COURT OF CASSATION (BELGIUM)

The 'Court of Cassation' (, , ) is the main court of last resort in Belgium. It was originally modelled after the French Cour de cassation. Its jurisdiction and powers are similar to those of its French counterpart.
Jean-Louis van Dievoet (1777-1854), who was the first Secretary of the Court of Cassation of Belgium, afther the independance.

''To maintain readability: Dutch will be abbreviated as D, French as F.''

Contents
Organisation
Bar
Jurisdiction
See also
External links

Organisation


The court comprises three chambers with 16 judges. Each chamber in turn has a Dutch and a French division. Each chamber has a chief judge, called the President, and two heads of division, one for each language group. The entire court is headed by a chief judge called the First President.
The ''parket generaal'' (D) or ''parquet général'' (F) is headed by the Chief Prosecutor (D: ''procureur-generaal'', F: ''procureur-general''). The Prosecutor is a magistrate, but does not actually try cases (his role is to give legal advice to the Court, in a similar manner to the Commissioner of the Government of Council of State (D: ''Raad van State'', F:''Conseil d'État ''). He brings cases to the Court "in the name of the law." The Chief Prosecutor is aided by the First Prosecutor (''first advocat-general'') and about 12 Prosecutors (D: ''advocaten-generaal'', F: ''advocat-generals'').

Bar


The lawyers, while not employees of the Court and not technically part of it, play an important role in the correct application of justice.
With the exception of a few categories of litigation (namely in penal cases), it is compulsory to use an advocate when referring matters to the ''Court of Cassation''. Lawyers admitted to pleading before this high court are known as ''advocaat bij het Hof van Cassatie'' (D) or ''avocat à la Cour de Cassation'' (F). Admission to this bar is particularly difficult, with special classes and a hard exam. The roles of these specialized lawyers includes advising litigants on whether their pleas are admissible, particularly that ''cassation'' cases only review points of law and not points of fact.

Jurisdiction



★ Appeal to the Court of Cassation is only possible against judgements against which no ordinary appeal is possible anymore. This will happen when all normal appeal procedures have been followed, usually before the Courts of Appeal or the Courts of Labour. The ''Cour de cassation'' can only confirm these judgements, or annul them ("cassation", from the French "''casser''", to break). It can not examine the case and make a new judgement.
The court can annul the entire judgement, or just part of it (D: ''gedeeltelijke cassatie'', F: ''cassation partielle''). If the court annuls a judgement, the case is taken back to a court at the same level as the one which judgement was overturned. The decision of the Court of Cassation is not (yet) binding, however. The new court may decide the case as it pleases (but the decision of the Court of Cassation has a persuasive value).
The decision of the new court may again be appealed to the Court of Cassation. In this case, if the earlier decision of the Court of Cassation is confirmed, the case is brought before a third court at the same level as the one which judgement was overturned, but this time the decision of the Court of Cassation is binding on points of law.

★ In some cases, it is unclear whether a case should be heard before administrative courts or judiciary courts. In these conflicts of attribution, the Court of Cassation can be asked to decide who has jurisdiction.

★ Occasionally the Court of Cassation requests the opinion of the European Court of Justice with respect to the laws of the European Union or of the Court of Arbitration of Belgium with respect to issues of the constitutionality of laws.

See also



Court of cassation

Council of State (Belgium)

Constitutional Court of Belgium

External links



Belgian Court of Cassation

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