Eduard Bartels (lawyer, 1872)

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Eduard Erich Carl Gustav Otto Friedrich Bartels (born March 26, 1872 in Osnabrück , † July 5, 1928 ) was a German judge .

Life

His father was Louis Friedrich August Eduard Bartels (1832–1907), President of the Senate at the Hamburg Higher Regional Court . His mother Hermine (1842-1910) was born Wedekind . He attended since the Untertertia the Gelehrtenschule the Johanneum . After graduating from high school in 1891, he studied law. In 1894 he received his doctorate in Leipzig. The Hanseate was sworn in in 1894. In 1899 he first became a lawyer. In 1901 he switched to civil service as a magistrate, which corresponded to the Hamburg and English custom that Bartels advocated. High Court Judge , he was in 1913. In World War I he was from August 1918 at the Imperial District Court in Antwerp supervisory leading district judge. These courts were established in 1918 and proceeded according to Belgian substantive law and German procedural law, but with the first-instance application of the contingency maxim . In 1921 the Senate appointed him honorary professor at the law and political science faculty of Hamburg University . He said "the academic teaching through Collegia [gave him] almost even more pleasure than the judicial profession." In 1925 he came to the Imperial Court . He worked as a judge in the 2nd Civil Senate . After a serious operation in 1927, he died in office in July 1928. Bartels was a member of the German Gymnasium Association .

Fonts

  • The clandestina possessio of land, Diss. Leipzig 1894.
  • "German Jurisdiction in Belgium and Process Reform" , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, Volume 24 (1919), Col. 459 .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Pedigree of the Wedekind family, PDF , accessed on November 14, 2012.
  2. Announcement concerning the filling of positions at the German judicial authorities in Flanders, No. 81 of August 31, 1918, Law and Ordinance Gazette for the occupied territories of Belgium, Volume 16 (1918), p. 266 .
  3. Official Gazette, supplement to the Hamburg Law and Ordinance Gazette, 1921, p. 1789.