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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> European Court of Human Rights >> KLAAS v. GERMANY - 15473/89 [1993] ECHR 45 (22 September 1993)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/1993/45.html
Cite as: [1993] ECHR 45, 18 EHRR 305, (1994) 18 EHRR 305

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In the case of Klaas v. Germany*,

The European Court of Human Rights, sitting, in accordance

with Article 43 (art. 43) of the Convention for the Protection of

Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ("the Convention")** and the

relevant provisions of the Rules of Court, as a Chamber composed of

the following judges:

Mr R. Ryssdal, President,

Mr R. Bernhardt,

Mr Thór Vilhjálmsson,

Mr L.-E. Pettiti,

Mr B. Walsh,

Mr A. Spielmann,

Mr I. Foighel,

Mr J.M. Morenilla,

Mr A.B. Baka,

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

Registrar,

Having deliberated in private on 26 March and

24 August 1993,

Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on the

last-mentioned date:

_______________

Notes by the Registrar

* The case is numbered 27/1992/372/446. The first number is the

case's position on the list of cases referred to the Court in the

relevant year (second number). The last two numbers indicate the

case's position on the list of cases referred to the Court since its

creation and on the list of the corresponding originating

applications to the Commission.

** As amended by Article 11 of Protocol No. 8 (P8-11), which came

into force on 1 January 1990.

_______________

PROCEDURE

1. The case was referred to the Court by the German Government

("the Government") on 10 August 1992 and by the European Commission

of Human Rights ("the Commission") on 11 September 1992, within the

three-month period laid down in Article 32 para. 1 and Article 47

(art. 32-1, art. 47) of the Convention. It originated in an

application (no. 15473/89) against Germany lodged with the

Commission under Article 25 (art. 25) on 11 July 1989 by two German

citizens, Mrs Hildegard Klaas and her daughter Monika Klaas,

hereinafter referred to as the first and second applicant

respectively.

The Government's request referred to Articles 32 and 48

(art. 32, art. 48); the Commission's request referred to Articles 44

and 48 (art. 44, art. 48) and to the declaration whereby Germany

recognised the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court (Article 46)

(art. 46). The object of the request and the application was to

obtain a decision as to whether the facts of the case disclosed a

breach by the respondent State of its obligations under Articles 3

and 8 (art. 3, art. 8) of the Convention.

2. In response to the enquiry made in accordance with

Rule 33 para. 3 (d) of the Rules of Court, the applicants stated

that they wished to take part in the proceedings and designated the

lawyer who would represent them (Rule 30). The President gave the

lawyer leave to use the German language (Rule 27 para. 3).

3. The Chamber to be constituted included ex officio

Mr R. Bernhardt, the elected judge of German nationality (Article 43

of the Convention) (art. 43), and Mr R. Ryssdal, the President of

the Court (Rule 21 para. 3 (b)). On 26 September 1992 the President

drew by lot, in the presence of the Registrar, the names of the

other seven members, namely Mr Thór Vilhjálmsson, Mr L.-E. Pettiti,

Mr B. Walsh, Mr A. Spielmann, Mr I. Foighel, Mr J.M. Morenilla and

Mr A.B. Baka (Article 43 in fine of the Convention and

Rule 21 para. 4) (art. 43).

4. Mr Ryssdal assumed the office of President of the Chamber

(Rule 21 para. 5) and, through the Deputy Registrar, consulted the

applicants' lawyer, the Agent of the Government and the Delegate of

the Commission on the organisation of the proceedings

(Rules 37 para. 1 and 38). Pursuant to the order made in

consequence, the Registrar received, on 7 December 1992, the

Government's memorial and, on 19 January 1993, the applicants'

observations.

Various documents were produced by the Commission on

4 February 1993 and by the Government on 24 March 1993, at the

request of the Registrar. On 9 February 1993 the Registrar was

informed that the Delegate would submit his observations at the

hearing.

5. In accordance with the decision of the President - who had

also given the Agent of the Government leave to plead in German

(Rule 27 para. 2) - the hearing took place in public in the Human

Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 24 March 1993. The Court had held a

preparatory meeting beforehand.

There appeared before the Court:

(a) for the Government

Mr J. Meyer-Ladewig, Ministerialdirigent,

Federal Ministry of Justice, Agent;

(b) for the Commission

Mr J. Frowein, Delegate;

(c) for the applicants

Mr M. Stüben, Rechtsanwalt, Counsel.

The Court heard addresses by Mr Meyer-Ladewig for the

Government, by Mr Frowein for the Commission and by Mr Stüben for

the applicants, as well as replies to its questions and by two of

its members individually.

AS TO THE FACTS

6. At about 7.30 p.m. on 28 January 1986, the first applicant,

a social worker, drew up outside the back entrance to the block of

flats in Lemgo where she lived. She was accompanied by her daughter

Monika, who, at the time of the incident that gave rise to the

complaint, was eight years old. After she had opened the gate she

was stopped by two police officers who had followed her and were

standing in the gateway. They accused her of having driven through

a red traffic light and of having tried to get away - an allegation

denied by the applicant. The police officers claimed to have

detected a strong smell of alcohol on her breath when they checked

her driving licence. She agreed to be breathalysed. Despite having

been shown what to do, she proved unable to provide a specimen of

breath satisfactorily and was therefore told that she would have to

accompany the police officers to the local hospital in order to have

a blood test.

An altercation followed during which Mrs Klaas was arrested.

The precise course of the events is disputed by the applicants (see

paragraph 7 below) and the police officers (see paragraph 9 below).

She was then driven to the hospital for the blood test,

which showed the level of alcohol in her blood to be 0.82 per ml

(milligrammes per millilitre). She was subsequently released.

7. According to the applicants, Mrs Klaas agreed to have a

blood sample taken, but explained that she wished first to accompany

her daughter to a neighbour. One of the police officers refused to

allow this and dragged her to the police car. She was warned that

she could be charged with obstructing a public officer in the

execution of his duties (Widerstand gegen die Staatsgewalt). When

she called her daughter, the police officers said that they would

look after the child. Thereupon she took her daughter by the hand,

went to the back door, rang her neighbour's doorbell and opened the

door. At that moment one of the police officers grabbed her,

twisted her left arm behind her back and her head knocked against

the corner of the window- ledge. The police officers then

handcuffed her. She lost consciousness for a short while. When she

came round, she found herself by the police car and noticed severe

pain in her left shoulder, which was being pressed towards her back

by one of the police officers. She was subsequently able to get

into the police car and was driven to the hospital.

8. The first applicant underwent two medical examinations. On

11 February 1986, Dr Schwering certified that he had examined the

applicant on 29 January and noticed bruises which were about 10cm

long on her right arm, considerable problems in moving her left

shoulder, and bruises on that shoulder. He also stated that she

would suffer long-term problems, in particular with her left

shoulder. She was put on sick-leave until 8 February 1986.

Furthermore, on 10 February 1986, Dr Krauspe, the chief surgeon at

the local hospital, certified that he had examined the first

applicant on 30 January 1986 and had reached an almost identical

diagnosis.

I. The criminal proceedings instituted against the first

applicant

9. On 29 January 1986, Police Constable (Polizeimeister) Bolte

laid an information against the first applicant. She was charged

with obstructing a public officer in the execution of his duties

contrary to Article 113 of the German Criminal Code

(Strafgesetzbuch), and of driving while under the influence of

alcohol contrary to Article 316 of the said code.

Police Constable Bolte stated in his report that after

Mrs Klaas had been informed that she had to undergo a blood test,

she had attempted to escape into the darkness of the back-yard,

whereupon he had grabbed her arm and stopped her.

The applicant had been very aggressive. When informed that

she was to be arrested, she had suddenly calmed down and declared

that she would come along when she had taken her daughter, whom he

had assumed to be about twelve years old, to a neighbour. The

police officers had agreed in order to avoid a further escalation of

the events. They had followed the applicants to the back door of

the house.

The first applicant had been about to follow her daughter

into the house. She tried to close the door behind her but Police

Constable Wildschut blocked the door open and Police Constable Bolte

grabbed the first applicant's right arm and pulled her outside. The

child went upstairs.

According to the report, Mrs Klaas struggled, struck out and

tried to free herself from the police officer's grip. Police

Constable Wildschut took her left arm and twisted it behind her

back, whilst Police Constable Bolte kept a tight grip on her right

arm.

With great difficulty the officers managed to control the

applicant, who was putting up a fight. They handcuffed her in order

to avoid further criminal offences being committed, in particular

injury to the person. On their way to the police car she had

attempted to throw herself to the ground, and he and his colleague

had had to hold her arms. At that point another police car arrived.

However, by that time, the applicant's neighbour had already offered

to take care of the child.

The officers noted on arrival at Lemgo Hospital that

Mrs Klaas had a graze on her right temple.

10. On 22 April 1986 the criminal proceedings against the first

applicant were discontinued by the public prosecutor's office

(Staatsanwaltschaft) at the Detmold Regional Court (Landgericht) for

two different reasons, namely that the offence of driving while

under the influence of alcohol was not proven and that the

applicant's guilt in resisting the police officers had been minimal

(gering) and there was no public interest in prosecuting.

In November 1986 the competent administrative authority

imposed an administrative fine of DM 500 for having committed the

"regulatory offence" (Ordnungswidrigkeit) of driving with a blood

alcohol content level of 0.82 per ml when 0.80 per ml was the legal

limit. A driving ban of one month was also imposed.

The Lemgo District Court (Amtsgericht) confirmed this

decision. The first applicant's subsequent appeal to the Hamm Court

of Appeal (Oberlandesgericht) and to the Federal Constitutional

Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht) were dismissed.

II. Proceedings brought by the first applicant against

the police officers

11. On 24 April 1986 the first applicant laid an information

against the police officers concerned. She alleged that they had

assaulted her contrary to Articles 223 and 230 of the Criminal Code.

In her pleadings of 24 April and 13 May 1986, Mrs Klaas claimed that

the police officers had used a disproportionate amount of force,

causing injuries to her head, left shoulder and upper right arm.

On 10 July 1986, following a telephone conversation between

her lawyer and an official of the public prosecutor's office in

which Mrs Klaas' allegations were withdrawn - allegedly after a

warning that criminal proceedings against her would otherwise be

continued - the proceedings against the police officers were

discontinued.

12. On 18 July 1986, the first applicant filed a complaint

(Dienstaufsichtsbeschwerde) with the Head of the Detmold District

Administration (Oberkreisdirektor) against the police officers

involved in the arrest. She stated that she had wanted to wait for

her neighbour to come to the door but that she had not been able to

as the bearded police officer had twisted her arm behind her back

and her head knocked against the brick window-ledge. Subsequently

she was forcibly taken to the police car where she was held with her

back up against the rear of the car. The bearded man continued to

pull her left shoulder back at regular intervals. At some point she

was dazed.

She maintained that the blood test showed the level of

alcohol to be 0.80 per ml. It was argued that the degree of force

used against an unarmed woman was incomprehensible on an objective

or subjective analysis; the mildest means of achieving the objective

should have been employed.

13. On 18 September 1986, the Head of the Detmold District

Administration, acting as the Police Department authority

(Kreispolizeibehörde), dismissed her complaint. In the decision, it

was stated in particular that after she had been informed that she

would have to give a blood sample, she had attempted to run away.

However, one of the police officers seized her arm and told her that

she was under arrest. Her request to take her daughter to a

neighbour's first was granted. When the first applicant opened the

door and tried to enter with her daughter, one of the police

officers held her right arm fast, whereupon she started to kick and

to hit out with her left hand. When the police officers held her

tight she tried to escape. She had to be handcuffed. It was not

accepted that her head knocked against the window-ledge at any

moment in the course of the arrest. He concluded that the use of

force had been justified and was not disproportionate to the aim

pursued, namely the taking of a blood test.

III. The first applicant's proceedings for compensation under

civil law

14. The first applicant instituted civil proceedings

in April 1987 against the Land North-Rhine Westphalia and the police

officers concerned. She claimed compensation for the injuries

sustained on 28 January 1986.

15. On 10 July 1987 the Detmold Regional Court, in a partial

judgment, dismissed her complaint against the police officers on the

ground that an official acting in the exercise of his duties does

not incur personal liability.

16. On 9 October 1987 the Detmold Regional Court held a hearing

in the case.

The applicant's neighbour was the first to give evidence.

She said that she had noticed Mrs Klaas's very blotchy and

tear-stained face despite the dim light, had seen the blond police

officer holding her arms behind her back and had feared that she

would collapse at any moment as her knees had given way and she had

bent forward suddenly several times. The neighbour stated on

further questioning that, judging from the first applicant's

behaviour, she must have been in terrible pain. The first applicant

complained about the pain in her left shoulder and asked the police

officers to remove the handcuffs. This request was repeated by the

neighbour but refused by the police officers.

Police Constable Bolte confirmed the facts as set out in his

report of 29 January 1986 (see paragraph 9 above). He added that he

was not sure whether the first applicant had deliberately not blown

into the breathalyser for a sufficient time or whether she had had

genuine difficulties. He stated that she had not knocked her head

against the wall when she was pulled outside, however he remained

unable to account for the injury to her right cheek to which he had

referred in the aforementioned report. Upon further questioning he

corroborated the neighbour's evidence that Mrs Klaas had requested

that the handcuffs be removed and he explained that they had refused

this request as they had feared more trouble. He said that she had

not complained about any pains in her shoulder and that she had

certainly not knocked her head against the wall. However, he

acknowledged that she did not have the head injury before they spoke

to her and said that he did not know whether she had got the injury

to her right cheek during the scuffle when the handcuffs had been

put on. He could not remember who had kept hold of Mrs Klaas until

they had put her into the police car, or whether she had bent

forward suddenly owing, for instance, to a jerking on her handcuffs

and the resulting pain.

Police Constable Wildschut was the next to give evidence.

He confirmed the general circumstances of the first applicant's

arrest as described by Police Constable Bolte, although he was not

prepared to say that she had run away. After the applicant had

opened the front door she had attempted to close it behind her but

he had held on to it while his colleague kept a tight grip on her.

As it was completely dark just outside the door he could not exclude

the possibility that she could have knocked her head on the wall or

on something else. In any event he did not notice it happening and

it was only later that he became aware of her head injury. He

stated that Mrs Klaas had vehemently resisted arrest which was why

he had taken her left arm and twisted it behind her back and then

handcuffed her arms in that position. He could not remember whether

she had been handcuffed in the back-yard or whether they had first

taken her to the street. He confirmed that she had requested that

the handcuffs be removed but did not remember her complaining about

any pain - in particular pain in her left shoulder. She continued,

without success, to resist accompanying them, but he could not be

sure who had been holding on to her while they waited for the second

police car.

On further questioning Police Constable Wildschut stated

that he did not remember whether she had bent forward suddenly while

she was still handcuffed. She had resisted arrest and had been

lashing out when he had twisted her arm behind her back, but he

assumed that she had not intended to assault either him or his

colleague. He denied that he had pushed the first applicant's head

against the window-ledge.

Finally, the second applicant, Monika, gave evidence. She

stated that she remembered the incident with her mother and the

police officers in their back-yard. She said, in particular, that

her mother had rung the doorbell and opened the door using a key.

Monika had then gone into the house and closed the door behind her.

She was not aware that one of the police officers had forcibly kept

the door open. Having closed the door behind her, she said that she

had managed to see through the plain glass door panel that one of

the police officers had pushed her mother's head against the wall.

She emphasised that the police officer had repeatedly pushed her

mother's head against the wall next to the door using his hand. The

officer concerned had blond hair. Her mother and the police officer

had been close to the door, approximately one metre away from it.

She herself had not been right in front of the glass panel. She had

subsequently run upstairs to their neighbour. She further explained

that, when her mother had rung the doorbell and opened the door, she

had been standing to Monika's right. Her mother had opened the door

only a little bit, and she had just been able to get in. She had

then immediately closed the door behind her.

Whilst she did not recognise the police officers involved

she thought that the dark-haired police officer had a beard. She

confirmed that the light had been poor, but said that it had been

light in the staircase. She had not seen either of the police

officers twisting her mother's arm behind her back.

17. On 30 October 1987 the Detmold Regional Court dismissed the

first applicant's compensation claims against the Land North-Rhine

Westphalia. It held as follows:

"The plaintiff has no claim under Articles 839 and 847 of

the Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch) taken together with

Article 34 of the Basic Law for breach of official duty to

her on the part of Police Constables Bolte and Wildschut.

The Chamber is admittedly convinced that the plaintiff

incurred the injuries complained of when she was arrested by

the two police officers. In any event the plaintiff ended

up with a graze on her temple, contusion of the left

shoulder and probably also concussion, as was also confirmed

in part by witnesses Bolte and Wildschut and moreover does

not seem to be seriously contested by the defendant Land.

These injuries were probably sustained by the plaintiff in

the context of her arrest.

It does not follow, however, that the defendant Land is

liable in damages.

The arrest itself was not unlawful. Even if the plaintiff

had no intention whatsoever to abscond, the situation

nevertheless appeared otherwise to the police officers. The

plaintiff was under suspicion of having committed a criminal

offence, namely driving under the influence of alcohol in

road traffic contrary to Article 316 of the Criminal Code,

as the police officers had found that the plaintiff's breath

smelt of alcohol. On the basis of the credible statements

of witnesses Bolte and Wildschut, the Chamber also assumes

that the plaintiff's conduct, first after failing to blow

satisfactorily into the breathalyser and then later at the

front door, gave both witnesses the impression that she

intended to evade further investigation, namely the taking

of a blood sample, by absconding. The Chamber can

understand that the police officers could have foreseen very

considerable difficulties if the plaintiff managed to get

into the building without the two witnesses. First, the

police officers could not know whether the plaintiff would

have allowed them access to her flat at all. Secondly, the

plaintiff would have had an opportunity of consuming more

alcohol or at least claiming that she had done so, thereby

making ascertainment of her blood alcohol level impossible

or significantly more difficult to obtain.

In the light of these circumstances the arrest does not

appear to be disproportionate either, but a perfectly

reasonable means of ensuring that the further investigations

could be carried out.

It is for the plaintiff to prove that in this initially

lawful exercise of their duty the police officers went

further than was necessary, by handling the plaintiff too

roughly and in so doing injuring her or even by deliberately

inflicting the injuries on her. Just as an attacker must

prove that a person attacked by him, acting in self-defence,

exceeded the limits of necessary self-defence (see Federal

Court of Justice - Bundesgerichtshof -, Versicherungsrecht

1971, pp. 629 et seq.), so also, in the Chamber's opinion,

must this apply in a case such as the present one: a person

who puts forward claims in respect of injuries suffered

during a lawful arrest must prove that the police officers

went beyond what was necessary and thereby caused the

injuries.

The plaintiff, however, has not succeeded in providing such

proof. On the evidence which has been taken, the Chamber is

not convinced that the police officers caused the

plaintiff's injuries by exceeding what was necessary when

arresting her.

With respect to the origin of the graze, the evidence of

witness Monika Klaas, the plaintiff's daughter, conflicts

with that of witnesses Bolte and Wildschut. Whereas witness

Klaas claims to have seen one of the police officers

repeatedly knocking the plaintiff's head against the wall by

the door, the two police officers deny this. None of these

three witnesses can be regarded as not having an interest in

these proceedings; the two police officers could certainly

expect disciplinary proceedings and a resumption of the

criminal investigation if these proved to be the facts,

while witness Klaas has a natural interest in supporting her

mother's claim and account of the facts. It is not clear to

the Chamber which of the statements corresponds to what

really happened. Definite findings of fact can therefore

not be made in this respect.

The largely disinterested witness Krüger [the neighbour] was

unable in her testimony to confirm the plaintiff's assertion

that witness Wildschut had pulled her arms upwards while she

was handcuffed. Neither can such a conclusion be drawn

merely from the fact that according to witness Krüger's

statements the plaintiff leant forward jerkily several times

while witness Wildschut stood behind her.

Neither the balance of probability nor general experience

militate in favour of accepting the plaintiff's version of

events. The Chamber considers it by no means improbable

that the plaintiff sustained all her injuries when she

resisted being handcuffed. In the process her head could

easily have knocked against the wall; the shoulder contusion

could also have occurred when she struggled while being

restrained by the police and when the handcuffs were being

put on her.

For these reasons the claim must be dismissed."

18. On 21 September 1988 the Hamm Court of Appeal dismissed the

first applicant's appeal. It upheld the decision of the Detmold

Regional Court that Mrs Klaas had not proved that excessive force

had been used against her by the police officers.

19. On 8 February 1989 a panel of three judges of the Federal

Constitutional Court declined to accept for adjudication the first

applicant's constitutional complaint on the ground that it did not

offer sufficient prospects of success. It considered in particular

that the Court of Appeal's assessment of the evidence did not appear

arbitrary or otherwise in violation of constitutional law.

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION

20. In an application (no. 15473/89) lodged with the Commission

on 11 July 1989, Mrs Hildegard Klaas, the first applicant, submitted

that, in the presence of her daughter, Monika, she had been

subjected in the course of her arrest to inhuman and degrading

treatment by the police contrary to Article 3 (art. 3) and that this

treatment had violated her right guaranteed under Article 8 (art. 8)

to respect for her private and family life. Monika Klaas, the

second applicant, contended that the aforementioned treatment of her

mother in her presence had violated her right to respect for her

private and family life, contrary to Article 8 (art. 8), in addition

to subjecting her to inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to

Article 3 (art. 3).

21. On 9 July 1991 the Commission declared the applicants'

complaints admissible and in its report of 21 May 1992 (Article 31)

(art. 31), expressed the opinion:

(a) by ten votes to five that there had been a violation of

Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the first applicant;

(b) by ten votes to five that no separate issue had arisen

under Article 8 (art. 8) in respect of the first applicant;

(c) by fourteen votes to one that there had been no

violation of Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the second applicant;

(d) by eight votes to seven that there had been a violation

of Article 8 (art. 8) in respect of the second applicant.

The full text of the Commission's opinion and of the various

separate opinions contained in the report is reproduced as an annex

to this judgment*.

_______________

* Note by the Registrar: for practical reasons this annex will

appear only with the printed version of the judgment (volume 269 of

Series A of the Publications of the Court), but a copy of the

Commission's report is available from the registry.

_______________

FINAL SUBMISSIONS MADE TO THE COURT BY THE GOVERNMENT

22. The Government in their memorial of 12 November 1992 invited

the Court to find "that the applicants did not suffer violations of

their rights under Article 3 (art. 3) or Article 8 (art. 8) of the

Convention".

AS TO THE LAW

I. THE FIRST APPLICANT

A. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 3 (art. 3)

23. The first applicant, Mrs Klaas, alleged that the treatment

to which she had been subjected by the police officers in the course

of her arrest constituted inhuman and degrading treatment contrary

to Article 3 (art. 3), according to which:

"No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or

degrading treatment or punishment."

She maintained that, as a result of the altercation with the

police, she had sustained, inter alia, injuries to her head and

shoulder. These were supported by medical evidence (see paragraph 8

above) and were also illustrated by the photographs submitted to the

Court by the Delegate of the Commission immediately prior to the

hearing.

24. The Commission accepted her allegation. In accordance with

the view expressed by the national courts, it was of the opinion

that her arrest had been lawful (see paragraphs 13, 16 and 18

above). However, even assuming that she had resisted arrest and had

been attempting to abscond, it considered that the use of force by

police officers resulting in serious injuries had to be seen as

inhuman and degrading treatment if it could not be shown by the

Government that the force used was necessary in order for the police

to accomplish their lawful duties.

According to the Commission, as the first applicant was

injured in the course of an arrest, while under police control, it

was incumbent on the Government to produce evidence showing facts

which cast doubt on the account given by the victim which was

supported by photographs and medical evidence. In the absence of

any convincing other explanation as to the cause of the injuries

suffered during her arrest, her allegations of a disproportionate

use of force seemed plausible.

25. The Government argued that the first applicant's left

shoulder had been damaged prior to the arrest, but otherwise

accepted the fact that as a result she had suffered bruising to her

shoulders as well as grazes on her face and her arm. They

disagreed, however, with the applicant's account of how the injuries

came about and maintained that the injuries were accidental and

regrettable consequences of a lawful arrest.

26. The Court notes that the parties to the national proceedings

did not dispute the fact that the injuries as shown by medical

evidence and illustrated by the photographs actually arose in the

course of the arrest. Indeed, this was not denied by the police

officers when they gave evidence before the Detmold Regional Court.

However, differing versions of how those injuries actually

came about have been put forward by the applicants and the

Government.

Mrs Klaas claimed that she had voluntarily agreed to provide

a specimen of breath and that when that had failed she had only

asked that her eight year-old daughter could go and stay with her

neighbour in order that she could accompany the police officers to

the hospital for a blood test. She denied the police officers'

allegation that there was any danger of her absconding. She

insisted that the police officers were responsible for her head

getting knocked against the wall, a fact corroborated by her

daughter who claimed to have observed the scene through the plain

glass window panel. Furthermore, she argued that the force used by

the police officers was disproportionate to the aim of securing the

evidence for the offence of driving under the influence of alcohol.

It was not necessary for two male police officers, well-trained in

dealing with situations of this kind, to have assaulted a woman in

this way.

The Government, on the other hand, contested the allegation

that the injuries were the result of a greater degree of force being

used by the police officers than was necessary in the circumstances.

They contended that she had inflicted the injuries upon herself as

by resisting arrest and attempting to escape she had provoked the

firm and rapid use of physical force against her.

27. The Court recalls that various proceedings have arisen out

of this incident, some of which have been abandoned.

First, criminal proceedings were instituted against

Mrs Klaas on 29 January 1986 for two separate offences of driving

under the influence of drink and resisting arrest, but these were

discontinued on 22 April 1986 by the public prosecutor's office at

the Detmold Regional Court; she was none the less fined for the

regulatory offence of driving with excess alcohol in her blood (see

paragraphs 9-10 above).

Secondly, on 24 April 1986, Mrs Klaas laid an information

against the police officers alleging that they had assaulted her and

caused her injuries. This, however, was withdrawn some weeks later

(see paragraph 11 above).

Thirdly, on 18 September 1986 her further complaint

of 18 July was dismissed by the Head of the Detmold District

Administration, who did not consider it necessary to take

disciplinary action (see paragraphs 12-13 above).

28. Exclusively civil proceedings were brought by Mrs Klaas for

compensation from the State in April 1987:

(a) the Detmold Regional Court accepted that the said

injuries occurred as a result of the incident with the police, but

held that they did not give rise to a compensation claim as

Mrs Klaas had failed to prove that the police officers had injured

her by a use of force disproportionate to the aim of pursuing the

investigations against her. After having heard various witnesses,

it found that her version of the events was not very probable and

that it did not seem unlikely that she had injured herself while

resisting the attempts to handcuff her (see paragraph 17 above);

(b) the Hamm Court of Appeal confirmed this decision (see

paragraph 18 above);

(c) a panel of three judges of the Federal Constitutional

Court declined to accept for adjudication her constitional

complaint. It noted in particular that the Court of Appeal's

assessment of the evidence did not appear arbitrary or otherwise in

violation of constitutional law (see paragraph 19 above).

29. The Court recalls that under the Convention system, the

establishment and verification of the facts is primarily a matter

for the Commission (Articles 28 para. 1 and 31) (art. 28-1,

art. 31). The Court is not, however, bound by the Commission's

findings of fact and remains free to make its own appreciation in

the light of all the material before it (see the Stocké v. Germany

judgment of 19 March 1991, Series A no. 199, p. 18, para. 53, and

the Cruz Varas and Others v. Sweden judgment of 20 March 1991,

Series A no. 201, p. 29, para. 74).

It is further recalled that it is not normally within the

province of the European Court to substitute its own assessment of

the facts for that of the domestic courts and, as a general rule, it

is for these courts to assess the evidence before them (see, inter

alia, the Edwards v. the United Kingdom judgment of

16 December 1992, Series A no. 247-B, p. 12, para. 34, and the Vidal

v. Belgium judgment of 22 April 1992, Series A no. 235-B, pp. 32-33,

paras. 33-34).

30. The admitted injuries sustained by the first applicant were

consistent with either her or the police officers' version of

events. The national courts, however, found against her. In

reaching the conclusion that she could have injured herself while

resisting arrest and that the arresting officers had not used

excessive force, the Regional Court, in particular, had the benefit

of seeing the various witnesses give their evidence and of

evaluating their credibility. No material has been adduced in the

course of the Strasbourg proceedings which could call into question

the findings of the national courts and add weight to the

applicant's allegations either before the Commission or the Court.

The Court would distinguish the present case from that of

Tomasi v. France (see the judgment of 27 August 1992, Series A

no. 241-A, pp. 40-42, paras. 108-115) where certain inferences could

be made from the fact that Mr Tomasi had sustained unexplained

injuries during forty-eight hours spent in police custody.

No cogent elements have been provided which could lead the

Court to depart from the findings of fact of the national courts.

31. Accordingly no violation of Article 3 (art. 3) can be found

to have occurred.

B. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 (art. 8)

32. The first applicant complained that as the aforementioned

treatment took place on private property in the presence of her

eight year-old daughter, it had also given rise to a breach of her

right to respect for her private and family life under Article 8

(art. 8).

This claim was contested by the Government. The Commission

did not consider it necessary to examine this complaint in view of

its conclusion that there had been a violation of Article 3

(art. 3).

33. The first applicant's complaint under Article 8 (art. 8) is

essentially based on the same disputed facts which have already been

considered in connection with Article 3 (art. 3) and found not to

have been established (see paragraphs 29-31 above). This being so,

the said complaint does not call for separate examination.

II. THE SECOND APPLICANT

34. The second applicant alleged that, having regard to the

police officers' excessive use of force against her mother in her

presence, she suffered inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to

Article 3 (art. 3) as well as a violation of her right to respect

for her private and family life under Article 8 (art. 8).

35. Both the Government and the Commission contested the former

claim. The Commission accepted the latter allegation as it took the

view that Monika Klaas, a minor, had suffered considerable damage to

her physical and moral integrity as a result of watching her

mother's forcible arrest. This was denied by the Government.

36. It follows from paragraph 31 that the facts on which the

second applicant relies are not established. Accordingly the Court

considers that her complaints are likewise unfounded.

FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT

1. Holds by six votes to three that there has been no violation

of Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the first applicant;

2. Holds by six votes to three that the first applicant's

complaint under Article 8 (art. 8) does not call for separate

examination;

3. Holds unanimously that there has been no violation of

Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the second applicant;

4. Holds by six votes to three that there has been no violation

of Article 8 (art. 8) in respect of the second applicant.

Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public

hearing in the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 22 September

1993.

Signed: Rolv RYSSDAL

President

Signed: Marc-André EISSEN

Registrar

In accordance with Article 51 para. 2 (art. 51-2) of the

Convention and Rule 53 para. 2 of the Rules of Court, the dissenting

opinions of Mr Pettiti, Mr Walsh and Mr Spielmann are annexed to

this judgment.

Initialled: R. R.

Initialled: M.-A. E

DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE PETTITI

(Translation)

I voted with the minority of the Chamber in support of the

view that there had been a breach of Articles 3 and 8 (art. 3,

art. 8) of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The reasoning adopted by the majority of the Chamber, on

both Article 3 and Article 8 (art. 3, art. 8), seems to me to be

based on an inaccurate interpretation of the issues raised and an

erroneous application of the Convention.

As regards police violence, which is a serious problem

throughout Europe, the key issue raised by the Klaas case was that

of the burden of proof. The majority did not recognise this.

In my view, which I think is supported by several European

codes of criminal procedure, the major acknowledged principle is

that the role of the police is to ensure the safety and protection

of the public.

While the police must intervene to provide the necessary

protection and law enforcement, they have to respect fundamental

rights when doing so. The basic rule is that the police must

protect the individual from any violence and ensure people's

physical safety. When called upon to act in regard to serious

criminal offences, they are not entitled to use violence other than

in circumstances of self-defence (légitime défense) or forceful

resistance, and then the response must be proportionate to the

danger.

In such a case, the burden of proving the need for self-

defence or the fact of forceful resistance must be on the police,

since otherwise police officers could commit violence and then

maintain that there had been forceful resistance, thus throwing on

the victims the onus of proof, which would be almost impossible to

discharge in the face of statements made by sworn officials.

The issue before the Court was a particularly serious one

and wholly analogous to the one dealt with in the Tomasi v. France*

judgment, contrary to the majority's opinion. It was an established

fact that violence had occurred during the period of arrest, when

police violence is prohibited as it is during police custody. The

violence could clearly be imputed to police officers as in the

Tomasi case, in which the European Court seems to have indicated

that Article 3 (art. 3) applied notwithstanding the physical level

of severity of the violence.

_______________

* Judgment of 27 August 1992, Series A no. 241-A.

_______________

The reasoning used by the Court in order to reject the

Commission's opinion that there had been a breach does not seem to

me to be adequate. The majority appear to take the view that the

contrary decision is justified by the Court's assessing the facts

differently from the Commission.

But the Commission, like the Court, based its opinion on the

facts as set out at the time the application was lodged and there

was no new evidence produced before the Commission and the Court.

In not substantively answering the main question and not, in

my view, providing sufficient reasoning for its decision, in that

the decision went contrary to the Commission's opinion founded on

the burden of proof, the majority left unanswered the vital

questions that have arisen in Europe in the sphere of police

violence. At a time when police authorities are making a

considerable effort to improve the teaching of professional ethics

in police colleges, the Klaas case provided the opportunity to set

out within the context of Article 3 (art. 3) of the Convention the

issue of the burden of proof and the ingredients of forceful

resistance and self-defence.

The majority's decision seems to me to be out of step with

the findings of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture

which has noted the seriousness of police violence in the countries

it has visited. In particular, the report on Germany mentioned the

Committee's concerns in this connection (see pages 18-19, 63 and 86

of doc. CPT/Inf (93) 13).

The decision also seems to be contrary to the teaching in

European police colleges and to police forces' codes of professional

ethics in Europe. There can be no doubt that senior police officers

in Europe wish to be able to prevent any "blunders" being committed

by junior police officers, sometimes owing to insufficient training

and education in this sphere.

The majority did not, in my view, take sufficient account of

a number of data that are, however, of great assistance when

assessing the facts:

1. German legislative provisions;

2. German police regulations; and

3. the reports of the European Committee for the Prevention

of Torture.

o

o o

In traditional national criminal law and according to the

general principles of criminal law in Europe, police violence cannot

be dealt with in the same way as other violence between individuals.

The prohibition on such violence is a requirement of the role of the

police, which is primarily to protect people.

Justifying circumstances and the defence of provocation in

respect of ordinary assaults by private individuals and by police

officers are not analysed in the same way in criminal law.

Policemen are never authorised to assault people, other than

in cases of forceful resistance to them in the execution of their

duties or in self-defence, and then it is for the police to prove

such forceful resistance or that an act was in self-defence.

Even in these cases, the police must prove that their

reaction was proportionate. In the instant case, however, certain

assaults have been established and are not disputed. The police did

not prove forceful resistance and their reaction was certainly

disproportionate.

The circumstances of the case in comparison with the Tomasi

case (murder suspect) are proportionately more to be regretted

although the violence was nearly of the same intensity in both

cases. At all events, the criterion of the degree of seriousness

was not dealt with in the Tomasi case.

The reports of the European Committee for the Prevention of

Torture, which are fairly damning of several police forces, are all

pleas for help to lawyers in the context of the European Convention

on Human Rights and the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly

Resolution 690 (1979) on the Declaration on the Police.

In the instant case, even if the policeman's responsibility

for the shoulder injury is ruled out, the existence of the marks of

other blows are not in dispute. They cannot be attributed to

forceful resistance by the person arrested and were certainly due to

police violence. This is all the more regrettable as the conduct of

the police officers from the moment that they decided to take the

applicant to the police station cannot be separated from what gave

rise to the incident. The offence complained of was moreover a

minor one, a regulatory offence.

In its judgment the Detmold Regional Court said:

"The Chamber is admittedly convinced that the plaintiff

incurred the injuries complained of when she was arrested by

the two police officers. In any event the plaintiff ended

up with a graze on her temple, contusion of the left

shoulder and probably also concussion, as was also confirmed

in part by witnesses Bolte and Wildschut and moreover does

not seem to be seriously contested by the defendant Land.

These injuries were probably sustained by the plaintiff in

the context of her arrest. ... It is not clear to the

Chamber which of the statements corresponds to what really

happened. Definite findings of fact can therefore not be

made in this respect."

The police cannot deal with peaceful law-abiding citizens

and dangerous criminals in the same way - that would be a negation

of the role of the police. The public have a claim on the police

for protection, and the police have a corresponding duty to provide

it.

Similarly, in the case of a citizen's arrest of an offender

caught red-handed (which is authorised, inter alia, in Great

Britain), the issue of liability is looked at differently from

police intervention in similar circumstances.

A dispute between private persons that leads to violence

cannot be compared to police intervention. The bases of

consideration in criminal law are different. The concepts of

self-defence, justification and provocation are governed by

different legal rules in the case of assaults by the police.

These distinctions are observed in most national codes of

ethics for the police. The major consideration is that a police

officer is, above all, there to guarantee the protection of the

citizen's physical inviolability.

The behaviour of the two policemen was contrary to their own

police code of ethics as recognised in German police colleges. Yet

there were not even any administrative or disciplinary penalties

- another point in common with the Tomasi case. Out of deference to

their police forces, State authorities show little zeal in

proceedings relating to police blunders. The European Committee for

the Prevention of Torture deplores this attitude, which runs

contrary to Article 3 (art. 3) of the Convention.

On the other hand, at a time when the number of attacks on

the police by subversive elements is increasing and the police after

find themselves actually or potentially outnumbered, the State and

the courts must support the police, who are essential for the

maintenance of public order and the upholding of democracy.

The question that arises on a charge of forceful resistance

is whether it is for the prosecution or the defence (at the trial or

pre-trial stage) to show, firstly, that the assault actually took

place and was unjustified and, secondly, that the response was

necessary and measured. Logically, on account both of the

presumption of innocence and of the general principles concerning

the onus of proof it is for the prosecution to prove that the legal

requirement of forceful resistance was satisfied and that the

violence was justified.

Nor must it be forgotten that police officers and public

servants who, without any legitimate cause, commit violence on

people are punishable under the criminal law. This is so that

officials or officers cannot, if they commit physical violence,

always plead that their assault was justified.

Did not Hegel write: "An attack is a negation of the law;

defence is a negation of that negation and is therefore the

application of the law"? It is no doubt for this reason that a

right of self-defence (légitime défense) occasionally arises, as the

code itself specifies, in defence of others as well as of oneself*,

and also that self-defence can only be pleaded if the attack was

unjustified, in other words if it breached the peace, and if the

defensive police response was a measured one and restored the peace

without otherwise disturbing it.

_______________

* See, for example, as regards French Criminal Law: Lyons tribunal

de grande instance, 16 October 1973, Juris-Classeur périodique

(JCP), 1974, II, 17812, note by Bouzat, comment by Larguier, Revue

de science criminelle et de droit comparé sc. crim., 1975, p. 406.

See also, on the protection of the property of others, Blois

Criminal Court, 11 January 1978, and Orléans Court of Appeal,

17 September 1979, cited by A. Romerio, "La violence légitime",

J.C.P., 1980, I, 2974.

_______________

If a policeman relies on self-defence against the person

arrested or on forceful resistance by that person, the resistance of

the person arrested must have been impossible to overcome.

German legislation is in line with this. The following are

quoted by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture:

1. Under the terms of Article 1, paragraph 1, of the Basic Law:

"The dignity of man shall be inviolable. To respect and protect it

shall be the duty of all state authority". Article 2, paragraph 2,

states: "Everyone shall have the right to life and to inviolability

of his person ...". The Federal Constitutional Court has ruled that

the latter provision also applies to any harm caused by

psychological or mental torture and by equivalent methods of

questioning.

In addition, Article 104, paragraph 1, of the Basic Law

states: " ... Detained persons may not be subjected to mental nor to

physical ill-treatment."

2. Many of the Penal Code's provisions make acts of torture and

other forms of ill-treatment an offence. Among the most important

are sections 340 and 343.

Section 340 states:

"(1) A public official who commits, or permits to be

committed, bodily harm during the exercise of his duties or

in connection therewith, shall be punished by imprisonment

from three months to five years. In less serious cases

imprisonment of up to three years or a fine shall be

imposed.

(2) If serious bodily harm (section 224) is committed, not

less than two years' imprisonment shall be imposed and, in

less serious cases, imprisonment from three months to five

years."

Section 343 provides that:

"(1) Whoever, in his capacity as public official, whose

duties involve acting in:

1. a criminal proceeding, or a proceeding to

order authorised custody;

2. an administrative fine proceeding; or

3. a disciplinary proceeding or an honour court

or professional court proceeding;

physically abuses another, or makes use of violence against

him, or threatens him with violence, or mentally torments

him, in order to coerce him to give testimony, or not to do

so, in the proceeding, shall be punished by imprisonment

from one to ten years."

By way of comparison, as regards police-custody measures

applicable to anybody and the behaviour required of police officers,

the new Article 10 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

provides:

"The police shall be responsible for any person arrested;

such a person must not be subjected to any violence or any

inhuman or degrading treatment by police officers or

others."

Similarly, Article 9 of the Code of Criminal Procedure

provides:

"Where a police officer is empowered by law to use force

..., he shall only use such force as is strictly necessary

and proportionate to the purpose to be achieved."

On a point which the Court did not have to deal with

directly but which throws extra light on the impugned police

behaviour, namely the arrangements for testing blood alcohol level,

some principles of general police regulations on the subject should

be remembered.

Taking to the police station for a blood alcohol level test

The fact of a person's being unable or unwilling to be

breathalysed means that his blood alcohol level must be tested but

does not in itself entail any sanction.

In the instant case the applicant was merely unable to be

breathalysed; furthermore, this fact was established in the

applicant's private back-yard and not in connection with any

judicially authorised house search.

As regards handcuffs, police codes of ethics generally

provide as follows:

Use of handcuffs

As an example, Article 803 of the French Code of Criminal

Procedure, as amended by the Act of 4 January 1993, provides that a

person shall not be handcuffed unless he can be regarded as a danger

to others or to himself or as being likely to try to abscond. The

German rule is similar. Other than in one of these situations, the

use of handcuffs is therefore prohibited. Where it is allowed, it

is for the officers whose duty it is to accompany the person

concerned to assess the best way of putting on the handcuffs, having

regard to the danger to others or to the person himself or to the

risk that the person concerned may escape. Coercion by handcuffing

is justified only in such cases.

Forceful resistance to police action

There is forceful resistance when a person resists the

action of a police officer by a violent act (and not merely

passively).

o

o o

In their reasoning in paragraph 30 of the judgment the

majority seem to want to invalidate the Commission's opinion on the

basis of a different assessment of the facts and in the absence of

any fresh evidence relating to that assessment subsequent to the

Commission's opinion.

But the discrepancy really concerns the primordial issue of

the burden of proof, which the Commission took as its basis.

I accordingly consider that, as the evidence stood, the

Commission's observations remained apposite, in particular the

following paragraphs of its report.

"82. The Commission recalls that ill-treatment must

attain a certain level of severity if it is to fall within

the scope of Article 3 (art. 3). The assessment of this

minimum is, in the nature of things, relative; it depends on

all the circumstances of the case, such as the duration of

the treatment, its physical or mental effects and, in some

cases, the sex, age and state of health of the victim, etc.

(Eur. Court H. R., Ireland v. the United Kingdom judgment of

18 January 1978, Series A no. 25, pp. 65-67,

paras. 162-167; Tyrer v. the United Kingdom judgment of

25 April 1978, Series A no. 26, pp. 14-15, paras. 29-30;

Soering v. the United Kingdom judgment of 7 July 1989,

Series A no. 161, p. 39, para. 100).

83. Such treatment causing, if not actual bodily injury,

at least intense physical and mental suffering falls into

the category of inhuman treatment within the meaning of

Article 3 (art. 3). It is degrading if it arouses in the

person subjected thereto feelings of fear, anguish and

inferiority capable of humiliating and debasing this person

and possibly breaking his or her physical or moral

resistance (Eur. Court H. R., Ireland v. the United Kingdom

judgment, loc. cit., p. 68, para. 174; Guzzardi v. Italy

judgment of 6 November 1980, Series A no. 39, p. 40,

para. 107; Abdulaziz, Cabales and Balkandali v. the United

Kingdom judgment of 28 May 1985, Series A no. 94, p. 42,

paras. 90-91; Soering judgment, loc. cit.).

...

98. As regards the question whether the force used by

Police Constables Bolte and Wildschut against the first

applicant for the purpose of her arrest was strictly

proportionate, the Commission attaches particular weight to

the injuries suffered by the first applicant in the course

of her arrest (Eur. Court H. R., Tomasi v. France judgment

of 27 August 1992, Series A no. 241-A, opinion of the

Commission, pp. 51-52, paras. 92-100, 105).

...

100. The respondent Government have not explained that

the first applicant's injuries resulted from a use of force

proportionate in the circumstances of her arrest. They

regarded these injuries as accidental and regrettable

consequences of an arrest which had as such been lawful.

Their submissions in this respect were based upon the

findings of the Detmold Regional Court in its judgment of

30 October 1987 and upon the statements of Police Constables

Bolte and Wildschut, heard as witnesses in these

proceedings.

...

102. The Commission, in examining whether there has been

a violation of Article 3 (art. 3), cannot share the approach

to the question of proof and assessment of evidence, as

expressed by the respondent Government on the basis of the

Regional Court's judgment.

103. The Commission recalls that in cases where injuries

occurred in the course of police custody, it is not

sufficient for the Government to point at other possible

causes of injuries, but it is incumbent on the Government to

produce evidence showing facts which cast doubt on the

account given by the victim and supported by medical

evidence (see Eur. Court H. R., Ireland v. the United

Kingdom, Series B no. 23-I, p. 413; see also, mutatis

mutandis, Tomasi judgment, loc. cit., opinion of the

Commission, p. 52, para. 99; Bozano v. France judgment of

18 December 1986, Series A no. 111, p. 26, para. 59).

104. Such considerations likewise apply in cases where a

person is arrested by police authorities and thereby

subjected to their power. In the present case, having

regard to the injuries suffered by the first applicant in

the course of her arrest, her allegations of a

disproportionate use of force seem plausible in the absence

of any evidence or convincing other explanation."

o

o o

In its decision the German civil court, which did not

consider the matter from the point of view of the European

Convention, gave no relevant ground, in my view, for concluding that

there has been no breach. That court was dealing with a different

legal issue (an action for damages). The European Court was not

bound by its decision.

Furthermore, that court did not choose between the two

versions of the facts and did not rule out violence. The police

version therefore cannot be accepted as the only accurate,

established one. Police violence must be punished, because the

police play a major role in safeguarding public order and democracy.

The police are all the more effective and respected when the public

know that if there are "blunders", there will be administrative or

judicial sanctions.

o

o o

As to Article 8 (art. 8), the majority have not, in my view,

provided valid reasons for their decision or dealt with the problem

that arose. This was the following.

In the circumstances of the case, even on the assumption

that there had been no breach of Article 3 (art. 3), had there been

a breach of Article 8 (art. 8) in respect of the first applicant

(the mother)?. The circumstances of the case - possible venial

traffic offence, no refusal by the applicant to be breathalysed,

police intervention within the inner courtyard, private residence,

disproportion between the strength of the two young policemen and

that of the victim, humiliation of the latter - were sufficient to

warrant finding a breach of Article 8 (art. 8).

As regards the second applicant, even on the assumption that

the police violence would have been justified in another similar

case in respect of the mother, the assessment of proportionality had

to be different in the case of a mother arrested on the pretext of

an offence - and a trifling one at that - in the presence of one or

more of her children. The policemen were under a duty to weigh up

the impact on the child and the resulting humiliation both for the

mother and for the child, in particular on account of the use of

handcuffs. The majority did not really take these two aspects into

account.

Conclusion

The scope of the judgment is open to question, since the

issue of the burden of proof has not been expressly decided.

On the whole, the Court's finding that there has been no

breach seems to me an inadequate response to the problem raised.

For all the foregoing reasons, I therefore voted for finding

that there had been a breach of both Article 3 and Article 8

(art. 3, art. 8) of the European Convention.

DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE WALSH

1. This case has arisen from an encounter between the first

applicant Hildegard Klaas, then accompanied by her eight year-old

daughter Monika, on 28 January 1986, with two male police officers.

At the time of the encounter the applicant Hildegard Klaas was

48 years old and the police officers were respectively 26 years old

and 33 years old. On that date the applicant had apparently driven

her motor car, in which her daughter was a passenger, through a red

traffic light. That incident did not result in any damage to person

or property, but had apparently been observed by the two police

officers who followed her to the back entrance to the block of flats

where she lived to which she had driven her motor car. Because the

police detected a smell of alcohol on her breath she was requested

to take a breathalyser test. The applicant apparently failed to do

this satisfactorily in the sense that there appeared to be some

breathing difficulty on her part and when requested she agreed to

undergo a blood test. As that test would involve her going to the

police station she was formally arrested by one of the police

officers who physically restrained her. There is no doubt that, as

from that moment, she was in the custody of the police. All the

subsequent injuries sustained by the applicant accordingly took

place during that period of custody. I cannot therefore accept as a

valid distinction the fact that in the case of Tomasi v. France (see

the judgment of 27 August 1992, Series A no. 241-A), the applicant

had been in custody for many hours. Whether one is in the custody

of the police for but a few minutes or for a few days makes no

difference to the principle involved. When the police take a person

into custody they have automatically assumed the duty and obligation

to save such person from harm whether from members of the police or

from any other party. Once a person's liberty has been restrained

by the police, she or he is in police custody, whether or not formal

words of arrest have been pronounced. Once it has been established

that physical injury has been sustained by such person while in

police custody, the burden falls upon the police or their State to

show that such injuries were not caused or brought about by the

actions of the police or their want of care.

2. The evidence clearly established that the injuries sustained

by the applicant were serious injuries and amount to infringements

of her bodily integrity. Mrs Klaas's injuries were examined by a

doctor on the day following the incident and she was ill from

28 January to 8 February. The findings of the first doctor were

subsequently confirmed by other doctors and photographs were taken

on 29 January which showed what her then condition was. The

distinguished Delegate of the Commission, Professor Frowein, was

justified in urging upon the Court that the present case was of

considerable importance for laying down the standard to be applied

under Article 3 (art. 3) of the Convention by police officers when

dealing with a normal, non-dangerous citizen in the performance of

their duties. He submitted that the use of force by police officers

resulting in important injuries must be seen as inhuman and

degrading treatment in violation of Article 3 (art. 3) of the

Convention if it cannot be shown that the force used was necessary

to accomplish the lawful duties of the police officers. I think he

was correct in this submission. It is already well established in

the jurisprudence of both the Commission and the Court that people

who are clearly injured while in police custody must be presumed to

have been treated in violation of Article 3 (art. 3) when no

explanation to the contrary is given by the State which, as

Professor Frowein submitted, is the only institution which can

submit a proof to the contrary.

3. The incident in question occurred at a point 60 to

100 metres from where she had been arrested. The parties had gone

to that point so that the applicant could hand the care of her eight

year-old daughter over to a neighbour. The police appeared to form

the opinion then that she intended to seek refuge in the neighbour's

house and thereupon proceeded to handcuff her and the injuries were

incurred during that episode. In subsequent investigation and court

hearings the police could offer no greater explanation than that the

applicant had caused the injuries herself and that they, the police,

did not do anything which could have caused them. The German

Regional Court which dealt with the civil proceedings felt that it

could not rely upon the direct evidence of either the applicant or

her daughter or of the two policemen on the grounds that each had an

interest in telling a particular story. In effect the court then

appears to have speculated on how the matter had arisen and

ultimately it came to the conclusion that the applicant, on whom was

the burden of proof in those proceedings, had not established her

case.

4. While the Court will always pay respectful attention to the

findings of a national court, it is of course in no way bound by the

findings of fact in national courts when an alleged breach of the

Convention is being investigated by the Court. When a case comes

before this Court it has already been through the Commission and the

establishment and verification of the facts is primarily a matter

for the Commission. While the Court would not lightly discard the

Commission's findings of primary facts it is free to draw its own

inferences from the facts and is ultimately free to make its own

appreciation of the whole case in the light of the materials before

it. In the present case the Commission unanimously held that the

police, and therefore the State, was answerable for the injuries

suffered by the applicant. A minority of the Commission found that

they were not sufficiently substantial to amount to a breach of

Article 3 (art. 3) but the majority of the Commission held that

there had been a breach of Article 3 (art. 3). All the Commission

were unanimous on the point that there had been a breach of

Article 8 (art. 8) so far as the first applicant was concerned.

Unlike the German courts in the civil proceedings, the Commission

took the view that the burden of proof fell upon the police and upon

the State. This clearly had not been discharged. The German

Regional Court appears to have in effect made no finding whatsoever

of primary facts save that the injuries had been sustained by the

applicant.

5. In view of the unanimous findings on the fact by the

Commission and the absence of a positive finding by the German court

on the primary facts, there does not appear to me to be any

reasonable justification for taking a completely opposing view of

the facts. It is not in dispute that a considerable amount of

violence had occurred, which included twisting the applicant's arm

behind her back and handcuffing both her arms behind her back and

physically pulling her along with them. This had been sought to be

justified by the police on the grounds that she was resisting

arrest, but she had already been arrested after having failed the

breathalyser test (see paragraph 1 above). The police could not,

however, offer any explanation as to how the injuries which were

evidenced by the photographs came about, nor as to whether she was

caused pain by jerking upon her handcuffed arms. It was admitted by

the police that she did not have the head injury when they first met

her. The explanation was that "she might have got this injury"

during the altercation which was alleged to have ensued when she was

placed in handcuffs. In view of the fact that this lady had no

police record of any description and no reputation of violence or

association with any persons who might be thought to indulge in

violent activities, the police approach to her was one which could

be fairly described as being heavy-handed. There was no question of

her being drunk though the police approach to her on this subject is

revealing. The analysis of her blood shows that her blood alcohol

exceeded 0.8 per ml by 0.02 per ml, notwithstanding which the police

charged her with the criminal offence of driving while under the

influence of alcohol (drunken driving), a charge which was

subsequently dropped by the public prosecutor's office on the ground

that there was no evidence upon which such an opinion could

reasonably be formed. In fact, the applicant was never brought

before any criminal court.

6. In my view a breach of Article 3 (art. 3) has occurred in

that she was subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment which has

not been justified. I regard inhuman treatment as being distinct

from degrading treatment but I am satisfied that they are both

established in the present case. I am also of the opinion that

there was a breach of Article 8 (art. 8) in her case and a breach of

Article 8 (art. 8) in the case of her daughter Monika who had been

wrongly and unwillingly exposed to the incident which brought about

the injuries to her mother. In Monika's case I am not satisfied

that there was any breach of Article 3 (art. 3).

DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE SPIELMANN

(Translation)

I am unable to agree with the decision of the majority of

the Chamber of the Court for the reasons set out below, which I have

divided into two parts, namely:

I. The specific case, II. The principle.

I. The specific case

A. The reasoning of the judgment

In the specific case I can accept neither the reasoning of

the judgment, nor, accordingly, its conclusions, except as regards

the finding of no violation of Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the

second applicant.

(a) The first applicant

1. Alleged violation of Article 3 (art. 3)

I wish to dissociate myself from what is said in the second

sub-paragraph of paragraph 29 and the second and third

sub-paragraphs of paragraph 30 of the judgment.

- second sub-paragraph of paragraph 29

According to the second sub-paragraph of paragraph 29 of the

decision of the majority of the Chamber:

"... it is not normally within the province of the

European Court to substitute its own assessment of the facts

for that of the domestic courts and, as a general rule, it

is for these courts to assess the evidence before them (see,

inter alia, the Edwards v. the United Kingdom judgment of

16 December 1992, Series A no. 247-B, p. 12, para. 34, and

the Vidal v. B778elgium judgment of 22 April 1992, Series A

no. 235-B, pp. 32-33, paras. 33-34)."

If that is the case in principle for the application of

Article 6 (art. 6) of the Convention, the same is not true, in my

view, when the Court has to apply Article 3 (art. 3) (see under II).

- second sub-paragraph of paragraph 30

According to the second sub-paragraph of paragraph 30 of the

decision of the majority of the Chamber:

"The Court would distinguish the present case from that of

Tomasi v. France ... where certain inferences could be made

from the fact that Mr Tomasi had sustained unexplained

injuries during forty-eight hours spent in police custody."

Observations

1. I can see no difference from the point of view of Article 3

(art. 3) of the Convention according to whether the ill-treatment

was meted out during police custody or in the course of an arrest

(see paragraph 103 of the Commission's report). In both cases the

person concerned is in the hands of the police.

2. On the other hand, I can see a major difference between the

two cases (but not that identified by the majority of the Chamber):

The Tomasi case was set against a background of

quasi-terrorism. The applicant had been suspected of having

participated in an attack carried out at Sorbo-Occagnano (Upper

Corsica) in the evening of 11 February 1982 against the Foreign

Legion rest centre, which was unoccupied at that time of the year.

Senior Corporal Rossi and Private Steinte, who, unarmed, were

responsible for maintaining and guarding the centre, had been shot

and wounded, the former fatally and the latter very severely.

The climate was such that, for the territory concerned,

France could have made the declaration provided for in Article 15

(art. 15) of the Convention.

In the Klaas case the first applicant was suspected of

having failed to stop at a red light and driving while under the

influence of drink. The blood test showed her to have an alcohol

level of 0.82 milligrams per millilitre.

Therein lies the real difference between the two cases.

- third sub-paragraph of paragraph 30

According to the third sub-paragraph of paragraph 30:

"No cogent elements have been provided which could lead

the Court to depart from the findings of fact of the

national courts."

This is an erroneous line of reasoning.

It is not incumbent on the applicant to provide convincing

evidence, it falls to the Government, where injuries are evidenced

by medical certificates, to prove that the police intervention was

not disproportionate in relation to the "offences" committed. The

Government did not do this; indeed they could not have done so.

2. Alleged violation of Article 8 (art. 8)

According to paragraph 33 of the judgment:

"The first applicant's complaint under Article 8 (art. 8)

is essentially based on the same disputed facts which have

already been considered in connection with Article 3

(art. 3) and found not to have been established ... . This

being so, the said complaint does not call for separate

examination."

The majority of the Commission, having found a violation of

Article 3 (art. 3), decided in accordance with its case-law "that no

separate issue [arose] under Article 8 (art. 8) of the Convention in

respect of the first applicant".

The minority of the Commission was clearly in a different

position as it had not found a violation of Article 3 (art. 3),

taking the view that the treatment inflicted on the first applicant,

although serious, had not attained the level of severity necessary

to bring it within the ambit of Article 3 (art. 3) of the

Convention.

On the other hand the minority, in contrast to the majority

of the Court, considered that there had been a violation of

Article 8 (art. 8), on the following grounds:

"... the treatment was in our view an interference with

the first applicant's right to respect for her private life

for which there was no justification under Article 8 para. 2

(art. 8-2) of the Convention." (see the dissenting opinion

of Mr Nørgaard, Mr Trechsel, Mr Danelius and Mr Marxer)

If I, like the minority of the Commission, had reached the

conclusion that there had been no violation of Article 3 (art. 3)

- which I did not -, I would have had no hesitation whatsoever in

finding a violation of Article 8 (art. 8).

It is in any case interesting to note that all the members

of the Commission found at least one violation of the Convention as

regards the first applicant and they did so because, instead of

basing their decision on the assessment of evidence effected by the

Detmold Regional Court, they made their own assessment of the

evidence.

(b) The second applicant

1. Alleged violation of Article 3 (art. 3)

I agree with the almost unanimous opinion of the Commission

that the negative effects of the events on the second applicant were

not such as to constitute inhuman and degrading treatment within the

meaning of Article 3 (art. 3) of the Convention (see, however, the

dissenting opinion of Mr Loucaides).

2. Alleged violation of Article 8 (art. 8)

Having found that there had been a violation of Article 8

(art. 8) in respect of the first applicant, logically I had to

consider that there had also been one in respect of the second

applicant. I would have done so even if I had not found a violation

of Article 3 (art. 3) in respect of the first applicant. For both

applicants the interference was in no way justified (Article 8

para. 2) (art. 8-2).

B. Conclusions

1. I conclude that there was a violation of Article 3 (art. 3)

of the Convention in relation to the first applicant.

2. I conclude that there was also a violation of Article 8

(art. 8) in respect of the first applicant.

3. I conclude that there was no violation of Article 3 (art. 3)

as regards the second applicant.

4. I conclude that there was a violation of Article 8 (art. 8)

in respect of the second applicant.

II. The principle

The questions of principle raised by the Klass case go far

beyond its specific facts. Police brutality is not a solely German

phenomenon; it is a European problem.

If anyone is in any doubt about this, he should read the

reports of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture.

What is the explanation?

In my opinion there are at least three, namely:

1. Because police ill-treatment most frequently occurs

without witnesses, except the victim, the facts are systematically

contested.

2. Injuries formally evidenced by medical certificates are

either self-inflicted, accidental or quite simply inexplicable

(suddenly for an incomprehensible reason the person concerned fell

knocking his head against a cupboard). The same sort of situation

arose in the Tomasi v. France case.

3. All too often this ill-treatment (usually referred to in

French as "bavures" or blunders) is tolerated by the national

courts.

In these circumstances, I take the view that it is for the

European Court to assess the evidence and not for instance the

Detmold Regional Court or a court of appeal.

Following the annulment of eight Articles of the Immigration

Law by the French Conseil constitutionnel, Mrs Béatrice Patrie,

President of the Syndicat de la magistrature has recently written in

particular as follows:

"We can therefore only welcome the fact that the French

Conseil constitutionnel, following the example of its European

counterparts, is devoting itself to its task as the guardian of

freedoms, because if it did not, human rights would become, just

like the 'fundamental principles recognised by the laws of the

Republic' as being 'particularly necessary to our time', mere

appendages serving only to embellish the civic education lessons

close to the heart of ..." (Le Monde, 19.8.1993, translated from the

French)

What is true for constitutional courts must a fortiori apply

to the European Court of Human Rights.



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