Vice President of the Supreme Court (Spain)

Vice President of the Supreme Court
Incumbent
Dimitry Berberoff Ayuda
since 25 September 2024
Supreme Court of Spain
StyleThe Most Excellent
Member ofSupreme Court of Spain
Reports toPresident of the Supreme Court
SeatSalesas Reales Convent, Madrid
NominatorGeneral Council of the Judiciary
AppointerMonarch
Term length5 years, renewable
Constituting instrumentAct 4/2013
Formation2013; 11 years ago (2013)
First holderÁngel Juanes Peces
Websitewww.poderjudicial.es

The Vice President of the Supreme Court is the second highest authority of the Supreme Court of Spain and its main duty is to support and replace the President as head of the Court. The vice president is appointed by the Monarch after being nominated by the General Council of the Judiciary at the proposal of the president of the council. It has a term of five years.

As the second authority and the main assistant to the president, the legislation established that the vice president is the person responsible for replacing the president in cases of vacancy, absence, illness or other legitimate reasons.[1] The office of vice president was created in 2013 and it must not to be confused with the Vice President of the General Council of the Judiciary. The office of Vice President of the Supreme Court was created to replace the CGPJ Vice Presidency. Likewise, the president may delegate in the vice president the superior direction of the Technical Office of the Supreme Court, as well as other functions, but always for a justified reason.[1][2]

The vice president, due to the fact of being it, is a born member of the Governing Chamber of the Supreme Court and it is responsible for proposing to the Chamber and to the president the adoption of those decisions aimed at guaranteeing the correct functioning of the Supreme Court, as well as ensuring the exact execution of the agreements adopted by the Governing Chamber.[1]

The current Vice President of the Supreme Court is Dimitry Berberoff Ayuda, who was elected unanimously by the members of the General Council of the Judiciary on 25 September 2024.[3]

  1. ^ a b c "Organic Act 4/2013, of June 28, on the reform of the General Council of the Judiciary, which modifies the Organic Act 6/1985, of July 1, on the Judiciary". www.boe.es. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
  2. ^ "1985 Organic Act of the Judiciary". www.boe.es. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
  3. ^ Rincón, Reyes (2024-09-25). "El magistrado conservador Dimitry Berberoff, elegido por unanimidad vicepresidente del Supremo". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-09-29.