Third party intervention is an institute that enables an individual to take part in third-party proceedings in order to safeguard his own legal interest. Intervention interest, the content of which is shaped by court practice, is crucial for his inclusion in civil proceedings. This interest exists when an intervenor is in such a substantive relationship with one of the parties that the judgement could indirectly affect his legal position, or when an unfavourable court decision could affect the relationship between the two. A person who successfully joins the procedure as an intervenor can generally perform all procedural acts, provided that they benefit the party he joined in the proceeding, the party does not oppose them and that these acts are not directly contrary to the party’s actions. This is the result of the fact that an intervenor is not a party, but only appears in the procedure as the party’s assistant who is responsible for the party’s legal interests and benefits, thereby indirectly protecting his own legal position. In the dissertation Third party intervention in recent court practice I find that the procedural provisions focusing on third party intervention are unclear and deficient in certain parts, thus a more detailed legal position, terms and requirements that the intervenor must meet to enter a proceeding, have been filled and shaped by court practice. This dissertation focuses primarily on the analysis of court practice covering civil proceedings, with a comparative analysis of third party intervention in the field of administrative proceedings, and a short analysis in the field of administrative disputes.
|