Abstract
The analysis focuses on three types of liability, that is ancillary liability (Article 24 and 25 of the Penal and Fiscal Code), pledge to return a financial gain (Article 53 of the Criminal Code and Article 24 § 5 of the Penal and Fiscal Code) and criminal liability of collective entities provided in Article 42 item 1 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland, which refers to direct criminal liability of a perpetrator. The approach to liability reflected in the Constitution has prompted to seek to determine whether or not Article 42, item 1 refers also to indirect criminal liability, provided for in the abovementioned legal provisions. The regulations incorporated in the analysed articles lead to a conclusion that convicting the perpetrator of a crime sets the grounds for prosecution under ancillary liability, for obligation to return a financial gain, or for prosecution of collective entities. Therefore, the imperative condition for the application of such measures, subject to the abovementioned types of liability, is to find a natural person associated with the entity guilty of a crime whose consequences affect this entity. In view of the above, prosecution under noncausative criminal liability remains closely related to causative liability, as provided for in Article 42, item 1 of Poland’s Constitution. Causative liability constitutes, as a matter of fact, the fundamental condition for prosecuting under noncausative liability, while noncausative liability constitutes, in a way, a consequence of prosecuting under causative criminal liability.License
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