On 7 November 2019, the
First Section of the Constitutional Court found a violation of the right to
respect for family life safeguarded by Article 20 of the Constitution in the
individual application lodged by Şükran İrge (no. 2016/8660).
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THE FACTS
[7-23] The applicant, a
convict serving her sentence in a penitentiary institution with her two
children, submitted a petition to the incumbent chief public prosecutor’s
office for being granted a suspension of execution of her sentence in order to
take care of her baby born on 12 February 2016. The chief public prosecutor’s
office dismissed her request. The applicant’s challenge against the dismissal
decision was also rejected by the relevant assize court.
Pending the examination by
the Court of the applicant’s request for an interim measure, the penitentiary
institution issued a letter to the effect that the wards were not suitable for
the children’s life and development. By its interim decision of 28 June 2016,
the Court indicated an interim measure in favour of the applicant and
accordingly ordered necessary steps to be taken for the elimination of the
threat to the physical and psychological integrity of both the applicant and
her children.
Besides, the Administrative
and Supervisory Board of the Penitentiary Institution decided, by virtue of the
interim measure indicated by the Court, to transfer the applicant to another
penitentiary institution fit for the applicant and her children. By the time
when her individual application was under examination, she had been still
placed in a women’s closed penitentiary institution where she was transferred.
V. EXAMINATION AND GROUNDS
24. The Constitutional Court,
at its session of 7 November 2019, examined the application and decided as
follows:
A. The Applicant’s
Allegations and the Ministry’s Observations
25. The applicant maintained
that due to the dismissal of her request for the suspension of her prison
sentence which had been imposed on her on account of offences committed on
various dates, indeed her baby was punished; and that in its practices and
decisions, the State should have taken into consideration primarily the best
interests of children. She also noted that the State preferred to place the
mother and her new-born baby suffering from a throat problem in prison instead
of finding solutions so as to ensure the mother and the baby to live in a
healthy environment; and that thereby, her baby was prevented from growing up
in a healthy environment. She accordingly alleged that her right to respect for
family life had been violated.
26. In its observations, the
Ministry recalled the relevant legislation and the case-law of the European
Court of Human Rights (“the ECHR”) on this matter. It stated that the decision
issued by the incumbent chief public prosecutor’s office relied on the
exception laid down in Article 16 § 5 of the Law no. 5275 on the Execution of
Penalties and Security Measures (“Law no. 5275); and that the applicant had not
surrendered herself for nearly 2 years by failing to comply with the decision
suspending the imprisonment sentence previously imposed on her. In this sense,
the Ministry stated that there was no violation in the applicant’s case as she
was considered, pursuant to the relevant legislation, to pose a threat due to
her acts and conducts, which should be found reasonable.
B. The Court’s Assessment
27. Article 20 § 1 of the Constitution,
titled “Privacy of private life”, provides as follows:
“Everyone has the right to demand respect for
his/her private and family life. Privacy of private or family life shall not be
violated.”
32. Article 41 of the
Constitution, titled “Protection of the family and children’s rights” reads
as follows:
“Family
is the foundation of the Turkish society and based on the equality between the
spouses.
The State shall take the necessary measures
and establish the necessary organisation to protect peace and welfare of the
family, especially mother and children, and to ensure the instruction of family
planning and its practice.
Every child has the right to protection and
care and the right to have and maintain a personal and direct relation with
his/her mother and father unless it is contrary to his/her high interests.
The State shall take measures for the
protection of the children against all kinds of abuse and violence.”
29. It is clear that placing
the children with their mothers in penitentiary institutions is a result of the
positive obligation incumbent on the State to ensure that children grow up with
their parents and is in essence intended for ensuring the maintenance of family
relationship. In this context, also given that the complaints raised in the
present case were related to the conditions ensured for the maintenance of the
family relationship also in pursuit of the child’s best interest, the
application was examined under the right to respect for private life.
1. Admissibility
30. The alleged violation of the right
to respect for family life must be declared admissible for not being manifestly
ill-founded and there being no other grounds for its inadmissibility.
2. Merits
a. General Principles
31. The obligation imposed on the State
by virtue of the right to respect for family life is not limited only to the
avoidance of arbitrary interference with the right. In addition to this
negative obligation, which is of priority, the right also embodies positive
obligations for ensuring an effective respect for private life. These positive
obligations entail taking of measures for ensuring respect for private life
even if in the realm of interpersonal relations (see Murat Atılgan, no.
2013/9047, 7 May 2015, § 26).
32. As regards the State’s
obligation to take positive measures, Articles 20 and 41 of the Constitution
entail the right to request for the taking of measures so as to ensure
integration between the parent and his/her child as well as the obligation to
take such measures that is incumbent on the public authorities. In Article 41
of the Constitution, it is explicitly laid down that unless being contrary to
the child’s best interest, he shall have the right to establish and maintain a
personal and direct relation with his mother and father (see Serpil Toros,
no. 2013/6382, 9 March 2016).
33. Moreover, the child’s
interest, as worded in the Convention on Children’s Rights, and the
child’s best interest, as worded in Article 41 of the Constitution, are a
principle that is to be observed in all acts and actions performed by the
courts, the administrative authorities and the legislative organ, which are of
concern to the children. In this sense, in cases where an action to have an
effect on the child will be performed, making an assessment as to whether this
action is in the child’s best interest is of great importance for the
fulfilment of the positive obligations inherent in the right to respect for
family life.
34. Unless being contrary to
the child’s best interest, it is essential to ensure the right to establish and
maintain a personal relationship with his mother and father. In this scope, as
required by the principle of the child’s best interest, the public authorities
are obliged to ensure the maintenance of the family relationship between the
parent and the child on the one hand, and to take the measures so as to ensure
the child to live in an environment where he could maintain his mental and
physical improvement on the other. The relevant administration has indeed a
wide margin of appreciation with respect to the practices in a penitentiary
institution. However, it cannot be said that the above-mentioned obligation is
not applicable to the children who are placed in penitentiary institutions together
with their convicted mothers.
35. On the other hand, what
is in pursuit of the child’s best interest varies depending on the particular
circumstances of every concrete case. However, it must be always borne in mind
that the State has obligations to provide sound conditions for the children who
are temporarily placed in penitentiary institutions. However, this obligation
is not absolute, and the nature and scope of the measures to be taken in consideration
of the particular circumstances of every case may vary. Besides, it must be
taken into consideration that the person who is indeed convicted is the mother
herself and therefore, the child’s best interest must be taken into account in
the rules and orders associated with the mother’s penalty. Accordingly, it must
be emphasised that the measures which would secure that the practices and
conditions at the penitentiary institution would have the minimum effect on the
child are to be taken.
36. Besides, the public
authorities are expected to strike a balance between the public interest in the
actions and orders with respect to the convicted mother, and the child’s best
interest, and to provide relevant and sufficient grounds to demonstrate that the
child’s best interests have been considered. Moreover, given the development
process of the children, it is of importance that the measures to be taken by
the public authorities be capable of meeting the child’s needs in consideration
of his age and that the relevant measures be applied swiftly so as to prevent
any possible adverse effects of the conditions at the penitentiary institution
on the child and his mother.
b. Application of
Principles to the Present Case
37. In Article 16 § 4 of Law no. 5275
applied in the present case, it is set forth that “imprisonment sentence of
the women who are pregnant or who gave birth 6 months ago at the most shall be
postponed”, which clearly serves for the protection of both the woman and
the child and aims at ensuring the child to be with his mother in a sound
environment. Besides, this legal arrangement also envisages that the public
interest pursued by placing a convicted mother in penitentiary institution be
overridden, under certain circumstances, by the best interest of child.
38. In the present case, it has been
observed that the applicant is being placed in the penitentiary institution
with her baby born on 12 February 2016 and her child born on 2 January 2014;
that she requested to be granted a suspension of her imprisonment sentence on
account of the baby’s need of care and unfit conditions of the penitentiary
institution. Considering the term during which the applicant served her imprisonment
sentence as well as her previous behaviours and conducts, the chief public
prosecutor’s office dismissed her request, noting that she was considered as a
dangerous convict. However, in dismissing the request, the chief public
prosecutor’s office failed to provide any sufficient ground so as to indicate
why the applicant, convicted of aggravated theft, was categorized as a convict
posing a threat. Moreover, her request was not assessed in consideration of the
baby’s living conditions and needs, and the provisions applicable merely to the
convicted mother were relied on in the dismissal decision.
39. Besides, the public
authorities found the ward’s capacity as well as physical conditions of the
penitentiary institution unfit for children’s life and development. It has been
therefore observed that the child of the applicant whose request for a
suspension of execution had been nevertheless dismissed was deprived of a sound
environment fit for his age and needs. It has been further concluded that in
the decisions associated with the convict’s sentence, the child’s best interest
was not taken into consideration within the scope of the right to respect for
family life; that no balance was struck between the applicant’s placement in a
penitentiary institution and the child’s best interest; and that nor was any
measure such as providing an appropriate environment for the child or
transferring them to another institution with better conditions taken.
40. For these reasons, the
Court concluded that in the present case, the positive obligations inherent in
the right to respect for family life were not fulfilled and accordingly found a
violation of the right to respect for family life safeguarded by Article 20 of
the Constitution.
3. Application of Article
50 of Code no. 6216
41. Article 50 §§ 1 and 2 of the Code no.
6216 on Establishment and Rules of Procedures of the Constitutional Court,
dated 30 March 2011, reads as follows:
“1) At the end of the examination of the
merits it is decided either the right of the applicant has been violated or
not. In cases where a decision of violation has been made what is required for
the resolution of the violation and the consequences thereof shall be ruled…
2) If the determined violation arises out of a
court decision, the file shall be sent to the relevant court for holding the
retrial in order for the violation and the consequences thereof to be removed.
In cases where there is no legal interest in holding the retrial, the
compensation may be adjudged in favour of the applicant or the remedy of filing
a case before the general courts may be shown. The court which is responsible
for holding the retrial shall deliver a decision over the file, if possible, in
a way that will remove the violation and the consequences thereof that the
Constitutional Court has explained in its decision of violation.”
42. In its judgment in the
case of Mehmet Doğan ([Plenary], no. 2014/8875, 7 June 2018), the Court has
indicated the general principles as to how a violation found would be
redressed.
43. The applicant requested
the Court to award her 50,000 Turkish liras (“TRY”).
44. It has been observed that
the violation found by the Court in the present case resulted from the decision
whereby the applicant’s request for suspension of the execution of her
imprisonment sentence was dismissed by the Diyarbakır Chief Public Prosecutor’s
Office.
45. In the present case, the
Court found a violation of the right to respect for family life safeguarded by
Article 20 of the Constitution.
46. Regard being had to the
fact that upon the interim measure indicated by the Constitutional Court, the
applicant was transferred to another penitentiary institution fit for the baby,
it has been concluded that there is no legal interest in conducting a retrial
to redress the consequences of the violation of the right to respect for family
life. On the other hand, a net amount of TRY 5,500 must be awarded to the
applicant in compensation for non-pecuniary damage suffered by her for not
being provided with the safeguards inherent in the right to respect for family
life, and her other claims for compensation must be rejected.
47. The total court expense
of TRY 2,714.50 including the court fee of TRY 239,50 and counsel fee of TRY 2,475,
which is calculated over the documents in the case file, must be reimbursed to
the applicant.
VI. JUDGMENT
For these reasons, the
Constitutional Court UNANIMOUSLY held on 7 November 2019:
A. The alleged violation of
the right to respect for family life be DECLARED ADMISSIBLE;
B. The right to respect for
family life safeguarded by Article 20 of the Constitution was VIOLATED;
C. A net amount of TRY 5,500
be PAID to the applicant in compensation for non-pecuniary damage, and other
claims for compensation be DISMISSED;
D. The total expense of TRY 2.714.50
including the court fee of TRY 239.50 and the counsel fee of TRY 2,475 be
REIMBURSED TO THE APPLICANT;
E. The payments be made
within four months as from the date when the applicant applies to the Ministry
of Finance following the notification of the judgment; In case of any default
in payment, legal INTEREST ACCRUE for the period elapsing from the expiry of
four-month time-limit to the payment date;
F. A copy of the judgment be
SENT to the Ministry of Justice.