Supreme Court of Japan
Supreme Court of Japan | |
---|---|
最高裁判所 | |
Supreme Court Building | |
Established | 1947 |
Country | Japan |
Location | Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo |
Coordinates | 35°40′49″N 139°44′37″E / 35.68028°N 139.74361°ECoordinates: 35°40′49″N 139°44′37″E / 35.68028°N 139.74361°E |
Composition method | Appointed by The Emperor on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
Authorized by | Constitution of Japan |
Judge term length | Life tenure until the mandatory retirement age of 70. |
Website | www.courts.go.jp |
Chief Justice of Japan | |
Currently | Itsurō Terada |
Since | April 1, 2014 |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Japan |
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The Supreme Court of Japan (最高裁判所 Saikō-Saibansho; called 最高裁 Saikō-Sai for short), located in Hayabusachō, Chiyoda, Tokyo is the highest court in Japan. It has ultimate judicial authority to interpret the Japanese constitution and decide questions of national law (including local bylaws). It has the power of judicial review; that is, it can declare Acts of the National Diet, local assemblies, and administrative actions, to be unconstitutional.
History
The first Western-style supreme court in Japan was the Supreme Court of Judicature (大審院 Dai-shin'in) organized by the Ministry of Justice in 1875. This court was composed of 120 judges in both civil and criminal divisions. Five judges would be empaneled for any given case. The criminal division of the court was the court of first instance for crimes against the Emperor (e.g. lèse majesté) and for high crimes against public order.
The statute creating the Court was abolished in 1947, and the modern Supreme Court was formed that year under the constitution of 1947. The new court was first convened in May 1947 in the former Privy Council quarters of the Tokyo Imperial Palace. It moved to the Tokyo District Court building in September, then assumed the former quarters of the Supreme Court of Judicature in October 1949.
In 1974, the Supreme Court moved to its current five-story building at 4-2 Hayabusa-cho, Chiyoda, Tokyo. The building was designed by architect Shinichi Okada and won the Architecture Institute of Japan Prize for Design.
Appointment and organization
The Article 81 of the constitution designates it as "the court of last resort with power to determine the constitutionality of any law, order, regulation, or official act." The Supreme Court is also responsible for nominating judges to lower courts, determining judicial procedures, overseeing the judicial system, including the activities of public prosecutors, and disciplining judges and other judicial personnel. It renders decisions from either a grand bench of fifteen justices or a petit bench of five. The grand bench is required for cases involving constitutionality. The court includes 34 research clerks, whose function is similar to that of the clerks of the United States Supreme Court.
The Chief Justice is nominated by the Cabinet and appointed to office by the Emperor.
The associate justices are appointed by the Cabinet in attestation of the Emperor.
After appointment, Supreme Court justices are subject to a "people's review": an automatic retention referendum in which the voters may remove the judge from office. A people's review occurs at the first election to the House of Representatives after a justice assumes office, when the question of whether his tenure should continue is put to voters on the ballot. The Supreme Court justice is then subject to a further people's review at the first lower house election after every ten years. The system used resembles the Missouri Plan followed in some U.S. states. It is established by Article 79 of the constitution which includes the following provisions:
The appointment of the judges of the Supreme Court shall be reviewed by the people at the first general election of members of the House of Representatives following their appointment, and shall be reviewed again at the first general election of members of the House of Representatives after a lapse of ten years, and in the same manner thereafter.
In cases mentioned in the foregoing paragraph, when the majority of the voters favors the dismissal of a judge, he shall be dismissed.
As of October 2009, no Supreme Court justice has ever been dismissed by a people's review. It is also unusual for a justice to be subject to a second review, as most are over the age of sixty when appointed and there is mandatory retirement at seventy.[1]
Judicial review of laws
The Supreme Court is the only Japanese court explicitly empowered to review the constitutionality of laws, although it has held that lower courts also have power to interpret the constitution.[2] Unlike constitutional courts in other civil law countries, it only exercises judicial review in cases where there is a genuine dispute between parties, and does not accept questions of constitutionality from government officials.[3]
The Supreme Court is generally reluctant to exercise the powers of judicial review given to it by the constitution, in large part because of unwillingness to become involved in politically sensitive issues. When decisions have been rendered on such matters as the constitutionality of the Self-Defense Forces, the sponsorship of Shinto ceremonies by public authorities, or the authority of the Ministry of Education to determine the content of school textbooks or teaching curricula, the Court has generally deferred to the government.[4]
One important exception to this trend was a series of rulings on the unconstitutionality of the electoral district apportionment system. Although the Court ruled in 1964 that legislative districting was largely a matter of legislative policy, it ruled in the 1976 case of Kurokawa v. Chiba Prefecture Election Control Commission, that a 5:1 discrepancy in the voter-to-representative ratio between two districts was an unconstitutional violation of the right to an equal vote.[5] Nonetheless the Diet has repeatedly failed to keep malapportionment within the limits set forth in Kurokawa.[6] Aside from electoral matters, provisions declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court have included rules[6]
- Punishing patricide more harshly than other homicides.
- Restricting pharmacies from doing business close to one another.
- Limiting the liability of the postal service for the loss of registered mail.
- Restricting subdivision of property by joint owners of forest land.
- Restricting the right of citizenship of certain illegitimate children.
One critic of the court writes that:
The Supreme Court of Japan has been described as the most conservative constitutional court in the world, and for good reason ...Since its creation in 1947 [the court] has struck down only eight statutes on constitutional grounds. By way of comparison, Germany’s constitutional court, which was established several years later, has struck down over 600 laws. The majority of the Japanese Supreme Court’s rulings of unconstitutionality have, moreover, been less than momentous ...The high point of ...judicial review in Japan is probably a 1976 decision rejecting a legislative apportionment scheme ...yet the Court refrained in that case from ordering any remedy.[6]
Current justices
The current justices are listed here:[7]
Title | Name | Petty Bench | University | Background | Previous occupation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chief Justice | Itsurō Terada | Second | Tokyo | Judge | President, Hiroshima High Court |
Justice | Yuki Furuta | Second | Tokyo | Prosecutor | Deputy Prosecutor-General, Supreme Public Prosecutors Office |
Justice | Mutsuo Tahara | Third | Kyoto | Attorney | Guest Professor, Kyoto University |
Justice | Koji Miyakawa | First | Nagoya | Attorney | |
Justice | Ryuko Sakurai | First | Kyushu | Bureaucrat | Director-General of the Women's Bureau, Ministry of Labour |
Justice | Yukio Takeuchi | Second | Kyoto | Diplomat | Special Adviser of Ministry of Foreign Affairs |
Justice | Seishi Kanetsuki | First | Tokyo | Judge | President, Osaka High Court |
Justice | Masahiko Sudo | Second | Chuo | Attorney | |
Justice | Katsumi Chiba | Second | Tokyo | Judge | President, Sendai High Court |
Justice | Tomoyuki Yokota | First | Chuo | Prosecutor | Deputy Prosecutor-General, Supreme Public Prosecutors Office |
Justice | Yū Shiraki | First | Tokyo | Judge | President, Tokyo High Court |
Justice | Kiyoko Okabe | Third | Keio | Judge, Academic | Professor, Keio University School of Law |
Justice | Takehiko Otani | Third | Tokyo | Judge | President, Osaka High Court |
Justice | Itsuro Terada | Third | Tokyo | Judge | President, Hiroshima High Court |
Justice | Masaharu Ōhashi | Third | Tokyo | Attorney | Official in the Japanese Federation of Bar Associations (JFBA) |
Former justices
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Title | Name | Petty Bench | University | Background | Previous occupation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Justice | Tokuji Izumi[8] | First | Kyoto | Judge | President, Tokyo High Court |
Chief Justice | Niro Shimada[9] | Second | Tokyo | Judge | President, Osaka High Court |
Justice | Kazuko Yokoo[10] | First | ICU | Diplomat | Ambassador of Japan to Ireland |
Justice | Chiharu Saiguchi[10] | First | Chūō | Attorney | Member, Advisory Committee on Civil Rules of the Supreme Court |
Justice | Osamu Tsuno[10] | Second | Kyoto | Bureaucrat, attorney | Director-General, Cabinet Legislation Bureau |
Justice | Shigeo Takii[10] | Second | |||
Justice | Kohei Nasu | Third | Tokyo | Attorney | Chairperson of the Sub-Committee on Research of Japan Law Foundation |
See also
- Politics of Japan
- Japanese law
- Judicial system of Japan
- Chief Justice of Japan
- 2008 Decisions of the Supreme Court of Japan
Footnotes
This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Library of Congress Country Studies. - Japan
- ↑ "Editorial: Review of Top Justices". Asahi Shimbun. 2009-08-27. Archived from the original on October 1, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
- ↑ Food Staple Management Law Constitutionality Case, 4 Minshu 73 (1950).
- ↑ National Police Reserve Constitutionality Case, 6 Minshu 783 (1952).
- ↑ Bolz, Herbert F. (1980). "Judicial Review in Japan: The Strategy of Restraint". Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 4 (87).
- ↑ Bailey, William Somers (1997). "Reducing Malapportionment in Japan's Electoral Districts: The Supreme Court Must Act". Pacific Rim Law and Policy Journal 6 (169).
- 1 2 3 Law, David S. (2009). "The Anatomy of a Conservative Court: Judicial Review in Japan". Texas Law Review 87: 1545.
- ↑ "Justices of the Supreme Court". Supreme Court of Japan. 2006. Retrieved 2010-05-03.
- ↑ "IZUMI, Tokuji." Supreme Court of Japan. Accessed February 12, 2009.
- ↑ "SHIMADA, Niro." Supreme Court of Japan. Accessed November 2, 2008.
- 1 2 3 4 "Justices of the Supreme Court." Supreme Court of Japan. June 17, 2006.
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