Police Tribunal (France)
A police tribunal is a criminal jurisdiction which judges the most serious or complicated contraventions committed by adults, classified as fifth-class (serious enough to be recorded in the casier judiciaire). More serious offenses (infractions) are judged by a tribunal correctionnel, correctional tribunal, when they are délits or misdemeanors, or by a cour d'assises (for a crime, analogous to a felony). Lesser or less serious contraventions (in the 1st to 4th categories), are the purview of a juge de proximité.
Composition
The police tribunal sits at the tribunal d'instance and is composed of a juge d'instance and a greffier, or court clerk. The ministère public is represented by the procureur de la République or one of his representatives, known as substituts (substitutes) if the offense is a fifth-degree contravention.
Contraventions of the first four classes (1-4) have since 2005 been brought before the juridiction de proximité, proximate jurisdiction, rather than the police tribunal as before 2005, except in the absence of a juge de proximité.
Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction of subject (ratione materiæ)
The police tribunal handles contraventions, except offenses punishable by a penalty of imprisonment or of fines greater than 3,000 euros, voire 4,000(? -t) euros (Article 521[1] of the code de procédure pénale, Code of Penal Procedure). The version approved November 18, 2016 provides for a few exceptions, such as an edict of the Conseil d'État. The police tribunal is also competent d'attribution, meaning it also has juridiction, in matters of customs, as provided by Article 356 of the Code des douanes, Code of Customs,[2] which specifies that the "tribunaux de police connaissent des contraventions douanières et de toutes les questions douanières soulevées par voie d'exception," (the police tribunals have authority ("know") in customs infractions and in all customs questions which may arise as exceptions).
Jurisdiction of place (ratione loci)
The police tribunal may handle infractions from any of the following relevant scopes of authority:
- place of the infraction's commission or discovery
- of the defendant's residence
- site of an impounded subject vehicle
The other compétence rules are identical to those of the tribunal correctionnel, (correctional tribunal).
References
External links
- (French) Texts of laws governing police tribunals
- (French) Police tribunals on the site of the French Ministry of Justice