Amicus Curiae presentado por Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa y otros


 

 

IN THE INTER AMERICAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS

REQUEST FOR AN ADVISORY OPINION PRESENTED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF COSTA RICA

Brief of Inter American Press Association,
World Press Freedom Committee,
American Newspaper Publishers Association,
Federation Internationale des Editeurs de Journaux,
The Copley Press, Inc.,
The Miami Herald,
Newsweek,
USA Today,
The Wall Street Journal,
and
The International Herald Tribune


as

Amici Curiae

Leonard H. Marks
Richard M. Schmidt, Jr.
J. Brian DeBoice
Cohn and Marks
1333 New Hampshire Avenue, N. W.
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 293-3860

Counsel for Amici Curiae

Of Counsel:

W. Terry Maguire
Vice President/General Counsel
American Newspaper Publishers
Association
Box 17047, Dulles Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
(703) 648-1060

(Additional Counsel listed
in Appendix)


April 4, 1986

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE

STATEMENT OF FACTS

QUESTIONS PRESENTED

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

ARGUMENT

 

I. The Provisions of Article 14(1)
Are Not Self-Executing

II. States Parties to the Convention
Have No Obligation to Enact Laws
Creating a "Right of Reply" in
Their Jurisdictions

 

CONCLUSION



TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

 

Treaties

American Convention on Human Rights

American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man

Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Constitutions

Constitution of Costa Rica, Art. 7

Cases

Advisory Opinion OC-5/85 of November 13, 1985 (Inter American Court of Human Rights)



IN THE INTER AMERICAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS

REQUEST FOR AN ADVISORY OPINION PRESENTED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF COSTA RICA


Brief of
Inter American Press Association,
World Press Freedom Committee,
American Newspaper Publishers Association,
Federation Internationale des Editeurs de Journaux,
The Copley Press, Inc.,
The Miami Herald,
Newsweek,
USA Today,
The Wall Street Journal,
and
The International Herald Tribune

as
Amici Curiae


INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE

The Inter American Press Association ("IAPA") is a non-profit organization of Western Hemisphere Publications devoted to the promotion and protection of Freedom of the Press and the peoples' right to know in the New World. Founded in 1943, the IAPA lists as members more than 1,200 newspapers from 34 countries of the Americas. The IAPA's objectives are, in brief: to guard freedom of the press; to foster and protect the general and specific interests of the daily and periodical press of the Americas; to promote and maintain the dignity, rights and responsibilities of journalism; to encourage uniform standards of professional and business conduct; to exchange ideas and information which contribute to the cultural, material, and technical development of the press; and to foster a wider knowledge and greater interchange among the peoples of the Americas support of the basic principles of a free society and individual liberty.

The World Press Freedom Committee, founded in 1976, represents 32 journalistic organizations on five continents. It works to maintain the free flow of news and opposes those who advocate state-controlled media, restrictions on journalistic and editorial freedom, and all other impediments to a vigorous and free international press.

The American Newspaper Publishers Association, founded in 1887, is a non-profit business trade association representing 1,379 member newspapers accounting for more than 90% of the daily and Sunday newspaper circulation in the United States and more than 85% of Canadian daily circulation. Outside the U.S. and Canada, ANPA has member newspapers in Argentina, the Bahamas, Bermuda, Brazil, the Virgin Islands, and the West Indies. ANPA member newspapers provide news and information to more than 135 million readers. ANPA works to advance the cause of a free press on behalf of its member newspapers.

The Federation Internationale des Editeurs de Journaux ("FIEJ") is an international organization of newspaper publishers dedicated to defending press freedom, to safeguarding the ethical and economic interest of newspapers, and to studying all question of interest to newspapers the solutions to which can be found, in whole or in part, at the international level.

The Copley Press, Inc., The Miami Herald, Newsweek, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, and The International Herald Tribune are publications and publishers of major newspapers and periodicals with circulation in the United States and throughout the Americas.


STATEMENT OF FACTS

The case before the Court is a request for an advisory opinion by the Government of Costa Rica pursuant to Article 64 of the American Convention on Human Rights ("the Convention"). the request concerns whether the provisions of Article 14(1) of the Convention concerning a "right of reply" are automatically incorporated into the law of Costa Rica by virtue of Article 1 of the Convention and Article 7 of the Constitution of Costa Rica. If the Article 14 "right of reply" is not automatically incorporated into the law of Costa Rica, the request further inquires whether Costa Rica has the duty to adopt, pursuant to Article 2 of the Convention, such laws as may be necessary to give effect to an Article 14 "right of reply" and, if so, whether such laws may be of a "reglamentary nature issued by executive decree".

In its October 1, 1985 letter requesting an advisory opinion, the Government of Costa Rica states that it is in doubt as to whether persons in Costa Rica now possess the Article 14 "right of reply" or whether the right becomes available only when a formal law is issued by the Costa Rican Government establishing the conditions for specific exercise of the right. The Government of Costa Rica notes that Article 7 of the Constitution of Costa Rica provides as follow:

Article 7. Public treaties, international agreements and concordants duly approved by the Legislative Assembly shall have a higher authority than the laws from their promulgation or from the day that they designate.

Thus, the Government of Costa Rica propounds a thesis that, under the provisions of Article 7 of the Constitution of Costa Rica, the civil and political rights set forth in the Convention were automatically incorporated into Costa Rican law when Costa Rica ratified the Convention by Legislative Decree No. 4534 on February 23, 1970.

The Government of Costa Rica propounds a second thesis, however, which is that the provisions of Article 14 of the Convention are not self-executing and therefore would require the promulgation of a formal domestic law to create and define the scope of an Article 14 "right of reply".


QUESTION PRESENTED

1. Should the right set out in Article 14 of the American Convention on Human Rights be considered as already guaranteed in its free and full exercise for all persons under the jurisdiction of the Costa Rican State, according to what results from the obligations imposed on Costa Rica by Article 1 of the Convention?

2. If that is not the case, does the Costa Rican State have the juridical-international duty to adopt, through its constitutional procedures, the legislative or other measures as may be necessary to give effect to the right of reply guaranteed by Article 14 of the Convention, pursuant to the provisions of Article 2 of the American Convention on Human Rights?

3. If it is decided that the Costa Rican State has the duty to adopt the legislative or other measures as may be necessary to give effect to the right of reply guaranteed by Article 14 of the American Convention, should it then be understood that the expression "law" which is included at the end of the first paragraph of Article 14 is employed in a broad sense, which might then include provisions of a reglamentary nature issued by executive decree, keeping in mind the rather instrumental nature of such legal provisions?


SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

The express provisions of Article 14(1) of the Convention and their context within the Convention framework indicate that Article 14(1) is not self-executing. The promulgation of formal domestic laws by the States Parties to the Convention would be necessary both to create an Article 14 "right of reply" and to define and restrict the scope of the right. Article 14 permits but does not command enactment of laws by States Parties to provide for a "right of reply". In addition, Article 14 requires that no "right of reply" be applied to communications media which are not "legally regulated". Article 14 thus requires that the print media not be subjected to a "right of reply".


ARGUMENT

I. The Provisions of Article 14(1) Are not Self-Executing.

Article 14(1) provides:

Anyone injured by inaccurate or offensive statements or ideas disseminated to the public in general by a legally regulated medium of communication has the right to reply or to make a correction using the same communications outlet, under such conditions as the law may establish.

By its terms, this provision is permissive in nature; it provides for a "right of reply" only "under such conditions as the law may establish". The provision thus reflects that the States Parties may, under certain conditions, create and define by law a "right of reply", but that States Parties do not automatically create or recognize such a right simply by ratifying the Convention. This view is confirmed by comparing Article 14(1) with other provisions of the Convention which variously describe in absolute, in mandatory and in permissive terms the existence of rights and interests and the establishment of laws by States Parties.

Provisions of the Convention which recognize fundamental rights are stated in absolute terms. Thus, Article 13(1) guarantees that,

Everyone has the right to freedom of thought and expression. This right includes freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing, in print, in form of art, or through any other medium of one's choice.


This absolute, unqualified provision declares the existence and authority of the right to freedom of thought and expression, without regard to the vicissitudes of local laws of States Parties. Thus, this fundamental right may be conceived of as "self-executing" in the sense that it is acknowledged to exist independently of recognition by the local laws of States Parties.

Under Article 13(1), States Parties recognize that all persons possess the right to freedom of thought and expression, because this right, like the other fundamental rights set forth in the Convention, is based on universal "attributes of the human personality", not on the circumstance of "one's being a national of a certain state". American Convention on Human Rights, Preamble; see also id. Art. 29(c) (the Convention must be interpreted as consistent with all rights "inherent in the human personality"). Numerous other fundamental rights are similarly recognized by the Convention.

In contrast to the foregoing class of fundamental rights which do not depend on the enactment of formal laws by States Parties for their existence and legitimacy, the Convention also recognizes classes of interests which must depend for their definition and protection on the enactment of local laws. Under the terms of the Convention, protection for such interests is specified to be either mandatory or permissive. Where protection is mandatory, the Convention requires that local laws be enacted. Where protection is permissive, the Convention merely permits the interest to be protected by local laws. In both instances, however, the Convention makes express reference to a need for enactment of local laws, thus negating any inference that protection for the interests in question can be deemed "self-executing".

An example of a mandatory requirement that States Parties enact legislation may be found in Article 13(2)'s reconciliation of reputation interests with the right of free expression by directing that the right of freedom of expression shall not be subject to prior censorship but shall be subject to subsequent imposition of liability, which shall be expressly established by law to the extent necessary to ensure:

a. Respect for the rights or reputations of others....

This provision does more than merely permit legislation which imposes subsequent liability on speech where necessary to ensure, inter alia, protection for interests in reputation. It requires that the right of free expression only be made subject to subsequent liability under such local laws as shall be established "to the extent necessary to ensure" respect for reputation. The Convention protects other interests as well by mandatory requirements that States Parties enact laws.

The Convention also recognizes a class of permissive interests which may, but need not, be protected by the law of States Parties. The permissive provisions of Article 14(1) fall in this third category. In addition to Article 14(1)'s allowance that the local law of the States Parties may establish conditions governing a "right to reply", the Convention provides, for example, that public entertainment's "may be subject by law" to prior censorship for certain narrow purposes (Articles 13(4); that the freedom of movement "may also be restricted by law" in designated zones for reasons of public interest (Article 22(4) ); and that the law "may regulate" the right to participate in government in certain defined ways (Article 23(2) ).

The intent of these provisions is to permit, but not to require, laws of the types mentioned. Thus, Article 22(4) of the Convention permits legislation which would restrict freedom of movement in certain designated zones for reasons of public interest, but it plainly does not require the States Parties to set up designated zones and restrict freedom of movement in them. Similarly, Article 23(2) of the Convention permits States Parties to regulate the rights of their citizens to take part in government on the basis of age, but it does not require that they do so. The same is true of the permissive provisions of Article 14(1). The Convention permits States Parties to establish by law conditions under which a "right of reply" may be exercised, but it does not require that they do so.

Given the permissive language of Article 14(1), Article 1 of the Convention does not render a "right of reply" automatically incorporated into the local law of the States Parties to the Convention. Article 1 merely provides that States Parties undertake to respect and carry out within their jurisdictions the provisions of the Convention. This general provision cannot give rise to a self-executing or mandatory obligation where a specific provision of the Convention, such as Article 14(1), has merely created a permissive condition. Thus, States Parties to the Convention may comply with Article 1 obligations whether or not they establish by local law conditions governing a "right of reply", because Article 14(1) does not require establishment of such conditions.

Indeed, the thesis that the permissive provisions of Article 14(1) might be "self-executing" is rebutted simply by the Convention's affirmative requirement that States Parties undertake to adopt "such legislative or other measures as may be necessary to give effect to" the provisions of the Convention. If even permissive provisions of the Convention, such as those of Article 14(1), were to be deemed "self-executing", then Article 2 and the related provisions of the Convention would be mere surplusage. The Court must interpret the Convention so as to give purpose and effect to all of its provisions. The provisions of Article 14(1) cannot therefore be deemed "self-executing".


II. States Parties to the Convention Have No Obligation to Enact Laws Creating a "Right of Reply" in Their Jurisdictions.

Analysis of the second and third questions posed by the Government of Costa Rica must begin with the permissive nature of Article 14(1)'s provisions. As observed in the preceding section, the provisions of Article 14(1) are merely permissive in that they permit but do not require States Parties to enact laws establishing conditions under which a "right of reply" may be exercised. Apart from relevance to the question of whether Article 14(1) is self-executing, the permissive language of Article 14(1) thus also necessitates the conclusion that States Parties have no obligation under Articles 1 and 2 of the Convention to enact such local laws as would be necessary to create and govern a "right of reply". Moreover, other aspects of human rights policy embodied in the Convention support the view that States Parties have no mandatory obligation to create in their local law a "right of reply".

Unlike the basic, fundamental human rights recognized in provisions of the Convention such as Articles 12 and 13 (freedoms of conscience, religion, thought, expression and the press), the Article 14(1) provisions concerning a "right of reply" are of a subsidiary, procedural character. The purpose of the Article 14 provisions is to recognize a permissible procedural avenue by which basic, fundamental interests recognized in other portions of the Convention (such as interests in privacy, reputation and dignity recognized in Articles 11 and 13(2) (a) ) may be vindicated.

The secondary, non fundamental character of the "right of reply" is illustrated by the fact that neither the (European) Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms ("the European Convention") nor the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ("the Covenant") recognize the existence of, or mention, the "right of reply". The Convention itself provides that interpretation of the Convention may be assisted by reference to international instruments setting forth human rights principles, and this Court has previously looked to both the European Convention and the Covenant for assistance in interpreting the Convention. Similarly, a "right of reply" is not recognized or provided for in either the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man or the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. These instruments recognize fundamental interests in reputation, privacy and human dignity, but they do not give preference to any one specific procedural mechanism (among the many which might be devised) to protect these interests. Thus, the Convention stands alone in devoting specific attention to a "right of reply" as distinct from other procedural mechanisms which local laws may devise to protect fundamental interests in reputation, privacy and human dignity.

Article 14(1) is both narrowly drafted and made contingent on those limiting conditions of local law which States Parties may establish to effectuate a "right of reply". Exemplifying this narrow scope is article 14(1)'s affirmative exemption from any "right of reply" obligation of all communications media which are not "legally regulated". The question of what communications media in a given jurisdiction are "legally regulated" must be answered, in the first instance, by reference to the local laws of States Parties.

The extent of regulation necessary to satisfy the "legally regulated" standard of Article 14(1) must be substantial. At minimum, government licensing and a pervasive scheme of substantive regulation must exist before the medium in question can be considered "legally regulated" for purposes of Article 14. This can be demonstrated by analysis of the language of the Article.

All commercial and non commercial enterprises are subject to common forms of legal "regulation". These common forms of "regulation", to which communications and non communications enterprises alike are subjected, include generally applicable laws such as tax laws, labor laws, and laws against discrimination. That such common forms of "regulation" do not satisfy the "legally regulated" requirement of Article 14(1) is apparent, because a contrary conclusion would render the "legally regulated" requirement of the Article both unnecessary and redundant.

Because all communications media are equally subject to common, content neutral forms of regulation of the business aspects of their operations, it would be unnecessary and, indeed, senseless for the Convention to purport to restrict a "right of reply" only to those media which are "legally regulated" in this universal manner. By restricting to "legally regulated" media the application of the right, the Convention distinguishes those media which are subject to a uniquely pervasive scheme of legal regulation from other media which are not subject to such a scheme. Any other conclusion would require interpretation of Article 14(1)'s "legally regulated" qualification as merely superfluous or redundant. Thus, the minimum attributes of a "legally regulated" medium of communication under Article 14 are a substantial, pervasive regulatory scheme, including a government administered licensing system. Where such a pervasive scheme of regulation is not present, the medium may not be considered "legally regulated" within the meaning of Article 14(1).

From the foregoing, it follows that the provisions of Article 14(1) prohibit application of a "right of reply" to the press and all print media not controlled by government. As previously stated, Communications media may not be made subject to a "right of reply" under Article 14 unless they are "legally regulated", and such regulation would have to consist of a pervasive scheme, including government licensing of the medium in question. Under the provisions of Articles 12 and 13 of the Convention, however, imposition of a licensing requirement on the free press is contrary to the fundamental right of free expression, and thus imposition of a "right of reply" on the press contravenes the provisions of Articles 12, 13 and 14(1).

Although the Court need not decide in this case to what extent a "right of reply" may be imposed on pervasively regulated media, resolution of that question must turn in part on the particular circumstances and modes of regulation which exist in the various jurisdictions of States Parties to the Convention. No one rule or result is necessarily appropriate for all jurisdictions. In any event, only the most compelling circumstances can justify imposition of a "right of reply" even on pervasively regulated, privately operated communications media.

Article 14(1)'s scope is also restricted by requirements that a person be "injured" by the statements in question, that the statements be "inaccurate" or "offensive", and that they be disseminated to the public "in general", rather than to a discrete portion of it. As with the restrictive condition that the communications medium be "legally regulated", the definition and interpretation of these further limitations on the right must occur in the context of local conditions and laws in the jurisdictions of the States Parties. Thus, Article 14(1) has provided that the local laws of the States Parties may establish conditions governing a "right of reply". Conditions governing such a right which would be appropriate for one State Party could be totally inappropriate for another. Indeed, the existence of any form of "right of reply" may be inappropriate, given local circumstances, in the jurisdictions of one or more States Parties.

Accordingly, Article 14 permits but does not require States Parties to establish conditions of local law creating a "right of reply". States Parties are under no obligation under the Convention to enact in their local law a "right of reply". Because States Parties are not required by the Convention to enact local laws creating a "right of reply", the third question posed by the Government of Costa Rica regarding the type of laws which the Convention would require to create such a right is moot.

CONCLUSION

For the reasons given, the Amici Curiae respectfully urge the court to refrain in this case from expressing an opinion on the issue, not here presented, of the substantive merits of an Article 14(1) "right of reply". Amicus Curiae urge the Court to rule only that the provisions of Article 14(1) of the American Convention on Human Rights are not "self-executing" and that States Parties are under no obligation to enact local laws providing for a "right of reply".

Respectfully submitted

Leonard H. Marks
Richard M. Schmidt, Jr.
J. Brian DeBoice
Cohn and Marks
1333 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 293-3860


Counsel for Inter American Press Association, World Freedom Committee, American Newspaper Publishers Association, Federation Internationale des Editeurs de Journaux, The Copley Press, Inc., The Miami Herald, Newsweek, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, and The International Herald Tribune


Of Counsel:

W. Terry Maguire
Vice President/General Counsel
American Newspaper Publishers
Association
Box 17407, Dulles Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
(703) 648-1060

(Additional Counsel listed
in Appendix)

April 4, 1986


APPENDIX

Of Counsel:

(continued from front cover)

Harold W. Fuson, Jr.
Vice President and General Counsel
The Copley Press, Inc.
7776 Ivanhoe Avenue
La Jolla, California 92037
(619) 454-0411

Robert B. Back
Richard J. Tofel
Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, New York 10112
(212) 541-4000

Alice Neff Lucao
Assistant General Counsel
Gannett Company, Inc.
1100 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22209
(703) 284-6948

Lee W. Huebner
Publisher
International Herald Tribune
181 Avenue Charles De Gaulle
9200 Neuilly
Paris, France
4637-9300

Diana Daniels
Vice President and General Counsel
Newsweek, Inc.
444 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10022
(212) 350-4713

 


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