Koenigs Wusterhausen District Court

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Koenigs Wusterhausen District Court

The Königs Wusterhausen district court is a court of ordinary jurisdiction with its seat in Königs Wusterhausen . Like all local courts in Germany, it negotiates legal matters in the first instance .

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The district court has belonged to the district of the Cottbus Regional Court (until 2012 Potsdam) and the Brandenburg Higher Regional Court since 2013 .

The seat of the court is the city of Königs Wusterhausen. With 13 judges, it is one of the largest courts in Brandenburg. A total of 82 employees work in the court. In addition, six bailiffs will be employed in 2014. The district court district includes the northern part of the district of Dahme-Spreewald , which is identical to the dimensions of the former district of Königs Wusterhausen , and is u. a. responsible for the only youth detention center in the country. Berlin Brandenburg Airport , located in the judicial district, will further increase the importance of the court in the coming years.

In addition to the main office at Schloßplatz 4, there are two branches in Max-Werner-Strasse 9 and at Schloßplatz 8. This division is due to the spatial bottlenecks at the main office. Due to current renovation work, the court moved to Friedrich-Engels-Straße 58 in Wildau.

history

In the official gazette of the royal government of Potsdam and the city of Berlin from 1849, Königs Wusterhausen was the seat of a district court commission and the district court of Berlin. The district comprised the following communities:

Parish (historical names) Parish (historical names)
  • Wusterhausen, Wusterhausen Gut, Wusterhausen German
  • Senzig
  • Neue-Mühle
  • Zeesen
  • Schenkendorf
  • Zernsdorf
  • High loam
  • Miersdorf
  • Schulzendorf
  • Kieckebusch
  • Rotzis and Colberg
  • Radeland
  • Waltersdorf
  • Zeuthen
  • Schoenfeld
  • Diepensee, also Tiefensee
  • Gussow
  • Graebendorf
  • Peetz
  • Great-best
  • Small-best
  • Prierosbrück
  • Niederlehme, with the Krummenluch forestry department

The district court commission was also assigned the forest court cases for "the heath between Senzig, Körbiskrug, Gräbendorf and Gussow, as well as the other forests and heaths in the district of the court commission".

The Royal Justice Office Königs-Wusterhausen was responsible for the following communities (historical place names):

  • Kienitz, Groß-
  • Koerbiskrug
  • Selchow
  • Crummensee
  • Wusterhausen, Wusterhausen Gut, Wusterhausen German
  • Zeesen
  • Schoenfeld (together with the Cathedral Court of Berlin)
  • Gussow

In 1894, the court was assigned to the Regional Court of Berlin II and the Higher Regional Court of Berlin as the Royal Prussian District Court - Königs-Wusterhausen . At the beginning of the 20th century, the district court was briefly located at Bahnhofstrasse 8 before moving into a specially built building in 1914. This building is still the seat of the court today. However, since the number of inhabitants and the scope of tasks have multiplied since then, the rooms have become too small and the auxiliary offices had to be set up additionally.

Responsibilities

The competencies of the individual sub-areas of jurisdiction are transferred to central courts through the bundling of individual departments or are summarized in Königs Wusterhausen. Due to the structural restrictions, the district court has to be divided into three different locations in the city. Like all local courts, the local court of first instance deals with civil proceedings, criminal cases, fines, family matters, as well as care and estate matters, foreclosures and property registers, land register and deposit proceedings.

Main office at Schloßplatz 4

The main office at Schloßplatz 4 deals with the following areas of responsibility:

  • Civil litigation
  • Criminal matters
  • Fines
  • Family matters
  • Care matters
  • Land registry procedure
  • Deposit procedure
  • Agricultural matters

The area for agricultural matters is carried out for the entire district court district of Potsdam .

Secondary office at Max-Werner-Strasse 9

The secondary office in Max-Werner-Straße 9 (formerly Weg am Kreisgericht) includes hearing room 003 and deals with the following areas of responsibility:

  • Guardianship matters
  • Foreclosure matters
  • Property law register (except real estate foreclosure)
  • partly family and care matters

Secondary office at Schloßplatz 8

The branch at Schloßplatz 8 deals with the following areas of responsibility:

  • Estate matters

Other dishes

For Königs Wusterhausen, the following legal areas are dealt with by the courts mentioned below:

  • Dunning procedure (machine processing): District court Wedding Central dunning court Berlin-Brandenburg
  • Foreclosure auction: Luckenwalde District Court
  • Insolvency proceedings: Potsdam District Court
  • Commercial register matters: Potsdam District Court
  • Association register matters: Potsdam District Court
  • Partnership register matters: Potsdam District Court

Future development

There are three fundamental considerations for the future development of the Königs Wusterhausen site:

Amalgamation

There are plans for a judicial reform in the state of Brandenburg, after which it is considered, u. a. to close the district court in Zossen and to transfer part of the workforce to Königs Wusterhausen. This is not associated with a division of the Zossen area of ​​responsibility. Originally, the entire area should be assigned to the Luckenwalde District Court . After the reform process was canceled, a split is no longer excluded.

Central land registry

In connection with the judicial reform, the responsibilities of the land registry proceedings are to be withdrawn from the Königs Wusterhausen site and concentrated in a central land registry in Wünsdorf .

Expansion and renovation

Due to the poor structural condition of the main site, renovation and expansion has become inevitable. Both the courthouse and the youth detention center are currently being renovated. The JAA will then have a new building near the police on Köpenicker Strasse. The young people are currently housed in construction containers. In total (including the costs of accommodating the prisoners in containers) the new building will cost 5.4 million euros. Construction will start in spring 2014. At the beginning of December 2012, the district court moved completely to a temporary facility in Wildau on Friedrich-Engels-Strasse, so that the renovation and expansion work can proceed quickly. After the planned move back to Königs Wusterhausen in 2016, the court also owns the renovated JAA building. In the future, the JAA and court will be located in different locations in Königs Wusterhausen. The state is investing 14.4 million euros in the new construction and renovation of the institutions.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Article of February 27, 2010 in the Märkische Allgemeine ; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  2. Details of the bailiffs in 2010; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  3. Information ( memento of January 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) on the homepage of the district court; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  4. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Second Supplement to the 13th Part of the Official Journal 1849, p. 58f at Google Books; Retrieved August 20, 2010.
  5. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. teltow.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  6. ^ City tour ( memento of March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) through the city; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  7. ^ Information from the local court of Königs Wusterhausen; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  8. Information on the NRW justice portal; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  9. ^ Article of January 7, 2009 in the Potsdamer Neuesten Nachrichten; Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  10. http://www.maerkischeallgemeine.de/cms/beitrag/11404391/62249/Neuer-Anlauf-nach-der-Landtagswahl-Platzeck-verkuendet-Aus.html (link not available)

Web links

Coordinates: 52 ° 17 ′ 54.5 ″  N , 13 ° 37 ′ 28.1 ″  E