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Revision as of 15:08, 8 October 2012

General Court
Established1989
StandortLuxembourg, Luxembourg
Website[1]

The General Court (EGC) is a jurisdictional instance of the Court of Justice of the European Union. From its inception on 1 January 1989 to 30 November 2009, it was known as the Court of First Instance (CFI).

Competence

The General Court hears disputes (such as disputes brought by those refused a trademark by OHIM, the EU Trade Mark and designs registry). Appeals are sent to the European Court of Justice. The General Court is an independent Court attached to the European Court of Justice.

The creation of the General Court instituted a judicial system based on two levels of jurisdiction: all cases heard at first instance by the General Court may be subject to a right of appeal to the Court of Justice on points of law only.

In view of the increasing number of cases brought before the General Court in the last five years, in order to relieve it of some of the caseload, the Treaty of Nice, which entered into force on February 1, 2003, provides for the creation of ‘judicial panels’ in certain specific areas.

On November 2, 2004 the Council adopted a decision establishing the European Union Civil Service Tribunal. This new specialised tribunal, composed of seven judges, will hear and determine at first instance disputes involving the European Civil Service. Its decisions will be subject to a right of appeal before the General Court on points of law only. Decisions given by the General Court in this area may exceptionally be subject to review by the Court of Justice. The European Union Civil Service Tribunal was duly constituted into law on December 2, 2005.

The creation of a European Union Patent Tribunal is currently being examined.

Composition

The General Court (previously known as the "Court of First Instance") is composed of 27 judges, at least one from each Member State, plus a registrar. The Judges are appointed for a renewable term of six years by common accord of the governments of the Member States.

The Members of the General Court elect their President and the Presidents of the Chambers of five Judges from among their number for a renewable period of three years.

There are no permanent Advocates General attached to the General Court (unlike the European Court of Justice which has 8 Advocates General). However, the task of an Advocate General may be performed in a limited number of cases by a Judge nominated to do so. In practice this has been done only very occasionally.

List of presidents

Year Name
1989–1995 Portugal José Luis Da Cruz Vilaça
1995–1998 Italien Antonio Saggio
1998–2007 Dänemark Bo Vesterdorf
2007–present Luxemburg Marc Jaeger

Judges

Name Land Elected Term Ends
Josef Azizi Österreich Österreich 1995 2013
Marc Jaeger Luxemburg Luxemburg 1996 2010
Arjen Meij Niederlande Niederlande 1998 2010
Nicholas James Forwood Vereinigtes Königreich Vereinigtes Königreich 1999 2011
Maria Eugénia Martins de Nazaré Ribeiro Portugal Portugal 2003 2015
Franklin Dehousse Belgien Belgien 2003 2015
Ena Cremona Malta Malta 2004 2010
Ottó Czúcz Ungarn Ungarn 2004 2010
Irena Wiszniewska-Białecka Polen Polen 2004 2010
Irena Pelikánová Tschechische Republik Tschechische Republik 2004 2010
Daniel Šváby Slowakei Slowakei 2004 2010
Vilenas Vadapalas Litauen Litauen 2004 2010
Küllike Jürimäe Estland Estland 2004 2010
Ingrida Labucka Lettland Lettland 2004 2010
Savvas S. Papasavvas Zypern Zypern 2004 2010
Emmanuel Coulon (registrar) [1] Frankreich Frankreich 2005 2011
Enzo Moavero Milanesi Italien Italien 2006 2012
Nils Wahl Schweden Schweden 2006 2012
Miro Prek Slowenien Slowenien 2006 2013 [1]
Teodor Tchipev Bulgarien Bulgarien 2007 2010
Alfred Dittrich Deutschland Deutschland 2007 2013
Santiago Soldevila Fragoso Spanien Spanien 2007 2013
Laurent Truchot Frankreich Frankreich 2007 2013
Sten Frimodt Nielsen Dänemark Dänemark 2007 2013
Kevin C.O'Higgins Republic of Ireland Irland 2008 2013
Heikki Kanninen Finnland Finnland 2009 2015
Juraj Schwarcz Slowakei Slowakei 2009 2015
Dimitris Gratsias Griechenland Griechenland 2010 2016
Andrei Popescu Rumänien Rumänien 2010 2016
Mariyana Kancheva Bulgarien Bulgarien 2011 2013

Former Judges

Name Land Elected Term Ended Ref.
Virpi Tiili Finnland Finnland January 8, 1995 October 6, 2009 [2]

References

  • "General Court: Presentation of the members". European Court of Justice.

Jurisdiction

The General Court, like the Court of Justice, has the task of ensuring that the law is observed in the interpretation and application of the Treaties of the European Union and the provisions adopted by the competent Union institutions.

In order to fulfil its main task, the General Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine at first instance all direct actions brought by individuals and the Member States, with the exception of those to be assigned to a ‘judicial panel’ and those reserved for the Court of Justice.

Categories of direct actions

  • Actions for annulment

(against acts of the Union institutions)

  • Actions for failure to act

(against inaction by the Union institutions)

  • Actions for damages

(for the reparation of damage caused by unlawful conduct on the part of a Union institution)

  • Actions based on an arbitration clause

(disputes concerning contracts in public or private law entered into by the Union, containing such a clause)

  • Actions concerning the civil service - As of 2006 these cases were transferred to the new Civil Service Tribunal

(disputes between the Union and its officials and other servants)

Subject-matter of direct actions: all matters, including:

  • agriculture
  • State aid
  • competition
  • commercial policy
  • regional policy
  • social policy
  • institutional law
  • trade mark law
  • transport

Procedure

The General Court has its own Rules of Procedure. As a rule the Court’s procedure includes a written phase and an oral phase. The proceedings are in a language chosen by the applicant. The working language of the Court, however, including the language in which the judges deliberate and the language in which preliminary reports and judgments are drafted is French. This makes the General Court, along with the Court of Justice of the European Union, the only international court where French is the sole working language [2]

The Court is divided into eight chambers, generally consisting of three judges, except for the sixth and the eighth chambers, which consist of four judges and alternate to form three-judge chambers for the purposes of dealing with cases [3]. Cases are distributed by the President of the Court to the Presidents of the chambers. The Presidents of chamber then assign a Judge-Rapporteur amongst the judges in the chamber, whose clerks write a preliminary report (rapport prealable) based on the pleadings received from the parties and the applicable law.

At the close of the written procedure and, as the case may be, on adoption of measures of inquiry, the case is argued orally in open court. The proceedings are interpreted simultaneously, as necessary, into different official languages of the European Union. The Judges then deliberate on the basis of a draft judgment prepared by the Judge-Rapporteur. The judgment is delivered in open court.

References

  1. ^ a b "CURIA - Members". CVRIA. Retrieved May 2, 2010.
  2. ^ "CURIA - Former Members". CVRIA. Retrieved May 2, 2010.