Transcript Slide 1

20 March 2015, Kiev
Distribution of the Burden of Proof
in Administrative Proceedings
Irmantas Jarukaitis
I. Specific role of the court in the process of proof during the
administrative proceedings (I)
Active role of administrative courts in judicial proceedings (e.g.,
whether to initiate abtract legality review proceedings; refer the issue to
the Constitutional Court; require to present additional evidence, etc.):
Art.81 LOAP: „When hearing administrative cases, judges must
actively participate in the collection of evidence, in the
establishment of all significant circumstances of the case and must
make a comprehensive and objective examination thereof“
Why? 1.
The necessity to ensure public interest (ensurance of the
principle of legality of administrative acts); 2. to protect the interest of
weaker litigant (usually private persons do not have a choice, whether to
enter public legal relations); 3. to take into account specific nature of legal
relations in certain fields
II. Specific role of the court in the process of proof during the
administrative proceedings (II)
General rule and difference from civil proceedings:
Art. 57 para 4: evidence are provided by parties to the
proceedings and other participants of proceedings. If there is a
need, the Court may propose to these persons to present
additional evidence or to require submit additional documents or to
require state officials give explanations
In Lithuania, no strict obligation (e.g., in Germany – no adversarial
process at all), only right, but still ...
The consequence: the lack of evidence may be a base for a court
decision only when there was not enough evidence, provided by
parties and collected by court, to establish certain facts (A1203/2005; A10-01/2007).
III. Distribution of the burden of proof (onus probandi): general
aspects
Especially difficult, but important aspect, since correct disribution of the
burden of proof may:
The knowledge about the burden of proof may pre-determine,
whether parties will address the court at all
have the major impact on the outcome of the proceedings
IV. Distribution of the burden of proof (onus probandi): general aspects (II)
2 inter-related aspects:
A. Positive aspect – general duty to collect/submit evidence: all parties + the
court itself are the subjects of the process of proof
B. Negative aspect – becomes important in cases, when evidence, submitted by the
applicant and respondent are not enough to establish the existence of certain
facts/circumstances – in these cases decision is rendered against the party,
which had the burden of proof in particular situation (A556-963/2009;
A556-862/2010)
While in case of positive aspect it doesn‘t have the impact on the court
judgment (it‘s not important, which subject submitted the evidence),
the negative apect answers the question, which party bears the risk
of non-proof of certain circumstances (e.g., whether the employer has sent the
request to trade union concerning dismissal of the member of trade union (14 days term and
presumption that trade union consented) A62-1007/2011)
V. Distribution of the burden of proof (onus probandi): general aspects (III)
General rule: every party must prove the existence of facts on the basis of which it
forms its claims (A146-2329/2011)
Both in terms of procedural and substantial law:
E.g., its up to the party asking to reniew the expired term of submission of the appeal
to prove the existence of objective circumstances, which precluded timely submission
of the appeal (A556-360/2012)
According to the Tax administration law, its up to the tax administrator to substantiate
the calculated tax and related sums; if the tax payer disagrees with calculations of the
tax administrator, it must substantiate the grounds of disagreement as regards those
calculations (A261-360/2012)
As a rule, a party, which negates the existence of certain facts is objectively unable
to do that, thus, it‘s up to the party, which argues that certain facts exist, to submit
the evidence (A756-156/2012)
VI. Specific examples of distribution of the burden of proof (I)
Given the fact that administrative relations/cases are very
different in nature, there maybe good reasons to depart from the
general principle:
Some stem from legal acts, others – the product of court practice
State/public service;
Taxation;
Damages;
Persons in detention;
Asylum cases;
VII. Specific examples of distribution of the burden of proof: state
service
The logic – employee (state officer) is a weaker party
If state officer suffers negative consequences, the burden of proof rests with the
employer (state/municipal institution)
Disciplinary sanctions; dismissal; transfer to the other office (A6-2160/2006)
The fact that state institution fully paid his salary before transfer of policeman to
other institution (A756-156/2012)
The question, if there were objective preconditions to fullfill the assignment in time
(A438-1112/2009; the question whether the database was operational)
Exeptions from the exeption: e. g., the obligation to declare private interests (which
party has the burden of proof to establish about the existence of certain private
interest of a close person? (A492-1322/2012) – positive obligation to declare means
the obligation to care about it – thus the BoP that you didn‘t know belong to you
VIII. Tax cases
If the content of the commercial operation is different, from that reflected
in accounting books, on the basis of which the tax payer seeks the VAT
deduction, and the tax administration has the grounds to believe the
existence of tax evasion, the tax administrator has the right to disclose the
true nature of commercial operation (A438-3582/2011)
If the tax payer grounds received revenue on the basis of contracts of a
proper form or other official documents, its up to the tax administrator to
proved that in reality the tax payer hasn’t received the revenue (A5753582/2011)
Its up to the tax payer to prove the existence of circumstances, established
by law, that there are grounds for exemption from the tax, reduced VAT
tariff, exemption from fines (A556-364/2011)
IX. Damages cases
Three elements of public delict/tort;
According to court practice, it’s up to the applicant to prove the
existence of damage and the amount of damage (both, pecuniary
and non-pecuniary)
Still, if, after all the efforts of the applicant is not able to prove the
exact amount of damages, it’s up to the court to calculate it (CC Art.
6.249) (A438-3420/2010 – state liability with regard to illegal
building permits)
X. Detained persons
Weaker party with particularly limited ability to collect and present evidence:
“once deciding cases of such nature it is necessary to take into account
into objective difficulties these persons face when collecting evidence
about the imprisonment conditions, therefore, its not possible to adhere
strictly to the principle, that a person must prove the existence of facts,
on which it bases its claim. In essence it means that the obligation
to submit a data about the conditions in prison rests on the
respondent
(e. g. Judgment of the ECtHR of 10 January 2012 Ananyev and others v.
Russia; Judgment of 10 April 2014 of the Supreme Administrative Court
of Lithuania No. A858-114/2014). Therefore, if the respondent is unable
to produce such data, situation is judged in favour of the applicant, who
claims that his rights were violated”.
XI. Asylum seekers
The ability of both the applicant and the respondent to collect and submit
the written evidence: foreign country with no access to it
 The privilege of doubt – Art. 83
 If the asylum seeker provides consistent description of the
situation/story, which, despite his/her sincere efforts, may not
be confirmed by written documents, the data presented are
evaluated in the favour of asylum seeker and its up to
Migration Department to provide evidence to the contrary
(A858-356/2014)
XII. Other types of cases:

Provision of the information to public – institution, refusing to provide
it (A525-419/2010)

Misleading advertising – its up to advertiser to prove that statements
provided in advertising, are accurate and true (A556-997/2008)

It’s up to the Competition Authority to prove the existence of the
infringement of competition law, but, if an undertaking wants to rely on
exceptions, it’s up to the undertaking to prove the existence of
conditions, under which exceptions are applicable (A858-1245/2012)

If there is a presumption – it’s up to party, negating it, to provide the
prove that negates the presumption (A492-14/2012 – information
about content of cosmetic product on the label)
Procedural consequences for a judge
The Court should look at the preliminary stage and evaluate what
kind of dispute arised, what substantial legal provisions will be
applicable – from that deduce the correct distribution of the burden
of proof and draw attention to the parties, what facts they
should prove, what are the consequences for not submitting the
evidence
Draw attention to the fact that submitted evidence is not accurate
or not enough informative; to suggest to submit additional
evidence; if it’s not possible, to consider the necessity to collect
evidence on its own motion.
Standard of proof
Civil proceedings: „balance of probabilities“ (3K-3-149/2004): if, after
studying all the evidence, it is more probable, that certain fact exists, it
is deemed to be established
Administrative proceedings: no clear general rule (different nature of
legal relations), but usually should be more strict (public interest)
Economic sanctions (Competition; Alcohol, Tabacco, etc.) – similar to
criminal cases (Art. 6 of the ECHR); presumption of innocense – „beyond
reasonble doubt“
Sources:
The Supreme Administrative Court of Lithuania:
http://www.lvat.lt/en/news.html
The Supreme Court of Lithuania:
http://www.lat.lt/en/news.html
Thank you!
Questions, comments?