Submitted by: P.R. (name deleted) [represented by counsel]
Alleged
victim: The author
State party:
Spain
Date of
the communication: 9 February 2000
The Committee
against Torture, established under article 17 of the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
Meeting
on 23 November 2000,
Adopts
the following decision:
1. The author
of the communication is Mr. P.R., a Spanish national who claims to be
the victim of violations by Spain of articles 12 and 13 of the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.
He is represented by counsel. The Committee transmitted the communication
to the State party, in accordance with article 22, paragraph 3, of the
Convention, on 11 April 2000.
The facts
as submitted by the author
2.1 The author
claims that on the night of 29 October 1997, at about 3 a.m., as he
was walking with two companions in Victoria Street in Murcia, he approached
two local police officers to ask whether they knew of a bar that was
open so that they could buy a few drinks. When one of the officers replied
that it was not a proper hour for drinking, the author turned to his
companions and made a disrespectful remark about the police. The two
policemen immediately bore down on the author, punching him and hitting
him with their truncheons, knocking him down and continuing to beat
him on the ground. Other local police officers were called to the scene
by the first two and joined in the beating. They then handcuffed him
in a very painful way and took him to the police station in Correos
Street, from which he was later released. The injuries suffered by the
author required medical attention at the Molina de Segura emergency
unit.
2.2 On 31 October
1997, the author filed a complaint against the police officers with
Investigating Court No. 1, which was on duty at the time, but no investigation
was conducted.
2.3 The police
officers who allegedly mounted the attack brought charges against the
author that very day, 29 October 1997, accusing him of insulting officers
of the law. In their charge, they claimed that at 4.55 a.m. the author
of the communication had approached them to ask whether there were any
bars open in the neighbourhood. The police officers had answered that
there were none open at that hour and the author had responded with
insults. They had asked for identification but he had refused, insulting
them again. They had thereupon placed the author, who had offered resistance,
in the police vehicle and had driven him to the police station for identification.
2.4 Investigating
Court No. 6 of Murcia, before which the charges were brought, instituted
a minor-offence procedure and summoned the parties to the oral proceedings
on 25 November 1997. During the proceedings, the author stated that
he had filed a complaint against the police officers with the court
on duty. The judge thereupon suspended the proceedings and, on 27 November,
requested Investigating Court No. 1 to transmit the author's complaint
on the grounds that it had jurisdiction to undertake the relevant investigation.
The judge finally pronounced judgement on 17 March 1998. He characterized
the language used by the author to the police officers as a minor insult
to an officer of the law and sentenced him to a fine and payment of
the costs of the proceedings. The judgement mentioned that the author
and the proposed witnesses had not appeared before the court and stated
in one paragraph that the author had claimed to have been assaulted
on the way to the police station. It stated in another paragraph, however,
that, since neither the Office of the Public Prosecutor nor the author
or his representative had brought charges during the proceedings and
since no evidence had been adduced in support of the complaint, the
police officers should be acquitted.
2.5 The author
appealed against the judgement to the Provincial High Court on 21 April
1998, requesting that the judgement should be set aside and that the
facts he had reported to the court on duty should be investigated as
a possible offence as defined in articles 173 to 177 of the Criminal
Code under the heading "Torture and other offences against the
person". The author argued that the investigation would have required
the opening of preliminary proceedings and the taking of statements
from the alleged perpetrators, the victim and the witnesses. He further
argued that his alleged offence should have been tried together with
the facts stated in his complaint, which were on no account prosecutable
by a minor-offence procedure. Lastly, he claimed that the failure to
investigate constituted a breach of article 12 of the Convention.
2.6 The Provincial
High Court dismissed the appeal on 17 June 1998. According to the judgement,
counsel for the author, at the oral proceedings on 25 November 1997,
had merely requested that the complaint filed by his client should be
joined to that before the court. The judge had acceded to that request,
suspended the proceedings and set a new date for their resumption. The
author had failed to appear for those proceedings without due reason.
As he had thus failed to support his complaint at the appointed time,
the judge had had no alternative but to reject it in the absence of
evidence for the prosecution. The judgement concluded that the judicial
proceedings had been terminated owing to the party's inaction.
2.7 The author
rejects the arguments set forth in the judgement. He claims that he
did attend the proceedings, although he arrived a few minutes late,
and that the facts reported in his complaint should have been investigated
automatically even if none of the parties had raised them in the proceedings,
since they constituted circumstantial evidence of criminal conduct (a
complaint having been filed and evidence submitted).
2.8 On 3 July
1998, the author filed an amparo application with the Constitutional
Court, alleging violations of the following provisions: article 15 of
the Constitution (right to physical integrity) and the corresponding
articles of the Convention; the provision of article 24 of the Constitution
concerning the right to an appropriate legal procedure, since the facts
reported could not be dealt with in minor-offence proceedings but in
ordinary criminal proceedings for more serious offences, which would
not be prosecuted by an investigating judge; the provision of article
24 of the Constitution concerning the right to adversarial proceedings,
since, despite the fact that the judgement by the Provincial High Court
indicated that the Office of the Public Prosecutor objected to the appeal
and requested confirmation of the initial judgement, the author had
never been informed of the objection filed by the prosecutor and was
thus denied the opportunity to challenge it; the jurisprudence of the
Committee against Torture in respect of article 13 of the Convention.
(1)
2.9 The Constitutional
Court declared the appeal inadmissible in a resolution of 19 January
2000, stating, inter alia, that the contested judgements were
constitutionally sound. It further stated that the author's procedural
conduct had been the decisive factor because he had simply requested
that his complaint against the officers of the Local Police should be
joined to the subject matter of the proceedings, but without bringing
charges against them. The author's claim that his right to physical
integrity had been violated was therefore completely unfounded.
The complaint
3.1 The author
claims that the facts amount to a violation by Spain of article 12 of
the Convention because the judicial authorities failed to conduct a
prompt and impartial investigation despite the fact that there were
reasonable grounds to believe that acts of torture or ill-treatment
had been committed. Neither the author nor the witnesses nor the doctor
who had testified to the assault was questioned. Moreover, the procedure
envisaged in domestic legislation for the crime of torture had not been
followed.
3.2 The author
does not share the view of the judicial authorities that it was his
inaction that determined the outcome of the legal proceedings. He considers
that there was a violation of article 13 of the Convention, according
to which it is enough for the victim simply to bring the facts to the
attention of an authority of the State. Article 13 does not require
the formal lodging of a complaint (a step that had been taken in his
case) or an express statement of intent to institute and sustain a criminal
action arising from the offence.
The State
party's observations concerning admissibility
4. In its statement
of 8 June 2000, the State party notes that the author did not indicate
at any stage that the procedure for serious offences was to be applied
to his complaint. On the contrary, at the minor-offence proceedings
his counsel requested that his complaint against the police should be
joined thereto. That means that he consented to his case being dealt
with in the context of minor-offence proceedings. Court No. 6 summoned
the author to attend the minor-offence proceedings "as complainant
and defendant". However, neither he nor his counsel turned up for
the proceedings at which all the evidence and findings were to be presented.
Responsibility for failure to support a complaint and to present a defence
against charges therefore lies with the person who failed to appear.
Following his failure to attend, the author neither entered a plea nor
submitted a document challenging the minor-offence procedure. It was
only on appeal that the author complained, for the first time, of the
failure to apply the procedure for serious offences to his complaint.
But that charge was inconsistent with his previous conduct and was also
untimely, since it was not filed in time or in due form, although the
author had enjoyed the assistance of counsel from the outset. The communication
should therefore be declared inadmissible on the ground of failure to
exhaust domestic remedies.
The author's
comments
5.1 The author
reiterates the fact that there was never a prompt, serious and impartial
investigation as required by the Convention, although he had lodged
a complaint with the judicial authorities together with a medical report
confirming that he had received multiple blows and bruises. He explains
that the Spanish Criminal Code makes clear distinctions in its definitions
between the serious offence of torture (art. 174) and the minor offence
of assault (art. 617). In particular, the offence of torture is punishable
by a prison term of two to six years and disqualification of the official
for two to four years, while the offence of assault is punishable only
by detention for three to six weekends or a fine. According to the author,
for the purposes of the Convention the serious, prompt and impartial
investigation required should be conducted in respect of the offence
of torture and not that of assault. Otherwise, the protection against
torture that the Convention seeks to guarantee would be ineffective.
He also notes that the procedure for serious offences is different from
that for minor offences. In the former case, the investigation is carried
out by investigating judges and the prosecution by criminal courts or
provincial high courts, while cases involving minor offences are decided
by the investigating judges themselves.
5.2 The author
further states that the judgement of the Provincial High Court completely
disregarded the Convention despite the fact that he had invoked it in
his appeal. Moreover, the argument on which the judgement is based is
incompatible with the Convention, which does not require the investigation
to be conducted by the victim himself, especially when he has submitted
a complaint, a document which, according to the Committee's jurisprudence,
is not even necessary for the conduct of a prompt and impartial investigation.
Lastly, the author contests the State party's argument about the untimeliness
of the complaint, claiming that the appeal was an appropriate means
of remedying the lack of a serious, prompt and impartial investigation.
The Provincial High Court demonstrated a lack of impartiality by distorting
the legal framework applicable to a criminal act which the organs of
State are required ex officio to prosecute. The author concludes that
all available legal remedies have been exhausted, including the amparo
application to the Constitutional Court.
Issues
and proceedings before the Committee
6.1 Before
considering any claims contained in the communication, the Committee
against Torture must decide whether or not it is admissible under article
22 of the Convention. The Committee has ascertained, as it is required
to do under article 22, paragraph 5 (a), of the Convention, that the
same matter has not been and is not being examined under another procedure
of international investigation or settlement. The Committee notes that
the State party has objected to admissibility on the grounds of failure
to exhaust domestic remedies.
6.2 It is a fact undisputed by the author of the communication that,
at the hearing on 25 November 1997 of oral minor-offence proceedings
in Investigating Court No. 6 in Murcia, before which the complaint against
him had been lodged by the police officers on 29 October 1997, it was
his own lawyer who requested the suspension of the proceedings on the
ground of the existence of the complaint lodged by his client against
the police officers. That complaint had been lodged before Murcia Investigating
Court No. 1, which had been on duty on the day it had been lodged, namely
31 October 1997. In addition, he had requested "the relevant joinder".
Consequently, the joinder of the author's complaint against the police
officers to that lodged by the officers against the author, which was
being dealt with in oral minor-offence proceedings, was expressly requested
by the author.
6.3 Between
the suspended hearing of 25 November 1997 and the new hearing for the
continuation of the proceedings, convened by decision of 12 December
1997 for 17 March 1998, the author, who could not have been unaware
of the fact that the proceedings were continuing in accordance with
the oral minor-offence procedure, did not, although he could have done
so, apply for the replacement of that procedure by the ordinary criminal
procedure, which he is now invoking as a basis for the communication
submitted to the Committee.
7. In the light
of the foregoing, the Committee, in accordance with the provisions of
rule 107, paragraph 1 (c), of its rules of procedure, declares the communication
inadmissible as constituting an abuse of the right to submit a communication
under article 22 of the Convention.
8. This decision
shall be transmitted to the State party and to the author of the communication.
Notes
1. The author
cites the Committee's views on communication No. 59/1996 (Blanco
Abad v. Spain), which states in paragraph 8.6: "The Committee
observes that article 13 of the Convention does not require either the
formal lodging of a complaint of torture under the procedure laid down
in national law or an express statement of intent to institute and sustain
a criminal action arising from the offence, and that it is enough for
the victim simply to bring the facts to the attention of an authority
of the State for the latter to be obliged to consider it as a tacit
but unequivocal expression of the victim's wish that the facts should
be promptly and impartially investigated, as prescribed by this provision
of the Convention." (See Official Records of the General Assembly,
Fifty-third session, Supplement No. 44 (A/53/44, annex X), Report
of the Committee against Torture.)