E/C.12/74/D/70/2018
right to adequate housing, and No. 7 (1997), on forced evictions, as they do not cover the
eviction of persons convicted of encroachment. The offence of encroachment is defined in
article 245 of the Criminal Code, and interpretations of this definition can be found in the
jurisprudence of the Supreme Court.4 In addition, encroachment involving a property that is
not a dwelling is punishable under Spanish law only in the event of conduct that poses a
substantial risk or danger to the interest protected under criminal law; a large number of
precedents maintain, for example, that criminal charges of encroachment are disproportionate
where the property occupied is abandoned or in poor repair. 5 Similarly, it has been asserted
in legal precedents that the commission of the offence requires that the occupation be
continuous over time; three days has been found not long enough to conclude that the offence
has been committed. Likewise, precedent has frequently supported exemptions granted on
the grounds of the state of necessity and consequent social vulnerability of the perpetrator of
the offence. To benefit from such an exculpatory circumstance, the perpetrator must have
been in a precarious economic situation when the offence was committed and must have been
experiencing serious difficulties as a result of the poverty at the root of the unlawful
occupation. Furthermore, the precarious situation must have lasted for a considerable period
of time, and the offender must have been unable to find alternative means of meeting his or
her housing needs during this time. Under Spanish case law, a potential state of necessity
may also justify the temporary occupation of another person’s property but not the occupation
of the property and residence therein for an extended period.
4.7
The State party submits that the present case does not involve tenure protected by
article 11 of the Covenant and that the return of the property to its owner therefore does not
constitute a forced eviction under article 11 of the Covenant or the Committee’s case law.
Paragraph 3 of general comment No. 7 (1997) states that the prohibition on forced evictions
does not apply to evictions carried out by force in accordance with the law and in conformity
with the provisions of the International Covenants on Human Rights. Furthermore, the
Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard
of living and on the right to non-discrimination in this regard, in his basic principles and
guidelines on development-generated evictions and displacement,6 does not refer to cases of
squatting. In paragraph 8 (a) of its general comment No. 4 (1991), the Committee lists only
lawful forms of tenure. “Tenure”, it states, “takes a variety of forms, including rental (public
and private) accommodation, cooperative housing, lease, owner-occupation, emergency
housing and informal settlements, including occupation of land or property”. According to
the State party, general comment No. 7 (1997) assumes that occupation is lawful when, in
paragraph 11, it states that, whereas some evictions may be justifiable, such as in the case of
persistent non-payment of rent or of damage to rented property without any reasonable cause,
it is incumbent upon the relevant authorities to ensure that they are carried out in a manner
warranted by a law which is compatible with the Covenant and that all the legal recourses
and remedies are available to those affected. The State party submits that, in the present case,
the author’s occupation was not one of the peaceful forms protected under article 11 of the
Covenant. Any other consideration would be tantamount to legitimizing by way of the right
to housing criminally unlawful conduct and a violation of the owner’s property rights. The
State party notes that evictions are justified in the event of persistent non-payment of rent or
damage to the rented property without any reasonable cause – that is, the tenant must comply
with his or her obligations, and the right to adequate housing cannot be used as a shield to
protect the tenant from the consequences of his or her failure to comply with the law, in
particular when such non-compliance involves criminal conduct upon taking possession of
property. The Committee has previously stated that the conditions that must be satisfied in
order to receive social services must be reasonable and very carefully designed and that they
must be communicated in a transparent, timely and complete manner to the applicant.7 Decree
No. 52/2016 contains a provision expressly denying access to emergency accommodation to
4
5
6
7
GE.23-20361
See Supreme Court judgment No. 800/2014 of 12 November 2014.
See Provincial High Court of Segovia ruling of 29 October 1998, Provincial High Court of Girona
ruling of 5 February 1999 and Provincial High Court of Valencia ruling of 4 February 2000.
A/HRC/4/18, annex I.
Ben Djazia et al. v. Spain (E/C.12/61/D/5/2015), para. 17.2.
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