Sunday, September 15, 2019

All about administrative cases



What are Administrative Cases?

The administrative case is a case between a person on the one side and state authority from the other. These cases differ comparing to civil procedure and are governed by Administrative procedure.

Depending on the type of national legal system, procedures of administrative cases differ. The majority of Civil law jurisdictions have specialized sections or courts to deal with administrative cases which, always, will apply procedural rules specifically designed for such cases and different from that applied in private-law proceedings, such as a contract or tort claims.


Administrative law
Administrative law is the body of law that governs the operation of government administrative agencies. Government agency action can include the enforcement of a specific regulatory agenda, adjudication, or rulemaking. This law is considered a public law branch.

There , usually, are two stages to the administrative case. Under administrative law, the decision is subject to appeal to a higher authority is the first stage. Only after the final decision has been received can the person bring an action before the Administrative Court is Stage Two.


Department of Administrative Cases

Department of Administrative Cases is the place where specialized people review Additional judgements of the Administrative regional court and Cassation complaints against judgements, Ancillary complaints against decisions of Administrative regional court, Procedure Law, Ancillary complaints on decisions of the Administrative district court and many more.

It may, in departments opinion, to establish a case for review in oral proceedings, If the department considers reviewing the case in a court hearing to be more useful.

The court informs participants of proceedings about the time of review of a case. When reviewing the case in written proceedings, the court informs participants of proceedings in writing about the composition of the court and explains their rights to declare refusal, as well as other procedural rights and duties.

Decisions and judgements of the Department of Administrative Cases of the Supreme Court come into force on the day of announcement or composition and are not reversible.