Hudoc
reference REF00003974
Originating
body Court (Second Section)
Document
type Judgment (Merits and just satisfaction)
Language
English
Title
CASE OF VENEMA v. THE NETHERLANDS
Application
number 00035731/97
Respondent
Netherlands
Date
of judgment 17/12/2002
Conclusion
Violation of Art. 8 ; Not necessary to
examine Art. 6-1 ; Pecuniary damage - claim rejected ; Non-pecuniary damage -
financial award ; Costs and expenses partial award
Separate
opinions No
Articles
6-1 ; 8 ; 41
Strasbourg
Case Law B. v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 8
July 1987, Series A no. 121, § 65 ; K. and T. v. Finland [GC], no. 25702/94, § 166,
12 July 2001 ; Krcmár and Others v. the Czech Republic, no. 35376/97, 3 March
2000, § 52 ; McMichael v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 24 February 1995,
Series A no. 307-B, p. 57, § 92 ; Meulendijks v. the Netherlands, no. 34549/97,
14 May 2002, § 63 ; P., C. and S. v. the United Kingdom, no. 56547/00, 16 July
2002, § 113, §§ 114-116, §§ 124-126 ; T.P. and K.M. v. the United Kingdom [GC],
no. 28945/95, § 73, ECHR 2001-V
Keywords
RESPECT FOR FAMILY LIFE ; PROTECTION OF THE
RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS OF OTHERS {ART 8} ; NECESSARY IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY {ART
8}
643
17.12.2002
EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN
RIGHTS
SECOND SECTION
CASE OF VENEMA
v. THE NETHERLANDS
(Application
no. 35731/97)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
17 December 2002
This judgment
will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2 of the
Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Venema and Venema-Huiting v.
the Netherlands,
The European Court of Human Rights (Second
Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Mr J.-P. Costa, President,
Mr L. Loucaides,
Mr C. Bîrsan,
Mr K. Jungwiert,
Mr V. Butkevych,
Mrs W. Thomassen,
Mrs A. Mularoni, judges,
and Mrs S. Dollé,
Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 29 January
2002 and 26 November 2002,
Delivers the following judgment, which was
adopted on the last-mentioned date:
PROCEDURE
1. The
case originated in an application (no. 35731/97) against the Kingdom of the
Netherlands lodged with the European Commission of Human Rights ( the
Commission ) under former Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection of
Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ( the Convention ) by three Netherlands
nationals, Mr Dirk Venema, Mrs Wubbechien Janny Venema-Huiting and Ms Kimberly
Venema ( the applicants ), on 24 July 1996.
2. The
applicants were represented by Mr A.W.M. Willems, a lawyer practising in Amsterdam.
The Netherlands Government ( the Government ) were represented by their Agents,
Mr R.A.A. Böcker and Ms J. Schukking of the Netherlands Ministry for Foreign
Affairs. Having been designated before the Commission by the initials D.V.,
W.V. and K.V., the applicants subsequently agreed to the disclosure of their
names.
3. The
applicants alleged, in particular, that their rights under Articles 6 and 8 of
the Convention had been violated through the separation of the third applicant
from the first and second applicants, her parents, which was not justified on
medical grounds and was not discontinued as soon as this became apparent, and
in that the first and second applicants were not involved in the
decision-making process that led to the separation.
4. The
application was transmitted to the Court on 1 November 1998, when Protocol No.
11 to the Convention came into force (Article 5 § 2 of Protocol No. 11).
5. The
application was initially allocated to the First Section of the Court (Rule 52 §
1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the Chamber that would consider
the case (Article 27 § 1 of the Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule
26 § 1 of the Rules of Court.
6. On
1 November 2001 the Court changed the composition of its Sections (Rule 25 §
1). This case was assigned to the newly composed Second Section.
7. By
a decision of 29 January 2002 the Court declared the application partly
admissible.
8. The
Government, but not the applicants, filed observations on the merits (Rule 59 §
1). The applicants confined themselves to filing claims under Article 41 of the
Convention. The Chamber having decided, after consulting the parties, that no
hearing on the merits was required (Rule 59 § 2 in fine), the Government
replied in writing to these claims. The applicants then submitted a further
document, which was admitted to the case file with the leave of the President
of the Chamber (Rule 38 § 1).
THE
FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
A. Introduction
9. The
applicants, Dirk Venema, Wubbechien Venema-Huiting and Kimberly Venema, are
Netherlands nationals and live in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands.
10. Mr
Dirk Venema and Mrs Wubbechien Venema-Huiting, who were born in 1964 and 1967
respectively, are the parents of Kimberly Venema. Kimberly was born on 14
February 1994.
B. Events leading up to the Juvenile Judge s
orders of
11.
From May 1994 onwards Mr and Mrs Venema became aware that Kimberly s breathing
sometimes stopped and her heart raced. This led them to seek medical advice
from, inter alios, doctors practising at Leiden University Hospital.
Kimberly was taken into hospital for two periods, of fourteen days and six days
respectively, in the course of July and August 1994.
12.
The doctors found nothing physically wrong with Kimberly. They began to
suspect that Kimberly was healthy but that Mrs Venema might be suffering from a
psychological disturbance known as the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome.
13.
The Münchhausen by proxy syndrome is a condition in which a parent of a
young child, nearly always the mother, driven by a need of her own for
attention, seeks superfluous medical assistance for her child. The parent may
invent a disease or even cause the symptoms. In certain cases, for example if
the child s breathing is interfered with, the child s life may be in danger.
14. At
around this time Kimberly was referred to Curium, a children s psychiatric
clinic in Oegstgeest near Leiden.
15. In
August 1994 the Leiden University Hospital doctors made their fears known to
the Child Welfare Board (Raad voor de Kinderbescherming). The Government
state that the identity of the applicants was not revealed to the Child Welfare
Board at this time. The Child Welfare Board advised the doctors to provide
adequate medical care and discuss their fears with the child s parents. The
Venema family was kept under medical observation but the doctors did not
discuss their suspicions with Mr and Mrs Venema.
16. On
1 December 1994 the Child Abuse Medical Counselling Centre (Bureau
Vertrouwensarts inzake Kindermishandeling) in The Hague telephoned the
Child Welfare Board. A doctor connected with this centre stated according to
the Government, still without naming the applicants that it was suspected that
Mrs Venema was suffering from the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome. In spite of
the medical care provided, the situation had not improved. The question arose
whether to intervene. It was agreed that the Child Abuse Medical Counselling
Centre doctor would obtain more information with a view to informing the Child
Welfare Board. It is not recorded that the doctor did so.
17.
Kimberly was again taken into hospital on 14 December 1994, following an
incident two days earlier.
18. A
meeting took place on 20 December 1994 to discuss the case of Kimberly. Those
taking part included the director of Curium, four doctors and two nurses
connected with the Leiden University Hospital, the doctor connected with the
Child Abuse Medical Counselling Centre, the Venema family s general
practitioner, the deputy unit head of the Child Welfare Board and a specialised
family help worker (gezinsverzorger). It was decided that the Leiden
University Hospital and Curium would jointly submit a report to the Child
Welfare Board. Mr and Mrs Venema were neither involved nor informed.
19. It
would appear that it was only during this meeting that the identity of the applicants
was communicated to the Child Welfare Board.
20. On
2 January 1995 the Child Welfare Board was provided by Curium with a first
version of this report (hereinafter the Curium/Leiden University Hospital
report ). In response to questions received from the Child Welfare Board, the
reporting parties made additions to it.
21. On
3 January 1995 Curium sent the revised version of the report to the Child
Welfare Board. The report stated that they believed Kimberly s life to be at
risk and that urgent action was required. It expressed the opinion that it was
not possible to discuss the matter with Mr and Mrs Venema, there being a danger
that they might react unpredictably. According to the Government, the Child
Welfare Board received the report on the following day.
C. Judicial proceedings
22. On
4 January 1995 the Child Welfare Board applied by fax to the Juvenile Judge (Kinderrechter)
of the Regional Court (arrondissementsrechtbank) of The Hague for a
supervision order (ondertoezichtstelling) and an order for Kimberly to
be placed away from her family (uithuisplaatsing). The same day the
Juvenile Judge issued a provisional supervision order (voorlopige
ondertoezichtstelling), valid until 11 January 1995, pending a decision of
a more permanent nature, at the same time ordering Kimberly to be placed away
from her family. The Juvenile Judge did not hear Mr and Mrs Venema before
coming to this decision. She scheduled a hearing for 10 January 1995.
23.
The Government state that the Child Welfare Board wrote to Mr and Mrs
Venema on 5 January 1995, enclosing with their letter the application for a
provisional supervision order, the Curium/Leiden University Hospital report and
several articles on the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome.
24.
The applicants state that they have not at any time received either the
letter of 5 January 1995 or any of the other documents mentioned. The
Government appear to dispute this.
25. On
6 January 1995 Mr and Mrs Venema arrived at Leiden University Hospital
intending to collect Kimberly and take her home with them. It was then that
they learnt of the Juvenile Judge s decisions of 4 January 1995. They were not
allowed to see Kimberly.
26.
Also on 6 January 1995 the Juvenile Judge issued an order, again without
hearing Mr and Mrs Venema, for Kimberly to be taken to a foster home, the name
and address of which was withheld from Mr and Mrs Venema. This order was
carried out the same day.
27.
Again on 6 January 1995 two of the doctors from Leiden University
Hospital a paediatrician and a child psychiatrist and the investigating officer
of the Child Welfare Board met with Mr and Mrs Venema to discuss the
Curium/Leiden University Hospital report, the implications of a provisional
supervision order and Kimberly s placement away from her family.
28. On
10 January 1995 the Juvenile Judge heard Mr and Mrs Venema in camera. Mr
and Mrs Venema were assisted by a lawyer. A representative of the Child Welfare
Board was also present. At the close of the hearing the Juvenile Judge decided
that, given the expert opinions to the effect that Kimberly s life appeared to
be in danger, the provisional supervision order would have to remain in force
but that a second opinion would be obtained as soon as possible from a
psychiatrist and a child psychiatrist.
29. It
can be inferred from the case-file that Mr and Mrs Venema were allowed to see
Kimberly once every two weeks under an access arrangement, but no copy of the
access order has been submitted.
30. The
order of 6 January 1995 was transmitted to Mr and Mrs Venema on 20 January
1995.
31.
The psychiatrist s report was dated 27 January 1995. It concluded that
there were no indications that Mr and Mrs Venema posed any danger to Kimberly.
However, a paragraph which the psychiatrist added to this report on 3
February 1995, after discussions by telephone with the Child Welfare Board,
stated that it [could] not be entirely ruled out that Mrs Venema was suffering
from the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome, and recommended further examination.
32.
The Child Welfare Board sent the psychiatrist s report to Curium and
Leiden University Hospital. Curium let it be known in response that it saw no
reason to reconsider its point of view.
33. Mr
and Mrs Venema appealed to the Court of Appeal (gerechtshof) of The
Hague on 9 February 1995 against the placement order.
34. Mr
and Mrs Venema submitted written statements made by their general practitioner
(dated 8 February 1995) and Mrs Venema s gynaecologist (dated 9 February 1995).
These criticised the quality of the reporting by Curium and the Leiden
University Hospital doctors and expressed doubts as to the validity of their
diagnosis. They also noted that Mrs Venema had not shown any tendency to seek superfluous
or clearly unnecessary medical attention.
35. Mr
and Mrs Venema also submitted separate statements of three different
psychiatrists (dated 17, 21 and 22 February 1995), including two university
professors, who had examined them at their request. All were extremely critical
of the diagnosis made by the Leiden University Hospital doctors. They concluded
that Kimberly would be in no apparent danger if she were returned to her
parents and recommended that this be done.
36.
The child psychiatrist, from whom an opinion was to be obtained pursuant
to the order given by the Juvenile Judge on 10 January 1995, was approached by
the Child Welfare Board on 16 February 1995.
37. On
25 February 1995 the Leiden University Hospital doctors elaborated the reasons
for their suspicions as set out in their report of 3 January to the Child
Welfare Board.
38. A
second child, Jonathan, was born to Mr and Mrs Venema on 28 February 1995. The
Child Welfare Board, aware that Mrs Venema was due to give birth, had on 14
February 1995 applied for a provisional supervision order aimed at the
protection of the second child immediately after the birth, but had withdrawn
this application on 16 February 1995.
39.
The Court of Appeal held a hearing on 1 March 1995.
40. On
15 March 1995 the Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal. It found that the Child
Welfare Board had had sufficient reason to approach the Juvenile Judge as it
had done, and that the Juvenile Judge had had sufficient reason to make the
orders in question. It would have been preferable, even so, to have involved
the parents in the decision-making process beforehand, or at least at an
earlier stage. As matters stood, the experts disagreed amongst themselves.
Given the likelihood that the examinations ordered by the Juvenile Judge would
be brought to a conclusion shortly and that the Juvenile Judge would rescind
the placement order immediately if the outcome was favourable to Mr and Mrs
Venema, the Court of Appeal decided to confirm the decision of the Juvenile
Judge.
41. On
30 March 1995 the Juvenile Judge gave a decision prolonging Kimberly s
placement away from her family until 6 May 1995. Mr and Mrs Venema appealed.
42. It
appears that around 10 April 1995 the access arrangement was modified in that
Mr and Mrs Venema were then allowed to see Kimberly once every week instead of
once a fortnight. The Government state that the initiative for this change was
taken by the Juvenile Judge.
43. Mr
and Mrs Venema lodged an appeal on points of law (cassatieberoep)
against the Court of Appeal s decision of 15 March 1995 with the Supreme Court
(Hoge Raad) on 24 April 1995.
44. On
2 May 1995 the Juvenile Judge gave an order prolonging Kimberly s placement
away from her family until 23 May 1995. Mr and Mrs Venema appealed, complaining
among other things that the Juvenile Judge had not heard them before reaching
this decision. On 12 May 1995, after having held a hearing, the Court of Appeal
gave a decision confirming the Juvenile Judge s order. It held that although
the Juvenile Judge had erred in not hearing Mr and Mrs Venema, this error was
sufficiently remedied by the appeal hearing. As to the merits of the case, the
Court of Appeal agreed that the expert opinion of the child psychiatrist
appointed as an expert pursuant to the order of the Juvenile Judge was slow in
coming but considered nonetheless that the potential danger to Kimberly s life
outweighed any disadvantages of Kimberly s placement away from her family. On
the same day the Court of Appeal by a separate decision declared Mr and Mrs
Venema s appeal against the decision of 30 March 1995, which had prolonged the
placement order until 6 May, inadmissible because by then it had become devoid
of interest.
45.
The child psychiatrist submitted his opinion on 19 May 1995. It
contained extensive reports of medical and other examinations and discussions
with the applicants, character witnesses and doctors who had treated Kimberly
on several occasions after she had stopped breathing. Appended to the opinion
were psychiatric reports in standard form on Mr and Mrs Venema, finding no sign
of any psychiatric disorder, and a report by two Rotterdam University Hospital
paediatricians finding a physical explanation for Kimberly s arrested breathing
but no sign of maltreatment. The opinion noted that Kimberly s normal
development had been impaired by the proceedings and that Mr and Mrs Venema had
found the entire sequence of events profoundly distressing. It concluded
without reservation that Kimberly should be handed back to her parents.
46. On
22 May 1995, following a hearing in camera, the Juvenile Judge rescinded
the provisional supervision order and the placement order, at the same time
refusing to replace the provisional supervision order with a permanent one.
Kimberly was handed back to Mr and Mrs Venema.
47.
The Supreme Court not yet having given judgment, Mr and Mrs Venema submitted
on 29 August 1995 that they nonetheless had a continued interest in obtaining a
decision of that court as to the legality of the measures in question. They
stated, in particular, that a finding in their favour would provide them with
some form of moral satisfaction; would enable them to take action in tort for
damages against the State, Leiden University Hospital and Curium; would prevent
further interference with their family life; and would obviate the need for the
applicants to take further civil proceedings.
48.
The Advocate General (advocaat-generaal) to the Supreme Court
submitted an advisory opinion on 20 December 1995. He expressed the view that
the appeal was inadmissible as Mr and Mrs Venema no longer had any legal
interest in the outcome of the proceedings. The possible satisfaction of being
found in the right was not in itself a sufficient interest. Nor was the
possibility of a further civil action for damages, it being by no means obvious
that such an action would in fact be made possible by a decision of the Supreme
Court. The possibility of further interference with the applicants family life
in the future was not relevant to the case before the Supreme Court. The
question whether the State, Leiden University Hospital or Curium had committed
a tort against the applicants was outside the scope of the case before the
Supreme Court, so that the need, if any, for further civil proceedings could
not be considered relevant either. Turning to the merits of the case, the
Advocate General expressed the opinion that the decision of the Court of Appeal
was based on adequate legal grounds and sufficiently reasoned.
49. On
26 January 1996 the Supreme Court gave judgment declaring Mr and Mrs Venema s
appeal on points of law inadmissible for lack of interest. It was held that the
interests stated were insufficient.
D. Complaint proceedings
50. In
the meantime, on 10 May 1995, a discussion took place between a representative
of the Legal Proceedings Monitoring Group (Vereniging Voor Nader Onderzoek
Rechtspleging, VVNOR ), a non-governmental organisation that had taken up
Mr and Mrs Venema s case, and the Director of the Child Welfare Board. It would
appear that the Legal Proceedings Monitoring Group representative showed the
Director documents taken from Kimberly s medical records, which had been
obtained from Leiden University Hospital and which had been in Mr and Mrs
Venema s possession for five weeks.
51. On
the same day, 10 May 1995, the Legal Proceedings Monitoring Group transmitted a
written statement of complaint on Mr and Mrs Venema s behalf to the Child
Welfare Board.
52. On
1 June 1995 the Deputy Director of the Child Welfare Board gave a written
decision declaring the complaint partly well-founded and partly ill-founded.
Complaints considered well-founded related to the failure to give Mr and Mrs
Venema access to certain documents due to the absence from the file, at the
relevant time, of certain meeting reports, and in the case of a list of
contacts, due to an omission and to the application for a provisional
supervision order lodged on 14 February 1995 in respect of the second child Mr
and Mrs Venema were then expecting. As to the latter issue, it was stated that
the said application had been withdrawn on 16 February 1995 because it appeared
not to be legally possible to seek a supervision order in respect of an as yet
unborn child; the application had therefore been precipitate. The Deputy
Director expressed regret for the lapse of time involved.
53.
The Legal Proceedings Monitoring Group, on behalf of Mr and Mrs Venema,
lodged an appeal with the Child Welfare Boards Complaints Committee No. IV (Klachtencommissie
IV bij de raden voor de kinderbescherming), which was received by that body
on 23 June 1995.
54.
The Complaints Committee held a hearing on 22 August 1995 and gave its
decision on the same day. It was considered reasonable that the Child Welfare
Board had accepted the assessment of the Leiden University Hospital and Curium
doctors that Kimberly s life was in danger; given the apparent urgency of the
situation, the Board could not be faulted for not ensuring that the Leiden
University Hospital and Curium doctors had obtained Mr and Mrs Venema s prior
permission for the transmission to it of medical information. The Board ought,
however, to have informed Mr and Mrs Venema in good time that it did not intend
to make use of informants named by them but intended to rely solely on the
court-appointed experts. The Complaints Committee further accepted the Board s
statement that the psychiatrist had added to his report of 27 February 1995 a
reservation to the effect that it could not be ruled out that Mrs Venema was
suffering from the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome, not at the bidding of the
Child Welfare Board, but in response to a reminder that the report did not
contain corroborating information from third-party sources (hetero-anamnese).
E. Subsequent events
55.
The case received a certain measure of publicity. Questions in
Parliament and a complaint to the Deputy Minister of Justice (Staatssecretaris
van Justitie), lodged on behalf of Mr and Mrs Venema by the Legal
Proceedings Monitoring Group, led the Deputy Minister to order an official
inquiry into the way the Child Welfare Board had handled the affair.
56.
The report of the official inquiry was published on 25 July 1996. Its
conclusions, in so far as relevant, may be summarised as follows:
In deciding to
intervene without the prior involvement of Mr and Mrs Venema, the Child Welfare
Board had no doubt sought in good faith to protect Kimberly s interests, but it
might with advantage have displayed more creativity in seeking a solution that
did more justice to the parents interests .
Given the Child
Welfare Board s own lack of psychiatric expertise and the fact that the
Münchhausen by proxy syndrome is difficult to diagnose, the use which the Child
Welfare Board made of a variety of contradictory reports had not been
unacceptable although it might have assessed them in a more critical fashion.
A lack of
coordination within the Child Welfare Board had delayed the involvement of the
child psychiatrist, who was only approached on 16 February 1995. This was
regrettable because otherwise the reports might have been complete by the time of
the birth of Jonathan.
The Child Welfare
Board s advice to the Juvenile Judge might have been more complete. As a
minimum, the Child Welfare Board could reasonably have been expected to justify
the absence of any inquiry of its own and to give more extensive reasons for
the choices it made.
The Child Welfare
Board s case-file management and internal reporting were deficient: documents
explaining the background to its decisions were not contained in the file.
The transmission
of the report of the psychiatrist to the Leiden University Hospital doctors and
Curium had constituted a breach of confidence vis-à-vis Mr and Mrs
Venema since, after they had first reported Kimberly s case to the Child
Welfare Board, their involvement had ended. Curium in particular had been
treated virtually as an external expert body.
It appeared that
Mr and Mrs Venema had not been summoned in writing to the hearing of the
Juvenile Judge on 10 January 1995, notwithstanding the Child Welfare Board s
statement to the contrary, but that this was due to a misunderstanding between
the Registry of the Regional Court and the Board and could not be blamed on the
latter.
57.
The report went on to formulate recommendations aimed at preventing the
recurrence of cases such as the present.
58.
According to the Government, the report led the Deputy Minister to
conclude that the Child Welfare Board had acted lawfully and fulfilled its
statutory responsibility , although its internal working procedures deserved some
criticism. It had been right for the Board to take firm action and, in view of
the nature and seriousness of the complaint, to rely on the expertise of third
parties.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. Child Welfare Boards
59. At
the time of the events complained of, there was a Child Welfare Board in each
of the jurisdictions of the Regional Courts (Article 1:238 § 1 of the Civil
Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek, hereinafter the CC ), as in force at the
time). Their duties included keeping themselves informed of developments
affecting child welfare within their area, promoting cooperation between
institutions concerned with child welfare and giving advice, upon request or of
their own motion, to authorities and institutions (Article 238 § 3 CC).
60. Each
of the Child Welfare Boards had competence to take action in the interests of
the underage persons resident within its respective area (Article 239 § 1 CC).
B. Supervision orders and provisional
supervision orders
61. At
the relevant time, Article 1:254 CC provided as follows:
1. If
a child is growing up under such conditions that it is threatened with moral or
physical destruction (zedelijke of lichamelijke ondergang), the Juvenile
Judge may order the child to be placed under supervision.
2. He
may do so on the application of one of the parents, one of the relatives by
marriage or blood up to and including the fourth degree of consanguinity, the
Child Welfare Board or the public prosecution service (openbaar ministerie).
62.
Article 1:257 of the CC provided as follows:
The Juvenile Judge may place the child under
supervision provisionally pending an investigation. A provisional supervision
order shall remain in force until a final and binding decision (gewijsde)
on supervision is made.
Article 258 of the CC, in relevant part,
provided as follows:
2. The
Juvenile Judge may lift the supervision order at any time. ...
C. Placement of a child away from its family
63. At
the relevant time, Article 1:260 of the CC provided, in relevant part, as
follows:
4. A
child shall only be placed away from its family under ... [Article] 1:263 [of
this Code] ...
64.
Article 1:263 of the CC provided, in relevant part:
1. If necessary
in the interests of the child s care and upbringing, the Juvenile Judge shall
order the child to be taken into an institution that qualifies for funding
under the Juveniles (Assistance) Act (Wet op de Jeugdhulpverlening) or
elsewhere. ...
D. Procedure as regards supervision orders,
provisional supervision orders and the placement of a child away from its
family
65. At
the relevant time, Article 940 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van
Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering, hereinafter the CCP ) provided as follows:
1. No
appeal or objection (geenerlei voorziening) is allowed against a
provisional supervision order under Article 1:257 of the CC.
2. Such
a decision can be given without any prior hearing.
66.
Article 945 of the CCP, in relevant part, provided as follows:
3.
Each of the parents may appeal against the decisions referred to in this
Article [sc. decisions under Article 1:263 of the CC].
E. Complaints procedure
67. Complaints
about the actions of an agent of a Child Welfare Board could be made to the
Director of the Child Welfare Board concerned by a person with an interest in a
case or an informant who had been affected by those actions. Such complaints
could be submitted orally or in writing. The time-limit was two months. If the
matter on which the complaint was based was pending before a court, the
Director must inform that court of the complaint (section 35 of the 1982 Child
Welfare Boards (Organisation) Ordinance Organisatiebesluit raden voor de
kinderbescherming 1982 which was in force at the relevant time; hereinafter
the 1982 Ordinance ).
68.
The Director must try to reach a solution that was acceptable for the
complainant. If that was not possible and the complainant wished to pursue the
complaint before the Child Welfare Boards Complaints Committee, the Director
must give a decision within four weeks after hearing the complainant and the
agent involved (section 36 of the 1982 Ordinance).
69.
The complainant had three weeks to refer the complaint to the Child
Welfare Boards Complaints Committee (section 37 of the 1982 Ordinance). Unless
this committee considered the matter a simple one or the complaint manifestly
ill-founded (in which case the matter was dealt with by the Complaints
Committee s chairman), it would hear the complainant and the Director of the
Child Welfare Board and give a reasoned opinion, normally within six weeks
after receiving the complaint. It could declare the complaint well-founded or
ill-founded. The opinion was sent to the Minister of Justice (sections 37a and
38 of the 1982 Ordinance).
THE
LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE
CONVENTION
70.
The applicants allege a violation of this provision in that the separation
of Kimberly from her parents was not justified on medical grounds and was not
discontinued as soon as this became apparent, and in that Kimberly s parents
were not involved in the decision-making process that led to the separation.
The Government dispute this.
Article 8 of the Convention provides as
follows:
1.
Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his
home and his correspondence.
2.
There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise
of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in
a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or
the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or
crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.
A. Whether Article 8 is applicable
71.
The mutual enjoyment by parent and child of each other s company constitutes
a fundamental element of family life, and domestic measures hindering such
enjoyment amount to an interference with the right protected by Article 8 of
the Convention. Any such interference constitutes a violation of this Article
unless it is in accordance with the law , pursues an aim or aims that are
legitimate under paragraph 2 of Article 8 and can be regarded as necessary in a
democratic society (see, as a recent authority, P., C. and S. v. the United
Kingdom [Section II], no. 56547/00, 16 July 2002, § 113).
72. It
is not in dispute that the separation of Kimberly from her parents constitutes
an interference with the applicants right to respect for their family life .
B. Whether Article 8 has been violated
73. It
is not in dispute that the measure separating Kimberly from her parents was in
accordance with domestic law and that it pursued the legitimate aim of
protecting Kimberly s rights. It remains to be examined whether this measure
could properly be considered necessary in a democratic society .
1. Arguments before the Court
a. The applicants
74.
The applicants submitted no argument after the application was declared
admissible. In their observations submitted at the admissibility stage, they stated
first of all that the competent authorities had taken insufficient care to
ensure that the information which led them to remove Kimberly from her parents
was correct and complete, that they had failed to discontinue the measure as
soon as it became apparent that the measure ordered was uncalled for, and that
they had failed to involve the parents before arriving at a decision.
75.
The applicants argued that the case had been known to the Child Welfare
Board since early August 1994. The telephone conversation of 1 December 1994
between the Child Welfare Board and the doctor at the Child Abuse Medical
Counselling Centre had not led to any further investigation. In these
circumstances it was clear that the Child Welfare Board had long been aware of the
need for a second opinion, and that the fact that the Child Welfare Board had
found itself forced to act under pressure of time was entirely that Board s own
fault.
76.
There had been no immediate danger to Kimberly s life at the time the
Board applied to the Juvenile Judge, for the simple reason that Kimberly was in
hospital and thus out of her parents immediate reach. In these circumstances it
would have been quite possible for the Board itself and the Juvenile Judge to
hear Kimberly s parents before any decision, even of a provisional nature, was
reached.
77.
Echoing the report of the official investigation ordered by the Deputy
Minister of Justice, the applicants pointed to what they considered the Child
Welfare Board s excessive reliance on information received from others in
particular, the Curium/Leiden University Hospital report and its failure to
make any investigations of its own. Such investigations would, in their
submission, have clarified errors and inconsistencies in the Curium/Leiden
University Hospital report. Instead, the Child Welfare Board had given
incomplete information to the Juvenile Judge.
78.
The failings in the file management and internal reporting practices of
the Child Welfare Board, noted in the report of the official investigation,
also contributed to the lack of sufficient information and had thus prolonged
Kimberly s placement away from her parental home.
79.
The Child Welfare Board had improperly influenced the psychiatrist by
inducing him, in a discussion by telephone, to add a caveat damaging to the
applicants interests to his report of 27 January 1995.
80.
Finally, the retraction of the request for a similar measure in respect
of Kimberly s sibling Jonathan, who was born on 28 February 1995, showed that
already at that time the Child Welfare Board had realised that there was no
danger to either child from the parents. Yet the Board had not sought to have
the measure in respect of Kimberly terminated.
b. The Government
81. The
Government pointed out that the Child Welfare Board was consulted hundreds of
times each year. The names of the persons involved were always withheld from
the Child Welfare Board in order to protect the privacy of the individuals
involved. In their contacts with that Board, the Leiden University Hospital
doctors (in August 1994) and the doctor connected with the Child Abuse Medical
Counselling Centre (on 1 December 1994) had kept the applicants identity
secret, such being the usual practice in order to maintain the privacy of the
individuals involved. Only on 20 December 1994 had the Child Welfare Board been
informed of the identity of the applicants, and only on 2 January 1995 had it
received the first version of the Curium/Leiden University Hospital report. The
final version of the report, dated 3 January 1995, was received by the Board
only on 4 January. It was only then that the Child Welfare Board was in a
position to take decisive action. Consequently it was not the case that the
Board could have sought a second opinion as early as August 1994.
82.
The absence of a hearing before the Juvenile Judge, who gave a
provisional supervision order had been justified by the perceived danger to
Kimberly s life. The Government referred to the Court s judgment in the case of
K. and T. v. Finland [GC], no. 25702/94, 12 July 2001, in which it had
been accepted that there might be a need in urgent cases to order emergency
child-care measures without associating in the decision-making process those
having custody of the child (loc. cit., § 166).
83.
The Government accepted that it was not impossible that Mr and Mrs
Venema might not have received the letter of 6 January 1995 (the Court
understands this to refer to the Child Welfare Board s letter of 5 January 1995).
Whatever the truth of the matter, a copy of at least one of the documents
enclosed with that letter an article on the Münchhausen by proxy syndrome was
also handed to Mr and Mrs Venema on 6 January 1995, so that it might be assumed
that copies of the other documents enclosed with the said letter were handed to
the applicants as well. Should it be the case that Mr and Mrs Venema never
received any formal summons for the hearing on 10 January 1995, it was
nonetheless true that they had turned up for that hearing and made their views
known.
84.
The Child Welfare Board had had little alternative to reliance on
information from outside sources. The Münchhausen by proxy syndrome was a
medical-psychiatric condition which the Child Welfare Board was ill-equipped to
investigate by its own means. Moreover, for reasons of privacy it was not
possible for the Board to examine the applicants medical records. In addition,
the official report of 25 July 1996 relied upon by the applicants did not
suggest either that the Child Welfare Board had not been well enough informed
to take considered action or that the Juvenile Judge had been insufficiently
informed.
85. Mr
and Mrs Venema had shown information from Kimberly s medical records to the
Child Welfare Board only on 10 May 1995, by which time it had been in their
possession for five weeks. The Board could therefore not be blamed for not
being in a position to take remedial action before mid-May. It should be
pointed out in this connection that the Board could not examine medical records
without the permission of the persons involved.
86.
The Government denied that the Child Welfare Board had improperly
persuaded the psychiatrist to add a caveat to his report of 27 January 1995,
which would otherwise have been favourable to the applicants. It had emerged
during the complaint proceedings that the psychiatrist, an independent expert,
had done so after it had been pointed out to him that his report contained no
corroboration from sources other than the applicants themselves.
87.
Finally, the decision of the Child Welfare Board to withdraw its
application for a supervision order in respect of Kimberly s brother Jonathan,
who at the time had not yet been born, did not reflect any medical opinion that
there was no danger to either child from Mr and Mrs Venema. It was grounded on
a legal opinion that it was not possible to seek a supervision order for an as
yet unborn child.
2. The Court s assessment
88.
The Court considers that the applicants complaints, firstly, that the
failure of the Child Welfare Board to involve itself at an earlier stage in the
proceedings led it to make a precipitate application to the Juvenile Judge and,
secondly, that it acted on incomplete information with the result that it
provided insufficient information to the Juvenile Judge, cannot be dissociated
from the applicants broader complaint concerning their own lack of involvement
in the decision-making process which culminated in the making of the
provisional order on 4 January 1995. Given their interrelation it would be
artificial to treat these various issues as distinct and unconnected.
89.
For the Court, the essence of the applicants case is that they were at
no stage prior to the making of the provisional order consulted about the
concerns being expressed about them by health professionals or offered an
opportunity to contest the reliability, relevance or sufficiency of the
information being compiled on them. Furthermore, although the Child Welfare
Board only became actively involved in Kimberly s case on 20 December 1995, it
cannot be overlooked that the possible need for urgent action was being
considered by public health professionals already in August 1994 (see
paragraphs 12-19 above) and that the Child Welfare Board had made
recommendations in that month to the Leiden University Hospital doctors on how
to proceed (see paragraph 15).
90.
Against this background, the Court recalls that its role is not to
substitute itself for the domestic authorities in the exercise of their
responsibilities in the field of the compulsory taking of children into public
care, but rather to review under the Convention the decisions that those
authorities have taken in the exercise of their power of appreciation. The
margin of appreciation so to be accorded to the competent national authorities
will vary in the light of the nature of the issues and the seriousness of the
interests at stake. While national authorities enjoy a wide margin of
appreciation in assessing the necessity of taking a child into care, in
particular where an emergency situation arises, the Court must still be
satisfied in the circumstances of the case that there existed circumstances
justifying such a measure. In this respect, it must have particular regard to
whether, in the light of the case as a whole, the reasons adduced to justify
the measure were relevant and sufficient such as to allow the conclusion to be
drawn that it was necessary in a democratic society (see P., C. and S. v.
the United Kingdom, cited above, §§ 114-116).
91.
The Court reiterates that whilst Article 8 contains no explicit
procedural requirements, the decision-making process involved in measures of
interference must be fair and such as to afford due respect to the interests
safeguarded by Article 8 of the Convention. The applicable principle has been
stated as follows (B. v. the United Kingdom, 8 July 1987, Series A no.
121, § 65):
In the Court s view, what ... has to be
determined is whether, having regard to the particular circumstances of the
case and notably the serious nature of the decisions to be taken, the parents
have been involved in the decision-making process, seen as a whole, to a degree
sufficient to provide them with the requisite protection of their interests. If
they have not, there will have been a failure to respect their family life and
the interference resulting from the decision will not be capable of being
regarded as necessary within the meaning of Article 8.
92. It
is essential that a parent be placed in a position where he or she may obtain
access to information which is relied on by the authorities in taking measures
of protective care or in taking decisions relevant to the care and custody of a
child. Otherwise, the parent will be unable to participate effectively in the
decision-making process or put forward in a fair or adequate manner those
matters militating in favour of his or her ability to provide the child with
proper care and protection (see the McMichael v. the United Kingdom
judgment of 24 February 1995, Series A no. 307-B, p. 57, § 92; and T.P. and
K.M. v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 28945/95, § 73, ECHR 2001-V).
93.
The Court accepts that when action has to be taken to protect a child in
an emergency, it may not always be possible, because of the urgency of the
situation, to associate in the decision-making process those having custody of
the child. Nor, as the Government point out, may it even be desirable, even if
possible, to do so if those having custody of the child are seen as the source
of an immediate threat to the child, since giving them prior warning would be
liable to deprive the measure of its effectiveness. The Court must however be
satisfied that the national authorities were entitled to consider that there
existed circumstances justifying the abrupt removal of the child from the care
of its parents without any prior contact or consultation. In particular, it is
for the respondent State to establish that a careful assessment of the impact
of the proposed care measure on the parents and the child, as well as of the
possible alternatives to the removal of the child from its family, was carried
out prior to the implementation of a care measure (see K. and T. v. Finland,
cited above, § 166).
94.
Turning to the facts of the instant case, the Court reiterates that,
irrespective of the Child Welfare Board s allegedly tardy involvement in the
procedure, the doctors at Leiden University Hospital had been monitoring
Kimberly s situation as of August 1994 and were expressing real concern about
Mrs Venema s mental condition (see paragraph 12 above). It cannot be overlooked
that the Child Welfare Board advised the doctors at the Leiden University
Hospital to discuss their concerns with Mr and Mrs Venema (see paragraph 15
above). This advice was not followed up. The Court finds it surprising that the
Child Welfare Board s representative at the meeting held on 20 December 1994 to
discuss Kimberly s case did not renew this advice or ascertain whether the
applicants had been consulted about the concerns being expressed about them
(see paragraph 18 above). In the event, the Board obtained a joint report of
the Leiden University Hospital and Curium on 2 January 1995. In response to
questions put by the Board, a revised version was transmitted to it on 3
January 1995. This report concluded that Kimberly s life was at risk and that
urgent action was required. On the basis of this report, the Juvenile Judge
decided on 4 January 1995 to issue provisional orders, valid until 11 January
1995, ordering Kimberly s placement under supervision and away from her family.
At no stage were the applicants asked to comment on the concerns about them or
in any other way involved in the procedure.
95. It
is to be further noted that on 20 December 1994 Kimberly was in hospital, where
she remained until 6 January 1995. During this time she was thus in perfect
safety. When the applicants came to collect Kimberly from the hospital on 6
January 1995, they were told that they were not allowed to take her home and
that they were not allowed to see her. This must have come to them as a
complete surprise as the hospital doctors, who had informed the Child Welfare
Board of their analysis of Kimberly s health situation, had not discussed this
with her parents.
96. It
has not been explained to the Court s satisfaction why the doctors at the
Leiden University Hospital or the Child Welfare Board could not have made
arrangements to discuss their concerns with the applicants and to afford them
an opportunity to dispel those concerns, if need be with reference to their own
medical experts opinions. The Court is not persuaded by the opinion in the
revised report sent by Curium to the Child Welfare Board on 3 January 1995 (see
paragraph 21 above) that the applicants might have reacted unpredictably if the
matter was discussed with them. In the Court s opinion, this justification,
while it may be relevant, cannot of itself be considered sufficient to exclude
Kimberly s parents from a procedure of immense personal importance to them, the
less so having regard to the fact that Kimberly was in perfect safety in the
days preceding the making of the provisional order. It would observe further
that the failure in this case to involve the applicants in the investigative
procedure before applying for the provisional order contrasts sharply with the
procedure of consultation and information followed by the domestic authorities
in the above-mentioned P., C. and S. v. the United Kingdom case, where,
arguably, there was more evidence of a threat posed to the welfare of the child
(loc. cit. §§ 124-126).
97. It
has been contended by the Government that, in view of the conclusions reached
in the joint report of 3 January 1995 and in particular the perceived
life-threatening situation for Kimberly and need for immediate urgent measures,
the Child Welfare Board s reliance on this report or the Juvenile Judge s
reaction in the form of provisional measures valid for eight days cannot be
considered arbitrary or unreasonable or as overstepping the margin of
appreciation enjoyed by them. However, it remains the case that the applicants
were at no stage able to influence the outcome of the procedure by, for
example, contesting the reliability of the information compiled in their case
or adding information from their own sources to the file. It was not before 10
January 1995, when the hearing before the Juvenile Judge took place, that
Kimberly s parents could express their views. This was six days after the
Juvenile Judge, on the basis of the untested fears of the Child Welfare Board,
had issued the provisional supervision order and an order for Kimberley to be
placed away from her family and four days after the Juvenile Judge had issued
an order to have Kimberly placed in a foster home. Before Kimberly s parents
were heard and given a chance to dispute the validity of the Child Welfare
Board s fears, measures had already been taken which, because of their
immediate impact and Kimberly s age, were difficult to redress.
98.
For the Court, it was crucial for the parents to be able to put forward
at some stage before the making of the provisional order their own point of
view. It notes that the report of the official inquiry indicated that the Child
Welfare Board could have displayed more creativity in seeking a solution that
did more justice to the parents interests and that the Child Welfare Board s
advice to the Juvenile Judge might have been more complete (see paragraph 56
above). It further notes that the Court of Appeal observed that it would have
been preferable to have involved the parents in the decision-making process at
least at an earlier stage (see paragraph 40 above). The unjustified failure to
allow them to participate in the decision-making process leading to the making
of the provisional order denied them the requisite protection of their
interests under Article 8 of the Convention including their right to challenge
the necessity for the measure sought by the Child Welfare Board. That measure,
it is to be noted, formed the basis of the regrettable separation of the
applicants and their daughter for a period of five months and eighteen days.
99. In
summary, the competent authorities presented the applicants with faits
accomplis without sufficient justification. This is enough for the Court to
find that there has been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE
CONVENTION
100.
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, in relevant part, provides as follows:
In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a] ...
tribunal...
The applicants alleged a violation of this
provision in that the Juvenile Judge had failed to hear Mr and Mrs Venema before
giving orders separating Kimberly from them. The Government disagreed.
101.
The Court observes that the applicants complaints under Article 6 (as
declared admissible) largely coincide with their complaints under Article 8.
The Court does not find it necessary to examine the facts also under Article 6
§ 1 of the Convention.
II. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
102.
Article 41 of the Convention provides:
If the Court finds that there has been a violation
of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High
Contracting Party concerned allows only partial reparation to be made, the
Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.
103.
The applicants claimed compensation for non-pecuniary and pecuniary
damage and reimbursement of costs and expenses.
A. Damage
1. Non-pecuniary damage
104.
The applicants claimed 60,000 euros (EUR) for non-pecuniary damage.
105.
Firstly, the timing of the interference shortly before the birth of Mr
and Mrs Venema s second child, Kimberly s sibling Jonathan coupled with the
threat of a measure that might also separate Jonathan from his family had
caused the applicants profound distress. The psychiatrist s report had in fact
found that the events complained of had adversely affected Kimberly s
development. They had also been very traumatic for Mr and Mrs Venema; it was
not certain that they would ever get over them.
106.
Secondly, Mr and Mrs Venema had lost all faith in the health care
services and the medical profession. Moreover, the nation-wide publicity given
to the case had made their position in their local community difficult.
107.
The Government considered the applicants claim exorbitant. They accepted
that if a violation of Article 8 were found, then an award in respect of
non-pecuniary damage would be appropriate; an amount such as that awarded in
the above-mentioned and largely similar case of K. and T. v. Finland,
namely 80,000 Finnish marks or EUR 13,455.03, would however be more suitable
than the figure named by the applicants.
108.
The Court observes that the applicants were reunited after five months
and eighteen days. Although it cannot be asserted that they would have been reunited
earlier if they had been involved in the initial decision-making process, the
Court accepts that the three applicants suffered non-pecuniary damage through
distress and anxiety as a result of feelings of frustration and injustice,
which is not sufficiently compensated by the finding of a violation of the
Convention. Deciding on an equitable basis, the Court awards the applicants
jointly EUR 15,000.
2. Pecuniary damage
109.
The applicants claimed the cost of home help in October and November
1994. They submitted that home help had been foisted on them by the authorities
for the purpose of keeping an eye on them. They had had to pay 174 Netherlands
guilders (NLG), or EUR 78.96.
110. The
applicants also stated that the publicity given to the case had caused Mr
Venema s employer to pass him over for a promotion that would have brought him
NLG 1,000 a month more salary. They claimed compensation for this loss, to be
set ex aequo et bono at an amount equivalent to the difference in salary
for three years, that is NLG 36,000 (EUR 16,336.09).
111.
The Government argued that the Child Welfare Board had not yet been
involved in the applicant s case in October and November 1994, so that the
claim in respect of home help was not related to the case before the Court. Nor
did a causal link exist between the loss of income alleged and any violation
that might be found.
112.
The Court has found a violation of Article 8 of the Convention in that
Mr and Mrs Venema were not involved in the proceedings before Kimberly was
placed away from her family. The cost of home help which Mr and Mrs Venema may
have had to bear in October and November 1994 is unrelated to this. The Court
also finds that the decision of Mr Venema s employer, a private enterprise, to
pass Mr Venema over for promotion is not imputable to the Government.
113.
It follows that the applicants claims under this head must be dismissed.
B. Costs and expenses
114.
The applicants claimed the following sums for costs and expenses:
(a) NLG 8,323.10 (EUR 3,776.86) in respect of
Messrs Wille & Donker, advocates practising in Alphen aan den Rijn, who had
assisted Mr and Mrs Venema up to the end of March 1995;
(b) NLG 53,736.54 (EUR 24,384.54) in respect
of Mr Willems, who assisted the applicants after March 1995, and subject to
deduction of EUR 630 paid by the Council of Europe by way of legal aid;
(c) NLG 2,150 (EUR 975.63) for the
assistance of the Legal Proceedings Monitoring Group; and
(d) NLG 6,761.89 (EUR 3,068.41) for the
services of various specialists, telephone costs, travelling expenses and the
purchase of a fax machine and video equipment.
115.
The Government expressed the opinion that the sums claimed in respect of
counsel fees were excessive and suggested a sum based on the legal aid rates
payable in the Netherlands. They further argued that the other expenses claimed
had not been necessary.
116.
As to the cost of legal assistance, the Court reiterates that it does
not regard itself bound by domestic scales and practices, although it may
derive some assistance from them (see, as a recent authority, Krcmár and
Others v. the Czech Republic, 35376/97, 3 March 2000, § 52).
117.
According to the Court s consistent case-law, to be awarded costs and
expenses the injured party must have incurred them in order to seek prevention
or rectification of a violation of the Convention, to have the same established
by the Court and to obtain redress therefor. It must also be shown that the
costs were actually and necessarily incurred and that they are reasonable as to
quantum (see, as a recent authority, Meulendijks v. the Netherlands,
34549/97, 14 May 2002, § 63).
118.
The Court considers that the sums claimed in respect of the fees of
Messrs Wille & Donker and Mr Willems are only recoverable from the
Government in so far as they relate to the violation found; it will award EUR
3,240 under this head. In respect of the fees of Mr Willems, the Court will award
EUR 18,995. Thus, the Court considers that the applicants should be awarded for
costs of legal assistance a total sum of EUR 22,235 plus any tax that may be
chargeable.
119.
As to the remainder of the applicants claim for costs and expenses, the Court
agrees with the Government that the assistance of the Legal Proceedings
Monitoring Group were incurred in the complaint proceedings which are not a
remedy properly so-called for the purposes of the Convention. They are
unrelated to the violations found. Neither have the applicants shown that the
costs set out under (d) were all necessary in order to obtain redress for the
violation found. Making its own estimate, the Court is of the opinion that, in
respect of these costs, the applicants should be awarded a sum of EUR 870.
120.
The amounts that the Court will award in respect of costs and expenses
thus total EUR 23,105, from which it will deduct the amounts paid and payable
by the Council of Europe by way of legal aid namely EUR 630. The resulting sum
is EUR 22,475, to which any tax that may be chargeable is to be added.
C. Default interest
121. The Court considers it appropriate that
the default interest should be based on the marginal lending rate of the
European Central Bank to which should be added three percentage points.
FOR
THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
1. Holds that there has been a violation
of Article 8 of the Convention;
2. Holds that there is no separate issue
under Article 6 of the Convention;
3. Holds
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the
applicants, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes
final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following amounts: