Balsamo v. San Marino
Balsamo v. San Marino
Balsamo v. San Marino
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
8 October 2019
This judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2 of the
Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT 1
PROCEDURE
1. The case originated in two applications (nos. 20319/17 and 21414/17)
against the Republic of San Marino lodged with the Court under Article 34
of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) by two Italian nationals, Ms Valentina
Balsamo and Ms Angela Balsamo (“the applicants”), on 8 March 2017 and
10 March 2017 respectively.
2. The applicants were represented by Mr A. Pagliano, a lawyer
practising in Naples. The San Marinese Government (“the Government”)
were represented by their Agent, Mr L. Daniele and their Co-Agent
Ms M. Bovi.
3. The applicants alleged, in particular, that a confiscation had been
imposed on them, following their acquittal, which they considered had not
been in accordance with the law and had been disproportionate.
4. On 19 September 2018 the Government were given notice of the
complaints concerning Articles 6 § 2, 7 § 1, alone and in conjunction with
Article 13 of the Convention, as well as under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to
the Convention and the remainder of the applications was declared
inadmissible pursuant to Rule 54 § 3 of the Rules of Court.
5. The Italian Government, who had been notified by the Registrar of
their right to intervene in the proceedings (Article 36 § 1 of the Convention
and Rule 44), did not indicate that they intended to do so.
6. Mr Gilberto Felici, the judge elected in respect of San Marino,
withdrew from sitting in the Chamber (Rule 28). The President of the
Chamber accordingly appointed V.A. De Gaetano to sit as an ad hoc judge
(Article 26 § 4 of the Convention and Rule 29).
2 BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
7. The applicants were born in 1986 and 1985 respectively and live in
Brescia, Italy.
12. By a judgment no. 139 of 4 November 2014, filed with the registry
on 7 August 2015, the first-instance criminal judge (Commissario della
Legge Decidente) found the first and the second applicant guilty of the
offence charged. He sentenced the first applicant to two years and six
months’ imprisonment, and the second applicant to one year’s
imprisonment. They were both fined EUR 5,000 and prohibited for one year
and four months from holding public office and exercising political rights.
The judge, relying on Article 147 § 3 of the Criminal Code, confiscated the
sums which had been seized (EUR 1,920,785.50). In addition, the judge
issued, in respect of the first applicant, a confiscation by equivalent means
of EUR 499,000 given that, before the execution of the seizure she had
withdrawn the latter sum from her bank account.
13. The first-instance criminal judge found that the applicants had
laundered assets which had been obtained by B., in Italy, through the
commission of multiple offences. As to the criminal origin of the assets, the
judge held that previous domestic case-law had established that in order to
find someone guilty of money laundering it was not necessary to have a
previous conviction for the underlying, predicate offence, or to know its
perpetrator. It sufficed instead to have reasonable evidence (prove logiche)
of the criminal origin of the money in question. The criminal origin of the
money was an objective prerequisite to be autonomously ascertained by the
judge in the money laundering case. It was thus not important to ascertain a
specific predicate offence if a plurality of elements showed the illicit origin
of the money. In the case at hand, the criminal origin of the assets had been
shown by the above-mentioned Italian criminal judgment against B.
together with other relevant elements. In particular, the judge quoted a part
of the Italian judgment which described the criminal career of B. and his
previous convictions for inter alia, fighting, causing personal injury,
carrying of weapons and, after 1975, handling and receiving stolen goods,
multiple instances of theft, owning unjustified assets and drug dealing.
14. The judge acknowledged that the proceeds (EUR 750,000) of the
predicate offence - of which B. had been found guilty in Italy by the
above-mentioned judgment - were much lower than the sum object of the
laundering (EUR 2,150,000). This fact, however, could not lead to exclude
the criminal origin of all the sum at issue since, inter alia, (i) B.’s criminal
record from 1975 included multiple offences each of which was able to
produce a relevant criminal profit; (ii) a disproportion existed between the
legitimate income of the applicants (and their family) and the assets in their
possession; (iii) the applicants had tried to demonstrate the licit origin of the
assets (such as from their family business and the sale of immovable
property) but their explanation had not relied on any evidence and there had
been some contradictions between the statements made by each applicant’s
4 BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT
legal counsel in this respect; (iv) it was unreasonable that the applicants had
decided to deposit the money in a foreign bank far from the centre of
interest of their family’s businesses and this was a further indication of their
attempt to hide the criminal origin of the assets.
15. The court was also convinced that despite their young age both
applicants were well aware of the origin of the money and the objectives
behind the transfers of money to San Marino, particularly given that they
were well aware of their father’s problems with the justice system.
17. When the applicants introduced their application with the Court (in
March 2017) they did not inform the Court about the proceedings they had
lodged two months earlier before the judge for extraordinary remedies
(criminal competence). Nor did they inform the Court about the matter, and
later about the relevant decision, at any other time after that. It was only the
Government, in their observations of 9 January 2019, following the
communication of the complaints, that brought the following facts to the
Court’s attention.
18. On 5 January 2017 the applicants applied for revision of the
judgment of 12 October 2016 before the judge for extraordinary remedies.
They complained in particular that the judgment of 12 October 2016 had
breached their rights under Article 6 § 2, and 7 of the Convention and
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention. They considered that under
domestic law there was no available remedy other than a request for a
revision of a judgment, noting that a failure of the judge for extraordinary
BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT 5
remedies to take cognisance of their complaints could make the State liable
to a violation of Article 13 of the Convention.
19. By a decree of 16 January 2017 the judge for extraordinary remedies
considered that he had competence to decide the case under Article 200 (1)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure and considered that the request for
revision could not be declared inadmissible under Article 201 (5) of the
same Code.
20. In his pleadings of 20 March 2017, the Attorney General requested
the judge for extraordinary remedies to declare the request inadmissible, as
Article 200 of the Code provided an exhaustive list of four situations in
relation to which a revision request could be lodged. None of those reasons
referred to alleged violations of Convention rights and thus it could not be
applied to the present case.
21. In their written submissions of May 2017 the applicants informed the
judge for extraordinary remedies that they had lodged an application with
the Court complaining about the same matters, as they were required to
respect the six month period for bringing such claim. At the same time they
requested the judge for extraordinary remedies to suspend his decision on
their request pending the proceedings before the Court. They further
informed the judge for extraordinary remedies that if their request to
suspend proceedings was not upheld, they would withdraw their application
before him.
22. By a judgment of 23 May 2017 the judge for extraordinary remedies
rejected their request for the proceedings to be suspended, as well as their
request to withdraw the proceedings and, having regard to the merits (seen
globally), he rejected their revision request.
23. He noted that no reasons had been put forward by the applicants to
contest his competence to decide the case, and that he had to bear in mind
the risks the State could incur in relation to, inter alia, Article 13 of the
Convention. Relying on judgment No. 6 of the constitutional jurisdiction
(namely, il Collegio Garante della Costituzionalita` delle Norme) of
1 August 2007 the judge considered that he had the competence to examine
Convention complaints (see paragraph 34 below) and that this was in
accordance with the State’s obligation under Article 13 of the Convention.
24. He further considered that the complaints raised by the applicants
were arguable and therefore Article 13 was applicable. On the merits he
found no violation of the provisions invoked in view of the fact that the
appeal judge had made a correct application of the law in the light of
relevant international instruments given that the confiscated sums had illicit
origins – the facts had been established in fair proceedings, where the
applicants’ defence rights had been respected. No arbitrary conclusions had
been drawn nor had there been any issue of legal certainty. The measure had
been proportionate, as well as foreseeable.
6 BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT
intended to be used to commit the crime, as well as the confiscation of the price, the
product, and the profit of the crime.
(2) Regardless of conviction, confiscation ensues in the case of any fabrication, use,
possession, transfer or commerce, of items, where such act constitutes an offence,
even if the items do not belong to the perpetrator of the act in issue (agente).
(3) In a judgment of conviction, the judge must always order (e’ sempre
obbligatoria) the confiscation of items which were used or which were intended to be
used to commit the offences ex Articles 167, 168, 168 bis, 169, 177 bis, 177 ter,
194, 195, 195 bis, 195 ter, 196, 199, 199 bis, 204 (3-1), 204 bis, 207, 212, 305 bis,
337 bis, 337 ter, 371, 372, 373, 374, 374 ter (1), 388, 389, or offences connected to
terrorism, or offences with the purpose of subverting the constitutional order, or the
crime ex Article 1 of Law no. 139 of 26 November 1997, as well as ordering the
confiscation of the price, product and profit of the crime. If confiscation is not
possible the judge shall order (impone l’obbligo di) the payment of an amount of
money equivalent to the value of the above-mentioned items.”
C. Relevant case-law
was not listed in the exhaustive list of situations proceeded by Article 200 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure.
38. On 12 October 2002 the Republic of San Marino ratified the Council
of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure and Confiscation of
the Proceeds from Crime (Strasbourg 1990 – ETS No. 141). The
Convention aimed to facilitate international co-operation and mutual
assistance in investigating crime and tracking down, seizing and
confiscating the proceeds thereof. Parties undertake in particular to
criminalise the laundering of the proceeds of crime and to confiscate
instrumentalities and proceeds (or property the value of which corresponds
to such proceeds).
39. On 27 July 2010 the Republic of San Marino ratified the Council of
Europe Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure and Confiscation of the
Proceeds from Crime and on the Financing of Terrorism (Warsaw 2005 -
CETS No.198). This Convention covers both the prevention and the control
of money laundering and the financing of terrorism. State parties to the
Convention are asked to adopt legislative and other measures in order to
assure that they are able to search, trace, identify, freeze, seize and
confiscate property, of a licit or illicit origin, used or allocated to be used for
the financing of terrorism; and to provide co-operation as well as
investigative assistance to each other.
40. According to these instruments confiscation means “a penalty or a
measure, ordered by a court following proceedings in relation to a criminal
offence or criminal offences resulting in the final deprivation of
property”. In particular in relation to confiscation measures, in so far as
relevant, the latter provides that:
Article 3
“1. Each Party shall adopt such legislative and other measures as may be necessary
to enable it to confiscate instrumentalities and proceeds or property the value of which
corresponds to such proceeds and laundered property.
2. Provided that paragraph 1 of this article applies to money laundering and to the
categories of offences in the appendix to the Convention, each Party may, at the time
of signature or when depositing its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession, by a declaration addressed to the Secretary General of the Council of
Europe, declare that paragraph 1 of this article applies
a) only in so far as the offence is punishable by deprivation of liberty or a detention
order for a maximum of more than one year. However, each Party may make a
declaration on this provision in respect of the confiscation of the proceeds from tax
offences for the sole purpose of being able to confiscate such proceeds, both
nationally and through international cooperation, under national and international
tax-debt recovery legislation; and/or
BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT 11
Article 5
“Each Party shall adopt such legislative and other measures as may be necessary to
ensure that the measures to freeze, seize and confiscate also encompass:
a) the property into which the proceeds have been transformed or converted;
b) property acquired from legitimate sources, if proceeds have been intermingled, in
whole or in part, with such property, up to the assessed value of the intermingled
proceeds;
c) income or other benefits derived from proceeds, from property into which
proceeds of crime have been transformed or converted or from property with which
proceeds of crime have been intermingled, up to the assessed value of the
intermingled proceeds, in the same manner and to the same extent as proceeds.”
THE LAW
I. JOINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS
41. Having regard to the similar subject matter of the applications, the
Court finds it appropriate to examine them jointly in a single judgment.
A. Abuse of petition
brought the same complaints brought to the Court under Articles 6 § 2 and 7
of the Convention. Moreover, in their application to the Court they
complained specifically that they had no remedy for the purposes of
Article 13, concealing to the Court that they had been pursuing precisely
such a remedy at the same time. They further failed to inform the Court
when a judgment in their case had been issued. The Government noted that
following developments in the case-law regarding the way and the
conditions to apply for a revision of criminal judgments under Article 200
of the Code of Criminal Procedure (see paragraphs 35 and 36 above) - in
particular the judgment of the Constitutional Court of 1 August 2007 the
principle of which was interpreted and extended by the judge for
extraordinary remedies to make him responsible for human rights violations
- that avenue had become an appropriate and effective remedy for
Convention complaints. Thus, the Government considered that the
applicants, who were aware of the domestic developments to the extent that
they attempted such proceedings, had deliberately submitted incomplete and
misleading information to the Court. The Government requested the Court
to find that there had been an abuse of petition and in consequence to
declare the application inadmissible.
44. The applicants considered that according to the ECtHR case-law
against San Marino to date, proceedings before the judge for extraordinary
remedies were an extraordinary remedy which did not need to be exhausted.
In consequence there had been no reason to inform the Court about that
further remedy they had pursued. In their view the remedy was unnecessary
and could not change their victim status since it could not redress their
situation. They submitted that they had not had a fraudulent intent to
mislead the Court and that their omission did not deal with the core issue of
the case. They distinguished their situation from that where applicants had
omitted to inform the Court that they had been successful in pursuing such a
remedy, i.e., a situation where domestically the authorities would have had
provided redress for the infringements, thus, impinging on their victim
status.
determines the issue of admissibility (see, for instance, Zalyan and Others
v. Armenia, nos. 36894/04 and 3521/07, § 238, 17 March 2016, with further
references).
53. The Court notes that – without prejudice as to whether or not
proceedings before the judge for extraordinary remedies lodged under
Article 200 of the Code of Criminal Procedure are still to be considered an
extraordinary remedy and whether they are an Article 13 compliant remedy
– those proceedings ended just a few months after the introduction of the
application and before the Court had determined the admissibility of the
relevant complaints. In those circumstances, there are no grounds for
dismissing the applicants’ complaint for failure to comply with the
requirements of Article 35 § 1 of the Convention (see, for instance, Milić
and Nikezić v. Montenegro, nos. 54999/10 and 10609/11, § 74, 28 April
2015, and Zalyan and Others, cited above, §§ 238-239).
54. Accordingly, the Government’s objection is dismissed.
55. The applicants complained that they had been punished despite
having been acquitted. They relied on Article 7 of the Convention which
reads as follows:
“1. No one shall be held guilty of any criminal offence on account of any act or
omission which did not constitute a criminal offence under national or international
law at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than
the one that was applicable at the time the criminal offence was committed.
2. This article shall not prejudice the trial and punishment of any person for any act
or omission which, at the time when it was committed, was criminal according to the
general principles of law recognised by civilised nations.”
possible in the criminal law sphere. In their view he had applied something
in between Article 147 (1) which was a punitive measure and
Article 147 (2) which was a preventive measure despite both provisions not
being applicable in their case. Thus, while the measure had not been
provided by law, it had been clearly punitive in nature.
57. The Government submitted that confiscation under Article 147 (2) of
the Criminal Code was not a sanction and was not punitive in nature. They
relied on the findings of the judge for extraordinary remedies (see
paragraphs 28 above). Referring to the Court’s criteria to prove the
non-criminal nature of the measure, the Government submitted that i) the
confiscation had not arisen from a finding of guilt; ii) under domestic law it
was classified as a civil obligation not a punishment as evident by its
positioning in Title VI of the Criminal Code entitled “Civil obligations and
other effects resulting from offences” (paragraph 31 above); iii) the nature
and purpose of the measure was preventive, in particular to prevent the
accumulation of illicit property solely based on its illicit origin as
established by domestic provisions and international conventions; iv) the
Government also considered that the confiscation of sums of money
indisputably consisting of proceedings of numerous serious crimes could
not be defined as having a “serious” consequence, but merely an adequate
measure to contrast and repress the accumulation of assets deriving from
serious crimes, such as trafficking in drugs and weapons, which are shared
objectives in the international community; v) lastly, such sums, had been
confiscated only after a prudent and careful assessment within which in the
face of multiple and serious indications of the illegal and criminal original
of the funds the applicants had failed to submit sufficient evidence of their
lawful origin.
1. General principles
58. For the purposes of the Convention there can be no “conviction”
unless it has been established in accordance with the law that there has been
an offence – a criminal or, if appropriate, a disciplinary offence. Similarly,
there can be no penalty unless personal liability has been established (see
Varvara v. Italy, no. 17475/09, § 69, 29 October 2013 and G.I.E.M S.R.L.
and Others v. Italy [GC], nos. 1828/06 and 2 Others, § 251, 28 June 2018).
59. The concept of a “penalty” in Article 7 has an autonomous meaning.
To render the protection offered by this Article effective, the Court must
remain free to go behind appearances and assess for itself whether a
particular measure amounts in substance to a “penalty” within the meaning
of this provision. The wording of Article 7 § 1, second sentence, indicates
that the starting-point in any assessment of the existence of a “penalty” is
whether the measure in question is imposed following a decision that a
BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT 17
68. The applicants submitted that since a criminal sanction had been
applied to them, they had been stigmatised and their presumption of
innocence had been breached.
69. The Government submitted that while the applicants had been
declared innocent, the same judge had confirmed the illicit origin of the
funds. Those funds had been generated by crimes for which the applicants’
father had been found guilty and the applicants had failed to prove any
alternative legitimate origin. The proceeds of the crimes committed by the
father were in themselves unlawful and thus subject to confiscation under
Article 147 (2). The measure was independent of any liability of the
applicants for the offence of money laundering and did not reflect the
opinion that the applicants were guilty of such offence, in respect of which
they were acquitted by the same judge. This was even more so given the
preventive nature of the measure. The Government relied on the findings of
the judge for extraordinary remedies and reiterated their submissions under
Article 7.
70. Without prejudice to the above, they noted that the applicants had
been given the opportunity to prove the licit origin of the funds they were in
possession of but they failed to satisfy the burden of proof. The situation
was therefore different from that in Geerings v. the Netherlands
(no. 30810/03, 1 March 2007) and the presumption of innocence had been
respected as was the case in Silickienė v. Lithuania (no. 20496/02, 10 April
2012).
1. General principles
71. Article 6 § 2 protects the right of any person to be “presumed
innocent until proved guilty according to law”. Regarded as a procedural
safeguard in the context of the criminal trial itself, the presumption of
innocence also has another aspect. Its general aim, in this second aspect, is
to protect individuals who have been acquitted of a criminal charge, or in
respect of whom criminal proceedings have been discontinued, from being
treated by public officials and authorities as though they are in fact guilty of
the offence charged. In these cases, the presumption of innocence has
already operated, through the application at trial of the various requirements
inherent in the procedural guarantee it affords, to prevent an unfair criminal
conviction being imposed. Without protection to ensure respect for the
acquittal or the discontinuance decision in any other proceedings, the
fair-trial guarantees of Article 6 § 2 could risk becoming theoretical and
illusory. What is also at stake once the criminal proceedings have concluded
is the person’s reputation and the way in which that person is perceived by
BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT 21
75. The applicants complained that the domestic system did not provide
them with an effective remedy in respect of their Convention complaints,
under Articles 6 § 2 and 7 of the Convention contrary to that provided in
Article 13 of the Convention, which reads as follows:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in [the] Convention are violated
shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the
violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
76. The Government contested that argument.
22 BALSAMO v. SAN MARINO JUDGMENT
77. The Court reiterates that Article 13 does not apply if there is no
arguable claim (see see Boyle and Rice v. the United Kingdom, 27 April
1988, Series A no. 131, § 52 and Brincat and Others v. Malta,
nos. 60908/11 and 4 others, § 139, 24 July 2014). As it has found above, the
complaints under Article 7 and 6 § 2 were inadmissible ratione materiae
and manifestly ill-founded respectively. Consequently there was no such
claim. It follows that in the present case Article 13 is not applicable in
conjunction with the mentioned provisions.
78. Accordingly, the complaint under Article 13 is incompatible ratione
materiae with the provisions of the Convention within the meaning of
Article 35 § 3 (a) and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 § 4.
79. The applicants further complained that the interference with their
right of property had been unlawful and disproportionate. They relied on
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention which reads as follows:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his
possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest
and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State
to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in
accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
A. Admissibility
the use of property to secure the payment of penalties. That provision had to
be construed in the light of the general principle set out in the first sentence
of the first paragraph which requires that there exist a reasonable
relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim
sought to be realised (see, among many examples, Sofia, cited above and
Phillips, cited above, § 51). In other cases, where a confiscation measure
had been imposed independently of the existence of a criminal conviction
but rather as a result of separate “civil” (within the meaning of Article 6 § 1
of the Convention) judicial proceedings aimed at the recovery of assets
deemed to have been acquired unlawfully, the Court has again held that
such a measure, even if it involves the irrevocable forfeiture of possessions,
constitutes nevertheless control of the use of property within the meaning of
the second paragraph of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and in such cases, also,
the measure had to be reasonably proportionate to the aim sought to be
realised (see Gogitidze and Others, cited above, §§ 94 and 97).
82. The Court first observes that it is not in dispute between the parties
that the confiscation order concerning the applicants’ assets amounted to
interference with their right to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions and
that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is therefore applicable. The Court further
notes that in the present case the confiscation was not based on a criminal
conviction, nor was it a result of separate “civil” proceedings, but that the
case nevertheless falls to be examined as one of control of the use of
property within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1.
83. The Court finds that the complaint is not manifestly ill-founded
within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention. It further notes
that is not inadmissible on any other grounds. It must therefore be declared
admissible.
B. Merits