Mr Mansour’s wife, a Slovak national, with whom he had been living in Ireland, travelled to Slovakia
in January 2011 with the couple’s two children, born in 2006 and 2008. They have not returned to
Ireland since. Less than a month after they had left, Mr Mansour brought proceedings before the
Slovakian courts for the return of his children to Ireland. The courts ordered the return and the order
became enforceable in July 2011.
Since the mother had not complied with it, Mr Mansour applied for the judicial enforcement of the
order in February 2012. The proceedings were stayed pending the outcome of a request which the
mother had lodged with the Prosecutor General for an extraordinary appeal against the order, and
they were resumed after the Prosecutor General had found that there were no reasons for such an
appeal. The district court eventually found that the order was not enforceable, a decision which was
confirmed by the regional court in June 2013. Both courts referred to a previous decision of the
district court, in May 2011, for provisional measures, namely for the children to be entrusted to the
care of the mother and for Mr Mansour to be required to pay maintenance. The courts considered
that, given that the return order had not specified that it was directed at the mother and given that
Mr Mansour had not been provisionally entrusted with the care of the children, the order could not
be enforced.
Mr Mansour lodged a constitutional complaint challenging those decisions. In May 2015, the
Constitutional Court found that the challenged decisions had been taken on purely formal grounds
and had been arbitrary. Having found that Mr Mansour’s rights had been violated, it quashed the
lower courts’ decision and remitted the case to the regional court, which in turn quashed the district
court’s decision and remitted the case to that court for examination, noting that the lapse of time
made a fresh assessment necessary. In April 2016 the district court again decided that the order
could not be enforced, relying in particular on a psychological report and taking into account the
children’s wish to stay with their mother in Slovakia. The regional court upheld that decision and it
became final in August 2016.
In the meantime, Mr Mansour lodged another constitutional complaint which led to the
Constitutional Court finding a violation of his rights in December 2016, in particular in connection
with the length of the enforcement proceedings, and awarding him compensation in the amount of
4,000 euros. After the enforcement proceedings had been completed by a final judgment, he lodged
a third constitutional complaint.
Mr Mansour complained, in particular, that the Slovakian enforcement courts had failed to secure
respect for his family life under Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life).
Violation of Article 8
Just satisfaction: EUR 10,000 (non-pecuniary damage) and EUR 5,400 (costs and expenses)
Just Satisfaction
Feryadi Şahin v. Turkey (no. 33279/05)*
The applicant, Feryadi Şahin, is a Turkish national who was born in 1967 and lives in Istanbul. On
9 December 1988 he acquired part of a plot of land in Samandra and a document attesting to his
title was issued to him by the Directorate General for Property Deeds and Registration. Relying on
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 (protection of property), he alleged that the annulment of his title in
December 2003 and the re-registration of his property in the name of the Public Treasury, without
the payment of any compensation, had constituted a disproportionate interference with his right to
the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions.
In its principal judgment of 13 September 2011 the Court found a violation of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1.
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