'War of Courts' as a clash of legal cultures: rethinking the conflict between the Polish Constitutional and Supreme Court over 'interpretive judgements'

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2014
Host editors
  • A. Geisler
  • M. Hein
  • S. Hummel
Book title Law, politics, and the constitution: new perspectives from legal and political theory
ISBN
  • 9783631654644
Series Central and Eastern European Forum for Legal, Political, and Social Theory Yearbook, 4
Pages (from-to) 79-92
Publisher Frankfurt [etc.]: Peter Lang Academic Research
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL)
Abstract
Since 1986, Poland has had its Constitutional Court (TK), placed outside the structure of ordinary judiciary. Since 1993, the TK has been issuing ‘interpretive judgments’ in which it decides that a certain statutory rule is constitutional only under a certain interpretation. On numerous occasions the Supreme Court (SN) has refused to follow the TK’s decisions, claiming that they are unconstitutional, ultra vires and non-binding. An analysis of the arguments put forward by the SN and TK in this ‘war of the courts’ reveals that the SN prefers ultra-formalist arguments typical of the hyperpositivist legal culture of the former state-socialist period, whilst the TK seems to prefer pragmatist arguments, more typical to contemporary Western legal culture. The paper concludes that behind the ‘war of the courts’ in Poland there is a clash of legal cultures and attempts at identifying the reasons for it.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2383914
Downloads
War-of-Courts (Final published version)
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