Karl Lißbauer

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Karl Lißbauer (born November 13, 1882 in Vienna , † December 28, 1941 in Leipzig ) was Ministerialrat in the Austrian Ministry of Justice and Senate President at the German Imperial Court .

Life

The Catholic was the son of an authorized signatory at Union Bank in Vienna. In 1905 he passed the State Judicial Examination (“with good success”). He got a doctorate. In 1906 he became a legal trainee at the District Court of Vienna-Josefstadt, and in 1908 he became a trainee at the Vienna Regional Court. He passed the judge's examination in 1910 "excellent". In 1911 he became a judge in Bad Ischl. In mid-February 1918 he came to the Vienna Ministry of Justice as a laborer and was promoted to district judge shortly afterwards. In September 1918 he became Ministerial Vice Secretary and in July 1919 Ministerial Secretary. On New Year's Day 1923 he was appointed Section Council and on March 24, 1927 he was appointed Ministerial Council. As a consultant, he was responsible for requests for pardon and clemency from the Higher Regional Court districts of Vienna and Innsbruck. From 1931 he worked as state commissioner for the reform of the administration and the reduction of burdens in the administrative area of ​​the Federal Ministry of Justice. In 1934 he was appointed head of the Federal Department of Justice of the Fatherland Front . In 1936 he drafted the Copyright Act and the Official Explanatory Notes. He is therefore considered to be the creator of the monistic theory in Austrian copyright law. After Austria's "annexation" to the National Socialist German Reich, he came to the Reichsgericht as Senate President on April 1, 1939 . He died in office.

literature

  • Friedrich Karl Kaul : History of the Reichsgericht, Volume IV (1933-1945), East Berlin 1971, p. 280.
  • Protocols of the Council of Ministers of the First Republic 1918–38.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ According to Kaul, he was appointed Section Councilor on December 22nd, 1920, on July 2nd, 1923 "Ministerial Councilor" and on March 24th, 1927, he was "appointed Ministerial Councilor".
  2. ^ Daniel Gutman / Walter Dillenz: UrhG & VerwGesG, 2nd edition, Vienna 2004, introduction margin no. 46.