Chief Justice of the Republic of Korea

The Chief Justice of the Republic of Korea (Korean: 대법원장; Hanja: 大法院長; RR: Daebeobwonjang) is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Korea. As presiding judge of Grand bench composed of two-thirds of fourteen Supreme Court Justices, the Chief represents the Supreme Court of South Korea. The Chief Justice is regarded as one of two equivalent heads of judicial branch in Government of South Korea. Another head is President of the Constitutional Court of Korea. The current Chief Justice of the Republic of Korea is Kim Myeong-soo.[1]

Chief Justice of the
Republic of Korea
대한민국 대법원장
Incumbent
Kim Myeong-soo

since 25 September 2017
Supreme Court of South Korea
StyleMr Chief Justice
(informal)
Your Honor
(within the court)
StatusChief Justice
Member ofCouncil of Supreme Court Justices
ResidenceDaebeobwonjang Gonggwan
SeatSeoul, South Korea
AppointerPresident
(Subject to the National Assembly's approval)
Term lengthSix years, non renewable
Constituting instrumentConstitution of South Korea
Inaugural holderKim Byung-ro
Formation5 August 1948 (1948-08-05)
WebsiteOfficial english website

Appointment and tenure

Under chapter 5, article 104(1) of Constitution,[2] and article 12(1) of Court Organization Act,[3] the Chief Justice is appointed by the President of South Korea with the consent of the National Assembly of South Korea.

While article 105(1) of Constitution sets term length of the Chief Justice as non-renewable single term of six-years, its mandatory age of retirement is delegated to sub-constitutional regulation by article 105(4) of Constitution. Currently, the Chief Justice's mandatory age of retirement is 70 by article 45(4) of Court Organization Act.

Powers and duties

As head member of the Supreme Court of South Korea, the Chief Justice's formal main role is participating in decision of the Court as one of Supreme Court Justices. However, since most of cases in the Court are handled by three different Panels or 'Petty benches'(Korean: 소부) each of consisting four Supreme Court Justices except the Chief Justice, the Chief cannot participate in ruling of daily cases. Rather, the Chief Justice only participates in 'Grand bench(Korean: 전원합의체)' convened with more than two-thirds of all fourteen Justices, as presiding judge.[4]

More substantial role of the Chief Justice is governing political and administrative tasks in ordinary courts, as the Chief is head of hierarchy of conventional judiciary consisted of all ordinary courts in South Korea.[5]

  • The Chief recommends candidate for all other thirteen Supreme Court Justices under article 104(2) of Constitution. Though all Supreme Court Justices are formally appointed by the President of South Korea with the consent of the National Assembly of South Korea, the Chief's power to recommend candidate for each of Supreme Court Justices supports influence over composition of South Korean Supreme Court.
  • The Chief nomiates candidate for three of nine Constitutional Court Justices under article 111(3) of Constitution. Though all Constitutional Court Justices are formally appointed by the President of South Korea, its nomination of candidate is usually reflected in final appointment by the President. Three of other six Constitutional Court Justices are elected by National Assembly of South Korea. The left three are directly appointed by the President.
  • The Chief serves as Chair at Council of Supreme Court Justices(Korean: 대법관회의) composed of all fourteen Supreme Court Justices including the Chief, which supervises administrative tasks in ordinary courts under article 16(1) and 17 of Court Organization Act. When vote ties, the Chief has casting vote.
  • The Chief appoints one of thirteen Supreme Court Justices as Minister of National Court Administration(Korean: 법원행정처), which is centralized organization to govern all matters on judicial administration of ordinary South Korean courts, under article 68(1) of Court Organization Act.
  • The Chief appoints every Judges in lower ordinary courts, with consent of the Council of Supreme Court Justices under article 104(3) of Constitution. Substantial power of this article is embodied by article 44(1) and 44-2(3) of Court Organization Act. Under article 44-2(3) of the Act, the Chief evaluates all Judges in lower ordinary courts regularly and reflects it into personnel affairs of Judges, such as transferring Judges from one lower court to other lower court (even against will of such Judge), or declining renew of lower court Judge's 10-year length term.[6]
  • The Chief also appoints every law clerks and court officials (including Judicial Assistant Officer which has similar role as german Rechtspfleger) under article 53, 53-2 and 54 of Court Organization Act.
  • The Chief can present written opinion to the National Assembly, on enacting or revising laws related to administration of ordinary courts, under article 9(3) of Court Organization Act.

List of Chief Justices

NameTenure
1Kim Byung-ro5 August 194812 December 1957
2Cho Young-sun9 June 195810 May 1960
3Cho Jin-man30 June 1961January 1964
4Cho Jin-manJanuary 196419 October 1968
5Min Bok-ki21 October 1968March 1973
6Min Bok-ki14 March 197321 December 1978
-Yi Young-sup22 December 197822 March 1979
7Yi Young-sup22 March 197915 April 1981
8Yoo Tai-heung16 April 198115 April 1986
9Kim Yong-chul16 April 198619 June 1988
10Lee Il-kyu6 July 198815 December 1990
11Kim Deok-ju16 December 199010 September 1993
12Yun Kwan25 September 199324 September 1999
13Choi Jong-young25 September 199924 September 2005
14Lee Yong-hun25 September 200524 September 2011
15Yang Sung-tae25 September 201124 September 2017
16Kim Myeong-soo25 September 2017Incumbent

See also

References

  1. "Message of Chief Justice". Supreme Court of Korea. Retrieved 2022-04-02.
  2. "CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA". Korea Legislation Research Institute. Retrieved 2022-04-04.
  3. "COURT ORGANIZATION ACT". Korea Legislation Research Institute. Retrieved 2022-04-04.
  4. So among the total fourteen Supreme Court Justices under article 4(2) of Court Organization Act, there are twelve Supreme Court Justices who participates in daily judgment. Other two Justices are Chief Justice and Minister of National Court Administration. Yet while the Chief usually participates in vote when cases are handled under Grand Bench, the other Justice as Minister usually do not participate in vote even when Grand bench is convened.
  5. "German law experts parse differences in Korea's judiciary". Korea Joongang Daily. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
  6. Since South Korean lower court Judges do not have life tenure, they can serve only renewable 10-year length term under article 105(3) of Constitution. The power to give permission on renewing lower court Judges term is stated under article 44-2(3) of Court Organization Act. These lower court Judges retire at age of 65, under article 45(4) of Court Organization Act
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.