discipline in criminal matters in order to bring it under a special discipline
and even less when this entails an aggravation of the punishment. Such a
the legislature alone by Article 25 of the Constitution, excluding any possibil-
ity of intervention through so-called additive judgments.
ity of the provision establishing that a parent intending to proceed to the belated recognition of
his/her son, already recognized by the other parent, needed the consent of the latter, waivered
only by a judgment of the Court which takes the place of the lacking parental consent: see the
taining to Article 266 of the Criminal Code, regarding the crime of inciting members of the
“Additive Judgments”
473
16.4. The Various Types of Additive Judgments
According to the classification proposed in the doctrine, additive judgments
come under the category of “manipulative judgments,” together with substi-
tutive judgments.
50
Within the category of additive judgments, it is possible
to distinguish between additive performance judgments and additive proce-
dural judgments. Despite the name, additive judgments of principle form an
autonomous category. There are also some new types of additive judgments
for which it is not yet possible to identify a category.
16.4.1. Additive Judgments
16.4.1.1. Additive Performance Judgments
With additive performance judgments, the Court introduces a “new” provi-
sion or, more frequently, extends the economically favorable effects of a law
to categories originally excluded in an “unreasonable way” from the benefit.
51
Additionally, there may be additive judgments of performance adopted under
the principle of solidarity, as envisaged in Article 38 of the Constitution.
52
The
peculiarity of this type of decision lies not so much in the ruling itself as in the
reasoning and in the effects it produces, as they create an economic burden
on public spending.
According to the third paragraph of Article 81 of the Constitution, which
introduces the necessary “financial coverage” clause, “any law involving new
or increased expenditure shall provide for the resources to cover such expend-
iture.”
53
Strictly speaking, this provision does not apply to the decisions of the
Constitutional Court, being directed only to Parliament and the Government.
However, the Court cannot ignore this provision when addressing the nec-
essary balancing between the rights guaranteed by the added benefits, and
respect for the principle of proper management of public finances. If the
Court considers that the disputed provision is unconstitutional because of the
breach of the principle of equality, two different scenarios are possible.
50
See Judgments 15 of 1969 and 409 of 1989.
51
See Judgment 1 of 1991.
52
See Judgment 250 of 1994 on the integration of the minimum pension.
53
Article 81 of the Constitution was modified by Constitutional Law no. 1 of 2012 in response to
the 2012 Euro-crisis: see Tania Groppi, Irene Spigno and Nicola Vizioli, “The Constitutional
Consequences of the Financial Crisis in Italy” in Xenophon Contiades (ed.), Constitutions in
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