Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)

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In comparative law, frictions between the Judiciary and the Constitutional Tribunal are not new. As Garcia Belaunde recalls they have existed since the 60’s in Italy, from where the name «Battle of the Courts» originated, because the maximum judicial body in said country is the Court of Cassation an...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor: Malpartida Castillo, Víctor
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2011
Institución:Poder Judicial del Perú
Repositorio:Revistas - Poder Judicial del Perú
Lenguaje:español
OAI Identifier:oai:revistas.pj.gob.pe:article/199
Enlace del recurso:https://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/199
Nivel de acceso:acceso abierto
Materia:jurisdiction of the Constitutional Tribunal
jurisdiction of the Judiciary
Battle of the Courts
supreme interpreter of the Constitution
binding precedent
constitutional res judicata
competencia del Tribunal Constitucional
competencia del Poder Judicial
Guerra de Cortes
intérprete supremo de la Constitución
precedente vinculante
cosa juzgada constitucional
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dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
Tribunal Constitucional vs. Poder Judicial (a propósito de un proceso competencial)
title Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
spellingShingle Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
Malpartida Castillo, Víctor
jurisdiction of the Constitutional Tribunal
jurisdiction of the Judiciary
Battle of the Courts
supreme interpreter of the Constitution
binding precedent
constitutional res judicata
competencia del Tribunal Constitucional
competencia del Poder Judicial
Guerra de Cortes
intérprete supremo de la Constitución
precedente vinculante
cosa juzgada constitucional
title_short Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
title_full Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
title_fullStr Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
title_full_unstemmed Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
title_sort Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Malpartida Castillo, Víctor
author Malpartida Castillo, Víctor
author_facet Malpartida Castillo, Víctor
author_role author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv jurisdiction of the Constitutional Tribunal
jurisdiction of the Judiciary
Battle of the Courts
supreme interpreter of the Constitution
binding precedent
constitutional res judicata
competencia del Tribunal Constitucional
competencia del Poder Judicial
Guerra de Cortes
intérprete supremo de la Constitución
precedente vinculante
cosa juzgada constitucional
topic jurisdiction of the Constitutional Tribunal
jurisdiction of the Judiciary
Battle of the Courts
supreme interpreter of the Constitution
binding precedent
constitutional res judicata
competencia del Tribunal Constitucional
competencia del Poder Judicial
Guerra de Cortes
intérprete supremo de la Constitución
precedente vinculante
cosa juzgada constitucional
description In comparative law, frictions between the Judiciary and the Constitutional Tribunal are not new. As Garcia Belaunde recalls they have existed since the 60’s in Italy, from where the name «Battle of the Courts» originated, because the maximum judicial body in said country is the Court of Cassation and the concentrated body for constitutional control is the Constitutional Tribunal. The aforementioned phenomenon is replicated in Spain and in Colombia, where the incident is known as a «train crash». In our country, to debate whether the Constitutional Tribunal is hierarchically superior to the Judiciary is to mention the scope of Article 201 of the Constitution in force that defines the Constitutional Tribunal as the autonomous and independent «controlling body of the Constitution». However and strictly in relation to the foregoing, this article also tackles the binding precedent, a figure that was introduced in Article VII of the Preliminary Title of the Constitutional Procedural Code and that the Constitutional Tribunal, in its Judgment No 0024-2003-A1/TC, defined as «it is a legal rule in a specific and particular case which the Constitutional Tribunal decides to establish as a general rule», thereby becoming a normative parameter for the resolution of future similar proceedings. In consequence, due to its very condition, the constitutional precedent has similar effects to those of a law. In other words, «the general rule established as a precedent based on a specific case becomes a common precept for all defendants which is effective against the public powers». Finally, it proposes a reflection of the constitutional res judicata.
publishDate 2011
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2011-06-30
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dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv https://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/199
10.35292/ropj.v6i6/7.199
url https://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/199
identifier_str_mv 10.35292/ropj.v6i6/7.199
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv spa
language spa
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Poder Judicial del Perú
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Poder Judicial del Perú
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista Oficial del Poder Judicial; Vol. 6 Núm. 6/7 (2010); 129-162
2663-9130
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10.35292/ropj.v6i6/7
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spelling Constitutional Court vs. Judicial Power (purpose of a competential process)Tribunal Constitucional vs. Poder Judicial (a propósito de un proceso competencial)Malpartida Castillo, Víctorjurisdiction of the Constitutional Tribunaljurisdiction of the JudiciaryBattle of the Courtssupreme interpreter of the Constitutionbinding precedentconstitutional res judicatacompetencia del Tribunal Constitucionalcompetencia del Poder JudicialGuerra de Cortesintérprete supremo de la Constituciónprecedente vinculantecosa juzgada constitucionalIn comparative law, frictions between the Judiciary and the Constitutional Tribunal are not new. As Garcia Belaunde recalls they have existed since the 60’s in Italy, from where the name «Battle of the Courts» originated, because the maximum judicial body in said country is the Court of Cassation and the concentrated body for constitutional control is the Constitutional Tribunal. The aforementioned phenomenon is replicated in Spain and in Colombia, where the incident is known as a «train crash». In our country, to debate whether the Constitutional Tribunal is hierarchically superior to the Judiciary is to mention the scope of Article 201 of the Constitution in force that defines the Constitutional Tribunal as the autonomous and independent «controlling body of the Constitution». However and strictly in relation to the foregoing, this article also tackles the binding precedent, a figure that was introduced in Article VII of the Preliminary Title of the Constitutional Procedural Code and that the Constitutional Tribunal, in its Judgment No 0024-2003-A1/TC, defined as «it is a legal rule in a specific and particular case which the Constitutional Tribunal decides to establish as a general rule», thereby becoming a normative parameter for the resolution of future similar proceedings. In consequence, due to its very condition, the constitutional precedent has similar effects to those of a law. In other words, «the general rule established as a precedent based on a specific case becomes a common precept for all defendants which is effective against the public powers». Finally, it proposes a reflection of the constitutional res judicata.Las fricciones entre el Poder Judicial y el Tribunal Constitucional no son nada nuevo dentro del derecho comparado. Como recuerda García Belaúnde han existido por lo menos desde la década del sesenta en Italia, de donde nos viene el nombre de «Guerra de las Cortes», ya que el máximo órgano judicial en el mencionado país es la denominada Corte de Casación y el órgano de control constitucional concentrado se llama Corte Constitucional. Dicho fenómeno se repetiría en España y también en Colombia, en donde se conoce al incidente como «choque de trenes». En nuestro país, discutir si el Tribunal Constitucional es jerárquicamente superior respecto al Poder Judicial es hacer mención de los alcances del artículo 201.o de la Constitución vigente que define al primero como autónomo e independiente y como «el órgano de control de la Constitución». Pero, en estricta relación con lo señalado, este trabajo también hace un tratamiento del precedente vinculante, figura que a partir del Código Procesal Constitucional se introdujo en el artículo VII de su Título Preliminar y que el Tribunal Constitucional en su Sentencia N.o 0024-2003-AI/TC ha definido como «aquella regla jurídica expuesta en un caso particular y concreto que el Tribunal Constitucional decide establecer como regla general; y, que por ende, deviene en parámetro normativo para la resolución de futuros procesos de naturaleza homóloga», y que por tanto, «el precedente constitucional tiene por su condición de tal, efectos similares a una ley. Es decir, la regla general externalizada como precedente a partir de un caso concreto se convierte en una regla preceptiva común que alcanza a todos los justiciables y que es oponible frente a los poderes públicos». Finalmente, se plantea una reflexión acerca de la cosa juzgada constitucional.Poder Judicial del Perú2011-06-30info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/19910.35292/ropj.v6i6/7.199Revista Oficial del Poder Judicial; Vol. 6 Núm. 6/7 (2010); 129-1622663-91301997-668210.35292/ropj.v6i6/7reponame:Revistas - Poder Judicial del Perúinstname:Poder Judicial del Perúinstacron:PJspahttps://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/199/254info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessoai:revistas.pj.gob.pe:article/1992021-07-16T04:51:01Z
score 12.789326
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