Max Nadler (lawyer)

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Max Nadler (born May 9, 1880 ; † October 1946 missing) was a German lawyer.

Life

Nadler received his doctorate in 1902 at the University of Rostock and immediately afterwards switched to the judicial service as a judge. In 1921 he was appointed to the Chamber Court Councilor and in 1932 President of the Senate at the Chamber Court in Berlin.

Nadler joined the NSDAP on May 1, 1933 - according to the historian Lothar Gruchmann - as a "March fallen" member.

In June 1933 he became the Prussian Minister of Justice Hanns Kerrl the Secretary , who was responsible for the management of the human resources department in the Prussian Ministry of Justice appointed, and changed on April 1, 1935 in the Reich Ministry of Justice . In the Ministry of Justice, Nadler headed Department I (human resources and court organization).

Together with Reich Minister Franz Gürtner, he handled the initiation of proceedings against judges for "dishonorable" convictions as requested by the party leadership as restrictively as possible, and in 1939 obtained confirmation from the Reich Chancellery that in cases of conflicting views between the judiciary and the party leadership, such proceedings should be initiated , there was no compulsion to “bring about a decision by Hitler”. He took on the 23./24. April 1941 took part in a conference of the highest jurists in the German Reich , in which information was given about the " destruction of life unworthy of life ". In the course of the "personnel renewal" promoted by State Secretary Curt Rothenberger in the Ministry of Justice, Nadler, who at that time, according to Susanne Schott, was not a member of the NSDAP, had to submit his departure on September 4, 1942.

Nadler was a permanent employee of the Legal Rundschau . He also published several comments .

Works

  • Land register and revaluation issues. - Berlin: Sack, 1926
  • Probate. - Berlin: Vahlen, 1928 (with Reinhold Fechner)
  • Revaluation deferral law: Commentary on the law on the maturity and interest of revaluation mortgages. - Berlin: Heymann, 1930
  • German Civil Service Act. - Berlin: de Gruyter, 1937 (with Hermann Wittland, Kuno Ruppert)
  • German civil service law. - Berlin: Stilke, 1937 (with Hermann Wittland)

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Message from the editors “Dr. Nadler is 60 years old ”in the official gazette of the Reich Ministry of Justice, German Justice in issue 20 of May 17, 1940, p. 579
  2. a b c Lothar Gruchmann: Justice in the Third Reich 1933–1940. Adaptation and submission in the Gürtner era. Munich, Oldenbourg Verlag, 3rd edition 2001, p. 219.
  3. ^ Lothar Gruchmann: Justice in the Third Reich 1933-1940. Munich, 3rd edition 2001, p. 203
  4. ^ Ernst Klee: The dictionary of persons on the Third Reich. 2nd Edition. Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 427
  5. ^ Susanne Schott: Curt Rothenberger - a political biography. P. 123.