Regional Court of Hamburg explained

Behörden Bezeichnung:Landgericht Hamburg
Behörden Abkürzung:LG Hamburg
Behörden Logo:200px|Wappen
Staatliche Ebene:Land
Aufsicht:Oberlandesgericht Hamburg
Gründungsdatum:1811[1]
Hauptsitz:Hamburg
Behördenleiter:Bernd Lübbe
Leiter Bezeichnung:Präsident des Landgerichts
Leitung Vertreter:Birte Meyerhoff[2]
Vertreter Bezeichnung:Vizepräsidentin des Landgerichts
Anz Mitarbeiter:580[3]
Homepage:https://justiz.hamburg.de/gerichte/landgericht-hamburg

The Hamburg Regional Court is a court of ordinary jurisdiction and the only regional court in the district of the Hanseatic Higher Regional Court based in Hamburg. The first woman to head the Hamburg Regional Court was Konstanze Görres-Ohde, who held office from 1996 to 2001. Sibylle Umlauf was president from 2009 until her retirement on March 31, 2018. Marc Tully headed the court from September 2018 to November 2020.

Court seat and district

The seat of the court is the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. The 755 km2 judicial district covers the entire area of the city-state with 1,841,179 inhabitants.

The Hamburg Regional Court is also responsible for legal disputes over technical property rights for the territory of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and the states of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Schleswig-Holstein.

Building

The court is located at Sievekingplatz 1 (civil justice building) and Sievekingplatz 3 (criminal justice building). The civil justice building, its extension, the criminal justice building opposite with the attached remand prison on Holstenglacis and the Hanseatic Higher Regional Court form a listed ensemble known as the Hamburg Justice Forum.

Superior and subordinate courts

The Hanseatic Higher Regional Court is superior to the Hamburg Regional Court. The district courts of Hamburg, Altona, Barmbek, Bergedorf, Blankenese, Harburg, St. Georg and Wandsbek are subordinate.

Known procedures

There are a number of civil chambers with special jurisdictions at the Hamburg Regional Court. Civil Chamber 24 of the Hamburg Regional Court, which is responsible for disputes arising from violation of personal rights, violation of protection of honour or interference with the right to an established and practised business directly through publications in the press, film, radio, television or other mass media or through reports from press agencies, was headed by Judge Andreas Buske until 2011 and has been headed by presiding judge Simone Käfer since then, has become known nationwide since around the year 2000 through case law which, to a degree that is controversial even among experts, emphasises the priority of personal rights over the interests of freedom of the press and freedom of expression and sets very strict copyright requirements for Internet publications. Due to these peculiarities and as a consequence of the principle of “flying jurisdiction”, the Hamburg Regional Court often hears media law cases in which neither the plaintiff nor the defendant have a connection to Hamburg.[6]

Criticism

In May 2016, lawyer Udo Vetter criticized the alleged “Hamburg monopoly” in his law blog[7] as a “strange concentration of interpretive sovereignty in the right of expression“. The reason why “the vast majority of plaintiffs“ choose the flying jurisdiction there is that the Hamburg Regional Court [...] is considered the safest bet when it comes to deciding in favor of the plaintiffs in the area of freedom of expression. In other words, in effect, it goes against freedom of expression.” He hoped that the Böhmermann affair, in the course of which Recep Tayyip Erdoğan applied for an interim injunction at the Hamburg Regional Court, would provide "enough impetus to vigorously question this strange floating jurisdiction. The Hamburg judiciary's sovereignty over what can and cannot be said in Germany should certainly be put to the test." However, the temporary injunction against Böhmermann was also upheld by the Higher Regional Court of Hamburg and the Federal Court of Justice. However, the court was reprimanded several times in connection with other rulings.

See also

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023-06-18 . de . Das Gerichtsgebäude . Hamburgischer Richterverein.
  2. Web site: 2024-04-03 . de . . Leitung des Gerichts .
  3. Web site: 2023-06-18 . de . . Justizfachangestellte*r oder Rechtsanwaltsfachangestellte*r Zivilverfahren und internationaler Rechtshilfeverkehr . XING.
  4. News: 1995-12-01 . Spitzen-Frau . 2024-09-13 . Die Tageszeitung: taz . 22 . de . 0931-9085.
  5. Web site: 2018-09-19 . de . Dr. Marc Tully ist neuer Präsident des Landgerichts .
  6. . Gita Datta, Josy Wübben, Manuskript zur NDR-Fernsehsendung Zapp, 27. Mai 2009.
  7. Web site: 2016-05-18 . . 2016-05-18 . . Das Hamburger Monopol .