Roman law in the jurisprudence of Russian courts
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
St Petersburg State University
Abstract
In modern Russian judicial practice, the justification of court decisions by normative provisions
extracted from all that is collectively embraced by the concept of “soft law” is becoming increasingly
widespread. In this article, this phenomenon is revealed in the aspect of the practical
application by Russian courts of certain provisions of Roman law. Considering specific examples
of this kind, the authors, through doctrinal reflection, seek to identify common reasons
that encourage domestic courts to turn to the mentioned source of “soft law” and come to the
conclusion that modern Russian civil law in a sense repeated the path that was traversed by
the civil law of imperial Russia. If, back in the middle of the 19th century, the judiciary could not
even think of looking for a source of inspiration anywhere other than a literal interpretation of
the text of the law, then with the beginning of the “Great Reforms” of the 1860s, the unsuitability
of such an approach for servicing the rapidly developing turnover was revealed, and since the
legislator could not keep up with its development, the main work of adapting positive law to
changing relations was accepted the courts have assumed much broader discretionary powers.
Since the possibilities of the domestic doctrine to meet the needs of the law enforcement
officer in understanding and developing Russian law turned out to be very limited, judges found
themselves in demand for the European civilian tradition based on Roman law, familiarity with
which prompted them to independent judicial law-making. In many ways, similar processes are
observed in post-Soviet Russia, a visible manifestation of which is the expansion of “soft law”
into law enforcement practice, primarily through an appeal to the analogy of law and teleological
interpretation. One of the facets of this process is the revival of interest in the legacy of Roman
law and the Romanistic tradition. In this sense, unexpected parallels are found with the
development of the common law.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Rudokvas A. D., Fedorova O. A. 2024. Roman law in the jurisprudence of Russian courts. Pravovedenie 68 (1): 7–25. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu25.2024.101 (In Russian)