Court of Cassation (France)

Court of Cassation of France
Cour de Cassation
Logo
The Court of Cassation building on the Île de la Cité in Paris seen from the Seine
Map
Established1791
JurisdictionCassation
LocationParis, France
Authorized byConstitution of France
Appeals toConstitutional Council
Websitewww.courdecassation.fr
President of the Court of Cassation
CurrentlyChristophe Soulard
SinceJanuary 7, 2022 (2022-01-07)
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The Court of Cassation (French: Cour de cassation [kuʁ ka.sa.sjɔ̃]) is the supreme court for civil and criminal cases in France. It is one of the country's four apex courts, along with the Council of State, the Constitutional Council and the Jurisdictional Disputes Tribunal.

It primarily hears appeals against the decisions of courts of assizes and courts of appeal (appeals-in-cassation). The Court only reviews questions of law (but not questions of fact) and bears ultimate responsibility for a uniform interpretation and application of statutory law throughout France. It also filters out appeals challenging the constitutionality of statutes before forwarding them to the Counstitutional Council, reviews lower court verdicts on request of the European Court of Human Rights and hears several other types of cases.

The Court is organized into three civil chambers, a commerce chamber, a labour chamber, a criminal chamber, a prosecutorial service and various other bodies. The Court usually rules in panels of three or five judges; the most significant cases are adjudicated by plenary sessions.

The Court was established in 1790 as the Tribunal of Cassation during the French Revolution; its original purpose was to act as a court of error with revisory jurisdiction over lower provincial prerogative courts (parlements).[1] However, much about the Court continues the earlier Paris Parlement.

The Court is located in the Palace of Justice in the 1st arrondissement of Paris.

  1. ^ Serge Guinchard, André Varinard and Thierry Debard, Institutions juridictionnelles (= Judicials institutions), 11th edn., (Paris: Dalloz, 2011).

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