General Court (European Union)


The General Court, informally known as the European General Court, is a constituent court of the Court of Justice of the European Union. It hears actions taken against the institutions of the European Union by individuals and member states, although certain matters are reserved for the European Court of Justice. Decisions of the General Court can be appealed to the Court of Justice, but only on a point of law. Prior to the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty on 1 December 2009, it was known as the Court of First Instance.

Competence

The General Court hears disputes.
The creation of the General Court instituted a judicial system based on two levels of jurisdiction: all cases heard at first instance by the General Court may be subject to a right of appeal to the Court of Justice on points of law only.
In view of the increasing number of cases brought before the General Court in the last five years, to relieve it of some of the caseload, the Treaty of Nice, which entered into force on 1 February 2003, provides for the creation of 'judicial panels' in certain specific areas.
On 2 November 2004 the Council adopted a decision establishing the European Union Civil Service Tribunal. This new specialised tribunal, composed of seven judges, heard and determined at first instance disputes involving the European Civil Service. Its decisions were subject to a right of appeal before the General Court on points of law only. Decisions given by the General Court in this area might exceptionally be subject to review by the Court of Justice. The European Union Civil Service Tribunal was duly constituted into law on 2 December 2005. Despite the success in its mandate, it was dissolved on 1 September 2016, leading to the doubling of the number of judges at the General Court.

Composition

Since February 2020 the General Court is composed of 54 Judges; this follows a 2016 reform which increased the number of judges to two per member state by 2019, and the departure of the UK from the EU at the end of January 2020. The Judges are appointed for a renewable term of six years by common accord of the governments of the Member States., there are 49 Judges in post: 23 member states have nominated both their judges, whilst Latvia, Poland, and Slovakia have nominated just one, and Slovenia has nominated neither.
The members of the General Court elect their president and the presidents of the Chambers of five Judges from among their number for a renewable period of three years.
There are no permanent Advocates General attached to the General Court. However, the task of an Advocate General may be performed in a limited number of cases by a Judge nominated to do so. In practice this has been done occasionally.

List of Presidents

ElectedTerm endedJudge
25 September 198918 September 1995 José Luís da Cruz Vilaça
18 September 19954 March 1998 Antonio Saggio
4 March 199817 September 2007 Bo Vesterdorf
17 September 200726 September 2019 Marc Jaeger
27 September 2019Incumbent Marc van der Woude

List of Vice-Presidents

List of Judges

NameCountryElectedCurrent Term EndsOther
Viktor Kreuschitz Austria20132022
Gerhard Hesse Austria20192022
:nl:Paul Nihoul|Paul Nihoul Belgium20162022
Geert De Baere Belgium20172022
Mariyana Kancheva Bulgaria20112025
Alexander Kornezov Bulgaria20162025President of the Tenth Chamber
Vesna Tomljenović Croatia20132025President of the Second Chamber
Tamara Perišin Croatia20192025
Savvas Papasavvas Cyprus20042022Vice-President of the General Court
Anna Marcoulli Cyprus20162022President of the Sixth Chamber
Petra Škvařilová-Pelzl Czech Republic20192025
Jan M. Passer Czech Republic20162025
Sten Frimodt Nielsen Denmark20072022
Jesper Svenningsen Denmark20162022President of the Eighth Chamber
Lauri Madise Estonia20132022
Iko Nõmm Estonia20192022
Heikki Kanninen Finland20092022President of the First Chamber
Vice-President of the General Court
Tuula Pynnä Finland20192022
Stéphane Gervasoni France20132025President of the Fourth Chamber
Laurent Truchot France20192025Judge
Johannes Laitenberger Germany20192025
Gabriele Steinfatt Germany20192025
Dimitris Gratsias Greece20102022
Constantinos Iliopoulos Greece20162022
Barna Berke Hungary20162022
Zoltán Csehi Hungary20162022
Anthony Michael Collins Ireland20132025President of the Third Chamber
Colm Mac Eochaidh Ireland20172025
Roberto Mastroianni Italy20192025
Ornella Porchia Italy20192025
Ingrida Labucka Latvia20042019*
Inga Reine Latvia20162025
Rimvydas Norkus Lithuania20192025
Virgilijus Valančius Lithuania20162019*
Marc Jaeger Luxembourg19962022President of the General Court
Dean Spielmann Luxembourg20162022President of the Fifth Chamber
Eugène Buttigieg Malta20122025
Ramona Frendo Malta20192025
Marc van der Woude Netherlands20102022President of the General Court
Vice-President of the General Court
René Barents Netherlands20162022
Krystyna Kowalik-Bańczyk Poland20162022
Nina Półtorak Poland20162016*
Octavia Spineanu-Matei Romania20162022
Mirela Stancu Romania20192022
Ricardo Da Silva Passos Portugal20162022President of the Seventh Chamber
Maria José Costeira Portugal20162022President of the Ninth Chamber
Juraj Schwarcz Slovakia20092022
TBA Slovakia
TBA Slovenia
TBA Slovenia
José Martín y Pérez de Nanclares Spain20192025
Miguel Sampol Pucurull Spain20192025
Ulf Christophe Öberg Sweden20162025
Fredrik Schalin Sweden20162025

* Judge continues to hold the office until their successor takes up the duties according to the Article 5 of the Protocol No. 3 on the Statute of the Court of Justice of the EU

List of Former Judges

List of Registrars

Jurisdiction

The General Court, like the Court of Justice, has the task of ensuring that the law is observed in the interpretation and application of the Treaties of the European Union and the provisions adopted by the competent Union institutions.
To fulfil its main task, the General Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine at first instance all direct actions brought by individuals and the Member States, with the exception of those to be assigned to a 'judicial panel' and those reserved for the Court of Justice.

Categories of direct actions

Subject-matter of direct actions: all matters, including:
The General Court has its own Rules of Procedure. As a rule, the Court's procedure includes a written phase and an oral phase. The proceedings are conducted in a language at the petitioner's choosing. As in the European Court of Justice, the working language of the Court is nevertheless French, and this includes the language the judges deliberate in and the drafting language of preliminary reports and judgments.
The Court is separated into 9 divisions sat by 3-judge benches, except for the 7th division whose bench is sat by 4 judges. Each chamber has an extended composition of 5 judges. Cases are assigned by the President of the Court to a relevant divisional presiding judge. The presiding judge assigned to the case then chooses a judge-reporter from the judges of the division, whose clerks write a preliminary report based on the parties' pleadings and applicable law.
At the close of the written phase and, as the case may be, on adoption of measures of inquiry, the case is argued orally in open court. The proceedings are interpreted simultaneously, if necessary, into various official languages of the European Union. The judges then deliberate based on a draft judgment prepared by the judge-reporter. The Court's final judgment is handed down in open court.