French Court Rejects 'Right to Correct' Defense, Strengthens Ban on Educational Violence

January 14, 2026
French Court Rejects 'Right to Correct' Defense, Strengthens Ban on Educational Violence
  • Metz had argued that parental correction could be allowed if the violence did not harm the child, was proportionate, and did not humiliate them, a view the Cassation rejected.

  • The Cour de cassation rejects the notion of a parental "right to correction" as a defense for educational violence, aligning with French law and international standards.

  • Legal commentators view the decision as closing a long-standing gap and aligning practice with modern norms that prohibit corporal punishment.

  • The ruling narrows the scope of permissible parental discipline in France and strengthens protections against corporal punishment in line with international norms.

  • A cassation decision in France closes a long-standing jurisprudential ambiguity by confirming there is no customary or implicit right to correct children through violence, and that such conduct is not permitted.

  • The cassation audience took place on November 19, and the Metz appeal’s April 18, 2024 decision is sent back to the Court of Appeal of Nancy for a new judgment.

  • The Court of Cassation overturned Metz’s 2024 acquittal of a father for violence against his two minor sons based on a claimed "right of correction."

  • The case was remanded to the Nancy Court of Appeal for rehearing after the cassation reversal of the Metz decision.

  • Historically, an 1819 criminel chamber ruling hinted at a "right of correction," but modern jurisprudence does not recognize such a defense, a point reinforced by the cassation ruling.

  • The ruling explicitly rejects lingering outdated remnants of a right of correction, emphasizing no modern basis exists for it.

  • The Cassation Court states there is no parental right of correction in French law, international texts, or contemporary jurisprudence, ordering a reexamination by the Nancy Court of Appeal.

  • Lawyers and child-protection advocates welcomed the ruling, noting that the 2019 law clearly prohibits so-called educational violence in France.

Summary based on 2 sources


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