Federal Disciplinary Chamber

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GermanyGermany Federal Disciplinary Chambersp1
Federal eagle of the German federal organs
State level Federation
position Federal courts
Consist 1953-1967
Arose from Reich Service Penal Chambers
Incorporated into Federal Disciplinary Court

The Federal Disciplinary chambers were 1953-1967 federal courts and separate departments of administrative jurisdiction according to Art. 96 Art. 3 Basic Law and Disciplinary Courts of First Instance in formal disciplinary proceedings by federal officials .

The Federal Disciplinary Court decided on appeals against judgments of the federal disciplinary chambers . The President of the Federal Disciplinary Court supervised the management of the Federal Disciplinary Chambers.

history

The law on the establishment of federal criminal courts of November 12, 1951 ( Federal Law Gazette I p. 883 ) regulated that the Federal Minister of the Interior set up “federal criminal chambers” by ordinance and determined their seat and district . The Reich Service Penal Chambers provided for in the Reich Service Penal Code of January 26, 1937 (Reichsgesetzbl. I p. 71) was renamed Federal Service Penal Chambers. With the law of November 28, 1952 ( Federal Law Gazette I p. 749 ) the term was replaced by federal disciplinary chambers. In addition, the Reich Service Penal Code was given the name Federal Disciplinary Code .

In 1967 the federal disciplinary chambers were formally dissolved. They went on as locally competent chambers in the new Federal Disciplinary Court in Frankfurt am Main , which was formed from Federal Disciplinary Chamber I and its office.

Chambers

The Federal Minister of the Interior issued the ordinance on the establishment of federal disciplinary chambers on January 5, 1953 ( Federal Law Gazette I p. 7 ). Accordingly, 13 chambers were set up, each with an office. The office of the Federal Disciplinary Chamber I had the tasks of a main office. The chairman of the Federal Disciplinary Chamber I.

designation Judicial district Headquarters of the office Street affiliated to
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  I Hesse Frankfurt am Main Adickesallee 40 -
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  II Baden-Württemberg , administrative districts of North and South Baden Karlsruhe Ettlinger-Tor-Platz 2 Oberpostdirektion Karlsruhe
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  III Baden-Württemberg , administrative districts of North Württemberg and South Württemberg-Hohenzollern Stuttgart Heilbronner Strasse 7 Railway Directorate Stuttgart
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  IV Bavaria , administrative districts of Upper and Lower Bavaria , Upper Palatinate , Swabia , Lindau district Munich Prielmayerstraße 1 Railway Directorate Munich
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  V Bavaria , administrative districts of Upper , Middle and Lower Franconia Nuremberg Sandstrasse 38-40 Railway Directorate Nuremberg
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  VI Berlin Berlin-Charlottenburg Hardenbergstrasse 31 Federal Administrative Court
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  VII Hamburg Hamburg Museumstrasse 39 Hamburg Railway Directorate
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  VIII Lower Saxony , except for the administrative districts of Aurich , Osnabrück , Stade ; Oldenburg administrative district Hanover Zeppelinstrasse 24 Oberpostdirektion Hannover
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  IX Bremen , Lower Saxony administrative districts Aurich , Osnabrück , Stade ; Oldenburg administrative district Bremen Bremen Post Office
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  X North Rhine-Westphalia , administrative districts Düsseldorf , Aachen , Cologne Dusseldorf Jürgensplatz 1 Oberpostdirektion Düsseldorf
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  XI North Rhine-Westphalia , administrative districts Arnsberg , Detmold , Münster Dortmund Hiltropwall 10 Oberpostdirektion Dortmund
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  XII Rhineland-Palatinate Mainz Kaiserstraße 3 Railway Directorate Mainz
Federal Disciplinary Chamber  XIII Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Oberpostdirektion Kiel

Official costume

The official costume of the chairmen of the federal disciplinary chambers consisted of an official robe and a beret in accordance with the order of the Federal President on the official costume at the federal disciplinary courts of March 31, 1953 ( Federal Law Gazette I p. 122 ). The color of the official costume was black. The trimmings on the official robe and the beret of the federal judges consisted of velvet. The chairmen of the federal disciplinary chambers wore a silver cord on their berets.

literature

  • Erich Lindgen: Handbook of disciplinary law for civil servants and judges in federal and state levels: second volume Formal Disciplinary Law . de Gruyter , Berlin 1968, DNB  457437219 , p. 14th ff .

Individual evidence

  1. Erich Lindgen: Handbook of disciplinary law for civil servants and judges in the federal and state levels: second volume Formal Disciplinary Law . de Gruyter , Berlin 1968, DNB  457437219 , p. 14th ff .
  2. Erich Lindgen: Handbook of disciplinary law for civil servants and judges in the federal and state levels: second volume Formal Disciplinary Law . de Gruyter , Berlin 1968, DNB  457437219 , p. 34-37 .
  3. Erich Lindgen: Handbook of disciplinary law for civil servants and judges in the federal and state levels: second volume Formal Disciplinary Law . de Gruyter , Berlin 1968, DNB  457437219 , p. 20th f .