24 | 11 | 2024

Case of van Kück v. Germany

THIRD SECTION

CASE OF VAN KÜCK v. GERMANY

(Application no. 35968/97)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG

12 June 2003

FINAL

12/09/2003

This judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.

In the case of van Kück v. Germany,

The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:

Mr I. Cabral Barreto, President, 
Mr G. Ress, 
Mr L. Caflisch, 
Mr R. Türmen, 
Mr B. Zupancic,

Mr J. Hedigan,
Mrs H.S. Greve, judges, 
and Mr V. Berger, Section Registrar,

Having deliberated in private on 20 June 2002 and 22 May 2003,

Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on the last-mentioned date:

PROCEDURE

1. The case originated in an application (no. 35968/97) against the Federal Republic of Germany lodged with the European Commission of Human Rights (“the Commission”) under former Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a German national, Ms Carola van Kück, on 6 May 1997.

2. The German Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mr Stoltenberg, Ministerialdirigent, Ministry of Justice.

3. The applicant alleged that German court decisions refusing her claims for reimbursement of gender re-assignment measures and also the proceedings concerned were in breach of her right to a fair trial and of her right to respect for her private life and that they amounted to discrimination on the ground of her particular psychological situation. She relied upon Articles 6 § 1, 8, 13 and 14 of the Convention.

4. The application was transmitted to the Court on 1 November 1998, when Protocol No. 11 to the Convention came into force (Article 5 § 2 of Protocol No. 11).

5. The application was allocated to the Fourth Section of the Court (Rule 52 § 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 § 1 of the Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 § 1.

6. By a decision of 18 October 2001, the Court declared the application admissible.

7. On 1 November 2001 the Court changed the composition of its Sections (Rule 25 § 1). This case was assigned to the newly composed Third Section.

THE FACTS

I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE

8. The applicant was born in 1948 and lives in Berlin. Upon her birth, the applicant was registered as of male sex, with the forenames Bernhard Friedrich.

A. The proceedings for the change of the applicant’s forenames

9. In 1990 the applicant instituted proceedings before the Schöneberg District Court, asking it to change the forenames to Carola Brenda.

10. On 20 December 1991 the District Court granted the applicant’s request. The court found that the conditions under section 1 of the Transsexuals Act (Gesetz über die Änderung der Vornamen und die Feststellung der Geschlechtszugehörigkeit in besonderen Fällen) were met in the applicant’s case.

11.  The District Court, having heard the applicant and having regard to the written opinions of the psychiatric experts Prof. R. and Dr O. of 28 August 1991 and of the psychological expert Prof. D. of 1 September 1991, considered that the applicant was a male to female transsexual. It noted that Prof. R. and Dr O. had indicated that the applicant was not a typical transsexual, however, in its view, the Transsexuals Act required that the condition of transsexuality be met, irrespective of a particular development. Moreover, the court found that the experts had convincingly shown that the applicant had been for at least the last three years under the constraint of living according to these tendencies and that there was a high probability that the applicant would not change these tendencies in future.

B. The civil proceedings against the health insurance

12. In 1992 the applicant, represented by counsel, brought an action with the Berlin Regional Court against a German health insurance company. Having been affiliated to this company since 1975, the applicant claimed reimbursement of pharmaceutical expenses for hormone treatment. The applicant further requested a declaratory judgment to the effect that the defendant company was liable to reimburse 50% of the expenses for gender re-assignment operations and further hormone treatment. As an employee of the Land Berlin, the applicant was entitled to allowances covering half of her medical expenses, the private health insurance was to cover the other half.

13. On 20 October 1992 the Berlin Regional Court decided to take expert evidence on the questions of whether or not the applicant was a male to female transsexual; whether or not her kind of transsexuality was a disease; whether or not the gender re-assignment operation was the necessary medical treatment for the transsexuality; and whether or not this medical treatment was generally recognised in medical science.

14. The psychiatrist Dr H., having examined the applicant in January 1993, delivered his opinion in February 1993. In his conclusions, he confirmed that the applicant was a male to female transsexual and that her transsexuality had to be regarded as a disease. He further indicated that the gender re-assignment operation was not the only necessary medical treatment in case of transsexuality. In the applicant’s case, he recommended such an operation from a psychiatric-psychotherapeutic point of view, as it would further improve her social situation. He noted that the gender re-assignment operation was not generally recognised in science and that there were several comments in literature questioning whether the operation was an effective factor; however, it could be assumed that the fact that transsexuals accepted themselves and their body contributed to their stabilisation. According to him, many transsexuals reached such stability only after an operation. In his view, this was the case for the applicant and an operation should therefore be approved. The expert concluded that the gender re-assignment operation formed part of the medical treatment of a mental disease.

15. On 3 August 1993 the Regional Court, following an oral hearing, dismissed the applicant’s claims. The court considered that under the relevant provisions of the General Insurance Conditions (Allgemeine Versicherungsbedingungen), governing the contractual relations between the applicant and her private health insurance, the applicant was not entitled to reimbursement of medical treatment regarding her transsexuality.

16. In its reasoning, the court, having regard to the opinion prepared by Dr H. and to the expert opinions prepared in the proceedings before the Schöneberg District Court, considered that the applicant was a male to female transsexual and that her state had to be regarded as a disease. The question of whether the medical treatment was recognised in medical science was irrelevant. In the court’s view, hormone treatment and gender re-assignment operations could not reasonably be considered as necessary medical treatment. Having regard to the relevant case-law of the Federal Social Court, the court found that the applicant ought to have had first recourse to less severe means, namely an extensive psychotherapy of 50 to 100 sessions, such as proposed by the psychiatric expert Prof. D. and refused by the applicant after 2 sessions (NB: according to the Government, the original manuscript decision referred to 24 sessions). The court was not convinced that, on account of the applicant’s resistance to therapy, the intended operation was the only possible treatment.

17. Moreover, the Regional Court found that the evidence did not show conclusively that the gender re-assignment measures would relieve the applicant’s physical and mental grievances, a further criterion for assuming their medical necessity. The expert Dr H. had merely recommended the operation from a psychiatric-psychotherapeutic point of view, as it would improve the applicant’s social situation. His submissions, according to which the effect of the gender re-assignment operation was often overrated, did not show that the gender re-assignment measures were necessary for medical reasons. The court had not, therefore, been required, ex officio, to issue the expert with a summons to explain his opinion orally.

18. On 11 October 1993 the applicant lodged an appeal with the Berlin Court of Appeal. In the written appeal submissions, the applicant objected to the findings of the Regional Court to the extent that the necessity of gender re-assignment measures was denied. The applicant also submitted that she had unsuccessfully attended psychotherapy sessions of between 24 and 35 sessions. In these respects, she referred to the written expert opinions and also mentioned the possibility to hear these experts.

19. In November 1994 the applicant underwent gender re-assignment surgery. According to her, having been unfit for work since February 1994, she had agreed with the physician treating her that her suffering would not permit to await the outcome of the appeal proceedings.

20. On 27 January 1995 the Court of Appeal, following an oral hearing, dismissed the applicant’s appeal. The Court of Appeal valued the claims at stake at 28,455.92 German marks (DEM).

21. The Court of Appeal noted that the applicant was a male to female transsexual and that, according to the opinion of the expert Dr H., her transsexuality constituted a disease, a matter not in dispute between the parties to the proceedings.

22.  Referring to section 1 of the General Insurance Conditions, the Court of Appeal confirmed the Regional Court’s conclusions that the expert Dr H. had not confirmed the necessity of gender re-assignment measures. The Court of Appeal had regard to various passages of the expert opinion. Thus it noted that the expert had considered gender re-assignment surgery as a possible medical treatment; however, the question of necessity could not be clearly affirmed given the diverging scientific opinions and results. In his view, consensus existed on the improved psycho-social situation following the change of the sexual role, though the effect of the operation as such was often overrated. In the applicant’s case, the advantages of an operation would, in the expert’s view, prevail, while psychotherapy could not cure the transsexuality on account of the applicant’s chronic narcissistic character structure and even an extended psychotherapy was not likely to result in any changes. Turning to the expert’s statement that gender re-assignment was not the only possible curative treatment, but recommendable from a psychological-psychotheraphist point of view in order to improve the applicant’s social situation, the Court of Appeal found that, with this cautious formulation, the expert had not clearly affirmed the necessity of an operation. The applicant had therefore failed to prove that the conditions for reimbursement of medical treatment were met in her case. The Court of Appeal added that the expert had mentioned that the gender re-assignment operation formed ‘part of a curative treatment of a psychological treatment’, however, taking his other statements into account, he had regarded success as rather uncertain. Such a vague hope could not justify the necessity of medical treatment, bearing the aim of health insurance in mind. Thus, the health insurance had to bear only costs of treatment suitable to cure a disease. In the applicant’s case, the expert had explained that gender re-assignment measures could not be expected to cure the applicant’s transsexuality, but at best to improve her psycho-social situation. This result was insufficient, as such an improvement did not affect the applicant’s transsexuality as such. With regard to these remaining doubts, the Court of Appeal concluded that the applicant had failed to prove the necessity of her treatment.

23. The Court of Appeal further considered that, in any event, the applicant was not entitled to reimbursement under section 5.1(b) of the General Insurance Conditions on the ground that she had herself deliberately caused the disease, as argued by the defendant in earlier submissions.

24. Referring to the details of her anamnesis as contained in the expert opinion of Dr O. of August 1991, the Court of Appeal found in particular that the applicant had been born as a male child and did not claim that she was a female on account of chromosomal factors. Initially, she had not adopted female behaviour. On account of her male orientation, she had been able to resist to feelings that she would have preferred to be a girl and that this would have been more correct, and had controlled her emotional life at an early stage.

25. The Court of Appeal considered that the applicant had continued to live as a man. In its view, the applicant’s ‘fear of bigger boys’ at school was not gender-specific. Furthermore, applying with the armed forces did not advocate female feelings, and she had left the armed forces not because of the feeling that she was a ‘woman’, but because she had experienced degrading treatment. In 1971, the applicant had met her later spouse; he had married her in November 1972, likewise a sign of her male orientation. As from 1981, the spouses had wished to have a child.

26. According to the Court of Appeal, the ‘turning point’, as stated by the applicant, had been the moment when, after an unsuccessful operation in 1986, she had realised that she was infertile. The Court of Appeal quoted the following passage from the expert opinion of 1991:

“The recognition that he was infertile is a decisive factor confirming the subsequent transsexual development.

27. It continued in the following terms:

“Fully aware of this position, the plaintiff concluded for herself: “If you cannot have children, you are not a man”, and as a consequence she went one step further and wanted to be a woman from then on. She had never otherwise felt that she was, or that she had to become, a woman, but was merely making a statement that she could do without a penis and still have satisfying relations with his [sic] wife (...) Doing without the one is not the same as an irresistible desire for the other. In furtherance of the self-imposed goal of wishing to be a woman, from December 1986 she took - without medical advice, assistance or instruction - female hormones (...).

That was deliberate. Having recognised - no doubt painfully - that she could not have children, she decided to distance herself from her past as a man ... It was this deliberate act of self-medication that led the plaintiff ever more to her decision that she wanted to be a woman and to look like one, although it was biologically impossible. This was based on her limited preparedness or ability to reflect critically (...) but was faultily deliberate because the plaintiff was at all events at that stage in a position to see what the consequences of her "self-medication" would be, and to act accordingly.

...”

28. On 25 October 1996 the Federal Constitutional Court refused to admit the applicant’s constitutional complaint.

II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE AND OTHER MATTERS

A. The status of transsexuals

29. The German Transsexuals Act (Gesetz über die Änderung der Vornamen und die Feststellung der Geschlechtszugehörigkeit in besonderen Fällen) of 10 September 1980 (Federal Gazette I p. 1654) was enacted following the decision of the Federal Constitutional Court of 11 October 1978, according to which the refusal to change the sex of a post-operative transsexual in the register of births was an unjustified interference with human dignity and everyone’s fundamental right to develop his personality freely (Reports of the decisions of the Federal Constitutional Court, BverfGE 49, pp. 286 et seq.).

30. Section 1 to 7 of the Transsexuals Act govern the conditions, procedure and legal consequences of a change of a transsexual’s forenames without gender re-assignment operation. Under section 1, persons may request that their forenames be changed if, on account of their transsexual orientation, they do no longer feel as belonging to the sex recorded in the register of births, if they have been for at least three years living under the constraint of living according to these tendencies and if there is a high probability that they would not change this orientation in future. The competent civil courts have to obtain two medical expert opinions in order to establish whether the medical conditions are met (section 4).

31. Following gender re-assignment operations, section 8 provides for a change of the sex entered in the register of births, if, further to the conditions laid down in section 1, the persons concerned are not married and are not able to procreate. The forenames will be changed, if proceedings under section 1 had not yet taken place.

B. Gender re-assignment operations

1. The general social health insurance system

32. Since 1989, the German social health insurance system which previously formed part of the Reich Insurance Code (Reichsversicherungsordnung) of 1911 is governed by the Social Security Act, Volume V, Social Health Insurance (Sozialgesetzbuch, Fünftes Buch, Gesetzliche Krankenversicherung), on the basis of the Health (Reform) Act (Gesetz zur Strukturreform im Gesundheitswesen) of 20 December 1988. Subsequently, further reform legislation was enacted. Under the relevant provisions, persons insured under the social health system are entitled to medical treatment which is necessary in order to diagnose or to cure a disease, in order to prevent its aggravation or to offer relief for its symptoms.

33.  The Federal Social Court, in a decision of 6 August 1987 (Reports of decisions, BSGE 62, pp. 83 et seq.), confirmed the lower social courts’ decisions that the cost of gender re-assignment surgery had to be reimbursed if, in the circumstances of the individual case, the psychophysical state of the transsexual amounted to a disease and if gender re-assignment was the sole means of finding relief, psychiatric and psychotherapist treatment having remained unsuccessful.

2. Private health insurance

34. The basic rules for the private health insurance, as for any other private insurance, are laid down in the Insurance Contract Act (Gesetz über den Versicherungsvertrag) of 1908, as amended. According to section 178b, the private health insurance covers, expenses for curative treatment which is medically necessary on account of a disease or injuries suffered as a result of an accident or for other medical services illness, as far as stipulated in the contract. The insurer is exempted from liability if the insured person has deliberately caused the own disease or accident (section 178l). The contractual relations are standardised in general insurance conditions.

35.  The Federal Court of Justice, in a decision of 11 April 1994 (Versicherungsrecht 1995, pp. 447 et seq.), endorsed the lower court’s finding that gender re-assignment surgery had to be considered as necessary medical treatment of a disease if the insured person’s change of gender had been recognised under sections 8 et seq. of the Transsexuals Act.

C. Other relevant material

36.  In its judgment of 30 April 1996, in the case of P. v. S. and Cornwall County Council (C-13/94, Rec.1996, p. I-2143), the European Court of Justice (ECJ) found that discrimination arising from gender re-assignment constituted discrimination on grounds of sex and accordingly Article 5 § 1 of Council Directive 76/207/EEC of 9 February 1976 on the implementation of the principle of equal treatment for men and women as regards access to employment, vocational training and promotion and working conditions precluded dismissal of a transsexual for a reason related to a gender re-assignment. It held, rejecting the argument of the United Kingdom Government that the employer would also have dismissed P. if P. had previously been a woman and had undergone an operation to become a man, that

“... Where a person is dismissed on the ground that he or she intends to undergo or has undergone gender re-assignment, he or she is treated unfavourably by comparison with persons of the sex to which he or she was deemed to belong before undergoing gender re-assignment.

To tolerate such discrimination would be tantamount, as regards such a person, to a failure to respect the dignity and freedom to which he or she is entitled and which the Court has a duty to safeguard.” (paragraphs 21–22)

37.  In its judgment of 17 February 1998, in the case of Lisa Jacqueline Grant v. South-West Trains Ltd (C-249/96, Rec.1998, p. I-621), the European Court of Justice clarified that

“... That reasoning, which leads to the conclusion that such discrimination is to be prohibited just as is discrimination based on the fact that a person belongs to a particular sex, is limited to the case of a worker’s gender re-assignment and does not therefore apply to differences of treatment based on a person’s sexual orientation.

...

... Community law as it stands at present does not cover discrimination based on sexual orientation, such as that in issue in the main proceedings.

It should be observed, however, that the Treaty of Amsterdam amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties establishing the European Communities and certain related acts, signed on 2 October 1997, provides for the insertion in the EC Treaty of an Article 6a which, once the Treaty of Amsterdam has entered into force, will allow the Council under certain conditions (a unanimous vote on a proposal from the Commission after consulting the European Parliament) to take appropriate action to eliminate various forms of discrimination, including discrimination based on sexual orientation.”

The European Court of Justice concluded that the refusal by an employer to allow travel concessions to the person of the same sex with whom a worker has a stable relationship, where such concessions are allowed to a worker’s spouse or to the person of the opposite sex with whom a worker has a stable relationship outside marriage, did not constitute discrimination prohibited by Article 119 of the Treaty or Directive 75/117.

THE LAW

I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION

38.  The applicant complained about the alleged unfairness of German court proceedings concerning her claims for reimbursement of medical expenses against a private health insurance company. She invokes Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, which, as far as relevant, reads as follows:

“In the determination of his civil rights and obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a] ... tribunal ...”

A. Arguments of the parties

1. The applicant

39.  The applicant maintained that German courts had arbitrarily interpreted the notion of “necessary medical treatment” in a narrow sense. In her view, the expert had recommended her operation without hesitation. However, in particular the Court of Appeal had transposed general views on transsexuality on the medical opinion of Dr H. and had required the operation to be the only possible treatment.

40.  She also considered that the Court of Appeal should not have drawn conclusions from a written expert opinion prepared in the context of a previous set of court proceedings without hearing the expert Dr O. She had only agreed to the consultation of these files in order to avoid repeated taking of evidence on her sexual orientation. The experts had never situated the biographical information concerned in the context of the question whether she had herself deliberately caused her transsexuality. Moreover, in her expert opinion, Dr O. had only stated that the applicant’s infertility had contributed to the development. The Court of Appeal’s conclusion, without medical expertise, that her hormone treatment had brought about her transsexuality was arbitrary.

2. The Government

41.  According to the Government, the proceedings as a whole were fair. In their view, the applicant had the possibility to put forward all relevant arguments and to adduce evidence. Moreover, the Berlin Regional Court had taken evidence on the question whether the operation in question was a necessary medical treatment and had taken the conclusions of the expert Dr H. duly into account. Likewise, the Court of Appeal had fully considered the medical expert opinion and, at an oral hearing, it had given the applicant a further opportunity to comment on the matter.

42.  The German courts’ interpretation of the insurance contract between the applicant and the health insurance company, in particular of the necessity of the gender re-assignment surgery as medical treatment, could not be objected to under the Convention. The burden of proof had been on the applicant as the insured person. The expert had not unequivocally affirmed the medical necessity of an operation, but had recommended the operation from a psychiatric-psychotherapeutic point of view. The Court of Appeal had concluded therefrom that the operation was not necessary as a medical treatment, even though the applicant’s social situation could be improved. The courts further had regard to the proceedings concerning the change of the applicant’s forenames.

43.  Furthermore, as the written expert opinion had been conclusive, the Regional Court and the Court of Appeal had not been obliged to summon the expert.

44.  Moreover, the Court of Appeal, taking into account the defendant’s submissions, had to take evidence on the question of whether the applicant had herself deliberately caused the disease. The court had assessed this matter on the basis of an expert opinion, prepared by Dr O. in the context of the proceedings before the Schöneberg District Court concerning the change of forenames. In the first instance proceedings, the applicant had agreed that these files be consulted.

45.  According to the Government, this expert opinion contained sufficient elements concerning inter alia her early youth, her military service and her marriage to support the conclusion that the applicant had herself deliberately caused her transsexuality. In this respect, the Court of Appeal had correctly noted that the applicant had started hormone medication without prior consultation with a medical practitioner.

B. The Court’s assessment

1. The Court’s general approach

46.  The Court reiterates that it is in the first place for the national authorities, and notably the courts, to interpret domestic law and that it will not substitute its own interpretation for theirs in the absence of arbitrariness (see, mutatis mutandis, Ravnsborg v. Sweden, judgment of 23 March 1994, Series A no. 283-B, p. 29, § 33, Bulut v. Austria, judgment of 22 February 1996,Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-II, pp. 355–356, § 29, and Tejedor García v. Spain, judgment of 16 December 1997, Reports 1997-VIII, p. 2796, § 31).

47.  Moreover, it is for the national courts to assess the evidence they have obtained and the relevance of any evidence that a party wishes to have produced. The Court has nevertheless to ascertain whether the proceedings considered as a whole were fair as required by Article 6 § 1 (see Mantonavelli v. France, judgment of 18 March 1997, Reports 1997-II, p. 436, § 34, andElsholz v. Germany [GC], no. 25735/94, § 66, ECHR 2000-VIII).

48.  In particular, Article 6 § 1 places the “tribunal” under a duty to conduct a proper examination of the submissions, arguments and evidence adduced by the parties, without prejudice to its assessment of whether they are relevant to its decision (see Van de Hurk v. the Netherlands, judgment of 19 April 1994, Series A no. 288, p. 19, § 59).

49.  As regards the issue of transsexualism, the Court recalls that in the context of case-law on the legal status of transsexuals, it had regard inter alia to the developing medical and scientific considerations.

50.  In its Rees judgment of 17 October 1986 (Series A no. 106, pp. 15-16, § 38, the Court noted:

“Transsexualism is not a new condition, but its particular features have been identified and examined only fairly recently. The developments that have taken place in consequence of these studies have been largely promoted by experts in the medical and scientific fields who have drawn attention to the considerable problems experienced by the individuals concerned and found it possible to alleviate them by means of medical and surgical treatment. The term “transsexual” is usually applied to those who, whilst belonging physically to one sex, feel convinced that they belong to the other; they often seek to achieve a more integrated, unambiguous identity by undergoing medical treatment and surgical operations to adapt their physical characteristics to their psychological nature. Transsexuals who have been operated upon thus form a fairly well-defined and identifiable group.”

51.  In its Cossey judgment, it considered that there had been no noteworthy scientific developments in the area of transsexualism in the period since the date of adoption of its Rees judgment which would compel it to depart from the decision reached in the latter case (Cossey v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 27 September 1990, Series A no. 184, p. 17, § 40). This view was confirmed subsequently in the case of B. v. France in which it observed that there still remained uncertainty as to the essential nature of transsexualism and that the legitimacy of surgical intervention in such cases was sometimes questioned (judgment of 25 March 1992, Series A no. 232-C, p. 49, § 48; see also Sheffield and Horsham v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 30 July 1998,Reports 1998-V, p. 2028, § 56).

52.  In recent judgments, however, (see I. v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 25680/94, §§ 61-62, 11 July 2002, and Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom [GC], §§ 81-82, 11 July 2002), the Court came to different conclusions. In the case ofChristine Goodwin, the Court noted:

“81. It remains the case that there are no conclusive findings as to the cause of transsexualism and, in particular, whether it is wholly psychological or associated with physical differentiation in the brain. The expert evidence in the domestic case of Bellinger v. Bellinger was found to indicate a growing acceptance of findings of sexual differences in the brain that are determined pre-natally, though scientific proof for the theory was far from complete. The Court considers it more significant however that transsexualism has wide international recognition as a medical condition for which treatment is provided in order to afford relief (for example, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual fourth edition (DSM-IV) replaced the diagnosis of transsexualism with “gender identity disorder”; see also the International Classification of Diseases, tenth edition (ICD-10)). The United Kingdom national health service, in common with the vast majority of Contracting States, acknowledges the existence of the condition and provides or permits treatment, including irreversible surgery. The medical and surgical acts which in this case rendered the gender re-assignment possible were indeed carried out under the supervision of the national health authorities. Nor, given the numerous and painful interventions involved in such surgery and the level of commitment and conviction required to achieve a change in social gender role, can it be suggested that there is anything arbitrary or capricious in the decision taken by a person to undergo gender re-assignment. In those circumstances, the ongoing scientific and medical debate as to the exact causes of the condition is of diminished relevance. 
82. While it also remains the case that a transsexual cannot acquire all the biological characteristics of the assigned sex (Sheffield and Horsham, cited above, p. 2028, § 56), the Court notes that with increasingly sophisticated surgery and types of hormonal treatments, the principal unchanging biological aspect of gender identity is the chromosomal element. It is known however that chromosomal anomalies may arise naturally (for example, in cases of intersex conditions where the biological criteria at birth are not congruent) and in those cases, some persons have to be assigned to one sex or the other as seems most appropriate in the circumstances of the individual case. It is not apparent to the Court that the chromosomal element, amongst all the others, must inevitably take on decisive significance for the purposes of legal attribution of gender identity for transsexuals (...).”

2. The assessment of the “medical necessity” of gender re-assignment measures

53.  The Court notes that, in the civil proceedings against her private health insurance, the applicant, who changed her forenames after recognition of her transsexuality in court proceedings under the Transsexuals Act in 1991, claimed reimbursement of medical expenses in respect of gender re-assignment measures, namely hormone treatment and gender re-assignment surgery. In 1992 the Regional Court ordered an expert opinion on questions of the applicant’s transsexuality and the necessity of gender re-assignment measures. The Regional Court and the Court of Appeal concluded that the expert had not clearly affirmed the medical necessity of gender re-assignment surgery. In this respect, the Regional Court considered two points, namely first recourse to extensive psychotherapy as less severe means and second the lack of a clear affirmation of the need of gender re-assignment measures for medical purposes, the expert’s recommendation being limited to the improvement of the applicant’s social situation. The Court of Appeal endorsed the second aspect of the Regional Court’s reasoning and concluded that, as there remained doubts, the applicant had failed to prove the medical necessity of the gender re-assignment surgery.

54.  The Court, bearing in mind the complexity of assessing the applicant’s condition of transsexuality and the need for medical treatment, finds that the Regional Court rightly decided to obtain a medical expert opinion on these questions. However, irrespective of the expert’s unequivocal recommendation of gender re-assignment measures in the applicant’s situation, the German courts concluded that she had failed to prove the medical necessity of these measures. In their understanding, the expert’s finding that gender re-assignment measures would improve the applicant’s social condition did not clearly assert the necessity of such measures from a medical point of view. The Court considers that determining the medical necessity of gender re-assignment measures by their curative effects on a transsexual is not a matter of legal definition. In the case of Christine Goodwin (see paragraph 52 above), the Court referred to the expert evidence in the British case of Bellinger v. Bellinger, which indicated “a growing acceptance of findings of sexual differences in the brain that are determined pre-natally, though scientific proof for the theory was far from complete”. The Court considered it more significant “that transsexualism has wide international recognition as a medical condition for which treatment is provided in order to afford relief”.

55.  In the present case, the German courts’ evaluation of the expert opinion and their assessment that improving the applicant’s social situation as part of psychological treatment did not meet the requisite condition of medical necessity does not seem to coincide with the above findings of the Court (see Christine Goodwin, cited above). In any case, it would have required special medical knowledge and expertise in the field of transsexualism. In this situation, the German courts should have sought further, written or oral, clarification from the expert Dr H. or from any other medical specialist.

56.  Furthermore, considering recent developments (see I. v. the United Kingdom and Christine Goodwin, cited above, § 62 and § 82, respectively), gender identity is one of the most intimate private-life matters of a person. The burden placed on a person in such a situation to prove the medical necessity of treatment, including irreversible surgery, appears therefore disproportionate.

57.  In these circumstances, the Court finds that the interpretation of the term of “medical necessity” and evaluation of evidence in this respect was not reasonable.

3. The assessment of the cause of the applicant’s transsexuality

58.  The Court of Appeal further based its decision on the consideration that, under the insurance conditions, the defendant was exempted from payment on the ground that the applicant had deliberately caused her transsexuality. In this respect, the Court of Appeal found that, only after having had to recognise that, as a man, she was infertile, the applicant had decided to become a woman and had forced this development with a self-medication of female hormones.

59.  The Court would again emphasise its consideration in the cases of I. v. the United Kingdom and Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom (see paragraph 52 above) that, given the numerous and painful interventions involved in gender re-assignment surgery and the level of commitment and conviction required to achieve a change in social gender role, it cannot be suggested that there is anything arbitrary or capricious in the decision taken by a person to undergo gender re-assignment.

60.  The Court observes at the outset that the applicant had obtained recognition of her transsexuality in court proceedings under the Transsexuals Act in 1991. Furthermore, she had undergone gender re-assignment surgery at the time of the Court of Appeal’s decision.

61.  The Court notes that the issue of the cause of the applicant’s transsexuality did not figure in the Regional Court’s order for the taking of expert evidence and was not, therefore, covered by the opinion prepared by Dr H. The Court of Appeal did not itself hear this expert on this question or nor did it hear the experts involved in the earlier proceedings in 1990/91, respectively, as the applicant had requested. Rather, the Court of Appeal analysed personal data recorded in an anamnesis which was contained in the opinion prepared by Dr O. in 1991 in the context of the proceedings under the Transsexuals Act. This opinion had been limited to the questions of whether the applicant was a male to female transsexual and had been for at least the last three years under the constraint of living according to these tendencies, which were answered in the affirmative.

62.  In the Court’s opinion, the Court of Appeal was not entitled to take the view that it had sufficient information and medical expertise for it to be able to assess the complex question of whether the applicant had deliberately caused her transsexuality (cf.,mutatis mutandis, H. v. France, judgment of 24 October 1989, Series A no. 162-A, p. 25, § 70).

63.  Moreover, in the absence of any conclusive scientific findings as to the cause of transsexualism and, in particular, whether it is wholly psychological or associated with physical differentiation in the brain (see again I. v. the United Kingdom and Christine Goodwin, cited above, § 62 and § 82, respectively), the approach taken by the Court of Appeal in examining the question of whether the applicant had deliberately caused his condition appears inappropriate.

4. Conclusion

64.  Having regard to the determination of the medical necessity of gender re-assignment measures in the applicant’s case and also of the cause of the applicant’s transsexuality, the Court concludes that the proceedings in question, taken as a whole, did not satisfy the requirements of a fair hearing.

65.  Accordingly, there has been a breach of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.

II.  ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION

66.  The applicant further considered that the impugned court decisions violated her right to respect for her private life within the meaning of Article 8 of the Convention which, as far as relevant, reads:

“1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private ... life ...

2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.”

A. Arguments of the parties

67.  The applicant considered that the Court of Appeal had failed to respect her sexual identity when projecting an image of her personality which was based on misconstrued facts. When looking at her male past, the Court of Appeal had regarded various episodes as disclosing a male orientation without considering the efforts to repress the feeling of a different identity. It had thereby disregarded the development of her personality and sexual identity.

68.  The Government maintained that the Court of Appeal had duly considered an expert opinion prepared in the context of preceding court proceedings. They repeated that the applicant had agreed to the consultation of these files. The Court of Appeal had highlighted some elements in the said expert opinion in order to show that the applicant had herself deliberately caused her transsexuality. It had not criticised the applicant’s sexual orientation nor had it regarded this orientation as reprehensible or inadmissible. Rather, the fact that the Court of Appeal had referred to the circumstance that the applicant was meanwhile living as a woman showed that it had accepted and respected her sexual identity. However, the Court of Appeal had been obliged to consider the applicant’s personal development in deciding whether her claim against the insurance company had been valid.

B. The Court’s assessment

1. General principles

69.  As the Court has had previous occasion to remark, the concept of “private life” is a broad term not susceptible to exhaustive definition. It covers the physical and psychological integrity of a person (X and Y v. the Netherlands, judgment of 26 March 1985, Series A no. 91, p. 11, § 22). It can sometimes embrace aspects of an individual’s physical and social identity (Mikulic v. Croatia, no. 53176/99, § 53, 7 February 2002). Elements such as, for example, gender identification, name and sexual orientation and sexual life fall within the personal sphere protected by Article 8 (see e.g. B. v. France, cited above, § 63; Burghartz v. Switzerland, judgment of 22 February 1994, Series A no. 280-B, § 24; Dudgeon v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 22 October 1991, Series A no. 45, § 41; Laskey, Jaggard and Brown v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 19 February 1997,Reports 1997-I, § 36, and Smith and Grady v. the United Kingdom, nos. 33985/96 and 33986/96, § 71, ECHR 1999-VI). Article 8 also protects a right to personal development, and the right to establish and develop relationships with other human beings and the outside world (see, for example, Burghartz v. Switzerland, Commission’s report, op. cit., § 47; Friedl v. Austria, Series A no. 305-B, Commission’s report, § 45). Likewise, the Court has held that though no previous case has established as such any right to self-determination as being contained in Article 8, the notion of personal autonomy is an important principle underlying the interpretation of its guarantees (see Pretty v. the United Kingdom, no. 2346/02, § 61, 29 April 2002). Moreover, the very essence of the Convention being respect for human dignity and human freedom, protection is given to the right of transsexuals to personal development and to physical and moral security (see I. v. the United Kingdom, cited above, § 70; Christine Goodwin, cited above, § 90).

70.  The Court further reiterates that while the essential object of Article 8 is to protect the individual against arbitrary interference by the public authorities, it does not merely compel the State to abstain from such interference: in addition to this negative undertaking, there may be positive obligations inherent in an effective respect for private or family life. These obligations may involve the adoption of measures designed to secure respect for private life even in the sphere of the relations of individuals between themselves (see X and Y v. the Netherlands, cited above, p. 11, § 23, Botta v. Italy, judgment of 24 February 1998,Reports 1998-I, p. 422, § 33, and Mikulic, cited above, § 57).

71.  However, the boundaries between the State’s positive and negative obligations under Article 8 do not lend themselves to precise definition. The applicable principles are nonetheless similar. In determining whether or not such an obligation exists, regard must be had to the fair balance which has to be struck between the general interest and the interests of the individual; and in both contexts the State enjoys a certain margin of appreciation (see, for instance, Keegan v. Ireland, judgment of 26 May 1994, Series A no. 290, p. 19, § 49, B. v. France, cited above, p. 47, § 44, and, as recent authorities, Sheffield and Horsham, judgment of 30 July 1998, Reports 1998-V, p. 2026, § 52, and Mikulic, cited above, § 57).

72.  For the balancing of the competing interests, the Court has emphasised the particular importance of matters relating to a most intimate part of an individual’s life (see Dudgeon, cited above, p. 21, § 52; and Smith and Grady, cited above, § 115).

2. Application of these principles to the present case

73.  In the present case, the civil court proceedings touched upon the applicant’s freedom to define herself as a female person, one of the most basic essentials of self-determination. The applicant complained in substance that, in the context of the dispute with her private health insurance company, the German courts, in particular the Berlin Court of Appeal, failed to give appropriate consideration to her condition of transsexuality.

74.  The Court observes that the applicant’s submissions under Article 8 § 1 are focussed on the German courts’ taking and evaluation of evidence as regards her transsexuality, a matter which has already been examined under Article 6 § 1. However, the Court would point to the difference in the nature of the interests protected by Article 6, namely procedural safeguards, and by Article 8 § 1, ensuring the proper respect for, inter alia, private life, differences which justify the examination of the same set of facts under both Articles (see McMichael v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 24 February 1995, Series A no. 307-B, p. 57, § 91, Buchberger v. Austria, no. 32899/96, § 49, 20 December 2001, and P., C. and S. v. the United Kingdom, no. 56547/00, § 120, 16 July 2002).

75.  In the present case, the facts complained of did not only deprive the applicant of a fair hearing as guaranteed under Article 6 § 1, but had repercussions also on a fundamental aspect of her right to respect for private life, namely her right to gender identity and personal development. In these circumstances, the Court considers it appropriate to examine the applicant’s submissions also under Article 8 as to whether the German courts, in dealing with the applicant’s claims for reimbursement of medical expenses, violated the State’s positive obligations.

76.  The Court notes at the outset that the court proceedings in question took place between 1992 and 1995 at a time when the condition of transsexualism was generally known (see the references to the German legislation and case-law, paragraphs 29-31, 33 and 35 above, and the Court’s considerations, in its case-law, cited in paragraphs 50-52 above). In this connection, the Court is further aware of the remaining uncertainty as to the essential nature and cause of transsexualism and of the fact that the legitimacy of surgical intervention in such cases is sometimes questioned (see the Court’s statements in 1992, 1998 and 2002 in B. v. France, inSheffield and Horsham and in I v. the United Kingdom and Christine Goodwin; see above paragraphs 50-52).

77.  The Court has previously also held that the fact that the public medical health services did not delay the giving of medical and surgical treatment until all legal aspects of transsexuals had been fully investigated and resolved, benefited the person concerned and contributed to the individual’s freedom of choice (see Rees, cited above, p. 18 § 45). Moreover, manifest determination has been regarded as a factor which is sufficiently significant to be taken into account, together with other factors, with reference to Article 8 (see B. v. France, cited above, p. 51, § 55).

78.  In the present case, the central issue is the German courts’ application of the existing criteria on reimbursement of medical treatment to the applicant’s claim for reimbursement of gender re-assignment surgery, not the legitimacy of such measures in general. Furthermore, what matters is not the entitlement to reimbursement as such, but the impact of the court decisions on the applicant’s right to respect for her sexual self-determination as one of the aspects of her right to respect for her private life.

79.  The Court notes that the Regional Court referred the applicant to a possibility of psychotherapy as a less severe means in treating her condition, contrary to the statements contained in the expert opinion.

80.  Furthermore, both the Regional Court and the Court of Appeal, irrespective of the expert’s unequivocal recommendation, questioned the necessity of gender re-assignment for medical reasons without obtaining supplementary medical information on this point.

81.  The Court of Appeal also reproached the applicant with having deliberately caused her condition of transsexuality. In evaluating the applicant’s sexual identity and development, the Court of Appeal analysed her past prior to the taking of female hormones and found that the applicant had only shown male behaviour and was thus genuinely male orientated. In doing so, the Court of Appeal, on the basis of general assumptions as to male and female behaviour, substituted its views on most intimate feelings and experiences for those of the applicant, and this without any medical competence. It thereby required the applicant not only to prove that this orientation existed and amounted to a disease necessitating hormone treatment and gender re-assignment surgery, but further to show a ‘genuine nature’ of her transsexuality although, as stated above (see § 75 above), the essential nature and cause of transsexualism are uncertain.

82.  In the light of the recent developments (see I. v. the United Kingdom and Christine Goodwin, cited above, § 62 and § 82, respectively), the burden placed on a person to prove the medical necessity of treatment, including irreversible surgery, in the field of one of the most intimate private-life matters, appears disproportionate.

83.  In this context, the Court notes that, at the relevant time, the applicant, in agreement with the doctor treating her, had undergone the gender re-assignment surgery in question.

84.  In the light of these various factors, the Court reaches the conclusion that no fair balance was struck between the interests of the private health insurance company on the one side and the interests of the individual on the other.

85.  In these circumstances, the Court considers that the German authorities overstepped the margin of appreciation afforded to them under paragraph 2 of Article 8.

86.  Consequently, there has been a violation of Article 8 § 1.

III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 14 TAKEN TOGETHER WITH ARTICLES 6 § 1 AND 8 OF THE CONVENTION

87.  The applicant also complained that the Court of Appeal’s decision amounted to discrimination against her on ground of her transsexuality. She relied on Article 14 of the Convention which reads as follows:

“The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in [the] Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, property, birth or other status.”

88.  In the applicant’s submission, the findings of the Court of Appeal were arbitrary and infringed her personal integrity. In this respect, she noted that her transsexuality had been established in the context of the proceedings before the District Court.

89.  The Government submitted that the German courts did not discriminate against the applicant on account of her transsexuality. Any person claiming that the costs of surgical operations be borne by a health insurance company had to show a valid claim and, in case of dispute, adduce relevant evidence. In respect of the medical treatment of transsexuals, evidence had to be furnished for this sexual orientation and the reasons thereof. The necessity to determine whether or not a disease had been deliberately caused applied to all insured persons. For a transsexual, hormone treatment was relevant circumstantial evidence. The Court of Appeal’s evaluation and assessment of evidence did not disclose any discrimination.

90.  The Court recalls that where domestic courts base their decisions on general assumptions which introduce a difference of treatment on the ground of sex, a problem may arise under Article 14 (see Schuler-Zgraggen v. Switzerland, judgment of 24 June 1993, Series A no. 263, pp. 21-22, § 67). Similar considerations apply with regard to discrimination on any other ground or status, i.e. also on the ground of an individual’s sexual orientation.

91.  The Court considers, however, that, in the circumstances of the present case, the applicant’s complaint that she was discriminated against on grounds of her transsexuality amounts in effect to the same complaint, albeit seen from a different angle, that the Court has already considered in relation to Article 6 § 1 and, more particularly, Article 8 of the Convention (see Smith and Grady, cited above, § 115).

92.  Accordingly, the Court considers that the applicant’s complaints do not give rise to any separate issue under Article 14 in conjunction with Article 6 § 1 and Article 8.

IV. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION

93.  Article 41 of the Convention provides:

“If the Court finds that there has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.”

A. Damage

94.  The applicant, referring to practical difficulties in quantifying the prejudice suffered as a result of the Berlin court decisions refusing her claims for reimbursement of gender re-assignment measures, in particular as far as the consequential negative impact on her life was concerned, claimed payment of an amount of EUR 14,549, namely the equivalent of the value fixed by the Court of Appeal (see above § 20).

95.  The Government did not comment on the applicant’s claim.

96.  The Court cannot speculate on what the outcome of the impugned proceedings would have been if the Convention had not been violated. However, it considers that the applicant has undeniably sustained non-pecuniary damage as a result of the unfairness of the court proceedings and the lack of respect for her private life. Having regard to the circumstances of the case and ruling on an equitable basis as required by Article 41, the Court awards her compensation of EUR 15,000.

B. Costs and expenses

97.  The applicant’s claim for costs and expenses was broken down as follows:

(i) EUR 1,916 representing the costs awarded against her by the Berlin Regional Court (DEM 1,730) and by the Berlin Court of Appeal (an advance payment of DEM 567 and an overall award of DEM 1,449);

(ii) EUR 807 (DEM 1,578.37) for legal expenses in the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court.

98.  The Government did not raise any objections to the claims.

99.  If the Court finds that there has been a violation of the Convention, it may award the applicant not only the costs and expenses incurred before the Strasbourg institutions, but also those incurred before the national courts for the prevention or redress of the violation (see, in particular, Zimmermann and Steiner v. Switzerland, judgment of 13 July 1983, Series A no. 66, p. 14, § 36).

100.  In the Court’s view, reimbursement of the court costs relating to the proceedings before the Regional Court on the merits of her claims for reimbursement of medical expenses cannot be ordered, there being no sufficient connection between those costs and the violation found.  On the other hand, the applicant is entitled to be paid the costs referable to the proceedings before the Court of Appeal since the ground of appeal had been the Regional Court’s determination of the medical necessity of gender re-assignment measures in her case which had been one element in the Court’s finding of a violation of Articles 6 and 8. As to the quantum of these costs, the Court, having regard to the court bills filed by the applicant, notes that the advance payment had been deducted from the overall award of costs.  Furthermore, the applicant’s legal expenses in the proceedings before the Federal Constitutional Court must be reimbursed.

101.  Ruling on an equitable basis, the Court decides to award the applicant the sum of EUR 2,500.

C. Default interest

102.  The Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank to which should be added three percentage points.

FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT

1. Holds by four votes to three that there has been a violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention;

2. Holds by four votes to three that there has been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention;

3. Holds unanimously that no separate issue arises under Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction with Articles 6 § 1 and 8;

4. Holds by four votes to three

(a) that the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final according to Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following amounts:

(i) EUR 15,000 (fifteen thousand euros) in respect of non-pecuniary damage;

(ii) EUR 2,500 (two thousand and five hundred euros) in respect of costs and expenses;

(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;

5. Dismisses unanimously the remainder of the applicant’s claim for just satisfaction.

Done in English, and notified in writing on 12 June 2003, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.

Vincent Berger Ireneu Cabral Barreto
Registrar President

In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules of Court, the following opinions are annexed to this judgment:

(a)  dissenting opinion of Mr Cabral Barreto, Mr Hedigan and  Mrs Greve;

(b)  concurring opinion of Mr Ress.

I.C.B. 
V.B.

DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGES CABRAL BARRETO, HEDIGAN AND GREVE

1. We regret that we must disagree with the majority in this case.

For us, this case is not about the rights of transsexuals to respect for their private life, dignity and gender self-identification. These rights we consider now clearly established in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, most recently in Christine Goodwin v. United Kingdom [GC] with which we are in full agreement. In our view, this case deals with the adjudication at the applicant’s request, by the German courts, on two of the terms of her private contract of medical insurance. We fear that the judgement overly restricts the ability of one of the parties, in this case the defendant insurance company, to litigate the terms of a contract negotiated with the other party, in this case, the applicant.

2. The facts of the case are outlined in the judgement and need no repetition. Suffice it to note that the history of the case is somewhat unusual. The German courts were obliged to determine whether, pursuant to the General Insurance Conditions, the applicant’s private insurers were obliged to reimburse her 50% of the cost of certain pharmaceutical expenses connected with hormone treatment and her gender re-assignment operation.

3. The issue before the German courts was as to whether the operation and attendant treatment were necessary and whether the disease had been self-inflicted. The terms of the insurance contract were such that, were the operation not necessary or the disease self-inflicted, the insurer would not be obliged to pay out on the policy.

4. The case was heard initially by the Berlin Regional Court. It decided to take expert evidence on the following matters:

a) was the applicant a male to female transsexual;

b) was her kind of transsexuality a disease;

c) was the gender re-assignment operation the necessary medical  treatment for the transsexuality;

e) was this medical treatment generally recognised in medical  science.

In the Regional Court, the applicant failed. That court considered that the hormonal and surgical course intended by the applicant could not reasonably be considered as necessary at that time and on its own and therefore in this case. It was of the view that the applicant ought first have recourse to less severe means, i.e. an extensive course of psychotherapy of

50 to 100 sessions as recommended by the psychiatrist Dr H., the author of the expert opinion in question. The applicant in fact had refused to continue after 24 sessions. (confusion as to whether there were 2 or 24 sessions is resolved, with the agreement of the government, in favour of the applicant’s case as 24 sessions.) It seems to us from a reading of Dr H.’s report that it was his firm view that a full course of psychotherapy was to be, at the very least, a part of a comprehensive treatment possibly including surgery and an essential part of a successful gender re-assignment. In the light of this report and of the somewhat unusual background to the applicant’s condition together with the irreversible nature of the surgery, the Regional Courts’ above view seems to us to be not unreasonable.

The Regional Court further found that the evidence did not show conclusively that the gender re-assignment measures would relieve the applicant’s physical and mental grievances and that this was a further criterion for assuming their medical necessity. The expert had recommended the operation from a psychiatric-psychotherapeutic point of view, as it would improve the applicant’s social situation.

According to the court’s assessment of the evidence, this expert report did not establish that the operation was the necessary medical treatment in this case but had expressed the view that the applicant ought first to complete the extensive course of psychotherapy recommended by the psychiatrist. This assessment does not appear to us to be either arbitrary or unreasonable and we do not find any reason therefore to criticise it.

It is to be noted that at the time of the Regional Court’s hearing, the applicant had not yet had the surgery in question.

5. The applicant appealed to the Berlin Court of Appeal. She objected to the finding of non-necessity. She submitted that she had attended psychotherapy for between 24 and 35 sessions. She refused to attend anymore. She referred to the written expert opinions and referred to the possibility of hearing these experts.

6. In November 1994, the applicant went ahead with the surgery without completing the course of psychotherapy which had been advised as an essential part of a gender re-assignment including possible surgery.

7. On the 27th of January 1995, the Court of Appeal, following an oral hearing, dismissed the appeal. The reasons are set out in the judgement at paragraphs 21 to 28.

8. For the purposes of this dissenting opinion, we consider the following findings of the Court of Appeal of note:

a) the applicant was a transsexual;

b) according to Dr H., her transsexuality constituted a disease;

c) the Court of Appeal confirmed the Regional Court’s conclusions as follows:

i) that Dr H. had not confirmed the necessity of the operation;

ii) in Dr H.’s view, such surgery was a possible medical treatment but the question of necessity could not be clearly affirmed;

iii) balancing the limitations and advantages, in the applicant’s case Dr H. was of the view that the advantages prevailed and therefore he recommended the operation;

iv) the Court of Appeal found Dr H.’s formulation to be cautious and not therefore a clear affirmation of the necessity of the operation;

v) in the Court of Appeal’s view, Dr H.’s report showed that he regarded the success of surgery in the applicant’s case as rather uncertain. The Court of Appeal described this as “a vague hope” and concluded that such could not justify the necessity of surgery bearing in mind the aim of health insurance.

We find all the above conclusions in the circumstances to be reasonable.

9. The Court of Appeal then went on to consider Section 5.1(b) of the contract as to whether the applicant had in fact caused her own disease as had been argued by the defendant insurance company.

The Court of Appeal referred to the case history contained in the expert opinion of Dr O. in 1991. The Court quoted from this as set out in paragraphs 26 and 27. As a result, the Court of Appeal found that she had caused the disease deliberately. Again we are of the view that it was open to the Court of Appeal on any reading of this report to reasonably come to such a conclusion and we note that all it needed to rely upon were the strictly factual details of the applicant’s case history as contained therein.

10. We agree it is for the national courts to assess the evidence they have obtained but that it is for the European Court to ascertain whether the proceedings considered as a whole were fair. We agree further that the national courts are under a duty to conduct a proper examination of the submissions, arguments and evidence adduced by the parties. As noted above, we are also in agreement with the decision of this court in Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom.

11. We cannot agree with the characterisation in paragraph 54 of Dr H.’s recommendation for surgery as “unequivocal”. As noted above, we take the view that the conclusions of both the Regional Court and the Court of Appeal in this respect were reasonable. Their characterisation of his report was “cautious”, “not a clear affirmation of the necessity of the operation”, “success of the operation was uncertain” and that the recommendation was based on a “vague hope” of success.

12. We are in agreement that gender identity is one of the most intimate and private aspect of any person’s life. We cannot however agree as outlined in the second sentence of paragraph 56 that this means that there is anything disproportionate about requiring a person such as the applicant to prove the medical necessity of treatment including irreversible surgery. This case involves an action by the applicant to force her private insurers on foot of her contract with them to reimburse her for 50% of the cost of such treatment. One of the terms of that contract as outlined above was that such treatment must be medically necessary. The insurance company took the view that it was not. Not unnaturally, the applicant took the view that it was. The issue therefore was the very question of necessity. Nothing in our view in the Christine Goodwin case prohibits or should prohibit a party to such a contract of insurance from litigating any term of that contract including the term requiring the medical necessity of the relevant treatment. To find otherwise we fear, means that the medical necessity of surgery would have to be assumed in every case involving a transsexual. This in our view cannot be correct. The likely consequence indeed would be the exclusion of such cover from medical insurance policies to the great disadvantage of transsexuals in general.

13. In relation to the question of causation, our opinion differs also from the majority for the same reasons outlined above. In this regard, we note the most unusual historical background to this case. We note that the applicant herself had agreed to the use of the reports in the earlier proceedings. The factual history contained therein is quite striking on the issue of causation and in the context of the action on the contract involved we do not consider the decision of the Court of Appeal in this regard to be arbitrary or unreasonable and as noted above save as provided, it is for the national courts to assess the evidence. In our view for the reasons outlined, the proceedings taken as a whole were fair.

14. For the above reasons we regretfully disagree with the majority in this judgement and find no breach of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention.

Alleged violation of Article 8 of the Convention

15. We agree with the general principles as outlined at paragraphs 69 to 72. We cannot agree with the statement in paragraph 79 that the Regional Courts referred the applicant to a possibility of psychotherapy as a less severe means in treating her condition “contrary to the statements contained in the expert opinion”. As outlined in paragraph 16, the Regional Court found that the applicant ought to have first had recourse to less severe means. Such a view was very significant in the context of necessity. We have above expressed our disagreement with the characterisation as an “unequivocal recommendation” of Dr H.’s view on the necessity for surgery. We further do not agree with the description of the Court of Appeal’s judgement in relation to causation as a reproach.

16. The task of the German courts at the request of the applicant in this case was to adjudicate upon her contract of insurance in respect of two issues:

a) the necessity of surgical gender re-assignment;

b) the causation of the applicant’s condition.

In order to do so it was inevitable that a painful and intrusive analysis of the applicant’s case history was required. A proper respect for the undoubted right of transsexuals to respect for their dignity, private life and gender self-determination demands that such an adjudication be carried out with all appropriate respect and decorum but does not prevent such an analysis being carried out at all. It seems to us that this judgement provides otherwise and that in order to follow it, domestic courts would never be able to carry out such an adjudication in any meaningful manner.

It is for these reasons, in respect of the Article 8 together with the Article 6 complaints, that we respectfully beg to differ.

CONCURRING OPINION OF JUDGE RESS

I fully agree with the judgment of the Chamber and would like to add the following.

1. Even though the case concerns the interpretation of the terms of a contract negotiated between the applicant and her private insurance company and related litigation, three factors must be taken into account: firstly, the parallelism between private health insurance and the social-security system in Germany; secondly, the impact of Article 8 on private-law relations between individuals or between individuals and companies; and, thirdly, respect ultimately for the free will of transsexuals and the choices made by them.

2. There exists a close legal relationship between the social-security system in Germany and, as an alternative or addition for certain groups of people, private insurance. The conditions of private insurance must, mutatis mutandis, be the same as those of the public system. As is clear from the judgment of the Chamber, gender-related operations are covered by the social-security system and by private health insurance although, it would appear, the conditions laid down by administrative courts and civil courts are, at least in their tendency, different (see paragraph 33 of the judgment).

3. According to German constitutional law, fundamental rights have a direct impact on relations between private persons. The same is true with the rights of the Convention. Under the Convention, Contracting States have to ensure (Article 1) that individuals can enjoy their private life and one of the requirements, as the Court stressed in the case of Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom, is respect for gender identity. The terms of the contract between the applicant and her private insurers must be interpreted in the light of these requirements of Article 8. The term “necessary” in relation to gender surgery must therefore be interpreted with a view not only to respecting the difficult situation of potential transsexuals but also to taking into account the findings of science which were set out in the recent judgment in Goodwin. According to those findings, the situation is one which is dominated by the brain and is characterised by both objective and subjective elements. In the light of these requirements, did the German courts approach the question with due regard to Article 8? Despite the fact that the doctor who had seen the applicant concluded, after weighing the advantages and disadvantages in the applicant’s case, that the advantages outweighed the disadvantages and that an operation was therefore to be recommended, the German courts held that that was not a clear affirmation of the necessity of the operation. The Court of Appeal’s reasoning would be quite acceptable and, as is said in the dissenting opinion, reasonable if it did not fall to be judged from the standpoint of whether the requirements of Article 8 – respect for the specific private-life circumstances of the applicant – had been observed.

4. This leads me to my third and last consideration. In cases where the question arises whether a gender-reassignment operation is necessary and the doctor who examined the person concerned came to the conclusion, as in the instant case, that the applicant was a transsexual and that transsexuality constituted a disease and accordingly, after weighing up the drawbacks and advantages, recommended the operation, the decision of the applicant should always be the final and decisive factor to indicate that the operation was necessary. I think that this type of case, following the reasoning in Goodwin, can be clearly distinguished from other medical cases. Where a transsexual, after lengthy treatment, has been told by his or her doctor that in that doctor’s view, the advantages of an operation outweigh the disadvantages, it cannot be said that the transsexual caused the “disease” deliberately. This does not mean that in the case of every transsexual, surgery should be assumed to be necessary, but if a transsexual has, over quite a long period, undergone treatments of a different kind, such as psychotherapy (see paragraph 16 of the judgment), the individual has done everything necessary to come finally to the conclusion, which has to be respected, that only a gender-reassignment operation would be helpful and thus necessary in his or her case. The applicant had already had recourse to less drastic means, such as hormonal treatments. To prolong her situation, which had already lasted quite a time (see paragraph 11 and 26 of the judgment), would have amounted to treatment which would, in my view, not have been in keeping with “respect” for private life under Article 8. It is a most intimate and private aspect of a person’s life whether to undergo a gender-reassignment operation, and therefore the courts, in considering the necessity of an operation should take into account, as one of the decisive factors, the wishes of the transsexual. I cannot see any arbitrary element in the applicant’s decision finally, after quite lengthy treatment, to undergo the reassignment operation, when even her doctor had recommended it.