Labor Court Gelsenkirchen

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The Gelsenkirchen Justice Center on Bochumer Straße has been the seat of the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court since 2016

The Gelsenkirchen Labor Court , a labor court system , is one of the thirty labor courts in North Rhine-Westphalia ; it has five chambers .

Jurisdiction

The court is locally responsible for labor disputes from the cities of Gelsenkirchen , Gladbeck and Bottrop with a total of around 460,000 inhabitants. This makes the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court one of the largest courts in its district. The factual competence and thus the delimitation of the field of competence in labor matters to civil law disputes results from the Labor Court Act .

Superior courts

The Hamm Regional Labor Court and the Federal Labor Court are superordinate to the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court.

history

The reorganization of the labor justice system was initiated by the Labor Court Act of March 30, 1946 ( Control Council Act No. 21). As early as 1947 there was a labor court in Gelsenkirchen; The files are accessible from 1949. With the constitutional anchoring of the independence of a three-course labor jurisdiction in 1949 and the entry into force of the Labor Court Act 1953, the Control Council Act No. 21 was repealed and the organizational separation between labor jurisdiction and ordinary justice was fixed.

Court seat

Former administration building of the Thyssen foundry, 1993–2016 seat of the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court

The court is based in Gelsenkirchen and was since 1993 in the former administrative building of the Thyssen - foundry housed in Bochum street 86th After the completion of the new Justice Center in Gelsenkirchen , which was built in the immediate vicinity of the previous court seat at Gelsenkirchen Science Park , the Labor Court moved into the new complex at Bochumer Strasse 79 in January 2016 (together with the Gelsenkirchen District Court and the Gelsenkirchen Social Court ).

management

Stefan Kröner has been the director of the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court since November 2, 2016. He headed the Herne Labor Court until September 2014 and then worked at the Ministry of Justice of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia in Düsseldorf. In this position he succeeds Ines Koch, who has headed the Münster Labor Court since July 1, 2016 . She had taken over the management of the Labor Court in Gelsenkirchen from its long-time director Friedrich-Wilhelm Heiringhoff, who had headed the court since 1999 and retired in 2011.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Annex to the announcement of the number of chambers at the courts for labor matters of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (RV d. JM of July 15, 2015) , accessed on July 23, 2015
  2. a b Director of the Labor Court Gelsenkirchen retired. In: lokalkompass.de of January 3, 2012, accessed on March 21, 2017.
  3. Helga Grebing (Ed.): Lehrstücke in Solidarität: Letters and Biographies of German Socialists 1945-1949 (Sources and representations on contemporary history, Volume 23). Deutsche Verlagsanstalt , Stuttgart 1983, p. 100 (letter from Emil Samorei of August 15, 1947).
  4. ^ Landesarchiv NRW, Westphalia department, holdings Q 810.
  5. ^ History of labor jurisdiction. Presentation on the justice portal of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (as of 2017), accessed on April 9, 2017.
  6. Jörn Stender: Logistical challenge for Gelsenkirchen dishes. In: WAZ of January 7, 2016, accessed on February 21, 2016.
  7. Stefan Kröner appointed as the new director of the Gelsenkirchen Labor Court. Press release on the justice portal of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia from November 2, 2016, accessed on April 9, 2017.

Coordinates: 51 ° 30 ′ 2.6 ″  N , 7 ° 6 ′ 26.3 ″  E