
Chilling Changes in the Japan–South Korea Relationship
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Tableau 2: Challenges to the 1965 Basic Treaty
Kim Chang-rok cites a pair of rulings by South Korea’s courts as having dealt critical blows to the 1965 system even before its service life expired. One of the rulings was issued by the Constitutional Court in August 2011, the other by the Supreme Court in May 2012.
On August 30, 2011, the Constitutional Court handed down its decision on a case brought by former comfort women against the minister of foreign affairs. The court ruled that the defendant’s “failure to act”—the fact that the defendant, i.e. the Korean government, had not acted to resolve the dispute between South Korea and Japan in line with the dispute-settlement procedures between the two countries—was unconstitutional. In lay terms, the court scolded the government and indicated that it must strive to deal with the issue of compensation for the former comfort women.
On May 24, 2012, the Supreme Court issued a pair of rulings with even graver implications. These rulings concluded cases brought in 1995 and 1997 by Koreans who had been conscripted during World War II to work at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and at Nippon Steel, respectively. The plaintiffs, having lost their cases in Japanese courts, had turned to Korean courts in Busan and Seoul, seeking payment of past wages and compensation from their former employers. But there too they had lost both in the initial trials and on appeal.
The plaintiffs next took their cases to the Supreme Court, which nixed the earlier rulings and sent the cases back to the two high courts. The thrust of the two rulings was the same: Imperial Japan’s rule over the Korean Peninsula was unlawful, and legal relationships based on it are invalid if they are incompatible with the spirit of South Korea’s Constitution. On July 10, 2013, the Seoul High Court awarded payments of 100 million won to each of the plaintiffs in the Nippon Steel case, and on July 30 the Busan High Court awarded payments of 80 million won to each in the Mitsubishi Heavy case (both awards have been resubmitted on appeal to the Supreme Court).
Carrying Past Issues into the Future
The 2012 Supreme Court rulings were widely welcomed within South Korea, where people praised the court for having restored the country’s legal sovereignty and having addressed the people’s resentment against Japan’s past behavior. But in terms of the Japan–South Korea relationship, the court may be said to have opened a Pandora’s box. The historical conflicts between the two countries all concern matters that are in the past. But suits seeking compensation from contemporary Japanese corporations are present and future matters.
Already moves are afoot to identify and sue all the Japanese companies that employed conscripted Korean workers in any capacity during World War II. In addition, we see steps toward seeking large-scale settlements through the US judicial system on the basis of the Korean rulings in favor of the plaintiffs. Robert Swift, a director of the Philadelphia-based law firm Kohn Swift & Graf famous for his involvement in war crimes litigation, announced in Seoul on June 6 this year that he was ready to cooperate in Korean efforts to gain restitution.
“Good Morals” as a Judicial Norm
Human history is full of wars and conflicts between nations, from which winners and losers have emerged. When the victorious and vanquished countries reach a treaty to set their adversarial relationship behind them, they must observe it. This principle, known by the Latin phrase pacta sunt servanda (agreements must be kept) is the foundation of international law and the international order.
There are, to be sure, exceptions to this basic principle. One is the provision called rebus sic stantibus (things thus standing), according to which a treaty becomes inapplicable if there is a change of circumstances unforeseen to the parties to the treaty such that observing it would go against the original spirit of the agreement. This, however, does not cover the South Korean Supreme Court rulings. The other is jus cogens (compelling law), which refers to “peremptory norms” that cannot be revoked under international law even by agreement among countries. This is the provision that the South Korean Supreme Court applied; I am not capable of assessing whether it was correct to do so.
One point that emerged clearly, though, was the Supreme Court’s explicit declaration that for Korean courts to honor the Japanese courts’ rulings against the conscripted workers was not consistent with the “good morals or other social order” of South Korea. In other words, the court judged that the compulsion exerted by Japanese companies in the past violated a “peremptory norm” as commonly accepted in South Korea.
A Roh Moo-hyun Appointee Takes the Lead
Aside from the legal reasoning behind the Supreme Court’s rulings, one point that troubles me is the fact that they were issued not by the Grand Bench, with the chief justice presiding, but by a petty bench. The Grand Bench consists of at least two-thirds of the justices (of whom there are 14, including the chief justice), while petty benches can consist of as few as three justices. The Grand Bench handles rulings that have major social repercussions or that overturn one of the court’s previous judgments. Rulings thus issued represent the consensus of the South Korean judiciary and have substantial political significance.
The cases of the conscripted workers were handled by the First Petty Bench, not by the Grand Bench. Given the nature of the relationship between Japan and South Korea, the two countries that built East Asia’s postwar economy, was this an appropriate way of dealing with a pair of cases in which Japanese companies were the defendants? The fact that the rulings came from a petty bench may be interpreted to mean that they do not represent the consensus of the South Korean judiciary.
I might also point out that the justice who was presiding over the First Petty Bench at the time of these rulings was Kim Nung-hwan, who was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Roh Moo-hyun (2003–8). Kim passed the Korean bar examination in the same year as Roh. After completing his term on the Supreme Court, he became involved in convenience store management; he then joined a major law firm.
True to the Korean saying I cited at the beginning of this article, the past 10 years have brought great change in the relationship between Japan and South Korea. Observing this transformation, I cannot help feeling a chill in my bones.
(Banner photo: The late Park Tae-Joon [left center], founder of Pohang Iron & Steel, receives the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun in 1999 for his contributions to Japan–South Korea relations. © Jiji Press.)
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South Korea law Nippon Steel POSCO Pohang Mitsubishi Heavy Forced Labor