Administrative Court of Dresden

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The Dresden Administrative Court is a court of administrative jurisdiction in Dresden . It is one of three administrative courts in the Free State of Saxony .

Seat and District of the Court

The seat of the court is Dresden . The judicial district extends to the former administrative district of Dresden . This means that the court has local jurisdiction for the area of ​​the state capital and the districts of Bautzen , Görlitz , Meißen and Saxon Switzerland-Eastern Ore Mountains.

history

Shortly before the political change in the GDR, chambers for administrative matters were formed in the district courts of Leipzig, Dresden and Chemnitz in July 1989 . These were initially retained in the local courts after reunification. On July 1, 1992, the then were Dresden District Court , now the District Court of Dresden , existing chambers removed from this and established an independent administrative court with the initial twelve judges in four chambers. This was initially located at Loschwitzer Strasse  43 ( ) in the Blasewitz district . Between 1995 and November 2006 it was located in the Pirnaische Vorstadt on Blüherstrasse 4 ( ) and then moved to the former rifle barracks in Albertstadt . World iconWorld icon

staff

As of January 1, 2008, 29 judges and 31 employees were active in eight chambers of the Dresden Administrative Court. The President of the Administrative Court was the Bavarian judge Heinrich Rehak from November 1, 1992 until his retirement on September 30, 2008. In June 1996 Rehak was elected representative of the President of the Constitutional Court for nine years . In a Spiegel interview 8 years before his retirement, Rehak said: “I don't know of any other federal state in which the Ministry of Justice exerts such open influence on the administrative courts.” Although judgments were not “prescribed” for him, “The minister often appeals to us To speed up procedures and not look so closely. For promotions, the number of clearances is decisive. ” And: “ ... the supervision is too strict. As a result, the individual judge feels under constant control. It is the task of administrative courts to control decisions of state authorities. "

Claudia Kucklick has been President of the Administrative Court since July 1, 2015.

building

current building
Main building of the rifle barracks on
Alaunplatz in 1910, demolished in 1954

The administrative court is housed together with the Dresden Social Court and the Dresden Labor Court in the Dresden Specialized Court Center in Albertstadt . This is located in the outbuildings of the former Dresden rifle barracks. The administrative court moved into a building originally called the Small Barracks , which was built in 1878 in neo-Gothic style. The air raids on Dresden in 1945 caused destruction of the barracks area, as a result of which the main building of the rifle barracks was demolished in 1954. In contrast, the small barracks remained and was used by the Soviet Army until 1992 . After extensive renovation work, it has been home to the Dresden Administrative Court since November 2006.

Superior courts

The higher court is the Saxon Higher Administrative Court in Bautzen . In to this following of appeal , the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig for Administrative Affairs under federal law.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Change at the head of the Dresden Administrative Court. (No longer available online.) Saxon State Ministry of Justice and for Europe, September 25, 2008, archived from the original on February 20, 2014 ; Retrieved February 8, 2014 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.justiz.sachsen.de
  2. ^ Justice: Climate of uncertainty . In: Der Spiegel . No. 36 , 2000 ( online - 4 September 2000 ).

Coordinates: 51 ° 4 ′ 26.5 "  N , 13 ° 45 ′ 24"  E