Meet the new judges at Europe’s Court of Justice

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Meet the new judges at Europe’s Court of Justice

New appointments at the EU’s Luxembourg-based courts this week have seen two new judges and an advocate general begin work at the Court of Justice, with another judge assuming the post of judge at the General Court

The Court of Justice clarifies points of European law referred to it by judges in the European Union’s 27 member states and hears appeals of decisions of the General Court, which rules on questions relating to Community trade mark registrations – among other things.

The Court of Justice has 27 judges and eight advocates general. The advocates general provide legal opinions to the Court in some of the most important cases it hears. Each is appointed for six-year term, which is renewable.

The latest appointments have seen Portugal’s José Luís da Cruz Vilaça replace José Narciso da Cunha Rodrigues, and the UK’s Christopher Vajda take over from Sir Konrad Schiemann. Melchior Wathelet replaces Ján Masák as an advocate general in the Court and Eugène Buttigieg of Malta becomes a judge at the General Court, taking the place of Ena Cremona.

José Luís da Cruz Vilaça, Judge, Court of Justice

The 68-year-old Portuguese law professor has been a politician and member of the Portuguese government (helping negotiate the country’s entry into the EU), and served as an advocate general of the Court of Justice between 1986 and 1988 and then as the president of the Court of First Instance (now known as the General Court).

Cruz Vilaça joined Lisbon-based law firm PLMJ as partner and head of its EU and competition practice in 1996.

Christopher Vajda, Judge, Court of Justice

Vajda qualified as a barrister in 1979 and is a member of Monkton Chambers. The 57-year-old studied law at Cambridge and in Brussels and acts as a judge at the Crown Court, which hears criminal cases.

Melchior Wathelet, Advocate General

The Belgian politician has degrees and economics. He has been professor of European law at universities in Louvain and Liège and served as deputy prime minister and minister for justice and economic affairs. The 63-year-old was a judge at the Court of Justice between 1995 and 2003.

Eugène Buttigieg, Judge, General Court

The 51-year-old competition law specialist has served as a legal adviser to the Maltese government on consumer and competition law. He holds the Jean Monnet Chair in EU Law at the University of Malta and was co-founder and vice-president of the Maltese Association for European Law. 

Read an interview with Advocate General Eleanor Sharpston in Managing IP.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

With the US privacy landscape more fragmented and active than ever and federal legislation stalled, lawyers at Sheppard Mullin explain how states are taking bold steps to define their own regimes
Viji Krishnan of Corsearch unpicks the results of a survey that reveals almost 80% of trademark practitioners believe in a hybrid AI model for trademark clearance and searches
News of Via Licensing Alliance selling its HEVC/VCC pools and a $1.5 million win for Davis Polk were also among the top talking points
The winner of a high-profile bidding war for Warner Bros Discovery may gain a strategic advantage far greater than mere subscriber growth - IP licensing leverage
A vote to be held in 2026 could create Hogan Lovells Cadwalader, a $3.6bn giant with 3,100 lawyers across the Americas, EMEA and Asia Pacific
Varuni Paranavitane of Finnegan and IP counsel Lisa Ribes compare and contrast two recent AI copyright decisions from Germany and the UK
Exclusive in-house data uncovered by Managing IP reveals French firms underperform on providing value equivalent to billing costs and technology use
The new court has drastically changed the German legal market, and the Munich-based firm, with two recent partner hires, is among those responding
Consultation feedback on mediation and arbitration rules and hires for Marks & Clerk and Heuking were also among the major talking points
Nick Groombridge shares how an accidental turn into patent law informed his approach to building a practice based on flexibility and balancing client and practitioner needs
Gift this article