C 2008

Sanctions under the Rules of Civil Procedure

STAVINOHOVÁ, Jaruška a Petr LAVICKÝ

Základní údaje

Originální název

Sanctions under the Rules of Civil Procedure

Název česky

Sankce v civilním procesu

Název anglicky

Sanctions under the Rules of Civil Procedure

Autoři

STAVINOHOVÁ, Jaruška (203 Česká republika, garant) a Petr LAVICKÝ (203 Česká republika)

Vydání

2008. vyd. Brno - Bialystok, Legal Sanctions: Theoretical and Practical Aspects in Poland and the Czech Republic, od s. 178-196, 18 s. Spisy PrF MU v Brně. Řada teoretická. č. 340, 2008

Nakladatel

Faculty of Law Masaryk University - Faculty of Law University of Bialystok

Další údaje

Jazyk

čeština

Typ výsledku

Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize

Obor

50500 5.5 Law

Stát vydavatele

Česká republika

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Kód RIV

RIV/00216224:14220/08:00034912

Organizační jednotka

Právnická fakulta

ISBN

978-80-210-4768-6

Klíčová slova anglicky

civil procedure; sanctions

Příznaky

Mezinárodní význam
Změněno: 2. 4. 2010 18:54, Mgr. Marie Zejdová

Anotace

V originále

Procedural sanctions present unfavourable legal consequences stipulated in law by a punitive rule of civil procedural nature for breach of subjective procedural duties. As seen from the above explanations it is necessary to distinguish sanctions affecting the court and those imposed on the parties to a lawsuit. Breach of court duty will most often result in change or revocal of the court ruling. Sanctions imposed on the parties are more varied, but principally they should be of procedural nature only, i.e. they should lie in worsening the procedural situation of a party; Czech rules of civil procedure, however, do not quite comply with this requirement. In the future some of the provisions should be reconsidered (e.g. the one concerning certainty when filing the petition for entering preliminary ruling or a the one involving a fiction of claim recognition) or for now it might be useful at least to attempt to take different attitudes during decision taking in legal practice in relation to these questionable institutes.

Anglicky

Procedural sanctions present unfavourable legal consequences stipulated in law by a punitive rule of civil procedural nature for breach of subjective procedural duties. As seen from the above explanations it is necessary to distinguish sanctions affecting the court and those imposed on the parties to a lawsuit. Breach of court duty will most often result in change or revocal of the court ruling. Sanctions imposed on the parties are more varied, but principally they should be of procedural nature only, i.e. they should lie in worsening the procedural situation of a party; Czech rules of civil procedure, however, do not quite comply with this requirement. In the future some of the provisions should be reconsidered (e.g. the one concerning certainty when filing the petition for entering preliminary ruling or a the one involving a fiction of claim recognition) or for now it might be useful at least to attempt to take different attitudes during decision taking in legal practice in relation to these questionable institutes.