Greek Council of State refuses to abide by foreign res iudicata recognized in Greece
In
a rather peculiar situation, the Council of State did not abide by the res iudicata
effect of two judgments issued by the Tverskoy District Court in Moscow and
recognized by the Athens 1st Instance Court. The Russian decisions
declared that the applicants are Greek nationals. The Council of State ruled
that the decisions are not binding, even though already recognized in Greece,
because the issue of Greek nationality is not to be examined by foreign courts
[Council of State 316/2014, unreported]
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The facts: By virtue of a 1996 decision of the Western Athens
Prefecture, two individuals, born in 1963 & 1967 in Russia, have been granted
the Greek nationality by birth, pursuant to Greek Statutes on nationality.
Seven years later the above Prefecture received notice from the Greek police,
which in turn was informed by the Interpol branch in Georgia, that the
passports submitted for acquiring the status of Greek nationals were falsified.
As a result, the administrative act was recalled. The persons affected filed an
application to annul the second administrative act. They asserted that the
prefecture should abide by the res iudicata effect of the Russian decisions,
since they have been recognized in Greece.
The ruling: The Council of State clarified that the issue of
an individual’s nationality is governed exclusively by the law of the country
in question, that being part of its sovereignty powers. Hence, only Greek
courts and authorities are competent to examine the matter. Beyond that, Art.
780 & 323 Greek Code of Civil Procedure [i.e. the provisions dealing with
recognition of foreign judgments] are not allowing the recognition of foreign
res iudicata regarding matters regulated by Greek legislation as falling into
the sovereign powers of the state. The Council of State made also reference to
the bilateral treaty on judicial assistance with ex-Soviet Union, still in force
between Greece and Russia, mentioning Art. 24 Para. 4, which sets as a
prerequisite to recognition that the case should not be subjected to the
exclusive competence of state bodies of the country where the judgment is to be
recognized or enforced. Finally, with regard to the issue of res iudicata, the
Council of State ruled that the Greek State is not bound by the effects of the
Russian judgments, since it was not a party in the Moscow proceedings
For
the reasons above, the application for annulment was dismissed.
Comments: I don’t think anyone would disagree with this
ruling. Allowing foreign courts to decide over matters of undisputable
sovereignty for each state (like the nationality issue in the present case)
would open the bag of Aeolus. Moroccan courts would grant the Spanish, Algerian
courts the French, Libyan courts the Italian nationality, etc etc. Even if one
is willing to give the applicants the benefit of the doubt on the falsification
issue, the matter extends to much larger proportions, beyond the specific
subject matter of the case at hand.
Of
course, the problem began by the Athens court giving green light to the Russian
judgments. Obviously the court was not aware of the potential ramifications the
case would develop. Over the last decade, there has been a flurry of Russian
judgments regarding personal status matters, like amendments of first and last
names in register-offices, adoptions, declarations of absence, etc. So courts
are frequently faced with applications to recognize Russian decisions, because
Greek authorities are explicitly asking for such, in order to proceed to
respective registrations and issue certificates requested. In the heat of the
moment, the Athens court mistakenly considered the nationality issue as part of
the personal status agenda in the Greek-Russian judicial assistance treaty.
This is evidently not the case, and with this ruling the Council of State draws
a clear red line in the recognition of foreign judgments.
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