72 research outputs found

    The Present and Possible Future of Judicial Cooperation in Civil Matters

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    Judicial cooperation in civil matters is based on the principle of mutual recognition, which in turn is based on the principle of mutual trust. The study shows how the EU has been given the power to regulate this policy through the amendments to the founding treaties, what the current results of this policy are, and how the principle of mutual trust is reflected in the various EU legal sources and the relevant case law of the CJEU. It gives an overview of the most recent relevant legislation on digitization and finally suggests how to make the practical implementation of this policy in the relationship between national courts and the CJEU more effective

    The legal remedy system of the Hungarian Civil Procedural Code — Changes in the act on the new Hungarian Code of Civil Procedure

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    The Hungarian legal society has been waiting for almost a decade for the legislator not to modify the Code of Civil Procedure in force but to find some time to adopt a new Code of Civil Procedure that meets the changed societal and economic expectations for a modern justice system. Their wish has been satisfied by the Hungarian Parliament, however, the new procedural code and its detailed rules will be heavily debated. This paper sets two aims: briefly presents the legal remedy system of the Hungarian Code of Civil Procedure in force, including the conceptual problems that have arisen during its application by the courts in the past 60 years, secondly, outlines the legal remedy system of the Bill on the new Hungarian Code of Civil Procedure and examines whether the conceptual problems presented could be successfully addressed by the new procedural code

    Foreword

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