Federal Constitutional Court

Federal Constitutional Court
Established 1951[1]
Country Federal Republic of Germany
Location Karlsruhe, Germany
Coordinates 49°00′45″N 8°24′06″E / 49.012422°N 8.40161°E / 49.012422; 8.40161Coordinates: 49°00′45″N 8°24′06″E / 49.012422°N 8.40161°E / 49.012422; 8.40161
Composition method Bundestag or Bundesrat appointment
Authorized by Basic Law of Germany (Grundgesetz)
Judge term length 12 years (mandatory retirement at 68)
No. of positions 16, halved into two Senates
Website bundesverfassungsgericht.de
President of the Court
Currently Andreas Voßkuhle
Since March 2010
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Germany
Foreign relations
Bundesverfassungsgericht
Temporary building of the Bundesverfassungsgericht

The Federal Constitutional Court (German: Bundesverfassungsgericht; abbreviated: BVerfG) is the supreme constitutional court for the Federal Republic of Germany, established by the constitution or Basic Law (Grundgesetz) of Germany. Since its inception with the beginning of the post-WW2 republic, the court has been located in the city of Karlsruheintentionally distanced from the other federal institutions in Berlin (earlier in Bonn) and other cities.

The main task of the court is judicial review, and it may declare legislation unconstitutional, thus rendering them ineffective. In this respect, it is similar to other supreme courts with judicial review powers, yet the court possesses a number of additional powers, and is regarded as among the most interventionist and powerful national courts in the world. Unlike other supreme courts, the constitutional court is not an integral stage of the judicial or appeals process (aside from cases concerning constitutional or public international law), and does not serve as a regular appellate court from lower courts or the Federal Supreme Courts on any violation of federal laws.

The court's jurisdiction is focused on constitutional issues and the compliance of all governmental institutions with the constitution. Constitutional amendments or changes passed by the Parliament are subject to its judicial review, since they have to be compatible with the most basic principles of the Grundgesetz defined by the eternity clause.[note 1]

The court's practice of enormous constitutional control frequency on the one hand, and the continuity in judicial restraint and political revision on the other hand, have created a unique defender of the Grundgesetz since World War II and given it a significant role in Germany's modern democracy.

50th Anniversary of the Bun­des­ver­fas­sungs­ge­richt (last coin in Deutsche Mark denomination)

Scope

Article 20 Section 3 of the Basic Law stipulates that all three branches of the state (the legislature, executive, and judiciary) are bound directly by the constitution. As a result, the court can rule acts of any branches unconstitutional, whether as formal violations (exceeding powers or violating procedures) or as material conflicts (when the civil rights prescribed in the Grundgesetz are not respected).

The powers of the Federal Constitutional Court are defined in article 93 of the Grundgesetz.[2] This constitutional norm is set out in a federal law, the Federal Constitutional Court Act (BVerfGG), which also defines how decisions of the court on material conflicts are put into force. The Constitutional Court has therefore several strictly defined procedures in which cases may be brought before it:

Up to 2009, the Constitutional Court had struck down more than 600 laws as unconstitutional.[3]

Organization

The court consists of two senates, each of which has eight members, headed by a senate’s chairman. The members of each senate are allocated to three chambers for hearings in constitutional complaint and single regulation control cases. Each chamber consists of three judges, so each senate chairman is at the same time a member of two chambers.

Decisions by a senate require a majority. In some cases a two-thirds vote is required (§ 15 IV 1 BVerfGG). Decisions by a chamber need to be unanimous. A chamber is not authorized to overrule a standing precedent of the senate to which it belongs; such issues need to be submitted to the senate as a whole. Similarly, a senate may not overrule a standing precedent of the other senate, and such issues will be submitted to a plenary meeting of all 16 judges (the Plenum).

Unlike all other German courts, the court often publishes the vote count on its decisions (though only the final tally, not every judge's personal vote) and even allows its members to issue a dissenting opinion. This possibility, introduced only in 1971, is a remarkable deviation from German judicial tradition.

One of the two senate chairmen is also the president of the court, the other one being the vice-president. The presidency alternates between the two senates, i.e. the successor of a president is always chosen from the other senate. The current president of the court is Andreas Voßkuhle.

Democratic function

The Constitutional Court is able to actively administer the law and ensure that political and bureaucratic decisions comply with the rights of the individual enshrined in the Basic Law. Specifically, it can vet the democratic and constitutional legitimacy of bills proposed by federal or state government, scrutinise decisions (such as those relating to taxation) by the administration, arbitrate disputes over the implementation of law between states and the federal government, and (most controversially) ban non-democratic political parties.[5] The Constitutional Court enjoys more public trust than the federal or state parliaments, which some say derives from the German enthusiasm for the rule of law.[6]

Appointment of judges

The court's judges are elected by the Bundestag (the german parliament) and the Bundesrat (a legislative body that represents the sixteen state governments on the federal level). According to the Basic Law, each of these bodies selects four members of each senate, while the authority to select the court's president alternates between them. The selection of a judge requires a two-thirds vote.

Until 2015 the Bundestag has delegated this task to a special body (Richterwahlausschuss, judges election board), consisting of a small number of Bundestag members. This procedure has caused some constitutional concern and was considered to be unconstitutional by many scholars. In 2015 the Bundesverfassungsgerichtsgesetz (law code of the Federal Constitutional Court) was changed in this aspect, ruling that the Bundestag elects judges to the court by secret ballot in the plenum, requiring a candidate to get a two-thirds majority, that has to equal at least an absolute majority of members of the Bundestag. The Richterwahlausschuss now only has to nominate a candidate.[7] This new procedure will take place for the first time in November 2017, when the successor of Wilhelm Schluckebier from the first senate will have to be elected, assuming no one of the other seven judges appointed by the Bundestag resigns, dies or is removed from office before that date.

In the Bundesrat, a chamber in which the governments of the sixteen German states are represented (each state has 3 to 6 votes depending on its population, which it has to cast en bloc), a candidate currently needs at least 46 of 69 possible votes.

The judges are elected for a 12-year term, but they must retire upon reaching the age of 68. A judge must be at least 40 years old and must be a well-trained jurist. Three out of eight members of each senate have served as a judge on one of the federal courts. Of the other five members of each senate, most judges previously served as an academic jurist at a university, as a public servant or as a lawyer. After ending their term, most judges withdraw themselves from public life. However, there are some prominent exceptions, most notably Roman Herzog, who was elected President of Germany in 1994, shortly before the end of his term as president of the court.

Current members

First Senate 1989
Second Senate 1989
Name Term Nomination by Election by
First Senate
Ferdinand Kirchhof (born 1950)
(Vice-President of the Court, Chairman of the First Senate)
10/2007–6/2018 (retirement) CDU/CSU Bundestag
Wilhelm Schluckebier (born 1949) 10/2006–11/2017 (retirement) CDU/CSU Bundestag
Michael Eichberger (born 1953) 4/2006–4/2018 (12-year-term) CDU/CSU Bundesrat
Gabriele Britz (born 1968) 2/2011–2/2023 (12-year term) SPD Bundesrat
Johannes Masing (born 1959) 4/2008–4/2020 (12-year term) SPD Bundesrat
Susanne Baer (born 1964) 2/2011–2/2023 (12-year term) Alliance '90/The Greens Bundestag
Yvonne Ott (born 1963) 11/2016–11/2028 (12-year-term) SPD Bundesrat
Andreas L. Paulus (born 1968) 03/2010–03/2022 (12-year term) FDP Bundestag
Second Senate
Andreas Voßkuhle (born 1963)
(President of the Court, Chairman of the Second Senate)
5/2008–5/2020 (12-year term) SPD Bundesrat
Peter M. Huber (born 1959) 10/2010–10/2022 (12-year term) CDU/CSU Bundestag
Monika Hermanns (born 1959) 11/2010–11/2022 (12-year term) SPD Bundestag
Sibylle Kessal-Wulf (born 1958) 12/2011–12/2023 (12-year term) CDU/CSU Bundesrat
Peter Müller (born 1955) 12/2011–12/2023 (12-year term) CDU/CSU Bundesrat
Doris König (born 1957) 6/2014–6/2024 (12-year term) SPD Bundestag
Ulrich Maidowski (born 1958) 7/2014–7/2026 (12-year term) SPD Bundestag
Christine Langenfeld (born 1962) 7/2016–7/2028 (12-year term) CDU/CSU Bundesrat

Presidents of the court

Previous judges

Impact on European constitutional questions

On 12 September 2012 the Court stated that the question of whether the ECB's decision to finance European constituent nations through the purchase of bonds on the secondary markets was ultra vires because it exceeded the limits established by the German act approving the ESM was to be examined.[8] This demonstrates how a citizen's group has the ability to affect the conduct of European institutions. On 7 February 2014, the Court made a preliminary announcement on the case, which was to be published in full on 18 March. In its ruling, the Court decided to leave judgment to the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU).[8]

Further reading

Notes

  1. Art. 79 s. III

References

  1. http://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/EN/Das-Gericht/Bibliothek/bibliothek_node.html Reference to The Federal Constitutional Court's Webpage saying that its establishment was in 1951
  2. "Art. 93" [Jurisdiction of the Federal Constitutional Court] (PDF). Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany. Berlin: German Bundestag. April 2010. pp. 82–83. Retrieved 19 August 2010.
  3. Law, David S., The Anatomy of a Conservative Court in Texas Law Review lxxxvii: 1545–93
  4. Government and Politics of West Germany, p. 165
  5. Kesselman et al. (2009), ch. 4 p. 69
  6. "Germany's Constitutional Court: Judgment days", The Economist, Karlsruhe, 26 May 2009, archived from the original on 2012-03-16
  7. http://www.bgbl.de/xaver/bgbl/start.xav?startbk=Bundesanzeiger_BGBl&jumpTo=bgbl115s0973.pdf#__bgbl__%2F%2F*%5B%40attr_id%3D%27bgbl115s0973.pdf%27%5D__1473798083909
  8. 1 2 europarl.europa.eu: "The German Constitutional Court's ruling on the ECB's bond-buying decision" 10 Feb 2014

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.