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Published byAudrey Cross Modified over 9 years ago
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The Courts Basic principels of the judiciary Organisation and administration of the judiciary Jurisdiction on fundamental rights
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1. Basic principels of the judiciary 1.1 Independence of the judges European Convention on Human Rights Article 6. conditions of fair trial: „an independent and impartial tribunal established by law” Constitution Article 50. (3) „Judges are independent and are responsible only to the law.”
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1.1.1 Independence of the judiciary Reform in 1991: administrative competences of the Minister of Justice (assure personal and financial conditions) DECISION 53/1991 AB: constitutional DECISION 17/1994 AB: ombudsman’s right to review > safeguard of independence DECISION 28/1995 AB: rearrangement of judicial budgetary estimates by the executive power > unconstitutional without restrictions DECISION 12/2001 AB: procedure concerning uniformity 2003: motion of budget > National Council of Justice
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1.1.2 Personal independence DECISION 51/1992 AB: party membership of lay judges – principle of jurisdiction in council DECISION 38/1993 AB: Minister of Justice’s right to nomination and granting of title - constitutional requirement: compenzation of nominater belonging to an other power, contribution of courts or other balance DECISION 45/1994 AB: award of judges > contribution of judicial power; S.L., L.T., Z.J. unconstitutional Act of 1997 on legal status: new procedure of becoming judge > general system concerning a competition (except the first three years nomination); the lowest pay + every year Annual Budget DECISION 13/2002 AB: indpendence of the decision – Criminal Code medium-proportion > not unconstitutional
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1.2 Other basic principels -Judicial way -Generality of the jurisdiction (judicial monopoly) -Equality before the law -Presumption of innocence -Fair trial -Right to appeal -Right to a public trial -Right to jurisdiction in council -Right to use of the mother tongue
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2. Judiciary and administration Act LXVI of 1997 – reform -Court of four instance: local, county, appeals courts, Supreme Court -Act CX of 1999 appeals court in Budapest > DECISION 45/2001 AB: appeals courts > Act XXII of 2002 Budapest, Szeged, Pécs + Debrecen, Győr (01. 07. 2004) -Judicial self-administration succeeds external administration: dominance of the judges + President of the Supreme Court (?), General Prosecutor, President of Hungarian Chamber of Attornies, Minister of Justice, 2 MPs
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3. Jurisdiction on fundamental rights Constitution Article 32/A. Constitutional Court: abstract norm-control Constitution Article 70/K. „Claims arising from infringement on fundamental rights, and objections to the decisions of public authorities regarding the fulfillment of duties may be brought before a court of law.”
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3.1 Interpretation of the Constitution by ordinary judges Direct (Dávodi case) or indirect (Profi, Góman, Tiszavasvári) „Drittwirkung” Monopoly of the constitutional interpretation versus Norm-nature of Constitution (Article 77. (2))
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3.2 Judicial norm-control? Norm-control versus monopoly of the annulment? Act on Constitutional Court Article 38.: compulsory judicial norm-control Possibilities of solution: -constitutional review of the resolutions concerning uniformity -real constitutional complaint
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