Admission

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The entering an refers to the opinion of a defendant in the civil case on charges against him claims or defendants in criminal proceedings to accusations made against him.

Civil litigation

In civil proceedings, admission aims to have a lawsuit declared unfounded by means of dismissal . The defendant can dispute the allegations, raise objections or submit his own statements on the legal situation. If the defendant does not get involved or if he only tries to assert procedural deficiencies, a default judgment or preclusion can occur. If the defendant agrees, however, the plaintiff can no longer withdraw his action without his consent and the defendant recognizes the admissibility of the action, the jurisdiction of the court and the absence of defects in the process of filing the action.

Criminal trial

In criminal proceedings, the admission is a statement by the defendant on the charge. It is neither a confession nor evidence . Both can, however, be assessed as evidence in the context of judicial assessment of evidence.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ " Admission " in: Duden Law AZ - Specialized lexicon for studies, training and work, Bibliographisches Institut & FA Brockhaus, Mannheim, 2007, licensed edition Bonn: Federal Agency for Political Education, 2007.
  2. ^ " Evidence " at: rechtslexikon-online.de