Chief Justice of Hungary explained

Post:Chief Justice
Body:the
Kingdom of Hungary
Insignia:Blason louis II de Hongrie.svg
Residence:Buda (1514–1536; 1784–1867)
Pressburg (1536–1784)
Appointer:King of Hungary
Precursor:Secret Chancellor
Formation:15th century (1464)
First:Janus Pannonius
Last:István Melczer
Abolished:1867
Succession:President of the Curia Regia

The chief justice[1] [2] [3] (Hungarian: királyi személynök,[4] Latin: personalis praesentiae regiae in judiciis locumtenens,[5] German: Königliche Personalis)[1] was the personal legal representative of the king of Hungary, who issued decrees of judicial character on behalf of the monarch authenticated with the royal seal, performed national notarial activities and played an important role in the organisation of lawyers training. Later the chief justice was the head of the Royal Court of Justice (Hungarian: Királyi Ítélőtábla, Latin: Tabula Regia Iudiciaria) and the Tribunal of the Chief Justice (Hungarian: személynöki szék, Latin: sedes personalitia), the highest legal forum of civil cases.

Origins

The office of personalis evolved since the early 15th century within the royal chancellery. In the beginning, the king was represented by the secret chancellor in the judiciary (judge of personal presence).[6] The first known chief justice was Janus Pannonius, a Croato-Hungarian humanist poet who returned to Hungary after finishing studies at the University of Padua in 1458, the coronation year of Matthias Corvinus. Pannonius served as chief justice until 1459, when he was elected as the bishop of Pécs. Until the 1464 reform, the complete list of chief justices is unknown. It is certain that Albert Vetési, Bishop of Veszprém held the office for a short time around 1460.

From the 1370s, during the reign of Louis I, the lord chancellor also had a judicial function. He became judge of special presence (Latin: specialis presentia regia). This position was held by Roman Catholic prelates, therefore the judicial function was performed by their deputies. Consequently, a dual judicial system existed in the Kingdom of Hungary until the administrative reform of 1464.[7]

Formation

Matthias Corvinus (formally Matthias I), after restoring the Holy Crown of Hungary for 60,000 ducats, was allowed to retain certain Hungarian counties with the title of king and was crowned legitimately on 29 March 1464. After the second and valid coronation, Matthias began to reorganize the administrative and judicial structure.[8] He merged the two courts ("special" and "personal judicatures") and established the institution of chief justice as a full-fledged judge to the head of the Royal Court. The chancellery was also unified and the new office of "lord- and vice-chancellor" lost all of its judicial functions.[7]

The Tribunal of the Chief Justice also established where the so-called "towns of chief justice" (Hungarian: személynöki város) forwarded those appeals concerning litigations. The tribunal chaired by the chief justice functioned as appellate court for the "towns of treasurer" (Hungarian: tárnoki város) too. According to the Tripartitum (1514) five settlements were towns of chief justice: Székesfehérvár, Esztergom, Lőcse (Levoča), Kisszeben (Sabinov) and Szakolca (Skalica). The status meant some independence, so was sought after by the towns. The Quadripartitum (1551), which never came to force, also mentions the seven mining towns of Upper Hungary as towns of chief justice.

Functions and development

The Act LXVIII of 1486 listed the chief justice among the "ordinary judges" beside the palatine and the judge royal. The chief justice also served as keeper of the monarch's judicial seal. In contrast, the secret chancellor assumed his role in the arbitration only on special occasions. The ordinary judges were able to make judgements on any matter and also could appoint deputies and masters of judgement. In practice, this meant that the judicial power decoupled itself from the executive branch (the king). The Act XLII of 1492 (during the reign of Vladislaus II) also confirmed these authorities.[6] During the first decades the position was held by ecclesiastical dignitaries. Thomas Drági was the first secular office-holder between 1486 and 1490. There had been a growing demand to fill the position by secular jurists and professionals on a permanent basis. That finally occurred at the beginning of the 16th century when the Act IV of 1507 decreed that the office must be occupied by a secular person with legal practice.[6] Despite the new law the influential and powerful cardinal Tamás Bakócz chose his prelate relatives for the office. The importance of the office of chief justice was made clear when Buda became the permanent residence of the Tribunal of the Chief Justice. The Act LV of 1514 also emphasized the appointment of secular office-holders. After that the secular and ecclesiastical elite agreed with each other and István Werbőczy, creator of the Tripartitum was appointed later in 1516.[9]

After the battle of Mohács (1526) the reigning chief justice Miklós Thuróczy swore allegiance to Ferdinand I. As a result, the other elected king, John Zápolya also appointed a chief justice for his own royal court in the person of Benedek Bekényi.[6] Charles III divided the Curia Regia into two courts in 1723: the Tabula Septemviralis (Court of the seven) and the Tabula Regia Iudiciaria (Royal Court of Justice). The latter functioned under the direction of the chief justice, in the case of prevention, of the elder Baron Court. The Tabula Regia Iudiciaria was constituted of two prelates, two Barons of the Court, two deputy judge advocates of the Kingdom: the vice Palatine, the deputy judge advocate of the Curia Regia, four prothonotaries, four assessors of the Kingdom, four assessors of the archdiocese, four adjunctive assessors.[5]

The chief justice also had a political function: he became speaker of the occasionally convened lower house of the Diet of Hungary. During the Habsburg-dominated kingdom a customary law emerged whereby jurists to the office of chief justice were chosen from the lesser nobility, however later sometimes aristocrats were also appointed to that position. The Tribunal of the Chief Justice was one of the positions used for the development, patronage and rise of a new aristocracy which was loyal to the House of Habsburg. For the new "official nobility" the position of chief justice was the springboard to obtain higher positions (mostly judge royal, president of the Hungarian Court Chamber, vice-chancellor).[5]

János Zarka opened and presided over the last feudal Diet of 1848. During the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 the position became vacant. After the defeat of the War of Independence Francis Joseph I applied neo-absolutist governance ("Bach system") and integrated the Kingdom of Hungary to the Habsburg Empire. Due to the fall of the Bach system in 1861, the position of chief justice, among others, was revived again and István Melczer took the office. According to the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 the judicial system had been converted and modernized; the chief justice lost all of its features and the position was officially discontinued.

List of known chief justices

Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1538)

TermPortraitIncumbentMonarchNotesSource
1458Janus Pannonius
(John Csezmicei)
Matthias Corvinushumanist poet; later bishop of Pécs (1459–1472)[10] [11]
1458–1459Albert VetésiMatthias Corvinusfrom the gens Kaplon; also vice-chancellor (1458), secret chancellor (1458–1459), bishop of Veszprém (1458–1486)[12] [13]
1459–1464Nicholas BodóMatthias Corvinuspersonalis presentia
1464–1465Albert HangácsiMatthias Corvinus1464 judicial and administrative reform; also bishop of Csanád (1457–1466)[14]
1465–1466StephenMatthias Corvinusfirst term; provost of Kalocsa[15]
1468–1470Gabriel MatucsinaiMatthias Corvinusalso vice-chancellor (1468–1471), later archbishop of Kalocsa and lord chancellor (1471–1478)[16] [17] [18]
1470–1472StephenMatthias Corvinussecond term[19]
1472–1483Ladislaus KaraiMatthias Corvinusprovost of Buda; also vice-chancellor (1471–1476); patron of András Hess (Chronica Hungarorum); resigned due to illness[20]
1483–1484Peter VáradiMatthias Corvinusalso lord and secret chancellor (1480–1484), archbishop of Kalocsa (1480–1501); imprisoned[21] [22]
1485–1486Lucas ApátiMatthias Corvinusprovost of Eger[23]
1486John FilipecMatthias CorvinusJan Filipec z Prostějova
also bishop of Olomouc (1484–1490)
[24] [25]
1486–1490Thomas DrágiMatthias Corvinusfirst secular chief justice;[26] Drági Compendium[27] [28]
1490–1494Stephanus Crispus
(Stephen Fodor)
Vladislaus IInephew of Urban Nagylucsei; also bishop of Syrmia (1490–1494)[29] [30]
1495–1501Domokos KálmáncsehiVladislaus IIalso bishop of Várad (1495–1501); Breviarium (1481)[31]
1502–1503Lucas SzegediVladislaus IIbishop of Bosnia (1490–1493), treasurer (1490–1492), bishop of Zagreb (1500–1510)[32] [33]
1503–1512István ErdődyVladislaus IIbrother of Tamás Bakócz; remained in office despite Act IV of 1507; also bishop of Syrmia (1503–1505) and bishop of Nyitra (1505–1512)
1513–1514János ErdődyVladislaus IInephew of Tamás Bakócz; appointed despite Act IV of 1507; also bishop of Zagreb (1512–1518); resigned[34]
1516–1525István WerbőczyLouis IIcreator of the Tripartitum (1514); later palatine (1525–1526), chancellor for John I (1526–1540)[35]
1525–1527Miklós ThuróczyLouis II
Ferdinand I
John I
also master of judgement for judge royal (1525–1527); he supported Ferdinand I after the battle of Mohács (1526)[36]

Hungarian Civil War (1526–1538)

width=50% valign=top
For Ferdinand I
TermPortraitIncumbentNotesSource
1527Pál Várdaialso archbishop of Esztergom and lord chancellor (1526–1549), later royal governor (1542–1549)[37]
1527–1542Ferenc Révayalso ispán of Turóc County (1532–1553), later palatinal governor (1542–1553)[38]
width=50% valign=top
For John I
TermPortraitIncumbentNotesSource
1526–1537Benedek Bekényior Bekény; appointed after the battle of Mohács
1539Szaniszló Várallyailater bishop of Pécs and ispán of Baranya County (1541–1548); the Ottomans occupied Pécs and Baranya during his reign (1543)

Kingdom of Hungary (1538–1867)

16th–17th century

TermPortraitIncumbentMonarchNotesSource
1542–1544Vacancy
1544–1562Mihály MéreyFerdinand Ilater palatinal governor (1562–1572); creator of the Quadripartitum (1551)[39]
1562–1570János ZomorFerdinand I
Maximilian
[40]
1570–1571Damján AranyániMaximilian
1572–1585András VitálMaximilian
Rudolf
master of judgement for palatine (1569–1572)
1585–1587Vacancy
1587–1603János JoóRudolfdismissed due to his involvement in the show trial against István Illésházy (1603)
1604–1616János LippayRudolf
Matthias II
one of the signatories of the treaty of Vienna (1606)[41]
1617–1625Benedek PákayMatthias II
Ferdinand II
also a royal councillor (1625)[42]
1625–1627Mózes CzirákyFerdinand II
1627–1628István PatachichFerdinand IIalso acting ban of Croatia (1626–1627)
1629–1630Gáspár TersztyánszkyFerdinand II
1631–1649Tamás MikulichFerdinand II
Ferdinand III
1650–1665György OrossyFerdinand III
Leopold I
also a royal councillor (1650–1665)
1665–1666Gáspár HeölgyiLeopold Iconverted to Roman Catholicism; his widow later married chief justice Esterházy[43]
1666–1667János SzakmárdyLeopold Ialso master of judgement for Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia, vice-ispán of Varaždin County, royal councillor (1666–1667)
1667–1670Farkas EsterházyLeopold Ifrom the House of Esterházy; member of the committee which investigated the Wesselényi conspiracy (1670)
1670–1677János MajthényiLeopold I[44]
1677–1679Vacancy
1679–1693István OrbánLeopold Ialso member of the Gubernium (1681–1693)
1693–1699János MaholányiLeopold Ialso master of judgement for chief justice (1695–1699)[45]

18th–19th century

TermPortraitIncumbentMonarchNotesSource
1699–1705Ferenc KlobusiczkyLeopold Ialso ispán of Arad (1699–1702) and Sáros Counties (1701–1708); he joined Kuruc during the Rákóczi's War of Independence (1705)
1705–1707Leopold Karl von KollonitschJoseph Ialso archbishop of Esztergom and lord chancellor (1695–1707); leading figure of the Hungarian Counter-Reformation[46]
1708–1723János Horváth-SimonchichJoseph I
Charles III
1723László HunyadyCharles IIIalso titular counselor for chancellery (1722–1723); died before taking office
1724–1731György SzárazCharles III
1731–1748Antal GrassalkovichCharles III
Maria Theresa
confidant of Maria Theresa; also ispán of Arad County (1744–1751); created baron (1736) and count (1743); appointed president of the Hungarian Court Chamber (1748)
1748–1762György FeketeMaria Theresaalso ispán of Arad and Zaránd Counties (1751–1788); created count (1758); appointed vice-chancellor (1762), later judge royal (1773)[47]
1762–1765Ferenc KollerMaria Theresaalso ispán of Bars County (1759–1787); dismissed
1765–1779Jakab SzveticsMaria Theresa
1779–1789Péter VéghMaria Theresa
Joseph II
also ispán of Baranya County (1782–1792); appointed master of the treasury (1789), later judge royal (1795)[48]
1789–1795József ÜrményiJoseph II
Leopold II
Francis
also ispán of Bács County (1790–1802); later appointed governor of Galicia (1801), judge royal (1806); Ratio Educationis (1777)[49]
1795–1801József Felsőbüki NagyFrancisspeaker of the Diet of 1796
1802–1808András SemseyFrancisalso ispán of Ugocsa (1803–1807) and Abaúj Counties (1807–1814); appointed president of the Hungarian Court Chamber (1808)
1808István AczélFrancisdismissed due to heavy resistance against his operation; appointed vice-chancellor (1808)
1808–1821György Majláth, Sr.FrancisJesuit cleric (1767–1773); also ispán of Tolna County (1811–1821)
1821–1825Zsigmond SzőgyényFrancisfather of László Szőgyény-Marich, Sr.; appointed vice-chancellor (1825)
1825–1831György Majláth, Jr.Francisson of György Majláth, Sr.; also ispán of Hont County (1828–1843), later judge royal (1839–1848), speaker of the House of Magnates and royal governor (1848)[50]
1831–1833Sándor MéreyFrancisalso ispán of Somogy County (1831–1845)
1833–1839Pongrác SomssichFrancis
Ferdinand V
also ispán of Baranya County (1835–1846)
1839–1847István SzerencsyFerdinand Valso ispán of Arad County (1836–1842); appointed master of the cupbearers (1847)
1847–1848János ZarkaFerdinand Vspeaker of the Diet of 1848
1848–1861Vacancy during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 and after its suppression
1861–1867István MelczerFrancis Joseph Ilast chief justice of the Kingdom of Hungary

See also

References

Laws and rules

External links

Notes and References

  1. Fallenbüchl 1988, p. 147.
  2. Szende 1999, p. 448.
  3. Gergely 2000, pp. 133–134.
  4. Fallenbüchl 1988, p. 107.
  5. Fallenbüchl 1988, p. 29.
  6. Markó 2006, p. 336.
  7. http://www.rubicon.hu/magyar/oldalak/a_magyar_kiralyi_udvar_tisztsegviseloi_a_kozepkorban/ Bertényi 1996.
  8. Kubinyi 2004, p. 40.
  9. http://mek.oszk.hu/05700/05752/html/03.htm#174 Fraknói 1899.
  10. Markó 2006, p. 444.
  11. Bónis 1971, table VI.
  12. Markó 2006, p. 333.
  13. Kubinyi 2000, p. 12.
  14. Kubinyi 2004, p. 32.
  15. Markó 2006, p. 339.
  16. Markó 2006, p. 319.
  17. Kubinyi 2000, p. 19.
  18. Bónis 1971, p. 254.
  19. Bónis 1971, pp. 225–226.
  20. Véber 2009, p. 26.
  21. Véber 2009, p. 34.
  22. Markó 2006, p. 332.
  23. Véber 2009, p. 68.
  24. Markó 2006, p. 309.
  25. Bónis 1971, p. 19.
  26. Matucsinai was also secular when he held the office of chief justice, however later became a Roman Catholic prelate. Kubinyi 2000, p. 19.
  27. Kubinyi 2000, p. 19.
  28. Markó 2006, p. 337.
  29. Véber 2009, p. 102.
  30. Bónis 1971, p. 334.
  31. Kubinyi 1957, p. 30.
  32. Markó 2006, p. 343.
  33. Kubinyi 1957, p. 32.
  34. Bónis 1971, pp. 319–320.
  35. Markó 2006, p. 259.
  36. Markó 2006, p. 344.
  37. Markó 2006, p. 257.
  38. Markó 2006, p. 250.
  39. Markó 2006, p. 240.
  40. Markó 2006, p. 345.
  41. Markó 2006, p. 340.
  42. Markó 2006, p. 342.
  43. Markó 2006, p. 338.
  44. Markó 2006, p. 341.
  45. Fallenbüchl 1988, p. 108.
  46. Markó 2006, p. 316.
  47. Markó 2006, p. 280.
  48. Markó 2006, p. 297.
  49. Markó 2006, p. 296.
  50. Markó 2006, p. 285–286.