Protection of Public Interest in Civil Procedure and the Doctrine of the Constitutional Court
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Abstract
							On 21 June 2011 the Parliament of the Republic of Lithuania adopted  extensive and important amendments of the Code of Civil Procedure of the  Republic of Lithuania. Most of them came into force on 1 October  2011.One of the important tasks that have been mentioned for the  preparation of amendments was to ensure the implementation of the  Constitutional Court’s doctrine of matters of civil procedure. This  article analyses one of the changed aspect - the system of defence of  public interest. The doctrine of concept of public interest was formed  by the resolutions of the Lithuanian Constitutional Court adopted on 16  January and 21 September 2006. That concept was quite confusing and  could be interpreted widely as well as narrowly (such as protection of  special key values in the Constitution). This paper analyses the manner  in which the doctrine of the Constitutional Court has been implemented  in the law of civil procedure. In addition, the article analyzes the  history of the amendments in the Code of Civil Procedure relating to the  protection of public interest. The author presents a situation proposed  to the Working Group that prepared the draft amendments to the Code of  Civil Procedure, and compares the proposals with the effective version  of the Code of Civil Procedure. The same article analyses the way that  the effective version of the Code of Civil Procedure forces to the  protection of the public interest doctrine of the Constitutional Court.  The author concludes that the current system is conducive to abuses when  the state can envisage the existence of public interest in every  dispute and intervene in its investigation. In addition, the court is  transformed into an entity liable to defend public interest, while it  should be an independent and impartial entity to administer justice. Let  us hope that in judicial practice the concept of public interest will  be interpreted very narrowly and the Code of Civil Procedure provides  the right to collect evidence or apply interim protection measures and  etc. will be seen as a political mistake and generally will not be  applied (except when it comes to non dispositive cases).
						
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