ZAGREB, April 4 (Hina) - The Croatian Constitutional Court has quashed rulings of the Supreme Court and the Rijeka County Court, ordering a retrial in the case of a disabled World War II veteran holding tenancy rights who sought a
discount when buying a flat. The Supreme Court and the Rijeka County Court previously ruled that only the victims of the 1991-1995 Homeland War had the right to a discount when buying flats.
ZAGREB, April 4 (Hina) - The Croatian Constitutional Court has quashed
rulings of the Supreme Court and the Rijeka County Court, ordering a
retrial in the case of a disabled World War II veteran holding tenancy
rights who sought a discount when buying a flat. The Supreme Court and
the Rijeka County Court previously ruled that only the victims of the
1991-1995 Homeland War had the right to a discount when buying flats.#L#
The two courts had previously changed a verdict of the Rijeka
Municipal Court from 1996 which rejected an attempt by the State
Prosecution to challenge the lawfulness of an annex to a 1994
agreement granting disabled WWII veterans with tenancy rights a
discount when buying flats. The Rijeka Court Court and the Supreme
Court ruled that the annex could be signed only with Homeland War
victims, but not WWII victims because the definition of a disabled war
veteran was narrowed down with one of the numerous changes to the
legislation regulating the sale of flats.
The Constitutional Court ruled that the status of a disabled war
veteran is defined with a provision of the Law on the Protection of
Military and Civil War Invalids which states that the status of a
disabled war veteran is granted to a person with minimum 20-percent
disability caused by wounds or injuries sustained during the Homeland
War, as well as WWII.
(Hina) rml