Alfredo Buzaid

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Alfredo Buzaid
Justice of the Supreme Federal Court
In office
30 March 1982 – 20 July 1984
Appointed byJoão Figueiredo
Preceded byCarlos Fulgêncio da Cunha Peixoto
Succeeded bySydney Sanches
Minister of Justice
In office
30 October 1969 – 15 March 1974
Appointed byEmílio Garrastazu Médici
Preceded byLuís Antônio da Gama e Silva
Succeeded byArmando Falcão
Personal details
Born(1914-07-20)20 July 1914
Jaboticabal, São Paulo, Brazil
Died10 July 1991(1991-07-10) (aged 76)
São Paulo, Brazil
Alma materUniversity of São Paulo

Alfredo Buzaid (20 July 1914 – 10 July 1991)[1] was a Brazilian jurist, lawyer, magistrate and professor. During the military dictatorship he was Minister of Justice in the Emílio Garrastazu Médici government and Minister of the Supreme Court appointed by President João Figueiredo.

He was one of the leading drafters of the 1973 Code of Civil Procedure, which became known as the "Buzaid Code" and was in force until 2015.

Biography[edit]

Buzaid attended primary and secondary school at the Ginásio São Luiz in Jaboticabal, completed in 1930. He entered the São Paulo Law School in 1931, graduating in 1935.[2]

Besides law, he also worked as journalist writing for his hometown newspaper “O Combate”, and for Gazeta Comercial, becoming editor for the latter.[2]

Alfredo Buzaid participated in the Sociedade de Estudos Políticos (Society of Political Studies), a group of São Paulo Law students centered around Plínio Salgado.[3] From that group emerged the Brazilian Integralist Action (AIB), of which Buzaid was active in the São Paulo Integralist Students Section,[4] He wrote for the group's official newspaper, O Integralista, in November 1932, one month after the ofounding of AIB.[5] He was head of the AIB section in his municipality, Jaboticabal, and remained in his integralist beliefs until the end of his life, according to historian and parliamentarian Carlos Giannazi.[6]

Law practice[edit]

Buzaid in 1971 (Arquivo Nacional).

Buzaid started his lawyer career in Jaboticabal and, in 1938, returned to São Paulo[2]

He was student of Enrico Tullio Liebman in aa specialisation course at the São Paulo Law Schoolem 1935,[4] later joining the "Escola Paulista de Direito Processual" and becoming Liebman's personal friend.[2]

In 1960 he was appointed by the Brazilian Federal Government to draft the Code of Civil Procedure, which was eventually presented by him 4 years later.[2]

In 1966 he assumed the position of director of the University of São Paulo Law School after being named on a triple list for the rector's approval, according to rules established by the current dictatorial regime, succeeding Luís Eulálio de Bueno Vidigal.[7] In 1969, he was named vice rector of the University of São Paulo.[2]

Military dictatorship (1964-1985)[edit]

According to Zuenir Ventura, in his book 1968 - O ano que não terminou, Alfredo Buzaid would have participated in the meeting that took place at the Planalto Palace in late 1968 in which the Institutional Act Number 5 (AI-5) was designed, being one of its main defenders. According to the author, the AI-5 would have been even more rigid if approved in the manner advocated by Buzaid.

In October 1969, Buzaid was appointed Minister of Justice, being one of the intellectual mentors of the Code of Civil Procedure which came into force in 1974. He remained in the Ministry of Justice until 14 March 1974.[2]

Alfredo Buzaid attending the funeral of Plínio Salgado, in 1975.

On 22 March 1982, Buzaid was appointed Minister of the Supreme Federal Court. His nomination faced strong opposition from the Order of Attorneys of Brazil[4] He took office on 30 March and remained in it for a little over two years, being compulsorily retired on 20 July 1984, when he reached the then limit age of 70. He then returned to his law firm and academic production.[2]

Buzaid died of cancer in his house in São Paulo on 9 July 1991, days before his 77th birthday.[2]

His archive - with more than 25 mil works- is kept at the São Paulo State University library in Franca.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ministros :: STF - Supremo Tribunal Federal". Archived from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Alfredo Buzaid". Supremo Tribunal Federal. Archived from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  3. ^ "INTEGRALISMO". CPDOC - FGV.
  4. ^ a b c Arnaldo Sampaio de Moraes Godoy (29 September 2013). "Alfredo Buzaid, processualista e ministro de Médici". Consultor Jurídico.
  5. ^ Histórias da política autoritária. EDIPUCRS. 2016. ISBN 9788539708796.
  6. ^ GIANNAZI, Carlos (2014). Marcha contra o saber: O Golpe militar de 1964 e o AI-5 na Universidade de São Paulo. Global. ISBN 9788526021723.
  7. ^ Institucional (1966). "Crônica Universitária: Prof. Dr. Alfredo Buzaid - Diretor da Faculdade de Direito". RFD USP.