The state, under this system, is required to compensate for damages
it has caused through infringement of citizens' rights. Article 2
of the Law on State Compensation, passed on May 12, 1994 by the
Eighth National People's Congress states, "Citizens, legal persons
or other organizations have the right to seek compensation from the
state if state organs and office holders abuse their power and
infringe upon their lawful rights and interests and have caused
damages thereof."
The State Compensation Law specifies two kinds of compensation:
administrative and criminal.
Administrative Compensation
The state should assume the responsibility of compensation if
government offices or their staff abuse their power and infringe
upon the lawful rights and interests of citizens, legal persons or
other organizations and have caused damages thereof. Administrative
compensation is the primary component of state compensation.
1.
Scope of Compensation
Articles 3 and 4 of the State Compensation Law specifies the scope
of compensation:
- Unlawfully detain citizens or adopt unlawful administrative,
forceful measures to restrict citizens' corporal freedom;
- Unlawfully incarcerate citizens or adopt other measures
depriving citizens of their corporal freedom;
- Use violent means such as battering or induce others to use
violent means such as battering that has caused physical injuries
or death to citizens;
- Abuse weapons or police devices and have caused physical
injuries or death to citizens;
- Other unlawful acts that have caused physical injuries or death
to citizens;
- Abuse administrative penalties such as imposing fines, revoking
licenses or permits, ordering suspension of business or
confiscation of property;
- Abuse administrative measures such as sequestrating, detaining
or freezing property;
- Abuse government regulations in expropriating property or
levying fees;
- Other unlawful acts that have caused property damages to
citizens.
Article 5 of the State Compensation Law also specifies a number of
situations where the state does not assume the responsibility for
compensation:
- Personal acts by government employees unrelated to the exercise
of their duties;
- Damages caused by acts committed by citizens, legal persons or
other organizations themselves; and
- Other situations as provided for in the law.
2.
Compensation Body
The State Compensation Law provides for the following ways for
defining responsibility of compensation:
- If damage is done by a government office or its staff, then the
office should assume the responsibility for compensation;
- If damage is done by more than two government offices, then all
the offices involved should jointly assume the responsibility for
compensation;
- If damage is done by organizations under authorization of laws
and regulations, then the authorized organizations should assume
the responsibility for compensation;
- If damage is done by organizations or individuals authorized by
government bodies in the exercise of authorized powers, then the
authorizing bodies should assume the responsibility for
compensation;
- If the government body responsible for compensation no longer
exists, then its succeeding body should assume the responsibility
for compensation; if no such succeeding body exists, then the
administrative body that eliminates the body responsible for
compensation should assume that responsibility;
- If damage is awarded by an administrative reconsideration body,
then the original body that causes the damage should be held
responsible for compensation; however, if the reconsideration
decision has aggravated the damage done, then the reconsideration
body should assume responsibility for compensation for the
aggravated part.
Claimants of administrative compensation should first file their
claim with the administrative body responsible for compensation;
they may also raise their claim while applying for administrative
reconsideration or filing an administrative suit. They should not
directly file a suit without first going through the administrative
body responsible for compensation.
Criminal Compensation
Criminal compensation applies when the judicial authorities wrongly
detain or arrest citizens or wrongly adjudicate cases.
1.
Scope of Compensation
Articles 15 and 16 of the State Compensation Law specifies the
scope of criminal compensation as follows:
- Wrongly detain persons without incriminating facts or without
facts proving that the persons are prime suspects;
- Wrongly arrest persons without incriminating facts;
- Persons who are pronounced innocent in a judicial review but
who have already served their sentence as ruled in the original
trial;
- Extort a confession through torture or cause physical injuries
or death to citizens through battery by judicial personnel or
others at their instigation;
- Abuse weapons or police devices and have caused physical
injuries or death to citizens;
- Abuse administrative measures such as sequestrating, detaining,
freezing or recovering property;
- Persons who are pronounced innocent in a judicial review but
who have already paid the fine and whose property has already been
confiscated as ruled in the original trial.
Article 18 of the State Compensation Law also specifies that the
state shall not assume the liability for criminal compensation
under any of the following circumstances:
- Persons who have been detained or penalized for purposeful
perjury or forgery of other incriminating evidence;
- Persons who, under Articles 14 and 15 of the Criminal Law,
should not assume criminal liability but who have been
detained;
- Persons who, under Article 11 of the Criminal Procedure Law,
should not be criminally prosecuted but who have been
detained;
- Acts committed by individuals unrelated to the exercise of
their duty as personnel of the state investigative, procuratorial,
judicial or jail authorities;
- Injuries caused by citizens themselves through self-injury or
deliberate self-hurt;
- Other situations as provided for in the law.
2.
Compensation Body
The State Compensation Law provides for the following ways for
defining responsibility of compensation:
- If damage is done to citizens, legal persons or other
organizations by government offices or their staff when exercising
investigative, procuratorial, judicial or jail management duties,
then the offices should assume the responsibility for
compensation;
- If citizens are wrongly detained without incriminating facts or
without facts proving that they are prime suspects, then the body
that made the detention decision should assume responsibility for
compensation;
- If citizens are wrongly arrested without incriminating facts,
then the body that made the arrest decision should assume
responsibility for compensation;
- For persons who are pronounced innocent in a re-trial, the
original court that gave the ruling already in effect should bear
the responsibility for compensation; for persons who are pronounced
innocent in the second instance, the court that gave the
first-instance ruling and the body that made the arrest decision
should jointly bear responsibility for compensation.
Claimants of criminal compensation should first file their claim
with the body responsible for compensation; they may also apply to
higher authorities for administrative reconsideration within 30
days of expiry of the term if compensation is rejected after expiry
of the term, or if they object to the amount of compensation.
A
compensation committee composed of three to seven judges should be
set up in a court above the intermediate level.
Compensation-paying bodies, reconsideration bodies or courts shall
charge no fees on compensation claimants.
State compensation is paid in monetary form. Whenever possible,
recovery or reinstatement of property should be implemented. State
compensation is calculated in the following ways:
- For citizens whose personal freedom has been infringed, the
amount of daily compensation is calculated on the basis of average
daily wage for workers in the preceding year;
- For citizens whose life and health rights have been infringed,
the amount of compensation should be calculated in the following
ways:
a)
For those who sustained physical injuries, the compensatory body
should pay their medical fees and loss of income caused by absence
from work. Daily compensation for the loss of income is calculated
on the basis of the average daily wage for workers in the preceding
year, with the maximum being five times the average annual wage for
workers in the preceding year;
b)
For those who lost partial or full working capabilities, the
compensatory body should pay their medical fee and a disability
compensation, the amount of which depends on the degree of the
disability. The maximum for partial disability should be 10 times
the average annual wage for workers in the preceding year;
c)
For those who lost all their working capabilities, the maximum
should be 20 times and living expenses should be paid for their
dependents who are unable to work;
d)
For those who died, the compensatory body should pay death
compensation and a funeral fee, with the maximum being 20 times the
annual wage for workers in the preceding year. In addition, it
should also pay living expenses for dependents of the victims.
3.
Compensation for damages done to the property of citizens, legal
persons or other organizations should be paid in the following
ways:
- Return of property in the case of imposition of fines, recovery
or confiscation of property, or expropriation of property or
collection of fees in violation of regulations;
- Remove the sequestration, detention or freezing action on the
property if it is wrongly sequestrated, detained or frozen; if
property is damaged or lost, restore it to original shape if
possible; if not, compensate for the damage;
- If the property due to be returned is damaged, restore it to
its original shape if possible; if not, compensate for the
damage;
- If the property due to be returned is lost, compensate for the
loss;
- If the property is already auctioned off, pay the claimant the
proceeds from the auction;
- If a business owner is wrongly revoked of his license or
ordered to suspend his business, compensate for his current
expenses incurred during the suspension of business;
- If other damages are done to an individual's property,
compensate for the direct losses arising thereof.
Compensation expenditures should be budgeted for by governments at
all levels.
Article 32 of the State Compensation Law provides for the validity
of state compensation: "Claimants should file their appeal for
state compensation within two years beginning from the date when
the acts of government bodies and their staff in exercising their
duties are established as unlawful, not including the days of
detention."
Article 33 of the same law specifies how foreign-related state
compensation is calculated: "This law applies to foreign
individuals, enterprises and organizations within the territory of
the People's Republic of China. Where the home country of the
foreign individual, enterprise or organization does not protect or
limits the rights to state compensation of individuals, enterprises
or organizations of the People's Republic of China in that country,
the People's Republic of China will reciprocate that policy toward
individuals, enterprises or organizations of that country." This
provision reflects both China's respect for the rights of foreign
individuals, enterprises and organizations and its sovereignty and
dignity.
Articles 14 and 24 of the State Compensation Law provides for the
right of recovery for the state in administrative and criminal
compensation: "Compensatory bodies, after paying for the damages or
losses, will recover, in part or in full, the amount of
compensation from the individuals or authorized organizations or
individuals that are responsible, whether purposefully or
otherwise, for the damage or loss." This includes the following
situations: 1) Situations as defined in Clauses 4 and 5 in Article
15 of this law; 2) Persons who are pronounced innocent in a
re-trial in accordance with the judicial review procedures, but for
whom the original ruling of fines or confiscation of property has
already been carried out.