District court Reutlingen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
District court Reutlingen

The Reutlingen District Court is a court of ordinary jurisdiction and, with 13 judges, is the largest of the seven district courts in the district of the Tübingen District Court . (As of April 2012)

Jurisdiction and seat

The judicial district of the Reutlingen District Court includes the municipalities of Reutlingen , Eningen , Pfullingen , Lichtenstein , Walddorfhäslach , Wannweil , Pliezhausen and Sonnenbühl .

The foreclosure department is also responsible for foreclosure matters in the district court districts of Bad Urach and Münsingen . It also handles family matters from the Münsingen district court .

Insolvency cases, however, are carried out at the Tübingen District Court . Commercial, cooperative and partnership registers are concentrated at the Stuttgart District Court .

The Tübingen Regional Court is superordinate to the Reutlingen District Court. The competent higher regional court is the higher regional court in Stuttgart .

building

The court is located at Gartenstrasse 40 in 72764 Reutlingen. There are a total of five meeting rooms, three on the ground floor and two on the first floor. The foreclosure department and the register of associations are in the annex at Gartenstrasse 44.

Significant cases

On the basis of a submission by the Reutlingen District Court, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) should decide whether the salutation "Mr." or "Ms." should always be used in a penalty order . The ECJ declared that it did not have jurisdiction.

A criminal judge from Reutlingen also made headlines when he seized a defendant's Facebook account for the first time in Germany in order to clarify his involvement in a burglary. In the end, however, Facebook did not release the data; however, the accused was convicted on the basis of further evidence.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c district . Reutlingen District Court, April 11, 2012
  2. Orientation in the house . Reutlingen District Court, April 11, 2012
  3. ^ Judgment of the European Court of Justice of October 9, 1997 , Ref .: C-291/96
  4. ^ Pia Grund-Ludwig: Facebook data in court . Deutschlandfunk, February 25, 2012.
  5. ↑ The Facebook process comes to an unspectacular end , accessed on August 5, 2014

See also

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 29 '30.9 "  N , 9 ° 12' 53.6"  E