Supreme Court of Croatia

Supreme Court of the Republic of Croatia

The Supreme Court of the Republic of Croatia is located at the Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square
Jurisdiction Croatia
Location Zagreb
Judge term length Five years in the first term, life tenure after renewal
Website http://www.vsrh.hr/
President
Currently Branko Hrvatin
Since 2005

The Supreme Court of the Republic of Croatia (Croatian: Vrhovni sud Republike Hrvatske) is a highest court and it ensures the uniform application of laws and equal justice to all.

Contents

Judicial system

Courts protect the legal order of the Republic of Croatia as established by the Constitution and law, and provide for the uniform application of law and equal justice for all.

Administration of justice in the Republic of Croatia is carried out by:

Powers and responsibilities

Supreme Court basic duties:

  1. ensures the uniform application of law and equal protection of all citizens before the law
  2. discusses all important legal issues arising from the court practice
  3. decides on extraordinary legal remedies against final decisions of all courts in the Republic of Croatia
  4. hears appeals against decisions of county courts rendered in the first instance
  5. hears appeals against decisions of the High Commercial Court of the Republic of Croatia and the Administrative Court of the Republic of Croatia, and any other court when specified so by the law
  6. decides on the conflict of jurisdiction between the courts in the territory of the Republic of Croatia when they have the same immediately superior court
  7. provide for the professional development of judges

Composition

The President of the Supreme Court is elected and relieved of duty by the Croatian Parliament at the proposal of the President of the Republic.

Judicial office is permanent, but exceptionally, at assuming the judicial office for the first time, judges are appointed for a five-year term. After the renewal of the appointment, judges assume their duty as permanent.

All judges are appointed by the National Judicial Council and relieves them of judicial duty, as well as decides on their disciplinary responsibility.

A judge can be relieved of judicial office:

  1. at his/her own request
  2. if he/she has become permanently incapacitated to perform judicial office
  3. if sentenced for a criminal offence which makes him/her unworthy of the judicial office
  4. if, in conformity with the law, so decides the National Judicial Council due to the commitment of an act of serious infringement of discipline
  5. when reaching 70 years of age

External links