Tokyo District Court Trial

 

The South Korean Association of The Bereaved of Pacific War Victims and a Japanese support group, The Hakkirikai (Association to Clarify Japa's Post-war Responsibility), have been supporting court battles in Japan, in which 40 Korean plaintiffs -- former ianfu (women put under sexual slavery in Japanese military brothels), soldiers and gunzoku (paramilitary personnel) of the now-defunct Japanese Military, or their bereaved families -- are demanding state compensation for their victimization during the Asia-Pacific War. They brought the case before the Tokyo District Court on 6 July 2001 through eleven attorneys led by Ken'ichi Takagi acting as their agent, and the trial was concluded on 26 March 2001, with all claims rejected.

On the same day, the plaintiffs, their counsel, and the two support organizations agreed upon appealing to the Tokyo High Court and did so on 6 April. Following is an outline of the verdict delivered on 26 March 2001 on the redress suit made by the Korean victims and their bereaved families of the Asia Pacific War (1991 No. 17461 and 1002 No. 50809). Note that this is only a provisional translation and the part concerning names, backgrounds and individual claims of the plaintiffs are largely omitted. For more precise information, you should try other sources.

[Hakkirikai-Japanese original]

The Adjudication of the Tokyo District Court

1. The court declines all the claims made by plaintiffs.
2. The cost of the lawsuit shall be charged to the plaintiffs


Facts and Causes

The plaintiffs claim against the defendant (the state of Japan) for the payment of 20mn yen each, based on the following reasons.


The Outline of the Case

The plaintiffs argue that during the Japan's colonial rule over the Korean peninsula (started with the annexation of Korea upon the Japan-Korea Amalgamation Treaty concluded on 22 August 1910, following the gradual corrosion of the sovereignty of then-Korean Empire since the second Korean-Japanese Accord on 17 November 1905, and lasted until 1945) they suffered unbearable pains caused by the defendant, which recruited Korean men to serve for its military as soldiers and gunzoku through various methods ranging from promoting volunteers to de-facto conscriptions, and Korean women to their military brothels. For the losses they suffered during the service, the plaintiffs --former soldiers/gunzoku, their bereaved families, or ianfu -- are claiming compensations against the state of Japan. Some of the plaintiffs also lay claims on their unpaid salaries and frozen balances of their postal saving accounts and demanding payback or compensation for the loss if their claims are no longer valid.

As the legal ground of the part of their claims that are related to human losses and damages (i.e. except claims on unpaid salaries; this portion will hereinafter be referred to as "compensation claims for human losses"), the plaintiffs raise the following:

1. The right for compensation claims stemming from the defendant's violation of the international laws, including the commitment of "crimes against humanity."
2. The right to make claims for the restitution of the original state provided by the Constitution of Japan (the right for compensation claims based on the Preambles of the Constitution as well as the acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration).
3. The right of making compensation claims based on Article 29-3 of the Constitution of Japan.
4. The right of making compensation claims based on the principle of equality in the international laws.
5. The right of making compensation claims based on the principle of equality in the Constitution of Japan.
6. The right for compensation claims based on principles.
7. The right for compensation claims based on the rule of trust (breach of the security care obligation).
8. The right for compensation claims based on the Japanese Civil Code.
9. The right for compensation claims based on the provision of legislative nonfeasance defined by Article 1-1 of the State Redress Law.
As for the compensation claim on unpaid salaries, etc., which was made on an optional basis separately from the main claim of "human loss" compensation, the ten claimants base their claim on the right of compensation claim based on Article 29-3 of the Constitution of Japan.


Points in Dispute

I. About Compensation Claims for Human Losses and Damages

I-1 Claims based on the international laws

(1) The compensation claims stemming from the defendant's violation of the international laws, including the commitment of "crimes against humanity."
--Validity of the argument that the defendant violated the international laws / Whether or not the alleged violation of the international laws entails civil liabilities.

(2) The compensation claim based on the right to demand the restitution of the original state (the right for compensation claims stemming from the acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration, etc.).
--Validity of the compensation claim based on the acceptance of Potsdam Declaration, etc.

(3) The compensation claim based on the principle of equality in the international laws.
--Validity of the argument that the defendant violated the equality principle in the international laws / Would the alleged violation entail in civil liabilities?

I-2 Claims based on domestic laws

(1) Claims based on Article 29-3 of the Constitution of Japan.
-- Existence of the right to make compensation claims based on Article 29-3

(2) Claims based on the principle of equality in the Constitution of Japan.
--Validity of the argument that the defendent violated the principle of equality in the Constitution / Would that lead to civil liabilities?

(3) The compensation claims based on principles.
--Validity of such claims

(4) The compensation claims based on the rule of trust (breach of the security care obligation).
--Validity of the argument that there was a violation of trust by the defendant. / Would that lead to civil liabilities?

(5) The compensation claims based on the Japanese Civil Code.
--Validity of the argument that the defendant violated the Civil Code of Japan. / Would that lead to liability for compensations?

(6) The compensation claims based on the legislative nonfeasance provided by Article 1-1 of the State Redress Law.
--Does the defendant bear responsibility based on the legislative nonfeasance in Article 1-1 of the State Redress Law?

II About the claims for unpaid salaries, etc. and related compensation claims

1. Whether or not the claims for unpaid salaries correspond to the "properties, rights and interests" in Article 2-3 of the Japan-ROK agreement as defined by the Sochi-ho (a domestic law for the treatment of the property rights held by South Korea and its nationals upon the implementation of the Japan-ROK agreement for the settlement of disputes over properties and claims and economic cooperation between the two states)?

2. Does the Sochi-ho's provision 1 violate Article 29-2 and 3 of the Constitution of Japan?

3. Whether or not there is the right for compensation claims based on Article 29-3 of the Constitution of Japan for the termination of the private claims for unpaid salaries by the provision 1 of the Sochi-ho?
 


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August 26, 2001

 

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