Civil Appeal to the Supreme Court in Spain: Art. 477 LEC, Legal Interest and Admissibility (2026)
Guide to civil cassation appeal to the Spanish Supreme Court: art. 477 LEC, legal interest grounds, contradictory court decisions, incorrect application of Supreme Court doctrine, grounds, deadlines and preparation brief.
The Civil Appeal on Points of Law (Recurso de Casación): Function and Nature
The recurso de casación (appeal on points of law) before the Tribunal Supremo (Supreme Court, First Chamber) is an extraordinary remedy whose purpose is not to re-examine the facts of the dispute, but to review the correct application of the law by the Audiencias Provinciales (Provincial Courts of Appeal). Its constitutional function is to unify case law doctrine and ensure equal application of the law.
It is governed by *Articles 477–487 of the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (LEC) (Civil Procedure Act), as amended by Law 37/2011 (which introduced the interés casacional* ( points-of-law significance ) procedure).
Appealable Decisions (Art. 477.1–2 LEC)
The following decisions may be appealed on points of law:
- *Judgments handed down by the Audiencias Provinciales* on second appeal in ordinary or summary proceedings, where the matter is of sufficient significance
- Final decisions issued on appeal
Monetary threshold or interés casacional requirement: the appeal is only admissible if either the monetary threshold is exceeded (ordinary proceedings with a value of more than €600,000 in certain cases) or there is interés casacional** (points-of-law significance) (Art. 477.2.3 LEC).
Interés Casacional: Points-of-Law Significance (Art. 477.2.3 LEC)
Interés casacional is the most important admissibility requirement. It exists when the decisión under appeal:
1. Conflicts with Supreme Court Case Law Doctrine
The Audiencia (Court of Appeal) has applied a legal provisión in a manner contrary to the doctrine established in the case law of the Tribunal Supremo. This requires citing at least two Supreme Court judgments that establish a consistent doctrine ( handed down after the facts giving rise to the dispute ) on the same point of law.
2. Contradicts the Doctrine of Other Audiencias Provinciales
The Audiencia has resolved the point of law differently from the way other Audiencias Provinciales have decided it (conflicting case law between divisions in different provinces). The judgment under appeal must be cited alongside the judgment or judgments of the other Audiencia(s) that resolved the point in the opposite direction.
3. Applies Provisions Less Than 5 Years Old
The decisión under appeal applies provisions that have been in force for fewer than 5 years and the Tribunal Supremo has not yet had the opportunity to rule on their interpretation.
Grounds of Appeal (Art. 477.1 LEC)
The only permissible ground for a civil recurso de casación is infringement of the provisions applicable to resolving the issues in dispute (Art. 477.1 LEC). This includes:
- Infringement of a statute or legal provisión of any rank
- Infringement of case law doctrine (though technically not a "provisión," the Tribunal Supremo treats it as equivalent for the purposes of this appeal)
What does NOT constitute a valid ground of appeal:
- Errors in the assessment of evidence (these fall within the scope of the appeal for procedural infringement or ordinary appeal)
- Breach of procedural requirements (Art. 469 LEC, this is a ground for the recurso extraordinario por infracción procesal, the extraordinary appeal for procedural infringement)
- Errors in the determination of established facts
Procedure: Preparation and Filing
1. Preliminary Notice of Appeal (Escrito de Preparación) (Art. 479 LEC)
Filed before the Audiencia Provincial that handed down the judgment, within 5 days of notification. It must identify:
- The provisión or case law doctrine allegedly infringed
- The specific interés casacional being invoked
- The decisions relied upon for comparison (if the ground is a conflict between Audiencias Provinciales)
2. Formal Lodging before the Tribunal Supremo (Art. 481 LEC)
If the Audiencia accepts the preliminary notice and refers the case to the Tribunal Supremo, the appellant has 20 days to formally lodge the appeal. The written submission must:
- Be structured into grounds with a precise format (Ground I, II, III…)
- For each ground: the provisión infringed + legal argument + reference to Tribunal Supremo doctrine or the decisions cited for comparison
3. Admissibility Screening (Art. 483 LEC)
The First Chamber of the Tribunal Supremo may reject the appeal as inadmissible where:
- Interés casacional is manifestly lacking
- Formal requirements have not been met
- The ground amounts in substance to a challenge to the facts dressed up as a point of law (a common pattern that the Court readily identifies)
Rejection at the admissibility stage is very common (approximately 60–70% of appeals, according to Tribunal Supremo statistics). A technically well-constructed preliminary notice and formal submission is therefore essential.
The Extraordinary Appeal for Procedural Infringement (Recurso Extraordinario por Infracción Procesal)
Alongside the recurso de casación, it is possible to bring a recurso por infracción procesal (extraordinary appeal for procedural infringement) (Arts. 468–476 LEC) on grounds of breach of procedural rules or fundamental procedural guarantees (denial of the right to a fair hearing, infringement of rules on evidence, inconsistency between the pleadings and the judgment). In practice, both appeals are frequently brought together.
The Judgment on Appeal (Sentencia de Casación)
If the Tribunal Supremo upholds the appeal, it may:
- Quash the decisión under appeal and issue a new ruling on the merits (where no remittal is required)
- Quash the decisión and remit the case to the Audiencia for a fresh judgment in line with the Tribunal Supremo's doctrine (where the ground is procedural)
The doctrine established in the judgment on appeal is binding in similar future cases, this is the mechanism through which the Tribunal Supremo achieves uniformity in case law.
Conclusion
The recurso de casación is the most sophisticated instrument available in Spanish civil procedure. It requires precise identification of the provisión or doctrine alleged to have been infringed, and demonstration of interés casacional. The majority of appeals are rejected at the admissibility stage, either for lack of genuine interés casacional or because they amount to challenges to the facts disguised as points of law.
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