Supreme Court of South Korea

Supreme Court of Korea
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised Romanization Daebeobwon
McCune–Reischauer Taebŏbwon

The Supreme Court of Korea is the highest court in South Korea. It is located in Seoul.

Articles 101110 of the Constitution of the Republic of Korea establish the Supreme Court and enumerates its powers and responsibilities.

Composition

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
South Korea
Constitution

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The Supreme Court of Korea is composed of the Chief Justice of the Republic of Korea, and 13 other Supreme Court Justices, 12 of which have adjudicatory functions. The 13th justice of the Supreme Court is appointed by the Chief Justice as the Minister of Court Administration, and does not participate in rendering judicial opinions.

The Chief Justice of Korea is appointed to the court by the President with the consent of the National Assembly, and serves a non-renewable term of six years from the time of appointment. The Chief Justice acts as the head of the judicial branch of the Republic of Korea, and has broad administrative powers under the Constitution, including the right to recommend other justices to the Supreme Court and the right to appoint judges of the inferior courts. The current Chief Justice is Yang Sung-Tae.

The 13 other Justices are appointed to the court by the President on the recommendation of the Chief Justice and the consent of the National Assembly, and serve renewable terms of six years.

By law, to be eligible for appointment to the Supreme Court, a person must be over 40, and have spent at least 15 years:

For the most part, Supreme Court Justices are appointed from the bench.

Supreme Court Justices are required to retire at age 65 (70 for the Chief Justice).

Current justices

Name Born Appointed by Recommended by Education First day /
Length of service
Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae

(Chief Justice)

January 26, 1948
(age 67)
in Busan, South Gyeongsang Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Seoul National University September 25, 2011
3 years, 7 months
Yang Chang-Soo, Yang Chang-Soo October 7, 1952
(age 62)
in Jeju Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University September 8, 2008
6 years, 7 months
Shin Young-Chul, Shin Young-Chul January 15, 1954
(age 61)
in Gongju, South Chungcheong Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University February 2, 2009
6 years, 2 months
Min Il-Young, Min Il-Young April 15, 1955
(age 60)
in Yeoju, Gyeonggi Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University September 17, 2009
5 years, 7 months
Lee In-Bok, Lee In-Bok August 5, 1956
(age 58)
in Nonsan, South Chungcheong Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University September 2, 2010
4 years, 7 months
Lee Sang-Hoon, Lee Sang-Hoon October 9, 1956
(age 58)
in Gwangju, South Jeolla Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University February 28, 2011
4 years, 2 months
Park Byoung-Dae, Park Byoung-Dae September 5, 1957
(age 57)
in Nonsan, South Chungcheong Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Lee Yong-hoon, Lee Yong-hoon Seoul National University June 2, 2011
3 years, 10 months
Kim Yong-Deok, Kim Yong-Deok November 20, 1957
(age 57)
in Seoul
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Seoul National University January 3, 2012
3 years, 3 months
Park Poe-Young, Park Poe-Young March 13, 1961
(age 54)
in Suncheon, South Jeolla Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Hanyang University January 3, 2012
3 years, 3 months
Ko Young-Han, Ko Young-Han February 7, 1955
(age 60)
in Gwangju, South Jeolla Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Seoul National University August 13, 2012
2 years, 8 months
Kim Chang-Suk, Kim Chang-Suk March 2, 1956
(age 59)
in Boryung, South Chungcheong Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Korea University August 13, 2012
2 years, 8 months
Kim Shin, Kim Shin March 30, 1957
(age 58)
in Busan, South Gyeongsang Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Seoul National University August 13, 2012
2 years, 8 months
Kim So-Young, Kim So-Young November 17, 1965
(age 49)
in Changwon, South Gyeongsang Province
Lee Myung-Bak, Lee Myung-Bak Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Seoul National University November 2, 2012
2 years, 5 months
Jo Hee-de, Jo Hee-de June 6, 1957
(age 57)
in Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province
Park Geun-hye, Park Geun-hye Yang Sung-tae, Yang Sung-tae Seoul National University March 4, 2014
1 year, 1 month

Research judges

The Supreme Court also employs a number of research judges, whose function is to assist the Justices in researching their opinions. These research judges may either be assigned to a particular justice, or else belong to a 'pool' that provides assistance to any Justice. The research judges are appointed from among the judges of the other courts, usually presiding judges of the district courts or else associate judges of the high courts. As of September 2012, there are 106 research judges including 1 Chief research judge and 1 Senior research judge. In addition, there are 10 non-judge researchers.

Jurisdiction

As the court of last resort for the Republic of Korea, the Supreme Court has appellate jurisdiction over cases in the South Korean legal system. Additionally, the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction over challenges to the validity of a presidential or parliamentary election and the power to review the constitutionality and legality of rules, orders, regulations, and actions of administrative entities.

Procedure

Petty Benches

The Supreme Court is organized into three Petty Benches, each consisting of four Justices. Normally, the Petty Benches hear cases from the lower courts, which they may overturn by consensus. Should the Petty Bench assigned to a case fail to reach a consensus, the case will be heard by the Grand Bench.

The Grand Bench

The Grand Bench must be composed of more than two-thirds of the Justices and be presided over by the Chief Justice. Unlike the Petty Benches, the Grand Bench can enter judgments by simple majority, rather than needing a consensus. If no majority can be reached amongst the Justices sitting on the Grand Bench, the judgment of the lower court is sustained by default. In addition to cases that fail to garner a consensus in one of the petty benches, the Grand Bench also hears cases where it is deemed that any order, rule, or regulation is in violation of the laws or the Constitution, where a previous opinion of the Supreme Court needs modification, or in cases where adjudication by the Petty Benches would not be appropriate.

Administrative function

In addition to its adjudicative functions, the Supreme Court is also responsible for the administration of the South Korean court system.

The Supreme Court Justices Council

The Supreme Court Justices Council comprises the highest body of court administration in the Republic of Korea. This council is presided over by the Chief Justice, with all of the Justices of the Supreme Court sitting on the Council. The Council has the power to promulgate the rules of procedure for the Supreme Court and lower courts, select judicial precedents for publication, request the budget for the judicial branch, and rule on other matters which are referred to it by the Chief Justice. In addition, the Council is responsible for confirming the nominations of the Chief Justice of judges for the lower courts.

To pass a resolution, the Justices Council requires a quorum of more than two-thirds of the Justices of the Supreme Court, a majority of which must approve of the proposed measure. The Chief Justice has a vote on the Council, and is given the prerogative to cast the deciding vote in the event of a tie.

The National Court Administration

The National Court Administration is headed by the Minister of the National Court Administration, and handles much of the daily operation and general administrative duties of the judicial branch. The Minister and Vice Minister of the National Court Administration have the right to address the National Assembly and the State Council on issues related to court administration.

Location

The court and its administrative offices are housed in a 66,500 square meter building located at 967 Seocho-dong, Seocho-gu, Seoul. This has been the home of the Supreme Court of South Korea since December 1, 1995. Before moving to its new building, the court was housed in a 10,300 square meter building built in 1928 as well as two annex buildings at 37 Seosomun-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul.

See also

Wikisource has several original texts related to: Supreme Court of Korea decisions

References