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cassazione

Cassazione is a legal remedy in Italian law by which a final decision of a lower court can be challenged before the Corte di Cassazione, the country’s supreme court of appeal. The term refers both to the remedy itself (ricorso per cassazione) and to the court that decides it. The primary purpose of cassazione is to ensure correct application and uniform interpretation of the law across the judiciary, rather than to re-examine factual findings.

The Corte di Cassazione sits in Rome and is organized into sections (Sezioni) that handle civil, criminal,

Procedurally, a party may file a ricorso per cassazione within prescribed time limits, typically sixty days

The cassation process thus serves as the final step in the ordinary judiciary pathway in Italy, shaping

labor,
and
administrative
matters,
as
well
as
unified
“Sezioni
Unite”
for
cases
requiring
authoritative
interpretation.
The
court’s
work
is
assisted
by
the
Procura
Generale
presso
la
Corte
di
Cassazione,
the
public
prosecutors’
office
that
represents
the
state
before
the
court.
from
notification
of
the
challenged
decision.
The
court
reviews
only
issues
of
law
and
compliance
with
procedural
rules;
it
does
not
re-evaluate
evidence
or
re-assess
factual
determinations.
If
the
cassation
is
granted,
the
decision
may
be
annulled
(cassata)
and,
in
many
cases,
remanded
(rinvio)
to
a
lower
court
for
a
new
judgment
consistent
with
the
cassation
ruling.
In
some
instances,
the
Corte
di
Cassazione
can
decide
the
case
itself
on
points
of
law
without
remand.
legal
doctrine
and
ensuring
consistency
in
the
application
of
statutes.