The preliminary questions procedure is a mechanism which enables our supreme court to consult the
Court of Justice of the European Union concerning the interpretation or validity of Community law in a pending case.
Supplementary law arises from uncodified sources, which include case law from the
Court of Justice of the European Union, international law and general principles of European law.
Writing exclusively in the legal context, and mostly in the context of the
Court of Justice of the European Union, he does not seek to supplant that formulation, but to supplement it, suggesting that when dealing with cases concerning equality, the Court could use Michael Walzer's theory of complex justice to complement Aristotle's idea that likes should be treated in a like fashion and unlikes in an unlike fashion.
The
Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) rejected lawsuits filed by depositors at Bank of Cyprus and Cyprus Popular bank for impairments suffered in 2013.
The case was then heard last November by the Court of Appeal and referred straight to the
Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).
If Bulgaria is convicted, the amount of the penalty is to be determined by the
Court of Justice of the European Union.
He begins by examining the approach towards dual nationality in public and private international law as well as in European Union law, primarily by analyzing the case law of the
Court of Justice of the European Union. He then presents overviews of the dual nationality regimes of France, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain and considers their possible effects on the European Union as a whole.
The new members of the ECA will be formally sworn in at the
Court of Justice of the European Union, on 14 May.
from Slovakia.Slovakia remains the only country that has failed to have its additional candidate for judge at the General Court in Luxembourg, part of the
Court of Justice of the European Union, appointed since 2016, the SITA newswire reported.
The
Court of Justice of the European Union: Subsidiarity and Proportionality
In May 2014, the
Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) ruled that people could ask search engines, such as Google and Microsoft's Bing, to remove inadequate or irrelevant information from web results appearing under searches for people's names -- dubbed the "right to be forgotten".