008.
There is great relevance to the AK-RS case where arbitrary court judgments are found in the Massei motivation report, the CSC quashing of the Hellmann acquittal, and the Nencini motivation report.
Bochan v. Ukraine (No. 2) (application no. 22251/08) [Grand Chamber]
The Court {ECHR} reiterated that it was not its role to act as a fourth instance and to question under Article 6 § 1 the judgments of the national courts, unless their findings had been arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable. However in Ms Bochan’s case, the Supreme Court, in its decision of 14 March 2008, had grossly misrepresented the Court’s findings in its judgment of 3 May 2007. Indeed, the Supreme Court had found that Ukrainian courts’ decisions in Ms Bochan’s case had been lawful and well-founded and that she had been awarded just satisfaction for the violation of the “reasonable-time” guarantee, when the Court had in fact found a violation of the Convention on account of the unfairness of the original domestic proceedings.
The Court observed that the Supreme Court’s reasoning could not be considered as a different reading of a legal text but rather as being “grossly arbitrary” or as entailing a “denial of justice”, as the distorted presentation of the Court’s 2007 judgment in the first Bochan case had defeated Ms Bochan’s attempt to have her property claim examined in the framework of the cassation-type procedure provided for under Ukrainian law in the light of the Court’s judgment in her previous case.
As a consequence, there had been a violation of Article 6 § 1 on account of the unfairness of the proceedings culminating in the decision of the Supreme Court of 14 March 2008.
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