Document from CIS Legislation database © 2012-2026 CIS Legislation Company

FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONAL LAW OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

of March 6, 2019 No. 1-FKZ

About modification of article 42 of the Federal constitutional Law "About Courts of Law in the Russian Federation"

Approved by the State Duma on February 19, 2019

Approved by the Federation Council on February 27, 2019

Bring in part 4 of article 42 of the Federal constitutional Law of February 7, 2011 No. 1-FKZ "About courts of law in the Russian Federation" (The Russian Federation Code, 2011, No. 7, Art. 898; No. 23, Art. 3240; 2014, No. 11, Art. 1088; 2018, to No. 31, the Art. 4811) change, having stated it in the following edition:

"4. The permanent residence of courts of the federal cities of Moscow, St. Petersburg and Sevastopol are respectively the city of Moscow, the city of St. Petersburg and the city of Sevastopol.".

President of the Russian Federation

V. Putin

 

Disclaimer! This text was translated by AI translator and is not a valid juridical document. No warranty. No claim. More info

Search in text CTRL-F

Demo Access

If you are guest on our site, you will work in Demo mode. In Demo mode you can see only first page of each document.


Full Access

With full access you can

  • see full text
  • see original text of document in Russian
  • download attachment (if exist)
  • see History and statistics

Get Full Access Now

Effectively work with search system

Database include more 65000 documents. You can find needed documents using search system.
For effective work you can mix any on documents parameters: country, documents type, date range, teams or tags.
More about search system

Get help

If you cannot find the required document, or you do not know where to begin, go to Help section.

In this section, we’ve tried to describe in detail the features and capabilities of the system, as well as the most effective techniques for working with the database.

You also may open the section Frequently asked questions.
This section provides answers to questions set by users.

Search engine created by CIS Legislation Company