Hermann Stumpf

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hermann Stumpf (born October 9, 1912 in Germersheim , † March 18, 1997 in Cologne ) was a German lawyer. From 1977 to 1980 he was Vice President of the Federal Labor Court (BAG).

Life

As a child, Stumpf moved to Cologne-Nippes and went to high school there. He studied seven semesters at the University of Cologne , passed the first state examination in law at the Cologne Higher Regional Court and in 1939 the assessor examination. On September 8, 1939, at the beginning of the Second World War , he was appointed assessor, and on October 16, 1939 at the Cologne Regional Court, he was appointed court assessor.

From 1938 on, Stumpf, who had obtained his doctorate on the marriage inheritance , was an assistant to Hans Carl Nipperdey . After his captivity he was in 1947, first deputy judge at the Regional Court of Cologne. In 1947 he was appointed district judge and in 1952 as district court director. On March 1, 1953, Hermann Stumpf was appointed senior judge.

According to his own statements, he owed his appointment as federal judge on June 7, 1957, among other things, to the fact that he was born in Rhineland-Palatinate and that state quotas had to be observed at the time. Stumpf became President of the Senate on December 21, 1964 and Vice President of the Federal Labor Court on December 1, 1977. He was retired on October 31, 1980 .

Hermann Stumpf held seminars and lectures at the University of Cologne until his death in March 1997. He was co-editor of magazines and supervised his work, which is organized according to legal norms, the labor law practice .

Fonts

  • The marriage court, especially in the event of annihilation and dissolution of the marriage. Bleicherode a. H .: Nieft, 1938. (Cologne, legal dissertation, 1938)

Honors

literature