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Supreme Federal Court

The Supreme Federal Court (Portuguese: Supremo Tribunal Federal, [suˈpɾẽmu tɾibuˈnaw fedeˈɾaw], abbreviated STF) is the supreme court (court of last resort) of Brazil, serving primarily as the country's Constitutional Court. It is the highest court of law in Brazil for constitutional issues and its rulings cannot be appealed. On cases involving exclusively non-constitutional issues, regarding federal laws, the highest court is, by rule, the Superior Court of Justice.

Supreme Federal Court
Supremo Tribunal Federal
15°48′08″S 47°51′43″W / 15.80222°S 47.86194°W / -15.80222; -47.86194
Established28 February 1891; 133 years ago (1891-02-28)
LocationBrasília, Federal District, Brazil
Coordinates15°48′08″S 47°51′43″W / 15.80222°S 47.86194°W / -15.80222; -47.86194
Composition methodPresidential nomination with Senate confirmation
Authorized byConstitution of Brazil
Appeals fromState Courts of Justice
Judge term lengthLife tenure (mandatory retirement at age 75)
Number of positions11
Websiteportal.stf.jus.br
President
CurrentlyLuís Roberto Barroso
Since28 September 2023
Vice President
CurrentlyLuiz Edson Fachin
Since28 September 2023

History edit

 
The Justice, by Alfredo Ceschiatti in front of the Supreme Federal Court

The current court was preceded by the House of Appeals of Brazil (Casa de Suplicação do Brasil), which was inaugurated during the colonial era on 10 May 1808, the year that the Portuguese royal family (the House of Braganza) arrived in Rio de Janeiro after fleeing to Brazil.

The Brazilian proclamation of Independence and the adoption of the Imperial Constitution in 1824 preceded the establishment of the Supreme Court of Justice (Supremo Tribunal de Justiça) in 1829, which served as the Brazilian Empire's supreme court. With the fall of the monarchy and Brazil's first Republican Constitution, the current court was established.

Although the constitutional norms that regulated the creation of the court allowed Deodoro da Fonseca, Brazil's first president, to nominate an entirely new court, the president chose to nominate as the first members of the Supreme Federal Court the ministers who were then serving as members of the imperial court that preceded it.

Two hundred members have served on the court. The Constitution of 1891 provided that the court would have 15 members. When Getúlio Vargas came into power, the number of members was reduced to 11. The number was changed to 16 in 1965, but returned to 11 in 1969 and has not changed since. Of all Presidents of Brazil, only Café Filho and Carlos Luz (acting) never nominated a minister.

All judicial and administrative meetings of the STF have been broadcast live on television since 2002. The court is open for the public to watch the meetings.

On 8 January 2023, the building was attacked by supporters of the former president, Jair Bolsonaro.[1]

Functions edit

Alongside its appeal competence, mostly by the Extraordinary Appeal (Recurso Extraordinário), the Court has a small range of cases of original jurisdiction, including the power of judicial review, judging the constitutionality of laws passed by the National Congress, through a Direct Action of Unconstitutionality (Ação Direta de Inconstitucionalidade, or ADI). There are also other mechanisms for reaching the Court directly, such as the Declaratory Action of Constitutionality (Ação Declaratória de Constitucionalidade, or ADC) and the Direct Action of Unconstitutionality by Omission (Ação Direta de Inconstitucionalidade por Omissão or ADO).

Case law edit

In May 2009 The Economist called the Supreme Federal Court "the most overburdened court in the world, thanks to a plethora of rights and privileges entrenched in the country's 1988 constitution (...) till recently the tribunal's decisions did not bind lower courts. The result was a court that is overstretched to the point of mutiny. The Supreme Court received 100,781 cases last year."[2]

Overruling seems to be frequent in SFC jurisprudence: "three years ago when the STF adopted the understanding that defendants who have a conviction upheld by a single appellate court may be sent to jail to begin serving their sentences. (...) The 2016 decision happened largely due to a change in opinion from Minister Gilmar Mendes (...). He had voted against sending defendants to jail after a single failed appeal in 2009, but changed his mind in 2016. Jump to 2019, and the circumstances – both political and judicial – have changed".[3]

President and Vice President edit

The President of the STF and its Vice President are elected by their peers for a two-year term by secret ballot. The incumbent president is Minister Luís Roberto Barroso.[4]

Reelection for a consecutive term is not allowed. By tradition, the most senior minister who has not yet served in the presidential role is elected as the president by the court members, to avoid politicisation of the court.

If all currently sitting members have already served in the presidential role, the rotation starts all over again. However, due to vacancies caused by the compulsory retirement age and subsequent appointment of new ministers, it is very rare for the cycle to be ever completed. Some ministers are forced to retire before their turn for the presidency arrives, as was expected to happen with Teori Zavascki.

According to the same convention, the minister who is next in the line of succession for the presidency will serve as the vice-president for the time being. Also by tradition, the elections of the president and vice-president are never unanimous, there being always one isolated minority vote in each election, as the ministers who are to be elected never cast their votes for themselves; such votes are cast either for the dean of the court—its most senior member—or for some other elder minister that the one to be elected admires and wants to pay homage to.

The chief justice is also the 4th in the presidential line of succession, when the President of the Republic becomes prevented to be in charge, being preceded by the Vice President, the President of the Chamber of Deputies, and the President of the Federal Senate, as provided in Article 80 of the Brazilian Constitution.[5]

Current members edit

The eleven judges of the court are called Ministers (Ministros), although having no similarity with the government body of ministers. They are appointed by the President and approved by the Federal Senate. There is no term length but a mandatory retirement age of 75.[6]

  Former president of the Court.     President of the Court.     Vice-President of the Court.
Order of
antiquity
Minister[M] Born (date and state) Appointed by Age at inauguration Initial date
(inauguration)
Limit date
(retirement)
Main previous functions
1  

Gilmar Ferreira Mendes

30 December 1955 in

Mato Grosso

Cardoso 46 20 June 2002 30 December 2030 Prosecutor of the Republic (1985–1988), deputy chief for Legal Issues of the Chief of Staff (1996–2000), Attorney General of the Union (2000–2002)
2  

Cármen Lúcia Antunes Rocha

19 April 1954 in

Minas Gerais

Lula 52 21 June 2006 19 April 2029 Attorney of the State of Minas Gerais (1983–2006)
3  

José Antonio Dias Toffoli

15 November 1967 in

São Paulo

Lula 41 23 October 2009 15 November 2042 Lawyer (1991–2009), deputy chief for Legal Issues of the Chief of Staff (2003–2005), Attorney General of the Union (2007–2009)
4  

Luiz Fux

26 April 1953 in

Rio de Janeiro

Rousseff 57 3 March 2011 26 April 2028 Prosecutor of Public Prosecutor's Office of Rio de Janeiro (1979–1982), judge of the state of Rio de Janeiro (1983–1997), desembargador of the Justice Court of the state of Rio de Janeiro (1997–2001), minister of STJ (2001–2011)
5  

Luís Roberto Barroso

11 March 1958 in

Rio de Janeiro

Rousseff 55 26 June 2013 11 March 2033 Lawyer (1981–2013), Attorney of the State of Rio de Janeiro (1985–2013)
6  

Luiz Edson Fachin

8 February 1958 in

Rio Grande do Sul

Rousseff 57 16 June 2015 8 February 2033 Lawyer (1980–2015), Attorney of the State of Paraná (1990–2006)
7  

Alexandre de Moraes

13 December 1968 in

São Paulo

Temer 48 22 March 2017 13 December 2043 Prosecutor of the Public Prosecutor's Office of the state of São Paulo (1991–2002), lawyer of public law (2010–2014), minister of Justice and Public Security (2016–2017)
8  

Kássio Nunes Marques

16 May 1972 in

Piauí

Bolsonaro 48 5 November 2020 16 May 2047 Desembargador of the Regional Federal Court of the 1st Region (2011–2020)
9  

André Luiz de Almeida Mendonça

27 December 1972 in

São Paulo

Bolsonaro 48 16 December 2021 27 December 2047 Attorney General of the Union (2019–2021), Minister of Justice and Public Security (2020)
10  

Cristiano Zanin Martins

15 November 1975 in

São Paulo

Lula 47 3 August 2023 15 November 2050 Lawyer (2000–2023)
11  

Flávio Dino de Castro e Costa

30 April 1968 in

Maranhão

Lula 55 22 February 2024[7] 30 April 2043 Minister of Justice and Public Security (2023–2024), Governor of Maranhão (2015–2022), Senator for Maranhão (2023), Federal Judge (1996–2006)

Notes

  • M. ^ Names in bold are the names used in social denomination.[8]

In relation to other courts edit

The 92 courts of the Brazilian judiciary
[9][10][11] State Federal
Superior
courts
0 Supreme Federal Court
STF
1
Federal superior courts

STJ TSE TST STM

4
Common
justice
Court of Justice
TJ
27 Federal Regional Courts
TRF1 .. TRF6
6
Specialized
justice
State Military
Justice Courts
3 Electoral Justice Courts
TRE
27
TJME Regional Labor Courts
TRT
24
Total
30 62

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nicas, Jack; Spigariol, André (8 January 2023). "Bolsonaro Supporters Lay Siege to Brazil's Capital". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  2. ^ . The Economist. 21 May 2009. Archived from the original on 25 May 2009.
  3. ^ Recondo, Felipe; Seligman, Felipe (5 November 2019). . Americas Quarterly. Archived from the original on 10 November 2019.
  4. ^ Patriolino, Luana; Souza, Renato (28 September 2023). "Luís Roberto Barroso toma posse como presidente do Supremo" [Luís Roberto Barroso takes office as President of the Supreme Court]. Correio Braziliense (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 30 September 2023.
  5. ^ Brazilian Constitution 21 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  6. ^ "Composição Atual" (in Brazilian Portuguese). Supremo Tribunal Federal. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  7. ^ "Flávio Dino visita o STF e prevê para fevereiro de 2024 a posse como ministro da Corte". G1 (in Brazilian Portuguese). 14 December 2023. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  8. ^ "Pastas dos ministros" (in Brazilian Portuguese). Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF). Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  9. ^ "O Brasil tem 91 tribunais - Para Entender Direito" [Brazil has 91 courts - Understand the Law]. Folha de S. Paulo (in Portuguese). 20 October 2010. from the original on 3 September 2015.
  10. ^ DataSelf (8 January 2021). "Conheça as diferenças e funções dos tribunais brasileiros" [Know the differences and functions of the Brazilian courts] (in Portuguese). DataSelf. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  11. ^ Conselho Nacional de Justiça. "Tribunais - Portal CNJ" [Courts - CNJ Portal]. National Council of Justice (in Portuguese). Retrieved 28 June 2023.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • (in Portuguese)

supreme, federal, court, portuguese, supremo, tribunal, federal, suˈpɾẽmu, tɾibuˈnaw, fedeˈɾaw, abbreviated, supreme, court, court, last, resort, brazil, serving, primarily, country, constitutional, court, highest, court, brazil, constitutional, issues, ruling. The Supreme Federal Court Portuguese Supremo Tribunal Federal suˈpɾẽmu tɾibuˈnaw fedeˈɾaw abbreviated STF is the supreme court court of last resort of Brazil serving primarily as the country s Constitutional Court It is the highest court of law in Brazil for constitutional issues and its rulings cannot be appealed On cases involving exclusively non constitutional issues regarding federal laws the highest court is by rule the Superior Court of Justice Supreme Federal CourtSupremo Tribunal FederalThe Supreme Federal Court Palace on Praca dos Tres Poderes15 48 08 S 47 51 43 W 15 80222 S 47 86194 W 15 80222 47 86194Established28 February 1891 133 years ago 1891 02 28 LocationBrasilia Federal District BrazilCoordinates15 48 08 S 47 51 43 W 15 80222 S 47 86194 W 15 80222 47 86194Composition methodPresidential nomination with Senate confirmationAuthorized byConstitution of BrazilAppeals fromState Courts of JusticeJudge term lengthLife tenure mandatory retirement at age 75 Number of positions11Websiteportal wbr stf wbr jus wbr brPresidentCurrentlyLuis Roberto BarrosoSince28 September 2023Vice PresidentCurrentlyLuiz Edson FachinSince28 September 2023 Contents 1 History 2 Functions 3 Case law 4 President and Vice President 5 Current members 6 In relation to other courts 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Justice by Alfredo Ceschiatti in front of the Supreme Federal Court The current court was preceded by the House of Appeals of Brazil Casa de Suplicacao do Brasil which was inaugurated during the colonial era on 10 May 1808 the year that the Portuguese royal family the House of Braganza arrived in Rio de Janeiro after fleeing to Brazil The Brazilian proclamation of Independence and the adoption of the Imperial Constitution in 1824 preceded the establishment of the Supreme Court of Justice Supremo Tribunal de Justica in 1829 which served as the Brazilian Empire s supreme court With the fall of the monarchy and Brazil s first Republican Constitution the current court was established Although the constitutional norms that regulated the creation of the court allowed Deodoro da Fonseca Brazil s first president to nominate an entirely new court the president chose to nominate as the first members of the Supreme Federal Court the ministers who were then serving as members of the imperial court that preceded it Two hundred members have served on the court The Constitution of 1891 provided that the court would have 15 members When Getulio Vargas came into power the number of members was reduced to 11 The number was changed to 16 in 1965 but returned to 11 in 1969 and has not changed since Of all Presidents of Brazil only Cafe Filho and Carlos Luz acting never nominated a minister All judicial and administrative meetings of the STF have been broadcast live on television since 2002 The court is open for the public to watch the meetings On 8 January 2023 the building was attacked by supporters of the former president Jair Bolsonaro 1 Functions editAlongside its appeal competence mostly by the Extraordinary Appeal Recurso Extraordinario the Court has a small range of cases of original jurisdiction including the power of judicial review judging the constitutionality of laws passed by the National Congress through a Direct Action of Unconstitutionality Acao Direta de Inconstitucionalidade or ADI There are also other mechanisms for reaching the Court directly such as the Declaratory Action of Constitutionality Acao Declaratoria de Constitucionalidade or ADC and the Direct Action of Unconstitutionality by Omission Acao Direta de Inconstitucionalidade por Omissao or ADO Case law editIn May 2009 The Economist called the Supreme Federal Court the most overburdened court in the world thanks to a plethora of rights and privileges entrenched in the country s 1988 constitution till recently the tribunal s decisions did not bind lower courts The result was a court that is overstretched to the point of mutiny The Supreme Court received 100 781 cases last year 2 Overruling seems to be frequent in SFC jurisprudence three years ago when the STF adopted the understanding that defendants who have a conviction upheld by a single appellate court may be sent to jail to begin serving their sentences The 2016 decision happened largely due to a change in opinion from Minister Gilmar Mendes He had voted against sending defendants to jail after a single failed appeal in 2009 but changed his mind in 2016 Jump to 2019 and the circumstances both political and judicial have changed 3 President and Vice President editThe President of the STF and its Vice President are elected by their peers for a two year term by secret ballot The incumbent president is Minister Luis Roberto Barroso 4 Reelection for a consecutive term is not allowed By tradition the most senior minister who has not yet served in the presidential role is elected as the president by the court members to avoid politicisation of the court If all currently sitting members have already served in the presidential role the rotation starts all over again However due to vacancies caused by the compulsory retirement age and subsequent appointment of new ministers it is very rare for the cycle to be ever completed Some ministers are forced to retire before their turn for the presidency arrives as was expected to happen with Teori Zavascki According to the same convention the minister who is next in the line of succession for the presidency will serve as the vice president for the time being Also by tradition the elections of the president and vice president are never unanimous there being always one isolated minority vote in each election as the ministers who are to be elected never cast their votes for themselves such votes are cast either for the dean of the court its most senior member or for some other elder minister that the one to be elected admires and wants to pay homage to The chief justice is also the 4th in the presidential line of succession when the President of the Republic becomes prevented to be in charge being preceded by the Vice President the President of the Chamber of Deputies and the President of the Federal Senate as provided in Article 80 of the Brazilian Constitution 5 Current members editThe eleven judges of the court are called Ministers Ministros although having no similarity with the government body of ministers They are appointed by the President and approved by the Federal Senate There is no term length but a mandatory retirement age of 75 6 Former president of the Court President of the Court Vice President of the Court Order ofantiquity Minister M Born date and state Appointed by Age at inauguration Initial date inauguration Limit date retirement Main previous functions 1 nbsp Gilmar Ferreira Mendes 30 December 1955 in Mato Grosso Cardoso 46 20 June 2002 30 December 2030 Prosecutor of the Republic 1985 1988 deputy chief for Legal Issues of the Chief of Staff 1996 2000 Attorney General of the Union 2000 2002 2 nbsp Carmen Lucia Antunes Rocha 19 April 1954 in Minas Gerais Lula 52 21 June 2006 19 April 2029 Attorney of the State of Minas Gerais 1983 2006 3 nbsp Jose Antonio Dias Toffoli 15 November 1967 in Sao Paulo Lula 41 23 October 2009 15 November 2042 Lawyer 1991 2009 deputy chief for Legal Issues of the Chief of Staff 2003 2005 Attorney General of the Union 2007 2009 4 nbsp Luiz Fux 26 April 1953 in Rio de Janeiro Rousseff 57 3 March 2011 26 April 2028 Prosecutor of Public Prosecutor s Office of Rio de Janeiro 1979 1982 judge of the state of Rio de Janeiro 1983 1997 desembargador of the Justice Court of the state of Rio de Janeiro 1997 2001 minister of STJ 2001 2011 5 nbsp Luis Roberto Barroso 11 March 1958 in Rio de Janeiro Rousseff 55 26 June 2013 11 March 2033 Lawyer 1981 2013 Attorney of the State of Rio de Janeiro 1985 2013 6 nbsp Luiz Edson Fachin 8 February 1958 in Rio Grande do Sul Rousseff 57 16 June 2015 8 February 2033 Lawyer 1980 2015 Attorney of the State of Parana 1990 2006 7 nbsp Alexandre de Moraes 13 December 1968 in Sao Paulo Temer 48 22 March 2017 13 December 2043 Prosecutor of the Public Prosecutor s Office of the state of Sao Paulo 1991 2002 lawyer of public law 2010 2014 minister of Justice and Public Security 2016 2017 8 nbsp Kassio Nunes Marques 16 May 1972 in Piaui Bolsonaro 48 5 November 2020 16 May 2047 Desembargador of the Regional Federal Court of the 1st Region 2011 2020 9 nbsp Andre Luiz de Almeida Mendonca 27 December 1972 in Sao Paulo Bolsonaro 48 16 December 2021 27 December 2047 Attorney General of the Union 2019 2021 Minister of Justice and Public Security 2020 10 nbsp Cristiano Zanin Martins 15 November 1975 in Sao Paulo Lula 47 3 August 2023 15 November 2050 Lawyer 2000 2023 11 nbsp Flavio Dino de Castro e Costa 30 April 1968 in Maranhao Lula 55 22 February 2024 7 30 April 2043 Minister of Justice and Public Security 2023 2024 Governor of Maranhao 2015 2022 Senator for Maranhao 2023 Federal Judge 1996 2006 Notes M Names in bold are the names used in social denomination 8 In relation to other courts editThe 92 courts of the Brazilian judiciary 9 10 11 State Federal Superiorcourts 0 Supreme Federal CourtSTF 1 Federal superior courts STJ TSE TST STM 4 Commonjustice Court of JusticeTJ 27 Federal Regional CourtsTRF1 TRF6 6 Specializedjustice State MilitaryJustice Courts 3 Electoral Justice CourtsTRE 27 TJME Regional Labor CourtsTRT 24 Totalvte 30 62Gallery edit nbsp The Supreme Federal Court in session nbsp The courtroom of the Supreme Federal Court nbsp Supreme Federal Court at night nbsp The Supreme Court lit up in pink for Breast Cancer Awareness Month on October 29 2020See also editBrazil federal courts List of ministers of the Supreme Federal Court Brazil Tribunal de JusticaNotes editReferences edit Nicas Jack Spigariol Andre 8 January 2023 Bolsonaro Supporters Lay Siege to Brazil s Capital The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Brazil s supreme court When less is more The Economist 21 May 2009 Archived from the original on 25 May 2009 Recondo Felipe Seligman Felipe 5 November 2019 Brazil s Supreme Court Used to Terrify Politicians Not Anymore Americas Quarterly Archived from the original on 10 November 2019 Patriolino Luana Souza Renato 28 September 2023 Luis Roberto Barroso toma posse como presidente do Supremo Luis Roberto Barroso takes office as President of the Supreme Court Correio Braziliense in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 30 September 2023 Brazilian Constitution Archived 21 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine in Portuguese Composicao Atual in Brazilian Portuguese Supremo Tribunal Federal Retrieved 21 March 2017 Flavio Dino visita o STF e preve para fevereiro de 2024 a posse como ministro da Corte G1 in Brazilian Portuguese 14 December 2023 Retrieved 14 December 2023 Pastas dos ministros in Brazilian Portuguese Supremo Tribunal Federal STF Retrieved 21 March 2017 O Brasil tem 91 tribunais Para Entender Direito Brazil has 91 courts Understand the Law Folha de S Paulo in Portuguese 20 October 2010 Archived from the original on 3 September 2015 DataSelf 8 January 2021 Conheca as diferencas e funcoes dos tribunais brasileiros Know the differences and functions of the Brazilian courts in Portuguese DataSelf Retrieved 28 June 2023 Conselho Nacional de Justica Tribunais Portal CNJ Courts CNJ Portal National Council of Justice in Portuguese Retrieved 28 June 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Supremo Tribunal Federal Official website nbsp Photo 360 of Supreme Federal Court GUIABSB in Portuguese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Supreme Federal Court amp oldid 1218397581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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