Juridinis asmuo Lietuvos baudžiamojoje justicijoje
The article deals with the entrenchment of the institute of criminal liability of a legal person in the Lithuanian criminal law. Upon approval of the Criminal Code of the Republic of Lithuania (hereinafter also referred to as the CC) on 26 September 2000, the criminal liability of a legal person was...
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Published in | Jurisprudencija Vol. 19; no. 1; pp. 293 - 314 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | German |
Published |
Mykolas Romeris University
2012
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The article deals with the entrenchment of the institute of criminal liability
of a legal person in the Lithuanian criminal law. Upon approval of the Criminal Code of
the Republic of Lithuania (hereinafter also referred to as the CC) on 26 September 2000, the
criminal liability of a legal person was provided almost in every fifth (at present—in every
second) article of the Special Part of the CC. Although criminal liability has been increasingly
applied to legal persons (e.g., in 2011, if compared to 2005, almost three times as much punishments were imposed), however, almost 90 percent of the articles of the CC providing
also for criminal liability of a legal person are “dead”. One doubt arises with regard to social
legitimacy of such lawmaking and the quality thereof in the sense of juridical technique.
The article points out that essentially erroneous provisions are being established in the
practice of institutions of pre-trial investigation and prosecutor’s office, and in the caselaw
of the courts of first and appeal instances when the grounds of a legal person’s criminal
liability are interpreted and applied, which are provided for in Article 20(2) of the CC, e.g.,
the formulation of suspicions and charges regarding criminal, selfish deeds of the head of a
legal person or regarding criminal, selfish deeds of a similar person, committed by making
use of the legal person, are essentially transferred, mechanically, also to such a legal person.
Consequently, the legal person is quite often punished without prior elucidation of a particular
manifestation of its guilt (contents thereof), the link of the legal person (more precisely, the
owner (shareholder) of the legal person or the main shareholders of the legal person having
the right of decisive vote, or the general meeting of shareholders, the board of the legal person or other governance structure thereof) with the criminal deed committed by the culprit—a natural person—for the benefit or in the interests of that legal person.
Such a link may be two-way and may be characterised not necessarily by the fact
that the culprit—a natural person—is holding a governing office in the legal person and enjoys respective powers. Having recognised that the criminal deed was committed by the culprit—a natural person—in order to gain property benefit or in other interests of the legal person, alongside, one must establish whether the legal person was aware of such criminal deed committed or prepared by the culprit—a natural person, whether the legal person comprehended, tolerated or induced such a deed, or whether it created preconditions for commission of such criminal deed. Without establishing that, such a situation is to be assessed as the one where the culprit—a natural person—while committing the criminal deed, was acting independently and arbitrarily, whereas, in such a case, bringing the legal person to criminal liability would mean objective imputation, i.e. the legal... |
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ISSN: | 1392-6195 |