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European Court of Human Rights


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> B. v. THE UNITED KINGDOM (ARTICLE 50) - 9840/82 [1988] ECHR 8 (9 June 1988)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/1988/8.html
Cite as: (1991) 13 EHRR 588, [1988] ECHR 8

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In the case of B v. the United Kingdom*,

_______________

* Note by the Registrar: The case is numbered 5/1986/103/151. The

second figure indicates the year in which the case was referred to the

Court and the first figure its place on the list of cases referred in

that year; the last two figures indicate, respectively, the case's

order on the list of cases and of originating applications (to the

Commission) referred to the Court since its creation.

_______________

The European Court of Human Rights, taking its decision in plenary

session pursuant to Rule 50 of the Rules of Court and composed of the

following judges:

Mr. R. Ryssdal, President,

Mr. J. Cremona,

Mr. Thór Vilhjálmsson,

Mr. G. Lagergren,

Mr. F. Gölcüklü,

Mr. F. Matscher,

Mr. J. Pinheiro Farinha,

Mr. L.-E. Pettiti,

Mr. B. Walsh,

Sir Vincent Evans,

Mr. R. Macdonald,

Mr. C. Russo,

Mr. R. Bernhardt,

Mr. J. Gersing,

Mr. A. Spielmann,

Mr. J. De Meyer,

Mr. N. Valticos,

and also of Mr. M.-A. Eissen, Registrar, and Mr. H. Petzold, Deputy

Registrar,

Having deliberated in private on 24 March and 28 May 1988,

Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on the

last-mentioned date, on the application in the present case of

Article 50 (art. 50) of the Convention for the Protection of Human

Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ("the Convention"):

PROCEDURE AND FACTS

1. The case was referred to the Court on 28 January 1986 by the

European Commission of Human Rights ("the Commission"). It originated

in an application (no. 9840/82) against the United Kingdom of Great

Britain and Northern Ireland lodged with the Commission in 1982 by a

British citizen.

2. On 23 October 1986, the Chamber constituted to examine the

case relinquished jurisdiction in favour of the plenary Court (Rule 50

of the Rules of Court). By judgment of 8 July 1987 ("the principal

judgment"), the plenary Court held, inter alia, that the applicant had

been the victim of breaches of Articles 8 and 6 § 1 (art. 8, art. 6-1)

of the Convention by reason of the procedures followed and the

insufficiency of the remedies available in connection with decisions

relating to her child in the care of a local authority (Series A

no. 121-B, paragraphs 59-83 of the reasons and points 1 and 3 of the

operative provisions, pp. 71-80 and 81).

The only outstanding matter to be settled is the question of the

application of Article 50 (art. 50) in the present case. Accordingly,

as regards the facts, reference should be made to paragraphs 8-54 of

the principal judgment (ibid., pp. 63-70).

3. At the Court's hearing on 25-26 November 1986, the Government

of the United Kingdom ("the Government") reserved their position on

the applicant's claim for just satisfaction, which claim had not then

been quantified.

In the principal judgment, the Court therefore reserved the whole of

this question; it invited (a) the applicant to submit, within the next

two months, full written particulars of her claim; and (b) the

Government to submit, within two months of receipt of those

particulars, their written comments thereon and, in particular, to

notify the Court of any agreement reached between them and the

applicant (paragraphs 86-87 of the reasons and point 5 of the

operative provisions, pp. 81-82).

4. In accordance with the foregoing invitation and the

President's directions, there were filed at the registry:

- on 1 October 1987, memorial of the applicant;

- on 21 December 1987 and 12 February 1988, memorials of the Government;

- on 21 January 1988, observations of the Delegate of the Commission.

These documents revealed that no agreement had been concluded between

the Government and the applicant.

5. Having consulted the Agent of the Government, the Delegate of

the Commission and the representative of the applicant, the Court

decided, on 24 March 1988, that there was no need to hold a hearing.

AS TO THE LAW

6. Under Article 50 (art. 50) of the Convention,

"If the Court finds that a decision or a measure taken by a legal

authority or any other authority of a High Contracting Party is

completely or partially in conflict with the obligations arising from

the ... Convention, and if the internal law of the said Party allows

only partial reparation to be made for the consequences of this

decision or measure, the decision of the Court shall, if necessary,

afford just satisfaction to the injured party."

Under this provision the applicant claimed, inter alia, compensation

for non-pecuniary damage and reimbursement of costs and expenses

incurred in the proceedings before the Convention institutions.

A. Damage

7. (a) The applicant claimed exemplary and aggravated, but

unquantified, damages for the violations of Articles 6 § 1 and 8

(art. 6-1, art. 8) of the Convention found by the Court in the

principal judgment. Such damages were to cover the loss of her child

P, the state of uncertainty in which she had been left for more than

five years from April 1978 until December 1983 with regard to the

future of the child, and the mental anguish which she had suffered.

(b) The Government argued that although the alleged damage might have

been the consequence of the local authority decisions in which the

Court had found the applicant to have been insufficiently involved and

of her lack of access to P, it was not attributable to the breaches of

Articles 6 § 1 and 8 (art. 6-1, art. 8), since there was no evidence

that the outcome would have been different if she had been more

closely involved or if she had been able to have the question of her

access to this child reviewed by a tribunal having jurisdiction to

examine the merits of the matter. Consequently, no causal link had

been demonstrated between the violations of the Convention found by

the Court and any damage alleged by the applicant.

The Government further contended that, having regard to particular

facts of the case which they set out in their memorial, there was no

evidence that a closer involvement of the applicant in the local

authority's decision-making process or the availability of a judicial

remedy on the access issue could actually have benefited her in

practical terms. Accordingly, she had not suffered a "loss of real

opportunities", as that expression was understood in the Court's

case-law, and the findings of violation of Articles 6 § 1 and 8

(art. 6-1, art. 8) therefore constituted sufficient just satisfaction

for the purposes of Article 50 (art. 50). If, however, the Court

should take a different view on this point, then - the Government

submitted in the alternative - any sum awarded to the applicant

should, in all the circumstances of the case, not exceed £5,000.

(c) The Delegate of the Commission considered that it was not

possible to establish with any degree of certainty whether the

relevant decisions would have been different if the breaches of

Articles 6 § 1 and 8 (art. 6-1, art. 8) had not occurred. In his

view, the applicant should nevertheless receive a "reasonable amount"

of compensation for non-pecuniary loss, which amount should reflect

the serious nature of the issues involved.

8. The Court would recall in the first place that the principal

judgment was in no way concerned with the justification for such

matters as the taking into public care or the adoption of the child or

the restriction or termination of the applicant's access to him.

Violations were found solely on the following grounds: as regards

Article 8 (art. 8), the applicant's insufficient involvement in the

local authority's decisions to move P to long-term foster parents

(June 1978) and to terminate her access to the child (May 1980); the

failure in the decision-making process adequately to take account of

the consequences of the social workers' strike on the programme to

promote rehabilitation of P with his mother and grandfather; and, as

regards Article 6 § 1 (art. 6-1), the non-availability of a judicial

remedy on the merits of the access issue (see the principal judgment,

pp. 74-76, §§ 66-70, and pp. 79-80, §§ 80-83).

Whilst the applicant was thus the victim of deficiencies of a

procedural nature, they were all the same deficiencies that were

intimately connected with an interference with one of the most

fundamental of rights, namely that of respect for family life.

9. As regards the loss of P, which the applicant attributed to

the breaches of the Convention, it cannot be affirmed with certainty

that this would not have occurred in the absence of the procedural

deficiencies in question. The Court finds it impossible to assert

that, if the applicant had been more closely involved in the relevant

deliberations of the local authority, the outcome would definitely

have been different. And even if a judicial remedy on the merits of

the access question had been available to and had been successfully

exercised by the applicant during the currency of the care orders, it

would by no means have followed automatically that P would have been

restored to her care or would not eventually have been adopted; as the

Court pointed out in paragraph 81 of the principal judgment, "whether

a child should be in public care and whether his parent should have

access to him are matters to which different considerations may well

apply".

10. On the other hand, the Court does not feel able to conclude

that, as the Government submitted, no practical benefit could have

accrued to the applicant if the procedural deficiencies in question

had not existed.

It is true that, having regard to the applicant's lifestyle and

apparent lack of interest in the child at the time, it seems somewhat

unlikely that the local authority's decision of June 1978 would have

been any different even if she had been involved in the procedure

leading thereto (see the principal judgment, pp. 64-65, §§ 12-13);

however, such involvement would have brought home to her the situation

and enabled her to reflect upon it and make representations at a

crucial time. It is also true that when the local authority took its

decision of May 1980 to terminate access, P had already been with his

foster parents for nearly two years. However, closer involvement of

the applicant in the decision-making process at that stage would at

least have enabled her to put her case on such matters as the adverse

effects of the social workers' strike on the agreed rehabilitation

programme; the strength of her desire to re-establish her relationship

with P (for which the County Court judge found in July 1983 she had at

all times made genuine efforts); and the continuing and positive

relationship between P and his grandfather, with whom the applicant

then had a settled home (ibid., pp. 65-67 and 68, §§ 13-18 and 22).

Moreover, more should in any event have been done by the local

authority to counter the effects of the social workers' strike on the

programme of rehabilitation.

As regards the possible value to the applicant of a judicial remedy on

the merits of the access issue, it has to be recalled that P was

placed with long-term foster parents in June 1978 and that the

applicant had no or only limited access to him from the start of the

social workers' strike (November 1978) until his adoption

(December 1983) (ibid., pp. 65-69, §§ 13-24). However, as the County

Court found in July 1983, at least in the early part of this period

the local authority and the applicant "understood and were agreed that

rehabilitation between mother and child was to be pursued" (ibid.,

p. 68, § 22); it was, in fact, the strike - a matter outside the

applicant's control - that occasioned the first total cessation of

access. And there was the fact that from July 1978 the applicant had

a settled home with her father, who had a continuing and positive

relationship with P. Furthermore, the different considerations

involved mean, as the Court pointed out in paragraph 81 of the

principal judgment, that a parent "may be able to adduce reasons

warranting a continuation or restoration of access but not of his care

of the child". It cannot, in the Court's opinion, be excluded that if

during the currency of the care orders the applicant had been able to

have the question of her access to P reviewed by a court on its

merits, she might have obtained some degree of satisfaction,

especially if she had made her application at a sufficiently early

date. And this could have changed the whole future complexion of her

relationship with the child.

In these respects she may therefore be said to have suffered some loss

of real opportunities, warranting monetary compensation.

11. In addition to the foregoing, the fact that the applicant was

not consulted about the local authority's decision of May 1980 or

informed in advance of the meeting at which it was taken must, in the

Court's view, have caused her considerable distress. To this was

added the feeling of frustration and helplessness which she must have

experienced as a result of her inability, during the currency of the

care orders, to refer the merits of the access issue to the courts.

These are all matters that similarly warrant monetary compensation.

12. None of the factors cited in paragraphs 10 and 11 above lends

itself to precise quantification. Making an assessment on an

equitable basis, as is required by Article 50 (art. 50), the Court

awards the applicant £12,000 for damage sustained.

B. Costs and expenses

13. The applicant claimed, in respect of lawyer's fees and

disbursements incurred in the proceedings before the Commission and

the Court, the sum of £20,051.32, excluding value added tax and before

deduction of the amounts she had received from the Council of Europe

by way of legal aid.

14. The Government did not contest that the applicant had incurred

liability to pay sums additional to those covered by the aforesaid

legal aid and they indicated their willingness to reimburse such costs

as had been actually and necessarily incurred and were reasonable as

to quantum. They did, however, make a series of observations on this

claim and they submitted that just satisfaction under this head would

be accorded by the payment to the applicant of £9,750 plus value added

tax, less the legal aid payments.

15. The Court has examined the claim in the light of the criteria

emerging from its established case-law and of the Government's

observations. In so doing, it has noted the following points.

(a) The services rendered by a lawyer to his client must be tailored

to the latter's specific needs and circumstances and the Court thus

attaches weight to the applicant's lawyer's general submission that

the greatest diligence was necessitated in the present case on account

of the applicant's limited abilities. For these reasons, the Court is

unable to sustain the Government's objections to the charges made for

work relating to legal aid and to the travelling expenses of the

applicant and her father.

(b) As the Government maintained, it may be doubted whether it was

necessary for the applicant to be represented by two lawyers in

February 1985 at the meeting with a social work adviser and then at

the meeting to discuss a possible friendly settlement of the case.

The same cannot be said of the conference in November 1986 with the

representatives of the applicants in the related cases of O, H, W and

R v. the United Kingdom, which must have entailed complex and detailed

consideration of the arguments to be presented at the Court's hearing.

(c) Whilst the Court is not in a position to enter into the detailed

calculations involved, it does share the doubts expressed by the

Government as to certain charges for telephone calls and photocopying.

On the other hand, it cannot fully subscribe to the Government's

proposition that, whilst travelling, a lawyer does little or no work

for his client.

(d) Whilst the Court could accept as reasonable a sum somewhat higher

than the £4,000 suggested by the Government for preparing for and

attending the Court's hearing, it agrees that the amount claimed for

this item (£9,712.50 exclusive of value added tax) appears too high.

The same applies to the amount claimed for drafting the applicant's

memorial on Article 50 (art. 50) (£370). More generally, as the

Government pointed out, in the Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali

judgment of 28 May 1985 (Series A no. 94) the Court allowed a charge

of £40 per hour for work done by solicitors in 1980-1984; it agrees

that in the present case a figure of £60 or £70 per hour (depending

on the nature of the work) would be fair and reasonable.

16. Taking into account the above factors and also the relevant

legal aid payments made by the Council of Europe and making an

assessment on an equitable basis, the Court considers that the

applicant is entitled to be reimbursed, for legal fees and expenses,

the sum of £10,500 plus value added tax.

C. Miscellaneous

17. The applicant also sought a declaration by the Government as

to how they intended to ensure that United Kingdom law as it related

to child care would not infringe the rights guaranteed by the

Convention.

The Court notes that its judgments leave to the State concerned the

choice of the means to be used in its domestic legal system to give

effect to its obligation under Article 53 (art. 53) (see, inter alia,

the Pauwels judgment of 26 May 1988, Series A no. 135, § 41).

FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY

1. Holds that the United Kingdom is to pay to the applicant £12,000

(twelve thousand pounds) for non-pecuniary damage and £10,500 (ten

thousand five hundred pounds) plus value added tax for costs and

expenses;

2. Rejects the remainder of the claim for just satisfaction.

Done in English and in French, and notified in writing on 9 June 1988

pursuant to Rule 54 § 2, second sub-paragraph, of the Rules of Court.

Signed: Rolv RYSSDAL

President

Signed: Marc-André EISSEN

Registrar



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