Constitution, Judicial Review, and the Rule of Law in the Jurisprudence of Administrative Courts in Poland

Journal Title: Studia Iuridica - Year 2019, Vol 79, Issue

Abstract

In the light of Article 184 of the 1997 Constitution administrative courts verify the lawfulness of administrative decisions and some other acts of public administration. Furthermore, administrative courts may review the lawfulness, including the compliance with the Constitution, of the so called “enactments of local law” (referred to in Articles 87(2) and 94 of the Constitution). Pursuant to Article 8(2) of the Constitution “The provisions of the Constitution shall apply directly, unless the Constitution provides otherwise”. This constitutional competence is addressed, inter alia, to courts. In practice, administrative courts apply Constitution in three ways: 1) pro-constitutional interpretation of laws, 2) referring the so called questions of law to the Constitutional Tribunal, 3) ruling in a case directly on the basis of a constitutional provision. The provision applied by administrative courts in most cases is Article 2 of the Constitution, which stipulates that “The Republic of Poland shall be a democratic state governed by the rule of law (…)”. The Article is focused on most important cases in which the rule of law principle was applied. Administrative courts, as well as other courts and the Constitutional Tribunal, consider the rule of law principle to be the source of several detailed principles, e.g. the certainty of law, the lex retro non agit principle, the loyalty of the State towards citizens, the citizens’ trust in the State and the law, the principle of proportionality. Each of these principles was referred to in the large number of administrative courts’ judgments as the basis of a ruling. This proves that the Constitution, in particular the rule of law principle, is one of the instruments utilized by administrative courts’ judges in their everyday work.<br/><br/>

Authors and Affiliations

Marcin Wiącek

Keywords

Related Articles

Non-discrimination and the Principle of Equal Treatment as Significant Constituent Parts of the Process of Shaping the Competitive Nature of Public Procurement Procedures

This article concerns about the problem of non-discriminatory problems of European and Polish public procurement law. Awarding public contracts should take account of such principles as the principle of equal treatment,...

Poradnictwo prawne i obywatelskie w kontekście świadomości prawnej i potrzeby edukacji prawnej Polaków. Wybrane problemy

The article analyzes the issue from the point of view of law, sociology and based on the experience of both authors.It not only raises issues related to legal awareness, legal education and legal advisory, but also prese...

Взгляды профессора Е. В. Васьковского на систему российского гражданского права и современность

The article is devoted to the views of Professor E. V. Vaskovsky on the system of Russian civil law of the late XIX beginning of XX centuries. Giving a presentation on the civil law system E. V. Vaskovsky, first of all,...

The Law School’s Role in Preparing Leaders and Lawyers for the New World

Autor na wstępie zauważa, że prawnicy zawsze odgrywali istotną rolę państwotwórczą nie tylko poprzez kreowanie porządku prawnego, ale także przywództwo polityczne, stając się „architektami demokracji” zarówno w Polsce, j...

Kształt odpowiedzialności dyscyplinarnej prokuratorów w świetle Prawa o prokuraturze – wybrane problemy

The material aspect of disciplinary responsibility regulated in the new act that came into force on 4th March 2016 is described in this short essay. The most interesting thing to deliberate on is the article 137 § 2 whic...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP559830
  • DOI 10.5604/01.3001.0013.1888
  • Views 114
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Marcin Wiącek (2019). Constitution, Judicial Review, and the Rule of Law in the Jurisprudence of Administrative Courts in Poland. Studia Iuridica, 79(), 92-106. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-559830