(Lord Lloyd of Berwick -3)
It was suggested by Professor Brownlie that the American Restatement of the Foreign
Relations Law of the United States was to the contrary effect. But I doubt if this is so.
In vol. 1, para. 464 we find:
- "Former heads of state or government have sometimes sought immunity
from suit in respect of claims arising out of their official acts while in office.
Ordinarily, such acts are not within the jurisdiction to prescribe of other states.
However a former head of state appears to have no immunity from jurisdiction to
adjudicate."
The last sentence means only that it is competent for the court of the foreign state to
inquire whether the acts complained of were official acts of the head of state, or private
acts. Unless the court is persuaded that they were private acts the immunity is absolute.
Decided cases support the same approach. In Duke of
Brunswick v. King of Hanover (1848) 2 H.L. Cas. p. 1, a case discussed by Professor F.
A. Mann in his illuminating article published in 59 L.Q.R. (1943) p. 42, the reigning King
of Hanover (who happened to be in England) was sued by the former reigning Duke of
Brunswick. It was held by this House that the action must fail, not on the ground that the
King of Hanover was entitled to personal immunity so long as he was in England (ratione
personae) but on the wider ground (ratione materiae) that a foreign sovereign
- "cannot be made responsible here for an act done in his sovereign character
in his own country; whether it be an act right or wrong, whether according to the
constitution of that country or not, the courts of this country cannot sit in judgment
upon an act of a sovereign, effected by virtue of his sovereign authority abroad."
In Hatch v. Baez (1876) 7 Hun. 596 the plaintiff complained of an injury which
he sustained at the hands of the defendant when president of the Dominican Republic. After
the defendant had ceased to be president, he was arrested in New York at the suit of the
plaintiff. There was a full argument before what would now, I think, be called the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals, with extensive citation of authority including Duke of
Brunswick v. King of Hanover. The plaintiff contended (just as the appellants have
contended in the present appeal) that the acts of the defendant must be regarded as having
been committed in his private capacity. I quote from the argument at p. 596-597:
- "No unjust or oppressive act committed by his direction upon any one of his
subjects, or upon others entitled to protection, is in any true sense the act of the
executive in his public and representative capacity, but of the man simply, rated
as other men are rated in private stations; for in the perpetration of unauthorised
offences of this nature, he divests himself of his "regal prerogatives" and
descends to the level of those untitled offenders, against whose crimes it is the highest
purpose of government to afford protection."
But the court rejected the plaintiff's argument. At p. 599 Gilbert J. said:
- "The wrongs and injuries of which the plaintiff complains were
inflicted upon him by the Government of St. Domingo, while he was residing in that
country, and was in all respects subject to its laws. They consist of acts done by the
defendant in his official capacity of president of that republic. The sole question is,
whether he is amenable to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state for those
acts."
A little later we find, at p. 600:
- "The general rule, no doubt, is that all persons and property within
the territorial jurisdiction of a state are amenable to the jurisdiction of its courts.
But the immunity of individuals from suits brought in foreign tribunals for acts done
within their own states, in the exercise of the sovereignty thereof, is essential to
preserve the peace and harmony of nations, and has the sanction of the most approved
writers on international law. It is also recognised in all the judicial decisions on the
subject that have come to my knowledge."
The court concluded:
- "The fact that the defendant has ceased to be president of St. Domingo
does not destroy his immunity. That springs from the capacity in which the acts were done,
and protects the individual who did them, because they emanated from a foreign and
friendly government."
In Underhill v. Hernandez (1897) 168 U.S. 250 the plaintiff was an American
citizen resident in Venezuela. The defendant was a general in command of revolutionary
forces, which afterwards prevailed. The plaintiffs brought proceedings against the
defendant in New York, alleging wrongful imprisonment during the revolution. In a
celebrated passage Chief Justice Fuller said, at 252:
- "Every sovereign state is bound to respect the independence of every
other sovereign state, and the courts of one country will not sit in judgment on the acts
of the government of another done within its own territory. Redress of grievances by
reason of such acts must be obtained through the means open to be availed of by sovereign
powers as between themselves."
The Supreme Court approved, at p. 254 a statement by the Circuit Court of Appeals
"that the acts of the defendant were the acts of the government of Venezuela, and as
such are not properly the subject of adjudication in the courts of another
government."
On the other side of the line is Jimenez v. Aristeguieta
(1962) 311 F. 2 547. In that case the State of Venezuela sought the extradition of a
former chief executive alleging four charges of murder, and various financial crimes.
There was insufficient evidence to connect the defendant with the murder charges. But the
judge found that the alleged financial crimes were committed for his private financial
benefit, and that they constituted "common crimes committed by the Chief of State
done in violation of his position and not in pursuance of it." The defendant argued
that as a former chief executive he was entitled to sovereign immunity, and he relied on Underhill
v. Hernandez. Not surprisingly the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected this
argument. At p. 557, they said:
- "It is only when officials having sovereign authority act in an official
capacity that the act of state doctrine applies."
To the same effect is United States of America v. Noriega (1990) 746 F.Supp.
1506. The defendant was charged with various drug offences. He claimed immunity as de
facto head of the Panamanian government. The court considered the claim under three heads,
sovereign immunity, the act of state doctrine and diplomatic immunity. Having referred to Hatch
v. Baez and Underhill v. Hernandez the court continued, at pp. 1521-1522:
- "In order for the act of state doctrine to apply, the defendant must
establish that his activities are 'acts of state', i.e. that they were taken on behalf of
the state and not, as private acts, on behalf of the actor himself. . . . That the acts
must be public acts of the sovereign has been repeatedly affirmed. . . .
Though the distinction between the public and private acts of government officials may
prove elusive, this difficulty has not prevented courts from scrutinising the character of
the conduct in question."
The court concluded that Noriega's alleged drug trafficking could not
conceivably constitute public acts on behalf of the Panamanian state.
These cases (and there are many others to which we were
referred) underline the critical distinction between personal or private acts on the one
hand, and public or official acts done in the execution or under colour of sovereign
authority on the other. Despite the plethora of authorities, especially in the United
States, the appellants were unable to point to a single case in which official acts
committed by a head of state have been made the subject of suit or prosecution after he
has left office. The nearest they got was Hilao v. Marcos (1994) 25 F. 3d 1467, in
which a claim for immunity by the estate of former President Marcos failed. But the facts
were special. Although there was no formal waiver of immunity in the case, the government
of the Philippines made plain their view that the claim should proceed. Indeed they filed
a brief in which they asserted that foreign relations with the United States would not
be adversely affected if claims against ex-President Marcos and his estate were litigated
in U.S. courts. There is an obvious contrast with the facts of the present case.
So the question comes to this: on which side of the line does
the present case come? In committing the crimes which are alleged against him, was Senator
Pinochet acting in his private capacity or was he acting in a sovereign capacity as head
of state? In my opinion there can be only one answer. He was acting in a sovereign
capacity. It has not been suggested that he was personally guilty of any of the crimes of
torture or hostage-taking in the sense that he carried them out with his own hands. What
is alleged against him is that he organised the commission of such crimes, including the
elimination of his political opponents, as head of the Chilean government, and that he did
so in co-operation with other governments under Plan Condor, and in particular with the
government of Argentina. I do not see how in these circumstances he can be treated as
having acted in a private capacity.
In order to make the above point good it is necessary to quote
some passages from the second international warrant.
- "It can be inferred from the inquiries made that, since September 1973
in Chile and since 1976 in the Republic of Argentina a series of events and punishable
actions were committed under the fiercest ideological repression against the citizens and
residents in these countries. The plans and instructions established beforehand from the
government enabled these actions to be carried out. . . .
- It has been ascertained that there were coordination actions at international
level that were called 'Operativo Condor' in which different countries, Chile and
Argentina among them, were involved and whose purpose was to coordinate the oppressive
actions among them.
- In this sense Augusto Pinochet Ugarte, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces and
head of the Chilean government at the time, committed punishable acts in coordination with
the military authorities in Argentina between 1976 and 1983 . . . as he gave orders to
eliminate, torture and kidnap persons and to cause others to disappear, both Chileans and
individuals from different nationalities, in Chile and in other countries, through the
actions of the secret service (D.I.N.A.) and within the framework of the above-mentioned
'Plan Condor'."
Where a person is accused of organising the commission of
crimes as the head of the government, in cooperation with other governments, and carrying
out those crimes through the agency of the police and the secret service, the inevitable
conclusion must be that he was acting in a sovereign capacity and not in a personal or
private capacity.
But the appellants have two further arguments. First they say
that the crimes alleged against Senator Pinochet are so horrific that an exception must be
made to the ordinary rule of customary international law. Secondly they say that the
crimes in question are crimes against international law, and that international law cannot
both condemn conduct as a breach of international law and at the same time grant immunity
from prosecution. It cannot give with one hand and take away with the other.
As to the first submission, the difficulty, as the Divisional
Court pointed out, is to know where to draw the line. Torture is, indeed, a horrific
crime, but so is murder. It is a regrettable fact that almost all leaders of revolutionary
movements are guilty of killing their political opponents in the course of coming to
power, and many are guilty of murdering their political opponents thereafter in order to
secure their power. Yet it is not suggested (I think) that the crime of murder puts the
successful revolutionary beyond the pale of immunity in customary international law. Of
course it is strange to think of murder or torture as "official" acts or as part
of the head of state's "public functions." But if for "official" one
substitutes "governmental" then the true nature of the distinction between
private acts and official acts becomes apparent. For reasons already mentioned I have no
doubt that the crimes of which Senator Pinochet is accused, including the crime of
torture, were governmental in nature. I agree with Collins J. in the Divisional Court that
it would be unjustifiable in theory, and unworkable in practice, to impose any restriction
on head of state immunity by reference to the number or gravity of the alleged crimes.
Otherwise one would get to this position: that the crimes of a head of state in the
execution of his governmental authority are to be attributed to the state so long as they
are not too serious. But beyond a certain (undefined) degree of seriousness the crimes
cease to be attributable to the state, and are instead to be treated as his private
crimes. That would not make sense.
As to the second submission, the question is whether there
should be an exception from the general rule of immunity in the case of crimes which have
been made the subject of international conventions, such as the International Convention
against the Taking of Hostages (1980) and the Convention against Torture (1984). The
purpose of these conventions, in very broad terms, was to ensure that acts of torture and
hostage-taking should be made (or remain) offences under the criminal law of each of the
state parties, and that each state party should take measures to establish
extra-territorial jurisdiction in specified cases. Thus in the case of torture a state
party is obliged to establish extra-territorial jurisdiction when the alleged offender is
a national of that state, but not where the victim is a national. In the latter case the
state has a discretion: see article 5.1(b) and (c). In addition there is an obligation on
a state to extradite or prosecute where a person accused of torture is found within its
territory--aut dedere aut judicare: see article 7. But there is nothing in the Torture
Convention which touches on state immunity. The contrast with the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948) could not be more marked.
Article 4 of the Genocide Convention provides:
- "Persons committing genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in article 3
shall be punished whether they are constitutionally responsible rulers or public officials
or private individuals."
There is no equivalent provision in either the Torture Convention or the Taking of
Hostages Convention.
Moreover when the Genocide Convention was incorporated into
English law by the Genocide Act 1969, article 4 was omitted. So Parliament must clearly
have intended, or at least contemplated, that a head of state accused of genocide would be
able to plead sovereign immunity. If the Torture Convention and the Taking of Hostages
Convention had contained a provision equivalent to article 4 of the Genocide Convention
(which they did not) it is reasonable to suppose that, as with genocide, the equivalent
provisions would have been omitted when Parliament incorporated those conventions into
English law. I cannot for my part see any inconsistency between the purposes underlying
these Conventions and the rule of international law which allows a head of state
procedural immunity in respect of crimes covered by the Conventions.
Nor is any distinction drawn between torture and other crimes
in state practice. In Al-Adsani v. Government of Kuwait (1996) 107 I.L.R. 536 the
plaintiff brought civil proceedings against the government of Kuwait alleging that he had
been tortured in Kuwait by government agents. He was given leave by the Court of Appeal to
serve out of the jurisdiction on the ground that state immunity does not extend to acts of
torture. When the case came back to the Court of Appeal on an application to set aside
service, it was argued that a state is not entitled to immunity in respect of acts that
are contrary to international law, and that since torture is a violation of jus cogens, a
state accused of torture forfeits its immunity. The argument was rejected. Stuart Smith
L.J. observed that the draftsman of the State Immunity Act must have been well aware of
the numerous international conventions covering torture (although he could not, of course,
have been aware of the convention against torture in 1984). If civil claims based on acts
of torture were intended to be excluded from the immunity afforded by section 1(1) of the
Act of 1978, because of the horrifying nature of such acts, or because they are condemned
by international law, it is inconceivable that section 1(1) would not have said so.
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