Georg Zaeschmar

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Georg Zaeschmar in 1930

Georg Zaeschmar (full name: Georg Karl Sylvius Adam Zaeschmar ) (born April 20, 1852 in Breslau , † July 26, 1932 in Naumburg (Saale) ) was a German judge .

Life

During his student days he was a member of the Corps Silesia Breslau . Zaeschmar entered the Prussian civil service as a trainee lawyer in 1876. In 1881 he was appointed court assessor and he was employed as a permanent assistant in the public prosecutor's office. In 1883 he came to Glatz as a public prosecutor . In 1886 he was transferred to Meiningen and in 1890 to Naumburg . The following year he was appointed to the council at the Naumburg Higher Regional Court. In 1895 he was appointed Council IV class. In 1898 he became a member of the public prosecutor's office and later a higher regional judge in Poznan . In June 1900 he joined the Reich Attorney General as an unskilled worker . In 1905 he was appointed to the Reichsgericht and was one of the Prussian citizens. From February 1, 1906, he was judge in the II. Criminal Senate, from April 17, 1906 in the V. Criminal Senate and finally from September 1, 1913 in the IV Criminal Senate. With the outbreak of the First World War, he was called up for the Reichswehr and was last with the rank of major in command of the officers' prison camp in Burg near Magdeburg. After the end of the war he worked again at the Reichsgericht, but after six weeks he fell ill with pleurisy , which led to occupational disability. He retired on the New Year of 1920.

family

Zaeschmar was the son of the Breslau bookseller and publisher Carl Adolf Zaeschmar (1821–1869), whose publisher had published the Breslauer Zeitung since 1855 . Georg Zaeschmar married on September 24, 1881 in Hamm (Westphalia) Marie John (1860–1947), whose father was a judge in Hamm and later President of the Senate at the higher regional courts in Breslau (around 1891) and Naumburg (around 1900). The couple had four sons: Leo (* 1882), journalist; Walter (* 1884), airship commander in World War I, lastly sea captain in World War II, then farmer in Dithmarschen; Herbert (* 1889), lawyer and Kurt (* 1893), lieutenant in the First World War, in the Second World War commander of the torpedo school in Flensburg - Mürwik , most recently with the rank of captain.

Fonts (selection)

Zaeschmar (right) with his family (1930)
  • The powers of the private postal service to transport letters , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, year 13 (1908), column 115 .
  • On the drafting of the reasons for an appeal in criminal matters , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, Volume 14 (1909), Col. 703 .
  • The “legally protected assets” in the facts of fraud , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, year 16 (1911), column 77 ; Sp. 328 .
  • On the concepts of income and income tax evasion , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, year 17 (1912), column 1456 .
  • Coincidence of several offenses in the field of disciplinary criminal law , Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, year 18 (1913), column 516 .
  • Is the threat of a boycott a legal weapon with wage warfare? Deutsche Juristen-Zeitung, year 18 (1913), column 669 .

Awards

literature

source

  • Adolf Lobe : “Fifty Years of the Reichsgericht on October 1, 1929”, Berlin 1929, p. 372, 405.

Web links

Commons : Georg Zaeschmar  - Collection of images, videos and audio files