Special Legal Relationships and Liability Issues in Relation to Evidence Handed over to A Forensic Expert by a Civil Court

Authors

  • Balázs Arató

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54148/ELTELJ.2024.1.77

Keywords:

expert appointed by the court, object of examination, custodial liability, rule of law, evidentiary procedure, fair trial

Abstract

The paper takes a recent case as a starting point to examine how the disappearance of the object of examination from a forensic expert appointed by the trial court should be assessed in the light of civil law, civil procedure and constitutional law. The analysis will focus on the specific legal relationships and liabilities associated with the appointment of an expert. The theoretical conclusions on these issues are the starting point for the fundamental question, of constitutional importance, of whether a judgment can be based on an expert’s opinion that was drawn up without the expert having returned the object of the examination although he should have done so. The study also attempts to answer this question.

Author Biography

Balázs Arató

Balázs Arató (PhD, Dr. habil.) is associate professor at Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, Department of Commercial Law/Department of Civil Law (e-mail: arato.balazs@kre.hu).

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Published

2024-08-30

Issue

Section

Articles