Trier District Court

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District court building on Nikolaus-Koch-Platz

The Trier Regional Court is a court of ordinary jurisdiction and one of eight regional courts in Rhineland-Palatinate . It is based in Trier .

Instance move

The district courts of Bernkastel-Kues , Bitburg , Daun , Hermeskeil , Prüm , Saarburg , Trier and Wittlich belong to the judicial district . The Higher Regional Court of Koblenz is superordinate to the Trier Regional Court.

history

Already in the French times there was an Intermediate Court in Trier with the Trier Court of Appeal . The district court in Trier has existed since August 1, 1820. In the then Prussian Rhine Province , the French court organization continued to apply. The Cologne Court of Appeal had the function of the Court of Appeal there . The courts subordinate to him were not called district courts , but regional courts. The following peace courts were subordinate to the Trier Regional Court as courts of first instance:

Magistrate's court Seat
Bernkastel District Court Bernkastel
Bitburg District Court Bitburg
Daun District Court Down
Dudeldorf District Court Dudeldorf
Hermeskeil Peace Court Hermeskeil
Hillesheim Court of Justice Hillesheim
Manderscheid District Court Manderscheid
Merzig District Court Merzig
Neuerburg Peace Court Neuerburg
Neumagen District Court New stomach
Court of Justice Perl Pearl
Prüm District Court Prüm
Rhaunen Peace Court Rhaunen
Saarburg District Court Saarburg
Schweich Peace Court Keep quiet
Trier District Court I trier
Trier II Peace Court trier
Wadern District Court Waders
Waxweiler District Court Waxweiler
Wittlich District Court Wittlich

In addition, the following peace courts were added in 1820, but in 1835 they were assigned to the then newly founded Saarbrücken Regional Court :

Magistrate's court Seat
Baumholder District Court Baumholder
Grumbach Peace Court Grumbach
St. Johann District Court St. Johann
Lebach Peace Court Lebach
Ottweiler District Court Ottweiler
Saarlouis District Court Saarlouis
Tholey Magistrate's Court Tholey
Wallerfangen District Court Catfish catch
St. Wendel District Court St. Wendel

From 1828 to 1835 Ernst Schiller , the son of Friedrich Schiller , was a district judge in Trier. The Reich Justice Acts , which came into force in 1879, reorganized the judiciary. However, the Trier district court remained. In 1944 the courthouse was destroyed by bombing. With the invasion of the British troops at the end of the Second World War , the district court was temporarily abolished. But it was reopened in December 1945. In 1954, the new building was put into operation at the same location as the former building. In 1966 it was expanded and modernized. Another extensive renovation followed between 2004 and 2006.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ HA Fecht: The court constitutions of the German states, 1868, pp. 175-176, online
  2. History

Coordinates: 49 ° 45 ′ 27 "  N , 6 ° 38 ′ 14.9"  E