The question, why it is necessary to examine the nature of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline, was catalysed by the contemporary development of the European Court of Human Rights’ case law regarding the application of the This article has been elaborated by Tomáš Sejkora within the programme ‘
It is indisputable, that a recent development of the case law in a tax field will affect the administration of taxes. However, some European jurisdictions does not constitute the own procedural regulation for every branch or sub-branch of law such as the Czech Republic legal order and these states use the tax procedural regulation as well for the administration of other sanctions imposed pursuant to the substantive regulation of other branch or sub-branch of law. For instance, in the Czech Republic, some budgetary instruments regulated by budgetary law are administered under the Tax Procedure Code 2009, therefore these instruments could be subjected to such European Court of Human Rights’ case law regarding the application of the
For these reasons, the main aim of this article is to evaluate and detect the possible applicable problems, which could be caused by a competing competence of some Czech public law authorities. With such purpose, the aim of this article is to get its reader familiarized with the basics of relevant Czech regulation, to summarize the grounds of the European Court of Human Rights’ case law regarding the nature of the sanction for the purposes of an application of For example, there exist recognized monograph Roman Seer and Anna Lena Wilmset al,
The regulation of revenues and expenses of the state budget and the financial management of state organizational units, other state facilities with the similar status, state public benefit organizations and other persons managing parts of the state budgetary fund is mainly concentrated in the Act No. 218/2000 Col., on budgetary rules (
For example, imagine that the recipient of the subsidy got the subsidy in the total amount of 1.000.000 CZK and this subsidy had to be used just for the financing of two same projects of the subsidy recipient under the rules of public procurements. One public procurement related to half of the provided subsidy was implemented in accordance with the public procurements regulation; unfortunately, the second one was not. Because the agreement on the subsidy had not contained any regulation of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline, the competent tax authority shall levy this charge in the amount of the affected fund by the breach of the budgetary discipline and the penalty up to the amount of the imposed charge depending on how long is the recipient of subsidy default with the payment of the charge. Therefore, the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline should be levied in the amount of 500.000 CZK (half of the subsidy affected by the breach) and, depending on the length of default with its payment, the penalty up to 500.000 CZK could be also levied.
The problem is that the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is always levied retrospectively to the date of the particular breach of law; therefore there is always the penalty to be imposed on the offender. Finally, the Budgetary Rules Act 2000 does not contain complex procedural regulation how to administer the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline, therefore the Budgetary Rules Act 2000 constitutes that its administration belongs to the scope of tax authorities and it must be administered pursuant to the Tax Procedure Code 2009. So, it is administered in the same way as taxes are levied in the Czech Republic.
The important aspect related to the imposition of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is that the disposition of the budgetary fund in the meaning of the financial resources accumulated in the public budget could be regulated not just by the Budgetary Rules Act 2000, but also by a different regulation belonging to the scope of different public law authority than tax authority. In particular, a good example is the above-mentioned case of subsidy. The regulation of subsidies provided from the state budget or from the national fund
The national fund is the fund accumulating financial sources provided from the EU or from other international organizations to the Czech Republic.
The result of the conditions is that if the recipient of the subsidy breaches the procurement regulation, this illegal conduct could be supervised by the Office for the Protection of Competition as an administrative offence and this office could impose the fine on the recipient of the subsidy. Concurrently, this illegal conduct shall be assessed as the breach of the condition of the subsidy (thus as the breach of the budgetary discipline) belonging to the scope of the tax authority, which can impose the charge for the breach of budgetary discipline. It is obvious that the recipient is punished for the same facts related to the same illegal activity in both cases. Thus, it is necessary to ask whether such legal regulation is in accordance with the basic principle
The European Convention does not define the term ‘criminal sanction’, but it could be deduced by the grammatic interpretation of the European Convention and from the case law of the European Court of Human Rights, that the criminal sanction shall be defined as a threatening sanction for the illegal conduct of an offender in the proceedings based on the criminal charge. The nature of the sanction is an important attribute for an assessment, whether the proceedings against offender was based on the criminal charge (
These criteria formulate the assessment of three attributes of examined case for the application of article 6 of the European Convention (van Bockel, 2009: 215). The first Engel criterion concerns whether the applied provision belongs to criminal law according to national law (Opinion of advocate general Case C-489/10 Bonda [2012] ECR, para 47). Nonetheless, this criterion is not decisive for the final assessment because it provides just the basic information about the national legislation, which is not distinctly relevant for the interpretation of the European Convention. Therefore, the European Court of Human Rights states that this criterion represents just the starting point for the further application of remaining two Engel criteria (
The second Engel criterion is far more important ( whether the legal rule in question is directed solely at a specific group or is of a generally binding character; whether the proceedings are instituted by a public body with statutory powers of enforcement; whether the legal rule has a punitive or deterrent purpose; whether the imposition of any penalty is dependent upon a finding of guilt; and how comparable procedures are classified in other Council of Europe member states.
The last criterion concerns the nature and the severity of the penalty, which is liable to be imposed. In the case of the sanction potentially imposed in tax proceedings, the really important factor is the objective of that penalty. A criminal nature of such penalty shall not be found if the penalty is only intended as pecuniary compensation for damages caused by the offender (
Finally, the significant rule applied on the application of second and third Engle criteria is that they are alternative, not necessarily cumulative (
As it was stated earlier, the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is a negative consequence for the illegal activity of the offender in the field of the budgetary law. Applying the first Engel criterion on this instrument, it is sure that the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is constituted by the budgetary regulation, not by the criminal one. However, this conclusion is not decisive for an assessment whether it is a criminal sanction or not (
According to the second Engel criteria, we should acquire more specific information about the material nature of the offence called breach of the budgetary discipline. There is no doubt that the regulation of the breach of the budgetary discipline is constituted by the general binding regulation and therefore this regulation is not directed solely at a specific group of persons ( On the other hand, contrary opinion could be found between Czech professionals to financial law. Compare Kateřina Frumarová et al,
Related to the assessment of the nature and the severity of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline, the charge could be imposed up to the amount of the funds affected by the breach of the budgetary discipline (Budgetary Rules Act 2000, sec. 44a/4). It is clear that this sanction is quite severe, indeed, if the tax authority can impose also the penalty up to the same amount as the charge is. It is obvious that the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is settled by the strict amount, which does not allow any discretion of the applying public authority. Therefore, the main aim of this sanction is to prevent the potential offender from any illegal conduct related to the budgetary discipline and may be to punish the offender by the loss of provided part of the budgetary fund. From these reasons, applying the last Engel criterion, we must conclude that the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline is a criminal sanction.
The national circumstances also draw the criminal nature of this charge. As the Supreme Administrative Court found: ‘
The proceedings conducted before the Office for the Protection of Competition can lead to the imposition of the fine for the administrative offence due to the breach of the public procurements law. The nature of administrative offences had been analysed by the Supreme Administrative Court for the purpose of the application of articles 6 and 7 of the European Convention and the result was that such offences are based on the criminal charge (Supreme Administrative Court: 3 As 57/2004 – 39). Therefore, the imposed fine by the Office for the Protection of Competition must be also considered as a criminal penalty (Office for the Protection of Competition: ÚOHS-R370/2014/VZ-37230/2015/321/Oho).
The consequent conducted proceedings on the imposition of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline pursuant to section 44a of the Budgetary Rules Act 2000 and on the imposition of the fine pursuant to section 268 and following of the Act No. 134/2016 Col., on public procurements, are quite common phenomenon in the Czech Republic. The fact is that both proceedings are usually dealing with the same facts connected in the place and time, and therefore it is necessary to answer if the specific conditions for the conduct of both consequent proceedings are met. The European Court of Human Rights accepted that article 4 of the Protocol to the European Convention is not breached by the duplication of the proceedings dealing with identical or substantially the same acts if they are sufficiently closely connected in time and in substance (
It is a reality that the proceeding before the Office for the Protection of Competition is much faster than the proceeding before the tax authority. Also, this administrative proceeding usually ends before the tax proceeding held by the tax authority begins. Yet, it is precisely the tax authority that can impose the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline without any discretion on the scope of this sanction; therefore in every case, this charge is always disproportional to the previously imposed fine by the Office for the Protection of Competition. Under these circumstances, it must be concluded that the tax proceeding with the aim to impose the charge for the breach of budgetary discipline on the subsidy recipient, following the administrative proceedings before the Office for the Protection of Competition is illegal due to the application of the
The European Convention regulation of the
Because of the nature of these sanctions, it must answer the question, under which condition could these sanctions be imposed – in consequent or parallel proceedings. It is true that it is not categorically forbidden to conduct two proceedings dealing with the identical or substantially the same acts, however, just if they are connected in time and in substance. This condition was finally described by the European Court of Human Rights in the A and B case and briefly summarized, which means that these proceedings has to deal with different aspects of the social misconduct involved, the sanctions in both proceedings has to be foreseeable to the offender, the public authorities has to cooperate in both proceedings and finally, the sanctions in both proceedings must be proportional, therefore the last sanction must take into account the previously imposed one. Unfortunately, the proceedings before the Office for the Protection of Competition is much faster than the tax proceedings and it is usually finished before the tax proceedings on the imposition of the charge for the breach of the budgetary discipline starts. Therefore, it is the tax authority that must levy this charge proportionately to the previously imposed fine. Lamentably, the tax authority has no discretion over the severity of the charge, which must be imposed in the exact amount pursuant to the Budgetary Rules Act 2000. For this reason, the dual sanctioning of the offender for the breach of the budgetary discipline in the case of the recipient of subsidy, regulated also by the public procurements law, is in contradiction to article 4 of the Protocol No. 7 to the European Convention, and therefore the hypothesis was confirmed.
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