303
DO LEGAL PERSONS HAVE THE RIGHT TO RESPECT FOR PRIVATE AND FAMILY LIFE?
case related to the anti-government demonstrations throughout Romania in December
1989, around the time when the head of state, Nicolae Ceauşescu, was overthrown.
The first applicant was the Association „21 December 1989“, an association that
supported the interests of victims in criminal proceedings concerning killings, gunshot
wounds and the ill-treatment of several thousand people in various Romanian towns
as a reset of the demonstrations. The second applicant, Mr Mărieş, took part in the
anti-government demonstrations in Bucharest in December 1989. The Court in the
present case did not deal with the status of the applicant association, as far as the
complaints under Article 8 of the Convention were raised by the second applicant
solely. He submitted that he had been subjected to secret surveillance measures,
particularly telephone tapping. In his opinion, those measures served as means of
pressure exerted by the authorities in connection with his activity as president of the
association. When finding a breach of right to private life the Court observed that
the domestic legislation lacked safeguards to guarantee that information obtained
through secret surveillance was destroyed as soon as it was no longer needed.
Regarding the information about the applicant, gathered by the intelligence services
in 1990, it was still being held by them in 2006, that is, sixteen years later.
Another case which was submitted by a legal and a natural person alleging
a violation of Article 8 is the case of
Eugenia Michaelidou Developments Ltd and
Michael Tymvios v. Turkey
.
45
The applicants in the present case were a private
company and the director and major shareholder of the company. They alleged that
deprivation of their property rights in respect of the plots located in the northern part
of Cyprus constituted violations of Articles 1, 8 and 14 of the Convention, Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 and Articles 2 and 3 of Protocol No. 4. It its admissibility decision
the Court concluded that the application raised serious questions of fact and law
which were to be examined on the merits. It nevertheless did not rule on the issue
since the parties came to a friendly settlement and the case was struck out of the list.
46
There was a similar situation in the case of
Angoulos Estate Ltd v. Turkey.
47
The complaint in the case of
Saarekallas OÜ and Others v. Estonia
48
was submitted
by Saarekallas OÜ, a private limited company registered in Estonia, and seven
Finnish nationals. All together alleged under Article 8 that their right to respect for
private and family life had been violated by telephone calls, faxes and letters from K.
and R. and by the bailiff, who delivered court summons in person. The Court did not
deal separately with the complaints from individuals and the legal person, but merely
concluded that these complaints did not disclose any appearance of a violation of the
rights and freedoms set out in the invoked Article of the Convention.
45
Eugenia Michaelidou Developments Ltd and Michael Tymvios v. Turkey
(dec.), no. 16163/90, 8 June 1999.
46
Eugenia Michaelidou Developments Ltd and Michael Tymvios v. Turkey
(just satisfaction-friendly
settlement), no. 16163/90, § 17, 22 April 2008.
47
Angoulos Estate Ltd v. Turkey
(dec.), no. 36115/03, 9 February 2010.
48
Saarekallas O
Ü
and Others v. Estonia
(dec.), no. 11548/04, 15 May 2006.