Post by account_disabled on Mar 11, 2024 19:25:30 GMT -8
In the family area, González indicates that a response time of three years has gone from a “normalization” . Currently there are three sections, of which two of them respond in six months and another in a year, which, in his opinion, are reasonable times. “There may be specific issues that are delayed, among other issues due to reports from the technical teams” who, at times, are short or overwhelmed with work. He appreciates the effort made by the Ministry of Justice, thanks to which “a new family section has been created, a new commercial section and three new positions for magistrates will be created in the Provincial Court of Madrid. They are insufficient, he says, but it is already a step.
And the thing is that in the Provincial Court of Email Data Madrid there are 17 judges missing (8 in the civil sections and 9 in the penalty sections) for its functioning to be optimal; that is, so that all the civilian sections had 5 and 6 in the penal section. In this sense, the president of the Provincial Court of Madrid considers that there is a poor distribution of the judicial staff. “There are territories that need a greater number of judges and there are territories that could function with a smaller number .”
Another of the problems detected is the high level of litigation in Spain, especially in Madrid. In his opinion, “ there is litigation that does not respond to a legitimate interest. There is such a possibility of appeals, such procedural complexity, that artificial litigation is generated that does not respond to true interests. In addition to increasing the staff, measures must be implemented to reduce litigation so that judges can focus on what is important. Also resorting to alternative conflict resolution mechanisms,” says González. In this sense, he considers that the procedural complexity is such that “a lawyer who wants to hinder the development of a procedure has many resources to do so.”
And the thing is that in the Provincial Court of Email Data Madrid there are 17 judges missing (8 in the civil sections and 9 in the penalty sections) for its functioning to be optimal; that is, so that all the civilian sections had 5 and 6 in the penal section. In this sense, the president of the Provincial Court of Madrid considers that there is a poor distribution of the judicial staff. “There are territories that need a greater number of judges and there are territories that could function with a smaller number .”
Another of the problems detected is the high level of litigation in Spain, especially in Madrid. In his opinion, “ there is litigation that does not respond to a legitimate interest. There is such a possibility of appeals, such procedural complexity, that artificial litigation is generated that does not respond to true interests. In addition to increasing the staff, measures must be implemented to reduce litigation so that judges can focus on what is important. Also resorting to alternative conflict resolution mechanisms,” says González. In this sense, he considers that the procedural complexity is such that “a lawyer who wants to hinder the development of a procedure has many resources to do so.”