Labor Court Suhl

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Labor court building on Suhl's market square

The Suhl Labor Court , a labor court system , is one of the four Thuringian labor courts .

Seat and District of the Court

Location of the Sonneberg Judgment Day

The newly established court in 1993 has its seat in the independent city of Suhl . The courthouse has been located at Marktplatz 2 since mid-February 2011 . The Suhl Labor Court holds court days in the buildings of the Eisenach and Sonneberg District Courts . The Labor Court Suhl's local jurisdiction for legal disputes arising from the independent cities Suhl and Eisenach , the Wartburg district , the Schmalkalden-Meiningen , the district Hildburghausen and the district Sonneberg . The judicial authority results from theLabor Court Act .

At the location of the court in Suhl and on the two days of the court, a legal application center has been set up to support citizens with filing a complaint.

History of the place of jurisdiction

Allocation to the Kingdom of Prussia through the stipulations of the Congress of Vienna brought the Suhl judicial location, after many years of standstill, to the beginnings of the nascent labor law: the freedom of trade, the emerging legislation on occupational health and safety, the ban on coalitions, the criminalization of labor law breaches and civil procedural experiments with Summary procedure for the settlement of labor disputes within the framework of ordinary jurisdiction. After the institutionalization under imperial law, commercial and merchant courts in Eisenach, Bad Salzungen, Ruhla, Meiningen, Suhl, Zella-Mehlis and Sonneberg were set up within the jurisdiction of today's Labor Court in Suhl. These early forms of labor jurisdiction were followed in mid-1927 by the labor courts of the ArbGG 1926, which had their headquarters in Eisenach, Meiningen, Sonneberg and Suhl. After the Second World War , the existing labor courts resumed their activities with the approval of SMAD. They were replaced in 1952 by the district and district labor courts, which were absorbed by the district courts in 1963. After reunification, Suhl was one of the locations where in 1992 the jurisdiction in labor matters was concentrated. The final separation from the district court structures took place on January 9, 1993.

After the court was re-established in 1993, its area of ​​responsibility and organizational structure was subject to several changes. With effect from October 1, 1998, Art. 2 ThürGerBÄG of September 29, 1998 placed the Altlandkreis Ilmenau under the jurisdiction of the Gotha Labor Court, the municipalities of the Altlandkreis assigned to the Schwarza district by Section 14 (2) 3 ThürNGG of August 16, 1993 Neuhaus am Rennweg transferred to the jurisdiction of the Jena Labor Court. At the same time, the Sonneberg external chambers of the Suhl Labor Court were abolished and subsequently replaced by the Sonneberg Court Day. With effect from July 1, 2001, Art. 15 ThürHhBG of December 21, 2000 in connection with the dissolution of the Gotha Labor Court transferred the Ilmkreis to the jurisdiction of the Suhl Labor Court. In the course of the dissolution of the Eisenach Labor Court by the Thuringian Household Supplementary Act 2012, jurisdiction for the independent city of Eisenach and the Wartburg district has been transferred to the Suhl Labor Court with effect from January 1, 2014, whereas the Ilm district will in future be the responsibility of the Erfurt Labor Court.

Superior courts

The Thuringian Regional Labor Court and the Federal Labor Court are superordinate to the Suhl Labor Court.

Individual evidence

  1. Section 2 (1) of the ThürAGArbGG of December 22, 1992 (GVBl. 1993 p. 1); valid from January 9, 1993
  2. Thuringian Ordinance on the Holding of Court Days of the Suhl Labor Court of November 20, 2013 (GVBl. 2013, p. 333)
  3. Section 2 (2) ThürAGArbGG of December 22, 1992 in the version of Article 5 of the law of December 21, 2011 (GVBl. P. 531, 532) in conjunction with the annex to Section 2 (2) ThürAGArbGG
  4. State Handbook for Thuringia, Weimar 1926, pp. 161 ff .; http://zs.thulb.uni-jena.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/jportal_derivate_00182029/StHaThue_1926.pdf
  5. State Handbook for Thuringia, Weimar 1931, p. 480 ff .; http://zs.thulb.uni-jena.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/jportal_derivate_00182028/StHaThue_1931.pdf
  6. GVBl. 1998, p. 288
  7. GVBl. 1993, p. 545.
  8. GVBl. 2000, p. 408.
  9. GVBl. 2011, p. 531.

See also

Web links

Coordinates: 50 ° 36 ′ 38.3 "  N , 10 ° 41 ′ 34.9"  E