District Court Dieburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
District court building in Dieburg

The Dieburg District Court (from 1821 to 1879 Dieburg Regional Court ) is a court of ordinary jurisdiction in Dieburg in the Darmstadt-Dieburg district .

Seat and District of the Court

Location of the district court district of Dieburg in Hesse
Location of the district court district of Dieburg in Hesse

The seat of the court is in Dieburg in the street Bei der Erlesmühle 1. The judicial district of the district court Dieburg includes the cities and communities Babenhausen , Dieburg , Eppertshausen , Fischbachtal , Groß-Bieberau , Groß-Umstadt , Groß -zimmer , Münster (Hesse) , Otzberg , Reinheim and Schaafheim (each including all parts of the city and district). All are in the Darmstadt-Dieburg district .

history

Building of the Dieburg District Court from 1905 to 1981
Former building of the Dieburg District Court until 1981

With the Rhine Confederation created on the initiative of Napoleon , the judiciary was reformed, the patrimonial courts abolished and a three-tier court system introduced. Another reform through the Courts Constitution Act of January 27, 1877, which came into force on October 1, 1879 as one of the so-called Reich Justice Acts, the regional courts of the lowest level were replaced by the form of the local courts in the currently known form. With the grand ducal ordinance on the division of the state into district councils and district courts of July 14, 1821, Groß-Umstadt with its handsome Renaissance town hall, which has been the seat of the court since ancient times, was established as the seat of an ordinary court for the Grand Duchy of Hesse , while Dieburg The official seat of the administration in the then created district was. At the turn of the century, on the initiative of Dieburg city councilors, mayor Krausmann successfully presented arguments for a change in the seat of the court and offered a free building plot in the parish garden at the Gnadenkapelle. With reference to the adverse traffic conditions in the district, in particular the lack of connection between Groß-Umstadt and the Dieburg area and the surrounding area, Justice Minister Ditmar endorsed the Dieburger's concerns despite violent Umstadt protests. On March 12, 1903, the Second Chamber of Estates approved, with the votes of the Center and the Social Democrats, the financial means of 114,000 marks for the construction of a new district court in Dieburg. In 1905 the architecturally attractive, Art Nouveau- oriented new building of the court was completed; a planned inauguration ceremony for July 1st, 1905 did not take place for unknown reasons. Under the direction of Chief Magistrate Pullmann from Groß-Zimmer, work began unnoticed in the associated district court district with the towns of Dieburg, Groß-Zimmer , Klein-Zimmer , Münster , Altheim , Altheimer Wald, Ober-Roden , Messenhausen , Eichen with Thomashütte , Eppertshausen, Nieder -Roden and Gundernhausen with a total of 18,808 court members .

With a change in the organization of the courts in 1968, the local courts were to have their seat in the district town, which meant the dissolution of the Groß-Umstadt district court and the Reinheim district court . On July 1, 1968, the entire district court district of Groß-Umstadt with the communities Dorndiel , Groß-Umstadt, Harpertshausen , Hering , Heubach , Kleestadt , Klein-Umstadt , Langstadt , Lengfeld , Mosbach , Radheim , Raibach , Richen , Schaafheim, Schlierbach , Semd and Wiebelsbach ; the communities Billings , Brensbach , Georgenhausen , Groß-Bieberau, Habitzheim , Lichtenberg , Meßbach , Nieder-Klingen , Niedernhausen , Nonrod , Ober-Klingen , Reinheim, Rodau , Spachbrücken , Steinau , Ueberau , Wersau and Zeilhard of the district court district of Reinheim ; the municipality of Ober-Nauses from the district court district of Höchst in the Odenwald ; the municipality of Urberach from the district court district of Langen ; the municipality of Fränkisch-Crumbach was incorporated into the district court district of Reichelsheim in the Odenwald and the communities of Babenhausen, Harreshausen , Hergershausen and Sickenhofen by the district court district of Seligenstadt ; the jurisdiction of the district court of Dieburg was now identical to the district. The previous courthouse could not accommodate the additional staff and files; under the direction of District Court Director Loeber, four additional locations were rented within the community. In 1969 a new court building was decided, the implementation of which was delayed due to the regional reform and reorganization of the districts and could only be completed in 1981.

With effect from July 1, 1973, the communities of Brensbach with the incorporated districts of Wersau and Fränkisch-Crumbach moved to the district of the Michelstadt District Court . The last major change to the Dieburg district court district so far occurred on May 1, 1978 when the towns of Messenhausen, Ober-Roden and Urberach, which had meanwhile been merged to form the municipality of Rödermark , were added to the district court of Langen and the district of Nieder-Roden, incorporated into Rodgau, came under the jurisdiction of the district court of Seligenstadt fell.

The court at Bei der Erlesmühle , which was inaugurated in 1981 , currently employs 80 people, including ten judges, who deal with around 1400 civil law cases, 960 family proceedings, 350 criminal proceedings against adults and 140 against young people and adolescents, as well as 270 administrative offenses.

The director of the local court has been Frank Richter since August 1, 2010, he succeeded Joachim Blaeschke (2004 to 2010), since 2016 President of the Wiesbaden Regional Court and Günther Huther (1994 to 2004), since 2010 President of the Darmstadt Regional Court . On September 15, 2017, Porschitz was introduced as the new director, before that he was his deputy.

Superior courts

The Darmstadt Regional Court is superordinate to the Dieburg District Court . The higher regional court of Frankfurt am Main and the Federal Court of Justice are superordinate in the next instance .

Judge

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Announcement concerning the establishment of a local court in Dieburg on April 1, 1904 . In: Grand Ducal Ministry of Justice (Ed.): Grand Ducal Hessian Government Gazette. 1905 no. 13 , p. 131–132 ( online at the information system of the Hessian state parliament [PDF; 23.1 MB ]).
  2. Second law amending the Court Organization Act (Amends GVBl. II 210–16) of February 12, 1968 . In: The Hessian Minister of Justice (ed.): Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Hesse . 1968 No. 4 , p. 41–44 ( online at the information system of the Hessian state parliament [PDF; 298 kB ]).
  3. ^ Judge at the District Court a. D. Peter Füßler: The history of the district court Dieburg. Retrieved January 5, 2017 .
  4. Fifth Act to Amend the Court Organization Act of June 12, 1973 . In: The Hessian Minister of Justice (ed.): Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Hesse . 1973 No. 15 , p. 199–201 , Article 1, points 1.4 and 1.2 ( online at the information system of the Hessian State Parliament [PDF; 385 kB ]).
  5. Eighth law amending the Court Organization Act (GVBl. II amends 210-16) of February 28, 1978 . In: The Hessian Minister of Justice (ed.): Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Hesse . 1978 No. 7 , p. 143–144 , Article 1, Paragraph 1 ( online at the information system of the Hessian State Parliament [PDF; 599 kB ]).
  6. Dorothee Dorschel: The world is not becoming more criminal . In: Darmstädter Echo . January 2, 2017, p. 18 .
  7. Joachim Blaeschke is the new President of the Wiesbaden Regional Court. Retrieved January 5, 2017 .
  8. ^ Ceremonial inauguration of the new director of the Dieburg district court. October 2, 2017, accessed May 14, 2020 .

Web links

Commons : Amtsgericht Dieburg  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 49 ° 54 ′ 3 ″  N , 8 ° 50 ′ 16 ″  E