Abstract

The paper analyses legal relations that develop in writ proceedings and conciliation procedures and substantiates the idea that they are not included in the subject of civil procedural law. The author shows their qualitative difference from the industry forming relations arising in the administration of justice and the impossibility of combining them in the subject of the industry. The effectiveness of changes in civil procedural legislation aimed at reducing the judicial burden is assessed. It is pointed out that it is inadmissible to refuse procedural guarantees of justice. The author agrees with the position existing in the scientific literature on the exclusion of writ proceedings from the jurisdiction of the courts in order to optimize the workload on judges. Attention is given to the need to improve the procedure for issuing court orders, some measures are proposed for this. Due to the lack of connection between the relations that develop in conciliation procedures and the subject of the industry, the inclusion of the norms regulating them in the texts of civil procedural codes is criticized.

Highlights

  • The paper analyses legal relations that develop in writ proceedings and conciliation procedures and substantiates the idea that they are not included in the subject of civil procedural law

  • The author shows their qualitative difference from the industry forming relations arising in the administration of justice and the impossibility of combining them in the subject of the industry

  • Attention is given to the need to improve the procedure for issuing court orders, some measures are proposed for this

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Summary

Introduction

The paper analyses legal relations that develop in writ proceedings and conciliation procedures and substantiates the idea that they are not included in the subject of civil procedural law.

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