nal inconsistencies. Early on, the Court announced that in order to fill in
Andrew Arato and Zoltán Miklósi, ‘Constitution Making and Transitional Politics in Hungary’,
Georg Brunner, cited in Dupré, Supra note 34, 37.
Interim Constitutions and the Invisible Constitution
185
The Hungarian Fundamental Law, which came into force on 1 January
2012, contained an explicit disavowal of the 1949 Constitution and appeared to
reject the post-communist era amendments to that law as well. In spite of this
disavowal, the Constitutional Court’s rulings in the interim era continued to
have a significant influence on the law of Hungary.
An example of the continued application of principles developed in the
interim era is seen in a 2013 case where the Court invalidated an Act on Election
Procedure on the basis that it was unconstitutional. The Court’s ruling included
reference to numerous cases heard under the previous constitution. In uphold-
ing a particular interpretation of Article 7(1) of the Fundamental Law about
Hungary’s acceptance of the ‘generally recognised rules of international law’,
the Court made its decision according to the approach ‘already established by
the Constitutional Court on the basis of the previous Constitution’ in a 1993
case and noted that the previous constitution contained the ‘same essential
content’.
88
In a separate part of the judgment, the Court noted that while the
two Constitutions contained provisions that were not identical, they were ‘sim-
ilar’ and that ‘therefore the Constitutional Court’s interpretation of the law as
contained in its previous decisions is to be followed in the course of reviewing
the present case, too’.
89
Thus, even though the jurisprudence under the 1989
Constitution was not only not binding – but disavowed – by the Fundamental
Law, it continued to have ongoing influence in Hungarian constitutional law.
This influence has been ended, or severely curtailed, by subsequent amend-
ments to the Fundamental law discussed by Toth in Chapter 19.
The Polish Constitutional Tribunal was established in the communist era
and commenced hearing cases in 1986. The only body of its kind in the Soviet
bloc, it lacked the political or legal power to challenge the supremacy of the
legislature, but even in the communist period the Tribunal was effective in its
focus on reviewing administrative decisions.
90
One substantial area of juris-
prudence established in the interim era relates to the
Rechtsstaat principle.
The Rechtsstaat principle is embodied in Article 1 of the amended 1952 text
and states that Poland is a ‘democratic state ruled by law, implementing prin-
ciples of social justice’. Andrzej Zoll, the Chief Justice of the Constitutional
Tribunal from 1993–7, describes the ‘great deal of freedom’ the Tribunal has in
88
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: