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Comparative Procedural Law and Justice

Part IV - Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of Civil Procedural Guarantees and Principles

Chapter 4

Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of the Review of Court Decisions

Jordi Nieva-Fenoll
Date of publication: November 2025
Editors: Burkhard Hess Margaret Woo Loïc Cadiet Séverine Menétrey Enrique Vallines García
ISBN: TBC
License:
Cite as: J Nieva-Fenoll, 'Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of the Review of Court Decisions' in B Hess, M Woo, L Cadiet, S Menétrey and E Vallines García (eds), Comparative Procedural Law and Justice (Part IV Chapter 4), cplj.org/a/4-4, accessed 13 November 2025, para
Short citation: Nieva-Fenoll 'Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of the Review of Court Decisions' CPLJ IV 4, para

1        Subchapter 1: Right to Appeal as a Constitutional or Fundamental Right?

  1. Although the reality of appeals is very old and their study, albeit more modern, is also very old, the reflection on whether there should be a right to appeal is actually very recent. In fact, the history of rights itself is not so old. But what is interesting to note here is that the existence of a right of recourse/appeal was not originally the subject of any right. It appears neither in the oldest catalogues - Magna Carta Libertatum (1215), Petition of Right (1628), Bill of Rights (1689) - nor is it really present in the amendments to the US Constitution, despite some recent attempts to include it[1], which will be dealt with later, and which are also still very few. This is why the bibliography on the subject is also scarce and the current constitutional, legal or case law references are somewhat poor, as will be seen later.
  2. However, at least since Roman times[2], and even earlier in other cultures[3], the idea of appeal was present, ie, the possibility of appealing to a higher judge whose cognition was more or less extensive, although usually not as a right, but as a power of the sovereign of a territory. Be that as it may, although there may be older antecedents in different cultures, in the most widespread one today we start from the model of the Roman appellatio, which was a genuine novum iudicium. However, the history of law has come to create mechanisms as strange and restricted as the old English ‘writ of error’[4], or means of challenge that appear to be as original as ‘cassation’[5]. In other words, a series of instruments have been produced over time in one way or another which allow a final judicial decision to be called into question, despite the fact that in some legal systems - again, the English - there was an aversion to the second instance - particularly in criminal proceedings - as a consequence of the existence of the jury.[6]
  3. This means that although the legal systems appear to be very uniform in general due to the strong influence - also in the Anglo-Saxon area[7] - of Roman law, the juridical reality and judicial structure in many places have been too varied to allow the creation of a right to an appeal to be conceivable wherever. At most, the right to a ‘remedy’ was generally guaranteed in the first constitutional norms, terminology which refers both to the possibility of going before a judge of first instance - as the equivalent of judicial protection of a right[8] - and also to an instance of appeal[9], but a right to a remedy was not specifically established.
  4. This study will address the opportunity for such a right to appeal to exist, ie, to the review of judicial decisions by a higher judge in civil proceedings, assessing the opportunity to configure a content similar to that which exists in criminal proceedings.[10] It should be added that this analysis is based on a paradox. In criminal proceedings, the possibility of introducing this right has been hotly debated, and yet this is the area in which, since the middle of the twentieth century, it has existed without doubt, at least for the convicted person, in accordance with Art 14.5 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of the United Nations of 1966[11] and Art 2 of Protocol no 7 of the European Convention on Human Rights[12] (1984) (ECHR).
  5. In contrast, in civil proceedings there is no real equivalent right. Over time, the doctrine[13] has taken it for granted that in this civil sphere, the legal systems generally recognize appeals against the first instance judgment, and therefore the concern to elevate it to the rank of a fundamental right has been almost non-existent. Only occasionally has the doctrine been concerned with the issue for very specific reasons. In the US, for example, to try to mitigate the abuses of summary judgment.[14] Meanwhile, in continental Europe, the concern has been mainly about ‘cassation’ (a final appeal), but focusing the question not so much on whether the ‘right to cassation’ exists or is fundamental, but about whether the restrictions that are usually imposed on it are legitimate from a constitutional point of view,[15] which is quite different. Only in Italy was ‘cassation’ surprisingly included in the scope of constitutionalization (Art 111[16] of the Italian Costituzione[17]),[18] which has been an indirect way of recognizing this right, which, incidentally, has not even had a really positive effect. In fact, this ‘right’ has for years now been a burden on the Italian Corte di Cassazione (Court of Cassation)[19].
  6. In short, the question of whether the right to appeal should exist - autonomously or as a derivation of the right of defence - will be dealt with, not only when the existence of the appeal has been foreseen by the legislator, but in general. To this end, a comparative law study will be carried out covering the most interesting experiences worldwide in the field. The study will be extended to whether the right to appeal to a constitutional court and to a supranational court such as the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) should also exist. The answer is not obvious, since most states do not have anything like the German Verfassungsbeschwerde (constitutional complaint). Moreover, moving to the supranational level, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights does not, as we shall see, guarantee direct access for citizens to its cognition, but through the difficult intermediate step of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. In fact, there are states such as Canada or the USA that do not recognise any international judicial protection mechanism for the rights of individual citizens.
  7. This first chapter will begin with a descriptive study of comparative law in order to show the state of the question. On this basis, it will then conclude by examining the theoretical essence of the right and its potential to be fundamentalized or at least constitutionalized.

1.1        Access to Internal Remedies

  1. The legal systems are relatively uniform in this area. The existence of a domestic remedy is not usually provided for as a right of the litigant. Remedies in civil proceedings exist rather by tradition than by constitutional provision. However, if the tradition is so long-established and the public awareness is so widespread that there is almost always the possibility of at least appealing – also with restrictions – against the judgment of a first instance judge, perhaps the constitutionalization of this reality could come about one day. We will see later that this is already the case in some places.
  2. However, what remedies should there be, only the traditional appeal, or something else? Let us see what national constitutional laws have to offer in this respect.

1.1.1        Discretion of the Legislature to Provide Access to Remedies?

  1. According to the majority of national constitutional rules, strictly speaking there should be no appeal at all. The legislator is thus free to decide whether or not to provide for appeals against judicial decisions. We could well imagine a legal system that only provided for a single-instance procedure in which even the judge's interlocutory decisions could not be appealed, not even to the judge himself. This would radically change the history of law and would in fact lead to a return to a situation of non-existence of appeals that had not existed, with a few exceptions, for millennia, at least in the territories influenced by Roman culture.
  2. Therefore, as we shall see, the right to appeal does not generally exist in national constitutions, although there are some relevant exceptions that will be analysed. And which, by the way, are growing in number.

1.1.2        According to National Law

  1. Relatively few countries expressly recognize in their constitutions a right of appeal in civil proceedings, and it is not always the same kind of appeal. In fact, we could say that, according to the constitutional texts only, in all the democratic countries of the world[20], the only ones where rights are really conceivable - leaving aside their different levels of corruption - there are three main groups: those which do not recognize any fundamental right to appeal and which have not constitutionalized a similar content; countries which recognize in their constitutions judicial structures from which their courts might one day be able to deduce a right to appeal; and finally States in which the right to some kind of appeal is recognized, usually the right to traditional appeal. I will now refer to all the states in these three groups, quoting in the first place the provisions in which the right of defence is recognized, and then those articles in which the judiciary is regulated.
  2. The first of these groups - neither constitutionalization nor fundamentalization of the right of appeal - is the most numerous (34 States), and it is also cross-cutting, since it includes different geographical areas and areas of diverse legal tradition. Taking the United Kingdom for granted, as mentioned above, it also includes Canada[21], Switzerland[22] (Art 29, 29a and 30)[23], France[24] (Art 64-66-1), Germany[25] (Art 1 and 92-104), Austria[26] (Art 82-94), Spain[27] (Art 24 and 117-123), Andorra[28] (Art 10 and 85-94), the Netherlands[29] (Art 18 and 112-122), Belgium[30] (Art 144-159), Luxembourg[31] (Art 84-95b), Greece[32] (Art 20 and 87-100A) and Turkey[33] (Art 36 and 138-160); also Denmark[34] (Art 59-65), Sweden[35] (Chapter 11) and Iceland[36] (Art 59-61) in the Nordic area; Latvia[37] (Art 92 and 82-86), Czech Republic[38] (Art 90-96), Slovakia[39] (Art 46 and 141-148), Hungary[40] (Art 25-28) and Bosnia and Herzegovina[41] (Art 3.d) in countries with a Soviet-influenced past; in Latin America, Argentina[42] (Art 43 and 108-129), Paraguay[43] (Art 15, 247-275), Peru[44] (Art 138-149), Ecuador[45] (Art 75 and 167-203), Costa Rica[46] (Art 41 and 152-166), Panama[47] (Art 201-224), Honduras[48] (Art 82 and 303-320) and Bolivia[49] (Art 178-204). Japan[50] (Art 32, 37 and 76-82) and South Korea[51] (Art 12, 27 and 101-110)[52] in Asia, Somalia[53] (Art 34 and 105-109C) in Africa and New Zealand[54] (Art 23-24) in Oceania. In all these States, however, there are appeals against first instance judgments and also to Highest Courts, sometimes recognized by their constitutions, which has led the doctrine not to question the existence of the appeal at least, but neither has it felt the need to establish a fundamental right or any constitutional rule guaranteeing it.
  3. Finally, the US[55] should also be recognized[56] in this first group, since although its Constitution[57] makes some allusions to the courts of appeal (Art II Sec 2), and Amendment I refers to the ‘redress of grievances’, Amendment VII makes a relative prohibition of appeal in civil proceedings, which does not exist except in accordance with the rules of the common law, which means, in any case, an appeal limited to questions of law. This constitutes, albeit indirectly and a contrario, a first step towards the constitutionalization of appeals, which is what is happening in the countries of the second group, and which has already been sought within the US itself through Amendment XIV[58].
  4. This second group, in fact, is a sort of transitional area between the first and the third group, since their constitutional rules expressly recognize the existence of appellate courts, which implies the constitutionalization of the right but not yet its fundamentalization. In this small group are only 16 countries: Portugal[59] (Art 32 and 202-220), Finland[60] (Sec 21 and 98-105), Lithuania[61] (Art 30, 33 and 109-118), Bulgaria[62] (Art 31, 119 and 117-134), Albania[63] (Art 33 and 136), Chile[64] (Art 19.3º and 76-82), Uruguay[65] (Art 233-261), Guatemala[66] (Art 12 and 218), Brazil[67] (Art 33.3 and 92-126) [68], Dominican Republic[69] (Art 157-159), Mexico[70] (Art 17 and 94-107), Malaysia[71] (Art 122), South Sudan[72] (Art 19 and 129), Namibia[73] (Art 12 and 80), Botswana[74] (Art 10 and 99) and South Africa[75] (Art 34, 35.3 and 165-180), which also only expressly recognises the right of appeal in the criminal procedure.
  5. The third group comprises those states that are firmly committed to the right of appeal, and in fact are the 20 countries that currently have a fundamental right of appeal. There are six States with a direct or indirect common law influence: Ireland[76] (Art 34-37, in particular Art 34.4[77]), Australia[78] (Art 71-80, in particular Art 73[79]), India[80] (Art 32, 132, 133, 134, 134A[81], 137, 214-237, in particular Art 132 and 134A), Israel[82] (Basic Law: The Judiciary (1984), Section 17[83]), Malta[84] (Art 95[85]) and Cyprus[86] (Art 23.11[87], 111.4[88] and 155.1[89]). But a large number of states from the former Soviet orbit are also included, perhaps influenced by the supervisory role of the Highest Court of the Soviet Union over the lower courts[90]: Estonia[91] (Art 15, 24[92] and 146-153), Poland[93] (Art 78[94] and 173-187), Romania[95] (Art 21 and 124-141, in particular Art 129[96]), Slovenia[97] (Art 25[98] and 125-134), Croatia[99] (Art 18[100]), Serbia[101] (Art 36[102]), Macedonia[103] (Art 15[104]), Montenegro[105] (Art 20[106] and 118-128) and Ukraine[107] (Art 129.8[108]). Finally, there is a kind of legal island in its geographical area in this sense in Latin America: Colombia[109] (Art 31[110] and 228-257); two in Africa: Tunisia[111] (Art 108[112]) and Ghana[113] (Art 19 and 138[114]). And two more in Europe: the first country to recognise it in 1814, Norway[115] (Art 95 and 86-91, in particular Art 88, 89 and 90 a contrario[116]) and Italy[117] (Art 24[118] and 101-113[119]).
  6. Within this third group, however, there are different intensities. On the one hand, there are the states that recognize this right of appeal - usually a traditional appeal - insofar as it is prescribed by law or with the exceptions prescribed by the legislator. This is the case in Ireland, Australia, Poland, Romania, Croatia, Malta, Colombia with regard to the second instance and also Norway with regard to final appeal, although one could infer from their regulation a fundamentalization of the second instance, by excluding appeal only with regard to judgments of the Supreme Court (Art 90 Constitution of Norway). The Ukrainian Constitution specifically provides for just that: an absolute right with regard to appeal, and a relative right with regard to final appeal, depending on what the legislator provides for.
  7. As a genuine fundamental right of appeal, appeal is only provided for without qualification in Estonia, Slovenia, Serbia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Cyprus, Israel, Tunisia and Ghana. Interestingly enough, the same right exists with regard to cassation no less in Italy, as mentioned above.
  8. Final case in point is India. The right of appeal to the Highest Court is provided for but only with the consent of the judge a quo, as is customary in the United Kingdom or partly in Germany (Zulassungsrevision (admission revision), Sec 543 German Civil Code of Procedure (GCCP)), but with no constitutional provision to that effect in the latter two countries, which is why they have not been included in this group.
  9. From the above study it can be tentatively concluded that the fundamental right to appeal, without qualification, is a minority right in the world. Regarding traditional appeal, it exists in only ten states. Six of them are countries in the area of former Soviet influence, and in fact four of them were part of a single State that has now disappeared (Yugoslavia). Italy's case with regard to cassation is a real rarity, formulated at a time of fascination with cassation[120], perhaps inspired by the great work of Calamandrei[121].

1.1.3        According to Regional and International Instruments

  1. The question that remains is whether, this being the reality, progress should be made towards a recognition of a right to appeal. Let us begin by saying that at the global level, neither Art 8-11 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights (10 December 1948)[122] nor Art 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (16 December 1966)[123] refer to this issue, as has already been mentioned. It is difficult for such generic norms to refer more than five decades ago to such specific content as the one in question, given that, as we have seen, the domestic development of the right to a remedy at that time was almost non-existent. It was enough that the aforementioned Art 14.5 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights provided for the systematic review of convictions in criminal proceedings.
  2. At a more regional level, neither the European Convention on Human Rights [124] nor Art 47[125] of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU (CFREU) provide for such a right, since Art 13 ECHR only requires the presence of an ‘effective remedy’, ie, a means of challenging violations of rights committed by national authorities before the courts. In fact, the specific right to appeal is only recognized in Art 2 of Protocol no 7 to the ECHR, but like the UN provisions, only with regard to criminal proceedings. This does not prevent a future recognition of the right in the European Convention with regard to civil proceedings, obviously, but at present such a right does not exist, as confirmed by the case law of both the ECtHR[126] and the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU)[127].
  3. However, a Recommendation[128] of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe concerning the introduction and improvement of the functioning of appeal systems and procedures in civil and commercial cases provided to the contrary, suggesting the generalized introduction of appeal in civil proceedings, although leaving a wide margin to introduce exceptions in the cognition of the tribunal ad quem, such as excluding small claims, or providing for an admission phase in the second instance (Art 3).
  4. However, most disappointing, as will be seen later, were the restrictions that the Recommendation allowed to be placed on the second instance court's cognition (Art 5). In particular, it endorsed restricting the appeal to points of law, respecting the assessment of evidence at first instance, as well as providing for grounds of appeal limiting the possibilities of the court ad quem. In reality, all of this had a strong Anglo-Saxon influence[129] that probably had to be respected in order to achieve consensus, and which might make sense when a jury decides, but not when a professional judge does so, however accustomed we are by now to the persistence of this historical error, which will be detailed later. The end result is that the Recommendation did not propose, far from it, a ‘right to appeal’ but, as its Art 1 put it, a ‘right to judicial control’, which is certainly not a second instance, but rather something that is much more akin to a writ of error[130]. Nevertheless, the aforementioned Recommendation is simply a minimum standard.
  5. The Inter-American Convention on Human Rights (San Jose, 22 November 1969) did not make any progress in the American area either, but it does offer some interesting innovations. Although it only recognizes the right to a remedy for criminal proceedings in Art 8.2.h[131], in civil proceedings the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (CIDH) leaves the task of establishing remedies to the legislator - or the constituent assembly -, demanding, however, that if the legislator has provided for a remedy, it must be suitable, effective, simple and brief in order to respond to violations of the rights contemplated in the convention[132]. In other words, although it does not stipulate an obligation for the legislature to provide for a right to a remedy, it does demand a minimum essential content if the remedy exists, which is a curious indirect strategy for affirming the right. In fact, case law extends this essential content to all appeals, including traditional appeals[133], of course, but also appeals to a constitutional court[134].
  6. In the African area, the African Charter on Human and People's Rights (27 June 1981)[135] did not really provide in Art 7 for a right to a second instance or any other right. The use of the expression ‘right to an appeal’ could have been interpreted as an improper use of this word equivalent to the term ‘remedy’, or even better, to a simple ‘access to justice’. However, the still scarce case law[136] of the African Court of Human and People's Rights (ACHR) - established in 2006 - has been bolder and has considered that the aforementioned article obliges states to provide for an appeal against judgments, and clearly establishes it as a right of citizens[137], which constitutes a novelty that goes far beyond, as we have seen, what is provided for in the European area.
  7. It can be concluded from the above that the more modern the rules, the greater the awareness of the right to appeal, in a similar way to what was seen in the presentation of the domestic legal systems. It can be inferred from this that a debate is opening up about the introduction of this right in a generalized way, and not only in the criminal field. Its content will be discussed below.

1.2        Specific Remedies in Case of Violation of (Some) Constitutional or Fundamental Rights?

  1. Usually, legal systems do not provide for specific remedies to challenge judicial decisions that may have infringed fundamental rights. It is generally considered that the protection afforded by the generalized means already existing in the ordinary justice system is sufficient for this purpose.
  2. However, some relevant initiatives have been developed in some states that challenge this general principle, although few of them are genuine appeals, but rather simple complaints or remedies that oblige the courts to carry out a specific analysis of the violation of a given right in a specific case. In other words, they have a very specialized subject matter. This is the case of the Abhilfe bei Verletzung des Anspruchs auf rechtliches Gehör (remedy for violation of the right to a fair hearing) of Sec 321a GCCP, created after a judgment of the Constitutional Court[138], which is brought before the same court that would have committed an infringement of the right of defence in a final decision. It is very similar to the ‘incidente de nulidad de actuaciones’ (motion to dismiss proceedings) in Art 241 of the Spanish Civil Procedure Act, although this remedy extends to all kinds of fundamental rights. In France, the ‘recours-nullité’ (appel-nullité or pourvoi-nullité (appeal for annulment or appeal for nullity)) has been created by case law in case of an excès de pouvoir (excess of power) of the judge[139], in case the regular appeal (recourse) is not available[140].
  3.  Somewhat similar are the ‘amparo’ actions or trials in some Latin American countries, including Argentina[141], Paraguay[142], Ecuador[143], Mexico[144], the Dominican Republic[145], Panama[146], Honduras[147], Guatemala[148], Bolivia[149] and Peru[150], which are brought before various judicial bodies. In reality, they are sometimes only special civil proceedings for the specific protection of fundamental rights, and not really intra-procedural complaints against a judicial decision.
  4. All of them, therefore, are really separate from the object of our study, since they do not constitute any right to appeal of some sort. Nor do the actions for patrimonial liability of the State for damages caused to citizens under Art L. 141-1 Code de l’organisation judicaire (French Code of Judicial Organization (COJ)) [151] in France, or the action for patrimonial liability of the State for the functioning of the Administration of Justice in Spain (Art 292-296 of the Organic Law of the Judiciary), or the action provided for in the case of undue delay[152] in Germany, through the Gesetz über den Rechtsschutz bei überlangen Verfahren (Law on legal protection in excessively long proceedings)[153].
  5. Therefore, the study will briefly refer only to direct challenges by citizens before constitutional courts as well as supranational courts, which do represent a right of appeal, albeit super-specialized in the protection of fundamental rights. In reality, both because of their general significance for the creation of case law, and also because of the restriction to the questions of law addressed by the courts, they are either small super-specialized ‘final appeals’, also inheritors of some traditional appeals before the Highest Courts[154].

1.2.1        Constitutional Remedies

  1. Appeals for infringement of a fundamental right before a constitutional court must be distinguished from citizens' actions before constitutional courts for the control of the constitutionality of laws, which are far from the object of our study. They have their origin in the case of Marbury v Madison (1803)[155] in the US and have been discarded by some states following the English example[156], for example the Netherlands[157], out of absolute respect for the independence of Parliament from the courts.
  2. The result of the above is that not many countries have a constitutional court autonomous from the highest court, and even fewer have provided for this competence to hear a direct appeal by citizens with the specific aim of reviewing a judicial decision that has violated fundamental rights. A pioneer in this area, not so well known, was the Tribunal of Constitutional Guarantees of the Second Spanish Republic[158], which existed from 1933 to 1939, and which had among its competences precisely an ‘amparo appeal’. This same remedy has been in effect again since 1980 as a competence of the current Constitutional Court[159]. A similar system exists in the German Verfassungsbeschwerde (constitutional complaint) (Art 93, 4a Grundgesetz (GG)).[160] Similar means are also provided for in their constitutions in countries such as Andorra (Art 88[161] and 98), Poland (Art 79.1)[162], Serbia[163], Montenegro[164], Macedonia[165], Peru (Art 202.2[166]), Colombia[167], Bolivia[168], South Africa[169], Malta[170], Albania[171], Turkey[172] and Hungary, which regulates an appeal which even goes beyond the scope of fundamental rights and extends to the entire constitutional rule (Art 24.d[173]). Only Lithuania[174], Croatia[175], the Dominican Republic[176], Cyprus[177], Belgium[178] and Austria[179] can be included in this list in a very nuanced way, given that their constitutions contain rather actions of unconstitutionality of general provisions exercised by citizens, designed more for complaints against laws, regulations and even administrative acts, but only eventually against judicial decisions, which in any case are in the administrative sphere after the exhaustion of this jurisdictional channel.
  3. Other countries such as Italy, Bulgaria, Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Portugal, Chile, Tunisia, Somalia and Korea have a constitutional court, but its powers do not include this direct appeal by citizens for judicial infringement of their fundamental rights.
  4. Each of the countries with remedies for infringement of fundamental rights has specific procedural rules, of course, but their treatment is not relevant to the justification for the establishment of this appeal before a constitutional court, which is what must be clarified in this section. Insofar, there does not seem to be a single political criterion when deciding on the provision of this super-specialized remedy in a constitution. In the case of Spain - beyond their particular historical background - Germany and Austria - also particular with the Austrian Constitutional Court of 1919-1920, the awareness that after harsh periods of dictatorship, the members of their judiciary, even because of their education as jurists - typical of the early twentieth century - might not be as sensitive as they should be to the protection of fundamental rights[180], which justified the creation of a specific high court responsible for correcting the ordinary justice system if it ignored them[181], may have had a decisive influence.
  5. A similar motivation may have existed in South Africa, after overcoming apartheid, and also in the countries of the former Soviet orbit, beyond an attempt to present themselves as states with a more democratic image to the international community, thus publicly reflecting an overcoming of their authoritarian periods that could convince the Council of Europe and the European Union to join. In Andorra, the criteria of these two organizations also weighs heavily, although in addition, as in the Latin American countries, there may have been a certain influence of mimicry with the Spanish system, leaving only the reasons for Malta and Cyprus to be explained, which rather than the European Union and the Council of Europe - although without ruling it out - perhaps have more to do with the usual ambition of the political class of small countries to possess all the institutions of a larger country.
  6. In any case, is it necessary to have this appeal to a constitutional court, given that the protection of the ordinary courts is already available? The communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions (2020 Rule of Law Report)[182] refers only to the importance of the review of the constitutionality of laws, but does not even make this reference in a generalized way, nor does it address the case of direct appeal for the protection of fundamental rights. Furthermore, the Rule of Law Checklist of the Venice Commission (2016)[183] is more concerned with the independence and impartiality of judges, as well as with the ease of free access to the courts but also does not specifically refer to such appeal to a constitutional court, or even its existence.
  7. It can by no means be said that democratic countries that do not have this remedy, and indeed they are the vast majority, have their citizens less protected for this reason. In fact, the cases of Turkey, Hungary[184] and, to a lesser extent, Poland, which do have this remedy and which, on the other hand, are having serious problems of democratic legitimization before the European Union[185] and, foreseeably, before the European Court of Human Rights itself, are worthy of consideration at the moment[186].
  8. This appeal is therefore dispensable. In fact, at the European level, it delays the European Court of Human Rights' opportunity to rule on the issue. Its existence, moreover, does not guarantee that the Constitutional Court will be composed of judges who are more aware of fundamental rights, but rather that they are often judges from the judiciary itself, and moreover with political influence in their appointment. Moreover, given that both in the European and American areas, and incipiently in the African area, there already exists – as we are about to see – an international court of reference on the subject with a consolidated case law on each fundamental right, the existence of these constitutional courts in reality constitutes a national opportunity to ignore this case law, which is disastrous. The problem has already occurred in Spain in the area of freedom of expression[187] or in Germany in various areas[188].

1.2.2        External Remedies

  1. In the international sphere, for decades there has been a concern for the enforcement of human rights that has led to the provision of different mechanisms so that citizens from all over the world can turn to them in one way or another. These are not genuine remedies, since compliance with their resolutions is, to a greater or lesser extent, left to the goodwill of the states. However, as has already been said, these mechanisms create a relevant body of doctrine that guides the courts of all countries. In fact, just as the US Federal Supreme Court has served as an inspiration in the field of human rights - particularly in its case law on the exclusionary Rule [189] and the Rights of the accused [190] - all over the world, the ECtHR also has a special relevance for the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. In this way, a dialogue between courts is activated, which encourages the exchange of views on the best protection of citizens.

1.2.2.1        At Regional Level

  1. At the regional level, there are three major international tribunals dealing with the protection of human rights, which are available to citizens in order to obtain a remedy against final judicial decisions rendered to their detriment in their states. These courts are the ECtHR, the CIDH and the African Court of Human Rights. These are true milestones in the history of law, covering immense geographical areas, and which represent the extension of the culture of human rights throughout the world, even though, as is the case with the ECtHR, they are subject to the principle of subsidiarity[191], which makes states primarily responsible for the respect of rights, rather than the ECtHR[192].
1.2.2.1.1        In Europe: The Individual Complaint Before the ECtHR
  1. Once domestic remedies have been exhausted before the jurisdiction of one of the signatory States to the Convention (Art 35 ECHR), any individual, non-governmental organization (NGO) or group of individuals (Art 34 ECHR), or one signatory State to the Convention against another (Art 33 ECHR), may bring a case before the ECtHR, generically considered, if they consider that a decision - usually of a court - has violated the rights recognized in the ECHR or in the other Protocols supplementing the Convention (Art 34 ECHR)[193].
  2. The time limit for bringing an action is four months from the date of the final decision (Art 35 ECHR). Its content is defined by Art 47 of the Rules of the Court[194], of which the (e) ‘concise and legible statement of the facts’ and (f) the ‘concise and legible statement of the alleged violation(s) of the Convention and the relevant arguments’ stand out above all, which are the most relevant aspects of its substantiation and which, despite being formulated in a way that attempts to be simple – and which can be written in one's own language (Art 34 of the Rules of the Court) – finally become the main aspect that the lawyers who draft it are concerned with. In fact, the language of drafting is an important aspect, given that the latest reforms of the Rules try to lead the parties to the use of English or French, the official languages of the ECtHR. And in fact, these are the languages that can be properly understood by all judges, which, whether they want to or not, is important for the success of the appeal.
1.2.2.1.1.1        Requirements to Be Met for the Admissibility of the Application
  1. Firstly, if the claim is individual – that is, if it is not from a State – it will be examined by a single judge who is not from the defendant State (Art 27 ECHR). If the single judge does not reject it outright, it will be referred to a committee (Art 28 ECHR). The committee will decide on the merits of the case if it bases its decision on the constant case law of the ECtHR, or if not, it will defer the case to one of the chambers, which will carry out a new admissibility examination (Art 29 ECHR).
  2. If this new examination is passed, the case will be decided by the Chamber itself, unless there is no previous case law or it considers it necessary to change it, in which case it transfers the case to the Grand Chamber (Art 30 ECHR).
  3. In any case, the possibilities of inadmissibility of the ECtHR are enormous[195], considering the grounds for inadmissibility set out in Art 35 and 37 ECHR. Particularly noteworthy are the following, related to the merits of the case:

The application is substantially the same as a matter that has already been examined by the Court or has already been submitted to another procedure of international investigation or settlement and contains no relevant new information.

The application is incompatible with the provisions of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, manifestly ill-founded, or an abuse of the right of individual application.

The applicant has not suffered a significant disadvantage, unless respect for human rights as defined in the Convention and the Protocols thereto requires an examination of the application on the merits.[196]

Loss of interest in the application, particularly if by any [...] reason established by the Court, it is no longer justified to continue the examination of the application.[197] 

  1. Inadmissibility may occur at any stage of the proceedings (Art 35.4 and 37.1 ECHR). If the application is finally admitted, the court may set a time limit for the parties to submit supplementary written observations or evidence, and even a hearing, although it usually does neither.
  2. Notwithstanding the important – and partially worrying – influence of NGO on the ECtHR[198], the role of states is predominant according to the rules. They may participate in the proceedings as third parties if one of their nationals has submitted an application, and the President of the Court may even invite a non-party state ‘in the interests of the proper administration of justice’ (Art 36 ECHR).
  3. The court, after an investigation of the case, may attempt mediation before the court itself (Art 38 and 39 ECHR).
1.2.2.1.1.2        Effects of a Finding of Violation of the ECHR or of One of its Protocols
  1. If mediation and the eventually celebrated 12-weeks-phase of friendly exchange of offers[199] between the parties have not been successful, the ECtHR will enter into the merits of the case and issue a judgment. Even if the law of the State provides only partial satisfaction to the litigant, it will take appropriate measures to ensure full satisfaction (Art 41 ECHR). There is no appeal against the Chamber's decision, but either party has three months to bring the case to the Grand Chamber ‘in exceptional cases’. A section of five judges of the Grand Chamber decides on the admissibility of the case. They will admit it if it is a case of general importance, or very relevant to the interpretation of the ECHR.
  2. The effects of the ECtHR's judgment are binding, according to Art 46 ECHR, which provides that in case of non-compliance by the State, the Committee of Ministers may take appropriate measures to compel such compliance, given that resistance is a violation of an international treaty. However, non-compliance is repeated, and even national legislators have created domestic judicial procedures to discuss how to enforce an ECtHR judgment, which was not necessary in every case and actually sometimes delays compliance with the judgment, as it happened in Spain[200]. It was all due to a well-intentioned 2000 Recommendation[201] of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, which was aimed at facilitating compliance with ECtHR judgments, not hindering it, and which proposed the creation of a specific procedure for this purpose. This gave rise to procedures in German law (Sec 580.8 GCCP), French law (Art L. 452-1 COJ[202] or Art 622-1 of the Code de Procédure Pénale (Criminal Procedure Code)), Swiss Law (Art 328(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure and Art 122 of the Bundesgerichtsgesetz (Federal Supreme Court Act)), Turkish law (Art 311 of the Ceza Muhakemesi Kanunu (Criminal Procedure Code)) or Spanish law (Art 510.2 of the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (Code of Civil Procedure)).
1.2.2.1.2        Interamerican Commission (and Court) of Human Rights and African Court on Human and People’s Rights
  1. A mechanism similar to that of the ECtHR exists in the Americas, with particular relevance in Latin America[203]. This is the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which acts essentially with a preliminary phase before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights[204], which is already too far removed from the object of our study, given that the mechanism does not really open up anything similar to an appeal and, therefore, it is not possible to speak of a right to appeal in this area.
  2. In reality, it is only a matter of complaints or petitions that can be submitted by citizens or NGOs to the aforementioned Commission[205], which is made up of persons elected by the Organization of American States (Art 44 ff American Convention on Human Rights (ACHR)). The Commission requires that domestic remedies have been exhausted (Art 46 ACHR), but it shall be insisted that what is opened from there has nothing to do with an appeal. In reality, the Commission tries to mediate with the State and, if it fails to do so, issues a report (Art 50 ACHR), which, if unsuccessful, may be submitted to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights but, and this is very important, only by the States party to the Convention or by the Commission itself, seeking to alter or confirm its report (Art 61 ff ACHR)[206], which confirms that the above has nothing to do with an appeal.
  3. In fact, the whole procedure described above is nothing more than an intraprocedural Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) with the appearance of an appeal to a court to give more psychological weight to its decisions, but little more. Thus, moving away from the object of the study, the analysis must be abandoned here.
  4. An absolutely similar procedure is the one before the African Court of Human and People's Rights[207], which, for the same reason, should not be commented on either[208]. Even the Asian Human Rights Commission[209], which is only an NGO of lawyers and human rights activists in Asia, does not reach this level.

1.2.2.2        At International Level

  1. At the global level, there is no court that can provide anything resembling a remedy for national judicial decisions. The only body with international impact which has at least, among other more general objectives[210], the examination of complaints of rights violations with some impact on states, is the Human Rights Committee of the United Nations[211]. Its basic text compiling rights is the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (16 December 1966).[212]
  2. The work of the Committee is only consultative. Its procedure is described in Art 41 of the International Covenant and in the First Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights[213], although it has many reservations from a large number of countries[214]. Complaints can only be made after domestic remedies have been exhausted. The Committee transmits them to the country concerned for a decision within 6 months. Following this information, the Committee gives its opinion.
  3. It is therefore a simple embryo of an international court, but it cannot be classified as such at all. Moreover, many countries – most European countries – do not recognise the competence of the Committee if the case has already been examined by an international procedure, such as the European Court of Human Rights. For this reason, when the Committee nevertheless gives its opinion, the value of its opinion is only symbolic, beyond the value that the international community may wish to attribute to it at any given moment.

1.2.2.3        Impact of Supranational Remedies and Jurisprudence on the Existence or the Design of National Remedies

  1. Leaving aside the procedures for the enforcement of ECtHR judgments that exist in a number of states – and which do not involve any remedies – international case law has not had a great impact on the design of the structure of the remedies system, with the exception of Switzerland and its final appeal against judgments of the Highest Court after a judgment of the ECtHR[215]. But generally, States have maintained their original structure and at least in the civil sphere, little or nothing has changed. The situation is different in the criminal field, where in several countries an appeal was finally introduced, which did not exist as a consequence of many of the modern nineteenth century regulations being based on the English jury system[216], having only provided for cassation as the only appeal against judgments. And it is obvious that not only the right to review of convictions in Art 2 of Protocol No. 7 of the ECHR, but also the corresponding Art 14.5 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights played a decisive role in the introduction of the appeal. But as has been said, all this has occurred in the criminal field, not in the civil field.
  2. Where there has been an unquestionable impact of international case law on civil proceedings has been both in the cognition of evidentiary issues and in the system for admitting appeals. The latter has become more flexible, while the former has moved away completely from the novum iudicium model and increasingly moved towards the system of revisio prioris instantiae. Both issues have partly affected the legal design of traditional appeals but, it shall be insisted, only in terms of the object of their cognition. Therefore, this whole issue will be examined in the next chapter.
  3. In fact, there only has been an extension of awareness of the existence of a right to appeal, in general in any process, which has even been reflected, as we have already seen, in some constitutions. It is possible that in the future these provisions will influence future reforms in each country. But constitutional reforms tend to be very slow and an explosion of express recognition of the right insofar is not foreseeable.

1.3        Should a Right to Appeal Exist?

  1. At this point, it is necessary to decide whether or not there should be a right to appeal, and whether it is sufficient for it to be constitutionalized or whether it should also be fundamentalized. So far, the existence of appeals, as we have seen, has been mainly due to the weight of the tradition of the original Roman model[217]. But at this point it is necessary to go beyond this and decide whether there is better justice when a legal system recognizes remedies, and whether or not it is therefore essential for them to exist and what their limits should be. The following section is devoted to all these questions, leaving the final decision on the advisability of constitutionalization/fundamentalization for the last section of this chapter.

1.3.1        Essence

  1. This has not been a subject that has generally interested the doctrine. When the basis for the existence of appeals is studied, once it has been ruled out that they serve to combat injustice, above all because of the complexity and imprecision of the very concept of ‘justice’, it is recognized that, despite everything, their remote origin could probably have been this – justice –, at least in the consciences of the people who created them, apart from the consciousness of the simple subordination of inferior judges to a superior judge.[218] Today, however, it is necessary to look for a more precise basis to explain the presence of the appeal in the legal system from an essentially organizational perspective.
  2. To this end, the desire to correct a legal or factual error is cited as the reason for the existence of appeals[219], but such a basis is not tenable. The reality is that not a few decisions are overturned, not because they are erroneous, far from it, but because the court ad quem has another opinion on the matter, just as valid as that of the first instance, but based on different factual and legal assessments. And such a reversal is not unlawful, since it is within the powers of any court of appeal insofar as the law does not prohibit it. Historically[220], in fact, it was assumed that the basis for appeals was the damage or disadvantage caused to the appellant by the decision appealed against, which legitimized the possibility of appealing with the aim of obtaining a better judgment. This is how, for example, the doctrine of materielle Beschwer (substantive complaint)[221] arose in Germany, although it was criticized by other authors[222].
  3. However, this prejudice is rather a reason that authorizes a specific litigant to appeal, but it is not a general, systemic aim of the legal system, since the reparation of damages is one of the expectations that any citizen has with justice in general, not only with an appeal, and therefore does not individualise it for these purposes. When looking for the essence of an institution, in this case of a supposed right to appeal, one is rather thinking of an objective of the legal system that can serve the political ends of the state in general. And in this particular case, the essential reason that one is trying to locate could be found in some task, purpose or orientation related to the work of the judiciary but which, as has been said, singles out the appeal as the right institution to fulfil that purpose.
  4. Although there have been some attempts to abolish the right to appeal, in particular the right of traditional appeal[223], but also the right of final appeal[224], the scarce doctrine that has considered this issue has emphasized, as the basis for appeals, a state vocation of excellence in the work of the judiciary, which would logically occur when judicial decisions are reviewed by a judge other than the one who has issued them[225]. E Allorio even offered an additional reason that also supports the existence of appeals: the appeal judge examines the work already carried out by another judge, which gives him a greater serenity and objectivity than the judge a quo, and allows the degree of certainty or correctness of the second judge to be greater.[226] This probably increases the possibilities of improving the quality of the service provided by the judiciary. Ultimately, according to this view, the rationale for appeals would lie in the purpose of obtaining a better judgment.[227]
  5. That view seems broadly acceptable. The state must always, at least in a democracy, desire the welfare of its citizens, and that welfare cannot be achieved if the justice service provided is deficient. Nevertheless, however perfect the system of training judges may be, mistakes will always arise, and it is good to have an opportunity to correct them. One could, of course, leave that opportunity to the judge who handed down the judgment, but that would create two problems. The first is that only with great difficulty will the judge be able to perceive that he or she has made a mistake, since the influence of confirmation bias[228] is too strong in any human being for the state to assume a reliance on self-correction of errors, which would occur very rarely. But furthermore, if the judge themself could correct their mistakes, we would be breaking one of the main guarantees of legal certainty in the legal system: res judicata[229]. It would therefore seem advisable to wait a further period of time so that, if an appeal is lodged, a different judge can review the appealed judgment, confirming the correctness of the ruling or attempting to rectify any errors it may contain. Naturally, the system can malfunction, and mistakes can be made by the judge ad quem, as well as by the judge a quo. This is precisely why it is so important that the appellate court is always collegial, since this makes it more unlikely that errors will be made by the multiplicity of minds carrying out the legal analysis of the same issue[230].
  6. Finally, it should not be forgotten that the right to appeal, if it exists, is a negative right, in the sense that it limits state action but does not impose any obligation on the state, since appeals are simply a matter for the citizen to decide, it being sufficient for the state to provide for the existence of the appeal.[231] The question is, however, whether the existence of this opportunity should become a requirement for the state when legislating or, even more so, when drafting its constitution. It is precisely this point, which is the decisive one, that is dealt with in the last section.        

1.3.2        Usefulness of its Constitutionalization / Fundamentalization

  1. If anything can be clearly deduced from the comparative law study carried out at the beginning of this chapter, it is that there is no criterion or master line for deciding what is included in a constitutional text, and much less to what extent the catalogue of recognized rights is broad or restricted. In the 71 countries we are considering, there is really everything to be found, and if the catalogues are similar, it is not because there is a general theory behind them, but because they have been copied from one another. In this sense, the most influential norms have obviously been the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution, the European Convention on Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. But none of these three texts, nor the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, recognises the right to appeal. In fact, the latter text does not even recognize it in the criminal field, unlike the ECHR and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
  2. Perhaps what should be in a constitution is the most basic, but in human rights matters it is possible to be more or less explicit without necessarily affecting the protection of citizens. However, it seems logical that a constitution should contain what citizens conceive of as part of their protection. From that perspective it can be said that the citizen expects a remedy for an adverse decision, an expectation so widespread that some believe it should be transformed into a right.[232]
  3. Such a view of citizens' expectations may be a first democratic orientation, but it cannot become the only thing that the drafter of a constitution must take into account. Sometimes citizens yearn for rights that are not compatible with democratic coexistence, and sometimes they do not even think about some of them because they are not even aware of them. In fact, it is not unusual for them to be violated and not even be aware of it, as happened during the 2020 pandemic in several countries with freedom of movement. Most citizens were unaware that such a right even existed.
  4. It therefore seems a more guiding criterion to imagine what would happen if, apart from traditions, the legislator was to decide that justice has only a first and only instance, with no opportunity for appeal. And although such a situation is perfectly conceivable and perhaps even feasible in some cases – small claims[233] –, the reality that would be created would perhaps not be the most desirable: a state in which judges rule sovereignly without the possibility of being challenged. No doubt Hegel[234] would not like this, as it eliminates the dialectical element that is created by the appeals and that reinforces the use of the same method during the process with the confrontation between the parties. Nor does it say anything in favour of the undeniable incidence of confirmation bias[235] indicated above, which would lead to many erroneous judicial decisions and which would also be wrong time and time again as it would be more difficult for judges to change their criteria if they are not corrected, behaving practically like tools of artificial intelligence[236].
  5. Therefore, both from the citizens' perspective and from the point of view of the quality of the provision of the justice service, however cumbersome it may seem, it seems essential that there should be a double opportunity for the judiciary to provide a service of the appropriate quality.[237] It is, in fact, a guarantee of that obvious quality that should be found in any constitution.
  6. The question is whether this content should only be constitutionalized or also fundamentalized. In other words, does it seem more appropriate to follow the tendency of those states that require the mere existence of an appeal in their constitutions, or is it better to create a genuine right of appeal that the interpreter does not have to deduce from the somehow hollow reference to an appeal in the constitution?
  7. The differences from one decision to the other can be considerable. A legislator who is only required to recognize the right of appeal can place many restrictions on its admissibility at the disposal of the court, despite the limitations that exist in this area and which will be discussed in the following section. However, if the right to appeal is fundamentalized, the restrictions on its admission are much more complicated, which can lead to the collapse of the courts dealing with such appeals, which is already empirical evidence in most countries, and which is also detrimental to the quality of the service of justice. On the other hand, the constitutionalization of the right to appeal makes it possible to claim it before the courts, also in cases where the litigant has no reason on the merits of the case, being able to achieve a victory on simple procedural grounds that in the end would prove to be vacuous.
  8. The decision, as can be seen, is a complex one. Yet the arguments in favour of the right to appeal seem to outweigh the arguments against. In the end, we are opposing excellence in the provision of a service to savings in human and material resources on the part of the state, without these savings making it possible to maintain this level of excellence. For this reason, it seems that the most acceptable option is to fundamentalize the right to appeal, generalizing it and at the same time freeing it from the limitations that have been imposed on it in criminal proceedings. Perhaps it must be recognized that a modern-day justice system is inconceivable without the existence of at least two instances, and this should be the content of the law, epistemically based on the dialectical method and psychologically based on the avoidance of confirmation bias, as has already been explained. In other words, the reasons for the existence of the right are no longer merely intuitive and based on the expectations of citizens, but are based on the soundness of arguments that are even extra-legal, even though they have undeniable influence in the legal sphere.
  9. The question remains, however, whether this fundamentalization should also extend to a third degree of jurisdiction, ie, an appeal to a highest (or supreme) court. The discussion on this issue is more complex and, in my opinion, goes beyond the scope of the right of appeal. Basically, with highest courts, we want the existence of bodies with a paralegislative vocation to guide the courts. Do we really need them? This is undoubtedly a reflection on the general theory of law and its development would require a space that is not available here[238]. But in any case, the easy conception of alternatives to the existence of such a body, alternatives that might even be more efficient - imagine a section of parliaments in charge of supervising case law - rules out that it should be constituted as a right. In any case, it is beyond dispute that the highest courts, the pinnacle of the system, do not open up a citizen's possibility of appeal to them in practically any legal system, except the Italian one. And this possibility, although also useful, is highly controversial, above all because it ends up leading to a certain elitism, as will be analysed in the following chapter. In any case, in these conditions, it should not be the object of constitutionalized law.

2        Subchapter 2: Constitutional or Fundamental Requirements for the Design of Effective Remedies

  1. Once it has been concluded that the right to appeal should be constitutionalized, it remains to be discussed somewhat more briefly under what conditions both the admission to appeals and the object of their cognition should be established, in order to prevent the existence of the appeal from being in vain, if it is then restricted by the existence of overly demanding or simply unpredictable requirements. Or that even if they are predictable, they are so difficult to fulfil that the right to appeal will eventually cease to exist. This would be the case, for example, if appeals would only be accepted in cases with a value of more than 10,000,000 EUR. It is not difficult to predict whether they will be admissible or not, but the reality is that most cases do not reach that amount. Such a threshold would risk becoming a restriction of the right of access to justice.
  2. In the following, the most frequent requirements and demands in the legislations will be reviewed, which tend to be more or less the same in the different countries, which is why in this case the study will mainly focus on these obstacles and their justification in the light of the case law.

2.1        Requirements for the Clarity and Transparency of the Formal Prerequisites of Remedies. Prohibition of Overly Formalistic Requirements

  1. The study of the requirements for lodging appeals has normally been a matter of national case law, particularly with regard to the final appeal. In reality, this is a very uninteresting part of procedural studies if one looks at it with a certain objectivity. The highest courts, in order to defend themselves against the number of appeals that came to them, have been improvising demands on the appellants in order to reject appeals and avoid collapsing. In this task, they have sometimes been helped by the legislator, who has often established – not infrequently at the suggestion of the judges – requirements that were simply far removed from any essential human logic, since they had been established as a simple arbitrary control of the volume of appeals. And this also affects, as we shall see, both the restriction to questions of law proper to the courts of cassation, as well as the creation of certiorari itself in the US Supreme Court.
  2. Although the study is above all a study of national law, it will begin with an exposition of supranational case law, since, as has occurred in other areas, this case law has become an inexcusable guide for national courts and legislators, which simplifies this study of domestic law.

2.1.1        The Case Law of the ECtHR and the Interamerican Court of Human Rights

  1. The ECtHR has set out quite simply what are the minimum standards to be respected when assessing the admissibility of appeals. It is indeed curious to note that it has done so without the need to recognize a right of appeal, which does not exist in the civil sphere in the ECHR.[239] But a good summary of its case law would be that if a legal system provides in its laws for the existence of an appeal, arbitrary obstacles to its admission cannot be placed in the way which would end up nullifying the right to free access to justice.[240] In order to carry out this task, as usual, the ECtHR does not interpret national law, because this is a matter for the courts of each State, but will only verify that the interpretation made by national judges does not violate the right to free access (Art 6 ECHR).[241]
  2. Therefore, the only objective of the case law is to guarantee this right[242], although taking into account that the ECtHR recognizes the capacity of the States to establish more rigorous conditions for cassation than for appeal.[243] Thus, the curious thing is that the ECtHR has accepted restrictions that are highly controversial in the doctrine, such as the limitation of cassation courts to questions of law. However, this is a restriction that is very widespread in the laws and case law of the States, which is probably the reason why the ECtHR does not see a realistic occasion to question it, even when its application is misplaced. Only if such a limitation, or others, were used in a completely unreasonable manner, would the ECtHR deal with the issue. To do otherwise would be to call into question not only the interpretative power of state courts, but even their legislative power, since, as has been said, if a state does not wish to provide remedies, it does not have to do so, with the only limit being respect for the right to free access, a requirement that is not by chance relaxed with respect to the cassation.
  3. But even if this is the case, the procedural rules must avoid excessive formalism which could violate the right to a fair trial, even to the point of making compliance with the procedural conditions laid down by law unpredictable.[244] This requirement of the ECtHR obliges the case law to avoid laying down requirements which serve absolutely no purpose in relation to the provision of the service of justice, and which only have the effect and objective of rendering appeals inadmissible.[245] Therefore, it is not that the case law cannot establish admission requirements, but that they must be reasonable from this perspective.[246] Consequently, they cannot simply be arbitrary requirements.
  4. And furthermore, the requirements imposed must not be impossible or very difficult for the appellant to comply with, as would be the case, for example, if the litigant were to be imposed an excessively short time limit for lodging an appeal against a decision of particular relevance to them.[247] In other words, if they were obliged to comply with a requirement which they are not in a position to meet, this would amount to a denial of justice, in other words, a violation of the right of free access.
  5. Finally, in order to be inadmissible, the non-compliance with the conditions for appeal must be solely attributable to the appellant, without the authorities having favoured or even forced the non-compliance with requirements contrary to the principle of proportionality[248] or, as already mentioned, in an arbitrary manner[249]. Moreover, it is incumbent on the national authorities to provide themselves with sufficient administrative and judicial infrastructures to ensure that any inconvenience caused by the litigant is not used as an excuse for the system to have deficiencies which ultimately lead to the rejection of the appeal as a result of those deficiencies.[250]
  6. So as to sum up, the case law of the ECtHR sets out the following three requirements in order to consider that admission has been carried out in a manner compatible with the right to free access:
  1. Exclusion of arbitrariness: the requirements for authorizing admission are permitted, but only insofar as they are not arbitrarily laid down by the legislature or judges.
  2. Proportionality: The requirements must respect the principle of proportionality: they must not be impossible or very difficult for the appellant to comply with.
  3. Imputability to the appellant: Non-compliance with the requirement must be imputable only to the appellant, without the involvement of the authorities.
  1. Based on these requirements, the problem is their interpretation, which has a relatively wide margin in the ECtHR's case law, as can be seen in the cases quoted above. Perhaps it would be positive if the ECtHR's decisions following these three requirements were more predictable, although the general idea for predicting the result in these cases would be the following, already indicated: the ECtHR will never discuss the interpretation of state judges of their national rules. They will only assess whether it fails to meet any of the three requirements indicated.
  2. The case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has focused above all on the guarantees of quality of the tribunal ad quem, as well as on the three characteristics that an appeal must have, in the opinion of this court: suitability, effectiveness and speed. Suitability, so that the appeal is not a mere formality and can deal with the full merits of the case, particularly the violation of human rights[251]; effectiveness[252], in the sense that the court hearing it is independent and impartial and can enforce its decisions[253]; and speed[254], which is related to the prohibition of undue delay and therefore goes beyond the analysis being carried out in this paper. In any case, this case law is less specific than that explained from the ECtHR, and in fact expressly follows it on this point[255], so it is not necessary to address it in more detail.

2.1.2        In National Law

  1. Today, as has been said, the European courts generally follow the ECtHR guidelines in this area, so the following discussion is no longer as relevant as it was in the past, nor does it aim to study in a comparative manner the restrictions – arbitrary – imposed by each court in each country, as this would be cumbersome and largely useless. Instead, beyond the already studied requirements of ECtHR case law, some of the more controversial or even constructive decisions in this area will be discussed in order to illustrate the impact of the right of free access on them.

2.1.2.1        The Most Common (Formal) Prerequisites of Remedies

  1. As already noted, case law and legislation have sought above all to unburden the highest courts. Thus, they have essentially provided four ways to achieve this goal: restriction to points of law, certiorari, the binding precedent and formalism. In one way or another, these four paths end up becoming formal prerequisites for the filing of appeals.
  2. The restriction to points of law arises in English law as a consequence of the existence of the jury[256], but it ends up becoming a mechanism to restrict the admission of appeals. Before the English higher courts, particularly in the House of Lords, from at least the eighteenth century onwards, no new evidence was admitted under any circumstances for the review of the case in the framework of an appeal, it being considered a practice alien to English law – not so to Roman or canon law – to review the judgment of a lower court on the basis of evidence that was not used in the first instance.[257] And all this was logical precisely because of what has already been said: the jury resolves the question of fact in an unmotivated manner[258], so that it can no longer be modified by a higher court[259] because there is no human way of knowing the factual reasons that remained in the jurors' minds without ever being disclosed. The restriction was therefore logical and unavoidable.
  3. It was different when this restriction was transferred in France[260] to the new Tribunal de Cassation[261], which in 1804 would become the Cour de Cassation[262]. P A Merlin had already developed the idea of the restriction[263], with the significance of the fact that Merlin was State Counsellor and Imperial Procurator General of the Cour de Cassation. But in fact, Merlin was taking up what was already the case law of the Cour[264]. As is well known, the restriction became consubstantial to the French cassation and from there it was transferred to the whole world, despite the doctrinal attacks it has suffered and continues to suffer for its lack of ontological and epistemic viability.[265]
  4. As for the binding precedents system, its emergence is not ancestral in the United Kingdom, as is sometimes believed, but appeared much later than one might think.[266] It comes from the case law of the House of Lords at the end of the nineteenth century[267], and not really from the English Judicature Acts 1873-1875, since these laws were rather focused on other issues, such as the reorganization of the English judiciary and the corruption of hereditary members of the House of Lords. And it simply arose as a way of avoiding appeals, ie, workload, by making the case law of the lower courts more uniform.
  5. Finally, the selection of cases or certiorari is even more modern. In the US, the introduction of case selection was gradual, first with the Judiciary Act of 1891 (Evarts Act), then with the Judiciary Act of 1925 and finally with the Supreme Court Case Selections Act of 1988, all laws that gradually restricted the formerly existing possibility of appeal. What is most striking, however, is that case selection was not introduced at all to enable the Supreme Court to play a quasi-legislative role, but that the primary purpose of the above-mentioned reforms was once again to combat the backlog of cases.[268] Thus, the possibilities for individuals to appeal to the Supreme Court were gradually reduced to an almost symbolic position, and the respective legislators decided to rely on the decisions of the lower courts. A factor of reliability in their own justice, which already had a historical basis[269], was thus introduced into the system, turning the English and American Highest Courts into quasi-legislative bodies, issuing very few decisions each year – just over 100 – which are intended to serve as a guide for all lower courts in every aspect of the entire legal system[270].
  6. In this whole scenario of conditions and restrictions, which, as can be seen, comes almost exclusively from the common law system, the other states have done nothing but copying, probably attracted by the enormous reduction in the volume of cases involving these procedures. Thus arises – despite initial criticism[271] – the ‘grundsätzliche Bedeutung’ (fundamental significance) of Sec 511.4.1 and 522.1 GCCP with regard to appeal, and the same expression applied to Revision (appeal) in Sec 543.1, or the ‘Fortbildung des Rechts oder die Sicherung einer einheitlichen Rechtsprechung’ (further development of the law or ensuring uniform case law) of Sec 543.2 of the same law, although constitutionally no Revision with a chance of success is allowed to be rejected on this ground[272]. The same applies to Sec 477 of the Spanish Civil Procedure Act with the ‘interés casacional’(annulment interest)[273], which, moreover, the Supreme Court interpreted in an exaggeratedly restrictive manner, with the approval of the Constitutional Court[274], given that it considered constitutional a case law that absolutely exceeded the legal boundaries of discretion in the admission, overruling its own previous case law on the issue[275], which followed the ECtHR case law examined above. In the same vein, reference should also be made to Sec 502 ATCCP with the ‘Wahrung der Rechtseinheit, Rechtssicherheit oder Rechtsentwicklung erhebliche Bedeutung’ (preservation of legal unity, legal certainty or legal development of considerable importance).

2.1.2.2        The Formalism

  1. But there remains formalism, which is a very old strategy of the highest courts above all. Examples of this could be given in many states, ranging from the very delimitation of grounds for cassation, which attempt not to guide but to restrict the infringements that can be alleged, to simple and stupid bureaucratic requirements, such as those cited by a Spanish Supreme Court judge 50 years ago, saying that one of those unforgivable defects that caused the fulminating inadmissibility was that ‘infringements of rules of different content that should be denounced in different grounds and with different numbering’[276] were accumulated in the same ground of cassation. These abuses are precisely those which the ECtHR case law cited above helped to quash, being this case law taken up, as has been said, by the Spanish Constitutional Court[277].
  2. It is not a matter now of listing these requirements in each country.[278] In general, they have already been discarded, fortunately, by national case law[279], echoing the need to follow the ECtHR case law as far as possible in the field of interpretation[280]. This case law requires clarity of requirements, so that the admission of the appeal does not become an incalculable expectation, over and above the costs involved. The substance of the reasoning has in fact something to do with the prohibition of surprise decisions, which is also based on the case law of the ECtHR[281]. The Strasbourg[282] Court has had to develop its work in the face of the many requirements that are being imposed in France to restrict access to remedies[283], which obviously have had an effect on the French case law[284].
  3.  However, sometimes it seems that the work already done by the ECtHR is not enough. As can be seen in the French or Spanish example, as soon as a court is faced with an excessive volume of cases, it improvises new strategies of inadmissibility. This is why the reaffirmation of the ECtHR's case law will always be necessary, at least until one day we learn to control the workload of the courts with modern management methods, with the assistance of artificial intelligence in some cases, and without falling into the temptation of exaggeratedly narrowing access to the supreme courts with methods similar to certiorari. Were it not for respect for the method employed in this regard, first by the House of Lords, and since 2009 by the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, perhaps the ECtHR would have excluded this method of case selection as manifestly overly arbitrary as it really is.[285]

2.2        Re-assessment of Evidence in Appellate Proceedings

  1. One of the most controversial issues in recent times relates to the case law that prevents appeal-tribunals to search for errors in the evaluation of the evidence, if this evaluation depends on the immediacy of the court of first instance, as it is the case with all interrogations.
  2. This case law[286], in principle aimed only for the criminal procedure, which clearly comes from the common law jury system where it makes full sense, is not so understandable in a system in which there is a professional judge who motivates the judgments, unlike the jury, and therefore gives reasons for its assessment of every evidence, also interrogations.
  3. On the other hand, the scientific advances of the psychology of eyewitness testimony must be taken into account. They confirm that the gestures of a person can be very misleading.[287] Also if gestures have traditionally been one of the main points that judges have almost intuitively taken into account[288], perhaps the value of immediacy is not as high as it is thought. Instead, the piecemeal examination of the assessment of the trial judge about the interrogations might bring much better results, and in this task, immediacy might not be essential.[289]
  4. In light of these recent assessments, the traditional case law of the ECtHR on this point should probably be reviewed. It unreasonably restricts the courts' scrutiny in appeals simply because it relies on a tool that scientifically does not yet have the efficiency attributed to it, namely immediacy, thus unjustifiably restricting the litigants' possibilities of appeal.
  5. On the contrary, these possibilities should be extended to the criticism of the assessment of evidence, also when it consists of interrogations. The judge at first instance will have had to state in their reasoning the specific reasons why they decided to believe a witness. These reasons are not simply intuitive, let alone uncontrollable to the point of arbitrariness. On the contrary, they must be legitimately reviewed and verified in a second instance, leaving behind an obscurantism which, as we have seen, makes no sense, thus definitively enhancing the content of the right to appeal in its full extent.

2.3        The Requirement of Equal Access to an Equal Use of Remedies

  1. The right to appeal has not often been studied from the perspective of the economic needs of litigants. In other words, the right to free access to the courts for persons without financial means is generally studied, but not specifically at the appeal stage.
  2. However, the general provisions on legal aid are certainly applicable to the right to appeal. If we start from a case law that guarantees free access, it cannot be denied at one of the stages of the proceedings that the legislator has made available to citizens. Lacking other country contributions, at least this is the view of the US Supreme Court in M.L.B. v S.L.J.[290] Following its earlier case law in Lindsey v Normet[291] in which it held that ‘when an appeal is afforded [...] it cannot be granted to some litigants and capriciously or arbitrarily denied to others without violating the Equal Protection Clause’ [emphasis added].
  3. That is the general principle, applicable to any other circumstance affecting or individualising a human being.[292] However, apart from any other consideration in this regard that might be made, underlies the decision on whether or not there is a right to appeal. In Griffin v Illinois[293] the Supreme Court made an interesting point when it held that

There is no meaningful distinction between a rule which would deny the poor the right to defend themselves in a trial court and one which effectively denies the poor an adequate appellate review accorded to all who have money enough to pay the costs in advance.

  1. But nevertheless, in the same judgment, Justice Harlan – and in part Frankfurter – held that States could not be put in the position of deciding whether to provide for appellate review for everyone or not to provide for it at all.[294] It is precisely the dilemma that we have already seen that years later was accepted by the ECtHR, in the sense that it is legitimate to opt for one of the two options.
  2. This appeal in forma pauperis[295] should come as no surprise. Access to justice should be open to all citizens, irrespective of their economic or any other status, such as weak parties like consumers or insured persons. To discriminate against them in appealing their judgments, at least in the second instance, is simply not admissible from any perspective. Also, from the perspective of the parties' procedural powers and expectations, as was the case in France with regard to the litigant's obligation to indicate the points on which he is appealing in order to materialise the devolutive effect. A similar obligation was considered formalistic by the Cour de Cassation[296] in cases where the procedure does not require mandatory representation by a lawyer.
  3. Would it be different if we consider a final appeal, ie, an appeal to a highest court? Perhaps it could be argued that as this is an extraordinary appeal, restrictions for economic reasons would be admissible. But it is precisely through this reflection that it becomes clear, once again, why it is not possible to deny free access to justice on the basis of any human quality. What lies at the heart of the matter is not so much the right to free access to the courts, but rather the right to equality, from which all the considerations that have been made in the case law, as already suggested in Lindsey v Normet[297], stem. The right to a remedy cannot be restricted on economic grounds simply because that would be discriminatory. This is perhaps what, as we have seen, was difficult for many jurists to understand seventy years ago, and even now, but should now be grasped without any difficulty.
  4. Equal access could also be studied, not as a discrimination, but from the point of view of rules that would lead to a kind of unjustified privilege in some situations, such as the one that occurred in France in relation to the territory of Mayotte, with regard to which a time limit for lodging an appeal different from the ordinary one was provided by decree, which was not justified as the situation of Mayotte was not different from that of other overseas territories, and which was therefore disallowed by the Conseil constitutionnel[298].

Abbreviations and Acronyms

ACHR

ACHR

African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights

American Convention on Human Rights

CFREU

Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU

GCCP

German Code of Civil Procedure

ADR

Alternative Dispute Resolution

Art

Article/Articles

BRCCP

Brazilian Code of Civil Procedure

BVerfG

Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal Constitutional Court) [Germany]

BVerwG

Bundesverwaltungsgericht (Federal Administrative Court) [Germany]

Cass Civ

Cour de cassation, civile (Court of Cassation Civil Devision) [France]

cf

confer (compare)

CIDH

Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (Interamerican Court of Human Rights)

COJ

Code de l’organisation judicaire (Code of judicial organization) [France]

ECLI

European Case Law Identifier

ECHR

European Convention on Human Rights

EctHR

European Court of Human Rights

ed

editor/editors

edn

edition/editions

eg

exempli gratia (for example)

etc

et cetera

EUR

Euro

ff

following

fn

GG

footnote (external, ie, in other chapters or in citations)

Grundgesetz (Federal Constitution) (Germany)

ie

id est (that is)

NGO

Non-governmental organization

no

number/numbers

para

paragraph/paragraphs

PU

Presses Universitaires

Sec

Section/Sections

supp

supplement/supplements

UP

University Press

US / USA

United States of America

v

versus

vol

volume/volumes

Legislation

International/Supranational

African (Banjul) Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights 1986.

American Convention on Human Rights 1969.

Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union 2000.

Charter of the Organization of the American States 1951.

Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions. Union of Equality: LGBTIQ Equality Strategy 2020-2025. Brussels, 12.11.2020. COM(2020) 698 final 2020.

European Convention on Human Rights 1953.

First Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1976.

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966.

Protocol No. 7 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 2016.

Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples Rights 2020.

Recommendation CM/Rec(2010)5 of the Committee of Ministers to member states on measures to combat discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation or gender identity 2010.

Recommendation No. R (95) 5 of the Committee of Ministers to Member States concerning the Introduction and Improvement of the Functioning of Appeal Systems and Procedures in Civil and Commercial Cases 1995.

Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948.

National

Bill of Rights 1689 (England).

Bundesgerichtsgesetz 2017 (Federal Court Act) (Switzerland).

Ceza Muhakemesi Kanunu 2005 (Code of Criminal Procedure) (Turkey).

Code de l’organisation judicaire (Code of judicial organization) (France).

Code de procédure pénale 1959 (Code of Criminal Procedure) (France).

Código de Processo Civil 2015 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Brazil).

Constitution Act of Canada 1982.

Constitution of Albania 1998.

Constitution of Andorra 1993.

Constitution of Argentina 1853.

Constitution of Australia 1900.

Constitution of Austria 1920.

Constitution of Belgium 1831.

Constitution of Bolivia 2009.

Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina 1995.

Constitution of Botswana 1966.

Constitution of Brazil 1988.

Constitution of Bulgaria 1991.

Constitution of Chile 1980.

Constitution of Colombia 1991.

Constitution of Costa Rica 1949.

Constitution of Croatia 1990.

Constitution of Cyprus 1960.

Constitution of Denmark 1953.

Constitution of Ecuador 2008.

Constitution of Estonia 1992.

Constitution of Finland 1999.

Constitution of France 1958.

Constitution of Germany 1949.

Constitution of Ghana 1992.

Constitution of Greece 1975.

Constitution of Guatemala 1985.

Constitution of Honduras 1982.

Constitution of Hungary 2011.

Constitution of Iceland 1944.

Constitution of India 2020.

Constitution of Ireland 1937.

Constitution of Israel 1958.

Constitution of Italy 1947.

Constitution of Japan 1946.

Constitution of Korea 1948.

Constitution of Latvia 1922.

Constitution of Lithuania 1992.

Constitution of Luxemburg 1868.

Constitution of Macedonia 1991.

Constitution of Malaysia 1957.

Constitution of Malta 1964.

Constitution of Mexico 1917.

Constitution of Montenegro 2007.

Constitution of Namibia 1990.

Constitution of New Zealand 1986.

Constitution of Norway 1814.

Constitution of Panamá 1972.

Constitution of Paraguay 1992.

Constitution of Peru 1993.

Constitution of Poland 1997.

Constitution of Portugal 1976.

Constitution of Romania 1991.

Constitution of Serbia 2006.

Constitution of Slovakia 1992.

Constitution of Slovenia 1991.

Constitution of South Africa 1996.

Constitution of South Sudan 2011.

Constitution of Spain 1931.

Constitution of Spain 1978.

Constitution of Sweden 1974.

Constitution of Switzerland 1999.

Constitution of the Czech Republic 1992.

Constitution of the Dominican Republic 2010.  

Constitution of the Netherlands 2008.

Constitution of the Republic of Turkey 1982.

Constitution of the United States 1788.

Constitution of Tunisia 2014.

Constitution of Ukraine 1996.

Constitution of Uruguay 1830.

Décret November 27-December 1, 1790 (France).

Digest, XLIX, 5 art. 100- ex 30.

Gesetz über den Rechtsschutz bei überlangen Gerichtsverfahren und strafrechtlichen Ermittlungsverfahren 2011 (Law on legal protection in excessively long court proceedings and criminal investigations) (Germany).

Judiciary Act 1891 (Evarts Act) (United States).

Judiciary Act 1925 (United States).

Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil 2000 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Spain).

Ley organic del poder judicial 1985 (Organic Law of the judiciary) (Spain).

Magna Carta Liberatum 1215 (England).

Petition of Rights 1628 (England).

Provisional Constitution of the Federal Republic of Somalia 2012. Constitution of Italy, 1947.

Supreme Court Case Selection Act 1988 (United States).

Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 and 1875 (England).

Zivilprozessordnung 1895 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Austria).

Zivilprozessordnung 1950 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Germany).

Zivilprozessordnung 2011 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Switzerland).


Cases

International/Supranational

‘Cinco Pensionistas’ v Perú, Case Serie C No. 98 (CIDH), Judgment 28 February 2003.

Bámaca Velásquez v Guatemala, Case Serie C No. 70 (CIDH), Judgment 25 November 2000.

Bayev and others v Russia, Case 67667/09 (ECtHR), Judgment Final 13 November 2017.

Bazo González v Spain, Case 30643/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 16 December 2008 [ECLI:CE:‌ECHR:2008:1216JUD003064304].

Caso del Tribunal Constitucional v Perú, Case Serie C No. 71 (CIDH), Judgment 31 January 2001.

Caso del Tribunal Constitucional v Perú, Case Serie C No. 712 (CIDH), Judgment 31 January 2001.

Castillo Petruzzi y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 52 (CIDH), Judgment 30 May 1999.

Constantinescu v Romania, Case 28871/95 (ECtHR), Judgment 27 June 2000.

Davran v Turkey, Case 18342/03 (ECtHR), Judgment 3 November 2009 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:2009:1103JUD001834203].

De Cubber v Belgium, Case 9186/809 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 October 1984 [ECLI:CE:ECH‌R:1984:1026JUD000918680].

Dorado Baúlde v Spain, Case 23486/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 1 September 2015 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2015:0901DEC002348612].

Dorado Baúlde v Spain, Case 23486/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 24 September 2015 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2015:0901DEC002348612].

Ekbatani v Sweden, Case 10563/83 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 May 1988.

Evaggelou v Greece, Case 44078/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 13 January 2011 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:2011:0113JUD004407807].

Gil Sanjuan v Spain, Case 48297/15 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 May 2020 [ECLI:CE:ECH‌R:2020:0526JUD004829715].

Helmers v Sweden, Case 11826/85 (ECtHR), Judgment 29 October 1991 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:1991:1029JUD001182685].

Henrioud v France, Case 21444/11 (ECtHR), Judgment 5November 2015.

Igual Coll v Spain, Case 37496/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 10 March 2009.

Jan-Äke Andersson v Sweden, Case 11274/84 (ECtHR), Judgment 29 October 1991 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:1991:1029JUD001127484].

Johansen v Germany, Case 17914/10 (ECtHR), Judgment 15 September 2016 [ECLI:CE:‌ECHR:2016:0915JUD001791410].

Labergère v France, Case 16846/02 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 September 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:0926JUD001684602].

Makungu v Tanzania (merits) (ACHR), (2018) 2 African Court Law Report 550.

Mallya v Tanzania (merits and reparations) (ACHR), (2019) 3 African Court Law Report 482.

Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:E‌CHR:2009:0625JUD005575907].

Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:E‌CHR:2009:0625JUD005575907].

Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:E‌CHR:2009:0625JUD005575907].

Popovici v Moldavia, Case 38178/08 (ECtHR), Judgment 24 June 2014 [ECLI:CE:ECH‌R:2014:0624DEC003817808].

Randstad Italia SpA v Umana SpA, Case C-497/20 (ECJ Grand Chamber), Judgment 21 December 2021 [ECLI:EU:C:2021:1037].

Reichman v France, Case 50147/11 (ECtHR), Judgment 12 July 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:0712JUD005014711].

San Miguel Sosa y otras v Venezuela, Case Serie C No. 3485 (CIDH), Judgment 8 February 2018.

Trabajadores Cesados de Petroperú y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 344 (CIDH), Judgment 23 November 2017.

Velásquez Rodríguez v Honduras, Case Serie C No. 123 (CIDH), Judgment 26 June 1987.

Walchli v France, Case 35787/03 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 July 2007 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:200‌7:0726JUD003578703].

Werema v Tanzania (merits) (ACHR), (2018) 2 African Court Law Report 520.

Xavier Lucas v France, Case 15567/20 (ECtHR), Judgment 9 June 2022 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:2022:0609JUD001556720].

National

Abney v United States (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 9 June 1977 [431 U.S. 651].

Case 1 BvR 1750/19 (BVerfG, Germany) [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2020:rk20200218.1bvr17501‌9].

Case 1 BvR 2965/10 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 5 August 2013 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2013:‌rk20130805.1bvr296510].

Case 1 BvR 547/06 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 24 July 2008 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2008:rk‌20080724.1bvr054706].

Case 1 PBvU 1/02 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 30 April 2003 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2003:up‌20030430.1pbvu000102].

Case 190-2020 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 190/2020 of 15 December [ECLI:ES:TC:2020:190].

Case 2 BvR 1380/08 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 18. August 2013 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2013‌:rk20130818.2bvr138008].

Case 2 BvR 831/76 (BverfG, Germany), (1979) 34(1) Juristenzeitung 20.

Case 2 C 5.99 (BVerwG, Germany), Judgment 21 September 2000, NVwZ 2000, 810.

Case 90 Hun-Ba 26 (Constitutional Court, Korea), Decision 26 June 1992.

Case Cass. civ. 1, 19-22.508 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 27 January 2021 [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2021:C100102].

Case Cass. civ. 2, 17-28.285 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 21 February 2019 [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2019:C200274].

Case Cass. Civ. 2, 18-23.626 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 17 September 2020 [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2020:C200827].

Case Pourvoi 20-13.662, (Cour de cassation, France), 9 September 2021.

Case SSTC 150 y 164/2004 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 4 October 2004 [ECLI:ES:TC:2004:164].

Case STC 56/1982 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 26 July 1982 [ECLI:ES:TC:1982:56].

Eisenstadt v Baird (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 22 March 1972 [405 U.S. 438].

Griffin v Illinois (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 23 April 1956 [351 U.S. 12].

Judgment 8.1.1806 (1806) 373(1) Journal du Palais 442.

Lindsey v Normet (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 23 February 1972 [405 U.S. 56].

M. L. B. v S. L. J. (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 16 December 1996 [519 U.S. 102].

Marbury v Madison (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 24 February 1803 [5 U.S. 137].

Miranda v Arizona (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 1 March 1966 [384 U.S. 436].

Nardone v U.S. (Supreme Court, US), Judgment11 December 1939 [308 U.S. 338].

Rice v Sioux City Memorial Park Cemetery Inc. et al (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 9 May 1955 [349 U.S. 70 (1955)].

Silverthorne Lumber Co. v United States (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 26 January 1920 [251 U.S. 385].

Société Horizon OI et autre [Délai d'appel des jugements rendus par le tribunal du travail de Mamoudzou], Case  2017-641 QPC (Cour de cassation, France), Decision 30 June [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2017:C200782].

Weeks v US (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 24 February 1914 [232 U.S. 383].


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[1] C B Robertson, ‘The Right to Appeal’ (2013) 91(4) North Carolina Law Review 1219.

[2] M Kaser and K Hackl, Das römische Zivilprozessrecht (Beck 1996) 46, 501.

[3] A B Kootz, Der altägyptische Staat. Untersuchung aus politikwissenschaftlicher Sicht (Menes: Studien zur Kultur und Sprache der ägyptischen Frühzeit und des Alten Reiches) (vol 4, Harrassowitz 2006) 68.

[4] W S Holdsworth, A History of English Law (vol 1, Methuen 1922) 215; J T Jr Hood, ‘The Right of Appeal’ (1969) 29(3) Louisiana Law Review 498.

[5] J Nieva-Fenoll, ‘The English Origin of French Cassation’ (2022) 42(1) Civil Justice Quarterly 31.

[6] W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 455; D Djukic, ‘The Right to Appeal in Comparative Perspective’ (2018) 19(2) The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process 214.

[7] See W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 1, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 3.

[8] T A Thomas, ‘Ubi Jus, Ibi Remedium: The Fundamental Right to a Remedy under Due Process’ (2004) 41(4) San Diego Law Review 1633; T R Phillips, ‘The Constitutional Right to a Remedy’ (2003) 78(4) New York University Law Review 1309; D Schuman, ‘The Right to a Remedy’ (1992) 65(4) Temple Law Review 1197; K Gutman, ‘The Essence of the Fundamental Right to an Effective Remedy and to a Fair Trial in the Case-Law of the Court of Justice of the European Union: The Best Is Yet to Come?’ (2019) 20(6) German Law Journal 889; B P Cover, ‘The First Amendment Right to a Remedy’ (2017) 50 University of California Davis Law Review 1741.

[9] L B Orfield, ‘Right of Appeal in Criminal Cases’ (1935-1936) 34 Michigan Law Review 937.

[10] See on the idea of unifying civil and criminal procedures, I Meyn, ‘Why Civil and Criminal Procedure Are So Different: A Forgotten History’ (2017) 86(2) Fordham Law Review 697.

[11] ‘Everyone convicted of a crime shall have the right to his conviction and sentence being reviewed by a higher tribunal according to law’.

[12] Art 2 ECHR: Right of appeal in criminal matters: ‘1. Everyone convicted of a criminal offence by a tribunal shall have the right to have his conviction or sentence reviewed by a higher tribunal. The exercise of this right, including the grounds on which it may be exercised, shall be governed by law. 2. This right may be subject to exceptions in regard to offences of a minor character, as prescribed by law, or in cases in which the person concerned was tried in the first instance by the highest tribunal or was convicted following an appeal against acquittal’.

[13] H L Dalton, ‘Taking the Right to Appeal (More or Less) Seriously’ (1985) 95(1) Yale Law Journal 62, 101; P D Marshall, ‘A Comparative Analysis of the Right to Appeal’ (2011) 22(1) Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law 1, 5.

[14] C B Robertson, ‘The Right to Appeal’ (2013) 91(4) North Carolina Law Review 1219.

[15] M Taboada Roca, La casación civil española en alguna de sus complejidades (Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación, 1977) 9; M Serra Domínguez, Estudios de Derecho Procesal (Ariel 1969) 438; M Taruffo, ‘La Corte di Cassazione e la legge’ (1990) 2 Rivista Trimestrale di Diritto e Procedura Civile 349; S Chiarloni, ‘In difesa della nomofilachia’ (1992) Rivista Trimestrale di Diritto e Procedura Civile 123. In Argentina, A M Morello, La casación, un modelo intermedio eficiente (Abeledo-Perrot 2000) 198. In Venezuela, A Abreu Burelli and L A Mejía Arnal, La casación civil (Juridica ALVA 2005) 201. See also E Honorat, ‘Plaider un pourvoi devant la Cour de justice’ in V Christianos (ed), Evolution récente du droit judiciaire communautaire (vol I, Institut européen d’administration publique 1994) 37; J F van Drooghenbroeck and D Mougenot, ‘Le formalisme dans la procédure de cassation en Belgique' in C Chainais, J F van Drooghenbroeck, A Saletti and B Hess (ed), Quel avenir pour les juridictions suprêmes? Etudes de droit comparé de la cassation en matière civile (Larcier 2021) 187. J Boré, La cassation en matière civile (Sirey 1980) 729; P Bellet, ‘Grandeur et servitudes de la Cour de cassation’ (1980) 32(2) Revue internationale de droit comparé 293, 299. From a different point of view, F Ferrand, Cassation française et Revision allemande (Presses Universitaires de France 1993) 242.

[16] ‘[...] Contro le sentenze e contro i provvedimenti sulla libertà personale, pronunciati dagli organi giurisdizionali ordinari o speciali, è sempre ammesso ricorso in Cassazione per violazione di legge. [...]’.

[17] See also Art 24: ‘Tutti possono agire in giudizio per la tutela dei propri diritti e interessi legittimi. La difesa è diritto inviolabile in ogni stato e grado del procedimento. […]’.

[18] See C Consolo, Spiegazioni di diritto processuale civile (Giappichelli 2012) 372. S Satta and C Punzi, Diritto Processuale Civile (12th edn, CEDAM 1996) 591.

[19] L Passanante, Il precedente impossibile (Giappichelli 2018) 3.

[20] See Democracy Countries (2022) https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/democracy-countries accessed 2 July 2024.

[21] Constitution Act of Canada (1982) https://laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/Const/page-12.html accessed 2 July 2024.

[22] Constitution of Switzerland (1999) https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/1999/404/de accessed 2 July 2024.

[23] With a slight and disputable exception with a final appeal: Art 191 of the Swiss Constitution.

[25] Constitution of Germany (1949) https://www.gesetze-im-intern‌et.de/gg/BJNR000010949.html accessed 2 July 2024.

[26] Constitution of Austria (1920) http://www.verfassungen.at/indexheute.htm accessed 2 July 2024.

[27] Constitution of Spain (1978) https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-1978-31229 accessed 2 July 2024.

[28] Constitution of Andorra (1993) https://www.cijc.org/es/NuestrasCon‌stituciones/ANDORRA-Constitucion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[30] Constitution of Belgium (1831) https://www.senate.be/doc/const_fr.html accessed 2 July 2024.

[31] Constitution of Luxemburg (1868) https://www.chd.lu/sites/default/files/2023-04/Constitution‌_en%203%20langues.pdf accessed 2 September 2024.

[32] Constitution of Greece (1975) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Greece‌_2008.pdf?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[33] Constitution of the Republic of Turkey (1982) https://www.anayasa.gov.tr/m‌edia/7258/anayasa_eng.pdf  accessed 2 September 2024.

[34] Constitution of Denmark (1953) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Den‌mark_1953.pdf?lang=en accessed 2 July 2025.

[36] Constitution of Iceland (1944) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Iceland_2013.pdf‌?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[37] Constitution of Latvia (1922) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Latvia_2016?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[38] Constitution of the Czech Republic (1992) https://www.psp.cz/en/docs/laws/1993/1.html accessed 2 July 2024.

[39] Constitution of Slovakia (1992) https://www.prezident.sk/upload-files/46422.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[40] Constitution of Hungary (2011) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Hungary_2011.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[41] Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1995) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/B‌osnia_Herzegovina_2009.pdf?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[42] Constitution of Argentina (1853) https://pdba.georgetown.edu/Parties/Argentina/Leyes/constitu‌cion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[43] Constitution of Paraguay (1992) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Paraguay_2011.p‌df?lang=es accessed 2 July 2024.

[44] Constitution of Peru (1993) https://www.oas.org/juridico/spanish/per_res17.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[45] Constitution of Ecuador (2008) https://www.oas.org/juridico/pdfs/mesicic4_ecu_const.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[46] Constitution of Costa Rica (1949)  https://pdba.georgetown.edu/Parties/CostaRica/Leyes/constitu‌cion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[47] Constitution of Panamá (1972) https://pdba.georgetown.edu/Constitutions/Panama/vigente.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[48] Constitution of Honduras (1982) https://www.oas.org/dil/esp/constitucion_de_honduras.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[49] Constitution of Bolivia (2009) https://www.oas.org/dil/esp/constitucion_bolivia.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[52] See also Case 90 Hun-Ba 26 (Constitutional Court, Korea) Decision 26 June 1992.

[53] Provisional Constitution of the Federal Republic of Somalia (2012) http://hrlibrary.umn.edu/rese‌arch/Somalia-Constitution2012.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[54] Constitution of New Zealand (1986) https://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1986/0114/latest/‌DLM94204.html accessed 2 July 2024.

[55] See Abney v United States (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 9 June 1977 [431 U.S. 651].

[56] See S Guinchard et al, Droit processuel (Dalloz 2021) 800.

[58] H G Fins, ‘Is the Right of Appeal Protected by the Fourteenth Amendment’ (1971) 54(7) Judicature 296.

[59] Constitution of Portugal (1976) https://www.parlamento.pt/Legislacao/Paginas/ConstituicaoRepu‌blicaPortuguesa.aspx accessed 2 July 2024.

[60] Constitution of Finland (1999) https://finlex.fi/en/laki/kaannokset/1999/en19990731 accessed 2 July 2024.

[61] Constitution of Lithuania (1992) https://lrkt.lt/en/about-the-court/legal-information/the-constitu‌tion/192 accessed 2 September 2024.

[62] Constitution of Bulgaria (1991) https://www.parliament.bg/en/const accessed 2 July 2024.

[63] Constitution of Albania (1998) https://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?‌pdffile=CDL-REF(2016)064-e accessed 2 September 2024.

[64] Constitution of Chile (1980) https://www.oas.org/dil/esp/constitucion_chile.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[65] Constitution of Uruguay (1830) https://parlamento.gub.uy/documentosyleyes/constitucion accessed 2 July 2024.

[66] Constitution of Guatemala (1985) https://www.cijc.org/es/NuestrasConstituciones/GUATEMALA-Constitucion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[67] Constitution of Brazil (1988) http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/constituicao/constituicao.htm accessed 2 July 2024.

[68] However, it is perceived by the quite dominant doctrine as a constitutional principle (so-called princípio do duplo grau de jurisdição (principle of double jurisdiction)), especially due to the structure of the Brazilian judicial system. The discussion plays a practical role in Art 1013 Sec 3o Brazilian Code of Civil Procedure (BRCCP), the so-called teoria da causa madura (theory of the ripe action). This provision allows the appellate court to rule on the merits of the action in certain cases, even if the judge of first instance did not rule on the action or if the first instance judgment was declared null and void. Even if in this case the party has asserted its right to appeal, part of the literature is of the opinion that, according to the princípio do duplo grau de jurisdição, the parties should have the right to have the action decided first by the judge of first instance and that Art 1013 Sec 3o BRCCP is accordingly unconstitutional.

[69] Constitution of the Dominican Republic (2010) https://www.cijc.org/es/NuestrasConstituciones/‌REP%C3%9ABLICA-DOMINICANA-Constitucion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[70] Constitution of Mexico (1917) https://www.diputados.gob.mx/LeyesBiblio/pdf/CPEUM.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[71] Constitution of Malaysia (1957) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Malaysia_2007.pd‌f?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[72] Constitution of South Sudan (2011) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/South_Suda‌n_2011.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[73] Constitution of Namibia (1990) https://www.lac.org.na/laws/annoSTAT/Namibian%20Constitut‌ion.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[74] Constitution of Botswana (1966) http://www.commonlii.org/bw/legis/const/1966/ accessed 2 July 2024.

[75] Constitution of South Africa (1996) https://www.gov.za/documents/constitution-republic-south-africa-1996 accessed 2 July 2024.

[76] Constitution of Ireland (1937) https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/cons/en/html accessed 2 July 2024.

[77] ‘The Court of Appeal shall – i. save as otherwise provided by this Article and, ii. with such exceptions and subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by law, have appellate jurisdiction from all decisions of the High Court, and shall also have appellate jurisdiction from such decisions of other courts as may be prescribed by law’ [emphasis added].

[79] ‘The High Court shall have jurisdiction, with such exceptions and subject to such regulations as the Parliament prescribes, to hear and determine appeals from all judgments, decrees, orders, and sentences: (i). of any Justice or Justices exercising the original jurisdiction of the High Court; (ii). of any other federal court, or court exercising federal jurisdiction; or of the Supreme Court of any State, or of any other court of any State from which at the establishment of the Commonwealth an appeal lies to the Queen in Council; (iii). of the Inter-State Commission, but as to questions of law only; and the judgment of the High Court in all such cases shall be final and conclusive’ [emphasis added].

[80] Constitution of India (2020) https://legislative.gov.in/constitution-of-india/ accessed 2 September 2024.

[81] Art 133 of the Constitution of India: ‘Appellate jurisdiction of Supreme Court in appeals from High Courts in regard to civil matters.— (1) An appeal shall lie to the Supreme Court from any judgment, decree or final order in a civil proceeding of a High Court in the territory of India if the High Court certifies under article 134A: (a) that the case involves a substantial question of law of general importance; and (b) that in the opinion of the High Court the said question needs to be decided by the Supreme Court. (2) Notwithstanding anything in article 132, any party appealing to the Supreme Court under clause (1) may urge as one of the grounds in such appeal that a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of this Constitution has been wrongly decided. (3) Notwithstanding anything in this article, no appeal shall, unless Parliament by law otherwise provides, lie to the Supreme Court from the judgment, decree or final order of one Judge of a High Court’.

Art 134A of the Constitution of India: ‘Certificate for appeal to the Supreme Court.—Every High Court, passing or making a judgment, decree, final order, or sentence, referred to in clause (1) of article 132 or clause (1) of article 133, or clause (1) of article 134,— (a) may, if it deems fit so to do, on its own motion; and (b) shall, if an oral application is made, by or on behalf of the party aggrieved, immediately after the passing or making of such judgment, decree, final order or sentence, determine, as soon as may be after such passing or making, the question whether a certificate of the nature referred to in clause (1) of article 132, or clause (1) of article 133 or, as the case may be, sub-clause (c) of clause (1) of article 134, may be given in respect of that case’.

[82] Constitution of Israel (1958) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Israel_2013.pdf?l‌ang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[83] Section 17 of the Basic Law: The Judiciary (1984) (Israel): ‘A judgment of a court of first instance, other than a judgment of the Supreme Court, shall be appealable as of right’.

[84] Constitution of Malta (1964) https://legislation.mt/eli/const/eng/pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[85] Art 95 of the Constitution of Malta: ‘(1) There shall be in and for Malta such Superior Courts having such powers and jurisdiction as may be provided by any law for the time being in force in Malta.

(2) One of the Superior Courts, composed of such three judges as could, in accordance with any law for the time being in force in Malta, compose the Court of Appeal, shall be known as the Constitutional Court and shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine – […] (c) appeals from decisions of the Civil Court, First Hall, under article 46 of this Constitution’.

[86] Constitution of Cyprus (1960) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Cyprus_2013.pdf‌?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[87] Art 23.11 of the Constitution of Cyprus: ‘Any interested person shall have the right of recourse to the court in respect of or under any of the provisions of this Article, and such recourse shall act as a stay of proceedings for the compulsory acquisition; and in case of any restriction or limitation imposed under paragraph 3 of this Article, the court shall have power to order stay of any proceedings in respect thereof. Any decision of the court under this paragraph shall be subject to appeal’.

[88] Art 111.4 of the Constitution of Cyprus: ‘Law shall provide for appeal against decisions of the family courts, for the composition of those who shall adjudicate and decide on these appeals and for the jurisdiction and powers of these appellate courts. A law enacted in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph may provide that the appellate court may be composed of one or more judges of the Supreme Court, sitting alone or together with another judge or other judges belonging to the judicial service of the Republic as the law may provide’.

[89] Art 155.1 of the Constitution of Cyprus: ‘The High Court shall be the highest appellate court in the Republic and shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine, subject to the provisions of this Constitution and of any Rules of Court made thereunder, all appeals from any court other than the Supreme Constitutional Court’.

[90] ‘Art 104. The Supreme Court of the U.S.S.R. is the highest judicial organ. The Supreme Court of the U.S.S.R. is charged with the supervision of the judicial activities of all the judicial organs of the U.S.S.R. and of the Union Republics’.

[91] Constitution of Estonia (1992) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Estonia_2015. pdf? ‌lang=en accessed 2 July 2024.

[92] Art 24 of the Constitution of Estonia: ‘[…] Everyone has the right of appeal to a higher court against the judgment in his or her case pursuant to procedure provided by law’.

[93] Constitution of Poland (1997) https://www.sejm.gov.pl/prawo/konst/angielski/kon1.htm accessed 2 July 2024.

[94] Art 78 of the Constitution of Poland: ‘Each party shall have the right to appeal against judgments and decisions made at first stage. Exceptions to this principle and the procedure for such appeals shall be specified by statute’.

[95] Constitution of Romania (1991) https://www.presidency.ro/en/the-constitution-of-romania accessed 2 July 2024.

[96] ‘Against decisions of the court, the parties concerned and the Public Ministry may exercise ways of appeal, in accordance with the law’.

[98] Art 25 of the Constitution of Slovenia: ‘Everyone shall be guaranteed the right to appeal or to any other legal remedy against the decisions of courts and other state authorities, local community authorities and bearers of public authority by which his rights, duties or legal interests are determined’.

[100] Art 18 of the Constitution of Croatia: ‘The right to appeal against individual legal decisions made in first-instance proceedings by courts or other authorized bodies shall be guaranteed. By way of exception, the right to appeal may be denied in cases specified by law if other legal protections are ensured’.

[101] Constitution of Serbia (2006) https://www.srbija.gov.rs/tekst/en/130144/constitution-of-serbia. ‌php accessed 2 September 2024.

[102] Art 36 of the Constitution of Serbia: ‘Equal protection of rights before courts and other state bodies, entities exercising public powers and bodies of the autonomous province or local self-government shall be guaranteed. Everyone shall have the right to an appeal or other legal remedy against any decision on his rights, obligations or lawful interests’.

[104] Art 15 of the Constitution of Macedonia: ‘The right to appeal against individual legal acts issued in a first instance proceedings by a court, administrative body, organization or other institution carrying out public mandates is guaranteed’.

[105] Constitution of Montenegro (2007) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Montenegro‌_2007.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[106] Art 20 of the Constitution of Montenegro: ‘Everyone shall have the right to legal remedy against the decision ruling on the right or legally based interest thereof’.

[107] Constitution of Ukraine (1996) https://www.refworld.org/pdfid/44a280124.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[108] Art 129.8 of the Constitution of Ukraine: ‘While administering justice, a judge is independent and governed by the rule of law. The main principles of justice are: […] 8) ensuring the right to appeal and, in cases prescribed by law, the right to cassation of court decision’.

[110] Art 31 of the Constitution of Colombia: ‘Toda sentencia judicial podrá ser apelada o consultada, salvo las excepciones que consagre la ley. [...]’.

[111] Constitution of Tunisia (2014) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Tunisia_2014.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[112] Art 108 of the Constitution of Tunisia: ‘[…] The right to litigation and the right to defence are guaranteed. The law facilitates access to justice and provides legal assistance to those without financial means. The law guarantees the double degree of jurisdiction. [...]’.

[113] Constitution of Ghana (1996) https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Ghana_1996.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[114] Art 138.b of the Constitution of Ghana (1992): ‘In civil matters, any order, direction or decision made or given in exercise of the powers conferred by this article, may be varied, discharged or reversed by the Court of Appeal as duly constituted’.

[115] Constitution of Norway (1814) https://lovdata.no/dokument/NLE/lov/1814-05-17 accessed 2 July 2024.

[116] Art 88 Constitution of Norway: ‘The Supreme Court pronounces judgment in the final instance. Nevertheless, limitations on the right to bring a case before the Supreme Court may be prescribed by law. The Supreme Court shall consist of a President and at least four other Members’.

Art 89 Constitution of Norway ‘In cases brought before the Courts, the Courts have the power and the duty to review whether applying a statutory provision is contrary to the Constitution, and whether applying other decisions under the exercise of public authority is contrary to the Constitution or the law of the land’.

Art 90 Constitution of Norway: ‘The judgments of the Supreme Court may in no case be appealed’.

Art 90 is the ancient Sec 91: ‘Høiesterets Domme kunne i intet Tilfælde paaankes eller underkastes Revision’.

[117] Constitution of Italy (1947) https://www.senato.it/istituzione/la-costituzione accessed 2 July 2024.

[118] Art 24 of the Constitution of Italy: ‘Tutti possono agire in giudizio per la tutela dei propri diritti e interessi legittimi. La difesa è diritto inviolabile in ogni stato e grado del procedimento. [...]’.

[119] Art 111 Constitution of Italy: ‘Contro le sentenze e contro i provvedimenti sulla libertà personale, pronunciati dagli organi giurisdizionali ordinari o speciali, è sempre ammesso ricorso in Cassazione per violazione di legge. Si può derogare a tale norma soltanto per le sentenze dei tribunali militari in tempo di guerra’.

[120] M Taruffo, La motivazione della sentenza civile (Cedam 1975) 474 ff. M Taruffo, ‘Le novità nel giudizio di cassazione’ (Treccani 2016) https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/le-novita-nel-giudizio-di-cassazione_%28Il-Libro-dell%27anno-del-Diritto%29/ accessed 2 July 2024.

[121] P Calamandrei, ‘La Cassazione civile, Milano 1920’ in P Calamandrei, Opere Giuridiche Vol VI and VII (RomaTre 1976).

[122] Art 8 Universal Declaration on Human Rights: ‘Everyone has the right to an effective remedy by the competent national tribunals for acts violating the fundamental rights granted him by the constitution or by law.’. Art 10: ‘Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal, in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any criminal charge against him’.

[123] Art 14 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: ‘1. All persons shall be equal before the courts and tribunals. In the determination of any criminal charge against him, or of his rights and obligations in a suit at law, everyone shall be entitled to a fair and public hearing by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law. The press and the public may be excluded from all or part of a trial for reasons of morals, public order (ordre public) or national security in a democratic society, or when the interest of the private lives of the parties so requires, or to the extent strictly necessary in the opinion of the court in special circumstances where publicity would prejudice the interests of justice; but any judgement rendered in a criminal case or in a suit at law shall be made public except where the interest of juvenile persons otherwise requires or the proceedings concern matrimonial disputes or the guardianship of children.

2. Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall have the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.

3. In the determination of any criminal charge against him, everyone shall be entitled to the following minimum guarantees, in full equality: (a) To be informed promptly and in detail in a language which he understands of the nature and cause of the charge against him;

(b) To have adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his defence and to communicate with counsel of his own choosing;

(c) To be tried without undue delay;

(d) To be tried in his presence, and to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing; to be informed, if he does not have legal assistance, of this right; and to have legal assistance assigned to him, in any case where the interests of justice so require, and without payment by him in any such case if he does not have sufficient means to pay for it;

(e) To examine, or have examined, the witnesses against him and to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses on his behalf under the same conditions as witnesses against him;

(f) To have the free assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand or speak the language used in court;

(g) Not to be compelled to testify against himself or to confess guilt.

4. In the case of juvenile persons, the procedure shall be such as will take account of their age and the desirability of promoting their rehabilitation.

5. Everyone convicted of a crime shall have the right to his conviction and sentence being reviewed by a higher tribunal according to law.

6. When a person has by a final decision been convicted of a criminal offence and when subsequently his conviction has been reversed or he has been pardoned on the ground that a new or newly discovered fact shows conclusively that there has been a miscarriage of justice, the person who has suffered punishment as a result of such conviction shall be compensated according to law, unless it is proved that the non-disclosure of the unknown fact in time is wholly or partly attributable to him.

7. No one shall be liable to be tried or punished again for an offence for which he has already been finally convicted or acquitted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of each country’.

[124] European Convention on Human Rights 1953, https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/conventio‌n_eng.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[125] Art 47 CFREU: ‘Everyone whose rights and freedoms guaranteed by the law of the Union are violated has the right to an effective remedy before a tribunal in compliance with the conditions laid down in this Article.

Everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal previously established by law. Everyone shall have the possibility of being advised, defended and represented.

Legal aid shall be made available to those who lack sufficient resources in so far as such aid is necessary to ensure effective access to justice’.

[126] De Cubber v Belgium, Case 9186/809 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 October 1984 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:1984:1026JUD000918680] Sec 32: ‘Article 6 Sec 1 (art. 6-1) concerns primarily courts of first instance; it does not require the existence of courts of further instance’. Dorado Baúlde v Spain, Case 23486/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 1 September 2015 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2015:0901DEC002348612] Sec 18: ‘As regards the applicant's complaint under Article 13 in conjunction with Article 6 of the Convention, the Court recalls that neither Article 6 of the Convention nor Article 13 guarantees, as such, a right of appeal or a right to a second level of jurisdiction (see, mutatis mutandis, Nurhan Yılmaz v. Turkey (no. 2), no. 16741/04, § 21, 8 April 2008, and Gurepka v. Ukraine, no. 61406/00, § 51, 6 September 2005’.

[127] Randstad Italia SpA v Umana SpA, Case C-497/20 (ECJ, Grand Chamber), Judgment 21 December 2021 [ECLI:EU:C:2021:1037] Sec 84.

[128] Council of Europe, Committee of Ministers, Recommendation No (95) 5 of 7 February 1995 https://rm.coe.int/CoERMPublicCommonSearchServices/DisplayDCTMContent?documentId=0900001680505f3c accessed 2 July 2024.

[129] See W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (Vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 455: ‘[…] an appeal to the king in parliament was always unquestionable allowed. But no new evidence is admitted in the house of lords upon any account, for this a distinct jurisdiction: which differs it very considerably from those instances, wherein the same jurisdiction revises and corrects its own acts, as in rehearings and bills of review. For it is a practice unknown to our law, (though constantly followed in the spiritual courts) when a superior court is reviewing a sentence of an inferior, to examine the justice of the former decree by evidence that was never produced below. This is the general method of proceeding in the courts of equity’.

[130] A L Freedman ‘The Writ of Error Coram Nobis’ (1929) 3(4) Temple Law Quarterly 365.

[131] Art 8 Inter-American Convention on Human Rights: ‘Right to a Fair Trial. […] 2.    Every person accused of a criminal offense has the right to be presumed innocent so long as his guilt has not been proven according to law. During the proceedings, every person is entitled, with full equality, to the following minimum guarantees: h.    the right to appeal the judgment to a higher court’.

[132] Trabajadores Cesados de Petroperú y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 344 (CIDH), Judgment 23 November 2017 Excepciones Preliminares, Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas; Bámaca Velásquez v Guatemala, Case Serie C No. 70 (CIDH), Judgment 25 November 2000 Fondo; Caso del Tribunal Constitucional v Perú, Case Serie C No. 712 (CIDH), Judgment 31 January 2001 Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas.

[133] San Miguel Sosa y otras v Venezuela, Case Serie C No. 3485 (CIDH), Judgment 8 February 2018 Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas.

[134] Trabajadores Cesados de Petroperú y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 344 (CIDH), Judgment 23 November 2017 Excepciones Preliminares, Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas.

[136] The official homepage of the African Court of Human and People‘s Rights available at https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/ accessed 2 July 2024.

[137] Mallya v Tanzania (merits and reparations) (African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHR)), (2019) 3 African Court Law Report 482 Sec 43. https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/african-court-law-report-volume-3-2019/ accessed 2 July 2024. Werema v Tanzania (merits) (ACHR), (2018) 2 African Court Law Report 520 Sec 68. Makungu v Tanzania (merits) (ACHR), (2018) 2 African Court Law Report 550 Sec 57 https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/African-Court-Law-Re‌port-Volume2-2017-2018.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[138] See Case 1 PBvU 1/02 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 30 April 2003 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2003:up20030430.1‌pbvu000102], Juris, Sec 49: ‘If the alleged violation of the fundamental procedural right occurs at the last instance provided for in the Rules of Procedure and if the error is material to the decision, the Rules of Procedure must provide for an independent judicial remedy’.

[139] S Guinchard et al, Droit processuel, Droits fondamentaux du procès (11th edn, Dalloz 2021) n 348.

[140] See R Laffly, ‘Recours pour excès de pouvoir contre l’ordonnance de radiation’ (2020) Cour de cassation, civile (Cass Civ) 2, 9.1.2020, no 18-19.301, Dalloz Actualité; N Hoffschir, ‘Le recours pour excès de pouvoir s’infiltre dans les mesures d’administration judiciare’ (2022) Civ 2e, 16.12.2021, no 19-243, Dalloz Actualité.

[141]Art 43 of National Argentinian Constitution: ‘Toda persona puede interponer acción expedita y rápida de amparo, siempre que no exista otro medio judicial más idóneo, contra todo acto u omisión de autoridades públicas o de particulares, que en forma actual o inminente lesione, restrinja, altere o amenace, con arbitrariedad o ilegalidad manifiesta, derechos y garantías reconocidos por esta Constitución, un tratado o una ley. En el caso, el juez podrá declarar la inconstitucionalidad de la norma en que se funde el acto u omisión lesiva. Podrán interponer esta acción contra cualquier forma de discriminación y en lo relativo a los derechos que protegen al ambiente, a la competencia, al usuario y al consumidor, así como a los derechos de incidencia colectiva en general, el afectado, el defensor del pueblo y las asociaciones que propendan a esos fines, registradas conforme a la ley, la que determinará los requisitos y formas de su organización. Toda persona podrá interponer esta acción para tomar conocimiento de los datos a ella referidos y de su finalidad, que consten en registros o bancos de datos públicos, o los privados destinados a proveer informes, y en caso de falsedad o discriminación, para exigir la supresión, rectificación, confidencialidad o actualización de aquellos. No podrá afectarse el secreto de las fuentes de información periodística. Cuando el derecho lesionado, restringido, alterado o amenazado fuera la libertad física, o en caso de agravamiento ilegítimo en la forma o condiciones de detención, o en el de desaparición forzada de personas, la acción de habeas corpus podrá ser interpuesta por el afectado o por cualquiera en su favor y el juez resolverá de inmediato aun durante la vigencia del estado de sitio’.

[142] Art 134 of Amparo: ‘All persons that for an act or an omission, manifestly illegitimate, of an authority or of a particular [person], consider themselves gravely affected, or in imminent danger to become so in rights and guarantees consecrated in this Constitution or in the law, and that due to the urgency of the case may not be remedied through the ordinary way [via], may promote amparo before the competent magistrate [...]’.

[143] Art 88 of the Constitution of the Republic of Ecuador: ‘La acción de protección tendrá por objeto el amparo directo y eficaz de los derechos reconocidos en la Constitución, y podrá interponerse cuando exista una vulneración de derechos constitucionales, por actos u omisiones de cualquier autoridad pública no judicial; contra políticas públicas cuando supongan la privación del goce o ejercicio de los derechos constitucionales; y cuando la violación proceda de una persona particular, si la violación del derecho provoca daño grave, si presta servicios públicos impropios, si actúa por delegación o concesión, o si la persona afectada se encuentra en estado de subordinación, indefensión o discriminación’.

[144] Art 103 and 107 of the Political Constitution of the Mexican United States.

[145] Art 72 of the Constitution of the Dominican Republic: ‘Acción de amparo. Toda persona tiene derecho a una acción de amparo para reclamar ante los tribunales, por sí o por quien actúe en su nombre, la protección inmediata de sus derechos fundamentales, no protegidos por el hábeas corpus, cuando resulten vulnerados o amenazados por la acción o la omisión de toda autoridad pública o de particulares, para hacer efectivo el cumplimiento de una ley o acto administrativo, para garantizar los derechos e intereses colectivos y difusos. De conformidad con la ley, el procedimiento es preferente, sumario, oral, público, gratuito y no sujeto a formalidades’.

[146] Art 54 of the Constitution of the Republic of Panama: ‘Toda persona contra la cual se expida o se ejecute, por cualquier servidor público, una orden de hacer o de no hacer, que viole los derechos y garantías que esta Constitución consagra, tendrá derecho a que la orden sea revocada a petición suya o de cualquier persona. El recurso de amparo de garantías constitucionales a que este artículo se refiere, se tramitará mediante procedimiento sumario y será de competencia de los tribunales judiciales’.

[147] Art 183 of the Constitution of Honduras: ‘El Estado reconoce la garantía de amparo. En consecuencia toda persona agraviada o cualquiera otra en nombre de esta, tiene derecho a interponer recurso de amparo: 1. Para que se le mantenga o restituya en el goce o disfrute de los derechos o garantías que la constitución establece; y 2. Para que se declare en casos concretos que un reglamento, hecho, acto o resolución de autoridad, no obliga al recurrente ni es aplicable por contravenir, disminuir o tergiversar cualesquiera de los derechos reconocidos por esta Constitución. El Recurso de Amparo se interpondrá de conformidad con la Ley’.

[148] Art 265 of the Political Constitution of the Republic of Guatemala: ‘Procedencia del amparo. Se instituye el amparo con el fin de proteger a las personas contra las amenazas de violaciones a sus derechos o para restaurar el imperio de los mismos cuando la violación hubiere ocurrido. No hay ámbito que no sea susceptible de amparo, y procederá siempre que los actos, resoluciones, disposiciones o leyes de autoridad lleven implícitos una amenaza, restricción o violación a los derechos que la Constitución y las leyes garantizan’.

[149] Art 128 of the Political Constitution of the Plurinational State of Bolivia: ‘La Acción de Amparo Constitucional tendrá lugar contra actos u omisiones ilegales o indebidos de los servidores públicos, o de persona individual o colectiva, que restrinjan, supriman o amenacen restringir o suprimir los derechos reconocidos por la Constitución y la ley’.

Art 129. I.: ‘La Acción de Amparo Constitucional se interpondrá por la persona que se crea afectada, por otra a su nombre con poder suficiente o por la autoridad correspondiente de acuerdo con la Constitución, ante cualquier juez o tribunal competente, siempre que no exista otro medio o recurso legal para la protección inmediata de los derechos y garantías restringidos, suprimidos o amenazados’.

[150] Art 200.2 of the Political Constitution of Peru: ‘2. La Acción de Amparo, que procede contra el hecho u omisión, por parte de cualquier autoridad, funcionario o persona, que vulnera o amenaza los demás derechos reconocidos por la Constitución, con excepción de los señalados en el inciso siguiente. No procede contra normas legales ni contra Resoluciones Judiciales emanadas de procedimiento regular’.

[151] Art L. 141-1 COJ: ‘Para 1. L'État est tenu de réparer le dommage causé par le fonctionnement défectueux du service public de la justice. Para 2. Sauf dispositions particulières, cette responsabilité n'est engagée que par une faute lourde ou par un déni de justice’. (The State shall compensate the damage caused by the defective functioning of the public service of justice. Except in the case of special provisions, this liability is incurred only by gross negligence or by a denial of justice.). Except in the case of a clear violation of European Union law by a decision of a national court ruling at last instance, an action for State liability for the defective functioning of the public service of justice based on Art. L. 141-1 COJ cannot have the effect of calling into question a judicial decision, apart from the exercise of remedies Civ. 1, 18 November 2020, no. 19-19.517 accessed 2 July 2024.

[152] See eg, Case 1 BvR 2965/10 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 5 August 2013 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2013:rk201‌30805.1bvr296510] (2013) NJW 3432. See also Case 1 BvR 547/06 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 24 July 2008 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2008:rk20080724.1bvr054706] (2008) Zeitschrift für das gesamte Familienrecht 2258.

[153] Gesetz über den Rechtsschutz bei überlangen Verfahren 2011 (Law on legal protection in excessively long proceedings) (Germany) BGBl. I Nr 60 of 2 Dezember 2011, 2302.

[154] See H Kelsen, ‘Mitbericht von Professor Dr Hans Kelsen in Wien‘ in Wesen und Entwicklung der Staatsgerichtsbarkeit, Veröffentlichungen der Vereinigung der Deutschen Staatsrechtslehrer Berlin (Vol 5, De Gruyter 1929) 30; V Ferreres Comella, Justicia constitucional y democracia (2nd edn, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales. Mº de la Presidencia 2007) 37; E García-Cuevas Roque, ‘Orígenes de la justicia constitucional: un recorrido por Europa’ in J Peña González (ed), Homenaje a D. Iñigo Cavero Lataillade (Tirant lo Blanch 2005) 291.

[155] Marbury v Madison (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 24 February 1803 [5 U.S. 137].

[156] J Sorabji, ‘El Tribunal Supremo de Reino Unido: procedimientos, precedentes y reforma’ in J Nieva-Fenoll and R Cavani (ed), La casación hoy, cien años después de Calamandrei (Marcial Pons 2021) 107.

[157] Art 120 of the Constitution of the Netherlands: ‘The constitutionality of Acts of Parliament and treaties shall not be reviewed by the courts’.

[158] Art 121 de la Constitución Española 1931 (Constitution of Spain) (Spain).

[159] Art 161 de la Constitución española vigente 1978 (of the current Constitution of Spain): ‘1. El Tribunal Constitucional tiene jurisdicción en todo el territorio español y es competente para conocer: […] b) Del recurso de amparo por violación de los derechos y libertades referidos en el artículo 53, 2, de esta Constitución, en los casos y formas que la ley establezca’.

[160] Art 93 Grundgesetz (Federal Constitution, GG) (Germany): ‘Das BVerfG entscheidet über: […[ 4a. über Verfassungsbeschwerden, die von jedermann mit der Behauptung erhoben werden können, durch die öffentliche Gewalt in einem seiner Grundrechte oder in einem seiner in Artikel 20 Abs. 4, 33, 38, 101, 103 und 104 enthaltenen Rechte verletzt zu sein […]‘ [emphasis added].

[161] Judgments, once final, have the value of res judicata and may not be modified or quashed except in the cases provided for by the law or when, in exceptional cases, the Tribunal Constitucional, after the corresponding process of Constitutional appeal, decides that they were rendered in violation of certain fundamental rights.

[162] Art 79.1 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland: ‘In accordance with principles specified by statute, everyone whose constitutional freedoms or rights have been infringed, shall have the right to appeal to the Constitutional Tribunal for its judgment on the conformity to the Constitution of a statute or another normative act upon which basis a court or organ of public administration has made a final decision on his freedoms or rights or on his obligations specified in the Constitution’.

[163] Art 170 of the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia: ‘A constitutional appeal may be lodged against individual general acts or actions performed by state bodies or organisations exercising delegated public powers which violate or deny human or minority rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution, if other legal remedies for their protection have already been applied or not specified’.

[164] Art 149 of the Constitution of Montenegro: ‘Responsibility. The Constitutional Court shall decide on the following: [...] 3. Constitutional appeal due to the violation of human rights and liberties granted by the Constitution, after all other efficient legal remedies have been exhausted [...]’.

[165] Art 110 of the Constitution of the Republic of North Macedonia: ‘The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Macedonia [...] protects the freedoms and rights of the individual and citizen relating to the freedom of conviction, conscience, thought and public expression of thought, political association and activity as well as to the prohibition of discrimination among citizens on the ground of sex, race, religion or national, social or political affiliation [...]’.

[166] Art 202 of the Political Constitution of Peru: ‘It is the duty of the Constitutional Court: [...] 2. To hear, as a court of last resort, orders refusing petitions of habeas corpus, amparo, habeas data, and mandamus. [...]’.

[167] Art 241 of the Constitution of Colombia: ‘A la Corte Constitucional se le confía la guarda de la integridad y supremacía de la Constitución, en los estrictos y precisos términos de este artículo. Con tal fin, cumplirá las siguientes funciones: [...] 9. Revisar, en la forma que determine la ley, las decisiones judiciales relacionadas con la acción de tutela de los derechos constitucionales’.

[168] Art 202 of the Political Constitution of the Plurinational State of Bolivia: ‘Son atribuciones del Tribunal Constitucional Plurinacional, además de las establecidas en la Constitución y la ley, conocer y resolver:  [...] 6. La revisión de las acciones de Libertad, de Amparo Constitucional, de Protección de Privacidad, Popular y de Cumplimiento. Esta revisión no impedirá la aplicación inmediata y obligatoria de la resolución que resuelva la acción’.

[169] Art 167 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa: ‘Constitutional Court [...] 6. National legislation or the rules of the Constitutional Court must allow a person, when it is in the interests of justice and with leave of the Constitutional Court:

a. to bring a matter directly to the Constitutional Court; or

b. to appeal directly to the Constitutional Court from any other court’.

[170] Art 95 of the Constitution of Malta: ‘(1) There shall be in and for Malta such Superior Courts having such powers and jurisdiction as may be provided by any law for the time being in force in Malta. (2) One of the Superior Courts, composed of such three judges as could, in accordance with any law for the time being in force in Malta, compose the Court of Appeal, shall be known as the Constitutional Court and shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine – [...] (c) appeals from decisions of the Civil Court, First Hall, under article 46 of this Constitution; (d) appeals  from  decisions  of  any  court  of  original jurisdiction in  Malta as  to  the  interpretation  of  this Constitution  other  than  those  which  may  fall  under article 46 of this Constitution [...]’.

[171] Art 131 of the Constitution of Albania: ‘The Constitutional Court decides on: […] f) final examination of the complaints of individuals against the acts of the public power or judicial acts impairing the fundamental rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution, after all effective legal means for the protection of those rights have been exhausted, unless provided otherwise by the Constitution’.

[172] Art 148 of the Turkish Constitution: ‘[…] Everyone may apply to the Constitutional Court on the grounds that one of the fundamental rights and freedoms within the scope of the European Convention on Human Rights which are guaranteed by the Constitution has been violated by public authorities. In order to make an application, ordinary legal remedies must be exhausted. […]’.

[173] Art 24.d of the Turkish Constitution: ‘2. The Constitutional Court shall: [...] d. review any court ruling for conformity with the Fundamental Law further to a constitutional complaint’.

[174] Art 106 of the Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania: ‘[...] Every person shall have the right to apply to the Constitutional Court concerning the acts specified in the first and second paragraphs of Article 105 if a decision adopted on the basis of these acts has violated the constitutional rights or freedoms of the person and the person has exhausted all legal remedies. The procedure for implementing this right shall be established by the Law on the Constitutional Court’.

See Art 105: ‘The Constitutional Court shall consider and adopt decisions on whether the laws of the Republic of Lithuania or other acts adopted by the Seimas are in conflict with the Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania. The Constitutional Court shall also consider whether the following are in conflict with the Constitution and laws: 1) the acts of the President of the Republic; 2) the acts of the Government of the Republic [...]’.

[175] Art 129 of the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia: ‘The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia: [...] shall decide on constitutional petitions against individual decisions taken by governmental agencies, bodies of local and regional self-government and legal persons vested with public authority where such decisions violate human rights and fundamental freedoms, as well as the right to local and regional self-government guaranteed by the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia [...]’.

[176] Art 185 of the Constitution of the Dominican Republic: ‘Atribuciones. El Tribunal Constitucional será competente para conocer en única instancia: 1) Las acciones directas de inconstitucionalidad contra las leyes, decretos, reglamentos, resoluciones y ordenanzas, a instancia del Presidente de la República, de una tercera parte de los miembros del Senado o de la Cámara de Diputados y de cualquier persona con interés legítimo y jurídicamente protegido’.

[177] Art 146. 1. Of the Constitution of the Republic of Cyprus: ‘The Supreme Constitutional Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate finally on a recourse made to it on a complaint that a decision, an act or omission of any organ, authority or person, exercising any executive or administrative authority is contrary to any of the provisions of this Constitution or of any law or is made in excess or in abuse of powers vested in such organ or authority or person.

2. Such a recourse may be made by a person whose any existing legitimate interest, which he has either as a person or by virtue of being a member of a Community, is adversely and directly affected by such decision or act or omission’.

[178] Art 142 of the Constitution of Belgium: ‘Il y a, pour toute la Belgique, une Cour constitutionnelle, dont la composition, la compétence et le fonctionnement sont déterminés par la loi. Cette Cour statue par voie d'arrêt sur:

1° les conflits visés à l'article 141; 2° la violation par une loi, un décret ou une règle visée à l'article134, des articles 10, 11 et 24; 3° la violation par une loi, un décret ou une règle visée à l'article 134, des articles de la Constitution que la loi détermine. La Cour peut être saisie par toute autorité que la loi désigne, par toute personne justifiant d'un intérêt ou, à titre préjudiciel, par toute juridiction’.

[179] Art 144(1) oft he Constitution of Austria: ‘Der Verfassungsgerichtshof erkennt über Beschwerden gegen Bescheide der Verwaltungsbehörden einschließlich der unabhängigen Verwaltungssenate, soweit der Beschwerdeführer durch den Bescheid in einem verfassungsgesetzlich gewährleisteten Recht oder wegen Anwendung einer gesetzwidrigen Verordnung, einer gesetzwidrigen Kundmachung über die Wiederverlautbarung eines Gesetzes (Staatsvertrages), eines verfassungswidrigen Gesetzes oder eines rechtswidrigen Staatsvertrages in seinen Rechten verletzt zu sein behauptet. Die Beschwerde kann erst nach Erschöpfung des Instanzenzuges erhoben werden‘.

[180] See B Rüthers, Entartetes Recht. Rechtslehren und Kronjuristen im Dritten Reich (Beck 1988); I Müller, Furchtbare Juristen (Kindler 1987).

[181] See the papers contained in H Kelsen, Wer soll Hüter der Verfassung sein? (2nd edn, Mohr Siebeck 2019).

[182] Commission, ‘2020 Rule of Law Report The rule of law situation in the European Union’ COM (2020) 580 final.

[183] Council of Europe, ‘Rule of Law Checklist’ (2016) https://www.venice.coe.int/images/SITE%20IM‌AGES/Publications/Rule_of_Law_Check_List.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[184] Committee of Ministers, ‘Recommendation of the Committee of Ministers to member states on measures to combat discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation or gender identity’ (2010) https://search.coe.int/cm/Pages/result_details.aspx?ObjectID=09000016805cf40a accessed 2 July 2024.

[185] Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, ‘Union of Equality: LGBTIQ Equality Strategy 2020-2025’ (2020) 698 final, https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX‌:52020DC0698 accessed 2 July 2024.

[186] Bayev and others v Russia, Case 67667/09 (ECtHR), Judgment Final 13 November 2017.

[187] Case 190-2020 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 190/2020 of 15 December [ECLI:ES:T‌C:2020:190].

[188] F Ekardt and V Lessmann, ‘EuGH, EGMR und BVerfG: Die dritte Gewalt im transnationalen Mehrebenensystem‘ (2006) 39(4) Kritische Justiz 381; S Mückl, ‘Kooperation oder Konfrontation? – Das Verhältnis zwischen Bundesverfassungsgericht und Europäischem Gerichtshof für Menschenrechte‘ (2005) 44(3) Der Staat 403; Case 2 C 5.99 (Bundesverwaltungsgericht (BVerwG), Germany), Judgment 21 September 2000 [NVwZ 2000, 810].

[189] Weeks v US (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 24 February 1914 [232 U.S. 383]; Silverthorne Lumber Co. v United States (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 26 January 1920 [251 U.S. 385]; Nardone v U.S. (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 11 December 1939 [308 U.S. 338].

[190] Miranda v Arizona (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 1 March 1966 [384 U.S. 436].

[191] P G Carozza, ‘Subsidiarity as a Structural Principle of International Human Rights Law’ (2003) 97(1) American Journal of International Law 38; S Sibanda, ‘Beneath it all lies the principle of subsidiarity: the principle of subsidiarity in the African and European regional human rights systems’ (2007) 40(3) The Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa 425; G Füglistaler, The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Margin of Appreciation. Doctrine in the European Court of Human Rights’ Post-2011 Jurisprudence’ (Cahier de l’IDHEAP 2016) 1.

[192] See E Bjorge, Domestic application of the ECHR. Courts as faithful trustees (Oxford University Press 2015).

[193] On applications before the ECtHR, see B Thavard, ‘The admissibility Hurdle’ (27 May 2021) Verfassungsblog: https://verfassungsblog.de/the-admissibility-hurdle/ accessed 2 July 2024, and of course the site of the Court itself: https://www.echr.coe.int/Pages/home.aspx?p=applicants&c accessed 2 July 2024.

[194] European Court of Human Rights, ‘Rules of Court’ (2025) https://www.echr.coe.int/document‌s/rules_court_eng.pdf 2 July 2024.

[195] See again B Thavard, ‘The admissibility Hurdle’ (27 May 2021) Verfassungsblog: https://verfassungs‌blog.de/the-admissibility-hurdle/ accessed 2 July 2024.

[196] Art 35 ECHR.

[197] Art 37 ECHR.

[198] See European Centre for Law & Justice, NGOs and Judges of the ECHR, 2009-2019 (Strasbourg 2020), ‌http://media.aclj.org/pdf/ECLJ-Report,-NGOs-and-the-Judges-of-the-ECHR,-2009---2019,-February-20‌20,-Complete-Edition.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[199] A Tametti, ‘Les méthodes de travail de la Cour européenne’ in L Robert and H Surrel (ed), Quel avenir pour le système européen de protection des droits de l’homme? (Anthemis 2020) 70.

[200] J Nieva-Fenoll, ‘Juzgar dos veces (Comentario a la sentencia de la Sala II del Tribunal Supremo de 15 de diciembre de 2020, en el caso Bateragune)’ (2021) 1 InDret 615.

[201] Council of Europe, Committee of Ministers, Recommendation No R (2000) 2, appendix 2.

[202] Art L. 452-1 COJ : ‘Le réexamen d'une décision civile définitive rendue en matière d'état des personnes peut être demandé au bénéfice de toute personne ayant été partie à l'instance et disposant d'un intérêt à le solliciter, lorsqu'il résulte d'un arrêt rendu par la Cour européenne des droits de l'homme que cette décision a été prononcée en violation de la convention européenne de sauvegarde des droits de l'homme et des libertés fondamentales ou de ses protocoles additionnels, dès lors que, par sa nature et sa gravité, la violation constatée entraîne, pour cette personne, des conséquences dommageables auxquelles la satisfaction équitable accordée en application de l'article 41 de la même convention ne pourrait mettre un terme. Le réexamen peut être demandé dans un délai d'un an à compter de la décision de la Cour européenne des droits de l'homme. Le réexamen d'un pourvoi en cassation peut être demandé dans les mêmes conditions’.

[203] See Inter-American Court of Human Rights, ‘Statute of the Court’, https://www.corteidh.or.c‌r/estatuto.cfm?lang=en accessed 2 July 2024. Twenty States have recognized the contentious jurisdiction of the Court, including as follows: Argentina, Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, and Uruguay.

[204] Official homepage of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights available at https://www.‌oas.org/en/iachr/accessed 2 July 2024.

[205] Digest of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on Its Admissibility and Competence Criteria, 2020 https://www.oas.org/en/iachr/reports/pdfs/DigestoADM-en.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[206] Art 6 ACHR: ‘1. Only the States Parties and the Commission shall have the right to submit a case to the Court.

2. In order for the Court to hear a case, it is necessary that the procedures set forth in Articles 48 and 50 shall have been completed’.

Art 62 ACHR: ‘1. A State Party may, upon depositing its instrument of ratification or adherence to this Convention, or at any subsequent time, declare that it recognizes as binding, ipso facto, and not requiring special agreement, the jurisdiction of the Court on all matters relating to the interpretation or application of this Convention.

2. Such declaration may be made unconditionally, on the condition of reciprocity, for a specified period, or for specific cases. It shall be presented to the Secretary General of the Organization, who shall transmit copies thereof to the other member states of the Organization and to the Secretary of the Court.

3. The jurisdiction of the Court shall comprise all cases concerning the interpretation and application of the provisions of this Convention that are submitted to it, provided that the States Parties to the case recognize or have recognized such jurisdiction, whether by special declaration pursuant to the preceding paragraphs, or by a special agreement’.

Art 63 ACHR: ‘1. If the Court finds that there has been a violation of a right or freedom protected by this Convention, the Court shall rule that the injured party be ensured the enjoyment of his right or freedom that was violated. It shall also rule, if appropriate, that the consequences of the measure or situation that constituted the breach of such right or freedom be remedied and that fair compensation be paid to the injured party.

2. In cases of extreme gravity and urgency, and when necessary to avoid irreparable damage to persons, the Court shall adopt such provisional measures as it deems pertinent in matters it has under consideration. With respect to a case not yet submitted to the Court, it may act at the request of the Commission’.

[207] Homepage of the African Court on Human and People’s Rights available at https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/ accessed 2 July 2024.  

[208] See the African (Banjul) Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights 1986 https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/AFRICAN-BANJUL-CHARTER-ON-HUMAN-AND-PEOPLE‌S-RIGHTS.pdf accessed 2 July 2024 and the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples Rights https://www.african-court.org/wpafc/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/2-PROTOCOL-TO-THE-AFRICAN-CHARTER-ON-HUMAN‌-AND-PEOPLES-RIGHTS-ON-THE-ESTABLISHMENT-OF-AN-AFRICAN-COURT-ON-HUMAN-AND-PEOPLES-RIGHTS.pdf accessed 2 July 2024.

[209] The official homepage of the Asian Human Rights Commission available at http://www.humanrig‌hts.asia/#:~:text=The%20Asian%20Human%20Rights%20Commission&text=The%20AHRC%20is%20an%20independent,victims%20of%20human%20rights%20violations accessed 2 July 2024.  Official homepage of the Asian Human Rights Commission http://www.humanrig‌hts.asia/#:~:text=The%20Asia‌n%20Human%20Rights%20Commission&text=The%20AHRC%20is%20an%20independent,victims%20of%20human%20rights%20violations accessed 2 July 2024.

[210] Art 40 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976).

[211] See Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights,  ‘Complaints about human rights violations’ https://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/TBPetitions/Pages/HRTBPetitions.aspx accessed 2 July 2024.

[212] International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976)  https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-civil-and-political-rights accessed 2 July 2024.

[213] Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976) https://web‌.archive.org/web/20081220175814/http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/ccpr-one.htm accessed 2 July 2024.

[214] Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976) https://web‌.archive.org/web/20080611154109/http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/ratification/5.htm accessed 2 July 2024.

[215] Art 122 Bundesgerichtsgesetz https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2006/218/de#art_122 accessed 2 July 2024. See also Art 328(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure for judgments of cantonal courts.

[216] See J Pradel, ‘Le jury en France. Une histoire jamais terminée’ (2001) 72(1) Revue internationale de droit pénal 175.

[217] M Kaser and K Hackl, Das römische Zivilprozessrecht (Beck 1996) 46, 501.

[218] R Nobles and D Schiff, ‘The Right to Appeal and Workable Systems of Justice’ (2002) 65(5) The Modern Law Review 676.

[219] H L Dalton, 'Taking the Right to Appeal (More or Less) Seriously' (1985) 95(1) Yale Law Journal 62, 69.

[220] Back in Roman Law: Digest XLIX, 5 art. 100- ex 30.

[221] K A Bettermann, ‘Die Beschwer als Rechtsmittelvoraussetzung im deutschen Zivilprozeß‘ (1969) 82 Zeitschrift für Zivilprozeß, 24, 46.

[222] F Baur, ‘Zur “Beschwer” im Rechtsmittelverfahren des Zivilprozeßes‘ in L Rosenberg and K H Schwab (ed), Festschrift für Lent (Beck 1957) 1.

[223] Also, if he was against the abolition, this author referred that tendence: R Perrot, ‘Le principe de double degré de juridiction et son evolution en droit judiciaire privé français’ in Studi in Onore di Enrico Tulio Liebman (Vol 3, Giuffrè 1979) 1971.

[224] R Molina Galicia, Reflexiones sobre una nueva visión constitucional del proceso y su tendencia jurisprudencial. ¿Hacia un gobierno judicial? (2nd edn, Ediciones Paredes 2008) 51.

[225] See R Perrot, ‘Le principe de double degré de juridiction et son evolution en droit judiciaire privé français’ in Studi in Onore di Enrico Tulio Liebman (Vol 3, Giuffrè 1979) 1971: ‘La justice des hommes est faillible: ses décisions peuvent être entachées d’erreurs ou d’insuffisances. Il est donc raisonnable d’offrir à tout plaideur la possibilité de soumettre l’affaire qui le concerne à la connaissance de deux juridictions succesives [...]’.

[226] E Allorio, ‘Sul doppio grado del processo civile’ in Studi in Onore di Enrico Tulio Liebman (Vol III, Giuffrè 1979) 1802-1804.

[227] G Chiovenda, ‘El juicio de reenvío y su perención’ in Ensayos de Derecho Procesal Civil (Vol III, Ediciones Jurídicas Europa-América 1949) 147.

[228] D Kahneman, P Slovic and A Tversky, Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases (Cambridge University Press 1982) 16.

[229] G Wurzer, Die Rechtskraft, eine Idee im Dienste des Rechts (J. Bensheimer 1923) 4; K Najarian, L’autorité de la chose jugée au criminel sur le criminel (Bibliothèque de sciences criminelles  1973) 2; M Vellani, Appunti sulla natura della cosa giudicata (Giuffrè 1958) 132; E Allorio, ‘Naturaleza de la cosa juzgada’ in Problemas de Derecho Procesal (Ediciones Jurídicas Europa-América 1963) 156; A De la Oliva Santos, Sobre la cosa juzgada civil, contencioso-administrativa y penal, con examen de la jurisprudencia del Tribunal Constitucional (Centro de Estudios Ramón Areces 1991); J Nieva-Fenoll, La cosa juzgada (Atelier 2006).

[230] M Serra Domínguez, ‘Del Recurso de Casación’ in La reforma de los procesos civiles (Comentario a la Ley 10/92 de medidas urgentes de reforma procesal) (Civitas 1993) 285.

[231] P D Marshall, ‘A Comparative Analysis of the Right to Appeal’ (2011) 22(1) Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law 1, 42.

[232] C B Robertson, ‘The Right to Appeal’ (2013) 91(4) North Carolina Law Review 1219.

[233] See W Hau, ‘Zivilprozesse mit geringem Streitwert: Small claims courts, small claims tracks, small claims procedures‘ (2017) 81(3) Rabels Zeitschrift für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht 570.

[234] F Hegel, Phänomenologie des Geistes (Joseph Anton Goebhardt 1807).

[235] D Kahneman, P Slovic and A Tversky, Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases (Cambridge University Press 1982) 16.

[236] See J Nieva-Fenoll, Inteligencia artificial y proceso judicial (Marcial Pons 2018).

[237] See S Guinchard et al, Droit processuel, Droits fondamentaux du procès (11th edn, Dalloz 2021) fn 439.

[238] See J Nieva-Fenoll, ‘¿Un juez supremo o un legislador "supremo"?’ (2015) 1 Justicia: revista de derecho procesal 31.

[239] S Guinchard et al, Droit processuel (Dalloz 2021) 806.

[240] Dorado Baúlde v Spain, Case 23486/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 24 September 2015 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:2015:0901DEC002348612] Sec 18: ‘As regards the applicant's complaint under Article 13 in conjunction with Article 6 of the Convention, the Court recalls that neither Article 6 of the Convention nor Article 13 guarantees, as such, a right of appeal or a right to a second level of jurisdiction (see, mutatis mutandis, Nurhan Yılmaz v. Turkey (no. 2), no. 16741/04, Sec 21, 8 April 2008, and Gurepka v. Ukraine, no. 61406/00, Sec 51, 6 September 2005)’.

[241] Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2009:‌0625JUD005575907] Sec 36: ‘The Court reiterates at the outset that it is not its task to take the place of the domestic courts. It is primarily for the national authorities, notably the courts, to resolve problems of interpretation of domestic legislation. The role of the Court is limited to verifying whether the effects of such interpretation are compatible with the Convention (see, Miragall Escolano and Others v. Spain, no. 38366/97, Sec 33-39, ECHR 2000-I)’.

[242] Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2009:06‌25JUD005575907] Sec 23: ‘The Court firstly observes that the actual name given to the proceedings in the domestic legal system or the fact that the national jurisdictions have considered them as an extraordinary remedy cannot be considered determinant: what is decisive is the nature and the scope of the proceedings at issue (see San Leonard Band Club v. Malta, no. 77562/01, § 41, ECHR 2004-IX). Furthermore, it is the Court’s well-established practice that the proceedings following an appeal on points of law or an appeal for cassation fall within the scope of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention (see, for example, H.E. v. Austria, no. 33505/96, para 14 and 18, 11 July 2002, and Cobianchi v. Italy (no. 1), no. 43434/98, para 8 and 11, 9 November 2000)’ [emphasis added].

[243] Reichman v France, Case 50147/11 (ECtHR), Judgment 12 July 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016‌:0712JUD005014711] Sec 29: ‘La Cour rappelle en outre que l’article 6 n’astreint pas les États contractants à créer des cours d’appel ou de cassation. Néanmoins, un État qui se dote de juridictions de cette nature a l’obligation de veiller à ce que les justiciables jouissent auprès d’elles des garanties fondamentales de cette disposition (Delcourt c. Belgique, 17 janvier 1970, § 25, série A no 11), notamment en ce qu’elle assure aux plaideurs un droit effectif d’accès aux tribunaux pour les décisions relatives au « bien-fondé de toute accusation en matière pénale » (Viard c. France, no 71658/10, § 30, 9 janvier 2014). La manière dont l’article 6 § 1 s’y applique dépend toutefois des particularités de la procédure en cause et il faut prendre en compte l’ensemble du procès mené dans l’ordre juridique interne et le rôle qu’y a joué la Cour de cassation, les conditions de recevabilité d’un pourvoi pouvant être plus rigoureuses que pour un appel (Levages Prestations Services c. France, 23 octobre 1996, § 45, Recueil des arrêts et décisions 1996-V, Kemp et autres c. Luxembourg, no 17140/05, § 48, 24 avril 2008, et Viard, précité, § 30)’.

[244] Walchli v France, Case 35787/03 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 July 2007 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2007:‌0726JUD003578703] Sec 29: ‘Il résulte de ces principes que si le droit d'exercer un recours est bien entendu soumis à des conditions légales, les tribunaux doivent, en appliquant des règles de procédure, éviter à la fois un excès de formalisme qui porterait atteinte à l'équité de la procédure, et une souplesse excessive qui aboutirait à supprimer les conditions de procédure établies par les lois’.

[245] See Xavier Lucas v France, Case 15567/20 (ECtHR), Judgment 9 June 2022 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2022‌:0609JUD001556720].

[246] Evaggelou v Greece, Case 44078/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 13 January 2011 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2011‌:0113JUD004407807] para 22 and 23: ‘22.  Il n'en reste pas moins qu'en l'occurrence la Cour de cassation a explicitement admis dans son arrêt no 724/2007 que « l'omission [de produire le mandat de représentation] ne peut pas être corrigée par le fait que le conseil du requérant l'avait aussi représenté lors de la procédure ayant débouché sur l'arrêt attaqué, comme il ressort de son examen. En effet, ledit fait devait être mentionné dans le pourvoi en cassation, pour que le mandat [entre l'avocat et son client] soit présumé ». En d'autres termes, dans le cas d'espèce, la haute juridiction pénale a admis que l'absence de pouvoir de représentation dans le dossier n'aurait pas entraîné sans autre l'irrecevabilité du pourvoi en cassation. Le requérant aurait été présumé légalement représenté si son conseil avait mentionné dans le pourvoi en cassation le fait qu'il était son représentant devant la cour d'appel de Corfou. La question particulière qui se pose donc en l'occurrence est celle de savoir si l'irrecevabilité du pourvoi en cassation, faute de mention explicite dans le pourvoi en cassation que l'avocat du requérant l'avait en fait représenté devant la juridiction inférieure, a enfreint le droit d'accès à un tribunal’.

[247] Labergère v France, Case 16846/02 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 September 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:200‌6:0926JUD001684602] Sec 20 and 23 : ‘Dans ces conditions, qui ne sont pas ordinaires, la Cour considère, qu'à supposer même que le requérant ait été en mesure d'interjeter appel avant son internement ou le jour de sa sortie, son délai d'appel, dont elle observe qu'il est en soi particulièrement court, aurait été considérablement réduit, passant de dix à trois jours. Or, compte tenu des circonstances particulières de l'espèce, et notamment de l'enjeu pour le requérant et de la nécessaire prise en compte de sa situation médicale, la Cour considère que l'application qui a été faite, en l'espèce, des règles de droit interne, et notamment des articles 380-1 et suivants du code de procédure pénale, par la Cour de cassation constitue une application particulièrement rigoureuse d'une règle procédurale, qui a porté atteinte à son droit d'accès à un tribunal, dans son essence même’.

[248] Maresti v Croatia, Case 55759/07 (ECtHR), Judgment 25 September 2009 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2009:06‌25JUD005575907] Sec 33-43: ‘33.  The Court reiterates that Article 6 of the Convention does not compel the Contracting States to set up courts of appeal or of cassation. However, where such courts do exist, the guarantees of Article 6 must be complied with, for instance in that it guarantees to litigants an effective right of access to the courts (see, Brualla Gómez de la Torre v. Spain, 19 December 1997, § 37, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997-VIII; Kozlica v. Croatia, no. 29182/03, § 32, 2 November 2006; and Angel Angelov v. Bulgaria, no. 51343/99, § 31, 15 February 2007). […] 37.  The right of access to a court by its very nature calls for regulation by the State and may be subject to limitations. Nevertheless, the limitations applied must not restrict the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired. A limitation will violate the Convention if it does not pursue a legitimate aim and if there is not a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved (see, among other authorities, Kreuz v. Poland, no. 28249/95, §§ 52-57, ECHR 2001-VI, and Liakopoulou v. Greece, no. 20627/04, §§ 19-25, 24 May 2006)’.

[249] Johansen v Germany, Case 17914/10 (ECtHR), Judgment 15 September 2016 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:0‌915JUD001791410] Sec 46-57: ‘49.  As for the proportionality of the restriction of the applicant’s access to court by the interpretation of the applicable procedural rules and in particular by the standard of proof required for refuting the probative value of a record of service, the Court reiterates that it is not its task to examine whether the requirements of domestic law in the abstract complied with the Convention. It must examine the manner in which those requirements were applied to the applicant in the particular circumstances (compare,  mutatis mutandis, Floquet v. Germany (dec.), no.  50215/99, 9 February 2006). (…) 55. In view of the foregoing elements, the Court concludes that the standard of proof which the applicant had to comply with in order to disprove the service of the penal order on her was indeed very high. However, the Court is satisfied that the interpretation of domestic law, and in particular of the applicable procedural rules in practice by the domestic courts in the applicant’s case, availed her of a sufficient opportunity to disprove the service of the penal order. The domestic courts, by taking additional evidence, addressed all arguments brought forward by the applicant in this respect. They found in reasoned decisions which do not disclose any arbitrariness that there was not sufficient proof that the penal order had not been served on the applicant in November 2008 as certified by the record of service. As a consequence, the applicant was awarded sufficient opportunity, by lodging an objection against the penal order within the statutory time-limit, to have the charges against her decided again by a court, following a hearing’ [emphasis added].

[250] Davran v Turkey, Case 18342/03 (ECtHR), Judgment 3 November 2009 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2009:11‌03JUD001834203] Sec 40-47: ‘40.  En l'espèce, la Cour observe que la Cour de cassation a déclaré le pourvoi du requérant irrecevable au motif que les délais légaux n'avaient pas été respectés. Elle relève que ces délais courent, selon le droit interne, à partir de la notification de l'arrêt rendu en première instance et que c'est précisément les modalités de notification que le requérant conteste. 41.  La Cour admet que le requérant a certes contribué à compliquer l'application de la loi sur la notification en se mettant en état de fuite [...] 45.  La Cour considère que l'objection du Gouvernement quant à l'impossibilité pour les autorités judiciaires de Midyat d'être informées de l'arrestation réalisée à Istanbul n'est pas fondée, dans la mesure où il incombe à l'Etat défendeur d'organiser son système judiciaire de manière à rendre effectifs les droits prévus à l'article 6 de la Convention et de se doter des moyens propres à assurer un réseau d'information entre les entités judiciaires de l'ensemble du pays.  [...] 47.  Ces éléments suffisent à la Cour pour conclure que le requérant a subi une entrave excessive à son droit d'accès à un tribunal et, partant, à son droit à un procès équitable. En conséquence, elle conclut qu'il y a eu violation de l'article 6 § 1’.

[251] Castillo Petruzzi y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 52 (CIDH), Judgment 30 May 1999 Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas Sec 185.

[252] Velásquez Rodríguez v Honduras, Case Serie C No. 123 (CIDH), Judgment 26 June 1987 Excepciones Preliminares.

[253] ‘Cinco Pensionistas’ v Perú, Case Serie C No. 98 (CIDH), Judgment 28 February 2003 Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas Sec 126.

[254] Caso del Tribunal Constitucional v Perú, Case Serie C No. 71 (CIDH), Judgment 31 January 2001 Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas.

[255] Trabajadores Cesados de Petroperú y otros v Perú, Case Serie C No. 344 (CIDH), Judgment 23 November 2017 Excepciones Preliminares, Fondo, Reparaciones y Costas.

[256] W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 452 : ‘for, if any matter of fact is strongly controverted, this court is so sensible of the deficiency of trial by written depositions, that it will not bind the parties thereby, but usually directs the matter to be tried by a jury’ [emphasis added]; R Nobles and D Schiff, ‘The Right to Appeal and Workable Systems of Justice’ (2002) 65(5) The Modern Law Review 676, 685.

[257] See W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 455: ‘[…]an appeal to the king in parliament was always unquestionable allowed. But no new evidence is admitted in the house of lords upon any account, for this a distinct jurisdiction: which differs it very considerably from those instances, wherein the same jurisdiction revises and corrects its own acts, as in rehearings and bills of review. For it is a practice unknown to our law, (though constantly followed in the spiritual courts) when a superior court is reviewing a sentence of an inferior, to examine the justice of the former decree by evidence that was never produced below. This is the general method of proceeding in the courts of equity’ [emphasis added].

[258] W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 378.

[259] See W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 4, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1770) 384: ‘But if such attainder of the vendor was by verdict, on the oath of his peers, the alienee cannot be received to falsify or contradict the fact of the crime committed’ [emphasis added].

[260] Décret 27 novembre-1 de décembre 1790 (loi des 27 novembre et 1er décembre 1790 portant institution d’un tribunal de cassation) (Decree of 27 November–1 December 1790 (law of 27 November and 1 December 1790 establishing a court of cassation).

[261] See J L Halpérin, Le tribunal de cassation et les pouvoirs sous la Révolution, 1790-1799, Librairie générale de droit et de jurisprudence et R. Pichon et R. Durand-Auzias, 1987, Bibliothèque d'histoire du droit et droit romain.

[262] Art 136: ‘Le Tribunal de cassation prend la dénomination de Cour de cassation. […] Constitución de 28 de Floreal del Año XII (18 de mayo de 1804), que reorganizó la República Francesa en un Imperio, por obra y gracia de Napoléon, obviamente’.

[263] See Répertoire universel et raisonné de jurisprudence T.V (Paris 1808) 94, Sec 7.

[264] See the Judgment of 8.1.1806: ‘la discussion de ce point de fait, et l’examen des preuves y relatives ne sont pas du domaine de la Cour de cassation’ (1806) 373(1) Journal du Palais 442. See also Jouanneau and Solon, Discussions du code Napoléon dans le Conseil d'État (Demonville 1808) 301; J B Jalbert, Journal des audiences de la Cour de Cassation (J Smith 1816) 131.

[265] S Chiarloni, ‘La cassazione e le norme’ (1990) Rivista di diritto processuale 992; V Fairén Guillén, ‘De los “hechos” al “derecho”: Uno de los sofismas de la Ley del Jurado de 1995’ (1997) 2 Revista de derecho procesal 359; S Guasch Fernández, El hecho y el derecho en la casación civil (Tirant Io Blanch 1997) 200; F M Iacoviello, La motivazione de la sentenza penale e il suo controllo in cassazione (Giuffrè 1997) 265; T Kleinknecht, K Meyer and L Meyer-Gossner, Strafprozeßordnung (Beck 1995) 991; F Mazzarella, ‘Fatto e diritto in Cassazione‘ (1974) Rivista trimestrale di diretto e procedura civile 82; U Neumann, ‘Die Abgrenzung von Rechtsfrage und Tatfrage und das Problem des Revisionsgerichtlichen Augenscheinsbeweises‘ (1988) Goltdammer's Archiv für Strafrecht 387 ; J Nieva-Fenoll, El hecho y el derecho en la casación penal (José María Bosch 2000) 101; S Satta, ‘Il formalismo nel proceso’ (1958) Rivista trimestrale di diretto e procedura civile 1154; D Temming, M Lemke, K-P Julius, C Krehl, H-J Kurth and E C Rartenberg, Strafprozeßordnung (C F Müller 1995) 1243; M Serra Domínguez, ‘Del recurso de casación’ in Comentarios a la reforma de la Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (Tecnos 1985) 843. J Verger Grau, ‘Algunas observaciones al Proyecto de Ley Orgánica del Tribunal del jurado de 20 de abril de 1994’ (1994) Justicia 528-529; J L Vázquez Sotelo, La Casación Civil (Revisión crítica) (Ediser 1981) 198.

[266] N Duxbury, The nature and authority of precedent (Cambridge UP 2008) 33.

[267] See N Duxbury, (n 264) 31.

[268] J Sternberg, ‘Deciding Not to Decide: The Judiciary Act of 1925 and the Discretionary Court’ (2008) 33 The Journal of Supreme Court History 1.

[269] W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (vol 3, Dawsons of Pall Mall 1768) 454.

[270] See Rice v Sioux City Memorial Park Cemetery Inc. et al (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 9 May 1955 [349 U.S. 70].

[271] C L Lässig, ‘Das neue Revisionsrecht - Kritik einer Reform‘ (1976) 29 Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 269; H Kaempfe, ‘Die Zukunft der Revision in Zivilsachen‘ (1979) 32 Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 1134; H Jagusch, ‘Nachteile der Grundsatzrevision‘ (1963) 16 Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 566.

[272] Case 2 BvR 831/76‘ (BverfG, Germany) (1979) 34(1) Juristenzeitung 20.

[273] See J Nieva-Fenoll, El recurso de casación civil (Ariel 2003) 185.

[274] Case SSTC 150 y 164/2004 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 4 October 2004 [ECLI:ES:T‌C:2004:164]. See also I Díez-Picazo Giménez, ‘Un torpedo a la casación’ (2001) 2 Tribunales de Justicia 1; M Aguilera Morales, ‘Los recursos extraordinarios: casación, extraordinario por infracción procesal, en interés de ley y queja’ (2001) 11 Tribunales de Justicia 15.

[275] Case STC 56/1982 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 26 July 1982 [ECLI:ES:TC:1982:56].

[276] M Taboada Roca, La casación civil española en alguna de sus complejidades (Real Academia de Judisprudencia y Legislación 1977) 10.

[277] Case STC 56/1982 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 26 July 1982 [ECLI:ES:TC:1982:56].

[278] See C Chainais, F Ferrand, L Mayer and S Guinchard, Procédure civile (35th edn, Dalloz 2020) 1318.

[279] See eg, Case 2 BvR 831/76 (BverfG, Germany), (1979) 34(1) Juristenzeitung 20 Sec 37 ff, with further references; see also recently eg, Case 1 BvR 1750/19 (BVerfG, Germany), [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2020‌:rk20200218.1bvr175019] juris Sec 9 with further references: according to this decision, the complainant of Verfassungsbeschwerde (a constitutional complaint) was not required to first seek legal protection again from the civil court against the decision on a remedy against an (alleged) violation by the court of the right to be heard (Anhörungsrüge) under section 321a of the German Code of Civil Procedure. In the absence of a reliable statutory regulation of such a (further) remedy, the Bundesverfassungsgericht (the German Federal Constitutional Court) held that the requirements of the rule of law regarding the clarity of legal remedies were not met in this respect.

[280] Case 2 BvR 1380/08 (BVerfG, Germany), Order 18. August 2013 [ECLI:DE:BVerfG:2013:‌rk20130818.2bvr138008] Rn 1 - 48, https://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/SharedDocs/Entsc‌heidungen/EN/2013/08/rk20130818_2bvr138008en.html  accessed 2 July 2024.  

[281] Gil Sanjuan v Spain, Case 48297/15 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 May 2020 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2020‌:0526JUD004829715].

[282] See eg, Henrioud v France, Case 21444/11 (ECtHR), Judgment 5 November 2015, relating to time-limits in civil cassation proceedings to send the service document to the Court of cassation.

[283] Eg, Case Cass. civ. 2, 17-28.285 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 21 February 2019 [ECLI:FR:CC‌ASS:2019:C200274]: ‘In appellate proceedings in which a representation by a lawyer is required (= in most civil appellate proceedings), it is possible to lodge a special recourse named déféré against some decisions given by the pre-trial judge (conseiller de la mise en état). The time-limit is very brief: 15 days from the date of the decision (Art. 916 CPC). The Court of cassation ruled that ‘this provision pursues a legitimate aim of speedy processing of incidents affecting the appeal proceedings, with a view to ruling on the appeal within a reasonable time; the inadmissibility of the appeal lodged after this time limit does not constitute a disproportionate infringement of the right of access to the courts, since the parties are obliged to appoint a lawyer, who is a skilled professional, who is in a position to carry out the acts of the appeal proceedings in the forms and within the time limits required’.

[284] Case Cass. civ. 1, 19-22.508 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 27 January 2021 [ECLI:FR:CC‌ASS:2021:C100102]: ‘A man who was later placed under guardianship had taken out a life insurance policy naming his partner as the beneficiary. The couple then separated. His son was then appointed his guardian and the son requested the judge to order a change of beneficiary, which the judge did. The former partner lodged an appeal but the court of appeal declared it inadmissible because the applicant did not belong to the categories of persons that have the right to appeal against a decision rendered by the guardianship judge (see Art 1239 CPC and 430 Civil code: the right to appeal belongs only to the spouse, the registered partner, the informal partner unless there do not longer live together etc). The court of appeal had declared the appeal admissible. The Court of cassation quashed the judgment. The drafting of the judgement is very typical of the new methodology of the Court of cassation as inspired by the ECtHR’s case law. In that case, the proportionality review (based on the conformity of the French legal provisions with Art 6 ECHR) carried out by the Court of cassation leads to a different result than in the judgment of the court of appeal’.

See also Case Cass. Civ. 2, 18-23.626 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 17 September 2020 [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2020:C200827]. It follows from Art 542 and 954 of the Code of Civil Procedure that where the appellant does not request in the operative part of his pleadings that the judgment be set aside or annulled, the court of appeal can only confirm the appealed judgment. Nevertheless, the Court of cassation added that ‘Secthe immediate application of this procedural rule, which results from the new interpretation of a provision in the light of the reform of the appeal procedure with compulsory representation resulting from decree no. 2017-891 of 6 May 2017 and which has never been affirmed by the Court of Cassation in a published judgment, in proceedings instituted by a declaration of appeal prior to the date of the present judgment, would result in depriving the appellants of the right to a fair trial’.

See as well CEDH, 9 June 2022, n° 15567/20, Xavier Lucas c/ France, Procédures 2022, n° 202, obs. N. Fricero; JCP (Semaine juridique) G 2022, 1345, n° 2, obs. L. Mayer. O. Boudeville et L. Monjaud, ‘Quand le recours croissant à la dématérialisation de la justice ne permet pas de garantir au justiciable un légitime droit d’accès au juge’, JCP (Semaine juridique) G 2022, 832.

[285] E Silvestri, L’accesso alle corti di ultima istanza: rilievi comparatistici (Part V, Il Foro Italiano 1987) 285.

[286] Ekbatani v Sweden, Case 10563/83 (ECtHR), Judgment 26 May 1988 Sec 32; Helmers v Sweden, Case 11826/85 (ECtHR), Judgment 29 October 1991 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:1991:1029JUD001182685] Sec 36, 37 and 39; Jan-Äke Andersson v Sweden, Case 11274/84 (ECtHR), Judgment 29 October 1991 [ECLI:CE:ECHR‌:1991:1029JUD001127484] Sec 28; Constantinescu v Romania, Case 28871/95 (ECtHR), Judgment 27 June 2000 Sec 54, 55, 58 and 59; Popovici v Moldavia, Case 38178/08 (ECtHR), Judgment 24 June 2014 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2014:0624DEC003817808] Sec 71; Bazo González v Spain, Case 30643/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 16 December 2008 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2008:1216JUD003064304] Sec 31; Igual Coll v Spain, Case 37496/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 10 March 2009 Sec 37.

[287] See E Loftus, Eyewitness testimony (Harvard UP 1996); G Mazzoni, Psicologia della testimonianza (Carocci 2015); M Diges, Los falsos recuerdos (Paidós 1997); A L Manzanero, Memoria de testigos, (Pirámide 2010); M R Leippe and D Eisenstadt, ‘Eyewitness confidence and the confidence-accuracy relationship in memory for people’ in R C L Lindsay et al (ed), The handbook of Eyewitness Psychology Vol 2 Memory for People (Psychology Press 2007) 377; A Memon, A Vrij and R Bull, Psychology and Law: Truthfulness, Accuracy and Credibility (John Wiley & Sons 2003); T Valentine and J Mesout, ‘Eyewitness identification under stress in the London Dungeon’ (2009) 23(2) Applied Cognitive Psychology 151; G L Wells and E A Olson, ‘Eyewitness Testimony’ (2003) 54 Annual Review of Psychology 277; R A Wise, C S Fishman and M A Safer, ‘How to Analyze the Accuracy of Eyewitness Testimony in a Criminal Case’ (2009) 42 Connecticut Law Review 435.

[288] See P Ekman, Nonverbal messages: cracking the code (Paul Ekman Group 2016); P Ekman, Emotions Revealed: Recognizing Faces and Feelings to Improve Communication and Emotional Life (Times Books 2003).

[289] See J Schemmel, T Steinhagen, M Ziegler and R Volbert, ‘How Information on a Motive to Lie Influences CBCA-Based Ratings and Veracity Judgments’ (2020) 11 Frontiers in Psychology https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.02021/full accessed 2 July 2024; V A Oberlader, L Quinten, R Banse, R Volbert, A F Schmidt and F D Schönbrodt, ‘Validity of content-based techniques for credibility assessment—How telling is an extended meta-analysis taking research bias into account?’ (2021) 35(2) Applied Cognitive Psychology, Wiley Online Library, https://onlinelibrary.w‌iley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.3776 accessed 2 July 2024.

[290] M. L. B. v S. L. J. (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 16 December 1996 [519 U.S. 102].

[291] Lindsey v Normet (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 23 February 1972 [405 U.S. 56].

[292] Eisenstadt v Baird (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 22 March 1972 453 [405 U.S. 438].

[293] Griffin v Illinois (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 23 April 1956 [351 U.S. 12].

[294] ‘I can find nothing in the past decisions of this Court justifying a holding that the Fourteenth Amendment confines the States to a choice between allowing no appeals at all or undertaking to bear the cost of appeals for indigents, which is what the Court, in effect, now holds’.

[295] L C Anderson, ‘The Constitutional Right of Poor People to Appeal without Payment of Fees: Convergence of Due Process and Equal Protection in M.L.B. v. S.L.J.’ (1999) 32(3) University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 441. See also G Epps, ‘Money and Civil Justice: Can a State Condition and Appeal on the Payment of Substantial Fees (95-853)’ (1996) (1) Preview of United States Supreme Court Cases 1996, 5.

[296] Case Pourvoi 20-13.662, (Cour de cassation, France), 9 September 2021.

[297] Lindsey v Normet (Supreme Court, US), Judgment 23 February 1972 [405 U.S. 56].

[298] Société Horizon OI et autre [Délai d'appel des jugements rendus par le tribunal du travail de Mamoudzou], Case 2017-641 QPC (Cour de cassation, France), Decision 30 June [ECLI:FR:CCASS:2017:C200782].

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