Supreme Court of Haiti
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The Supreme Court of Haiti (
History
From 1806–1817, the
- Louis Germain Linard, dean
- Jacques Ignace Fresnel
- Jean Thézan,
- Jean-François Lespinasse,
- Thomas Gédeon Christ (who was sworn in later),
- Lemerand
- Pitre Jeune
- Louis-Gabriel Audigé, Government Commissioner
Jules Solime Milscent was also appointed as the first clerk.
The Law of 16 July 1954 added a Judge to the eleven provided by the Law of 1918 and since then, the Court of Cassation of Haiti is composed of twelve Judges (including the President and Vice-President), a Government Commissioner, and three substitutes.
Composition
The Constitution of Haiti[1] stipulates that Supreme Court justices are appointed by the president from a list submitted by the senate of three persons per court seat.[2] It is unclear whether they are appointed for 10 years (Art. 174 says so) or for life (Art. 177 says so).[3]
Historically the court has frequently reversed its own opinions and its justices have often been replaced. Almost all new governments have a Supreme Court of their own choosing.
Role
The Supreme Court of Haiti interprets and expounds all congressional enactments brought to it in cases, and as such it interprets state law. It also has superseding power over all courts to examine departmental and federal statutes and executive actions, determining whether they conform to the country's Constitution. The Labor Courts and the Land Court are only appealable to the Supreme Court, as opposed to the Juvenile Court and the High Court of Accounts.[6]
If the constitutionality of a law, statute, or an executive action is ruled against by the Supreme Court, its decision can be overcome if the Constitution is amended by the people parliaments or if the Court overrules itself. Decisions by the Court do not pertain to specific cases, rather are intended to encompass interpretation of legislature and executive authority, actually developing the way laws are interpreted. The Cour de Cassation therefore potentially yields the highest power in the Haiti governmental system.[7]
Under the 1987 constitution, the
Palais de Justice
The Palais de Justice[8] (the Supreme Court building) was heavily damaged and partially collapsed as a result of the 2010 Haiti earthquake.[9]
Chief Justices of the Supreme Court
Chief Justice | Took office | Left office | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph Nemours Pierre-Louis | 1946 | 1957 | |
Lélio Vilgrain[10] | 1957 | ? | |
Théodore Nicoleau[11][12] | 1958 | 1961 | |
Adrien Douyon[11] | 1961 | 1963-? | |
Luc Boisvert[11] | ? | ? | |
Fournier Fortuné[13] | ?-1980 | 1982 | |
Rock Raymond[14] | 1982 | 1985 | |
Pierre Gonzalès[15] | 1985[16] | 1985 | |
Luc D. Hector | 1985 | 1987-? | [17] |
Pierre L. Jeannot | ? | 1989 | [18] |
Gilbert Austin | 1989 | 1990-? | [19][20] |
Ertha Pascal-Trouillot [provisional] | 1990 | 1991 | [21][22] |
Joseph Nérette | ? | 1991[23] | |
Émile Jonassaint | 1991[23] | 1993 | |
Clausel Débrosse | 1994 | 2000 | |
Boniface Alexandre | 2001 | 2006 | [24] |
Georges Moïse | 2006 | 2011 | [25] |
Anel Alexis Joseph | 2011 | 2015 | [26] |
Jules Cantave | 2015 | 2019 | [27] |
René Sylvestre | 2019 | 2021 | [27] |
Jean Joseph Lebrun | 2022 | current | [28] |
Current members
- Jean Joseph Lebrun, President (since 2022)
- Jean-Claude Théogène, vice-president (since 2019)
- Barthélemy Anténor (since 2019)
- Jean-Joseph Lebrun (since 2019)
References
- ^ "Haiti: Constitution, 1987".
- ^ Article 175 of the Constitution of Haiti
- ]
- ISBN 978-0-226-77627-9.
- ^ Haiti President Tells VOA He Retired 3 Judges to 'Protect' Supreme Court, VOA, Sandra Lemaire, February 10, 2021
- ]
- ISBN 978-1-4628-8814-6.
- ^ CNN, Anderson Cooper 360, airdate 25 January 2010
- ^ Lacey, Marc (24 January 2010). "Cultural Riches Turn to Rubble in Haiti Quake". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
- ^ Célestin, Clément (1959). "Compilations pour l'histoire: les gouvernements provisoires, 6 décembre 1956 au 25 mai 1957" (in French). Impr. N.A. Théodore.
- ^ ISBN 9782706819889.
- ^ "The West Indies and Caribbean Year Book: Anuario Comercial de Las Antillas Y Paises Del Caribe". Caribook Limited. 1961.
- ^ "Haïti, Cour de cassation, 14 mars 1980, 14-03-80" (in French). 14 March 1980.
- ^ "Haïti, Cour de cassation, 06 juillet 1982, 06-07-82" (in French). 6 July 1982.
- ^ "TEXTES RÉGLEMENTAIRES" (PDF).
- ^ "Au Palais de justice". Le Nouvelliste.
- ^ "Head of Supreme Court Appointed to Haiti's Ruling Junta". Associated Press.
- ^ "Daily Report: Latin America". Foreign Broadcast Information Service. February 1989.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 January 2022. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ISBN 9781469113166.
- ^ "Ertha Pascal Trouillot, la première femme présidente d'Haïti". Le Nouvelliste. 21 June 2018.
- ^ JEAN CLAUDE, PIERRE MICHELOT. "6 Ertha Pascal-Trouillot, avocate, magistrate et femme politique (1934-)". Haitiennes (in French). Pressbooks.
- ^ a b "Latin America Regional Reports: Caribbean 91/1991". Latin American Newsletters Limited. 1991.
- ^ "Embassy of the Republic of Haiti, Washington D.C." 27 April 2006. Archived from the original on 27 April 2006.
- ^ "Cour de cassation d'Haïti : nouveau Président". Association des Cours Constitutionnelles Francophones (in French). 16 October 2011.
- ^ "Me Anel Alexis Joseph est parti…". Le Nouvelliste.
- ^ a b Cadet, Ruth (1 February 2019). "René Sylvestre prend les rênes de la Cour de Cassation et du CSPJ". Le Nouvelliste (in French).
- ^ "Jean Joseph Lebrun prête serment comme nouveau président de la Cour de cassation". Le Nouvelliste.