Restitutio in integrum
Restitutio in integrum or in integrum restitutio ( Latin for "restoration into the intact") referred to in common law the judicial restoration of an earlier legal status for reasons of equity .
For today's state ( civil ) procedural law, see
- Resumption of proceedings against final decisions (cf. § 578 ZPO / DE ), in particular in the form of restitution action ( § 580 ZPO / DE), retrial action ( § 530 ZPO / AT ) or revision ( Art. 328 ZPO / CH )
- Reinstatement in the previous status if the deadline is missed ( § 233 ZPO / DE; § 146 ZPO / AT; restoration, Art. 148 ZPO / CH).
For today's canonical procedural law, see
- Reinstatement in the proceedings for final judgments ( restitutio in integrum , can. 1645 CIC , can. 1326 CCEO )
- Resubmission / resubmission after two identical judgments in civil status proceedings that are only capable of limited legal force ( nova causae propositio , can. 1644 CIC, can. 1325 CCEO).
Within the framework of responsibility under international law, there is a substantive restitutio in integrum (restoration of the status quo ante , in rem restitution ).
See also
- Restitutio ad integrum (medicine)
Individual evidence
- ^ Duden : Restitutio in Integrum
- ↑ cf. Friedrich Carl von Savigny : System of today's Roman law , Volume 7 (1848), p. 96 ff .; Johann Nepomuk von Wening-Ingenheim : Textbook of the common civil law , Volume 3 (4th edition 1832), p. 420 ff.
- ↑ Klaus Lüdicke in Munster Commentary on Codex iuris canonici , Can. 1645 (April 1991)
- ↑ Klaus Lüdicke in Munster Commentary on Codex iuris canonici , Can. 1644 (November 2017)
- ↑ Dahm / Delbrück / Wolfrum : Völkerrecht , Volume I / 3 (2nd edition 2002), p. 956 ; see also PCIJ , The Factory at Chorzów (Merits), Series A - No. 17 (1928), p. 47 ; ILC Draft Articles, Art. 34, 35 ; ECHR , Art. 41