Judiciary

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As Judiz ( lat. Judicium judgment , iudicare legal speak) refers to a specific legal judgment .

A judge in particular needs good judiciary , i.e. the ability to quickly recognize the facts relevant to the decision and to find the right solution for a legal case in order to be able to lead the hearing and later be able to pronounce his judgment. But a good sense of justice is also indispensable for lawyers and all other people who work in legal professions .

Judiciary can be described as the ability to intuitively evaluate a legal case . If the evaluation stands up to a case solution that has been developed using the appropriate method , the judiciary is well developed.

Judges according to the respective procedural rules, lawyers above all from the point of view of recourse, are obliged to provide an assessment based on the appropriate method. The relation technique offers a legal working method for the fastest possible recording, order and assessment of a more complex civil law dispute .

An awareness of the specific conflict on which the legal dispute is based , a feeling for the relevant interest assessments and the knowledge of how law and jurisdiction typically balance interests in comparable conflicts is helpful for developing a good judiciary .

The result of the judicial application of the law is collectively referred to as judicature .

Judiciary in the spiritual sense

In the Western Christian tradition, bonum judicium ( translated in the scriptures as good judiciary or good judgment ) is an important human asset . Above all in Ignatian spirituality , judiciary occupies a central position. In the statutes of the Society of Jesus , good judiciary is an indispensable quality both for candidates for admission to the Order and for candidates for office in the Order.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rolf Gröschner : Dialogik des Rechts: Philosophical, dogmatic and methodological basic work 1982-2012 . Ed .: Michael Henkel , Wolfgang Kopke, Oliver W. Lembcke , Katharina von Schlieffen . Mohr Siebeck Verlag, ISBN 978-3-16-152707-4 .
  2. Dieter Meyer: Legal foreign words, technical terms and abbreviations . 11th edition, Neuwied 2002
  3. ^ Constitutions of the Society of Jesus No. 154: "6 Quod ad intellectum attinet, doctrina sana, vel aptitudine ad eam addiscendam, et in rebus agendis discretione, vel certe indole boni judicii ad eam acquirendam." - "As to the understanding, sound teaching or the ability to learn it, and in practical matters, wisdom or evidence of good judiciary to acquire it." Provincial Conference Central Europe. Assistance SJ: statutes of the Society of Jesus and supplementary norms. Published by the Provincial Conference of the Central European Assistance. German translation of the Latin edition published on behalf of the 34th General Congregation. Munich 1997.