Emil Böhmer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emil Bohemian (* 19th June 1889 in Osnabrück , † 1981 ) was a German Reichsgerichtsrat and Senate President at the Higher Regional Court of Stuttgart .

Life

Böhmer came from an old family of lawyers. His father was a businessman. Böhmer was Protestant. From 1907 he studied law in Tübingen and Heidelberg. In 1911 he passed the legal traineeship examination in Tübingen with "good". He spent his legal traineeship at the courts in Stuttgart. During the First World War he suffered a serious arm injury as a lieutenant in 1914 and was 40% damaged in the war. He passed the second state examination in 1916 in Stuttgart with the grade “commendable”. In 1920 he became a public prosecutor, in 1921 a district judge and in 1928 a district judge. He worked in Stuttgart and Ravensburg and in the Württemberg Ministry of Justice. In 1935 he became a higher regional judge in Stuttgart. In 1937/38 he came to the Reichsgericht . He was in the VI. and V. Civil Senate . He returned to the civil service in 1949 as a judge at the Higher Regional Court in Tübingen. After the dissolution of the Tübingen Higher Regional Court in 1953, he was appointed Senate President at the Stuttgart Higher Regional Court. In 1954 he retired. He was considered a connoisseur of the law of tort, as he was a member of the VI. Civil Senate knew the Imperial Court jurisdiction well.

Memberships

Honors

Fonts (selection)

  • Reich Liability Act, Berlin 1950.
  • Property damage liability law, Berlin 1954.

literature

  • Kathrin Nahmmacher: The jurisprudence of the Reichsgericht and the Hamburg courts on the grounds for divorce under § 55 of the EheG 1938 in the years 1938 to 1945, (European university publications: series 2, jurisprudence; Volume 2604) Frankfurt am Main, p. 92f.
  • Ulrich Koebel: “Reichsgerichtsrat iR Emil Böhmer for his seventieth birthday”, NJW 1959, p. 1121.
  • Hugo Wilhelm: "Emil Böhmer 75 Years", NJW 1964, p. 1845.
  • Karl Henn, NJW 1969, p. 1160.
  • Norbert Plassmann: "Emil Böhmer for his 85th birthday", NJW 1974, p. 1123.
  • “Emil Böhmer for his 70th birthday!” JR , 1959, p. 217.
  • "On the 80th birthday: retired Senate President Emil Böhmer", JR 1969, p. 259.