Constitutional Court of Sint Maarten


The Constitutional Court of Sint Maarten is a court of Sint Maarten. As a constitutional court it evaluates the constitutionality of the provisions of legislation which is approved by the Estates of Sint Maarten and signed into law, but which has not entered into force. Procedures by the court may be initiated only by the ombudsman of Sint Maarten. As of July 2016, the court has decided two cases. Sint Maarten is the only country in the Kingdom of the Netherlands with a constitutional court.

Legal basis

The National ordinance Constitutional Court forms the legal basis for the constitutional court. It was approved by the Island Council of Sint Maarten before Sint Maarten obtained the status of country within the Kingdom as part of the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles and entered into force when Sint Maarten obtained that status on 10 October 2010.

Judges

The court consists of 3 judges which are appointed for a 10-year term, which may be renewed once. Membership of the court also ends in the month after reaching the age of 70. The Council of State of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Common Court of Justice of Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten, and of Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba each nominate one of their judges as a member and deputy member of the court. The third member and deputy member is appointed after hearing the Constitutional Court.
Members of the court are:
NameTerm StartTerm EndPositionMain position
Jacob Wit2010President
Caribbean Court of Justice
Pieter van Dijk20102013Vice-PresidentCouncil of State of the Netherlands
Jan de Boer2010Common Court of Justice of Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten, and of Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba
Ben Vermeulen2013Council of State of the Netherlands

Cases

As of January 2018, 2 cases have been brought before the court by Ombudsman Rachnilda J.A. Arduin, who has been ombudsman of the country since its inception.

Case 2013/1: Criminal Code

A complete recast of the Criminal Code was approved in 2012 and the ombudsman requested evaluation of the Act in January 2013. As this was the first case of the court, in its decision it first laid down certain points of departure regarding its evaluation consisting of 5 points:
The Ombudsman had made seven complaints regarding the law, which were dealt with in
  1. The promulgation date was not recorded, which made it hard to identify the start of the 6-week period that the Ombudsman has to file complaints with the court. This complaint was considered well-founded.
  2. The provisions of the code were renumbered following several amendments during the legislative process without a proper mandate to do so. This complaint was held to be well-founded.
  3. Animal fights. The code allowed animal fights as part of a cultural expression. The court held that such a provision was not a priori unconstitutional.
  4. Higher maximum penalties for theft from tourists. The court held the complaint unfounded as legitimate reasons existed for these penalties.
  5. Life without parole. The code did not provide any provision for parole for people convicted for life inhuman in line with ECHR case law.
  6. Different treatment of residents and non-residents, as the first could not qualify for release on licence. This complaint was held to be well-founded.
  7. Legalization of prostitution. The court held that this was not a priori unconstitutional.
Thus the Court held complaints 1, 2, 5, and 6 to be well founded. It decided not to annul the ordinance as a whole but to annul only the provisions related to life without parole and release on licence.

Case 2015/1: Integrity Chambre Ordinance

The National Ordinance for the establishment of the Integrity Chamber was approved by the Parliament of Sint Maarten, after considerable pressure from the Netherlands. The Chambre was to investigate and act upon possible violations of public integrity.
The ombudsman complained that a very substantial change had not been submitted to the Council of Advice for additional advice. The court held that the change was indeed sufficiently large to require such advice. Based on fundamental problems regarding the constitutionality of the act, in part because of the changes introduced, they Court annulled the act as a whole and laid down the requirements that a possible new act would have to fulfill. These requirements included: