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Review of European Administrative Law (REALaw)
2024 / 1 (april) 1
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp

    Special issue ‘Proof in Administrative Law’: Editorial online pdf
Articles
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp, Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    Proof in administrative law: introduction and comparative insights online pdf
  • Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    Proof of the Facts in Belgian Administrative Law: An Analysis of the Case Law of the Belgian Council of State online pdf
  • Caroline Expert-Foulquier - Associate Professor in public law, University of Limoges

    Proof of facts in administrative law in France: many ad hoc and ex post rules of evidence, but for how long? online pdf
  • Katharina Reiling - Professor of Public Law, Universität Bremen

    Proof in Administrative Law: the German Perspective online pdf
  • Professor Y. E. Schuurmans - Professor of Constitutional and Administrative Law, Leiden University

    Proof in Dutch Administrative Law online pdf
  • Stéphanie De Somer - Associate professor of administrative law, University of Antwerp, Annelien Stijleman - Doctoral Researcher Research Fund, University of Antwerp (BOF)

    The ‘Europeanization’ of the rules and principles on proof in domestic administrative law online pdf
Case Review
  • Dr Jakub Kerlin - Member of the Legal Service of the Single Resolution Board., Dariusz Ceran - Member of the Legal Service of the Single Resolution Board

    Obligation to State Reasons: Clear Principle with (Still) Unclear Scope? In Search of an Adequate Standard of Reasoning for a Decision Based on Confidential Data (Joined Cases C-584/20 P and C-621/20 P Commission and SRB v Landesbank Baden-Württemberg) online pdf
Book Reviews
  • Annemarie Drahmann - Associate Professor, Department of Constitutional and Administrative Law, Leiden University

    Felix Uhlmann (ed.), Codification of Administrative Law: A Comparative Study on the Sources of Administrative Law, Oxford: Hart Publishing 2023, ISBN 978-1-50995-492-6, Identifier b-9781509954957, open access online pdf
  • Sarah Tas - Sarah Tas, Assistant Professor of European and Comparative Administrative Law, Department of Public Law, Maastricht University.

    Evangelia (Lilian) Tsourdi and Philippe De Bruycker (Eds.), Research Handbook on EU Migration and Asylum Law. Edward Elgar, 2022. ISBN: 9781786439628 online pdf

Proof in Administrative Law: the German Perspective

Toon als PDF
Katharina Reiling - Professor of Public Law, Universität Bremen*


Abstract

German administrative law is characterized by the idea that the authorities and, in the case of a lawsuit, the administrative judges have sovereignty over the investigation of the facts - the so-called principle of ex officio inquiry (Section 1). In the relationship between the official and judicial investigation of the facts, it is striking that the judicial duty to investigate is not limited by the official duty to clarify the facts. This shift in the direction of a judicial right of final decision, also with regard to the factual basis of administrative decisions, derived from the German Constitution (Article 19(4) Grundgesetz) can probably only be explained by the historical background of National Socialist despotism. The article reveals that the instruments of evidence collection (Section 2), the consideration of evidence (Section 3), the evidential standard (Section 4) and the burden of proof (Section 5) are based on the principle of ex officio inquiry. This principle is based on the assumption that only a perceivable set of facts can be established. Therefore, practice and sectoral administrative laws show that in areas where obtaining knowledge is particularly difficult, the principle of ex officio investigation and the law of evidence based on it must be modified and, in particular, strong participation of the parties in obtaining the facts must be made possible. At the same time, the German law of evidence is based on theories and instruments of civil procedural law, which is characterized by the principle of production of evidence. Against this background, the article aims to illustrate that, contrary to the first impression, German administrative law does not implement the principle of official investigation in its pure form, but it is understood in a refined open and area-specific manner.

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