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Strasbourg, 28 June 2008
Opinion 479 / 2008
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CDL(2008)080*
Engl.
only
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EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW
(VENICE COMMISSION)
DRAFT OPINION
ON THE DRAFT LAW
ON THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT
OF MONTENEGRO
on the basis of comments by
Mr Aivars ENDZINS (Member, Latvia)
Mr Christoph
GRABENWARTER (Member, Austria)
Mr Harry GSTÖHL (Member, Liechtenstein)
Ms Jasna OMEJEC (Expert for the OSCE
Mission to Montenegro, Substitute Member, Croatia)
Table of contents
1. General Remarks. 3
2. The Venice Commission’s opinion on the Constitution of
Montenegro. 4
3. Chapter I (Introductory Provisions) 4
3. Chapter II (Organisation of the Constitutional Court) 5
4. Chapter III (Proceedings before the Constitutional
Court and Legal
Effect of its Decisions) 8
1) Common provisions. 8
2) Proceedings for the review of constitutionality and
legality of general acts. 9
3. Proceedings upon constitutional complaint 11
4) Proceedings for the determination whether the
President of Montenegro
violated the Constitution. 12
5) Proceedings resolving a conflict of jurisdiction. 13
6) Proceedings deciding on a ban on the work of a
political party or of a non-governmental organisation 13
7) Proceedings deciding on electoral disputes and
disputes related to a referendum.. 13
8) Proceedings deciding on the compatibility of measures
and actions of public authorities undertaken during the state of war and
emergency. 13
5. Remarks on provisions in Chapter IV (Penal Provisions) 14
6. Conclusion. 14
1. By letter of 19 May 2008, the Minister of Justice of Montenegro requested an opinion on the Draft Law
on the Constitutional Court (CDL(2008)073). The Commission invited Messrs
Endzins (CDL(2008)074), Grabenwarter (CDL(2008)076) and Gstöhl (CDL(2008)075) to act as rapporteurs.
2. On 16 June 2008, Messrs Endzins and Gstöhl, accompanied by Mr. Dürr from the Secretariat, participated
in a meeting with the Working Group, which prepared the draft. This Group is composed
of representatives of the Ministry of Justice, the Constitutional Court and the
governmental Secretariat for Legislation. On 17 June 2007, the Commission’s delegation participated in a public Round Table, organised in co-operation with the
OSCE Mission to Montenegro on this subject during which Ms Jasna Omejec presented
her comments as an expert for the OSCE. These comments as well as the results
of the meeting and the Round Table have been included in the present opinion.
3. The present opinion was
adopted by the Commission at its … Plenary Session (Venice, …).
The draft Law on the Constitutional Court is composed of 116 articles divided into five chapters. It addresses
almost all relevant questions of a modern law of this type. Chapter one (“general
provisions”) is followed by a chapter on the organisation of the Court. Chapter
III on the various proceedings before the Constitutional Court and on legal
effect of Constitutional Court decisions is by far the most voluminous chapter
of the Draft Law. The only article of Chapter IV, Article 111, deals with
“penal provisions”. Transitional and final provisions can be found in Chapter
V.
4. At the outset it has to be
mentioned, that the translation of the draft obviously suffers from some
problems so it may be that some of the remarks in this opinion are due to a
problem of translation.
5. A second general point is the
systematic structure of the law. A proposal for improvement concerns the
principle of public proceedings which is dealt with in Article 3 under general
provisions and in Article 33 in the main chapter with reference to public
hearings. A new, more systematic approach may also contribute to
reduction of the length of the law.
6. It would also be advisable to
repeat in the Law the provisions of the Constitution rather than just to
complete them. This would ease the reading and understanding and make it
unnecessary to work with two texts.
7. This concerns in particular
Article 2 of the draft Law, which refers to the wide list of competences
enumerated in Article 149 of the Constitution. It would be much easier for
consultation of the Law, if it would provide a complete list of the competences
in order not to oblige the reader to consult also the Constitution on this
matter. In Article 39 of the draft Law such an enumeration is made (even if
only for procedural purposes) and such an enumeration would be welcome also for
the competences. The same is true for the term of office of the judges, the
minimum requirements, the composition of the Court etc. as per Article 153 of
the Constitution.
8. In Podgorica, the Working Group
pointed out that according to legal tradition in Montenegro provisions from the
Constitution are not repeated in a law because as such they could become
subject of possible review by the Constitutional Court and this would
indirectly make the Constitution itself attackable. The Commission’s Delegation
pointed out that such a review should logically result in a finding of
constitutionality of these provisions because they were even literally
‘constitutional’. The mere fact that a provision is being reviewed by the Constitutional Court does not yet make it inapplicable and even if theoretically the legal
provision was annulled, its constitutional counterpart would still apply
directly. The understanding of the law by the individuals but even by lawyers
would be much enhanced if the relevant provisions could be found in a single text.
2. The Venice Commission’s opinion on the
Constitution of Montenegro
9. At its 73rd Plenary
Session (Venice, 14-15 December 2007), the Venice Commission adopted the
Opinion on the Constitution of Montenegro (CDL-AD(2007)047, interim Opinion CDL-AD(2007)017) . The Commission then particularly welcomed the wide jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court as set out in Article 149 of the Constitution.
10. However, the
Constitution itself also creates a certain number of problems for the functioning of
the Constitutional Court. Given that also some recommendations were not taken
into consideration, problems stemming from the Constitution itself directly
affect the preset draft Law on the Constitutional Court.
11. Issues raised in the
Opinion are:
- The Commission criticised the nomination
of all the Judges and the President of the Constitutional Court by the
President of the Republic and their election by Parliament even without a
qualified majority. This presents a series of risks of political
dependence on the majority and political exposure of the Court.
- While Article 149 of the
Constitution enumerates a number of procedures before the Constitutional Court, Article 150 defines who has standing before the Court, without
differentiating between the various procedures but as having the right to
ask “for the assessment of constitutionality and legality”. The
Constitution thus introduces an actio popularis, which risks
overburdening the Court.
- The possibility for the Constitutional Court to initiate proprio motu the assessment of the legality
and constitutionality of laws is inappropriate since it unduly drags the Constitutional Court into the political arena.
- For the issue of retroactive effect
of Constitutional Court decisions, it would have been more prudent not to
establish a rigid rule, especially not in the Constitution, and to leave
some discretion to the Constitutional Court.
- It would also have been
preferable to leave the election of the President to the Court itself.
- Finally, it seems excessive to
remove a judge from office if he or she publicly expresses his or her
political convictions.
12. Consequently, also the
present opinion will recommend the amend the Constitution in a number of points
even if it may be possible to attenuate some problems by way of the Law on the Constitutional Court.
13. The status of the Constitutional Court as an independent institution has not been provided for in the Draft
Law. Therefore it is recommended to include in Article 1 that the Constitutional
Court of Montenegro is an independent judicial institution”, which
exercises the jurisdiction set forth in the Constitution and this Law”. In
addition Article 1 should also provide that direct or indirect interference
with the activity of the Constitutional Court in relation to judging shall not
be permissible.
14. Article 3 on
the publicity of the work of the Constitutional Court should probably be merged
with Articles 33 to 36. Paragraph 3 could be aligned to the wording of Article
6 (1) 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights, although only a part of the
proceedings will be subject to this provision.
15. It is not clear
whether the publication of decisions of the court concerns all decisions or
not; it would not be a bad idea to leave it to the Court to decide which
decisions shall be published.
16. Article 4(3)
already provides that the President of the Court has the right to participate
in the parliamentary session on the adoption of the budget. This provision is
to be welcomed. However, this direct participation can become void of substance
if the Government has already reduced the Court’s budget proposal before
submitting it to Parliament. As an additional guarantee of the independence of the Constitutional Court, Article 4(2) should specify that the budget claims by the Constitutional Court shall not be amended by the Government without the agreement of the
Court.
17. According to Article
6 the method of work and of decision-making of the Constitutional Court
shall be regulated by this Law, and it shall be regulated in more details by
the Rules of Procedure. This technique is common and usually works well
in practice. The way those Rules are adopted and published should be made clear
(see also Article 114). The Working Group agreed that the Rules of Procedure should
be published in the Official Journal.
18. A number of
provisions are quite detailed and should be taken out of the Law and be transferred
to the Rules of Procedure (e.g. Articles 22(2), 25, 31, 34, 35, 37, 41,
44). This is important not only from a practical point of view but also as a
guarantee for the procedural autonomy of the Court, which otherwise would have
to seek an amendment to its Law for each minor change in its procedure.
19. Article 7 provides that ”[t]he President
and judge of the Constitutional Court shall be elected and dismissed in a
manner and under conditions prescribed by the Constitution.” The relevant
provisions can be found in Articles 82, 91, 95, 153 and 154 of the
Constitution. Unfortunately, neither the Constitution nor the Draft Law
determine the procedure for the choice of candidates. It is not clear whether
the names or CVs of the candidates are published, whether the candidates are
being invited to a Parliamentary hearing before the elections take place, whether
conclusions are adopted after such hearings. Especially due to the fact that
Parliament elects the judges with a simple majority, the procedure before the
election has to be as transparent as possible in order to ensure a high
professional level of the judges. The Working Group Pointed out that in the
Comments on the Draft Law on the Judicial Council of Montenegro (CDL(2007)129), the Commission had insisted not to bind the political organs in their appointment
decisions upon the advice of other bodies (the Supreme Judicial Council).
However, this issue concerned only the appointment of the President of the
Supreme Court of Montenegro and certainly does not exclude that Parliament
itself follows a specific procedure without being bound in its final decision
by the advice of any other body.
20. It follows neither from the Constitution nor from
the Draft Law whether one and the same person may be re-elected as Constitutional Court judge. The lack of the prohibition of re-election may
undermine the independence of a judge. In some countries constitutional court
judges are appointed until retirement (e.g. Armenia, Austria, Belgium) or appointed
only for one term (for example – Hungary, Lithuania).
21. Article 153(2) establishes that ”[t]he Constitutional Court judge shall be elected for the period of nine years” without further
provision on a partial renewal of the Court. This may create problems as
concerns the continuity and predictability of the case-law of the Court. It might
happen that all judges of the Court change at the same time. A solution to that
problem could be a system of rotation whereby one third of judges are renewed
every three years. For example when the Constitutional Court of Lithuania was
established for the first time, 3 judges were elected for a 3 year term, 3
judges for a six year term and 3 justices for a nine year term of office. Only judges,
who had initially not been elected for a 9 year term of office were eligible
for a second 9-year term after an absence from the Court for a minimum of three
years. This problem is however unlikely to arise in practice because Article 2
of the Constitutional Law for the Implementation of the Constitution provides
that all bodies (including the Constitutional Court) continue to exercise their
mandate. The Constitutional Court already exists since 20 years and the terms
of office of the members will probably already be spaced in time.
22. The term of office of
nine years is not as long as it is in other countries like in Germany (12 years, maximum age 65) or Austria (until the age of 70). There are, however, countries
with shorter terms (e.g. Liechtenstein). It also corresponds to the term of
office in the European Court of Human Rights according to Protocol No. 14. It
is sufficient regarding the requirement of independence.
23. The Court shall consist
of seven judges (Art 153 (1) of the Constitution). This is a relatively small
size for a Constitutional Court (Germany: 16, Austria: 14). However, bearing in
mind the size of the country the number of judges seems adequate (the
Liechtenstein Staatsgerichtshof has only 5 judges).
24. The last paragraph of Article
9 refers to a majority for taking a decision which shall be the majority of
“all judges”. This wording is in conformity with the Constitution. However, in
the context of Article 9 of the draft Law it is a vote on the suspension of a
judge or the President of the Court in relation to a criminal investigation. The
person under investigation should not vote (and also not participate in
the deliberations) in his or her own case. The Working Group has agreed to
change this provision.
25. It is most important
to ensure that after the end of office of a judge, the position does not remain
vacant for a prolonged period. In a few countries in Europe, Parliament was
indeed very late with the appointment of new judges and in one case, the Court
was in-operational for more than a year and a half because the number of
remaining judges had fallen below the quorum. Therefore, Article 10 should provide that judges
remain in office until their successor takes up office. A number of
countries have specific provisions to this effect (e.g. Latvia, Russia, Slovenia, Spain). The Working Group argued that such a provision would be
unconstitutional because it would effectively prolong the term of office of a
judge to more than the nine years specified in the Constitution. This could be
argued as concerns the judges whose term of office ends but this should not be
an obstacle for those judges who retire for reason of age because their nine
year term has not yet ended.
26. Pursuant to Article
12 of the draft law the Court shall designate a judge who shall substitute
the President of the Constitutional Court in instances when he is absent or
prevented from performing his duties. The Working Group explained that this substitution
rule is to remedy to the lack of an explicit constitutional provision on a Vice-President.
However, it should be possible to introduce such a function also by ordinary
law as long as the functions of the Vice-President to not infringe upon the
prerogatives of the President. Not least from the viewpoint of the close bi-
and multilateral international relations between constitutional courts in Europe, it is important to to be able be represented abroad by a Vice-President and not
only a substitute.
27. Moreover, the draft
law lacks a provision as to the event that the substitute / Vice-president is
prevented as well. The oldest judge could be empowered to deputise the
president so that the representation of the Constitutional Court is ensured at
any moment.
28. The right of a Constitutional Court judge to return to his/her previous position can only be ensured in the
public sector (Article 13). Private companies cannot be obliged to
re-establish a working contract with an employee who left the company nine
years ago. Tenure until retirement would, of course, avoid this problem and be
the best solution from the viewpoint of independence but this would require a
constitutional amendment.
29. Another point concerns
the number of judges required to have a quorum. Neither the draft law
nor the Constitution lay down explicitly if a valid vote requires the attendance
of all seven judges or if a still smaller, minimum number is sufficient. A
provision setting up a minimum number for decision-making secures the autonomy
and independence of the Court since otherwise the absence of a single judge is
capable of paralysing the Court. The Working Group agreed to fix this quorum at
four judges.
30. Moreover, profane
reasons such as diseases, deaths and so on might also give rise to adjournments
of decisions especially since the draft law does not mention any provision as
to substitute judges who are destined to represent regular judges in whatever
case of prevention. Most notably – apart from above mentioned diseases –
preventions may arise from bias. The legislator could add such provisions
regarding substitute judges to grant efficiency of the Constitutional Court. A
system of substitute judges seems advisable for cases of diseases, deaths or
bias. Such systems exist in Austria or Liechtenstein and with the ECHR
(“ad-hoc-judges”). Admittedly, they are more frequent in systems where the
judges only work in part time sessions and have another profession as the main
source of their income. Also complex issues of remuneration could arise from a
mix of full time judges and part-time substitutes.
31. Article 18 of the Draft Law specifies the
salary of Secretary General of the Constitutional Court and his/her deputy. However,
the Draft does not regulate salaries and social guarantees of judges and
other staff of the Court. The Working Group pointed out that social issues
of Judge and legal advisers are regulated in the legislation on social security
on the civil service and in the judiciary in particular. Only the Secretary
General of the Court would not be covered this way and needed a specific
regulation in the Law on the Constitutional Court. Other members of the Working
Group explained that the Court had agreed to be covered in such regulations
because then no other legislation was available.
32. The application of general rules for the civil
service and the judiciary is not appropriate for the Constitutional Court,
which in view of its position as an independent organ of constitutional
adjudication not only needs guarantees of non-interference in its activities,
budgetary and procedural guarantees but also specific material guarantees. The
Draft Law should set out the equivalence of the judges and the President of the
Court with other high State Officials. As concerns the legal advisers, specific
knowledge of international case-law available in foreign languages is required.
In order to attract such qualified personnel, the conditions of remuneration at
the Court need to be attractive. Consequently, also the five year tenure of the
Secretary General in Article 18 should be converted to permanent tenure.
33. Norms on immunity and disciplinary liability are
also not included in the Draft Law.
34. The reference to the relevant
procedural laws in Article 20 is ambiguous. No matter where cases
before the Constitutional Court originate from (civil, criminal or
administrative law), the proceedings before the Constitutional Court are
specific constitutional proceedings. Therefore it should be clear which
procedure code applies by default if the law on the Constitutional Court and
the Rules of Procedure do not provide an answer. The law could provide for the
code of civil procedure in general and for the code of criminal procedure in
specific proceedings (impeachment, suspending political parties).
35. Bias is tackled only
indirectly, namely by means of the draft law which refers to provisions of
relevant procedural laws to apply mutatis mutandis if a matter of
procedure before the Constitutional Court is not regulated by the draft law.
Nonetheless it might be preferable to lay down the regulations concerning
bias and the procedure for challenging a judge clearly in the draft law
given the specific competences of the Court.
36. Instead of an
application mutatis mutandis, the law could provide for an analogous
application, which allows for a wider discretion of the Court.
4. Chapter III (Proceedings before the Constitutional Court and Legal Effect of its Decisions)
37. Articles 21 to 24 deal
with the participants in proceedings. Article 21 contains a very detailed list
of participants. The value of this list appears questionable for two reasons.
Firstly, the term “participant” is not apt to determine rights in the
proceedings. It is preferable to refer to “parties of proceedings”. Secondly, item
no. 10 contains a general clause concerning the capacity of “participant” for
“other persons, in accordance with the law”. It is suggested to draft a more
consistent, shorter and more general provision on parties in proceedings, which
may very well leave some discretion to the Constitutional Court.
38. The list also gives
the impression that these “participants” can take part in each type of
proceedings. One solution would be to move the determination of the parties
from chapter III.1.a to each type of procedure in chapter III.2. Article 21 could then be deleted. The Working Group agreed to replace the term
“participants” with the term “parties” and preferred keep Article 21 but to
specify there who the parties are for each specific type of procedure.
39. In Article 22, it
should be clarified who are “other persons” who have a right of access
to the file. Members of the Working Group argued that the legislation on public
information empowered every person to have access to public files. While this
approach is certainly very transparent, it should be re-considered whether such
a wide access is really intended. At least, the present law could indicate that
access is given within the limits of the legislation on access to public
documents (there will probably be some limits).
40. As an exception to the
general procedure whereby submissions to the Court can be submitted by mail, Article
25(6) provides in electoral or referendum disputes that submissions shall
be submitted directly to the Court. This disadvantages persons living out of
the capital who have not only to respect the very short deadlines but also to
bring their claim to Podgorica in person. The Working Group pointed out that
the deadlines in electoral issues are necessarily very short, that the country
is small and the capital can be reached easily and finally that the mail
service in Montenegro would be notoriously unreliable. A solution to this
problem might be – not only in electoral cases - to allow the submission of
a complaint by fax, which then has to be followed by a written submission (by
mail or directly). The deadline would however be respected if the fax arrives
in time.
41. Article 27
refers to the allocation of tasks to a judge rapporteur. The Rules of Procedure
should define the procedure for the allocation of cases to the reporting judges
in an objective manner.
42. In the case of
individual complaints, Article 29(3) should specify that the complaint
not only be served to the authority, which took the original
decision but also to the authority (court) which took the decision in last
instance before the case was brought to the Constitutional Court
(exhaustion of remedies). Both the original – often administrative - and the
last instance authority – typically a court - should have the possibility to react.
If the constitutional complaint is directed against a court decision, the Court
should even give the party in whose favour the decision was taken an
opportunity to make a statement (see also Article 94(3) of the Law on the
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany). While they should have the
possibility to make a statement, courts should not be obliged to do so
because they usually “speak through their judgement” only. Consequently, an
exception to the obligation to provide information / make a statement should be
made in Article 30.
43. The time limit of 15
days for the authority concerned to provide documentation and information (Article
30) is probably too short. Even if the words “at least” make it clear that
this is only a minimum time limit that may be extended, there is a danger that such
a minimum becomes the rule in practice. As pointed out above, these authorities
should not only have the obligation to provide such information but have the
right to present their position. Such a substantive statement requires
preparation and for the sake of the quality of such a reply, the deadline
should be longer.
44. Conversely, Article
30(2) only authorises the Court to request the opinion of Parliament in the
procedure of the constitutionality of a law (“may request”). This
exception for Parliament is neither in the interest of constitutional
proceedings nor that of Parliament itself. Parliament should always be given
a chance to present its opinion, when its acts are under scrutiny by the Constitutional Court. Of course, like for the courts, Parliament cannot be forced to give
such a reply.
45. Article 32(4)
providing that a request be rejected if the Court has already dealt with the
matter should at least be qualified by specifying that this should be the case
only if no new circumstances have come up since the last decision.
46. In the light of the
possibly case-load of the Court, the possibility of dealing with cases in a
written procedure should be improved. Under the head of “public hearing”
Article 33 provides for (compulsory) public hearings in certain proceedings (paragraph
1), possible restrictions in proceedings for review of constitutionality or
legality (paragraph 2) and a general clause within the discretion of the
Constitutional Court (paragraph 3). Given the likely workload the Court it is
not realistic to hold too many hearings, especially where there is no chamber
system.
47. Article 39
determines which cases should be decided by a “decision”. Like with Article 22
of the Draft Law, the general list remains unclear as to in which procedure the
various decisions can be taken. The elements of the article could be integrated
either into the chapter of the specific procedures or, if the list should
remain, it should indicate in which procedures the various decisions can be
taken.
48. It is probably not
necessary to settle items 9 and 10 on the rejection of a petition and a
constitutional complaint / appeal respectively in the ‘heavy’ form of a
decision, especially also because the non acceptance of the initiative to
initiate proceedings for review of constitutionality or legality is taken in
the ‘lighter’ form of an order (Article 40(4)).
49. Apart from the issue
of publication, the Draft Law does not differentiate between decisions and
orders. Article 151(1) of the Constitution provides that the Constitutional Court shall decide by majority vote of all votes, i.e. four judges have to
vote in favour of a decision. Is the vote of four judges also required for
orders or can orders also be adopted in a smaller composition? If so, it
might be of interest to deal with the admissibility of constitutional
complaints in smaller chambers of three judges, which would issue orders rather
than decisions.
50. It is quite unusual
that a Constitutional Court can initiate proceedings ex officio:
According to Article 43 procedures for assessing the constitutionality
or legality of general acts may be initiated by the Constitutional Court itself
(“on its own by an order”). As already pointed out in the Opinion on the
Constitution, a general power of the Court to start proceedings on its own
initiative would make the Court a political actor and the Court could loose its
independent position. Each decision to take up a case or not to do so could be
criticised as a political choice. Consequently, the Court should be limited
to act on its own initiative only in cases when it has to apply a norm of which
it doubts the constitutionality. This is the situation for example in Austria, where the Constitutional Court can suspend an individual complaint case and start
abstract norm control proceedings on its own initiative. Such a limitation of
the powers of the Court to cases where it has to apply a law in another
procedure would contain this danger for the independence of the Court.
51. Article 43 of
the Draft Law only refers to Article 150(2) of the Constitution but also
according to the Working Group Article 150(1) of the Constitution remains
directly applicable and provides that “any person may file an initiative to
start a procedure for the assessment of constitutionality and legality”. This amounts
to an actio popularis which enables everyone to bring cases for
abstract review against any general act independently if this general act has
any relevance for the person. The Croatian experience with the actio
popularis is most telling. Among may others, a single (retired) person has
brought nearly 800 requests for constitutional review without having any
personal link to these acts. Such a wide access can totally overburden the
Court. The Working Group pointed out that Article 150(1) only give a right
to an “initiative”, which need not be taken up by the Court. Nonetheless,
according to Article 40 of the Draft Law has to make an order when it does not
accept such an initiative.
52. According to Article
47 the Constitutional Court shall not be limited by the petition or
initiative. This gives some additional discretion to the Court (the Austrian Constitutional Court for example is bound by the allegations in the application to
the Court).
53. Article 49
enables the Court to suspend the enforcement of an individual act or action
taken on the basis of the general act whose constitutionality or legality is
being assessed, where that enforcement could cause “irreversible detrimental
consequences”. This criterion seems rather strict in comparison with those
available to other constitutional courts. For example, Article 32(1) of the
German Law on the Constitutional Court and Article 85 (2) of the Austrian Law
on the Constitutional Court provide for interim measures with suspensive effect
also in cases of weighty disadvantages or other important grounds in the public
interest guided by the principle of proportionality.
54. Article 50 is to be
welcomed because it specifies that courts can make requests to the Constitutional Court only in proceedings pending before the Court. The wide formulation in
Article 150.2 of the Constitution, which does not provide for such a
limitation, should probably be amended.
55. The ordinary courts should not
only make preliminary requests when they are asked to do so by the
parties but also when they themselves have doubts about the
constitutionality of a law they have to apply.
56. According to Article
51(1), the Court shall discontinue proceedings if, during the proceedings,
the Law was harmonised with the Constitution and/or international treaties.
There may be situations when it is important to have a finding of
unconstitutionality of a law even if this law is no longer in force. The Court should
indeed have discretion when to continue the proceedings.
57. The cross-reference in
Article 52 applying elements of the proceedings for review of
constitutionality and legality of general acts also to other proceedings should
rather figure in the respective special provisions (Article 88 seq.).
58. Article 56
allows for the re-opening of all individual acts based on a general norm found
to be unconstitutional, which were adopted no less than two years for before
the request for the reopening. Such requests must be made no more than six
months after the Constitutional Courts unconstitutionality decision on the
general act. This results retroactive effects, which can have serious
consequences for society. It seems therefore prudent to entrust the Constitutional Court to decide on the effects of its decisions. Even with the limitation
on two years, such retroactivity can have very costly or negative
effects (also on third parties) and should be avoided (see also the
discussion of Article 62 below).
59. The Constitution and
the Draft Law provide for a constitutional complaint against individual acts,
which has to be welcomed in the interest of a high level of human rights
protection.
60. In line with Article
149 of the Constitution, Article 58 provides that individual complaints
can be lodged only after the exhaustion of effective remedies. The
explicit use of the term “effective” in the Constitution seems to indicate that
the exhaustion of non-effective remedies should not be required. Paragraph 2 of
Article 58 however provides that effective remedies are “all ordinary
extraordinary and extraordinary legal remedies prescribed by law”. This inappropriately
restricts the individual complaint for two reasons. First, extraordinary
remedies are by their very nature exceptional measures and as such they are not
available in standard cases. This may however be a minor point and can probably
be dealt with trough interpretation. Secondly, there may be ordinary remedies,
which are prescribed by law but which are ineffective because they may not be
apt to avoid irreversible detrimental consequences for the applicant in the
light of the constant jurisprudence of the ordinary courts. In such rare and exceptional
cases, the Constitutional Court should have the possibility to accept
individual complaints even before the exhaustion of these inefficient remedies.
61. Some further suggestions
concern technical details: According to Article 59(1) constitutional
complaints “may be lodged by anyone who believes that his human right and
freedom guaranteed by the Constitution was delivered” (the word “delivered” should
probably read as “violated”). Usually, the precondition of a complaint of this
type is the “allegation” of a violation of a right because only the proceedings
before the Constitutional Court will allow determining whether there has really
been a violation.
62. The competence of
“state authority or organization in charge of the monitoring and realization of
human rights and freedoms” to introduce constitutional complaints may be seen
as a step forward. This seems to be an indirect reference to an action of an
ombudsman / human rights protector on behalf of an individual. This is to
be welcomed. For the sake of equality this competence could be restricted
in situations where two individuals have conflicting human rights. In this case
it seems more adequate if the state remains neutral. Moreover the quality of
those bodies must be precisely defined in law.
63. One important type of
proceedings is missing: There should also be a type of summary proceedings
before chambers of a few judges dealing with complaints that have not enough
prospects to succeed. There are two solutions which have proved their efficacy
for three decades now: first, in the German way not to accept a complaint and
second the Austrian way to decline jurisdiction. In any event such an
instrument is necessary in order to uphold the efficient functioning of a Constitutional Court. The issue whether chambers can be established has already been
discussed above.
64. The deadline of 30
days in Article 60(1) for the introduction of an individual complaint should
start from the last appeal decision against the individual act (final
administrative or court decision).
65. Article 60 paragraphs
2 and 3 allow restitution to a person who on justified grounds missed the
time-limit for submitting a constitutional complaint if within 15 days
(relative time limit) from the disappearance of reasons which caused him to
miss the deadline that person submits an application for restitutio in
integrum and simultaneously lodges a constitutional complaint. Restitution
cannot be requested after the expiry of a period of three months from the date
of missing the deadline (absolute time limit). The latter absolute time limit
seems rather short. In Germany it amounts to one year.
66. The Working Group
informed the Commission’s delegation that the reference in Article 61 to
“attorney” does not result in an obligation to be represented by a lawyer.
67. Similar to Article 56
discussed above, Article 62 generalises the effect of an individual
complaint (even without a two year limitation). Again, this can have
serious and unexpected consequences for society. It seems safer to have a
general ex nunc effect with the exception of the petitioner who should
benefit from the complaint and to leave the determination of possible
retrospective effects of an individual complaint to the Court. On the other
hand, persons imprisoned on the basis of an unconstitutional act should benefit
also retroactively from the Constitutional Court decision.
68. Two alternative
versions are proposed for Article 67. Under the first alternative, when
the Constitutional Court establishes a violation, it shall after granting the
complaint and repealing the act remand the case for repeat procedure to the
authority which enacted the repealed act while reparation is conferred
irrespectively of the repeated procedure. The second alternative, for its part,
seems to turn these consequences into alternatives. Either reparation is
conferred or the procedure is repeated. The Working Group explained that in the
second alternative, the workload of the Court should be reduced by declaratory
decisions, which do not annul the individual act complained of. It would then
be up to the ordinary courts to deal with the consequences of the finding of a
human rights violation.
69. This calls for several
remarks. First it is not evident that a declaratory decision would indeed
burden the Court less than a decision, which at the same time annuls the
individual act. On the other hand, inevitably it seems, the relations between
ordinary courts and constitutional courts are sometimes strained when the
latter come to the conclusion of a human rights violation of the former.
Unfortunately, it happens not infrequently that ordinary courts avoid implementing
decisions of constitutional courts or following them by the letter rather than
in substance. Consequently, it is not sure that the ordinary courts would in fact
themselves annul their judgements found to violate human rights. This might even
result in a conclusion by the European Court of Human Rights that the complaint
to the Constitutional Court would not be an effective remedy. The annulment
of the individual act by the Constitutional Court should therefore be preferred
to a mere declaratory decision.
70. Article 68 asking the Constitutional Court to take into account the principles of the European Convention on Human
Rights is interesting and has to be welcomed from a European point of view. Nonetheless,
it leaves room for doubts on the meaning and effect of that provision. The wording,
which takes into account the principles of the ECHR, may be seen as a
restriction of legal effects of the Convention. Article 68 should refer to the
Convention as interpreted by the European Court of Human Rights. The
Working Group agreed to introduce such a provision
71. Article 69 obliging
other state authorities to take into account the legal reasons of the decision
of the Constitutional Court when they adopt a new individual act is also a
positive element. Often, the problems with other courts result from the
fact that they follow the operative part but not the reasoning of the Constitutional Court.
72. At least for respect
of the function, the decision on the violation of the Constitution by the President
shall also be served to the latter and not only to Parliament (Article 79).
73. The provisions on proceedings
resolving conflicts of jurisdiction (Articles 80 to 87) do not make an
explicit difference between positive conflicts (two or more authorities act in
the same issue, only one is competent) and negative conflicts of competence
(two or more authorities deny there competence, but one of them is competent).
Therefore the wording in Article 80 remains general and should be developed:
“The petition to resolve a conflict of jurisdiction shall be submitted by one
or both of the conflicting authorities, as well as the person who is unable to
exercise his rights due to acceptance or rejection of jurisdiction.” It is
suggested to include a provision enabling the Court to quash decisions of
authorities having acted without competence.
74. The deadline of 15
days after the final decision of the declaration of competence or
non-competence in Article 83, does not cover the case of a negative conflict
of competence in which an authority would simply not deliver any
decision, not even a refusal to decide. Then a deadline has to be set
after which a request for the resolution of a negative conflict of jurisdiction
can be introduced.
75. Article 91 should
provide that the decision banning a party or association be also served to
that party or association.
76. In the part concerning
the procedure of deciding on electoral disputes there could also be a need for
more specific provisions bearing in mind the importance and high political
significance of such proceedings (Articles 92 seq.). A specific point
concerns Article 98(2): In the case of a decision annulling the entire
electoral procedure or parts thereof, the entire electoral procedure or
parts thereof shall be repeated within ten days of the serving of the
decision of the Constitutional Court to the competent authority. This time
limit – like a few others - does not seem realistic.
77. By including
provisions on disputes relating to elections by Parliament for certain public
officials, Article 100 introduces a new category of disputes in Chapter III.7 on proceedings on electoral and referendum disputes. The difference between these two categories
of disputes is that while the disputes in Chapter III.7 are related to
elections by the general population, Article 100 refers to elections by
Parliament. For the sake of a systematic structure, these groups of disputes
should be dealt with in separate proceedings.
78. Especially in times of
crisis, it will not always be possible to learn about measures and actions and
to bring a complaint within three days (Article107).
79. With regard to the legal
effect of decisions Article 152 of the Constitution provides that a law which
the Court established to be not in conformity with the Constitution shall cease
to be valid on the date of publication of the decision of the Constitutional
Court (see also Article 109 of the Draft Law). In the first place it is
remarkable that there is no provision in pursuance with which the Court may
postpone cessation of validity if appropriate. Admittedly, this
consideration has not as much to do with the draft law but with the insofar
clear-cut Constitution. Yet in certain instances it might be impossible for the
legislator to amend the unconstitutional act at once so that terms postponing
cessation of validity could be highly desirable. The Austrian Constitution for
example provides for the possibility that the Constitutional Court may postpone
the effect of an annulment of a law for 18 months. In one case, the
Constitutional Court of Lithuania avoided this problem by announcing a decision
publicly but by delaying its formal publication. However, a constitutional
amendment should be considered to remedy to this serious problem in Montenegro.
80. Even more than the
possibility for the Court to initiate proceedings on its own motion, Article
110 brings the Constitutional Court in the political arena. The law
should restrict the task to monitor the implementation of constitutionality and
legality from a general supervision to monitoring the execution of its own
decisions.
81. Article 111 provides
for “penal provisions” for certain cases of misconduct of parties in the Constitutional Court proceedings. Such disciplinary measures form a common feature of
procedural law. However, one should bear in mind that such sanctions may -
following the case law of the ECHR - be qualified as criminal charges within
the meaning of Article 6 of the ECHR. In this case the procedural guarantees
must be respected. Some countries also have penal provisions for the
non-execution of Constitutional Court decisions.
82. The Draft Law is very
well drafted and sets out the functions and procedures of the Constitutional Court in a coherent way. The Working Group has prepared a very good text,
which can serve the Court as a sound basis with only some modifications.
83. The Venice Commission
welcomes the introduction of a “full” individual complaint, including against
individual acts and the reference to the European Convention on Human Rights to
be taken into account. The obligation for other state authorities to take into
account the legal reasons of the decision of the Constitutional Court when they
adopt a new individual act is also a very positive element.
84. Some issues result not
so much from the Draft Law but from the Constitution itself. The Commission therefore
recommends amending the Constitution in a few points:
- The election of the judges of
the Constitutional Court should require a qualified majority
- The Court should be enabled to
elect the President to the Court itself.
- The re-election of the judges should be excluded.
- A clear basis for the introduction of chambers should
be introduced.
- Judges should remain in office until their successor
takes up office.
- The actio popularis without legal interest
should be excluded.
- The Court should be enabled to postpone the entry into force
of its decisions in order to give time to Parliament to avoid a legal void
created by the annulment of a law.
- The Court should not be able to
initiate cases on its own motion and should not have a general competence
to monitor constitutionality and legality.
85. Other issues can be
resolved on the basis of ordinary law these are in particular:
- The Law should repeat the provisions
of the Constitution rather than just to complete them in order to provide
a single text which governs the work of the Court
- The Law should define the Constitutional Court as an independent judicial
institution
- The budgetary independence of the Court should be
guaranteed by specifying that the budget claims by the Constitutional
Court shall not be amended by the Government without the agreement of
the Court.
- The procedural autonomy of the Court should be safeguarded
by leaving more scope for regulation to the Rules of Procedure.
- The Law should regulate salaries and social guarantees
of judges and other staff of the Court.
- The procedure for the choice of candidates for judges
should be regulated. Parliamentary hearings should provide for a transparent
election.
- A judge being investigated should
not vote in his / her own case.
- At least the case of old-age retirement judges should remain
in office until their successor takes up office.
- The position of a Vice-President
should be introduced
- The right of a constitutional
court judge to return to his/her previous position stipulated can only be
ensured in the public sector
- The Law should make it clear be
clear which procedural code applies by default.
- Rules concerning bias and the
procedure for challenging a judge should be introduced
- The list of participants /
parties should make clear in which proceedings they can participate
- The access of any person to the
case-file should be limited in line with the legislation on access to
public documents.
- It should be possible to
introduce complaints by fax to be followed by a written submission by mail
or directly.
- In exceptional cases, the Constitutional Court should have the possibility to accept individual complaints even before
the exhaustion of remedies if those are inefficient.
- Both the original and the last
instance authority with adopted an individual act should have a
possibility to present their position on an individual complaint against
this act.
- If the constitutional complaint
is directed against a court decision, the Court should even give the party
in whose favour the decision was taken an opportunity to make a statement
courts and Parliament should be allowed but not obliged to make such a
statement
- The possibility of dealing with
cases in a written procedure should be improved.
- The Court should be limited to
act on its own initiative only in cases when it has to apply a norm of
which it doubts the constitutionality.
- Ordinary courts
should also be enabled to make preliminary requests to the Constitutional Court when they themselves have doubts about the constitutionality of a law
they have to apply.
- Both for abstract review and
constitutional complaints, the effects of a decision should be limited to
future cases but the Court could be enabled to extend these effects also
retroactively then it finds this to be appropriate. Persons imprisoned on
the basis of an unconstitutional act should benefit also retroactively
from the Constitutional Court decision.
- The annulment of the individual
act by the Constitutional Court should therefore be preferred to a mere
declaratory decision.
- A provision enabling the Constitutional Court to quash decisions of authorities having acted without competence
should be introduced.
- A number of time limits do not
seem realistic.
- The law should restrict the Constitutional Court’s task to monitor the implementation of constitutionality and legality in
general to monitoring the implementation of the execution of its own
decisions only.
86. The Venice Commission
remains at the disposal of the authorities of Montenegro for further assistance
in this matter.