3031 lines
150 KiB
Plaintext
3031 lines
150 KiB
Plaintext
THE LAW OF OCEANIA
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Draft 0.28
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by Eric Klien
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Copyright 1993, 1994. All rights reserved.
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Special thanks to Lee Crocker for his suggestions.
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CONTACT INTO
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WWW: http://unicycle.cs.tulane.edu/oceania
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BOOK: The Atlantis Papers from After Dark Publications/
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SNAILMAIL: The Atlantis Project
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4132 S. Rainbow Blvd., Suite 388
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AS A FREE SOCIETY of sovereign individuals, the Law of Oceania serves a
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purpose very different from that of the laws of other societies. Rather
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than imposing a structure upon the lives of citizens, it exists only to
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ensure that citizens are free to run their own lives without interference
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from others, including the Government. It also serves to regulate the
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Government that the founders have created to serve the needs of individual
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Oceanians.
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The law is a means to ensure the rights of Oceanians, not to endanger them.
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It is hoped that whatever problems arrive in the lives of Oceanians can be
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resolved by peaceful, consensual means rather than by the force of law.
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It should be noted as well, that an act which is considered legal in
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Oceania is so because of our Constitution's dedication to the sanctity of
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each individual's rights. In no way should it be construed that legality
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equals moral judgment. It's not the Government's or its individual
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representatives' place in society to determine morality for the people of
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Oceania.
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For example, while it is true that these laws allow an Oceanian
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to have multiple wives in the tradition of King Solomon. It
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should be noted that such an activity is neither criticized or
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endorsed by the Constitution of Oceania.
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CHAPTER ONE
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Definitions and Introduction
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The common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to, or
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inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of Oceania, shall be the rule of
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decision in all Courts of Oceania.
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The laws of Oceania, and all Contracts entered into by Oceanians, and all
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treaties entered into by Oceania, exist within the context of the
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Constitution of Oceania, and may not conflict with or alter it in any way.
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Laws that impose upon the rights of individual Oceanians are
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unconstitutional and void, even if passed by a clear majority. Any two laws
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that conflict with each other shall both be considered void by the jury
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trying them.
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Words capitalized throughout this book of law are to be interpreted exactly
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as defined here. The remaining text of this document should be interpreted
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strictly and exactly as written in common English language usage at the
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time of its adoption. Conflicts may be resolved by Webster's Third
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International Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language.
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While it is true that everything not declared illegal in these laws is
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automatically legal, a few laws state that certain actions are legal to
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help clarify some aspects of life in Oceania.
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To make it clear that we are granting justice to all persons who love
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liberty, regardless of sex, race, or beliefs, the pronouns in this document
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are gender-neutral ones formed by removing the initial th from the plural
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pronouns. That is, ey means he/she, eir means his/her, em means him/her,
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and similarly for eirs and emself. It is recommended that ey be pronounced
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to rhyme with he/she.
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Shall , Must and Will indicate legal compulsion. Should indicates
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suggestion. May indicates permission. Including always means "including but
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not necessarily limited to". Recommendations do not have the force of law.
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Commentary on or examples of certain laws will appear in boxes
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like this. These notes help to clarify the intent of the authors
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or the reasoning behind some of the decisions made here. These
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commentaries bear the full force of law.
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A Person is any born human being of either sex, and of any race, origin, or
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beliefs. Other beings may be granted the status of Person by law as
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necessary. The point of birth is defined as that point at which the
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organism becomes detached from its mother's biological systems and can
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function independently of that system.
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In this document, this includes Persons not currently in Oceanian
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territory, who are still responsible for Crimes and Debts incurred in
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foreign territory. Of course, such Persons cannot be abducted by the
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Government of Oceania to stand trial, but if they should appear in Oceania
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by other means, they may be arrested and brought to trial.
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An Entity is any corporation, club, foundation, charity, or other type of
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organization, formed for any purpose. Business is a synonym for Entity.
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Persons cannot evade responsibility for Crimes and Debts by forming
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Entities. If an Entity commits a Crime, the jury trying the Crime may
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decide which Person or Persons shall bear the consequences thereof.
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Generally, Debts will be paid by the Entity itself and punishments will be
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served by its officers or other Persons controlling it.
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In the remainder of this text, we will describe acts committed by Persons.
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It will be understood that Entities are also culpable for such actions, and
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suffer the same consequences.
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An Oceanian is a Person or Entity other than the Government currently
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within the territory of Oceania.
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A Child is a born human of age less than sixteen years old. Children are a
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special case in many laws that otherwise apply to all Persons.
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A Teen is a human at least sixteen years of age, and younger than eighteen.
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An Adult is a human eighteen years of age or older. A Person may be
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declared a Child, Teen, or Adult by a Court.
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A Parent is a Teen or Adult who has assumed responsibility for the care of
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a Child. This may or may not be the Child's biological Parents. A Child
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does not have the right to be classified as a Parent.
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A Spouse is one of two or more Oceanians who have signed a Marriage
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Contract with each other.
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The Nearest Relative of an Oceanian, to whom certain Rights and
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Entitlements are granted under these laws, is the first living Person in
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the following categories: Spouse, Child, sibling, grandchild, Parent, any
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blood relative, any Oceanian. If the Right or Entitlement sought applies
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only to Adults (such as the Right to bring suit), then only Adults on this
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list will be considered. If more than one Person is eligible in the first
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category eligible, then all Persons eligible in that category share equally
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the Rights and Entitlements of Nearest Relative under these laws. An
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exception to this is when someone from the "any blood relative" or "any
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Oceanian" categories claims proceeds from a deceased's estate or other
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Entitlements, in which case only the first Person successful in such a suit
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is granted such Entitlements in their entirety. Of course, an Oceanian has
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the right to sign a contract otherwise defining who is eir Nearest
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Relative. Such contract could define someone who is not at all blood
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related as the Nearest Relative.
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A Right is a freedom guaranteed to every Oceanian. These include Life,
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Liberty, Property, and Privacy. Rights extend not only to Persons in
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Oceania, but to Entities as well. All Rights of Entities are derived from
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personal Rights, therefore Entities can have no Rights that Persons do not
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also have.
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A Privilege is an action that can only be done with a License from the
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Government.
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A License is the granting of a Privilege by the Government to an Oceanian.
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Oceanians do NOT need Licenses for anything that is a Right. A Permit is a
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synonym for this word.
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Life is the biological state of animation. Persons who are unconscious, in
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cryonic suspension, or otherwise supported by technology are still
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considered alive and have all the Rights of conscious Persons.
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As technology advances, it is expected that precise definitions
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of Life and Death will be set by law.
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Liberty is a condition that exists when Persons have control over their
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individual lives and Property and where all Rights are protected. Liberty
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also applies to Entities.
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Property is the material and intellectual belongings of an Oceanian.
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Material belongings include Land, pets, livestock, Contracts, and personal
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effects. Intellectual belongings include patents and copyrights.
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Privacy is the expectation of a Person not to be subject to public scrutiny
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of eir personal affairs.
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Force is a physical act by one or more Oceanians that is destructive to the
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Rights of others. A believable threat to carry out such an action also
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constitutes Force.
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Fraud is the intentional deceit of another Oceanian to induce em to part
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with Property or to surrender a Right.
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A Voter is a Person allowed to vote in Oceania.
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A Permanent Oceanian is a Person who has lived a total of twelve months in
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Oceania, or an Oceanian under the age of twelve months.
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The Government (under the Constitution of Oceania) is a restricted Entity
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that protects Oceanians against external and internal Force and Fraud.
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Unlike other Entities, the Government has had most of its Rights restricted
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by laws and regulations.
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Land is an area composed of dirt, concrete, steel, or other substances that
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people are able to live on for extended periods of time.
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A Housing Development is a voluntary private association of Land owners and
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residents formed for the purpose of maintaining the infrastructure of a
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parcel of Land. A Housing Development may not contain more than 5,000
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Persons, and can contain as few as one.
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The reason the size of a Housing Development is limited by law is
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that it is allowed to take on many of the traditional functions
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of Government. Of course, a Housing Development is not bound by
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the restrictions that Government agencies normally must follow
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such as not discriminating against others.
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A Locality is a Government level that does not encompass more than 100
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square kilometers.
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A County is a Government level that does not encompass more than 10,000
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square kilometers.
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A City is a grouping of population with a geographical border. A City MAY
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NOT possess a Governmental structure. It may have one mayor to act as its
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ambassador for ceremonial purposes.
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A Court is a forum in which Oceanians resolve conflicts, establish
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liability for wrongdoing, and assign penalties for such liability.
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A Valuable is any money, Property, bonds, promissory notes, bank notes,
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bills of exchange, or other bills, orders, drafts, checks, receipts or
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certificates, or warrants concerning money or Property, due, or to become
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due, or to be delivered, any public security issued by any country, and any
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deed or writing containing a conveyance of Land or other Property, or
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valuable Contract in force, or any release or defeasance, or any other
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instrument of value, or which, by some contingency, may become valuable.
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The value, for the purposes of these laws, of an item that is to become
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valuable at some future time is the mathematical net present value of that
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item at a fair rate of interest set by the jury trying the case. The value
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of an item which is valuable only in certain contingencies, such as lottery
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tickets or other gambling instruments, is the mathematical expected value
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of the item. In general, it is expected that items will be valued as
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whatever a reasonable and fully informed person would pay for such an item
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at the time of the suit.
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A Debt is an obligation upon one Person to transfer some Valuable to
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another.
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A Crime is an act of Force or Fraud, either intentionally or by gross
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negligence, committed by one Person against another.
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A Felony is a Crime subject to Punishment of six months in jail or greater.
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A Misdemeanor is any other Crime.
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A Plaintiff is an injured party, or an agent of the injured party, who
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initiates a Court suit. Ey is also what other legal systems call a
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"prosecutor", in that ey controls the prosecution of the case at all times.
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A Defendant is a party who is accused of a Crime or Debt. The ancient
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custom of declaring an animal to be the Defendant will not be allowed in
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the Court of Oceania.
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A Convict is an Oceanian who has been convicted in Court of some Crime or
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Debt and who is subject to the penalties thereof.
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Court Costs are costs incurred by the Court administering a suit, e.g., the
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room rental, fees of the judge and jurors, and costs of punishment.
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A Fine is money or other Valuable that a Convict is ordered to pay a
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Plaintiff to compensate em for damages suffered. This does not in any way
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affect a Convict's liability for actual damages incurred.
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Punishment is the prevention of the exercise of certain Rights of the
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Convict for the purpose of preventing em from committing further Crimes,
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and as a deterrent.
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A Gram of Gold is a standard unit of money used in this document for Fines
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and other uses. At the time of this document's adoption, this is the
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equivalent value of one gram of gold. This value, for the purposes of the
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Fines and definitions in this document, may be changed by law.
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For example, if some technological discovery makes gold
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considerably less valuable, a law may be passed by referendum
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specifying that "Gram of Gold" be defined as 1,000 grams of gold,
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or 100 kilowatts of electricity, or 20 Swiss Francs.
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A Contract is a binding agreement to which there is evidence of between
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two or more Oceanians, written or oral. The creation of a valid Contract
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requires the unanimous free and informed consent of all parties subject to
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its terms. In Oceania, there being no distinction between Contract, civil
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and criminal law, all terms of a Contract freely entered are valid and
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enforceable, including physical Punishments.
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An Implied Contract is one created implicitly by the actions or words of a
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Person. While explicit consent is not required for such a Contract, some
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physical act on the part of the bound party is required to establish the
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Contractual obligation. "Status law", whereby an individual's status or
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circumstance is sufficient to create obligations, is not recognized in
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Oceania.
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A Newspaper is a newspaper printed in the nearest county available or
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whichever form of media has the highest circulation at that time.
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Justice in Oceania is achieved by one Oceanian, called the Plaintiff,
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filing suit in a Court against another Oceanian, called the Defendant, who
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is accused of some act of Force or Fraud against the Plaintiff (or an
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injured party on whose behalf the Plaintiff is suing).
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If both the Plaintiff and Defendant agree, any Entity in Oceania may serve
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as a Court to settle their dispute. Whatever the private Court finds,
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including physical punishments, is valid and enforceable as long as both
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parties freely consented to give the private Court that power.
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Where the Defendant does not agree to appear in any private Court, a
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Plaintiff Licensed to do so may bring suit in the Court of Oceania, which
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has the power to subpoena the Defendant for trial. Judgments of the Court
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of Oceania will be carried out regardless of the consent of the Convict.
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Because this is a dangerous power, many protections are granted to
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Defendants and Convicts, as detailed in the Constitution of Oceania.
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Punishment levied by the Court of Oceania is in the form of imprisonment. A
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Convict sentenced to jail time will be imprisoned for that amount of time
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in a privately run prison hired by the Court or the Plaintiff, the costs of
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which will be levied against the Convict. Court Costs and jail costs that
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cannot be collected are paid by donations to the Court of Oceania. It is
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recommended that each local Court establish a budget for that purpose. If
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the Court of Oceania has no money to hold prisoners, those prisoners not
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being held by other funds (such as the Plaintiff's or the prison's) may be
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released after three months notice has been given to the general media.
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Prison time Must be served while the Convict is consciously aware of the
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passage of time, i.e., not in cryonic suspension or other state of
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biological inactivity.
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While the primary purpose of imprisonment is to prevent the
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Convict from committing Crimes for a time, it is also hoped that
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fear of it will act as a deterrent. If prison time could be
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served painlessly, this purpose would be defeated.
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The maximum amount of time a prisoner may serve is 100 years. Longer
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sentences may be levied, but no prisoner may be physically held for longer
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than 100 years at one time. Sentences for Crimes committed while in prison
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shall be added to the prisoner's current sentence and are not subject to
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this limit. Sentences for Crimes committed while out of prison but tried
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and levied while imprisoned are subject to this limit. A prisoner who has
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served eir time and is released may be imprisoned for up to another 100
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years if ey commits more Crimes.
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Fines levied by the Court of Oceania are a Debt owed to the Plaintiff by
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the Convict. Court Costs are a Debt owed to the Court by the Convict.
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Time limits for prosecuting certain Crimes are generally measured from the
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time the Crime was discovered. For example, Burglary Must be prosecuted
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within six months of the time the Property owner discovers the fact, even
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though it may have been committed much earlier while the victim was away
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from home. The ten year limit listed in the Constitution under the Right to
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Forgiveness is absolute and is measured from the time the Crime was
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committed. For example, if one discovers that a safety deposit box has been
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burglarized, one has six months to investigate and bring charges, but if it
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is found to have been burglarized more than ten years ago, the charges will
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be dropped.
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CHAPTER TWO
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Crimes
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The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
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This chapter will define many Crimes and the standard Fines and Punishments
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for them. In addition, any new methods of Force or Fraud that are developed
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in the future may be added to this list of Crimes and Punishments by
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referendum. All Courts are legally bound to these definitions, and the
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Court of Oceania is legally bound to these Fines and Punishments. Private
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Courts may specify alternate Fines and Punishments.
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The Fines and Punishments listed here are solely for the act of the Crime
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itself, and are not to be interpreted as interfering with any suit in
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equity for actual damages stemming from the same acts.
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For example, if the act of Murder specifies a Fine of 20,000
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Grams of Gold, this Fine is in addition to any suit the victim's
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family may bring for loss of consortium, income or Child care, or
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losses suffered by businesses in which the deceased was involved,
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etc. Similarly, A Fine for the Crime of Battery is in addition to
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any suits for medical bills, etc.
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All imprisonments may be replaced with exile for the amount of time in
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question if the jury so decides.
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1. Criminal Culpability
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In every Crime there Must be a union or joint operation of act and
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intention, or criminal negligence. Intention is manifested by the
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circumstances connected with the perpetration of the offense, and
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discretion of the Entity accused.
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Oceanians Must take responsibility for their actions. It is
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assumed that Adults who live in Oceania do not wish to be treated
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as Children. For example, if a Person drinks too much at a bar
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and then gets into an accident, the drunk will be at fault, not
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the seller or manufacturer of the drink. Or, if a Person kills
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someone with a gun, the murderer will be at fault, not the seller
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or manufacturer of the gun. Or, if a Person forgets to ask the
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dangers of an operation, they will take responsibility for this,
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not eir Doctor.
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Children, the mentally ill or retarded, and others with diminished capacity
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for rational judgment are no less culpable for their Crimes than the sound
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of mind, and are still responsible for Fines, but may be given more lenient
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Punishments than specified here, and may at the Court's option have their
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criminal records expunged after a specified amount of time.
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Intoxication shall not be an excuse for any Crime, unless such intoxication
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is occasioned by the Force or Fraud of some other Entity for the purpose
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of causing the perpetration of an offense, in which case the Entity so
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causing said intoxication for such malignant purpose shall be considered
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principal, and suffer the same Punishment as would have been inflicted on
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the Entity committing the offense if ey had been of sound reason.
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All acts committed by misfortune or accident shall not be deemed criminal,
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where it satisfactorily appears that there was no evil design or intention,
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or culpable negligence. Of course, compensatory damages could still be
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collected.
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A Person committing a Crime, under threats or menaces, which sufficiently
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shows that eir life was in danger, or that ey had reasonable cause to
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believe, and did believe, that eir life was in danger, shall not be
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culpable. In such cases the Entity who did the threatening shall suffer
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the same punishment as if ey had perpetrated the offense.
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An Entity ordered or directed to commit an offense by an employer, military
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superior, or other figure of authority to the perpetrator shall not be
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excused from such Crime. The Entity giving such order shall be tried as an
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Accessory to the crime.
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When a Crime is committed by a business or other Entity, the jury shall
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determine what Person or Persons bear the responsibility for the Entity's
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Crimes and shall apportion Fines and assign Punishment appropriately. In
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cases of shared culpability, Fines will be split, but whole Punishments
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will be levied to each.
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2. Derivative Crimes
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An Accessory to a Crime is ey who stands by and aids, abets, or assists; or
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who, not being present, aids, abets, assists, advises or encourages the
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perpetration of the Crime. Ey who thus aids, abets, assists, advises, or
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encourages shall be considered as principal and punished accordingly.
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Accessories to a Crime may have the responsibility for Fines divided among
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them. The excuse of being related to the Person who actually committed the
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crime will not be accepted in Court.
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An Accessory After the Fact is an Entity who, after full knowledge that a
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Crime has been committed, conceals it, or harbors and protects the Entity
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charged with or found guilty of the Crime. Accessories After the Fact are
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not responsible for Fines, but may be given up to half the Punishment
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appropriate for the Crime they conceal. The excuse of being related to the
|
|
Person who actually committed the crime will not be accepted in Court.
|
|
|
|
An Attempted Crime is committed when an Entity commits acts clearly
|
|
intended to result in a Crime, but fails, as when an assassin fires eir
|
|
weapon but misses. Those who thus attempt a Crime are not liable for Fines,
|
|
but may be Punished exactly as those who carry out said Crime.
|
|
|
|
Conspiracy to Commit a Crime is the advance discussion and planning of
|
|
criminal acts among two or more Persons. If such criminal acts are actually
|
|
carried out, all those involved in the Conspiracy will treated as principal
|
|
and share culpability. If such criminal acts are not actually carried out
|
|
but a Court decides that those involved actually intended to commit the
|
|
act, the Defendants may be given up to one quarter the Punishment
|
|
appropriate for the Crime they intended to commit.
|
|
|
|
Assault is a believable threat to commit a Crime, and may result in Fines
|
|
and Punishments up to one quarter of those for the actual commission of
|
|
that Crime.
|
|
|
|
Extortion consists of a Person threatening to commit a Crime against the
|
|
Person or Property of another, with intent thereby to extort Valuables, or
|
|
to compel the Person so threatened to perform some act against eir will.
|
|
Fines and Punishments for Extortion shall be one half of those for the
|
|
Crime threatened. In addition, ey shall suffer the penalties of an
|
|
Accessory to any Crimes committed at eir request.
|
|
|
|
An exception to the above is when the Extortion victim owes the perpetrator
|
|
the Valuables requested by em, in which case such threats are only Assault,
|
|
for which there will be no Punishment, and the Fine for which will be
|
|
deducted from the victim's Debt.
|
|
|
|
Fraudulent Encouragement to commit a Crime is the inducement by fraudulent
|
|
means of an Entity of sound judgment, or the encouragement of a Child or
|
|
mentally incompetent Person, to commit a Crime. Such Entity shall be
|
|
prosecuted for the offense and shall suffer the same penalties ey committed
|
|
the offense directly.
|
|
|
|
3. Crimes Against Life
|
|
|
|
If the injury was inflicted in one county, and the party die within another
|
|
county, the accused shall be tried in the county where the act was done, or
|
|
the cause of death administered.
|
|
|
|
A.Murder is the killing of a Person, with malice aforethought, either
|
|
express or implied. Performing a brain autopsy on a Person who is about
|
|
to undergo cryonic suspension is considered murder. The same applies to
|
|
those who unnecessarily delay a cryonic suspension.
|
|
|
|
Express malice is that deliberate intention to take away the life of a
|
|
Person which is manifested by external circumstances capable of proof.
|
|
|
|
Malice shall be implied when no considerable provocation appears, or
|
|
when all the circumstances of the killing show an abandoned and
|
|
malignant heart. All murder perpetrated by means of poison, lying in
|
|
wait, torture, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate, and
|
|
premeditated killing, shall be deemed murder in the first degree. All
|
|
other kinds of murder shall be deemed murder in the second degree.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for murder in the first degree shall be 20,000 Grams of Gold,
|
|
and the Punishment shall be not less than ten years nor more than 100.
|
|
The Fine for murder in the second degree shall be 10,000 Grams of Gold
|
|
and the Punishment not less than five years nor more than 100. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting Murder is ten years from the death of the victim.
|
|
|
|
B.Manslaughter is the killing of a Person, without malice express or
|
|
implied, and without any mixture of deliberation. It Must be voluntary,
|
|
upon a sudden heat of passion, caused by a provocation apparently
|
|
sufficient to make the passion irresistible; or involuntary, with
|
|
reckless disregard for the lives affected.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Manslaughter shall be 10,000 Grams of Gold. Punishment
|
|
shall be not less than four nor more than forty years. The time limit
|
|
for prosecuting Manslaughter is ten years from the death of the victim.
|
|
|
|
In order to make the killing either murder or manslaughter, it is
|
|
necessary that the party die within a year and a day after the cause of
|
|
death is administered. The day on which the act was done shall be
|
|
reckoned the first.
|
|
|
|
An agreement to duel between two Persons Must be written and clearly
|
|
consented to by all involved, or any death resulting therefrom shall be
|
|
prosecuted as Manslaughter.
|
|
|
|
Justifiable Homicide is the killing of a Person in necessary self-
|
|
defense, or in defense of habitation, Property, or person, against one
|
|
who manifestly intends, or endeavors, by violence or surprise, to commit
|
|
a Felony, or against any person or persons who manifestly intend and
|
|
endeavor, in a violent, riotous, or tumultuous manner, to enter the
|
|
habitation of another, for the purpose of assaulting or offering
|
|
personal violence to any Person dwelling or being therein.
|
|
|
|
Justifiable Homicide may also consist in unavoidable necessity, without
|
|
any will or desire, and without any inadvertence or negligence in the
|
|
party killing. An arresting party who, in the execution of said arrest,
|
|
puts a person to death to defend eirself or to prevent escape, shall be
|
|
justified.
|
|
|
|
Excusable Homicide by misadventure, is when a person is doing a lawful
|
|
act, without any intention of killing, yet unfortunately kills another,
|
|
as where a man is at work with an ax, and the head flies off and kills a
|
|
bystander.
|
|
|
|
C.Assault with Intent is the threatening or intimidation of a Person,
|
|
coupled with that Person's reasonable belief that the perpetrator is
|
|
capable and intends to harm em physically or financially.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Assault with Intent shall be not less than 10 nor more than
|
|
100 Grams of Gold, in addition to the Fine for simple Assault.
|
|
Punishment shall be not more than 90 days in addition to that for
|
|
Assault. The time limit for prosecuting Assault is one year.
|
|
|
|
D.Battery is the willful or negligent injuring of a Person, causing
|
|
physical pain or injury, but no permanent loss of function or
|
|
disfigurement.
|
|
|
|
Having sexual contact with another knowing that you have a sexually
|
|
transmitted disease and not informing your partner of that fact is
|
|
considered Battery. Actually transmitting such disease would be Mayhem
|
|
if it is a permanent condition, or Manslaughter if it is fatal.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Battery shall be not less than twenty nor more than 200
|
|
Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be not more than one year. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting Battery is one year.
|
|
|
|
E.Mayhem consists of depriving a Person of a member of eir body, or
|
|
disfiguring or rendering it useless. If any Entity shall cut out or
|
|
disable the tongue, put out an eye, slit the nose, ear, or lip, or
|
|
disable any limb or member of a Person, ey shall be guilty of Mayhem.
|
|
Any Person who shall cause a woman to lose her unborn Child shall be
|
|
guilty of Mayhem, with the exception that no physician shall be affected
|
|
by this clause who, in the discharge of eir professional duty, produces
|
|
the miscarriage of any woman.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Mayhem shall be 2,000 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be
|
|
not less than three years nor more than 30 years. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting Mayhem is two years.
|
|
|
|
F.Rape in the first degree is the carnal knowledge or sodomy of a Person,
|
|
forcibly and against eir will. Rape in the second degree shall consist
|
|
of the carnal knowledge or sodomy of a Person who is either unable to
|
|
consent by reason of intoxication, or other state of impaired judgment;
|
|
or who is defrauded by the perpetrator into consenting to such acts.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Rape in the first degree shall be 1,000 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall be not less than two years nor more than twenty. The
|
|
Fine for Rape in the second degree shall be 500 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall be the same as for Rape in the first degree. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting Rape is ten years.
|
|
|
|
Assault, Battery, or Mayhem committed in the process of Rape shall incur
|
|
their penalties as well.
|
|
|
|
G.Torture. Any Murder, Manslaughter, Battery, Mayhem, or Rape committed
|
|
upon a restrained victim with malicious deliberation and sadistic
|
|
methods, shall incur double the penalty for the aforementioned Crime in
|
|
addition to any penalty for such restraint.
|
|
|
|
For example, if a jailer maliciously and sadistically removes a
|
|
prisoner's ear, ey shall suffer double the penalty for Mayhem, in
|
|
addition to the penalty for False Imprisonment, if applicable.
|
|
|
|
H.Reckless Endangerment is to engage in behavior that endangers the lives
|
|
of others. For example, shooting a gun up into the air to celebrate a
|
|
wedding could be considered Reckless Endangerment. The Fine for Reckless
|
|
Endangerment shall be not less than twenty nor more than 200 Grams of
|
|
Gold. Punishment shall be not more than six months. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
I.Bad Food: If any Person knowingly sells any flesh of any diseased
|
|
animal, or other unwholesome provisions, or any poisonous or adulterated
|
|
drink or liquors, the Person so offending shall be Punished not more
|
|
than six months and be Fined not more than 200 Grams of Gold. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting this Crime is one year from the time it is
|
|
discovered.
|
|
|
|
No penalties will be assessed if the purchaser is told that the items
|
|
are poisonous or otherwise tainted.
|
|
|
|
J.Biological Warfare: Any Person who shall knowingly take any clothing or
|
|
other substance contaminated with smallpox or other contagious disease
|
|
into any neighborhood or locality shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Ey
|
|
shall be Fined not more than twenty Grams of Gold and be imprisoned not
|
|
exceeding six months.
|
|
|
|
Any Person guilty of violating the provisions of this act, in addition
|
|
to the penalties herein prescribed, shall be liable in a civil action,
|
|
in damages, to any and all Persons who may become infected with such
|
|
contagious disease; said damages shall be so assessed as to include, in
|
|
addition to their damages, all expenses incurred by reason of such
|
|
sickness, loss of time, medical and burial expenses; and such action may
|
|
also be maintained by the legal representative of any deceased Person.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who shall knowingly partake in an act, sexually or otherwise,
|
|
which may result in the transmission of any communicable disease which
|
|
ey has and has not informed eir sexual partner, shall be guilty of a
|
|
misdemeanor. Ey shall be Fined not more than 300 Grams of Gold and be
|
|
imprisoned not exceeding six months. If the disease is actually
|
|
transmitted, ey shall be guilty of a Felony. Ey shall be imprisoned for
|
|
not less than one year and not more twenty. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting this Crime is one year from the date such infection is
|
|
discovered.
|
|
|
|
4. Crimes Against Liberty
|
|
|
|
A.False Imprisonment is an unlawful violation of the personal liberty of
|
|
another, and consists in confinement or detention without sufficient
|
|
legal authority.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for False Imprisonment may not exceed 200 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall not be less than 30 days nor more than one year. The
|
|
time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months from the time the
|
|
victim was released from such illegal detention.
|
|
|
|
Kidnapping is the forcible abduction or stealing away of a Person.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who shall maliciously, forcibly, or fraudulently lead, take,
|
|
carry away, decoy, or entice away any Child, with intent to detain and
|
|
conceal such Child from eir Parent, shall be guilty of Kidnapping.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who shall hire, persuade, entice, decoy, or seduce, by false
|
|
promises, misrepresentation, and the like, any Person to go out of
|
|
Oceania, or to be taken or removed therefrom, for the purpose and with
|
|
the intent to sell such Person into slavery or involuntary servitude, or
|
|
otherwise to employ em for eir own use, or to the use of another,
|
|
without the free will and consent of such Person, shall be guilty of
|
|
Kidnapping.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Kidnapping shall be no less than 200 nor more than 2,000
|
|
Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be not less than one nor more than ten
|
|
years. The time limit for prosecuting Kidnapping is five years from the
|
|
time the victim was released.
|
|
|
|
B.Miranda Violation is the failure to inform a detained suspect of eir
|
|
rights. The arresting person must repeat the following, or a similar
|
|
equivalent, to a suspect: 1) You have the right to remain silent and
|
|
refuse to answer questions. 2) Anything you say may be used against you
|
|
in a court of law. 3) You have the right to consult an attorney before
|
|
speaking to an interrogator and to have an attorney present during any
|
|
questioning now and in the future. 4) If you do not have an attorney
|
|
available, you have the right to remain silent until you have had an
|
|
opportunity to consult with one. 5) Now that I have advised you of your
|
|
rights, are you willing to answer questions without an attorney present?
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Miranda Violation may not exceed 100 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall not be less than 5 days nor more than thirty. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting the Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
C.Perjury is the act of a Person, having taken a lawful oath in any
|
|
judicial proceeding, or in any other matter where an oath is required,
|
|
who shall swear willfully, corruptly, and falsely, in a matter material
|
|
to the issue or point in question.
|
|
|
|
Any public official who makes false statements in the execution of eir
|
|
duties or under color of eir authority, such as at public hearings or in
|
|
official correspondence with citizens, shall be guilty of Perjury.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Perjury shall be not exceed 100 Grams of Gold. Punishment
|
|
shall not be less than 14 days nor more than six months. The time limit
|
|
for prosecuting the Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who, by willful and corrupt Perjury, shall procure the
|
|
conviction and Punishment of any innocent Person, shall be deemed and
|
|
adjudged guilty of False Imprisonment, and in addition suffer the same
|
|
penalties suffered by above said innocent Person.
|
|
|
|
D.Fraudulent Impersonation: Any Person who shall falsely represent or
|
|
impersonate another, and, in such assumed character, shall marry
|
|
another, become bail or surety for any party, in any proceeding, before
|
|
any Court or officer authorized to take such bail or surety, or confess
|
|
any judgment, or acknowledge to execution of any conveyance of Property,
|
|
or any other act in the course of any suit or proceeding, whereby the
|
|
Person so represented or impersonated may be made liable, in any event,
|
|
to the payment of any Debt, shall be Punished not less than one year nor
|
|
more than two years, and shall be Fined not exceeding 500 Grams of Gold.
|
|
The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months from the time
|
|
such impersonation is discovered.
|
|
|
|
Impersonation that is done for purposes other than fraudulent gain, such
|
|
as for entertainment or experiment, shall not be punished. In
|
|
particular, temporarily impersonating someone to determine whether that
|
|
Person is recognized by another, for example, a trial witness, is a
|
|
legitimate investigative technique.
|
|
|
|
E.Posse. Every Person who shall neglect or refuse to join the posse
|
|
comitatus, or power of the county, by neglecting or refusing to aid and
|
|
assist in taking or arresting any Person or Persons against whom there
|
|
may be issued any process, or by neglecting to aid and assist in
|
|
retaking any Person or Persons who, after being arrested or confined,
|
|
may have escaped from such arrest or imprisonment, or by neglecting or
|
|
refusing to aid and assist in preventing any breach of the peace, or the
|
|
commission of any criminal offense, shall be guilty of no crime.
|
|
|
|
5. Crimes Against Property
|
|
|
|
When theft is committed upon a railroad train or airplane, in motion or in
|
|
rest, that travels through Oceania and it cannot with reasonable certainty
|
|
be ascertained in what county said crime was committed, the offender may be
|
|
arrested and tried in any county through which said railroad train or
|
|
airplane may have run or flown.
|
|
|
|
As mentioned earlier, all Fines and penalties listed here are in addition
|
|
to any suits for actual damages brought against those committing these
|
|
crimes. A Conviction for Larceny, for example, is sufficient evidence for a
|
|
Court to rule that the victim is owed restitution in the amount taken in
|
|
addition to any criminal Fines.
|
|
|
|
A.Grand Larceny is the theft of Valuables worth 100 Grams of Gold or more.
|
|
Petit Larceny is the theft of Valuables worth less than 100 Grams of
|
|
Gold.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Grand Larceny shall be no less than 100 and no more than
|
|
500 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be no less than six months and no
|
|
more five years. The Fine for Petit Larceny shall be no less than ten
|
|
and no more than 100 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be no more than six
|
|
months. The time limit for prosecuting Larceny is six months from the
|
|
time the Crime is discovered.
|
|
|
|
Embezzlement is treated as Grand or Petit Larceny depending on the value
|
|
of the Property embezzled.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who, for eir own gain, or to prevent the owner from again
|
|
possessing eir Valuables, shall buy or receive stolen Valuables, or
|
|
Property obtained by robbery, burglary, or embezzlement, knowing the
|
|
same so to have been obtained, shall be guilty of receiving stolen
|
|
Property, the penalties for which shall be the same as for Petit
|
|
Larceny.
|
|
|
|
Larceny shall include the transfer of Property or any Valuables by any
|
|
means, physical or electronic, by transfer or relabeling or
|
|
misrepresenting ownership, forging or counterfeiting or deceiving the
|
|
owner thereof into transferring or authorizing the transfer of such
|
|
Property.
|
|
|
|
Every Person who shall mark or brand, alter or deface the mark or brand
|
|
of any animal not eir own Property, but belonging to some other person,
|
|
or cause the same to be done, with intent thereby to steal the same, or
|
|
to prevent identification thereof by the true owner shall be guilty of
|
|
larceny equal to the value of the Property involved.
|
|
|
|
If any bailee of any money, goods, or Property shall convert the same to
|
|
eir own use, with intent to steal the same, ey shall be deemed guilty of
|
|
grand or petit larceny, according to the amount of the money or the
|
|
value of the goods, or Property so converted.
|
|
|
|
If any lodger shall take away, with intent to steal, embezzle, or
|
|
purloin, any bedding, furniture goods, or Property, which ey is to use
|
|
in or with lodging, ey shall be deemed to be guilty of grand or petit
|
|
larceny, according to the value of the Property so taken.
|
|
|
|
Breaking into a computer and taking data is considered grand or petit
|
|
larceny, according to the value of the Property so taken.
|
|
|
|
B.Robbery is the violent taking of money, goods, or other valuable thing,
|
|
from the Person of another by Force or intimidation.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Robbery shall be the same as for Larceny of the degree
|
|
appropriate to the amount stolen. Punishment shall be no less than two
|
|
nor more than twenty years. The time limit for prosecuting Robbery is
|
|
three years.
|
|
|
|
C.Burglary is breaking and entry, with or without force, entering into any
|
|
dwelling, building, vessel, or vehicle with intent to commit murder,
|
|
robbery, rape, mayhem, grand larceny, petit larceny, or any Felony. The
|
|
Fine for Burglary shall be the same as for Larceny of the degree
|
|
appropriate for the amount of Property stolen or damaged. Punishment
|
|
shall be not less than one nor more than ten years. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting Burglary is six months.
|
|
|
|
D.Counterfeiting is the act of any Person who shall knowingly and
|
|
willfully forge or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be forged or
|
|
counterfeited, any currency or other notes, merchandise, the private
|
|
stamps or labels of any manufacturer, or try to sell this counterfeit
|
|
merchandise knowing it to be counterfeit. This law does not apply if the
|
|
item being sold is labled as a copy and the manufacturer of the original
|
|
item being copied does not object.
|
|
|
|
The Fine shall be not less than 100 nor more than 500 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall be no less than 90 days and no more than two years. The
|
|
time limit for prosecuting Counterfeiting is six months.
|
|
|
|
This may seem lenient, so an example is in order. If a
|
|
counterfeiter distributes 1,000 Grams worth of counterfeit
|
|
currency to twenty other Persons, each Person who suffered a loss
|
|
thereby may demand that actual damages be paid in addition to
|
|
fines levied for the crime, so that the counterfeiter in question
|
|
could suffer both restitution and the above fines and jail time
|
|
for each offense committed, so eir total penalty could be as high
|
|
as 30,000 Grams of Gold and 40 years.
|
|
|
|
E.Forgery is the act of a Person to fraudulently forge or counterfeit the
|
|
seal of Oceania, or the seal of any Court or public officer by law
|
|
entitled to have and use a seal, or seal of any corporation, and make
|
|
use of the same, or forge or counterfeit the signature of any public
|
|
officer, or seal of any corporation, or unlawfully and corruptly, affix
|
|
any of the said true seals to any commission, deed, warrant, pardon,
|
|
certificate, or other writing, or who have in eir possession or custody
|
|
any such counterfeit seal, and willfully conceal the same, knowing it to
|
|
be so.
|
|
|
|
The Fine shall be not less than 100 nor more than 500 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment no less than 90 days and no more than two years. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting forgery is six months.
|
|
|
|
Every person who shall falsely make, alter, forge, or counterfeit any
|
|
record, or other authentic matter of a public nature, shall be deemed
|
|
guilty of forgery in the first degree. The Fine shall be not less than
|
|
100 nor more than 1,000 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be no less than
|
|
six months and no more than five years.
|
|
|
|
F.Arson is the willful and malicious burning of the Property of another.
|
|
Any Entity who shall willfully and maliciously burn, or cause to be
|
|
burned, any dwelling house in which there is at the time some Person,
|
|
shall be deemed guilty of Arson in the first degree.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Arson in the first degree shall be 3,000 Grams of Gold.
|
|
Punishment shall be not less than two years nor more than 100. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting Arson is five years.
|
|
|
|
Any Entity who shall willfully and maliciously burn, or cause to be
|
|
burned, any dwelling house or building owned by emself, or the Property
|
|
of another, or at any time willfully burn or cause to be burned, any
|
|
building, or stacks of grain, or standing crops, the Property of any
|
|
other Entity, or any water craft, or any bridge erected across any of
|
|
the waters of Oceania, such Person shall be deemed guilty of Arson in
|
|
the second degree.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Arson in the second degree shall be not less than 100 nor
|
|
more than 1,000 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be not less than one
|
|
year nor more than ten years.
|
|
|
|
Should the life of any Person be lost in consequence of such burning,
|
|
such offender shall be deemed guilty of Murder, and shall be penalized
|
|
accordingly.
|
|
|
|
Any Entity who shall willfully burn, or cause to be burned, any building
|
|
or personal Property which shall be at the time insured against loss or
|
|
damage by fire, with intent to injure or defraud such insurer, whether
|
|
the same be the Property of such Person, or of any other, shall be
|
|
adjudged guilty of Arson in the second degree, and penalized
|
|
accordingly.
|
|
|
|
G Destruction: Any Person who shall willfully and maliciously break,
|
|
destroy, or injure any goods, or Property of any description belonging
|
|
to another, or set adrift any vessel, shall be punished as if ey had
|
|
stolen the amount of money equal to the value of the damage caused.
|
|
|
|
If any Person shall, willfully and intentionally, destroy or injure, in
|
|
whole or in part, any data on a computer, every Person so offending
|
|
shall be penalized as if the amount of injury suffered had been stolen.
|
|
|
|
Every Person who shall fraudulently or maliciously tear, burn, efface,
|
|
cut or in any other way destroy any Valuable shall be punished as if ey
|
|
had stolen the amount of money equal to the value of the damage caused.
|
|
The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
H.Trespassing is entering or infringing upon the Property of another
|
|
without eir consent. Every Person so offending shall pay a Fine not
|
|
exceeding 100 Grams of Gold on the first and subsequent offenses, and
|
|
may be Punished on the second and subsequent offenses as much as six
|
|
months per offense. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
Anyone who is asked to leave another's Property for any reason, and who
|
|
refuses to do so, or who resists attempts to physically remove em from
|
|
the Property, may be prosecuted for trespassing, even if the Property is
|
|
normally open to all. For example, if a prospective restaurant patron is
|
|
asked to leave because of eir behavior or style of dress, and refuses to
|
|
do so, ey may be prosecuted for trespassing, even if the restaurant is
|
|
open to the public, and even if the restaurant admits others with the
|
|
same behavior or style of dress, or has admitted that same person in the
|
|
past.
|
|
|
|
A Vagrant who begs or otherwise annoys others may be declared to be a
|
|
trespasser by the Property owner and prosecuted as such.
|
|
|
|
Breaking into a computer without taking or destroying any data is
|
|
considered trespassing.
|
|
|
|
I.Unlawful Detainer. In the absence of an explicit written lease or
|
|
rental Contract for a piece of Property, rental payments shall be made
|
|
monthly, in advance, and shall entitle renter to the use of said
|
|
Property for the month paid. The Property owner Must notify the renter
|
|
at least three days before a payment is due if ey intends to reclaim the
|
|
Property, in which case the renter shall have three days after the
|
|
expiration of eir paid rental period to vacate the Property or be
|
|
adjudged guilty of Unlawful Detainer.
|
|
|
|
Such Unlawful Detainer shall be punished as Larceny of the potential
|
|
rental value of the Property lost by the owner due to the Property's
|
|
occupation. Offers of further rent payments by the renter who has been
|
|
asked to vacate the Property may be refused by the Property owner and
|
|
will not diminish any penalties faced by the renter for eir actions.
|
|
|
|
The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months from the date
|
|
such Property is released or returned to its owner. Of course, it may be
|
|
prosecuted while the Property is still being retained.
|
|
|
|
J.Trademarks. Any Person who has first adopted and used a trademark or
|
|
name, whether within or beyond the limits of Oceania, shall be
|
|
considered its original owner, which ownership may be transferred in the
|
|
same manner as personal Property, and shall be entitled to the same
|
|
protection by suits at law as other personal Property. Foreign
|
|
trademarks will be recognized by Oceania.
|
|
|
|
Trademarks are Property only for as long as they are being actively used
|
|
for some business activity, and exist only in the context of that
|
|
business activity. Any trademark that falls out of use by its owner may
|
|
be reclaimed by another. Trademarks that become generic terms of the
|
|
language (e.g., "Aspirin") are still entitled to legal protection in
|
|
their original use.
|
|
|
|
Names of individuals cannot be trademarked, nor can an individual be
|
|
punished for having a name that is a trademark, but such Persons may not
|
|
use the trademarked name to compete with its original owner.
|
|
|
|
Persons guilty of trademark infringement may be Fined up to 500 Grams of
|
|
Gold. The time limit for prosecuting trademark infringement is six
|
|
months from the date such infringement is discovered.
|
|
|
|
For example, Apple Records, being the first record company with
|
|
that name, may be granted a trademark on the name, and no other
|
|
record company may use it while they are using it. Apple
|
|
Computer, which is an entirely different business, may use their
|
|
name in their business with the same protection. If Apple
|
|
Computer should venture into the music business, then Apple
|
|
Records would have cause to sue. Chris Apple may name eir
|
|
Children after emself without consequence, but neither ey nor eir
|
|
Children may create another Apple Records while the first exists.
|
|
|
|
Note that while companies like Bayer have already had their
|
|
trademarks taken from them, Oceania will protect the trademarks
|
|
of other foreign businesses even if their country of origin does
|
|
not, so even if other countries allow Cokes not made by Coca-Cola
|
|
or Xerox machines not made by Xerox, such products may not be
|
|
sold in Oceania.
|
|
|
|
K.Lodging. In the absence of an explicit written Contract with a hotel or
|
|
lodging house, the following will apply:
|
|
|
|
Whenever any Person shall leave a hotel or lodging house, indebted to
|
|
the proprietor or proprietors thereof, and shall remain absent for the
|
|
period of three months, it shall be lawful for such proprietor or
|
|
proprietors to sell or cause to be sold, at public auction, any baggage
|
|
or Property of such Person indebted, or so much thereof as may be
|
|
necessary to pay such indebtedness, expenses, and charges of sale, which
|
|
may have been left at such hotel or lodging house by such Person.
|
|
|
|
All baggage or Property, of whatever description, left at a hotel or
|
|
lodging house for the period of six months, may be sold at public
|
|
auction by the proprietor or proprietors thereof, and the proceeds
|
|
arising from such sale, after deducting the expenses and charges of sale
|
|
and storage, shall be kept by the proprietor.
|
|
|
|
L.Harassment is the repeated irritation of a Person against eir wishes.
|
|
Initial contact in Person or by mail or other means cannot be considered
|
|
Harassment, but repeated advances after the Plaintiff has clearly
|
|
communicated that such are not welcome are considered Harassment.
|
|
|
|
Of course this includes phone soliciting and door-to-door
|
|
soliciting.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Harassment shall be not less than 10 nor more than 100
|
|
Grams of Gold. Punishment shall be not more than 90 days. The time limit
|
|
for prosecuting Harassment is six months.
|
|
|
|
M.Piracy on the high seas is treated as one of two classes.
|
|
|
|
Class one is piracy not endorsed by particular nations. This class will
|
|
be treated as Robbery or Murder as is appropriate.
|
|
|
|
Class two is piracy endorsed by a particular nation. This will be
|
|
treated as an act of war and will call for military action.
|
|
|
|
6. Crimes Against Privacy
|
|
|
|
A.Unlawful Search: Any Person who shall search the person or Property of
|
|
another, or seize any Property therefrom, without a warrant for such
|
|
search issued by the Court of Oceania, or the full knowledge and consent
|
|
of the Person being searched, shall be guilty of an Unlawful Search.
|
|
|
|
Any Person who shall willfully open or read, or cause to be read, any
|
|
communication not addressed to emself, without being authorized to do so
|
|
by one of the parties to such communication or by a warrant duly issued
|
|
by the Court of Oceania, shall be guilty of an Unlawful Search.
|
|
Communications with foreign Entities are subject to the same protection.
|
|
|
|
Unlawful Search may result in Fines not more than 100 Grams of Gold and
|
|
imprisonment of not less than 30 days nor more than six months. The time
|
|
limit for prosecuting an Illegal Search is six months.
|
|
|
|
In particular, any agent of a foreign government who intercepts
|
|
private communications between one of its citizens and an
|
|
Oceanian shall be guilty of unlawful search against the Oceanian
|
|
notwithstanding any foreign warrants allowing such interception.
|
|
|
|
B.Publishing Secrets: Anyone knowingly and maliciously publishing
|
|
information gained in an illegal search shall be Punished with not less
|
|
than 90 days nor more than one year, and Fined no less than 20 nor more
|
|
than 200 Grams of Gold. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
C.Professional Confidences such as Attorney-Client, Banker-Client,
|
|
Clergy/Priest-Confessor or Doctor-Patient relationships Must be
|
|
explicitly specified in the Contract for such professional work, lest
|
|
such confidence violate the professional's Right to Knowledge. Penalties
|
|
for breach of such confidence shall be specified by Contract as well.
|
|
|
|
7. Crimes Against Children
|
|
|
|
A.Child Molestation is intercourse or the sexually fondling of a Child.
|
|
Child Molestation is illegal, even if the Child consents or if both
|
|
participants are Children. Juries may be lenient when both participants
|
|
in a sex act are Children or the Child is thirteen years or older.
|
|
|
|
Punishment for Child Molestation is the same as for Rape in the first
|
|
degree. The time limit for prosecuting Child Molestation is ten years.
|
|
|
|
B.Child Pornography is the filming or photographing of Child Molestation.
|
|
All money made from Child Pornography will be confiscated in addition to
|
|
any Fines levied for the act itself. This is the solution by these laws
|
|
to the problem of Child Pornography.
|
|
|
|
C.Incest. Parents may not have sex with their natural children or adopted
|
|
children unless their children are more than 21 years of age and have
|
|
not been declared mentally deficient by a jury. Penalties for incest are
|
|
the same as Rape in the first degree. Only the child involved (if ey is
|
|
a Teen or Adult) has standing to sue, and ey has ten years from the date
|
|
of the last act of incest to bring suit. Where the child involved is in
|
|
fact a Child, any Oceanian may bring suit on eir behalf.
|
|
|
|
Note that the age of 21 is well above the normal age of sixteen for
|
|
sexual consent. The reason for this is the large influence Parents have
|
|
over their Children.
|
|
|
|
With the exception of the previous two paragraphs, persons being within
|
|
the degrees of consanguinity within which marriages are normally
|
|
declared to be incestuous and void, who shall intermarry with each
|
|
other, or who shall commit fornication with each other, have committed
|
|
no crime.
|
|
|
|
Marriage contracts which explicitly disallow sexual relations, but grant
|
|
other spousal Rights such as inheritance or standing to sue, may be
|
|
drawn between a Parent and child without committing any Crime.
|
|
|
|
8. Crimes Against Teens
|
|
|
|
There are no specific crimes against Teens.
|
|
|
|
9. Crimes against Animals and Other Beings
|
|
|
|
A.Cruelty to Animals: Every Person who shall overdrive, overload, torture,
|
|
or unmercifully or cruelly beat or mutilate any animal, whether
|
|
belonging to emself or to any other Person, shall be deemed guilty of a
|
|
misdemeanor. Ey shall be imprisoned not exceeding six months.
|
|
|
|
Every person who shall willfully administer any poison to any cattle or
|
|
domestic animal, or maliciously expose any poisonous substance with the
|
|
intent that the same shall be taken or swallowed by any cattle or
|
|
domestic animal, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. Ey shall be
|
|
Fined 10 to one hundred Grams of Gold and imprisoned not exceeding six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
In the case of sex with an animal, no crime shall be considered
|
|
committed unless the animal was forcibly restrained or was physically
|
|
injured. If either of these cases occurs than ey shall be imprisoned
|
|
not exceeding six months.
|
|
|
|
Every person who shall injure or kill an animal by negligence shall be
|
|
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. Ey shall be Fined not more than fifty
|
|
Grams of Gold and imprisoned not exceeding three months. The time limit
|
|
for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
Of course, scientific research is legal in Oceania with the
|
|
provision that the animals are not unnecessarily tortured,
|
|
maimed, or killed. And it is not illegal for abandoned dogs and
|
|
other pets to be used in scientific experiments.
|
|
|
|
10. Frauds
|
|
|
|
A.False Credit. If any Person, by false representations of eir own wealth
|
|
or credit history, shall obtain a credit thereby, and thereby
|
|
fraudulently get into the possession of goods, wares, or merchandise, or
|
|
other valuable thing, every such offender shall be deemed a swindler if
|
|
the credit is not paid off as promised. The Penalties will be the same
|
|
as if the swindler had stolen the Property in question. The time limit
|
|
for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
B.False Pretenses. If any Person shall, knowingly and designedly, by any
|
|
false pretense, obtain from any other Person any piece of personal
|
|
Property, money, goods, wares, or other valuable thing, with intent to
|
|
cheat or defraud em of the same, every Person so offending shall be
|
|
deemed a cheat, and shall pay a Fine not less than twenty Grams of Gold
|
|
nor more than 200, and be Punished not less than 30 days nor more six
|
|
months. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
C.Selling Property Twice. Any Person, after once selling, bartering, or
|
|
disposing of any tract of Land, or executing any bond or agreement for
|
|
the sale of any Lands, who shall again, knowingly and fraudulently,
|
|
sell, barter, or dispose of the same tract of Land, to any other Person
|
|
for a valuable consideration, every such offender shall pay a Fine not
|
|
exceeding 500 Grams of Gold and be Punished not less than one year or
|
|
more than five years. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
D.False Weight. If any Person shall knowingly sell any goods, wares, or
|
|
merchandise, or any valuable thing, by false weight or measure, ey shall
|
|
be deemed a common cheat, and shall be Punished not less than one year
|
|
or more than five years. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is
|
|
six months.
|
|
|
|
E.Fraudulent Conveyance. If any debtor shall fraudulently remove eir
|
|
Property or effects out of Oceania, or shall fraudulently sell, convey,
|
|
or assign, or conceal eir Property or effects, with intent to defraud,
|
|
hinder, or delay eir creditors of their just Rights, claims, or demands,
|
|
ey shall be punished not exceeding one year. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting this Crime is two years.
|
|
|
|
F. Removing Marker. Every person who shall willfully or maliciously
|
|
remove any marker of any time, erected or kept for the purpose of
|
|
designating the corner, or any other point, in the boundary of any lot
|
|
or tract of Land shall be punished not less than thirty days and not
|
|
exceeding one year. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
G.A Libel is a Malicious, untrue, defamatory statement. True statements,
|
|
and statements presented as opinion or satire, are immune from
|
|
prosecution as Libel. Actual malice need not be proven if it can be
|
|
shown that the party making such statements did so with full knowledge
|
|
that they would like cause harm, and with reckless disregard for their
|
|
truth.
|
|
|
|
The Fine for Libel shall not exceed 500 Grams of Gold. Punishment shall
|
|
not exceed 90 days. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six
|
|
months.
|
|
|
|
11. Miscellaneous Crimes
|
|
|
|
A.Jail Break. Any Convict who escapes from eir confinement and is
|
|
recaptured shall serve additional time not less than one year nor more
|
|
than ten. Convicts who reenter Oceania before their exile is over shall
|
|
have their time increased by not less than one year nor more than ten
|
|
and in addition their sentence may be converted from exile to
|
|
imprisonment.
|
|
|
|
If any Person shall set at liberty any imprisoned Convict unless funds
|
|
have run out at the prison in question, such Person shall be Punished
|
|
the amount of time remaining to be served by the prisoner ey released,
|
|
not to exceed ten years, and shall Compensate the Plaintiff (who will be
|
|
the same or one of the same Plaintiffs for whom the released Convict was
|
|
serving eir time) not less than 100 nor more than 500 Grams of Gold.
|
|
|
|
If any Person shall convey, or cause to be delivered, to an imprisoned
|
|
Convict, any disguise, instrument, or arms, proper to facilitate the
|
|
escape of such prisoner (although no escape, or attempt to escape, is
|
|
actually made), ey shall be Punished not less than six months nor more
|
|
than five years and shall by Fined not more than 200 Grams of Gold. The
|
|
time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months. If such delivered
|
|
instrument is used in the performance of another crime, the deliverer
|
|
may also be tried as an accessory to that crime.
|
|
|
|
B.Unauthorized Office. If any Person shall willfully take upon emself to
|
|
exercise or officiate in any office or place of another, without being
|
|
lawfully authorized thereto, ey shall be Punished not less than 30 days.
|
|
|
|
If any Government official presumes an authority ey does not have, tells
|
|
an Oceanian that ey needs a License for something that is a Right, or
|
|
otherwise defrauds an Oceanian about the power of eir office, ey shall
|
|
Compensate such Plaintiff 20 Grams of Gold and be Punished not less than
|
|
30 days. The time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
C.Embracery is an attempt to influence a juror or jurors corruptly to one
|
|
side, by threats or menaces, or by promises, persuasions, entreaties,
|
|
money, and the like.
|
|
|
|
Educating a jury about law or their rights as jurors will not be
|
|
considered Embracery.
|
|
|
|
An embracer shall be Punished not less than one year, nor exceeding five
|
|
years, and shall be Fined not exceeding 500 Grams of Gold. Any juror
|
|
convicted of taking any money, present, reward, or any other Valuable,
|
|
or corruptly being influenced, as aforesaid, shall suffer like
|
|
penalties, and be disqualified to act as a juror for one century. This
|
|
law applies to grand as well as trial jurors.
|
|
|
|
The Court of Oceania shall not appoint judges who have been convicted of
|
|
Embracery or being influenced as a juror. Such Persons may still be
|
|
hired by private Courts or elected to office. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting this Crime is one year.
|
|
|
|
D.Treason is a threat to the security of Oceania against external threats
|
|
or an internal attempt to wage war against the Constitution of Oceania.
|
|
|
|
Exporting mind altering drugs to nations where they are illegal is
|
|
considered Treason of the first degree.
|
|
|
|
Waging war upon the territory and people of Oceania is considered
|
|
Treason of the second degree. Giving military aid or supplies to its
|
|
declared enemies, engaging in election Fraud or defrauding of the people
|
|
by Government agencies is also considered Treason of the second degree.
|
|
Election Fraud includes voting more than once, voting on behalf of
|
|
another Person, denying ballot access to legitimate candidates or
|
|
referendums, bribing or intimidating Voters, accepting ballots not
|
|
delivered in Person, misrepresenting the content of a ballot, and breach
|
|
of specific written promises made by candidates to Voters.
|
|
|
|
Suspending the Right to a Writ of Habeas Corpus, passing a bill of
|
|
attainder, ex post facto law, pre facto law (law declaring all future
|
|
actions of a Person or Entity to be legal) or passing a law impairing
|
|
the obligation of Contracts is considered Treason of the second degree.
|
|
|
|
Transferring money between Government budgets, authorizing Government
|
|
borrowing, or traveling into Oceania without permission during war is
|
|
considered Treason of the second degree.
|
|
|
|
Creating fake Oceania passports or committing fraud in the registration
|
|
of airplanes or ships under the flag of Oceania is considered Treason of
|
|
the third degree.
|
|
|
|
Persons who are convicted of Treason of the first degree shall be
|
|
Punished not less than ten years nor more than 100 and shall be Fined
|
|
not more than 10,000,000 Grams of Gold.
|
|
|
|
Persons who are convicted of Treason of the second degree shall be
|
|
Punished not less than ten years nor more than 100 and shall be Fined
|
|
not more than 100,000 Grams of Gold.
|
|
|
|
Persons who are convicted of Treason of the third degree shall be
|
|
Punished not less than five years nor more than 20 and shall be Fined
|
|
not more than 10,000 Grams of Gold.
|
|
|
|
All Fines in the case of Treason are to be given to the Department of
|
|
War Budget. If the Convicted traitor owns a frequency band, the
|
|
frequency may be collected as an additional Fine (if so ordered by the
|
|
jury) and sold at auction by the Department of War. The time limit for
|
|
prosecuting Treason is ten years.
|
|
|
|
E.Destroying Public Notices. If any Person shall intentionally deface,
|
|
obliterate, tear down, or destroy, in whole or in part, any copy or
|
|
transcript, or extract from or of any law of Oceania, or any
|
|
proclamation, advertisement, or notification, set up at any public place
|
|
in Oceania, such Person shall be Fined not less than ten Grams of Gold
|
|
nor more than 100, and shall be Punished not more than 30 days. This law
|
|
shall not extend to defacing, tearing down, obliterating, or destroying
|
|
any law, proclamation, publication, notification, advertisement, or
|
|
order, after the time for which the same was by law to remain up shall
|
|
have expired, or to notices posted without sufficient authority. The
|
|
time limit for prosecuting this Crime is six months.
|
|
|
|
F.Disturbing the Peace by public affray or other means shall be defined by
|
|
the standards of each Housing Development and prosecuted as specified in
|
|
the laws thereof. Extreme cases may be prosecuted as Harassment.
|
|
|
|
G.No Dispersal Upon Command is when two or more persons assemble for the
|
|
purpose of violating a Housing Development's rules. Prosecution will be
|
|
according to the Housing Development Contract.
|
|
|
|
H.Traffic Laws. Will be developed and enforced by the private owners of
|
|
roads. If such owners wished to prosecute in the Court of Oceania, the
|
|
crimes of Murder, Manslaughter, and Reckless Endangerment could be used
|
|
to prosecute violators of these laws.
|
|
|
|
I.Spitting On The Sidewalk and other "public" crimes will be regulated by
|
|
the owners of the private Property in question.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER THREE
|
|
Contracts
|
|
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|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
When there are no specific Punishments listed in a Contract for violating
|
|
its terms, the Court of Oceania may only order financial compensation in an
|
|
amount sufficient to render the injured parties whole for their loss, and
|
|
may not further punish the violator. Of course, evasion of these Debts
|
|
constitutes a separate offense for which the debtor may me sued and
|
|
subjected to the standard criminal Punishments for Larceny.
|
|
|
|
A Court may determine what constitutes free and informed consent for a
|
|
particular Contract. The signature of a party, when required to a written
|
|
instrument, shall be equally valid if the party cannot write, provided the
|
|
Person make eir mark, the name of the Person making the mark being written
|
|
near it, and the mark being witnessed by a Person who writes eir own name
|
|
as a witness.
|
|
|
|
If an Oceanian signs a note stating that ey is going to pay an amount of
|
|
money then ey is obligated to pay it. If the Debt isn't paid then the
|
|
penalty is in accordance with the Contract. If no penalty is mentioned,
|
|
then there will be no penalty.
|
|
|
|
Notice of non-payment may be directed to the address where the debtor lived
|
|
at the time ey signed the note, unless the debtor specified a different
|
|
address in the note.
|
|
|
|
These laws apply to videotaped Contracts, written Contracts, and those
|
|
recorded by any other means.
|
|
|
|
1. Marriage
|
|
|
|
Marriage is a private Contract among consenting Adults, and the Government
|
|
will take no part in defining its terms or methods or standards. The Courts
|
|
will enforce the terms of any Contract entered.
|
|
|
|
It is expected that boilerplate Contracts will be used for most
|
|
marriages.
|
|
|
|
Also, the legal standing of Spouse is defined by a Marriage Contract.
|
|
Anyone claiming the Rights of a Spouse (e.g., inheritance or Nearest
|
|
Relative status) Must present a Marriage Contract to the Court.
|
|
|
|
Bigamy and adultery are not Crimes unless explicitly disallowed by the
|
|
Marriage Contracts signed by the parties involved. If the Contract(s) do
|
|
not allow this, then the penalty will be as described in the Contract(s).
|
|
If a person has broken more than one Contract, then ey will receive the
|
|
worst of the penalties described in the Contracts involved.
|
|
|
|
Upon the dissolution of a Marriage Contract, or in the absence thereof, no
|
|
claims on the Property of a Spouse will be recognized by a Court without a
|
|
Contract explicitly specifying such transfer of Property. This means that
|
|
if someone lives with a Person for twelve years without a Marriage
|
|
Contract, they do NOT have any Spousal rights.
|
|
|
|
2. Implied Contracts
|
|
|
|
Following is a list of known Implied Contracts:
|
|
|
|
A.Advertisements and labels are an Implied Contract between the seller and
|
|
the customer.
|
|
|
|
B.The act of sexual intercourse binds the participants to an Implied
|
|
Contract to provide care for any Children resulting from that act. When
|
|
that Contractual obligation is terminated, either by the Child's
|
|
reaching teenhood or by a reassignment of Parental care by Explicit
|
|
Contract, the status of being a Child's biological Parent can confer no
|
|
further obligations to the Child.
|
|
|
|
C. Marrying a new partner implicitly transfers Parental responsibility of
|
|
all Children under eir control from the old partner to the new partner.
|
|
|
|
Explicit Contracts limiting or absolving the obligations of Implied
|
|
Contracts, to which all interested parties have consented, are legal.
|
|
Because a Child is an interested party in the Implied Contract obligating
|
|
eir care, and cannot consent to its absolution, the Implied Contract of
|
|
Child care may not be absolved in this way, though it may be transferred.
|
|
|
|
A jury may determine what Implied Contracts exist in a particular case.
|
|
|
|
3. Bankruptcy
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 1, Section 3,
|
|
Subsection H.
|
|
|
|
Bankruptcy may be declared once every hundred years, at which time the
|
|
debtor may keep eir homestead and is required by law to pay two sevenths of
|
|
eir income for the seven years following the bankruptcy. If ey is caught
|
|
not paying this money, it will be considered theft of the amount not paid,
|
|
i.e., a petit larceny or grand larceny depending on the amount of money not
|
|
paid. Of course, if the Debt is paid off before the seven years are up, no
|
|
more money needs to be paid. And if any Debt remains after seven years,
|
|
the remaining Debt will never be paid.
|
|
|
|
A business may not declare bankruptcy and continue to operate. It must
|
|
liquidate all its assets at the time of bankruptcy and never operate again.
|
|
|
|
If any Debts are accumulated when the debtor may no longer declare
|
|
bankruptcy and these Debts fall into arrears, such Debts will be treated as
|
|
theft, i.e., petit larceny or grand larceny depending on the amount owed.
|
|
|
|
Trying to declare bankruptcy a second time within a fiscal century is
|
|
considered Fraud and is punishable by up to six months of jail time.
|
|
|
|
In bankruptcy, the homestead, consisting of a quantity of Land, together
|
|
with the dwelling of no more than one house thereon, and personal Property
|
|
therein, not exceeding in value 10,000 Grams of Gold, to be selected by the
|
|
head of the household, shall not be subject to forced sale on execution, or
|
|
any final process from any Court, for any Debt or liability.
|
|
|
|
Such exemption shall not extend to any loans that were backed by the value,
|
|
or part of the value, of the homestead. It also shall not extend to
|
|
avoidance of payment of Fines for committing felonies.
|
|
|
|
If the value of the Property is over 10,000 Grams of Gold then the owner
|
|
may choose to divide it or auction it off. Ey will get to keep the 10,000
|
|
Grams of Gold raised at the auction. If the auction raises 10,000 Grams of
|
|
Gold or less then the auction is declared null and void and the owner gets
|
|
to keep the Property. In the situation where the Court and the owner cannot
|
|
agree on the value of the Property, the owner of the Property may either
|
|
hire three disinterested appraisers to value eir Property or call for an
|
|
auction to determine the value of the Property.
|
|
|
|
4. Protection of the Wages of Labor
|
|
|
|
In all bankruptcies of employers, the wages of employees shall be paid
|
|
before any other Debts provided that the amount of money owed shall not
|
|
exceed 500 Grams of Gold, and the services shall have been rendered within
|
|
ninety days before the bankruptcy was declared.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the death of an employer, the same applies with the
|
|
exception that first the funeral expenses Must be paid. This act shall in
|
|
no way affect the homestead or other Property exempted by law from forced
|
|
sale, or any mortgage or lien lawfully obtained on the Property of the
|
|
deceased Person before eir death.
|
|
|
|
Such claims Must be filed by the employee in Court within ten days of
|
|
notice delivered to the employee of the bankruptcy or death of employer. If
|
|
the claim is not filed on time, the employee will no longer get
|
|
preferential treatment on eir claim.
|
|
|
|
If there is not enough money to pay employee claims, all employees will be
|
|
paid a percentage of money owed them.
|
|
|
|
5. The Formation of Corporations
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
The formation of corporations can in no way be construed to be a privilege
|
|
granted by the Government or by any other outside Entities.
|
|
|
|
Corporations may be formed according to the provisions of this act, such
|
|
corporations, and the members thereof, being subject to all the conditions
|
|
and liabilities herein imposed, and to none others. This includes the
|
|
formation of banking Corporations for the purpose of issuing or circulating
|
|
money or currency within Oceania.
|
|
|
|
Any Person or Persons Must file (th)eir incorporation papers in the office
|
|
of a private company that stores such records. These papers Must include
|
|
the principal place of business, the corporate name of the company, the
|
|
object for which the same shall be formed, the amount of its capital stock,
|
|
the time of its existence, the number of shares of which the capital stock
|
|
shall consist, the number of trustees and their names, who shall manage the
|
|
concerns of the company for the first six months, and the name of the city,
|
|
town, or locality, and county in which the principal place of business of
|
|
the company is to be located.
|
|
|
|
When the certificate shall have been filed, the Persons who shall have
|
|
signed it and their successors shall have the power to enact corporate
|
|
bylaws which may not be inconsistent with these laws. From that point on,
|
|
the bylaws shall dictate internal procedures and dictate power of attorney
|
|
for external affairs.
|
|
|
|
Corporations organized under this act are deemed to possess the same rights
|
|
and powers of any Oceanian to issue bills, notes, or other evidences of
|
|
Debt, for circulation as money. Corporations possess the same powers of any
|
|
Oceanian to engage in any act of business. In the case of Fines or
|
|
imprisonment for Crimes committed in the name of the corporation, the
|
|
corporation will pay the Fines, and the Person(s) who actually committed
|
|
the Crime will serve the jail time.
|
|
|
|
Any Person or Persons who shall act as the agent of any such corporation in
|
|
conducting or carrying on any business of such corporation, in any of the
|
|
counties of Oceania, without any such certificate having been filed as
|
|
required, as provided in this act herein, shall be deemed guilty of a
|
|
misdemeanor if they have claimed to others that they are registered, and on
|
|
conviction, shall be Fined not exceeding 1,000 Grams of Gold, to which may
|
|
be added imprisonment not exceeding six months.
|
|
|
|
6. Limited Partnerships
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
The formation of limited partnerships can in no way be construed to be a
|
|
privilege granted by the Government or by any other outside Entities.
|
|
|
|
Limited partnerships within Oceania may be formed by two or more Persons
|
|
upon the terms and subject to the conditions and liabilities prescribed in
|
|
this act, and nothing contained in this act shall be construed to forbid
|
|
such partnerships from the purpose of banking or insurance.
|
|
|
|
The said partnerships may consist of one or more Persons who shall be
|
|
called general partners, who shall be jointly and severally responsible as
|
|
general partners. They are, by these laws, prescribed to enact the bylaws
|
|
of said limited partnership, thus creating the powers and responsibilities,
|
|
and the limits thereof, of their limited partners.
|
|
|
|
The Persons forming such partnerships shall sign a certificate, which shall
|
|
contain the name under which said partnership is to be conducted, the names
|
|
and respective places of residence of all the general partners, the general
|
|
nature of the business to be transacted, and the time when the partnership
|
|
is to commence and when it is to terminate. This certificate is to be filed
|
|
with a private record keeping company.
|
|
|
|
The business of the partnership shall be conducted under a firm in which
|
|
the names of the general partners only shall be inserted, and the general
|
|
partners and those they give power of attorney to shall only transact the
|
|
business.
|
|
|
|
In case of dissolution or insolvency of the partnership, notice Must be
|
|
given to the creditors, by certified delivery and public notice. And at the
|
|
same time they Must give notice to the private company that they filed
|
|
partnership papers with.
|
|
|
|
Any Person or Persons who shall act as the agent of any such partnership in
|
|
conducting or carrying on any business of such corporation, in any of the
|
|
counties of Oceania, without any such certificate having been filed as
|
|
required, as provided in this act herein, shall be deemed guilty of a
|
|
misdemeanor if they have claimed to others that they have registered, and
|
|
on conviction, shall be Fined not exceeding 1,000 Grams of Gold, to which
|
|
may be added imprisonment not exceeding six months.
|
|
|
|
7. Joint Debtors
|
|
|
|
If one Person pays off eir portion of a joint Debt, this may or may not
|
|
release em from the remainder of eir Debt with the other joint debtors
|
|
depending on the terms of the Contract ey has signed with them. If the
|
|
Contract does not cover this matter, ey will be released from the remainder
|
|
of the Debt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER FOUR
|
|
Property Disputes
|
|
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
When Land, bank accounts, or other Property is unclaimed for five years, it
|
|
will be auctioned off and the proceeds put into the Department of War
|
|
Budget. Of course, cash will not need to be auctioned off.
|
|
|
|
Land ownership in Oceania will originate with the person who created the
|
|
Land, and shall include the airspace up to one hundred kilometers above the
|
|
highest point of ground within 500 meters horizontally as well as all
|
|
matter below the Land to the center of the planet. For the purpose of this
|
|
clause, "Land" shall be defined as habitable or arable space at a
|
|
permanently fixed location with respect to the planet's surface, whether
|
|
such Land is at the surface, below, or above. If this "Land" should move,
|
|
the owner of this "Land" would not retain Rights to the airspace above the
|
|
former location of this "Land" or the matter below this "Land".
|
|
|
|
A Land owner has the Right to use its surface soil, surface, and subsurface
|
|
water and minerals. A Land owner may separately sell off eir water Rights,
|
|
mineral Rights, or airspace Rights while still retaining eir other Land
|
|
Rights.
|
|
|
|
A parcel bordering an ocean or sizable lake, shall extend to a distance of
|
|
1/4 kilometer or less from the edge between water and Land. A parcel
|
|
bordering a river shall control the water within 75 meters or less from
|
|
said edge.
|
|
|
|
In neither case shall the Land owner have a Right to block navigation. A
|
|
dam or other obstruction may be constructed on the water only if a
|
|
convenient alternate route is provided. The exception being if an Entity
|
|
buys travel rights from all Entities bordering the river or lake. All
|
|
owners of parcels bordering a river or lake are owners of these travel
|
|
Rights. If the obstruction will reduce or stop water flow, then water
|
|
Rights as well Must be bought from all Entities bordering the river or
|
|
lake. All owners of parcels bordering a river or lake are owners of these
|
|
water Rights. If the obstruction will reduce or stop fish or other useful
|
|
floating items in the water, then fishing Rights as well Must be bought
|
|
from all Entities bordering the river or lake. All owners of parcels
|
|
bordering a river or lake are owners of these fishing Rights.
|
|
|
|
Travel, water, and fishing rights will be apportioned based on the linear
|
|
amount of riverbank an owner has on eir Property bordering the river or
|
|
lake, measured to the nearest meter at a time in between high and low
|
|
tides.
|
|
|
|
Control of travel, water, and fishing rights in a river or lake more than
|
|
75 meters from its edges will be controlled by a development composed of
|
|
all the owners of such rights. If such a development does not exist, then
|
|
travel will be unrestricted, water will not be allowed to be siphoned off
|
|
in this area, and fishing will be limited to fishing for pleasure.
|
|
|
|
In situations where a river is less than 150 meters wide, then the owners
|
|
of properties bordering the river may not obstruct travel beyond half the
|
|
distance from their border to the center of the river. So if a river was
|
|
100 meters wide, each Land owner could only obstruct 25 meters.
|
|
|
|
A bay will be treated as a lake up to the opening of the bay.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER FIVE
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frequency Rights
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for this law is Article 1, Section 1,
|
|
Subsection D.
|
|
|
|
It is a complex process to assign rights to the frequencies that make up
|
|
the electromagnetic spectrum. When Oceania is first created, all
|
|
frequencies will be given away by lottery. As additional Land is added to
|
|
Oceania this process will be repeated when possible. Note that many
|
|
frequencies such as TV frequencies normally occupy over a hundred
|
|
kilometers of broadcastable space. So additional Land added to Oceania that
|
|
does not cause the total to exceed the range of a TV transmitter will not
|
|
give the Land owner money from the "sale" of eir rights to broadcast TV.
|
|
|
|
Of course, Oceanian broadcasters may not interfere with the
|
|
existing frequency rights of foreign broadcasters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER SIX
|
|
Wills and Property of the Deceased
|
|
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for the above laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
Will is defined as a will or codicil.
|
|
|
|
All Wills either handwritten or witnessed by two or more people are
|
|
automatically legal. Anything else must be determined by a jury as to
|
|
whether or not the Will is valid.
|
|
|
|
If, after the making of any Will, the testator shall duly make and execute
|
|
a second Will, the canceling of the second Will shall not revive the first
|
|
Will. The two exceptions to this are that:
|
|
|
|
It appears by the terms of such revocation it was the intention to
|
|
revive and give effect to the first Will or
|
|
|
|
after such canceling the first Will was duly reexecuted.
|
|
|
|
Wills shall be processed in the Court specified by the Will or in the
|
|
closest Court to the place specified in the Will. If no place is specified
|
|
then it Will be processed in the closest Court in Oceania to the place of
|
|
death. Any Person having the custody of any Will, shall, within thirty days
|
|
after ey shall have knowledge of the death of the deceased, deliver it into
|
|
the Court which has jurisdiction of the case.
|
|
|
|
If the executor intends to decline the trust, ey shall file eir
|
|
renunciation in writing. In the event that the executor declines eir
|
|
appointment, then it falls upon the backup executor. If there is no backup
|
|
named, at that time the Court shall be named executor and carry out the
|
|
duties of an executor. In any event, whomever is appointed as the
|
|
executor, it Will be eir duty to inventory of all the deceased's belongings
|
|
and to carry out he provisions and directions in the Will.
|
|
|
|
The executor Must notify the general public that the Will is being
|
|
processed. The time in which this shall be carried out shall be no more
|
|
than thirty days of date of death or thirty days after the executor
|
|
receives the Will, which ever is later. This shall be done by publication
|
|
in a Newspaper. Also, any Persons named in the Will shall be notified via
|
|
certified mail that the Will is being processed.
|
|
|
|
Every Person who shall neglect to perform any of the duties required in the
|
|
preceding paragraphs, without reasonable cause, shall be liable to every
|
|
Person interested in the Will for the damages they may sustain in
|
|
consequence of such neglect. It is the executor's responsibility to sue
|
|
parties who have harmed the estate and ey may be sued by others if ey harms
|
|
the estate.
|
|
|
|
If the executor is found to not be performing eir duties as prescribed,
|
|
then ey may be removed by the Court and the back up executor or the Court
|
|
shall take over as executor. In the event that the court is the executor
|
|
and believed by the interested parties to be incompetent, then the
|
|
interested parties may petition the next higher Court to have the Will
|
|
probated.
|
|
|
|
Any Person, having an interest in the Will, may present a petition. An
|
|
interest being defined as any Person who could present a valid copy of a
|
|
Will with eir name in it or be able to allege that someone has a valid copy
|
|
of a Will with eir name on it. If a Person has possession of a Will, and
|
|
neglects or refuses to produce it in obedience to an order, decided on by
|
|
the court hearing the Will, ey may, by warrant from the Court, be committed
|
|
to jail, and be kept in close confinement for up to five years.
|
|
|
|
If the Will is contested, the Court shall direct subpoenas to the witnesses
|
|
of the Will to establish the validity of it. The witnesses shall testify
|
|
as to whether the deceased was of sound mind at the time the Will was
|
|
signed and whether or not ey signed it. If no one contests the Will, only
|
|
one witness is needed to initiate its probate.
|
|
|
|
Any Person interested (interested being defined as above), may appear and
|
|
contest the Will. If it appears that there are Children then their
|
|
guardian shall see to their representation. If a child has no relatives
|
|
willing to be eir guardian and no relatives willing to appoint eir
|
|
guardian, then a Court should be charged with the goal of finding a
|
|
guardian for em.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the witnesses of the signing of the Will, the Court may
|
|
admit the testimony of other witnesses to prove the sanity of the deceased,
|
|
and the execution of the Will; and, as evidence of the execution, it may
|
|
admit proof of the handwriting of the deceased.
|
|
|
|
The executor or administrator may apply to the Court for an order to sell
|
|
the perishable Property of the estate, and any other Property as may be
|
|
necessary to be sold. If there be a delay in obtaining such order, such
|
|
Property may be sold without an order of sale; provided that the executor
|
|
shall be held responsible for such Property, unless, the Court decides that
|
|
the executor acted in good faith in the best interests of the estate. If
|
|
claims against the estate have been allowed, and a sale of Property shall
|
|
be necessary for their payment, or of the expenses of the administration,
|
|
the executor may also apply for an order to sell so much of the personal
|
|
Property as shall be necessary. Ey may make a similar application, from
|
|
time to time, as long as the sale thereof is again necessary.
|
|
|
|
No executor or administrator shall be accountable for any Debts due to the
|
|
deceased, if it shall appear that they remain uncollected without eir
|
|
fault.
|
|
|
|
The executor shall be allowed all necessary expenses in the care,
|
|
management, and settlement of the estate, and for eir services such fees as
|
|
the law provides; but when the deceased shall, by eir Will, make some other
|
|
provision for the compensation of eir executors, that shall be deemed a
|
|
full compensation for the executor's services, unless ey shall, by a
|
|
written instrument, filed in the Court, renounce all claim for compensation
|
|
provided by the Will.
|
|
|
|
The Debts of the estate shall be paid in the following order: Funeral
|
|
expenses; The expenses of the last sickness; Judgments rendered against the
|
|
deceased in eir lifetime, and mortgages in the order of their date; All
|
|
other demands against the estate.
|
|
|
|
The preference given in the preceding paragraph to a mortgage shall only
|
|
extend to the proceeds of the Property mortgaged. If the proceeds of such
|
|
Property be insufficient to pay the mortgage, the part remaining
|
|
unsatisfied shall be classed with other demands against the estate.
|
|
|
|
If any Person shall die and leave no heirs to inherit eir estate, then the
|
|
Person able to convince a jury that the Person would have wished that they
|
|
have received the money, shall get the money. If no Person is able to
|
|
convince a jury within a year, then the Department of War will auction off
|
|
such Property and keep the proceeds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER SEVEN
|
|
Regulation of Government Agencies
|
|
|
|
|
|
The few Government agencies allowed by the Constitution of Oceania are
|
|
subject to regulation by the people as stated in the constitution Article
|
|
2, Section 3. Each department has an elected director who may run the
|
|
agency and its budget as ey sees fit, provided that ey abides by these
|
|
regulations.
|
|
|
|
It shall be unlawful for any Government agency, or any Government officer,
|
|
to authorize, allow, or contract for any expenditure unless the money for
|
|
the payment thereof is in the treasury and specially set aside for such
|
|
payment. Any Government officer or officers violating this law shall be
|
|
convicted of Treason of the second degree and penalized accordingly.
|
|
|
|
In case of great necessity or emergency, any Government agency by unanimous
|
|
vote, by resolution reciting the character and nature of such necessity or
|
|
emergency, may NOT authorize a temporary loan for the purpose of meeting
|
|
such necessity or emergency.
|
|
|
|
1. The Office of the President
|
|
|
|
A.The President will be elected every four years on the tenth of June. Ey
|
|
has the responsibility and authority to run eir office and budget as ey
|
|
sees fit consistent with the laws here and in the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
B.The Vice President will be elected every four years on the tenth of
|
|
June. Ey has the responsibility to replace the President if the
|
|
President is no longer able to carry out eir duties.
|
|
|
|
2. The War Department
|
|
|
|
A.The Commander in Chief will be elected every four years on the tenth of
|
|
June. Ey has the responsibility and authority to run the Department of
|
|
War and its budget as ey sees fit consistent with the laws here and in
|
|
the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
B.The Air and Space Force Commander is elected on the tenth of June, the
|
|
year following the election of the Commander-in--Chief. Ey has the
|
|
responsibility and authority to run the Air and Space Force and its
|
|
budget as ey sees fit consistent with the laws here and in the
|
|
Constitution.
|
|
|
|
C.The Army Commander is elected on the tenth of June, the year following
|
|
the election of the Air and Space Force Commander. Ey has the
|
|
responsibility and authority to run the Army and its budget as ey sees
|
|
fit consistent with the laws here and in the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
D.The Navy Commander is elected on the tenth of June, the year following
|
|
the election of the Army Commander. Ey has the responsibility and
|
|
authority to run the Navy and its budget as ey sees fit consistent with
|
|
the laws here and in the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
Initially, the Commander in Chief, the Air and Space Force Commander, the
|
|
Army Commander, and the Navy Commander will be elected in the same year and
|
|
will serve terms of 1 year, two years, three years, and four years
|
|
respectively.
|
|
|
|
Military discipline is absolutely necessary, but under normal, non combat
|
|
conditions it is only necessary to remind military personnel that
|
|
noncompliance shall result in dismissal and loss of pay and benefits.
|
|
During national crisis, a soldier or officer may no less abandon the
|
|
military than a civilian ship captain may abandon passengers during a
|
|
possible shipwreck. The Contract between military personnel and the
|
|
militias they serve shall include provisions to cover such events
|
|
adequately.
|
|
|
|
To reduce the chance of unfairness, it is highly recommended that the
|
|
private Courts that these militias Contract with allow appeal to the Court
|
|
of Oceania.
|
|
|
|
3. The Anti-Law Department
|
|
|
|
A.The Chief Director of the Anti-Law Department will be elected every four
|
|
years on the tenth of June. Ey has the responsibility and authority to
|
|
run the Anti-Law Department as ey sees fit consistent with the laws here
|
|
and in the Constitution.
|
|
|
|
4. The Court of Oceania
|
|
|
|
A.The Chief Director of the Court of Oceania will be elected every four
|
|
years on the tenth of June. Ey has the responsibility and authority to
|
|
run the Court as ey sees fit consistent with the laws here and in the
|
|
Constitution. This includes the responsibility of appointing judges to
|
|
the levels of the Court of Oceania.
|
|
|
|
B.The Court of Oceania may not follow admiralty law or any other system of
|
|
laws that violates the Constitution of Oceania.
|
|
|
|
The corrupt practice of allowing a court to fly a flag that is
|
|
different that the national flag and to use laws that are
|
|
different from the national laws will not be allowed in the Court
|
|
of Oceania. For example, the use of Admiralty law and the
|
|
corresponding Admiralty flag in the U.S. would not be allowed in
|
|
the Court of Oceania. Admiralty law removes certain rights from
|
|
the Defendant such as the right to a jury.
|
|
|
|
C.Levels of Court. There are three levels of court: The Supreme Court,
|
|
County Courts, and Local Courts. Each Court will have one Judge and at
|
|
least twelve jurors. Each Court will have the responsibility to
|
|
determine if a law is constitutional. All cases Must begin in the Local
|
|
Court, from where they may be appealed to the County Court, and then to
|
|
the Supreme Court.
|
|
|
|
Cases that are tried in private Courts and are then appealed begin at
|
|
the Local Court level in the Court of Oceania. Private Courts do not
|
|
have to allow appeal.
|
|
|
|
D.Local Grand Juries. An Oceanian is Entitled to immediately ask for a
|
|
standing Grand Jury to decide whether ey has had eir rights violated by
|
|
the Government or others. There Must be a Grand Jury within two hours
|
|
travel time 24 hours a day. Grand Jury proceedings are to be secret.
|
|
|
|
The Grand Jury Must inquire into the case of every person imprisoned in
|
|
the jail of a County, and not indicted; into the condition and
|
|
management of all prisons hired by the County; and into the willful and
|
|
corrupt misconduct in office of public officers of every description
|
|
within the County.
|
|
|
|
The Grand Jury shall be entitled to free access, at all reasonable
|
|
times, to all prisons under its jurisdiction, and to the examination
|
|
without charge, of all public records within its County.
|
|
|
|
An Indictment cannot be found without the concurrence of at least twelve
|
|
grand jurors. When so found it shall be endorsed: "A true bill", and
|
|
the endorsement shall be signed by the foreman of the grand jury.
|
|
|
|
If twelve grand jurors do not concur in finding an indictment against a
|
|
Defendant who has been held to answer, the deposition and statement, if
|
|
any, transmitted to them shall be returned to the Court with the
|
|
indorsement signed by the foreman to the effect that the charge is
|
|
dismissed. Only Grand Juries may issue warrants for arrest and warrants
|
|
for searches of Property.
|
|
|
|
An Indictment Must contain the title of the action, specifying the name
|
|
of the Court to which the Indictment is presented and the names of the
|
|
parties, and a statement of the acts constituting the offense, in
|
|
ordinary and concise language and in such manner as to enable a person
|
|
of common understanding to know what is intended.
|
|
|
|
E.Trial Juries are selected at random from a list of jury volunteers.
|
|
Prospective jurors volunteer their services by giving the Court their
|
|
names, contact information, a list of fields in which they have
|
|
expertise, and the salary for which they are willing to work. The Court
|
|
may not require any personal or other information from prospective
|
|
jurors, though it may decline to call for duty those that cannot be
|
|
reached with the contact information given,
|
|
|
|
It is a Felony to bribe, threaten, or intimidate a juror in an attempt
|
|
to alter the outcome of a trial. Educating em about law or eir Rights as
|
|
a juror will not be considered bribing, threatening, or intimidating the
|
|
juror.
|
|
|
|
It is illegal to selectively withhold evidence and testimony from the
|
|
jury. Evidence that was illegally obtained IS considered evidence
|
|
although the party who uncovered the evidence will be convicted of an
|
|
Unlawful Search as described in the Crimes Against Privacy.
|
|
|
|
Juries shall not only decide whether or not the Defendant is guilty, but
|
|
they shall decide eir punishment within the limits prescribed by law.
|
|
|
|
All actions done by a Court are voted upon by the jury. This includes
|
|
deciding the maximum amount of money from the budget of the Court of
|
|
Oceania that will be spent on a trial. The judge is just an
|
|
administrator and referee to uphold court procedure, not the one who
|
|
decides the outcome of a trial. Decisions made by the jury during trial
|
|
will require majority vote, except the judgment itself, which Must be
|
|
unanimous. Ties in voting will cause decisions to fail.
|
|
|
|
Unanimity is necessary for judgment. Cases that end in two consecutive
|
|
hung juries will be considered acquittals.
|
|
|
|
To be proven guilty takes a unanimous decision by a jury that the
|
|
Defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. And when an offense is
|
|
proven against the Defendant and there exists a reasonable doubt as to
|
|
which of the two or more degrees ey is guilty, ey shall be convicted
|
|
only of the lowest.
|
|
|
|
F.Witnesses. The Party injured shall in all cases be a competent witness.
|
|
The credibility of all such witnesses shall be left to the jury, as in
|
|
other cases. In all cases where two or more Persons are jointly or
|
|
otherwise concerned in the commission of any Crime, either may be sworn
|
|
as a witness against another, in relation to such Crime, but the
|
|
testimony given by such witness shall in no instance be used against
|
|
emself in any criminal prosecution.
|
|
|
|
The solemn oath of witnesses shall be deemed sufficient. A false or
|
|
corrupt oath shall subject the witness to all the penalties of willful
|
|
and corrupt perjury.
|
|
|
|
No Person shall be compelled to be a witness against eirself, nor shall
|
|
a Person charged with a Crime be subjected, before conviction, to any
|
|
more restraint than is necessary for eir detention to answer the charge.
|
|
|
|
Nothing herein contained shall be construed as compelling any such
|
|
Person to testify; and in all cases wherein the Defendant declines to
|
|
testify, the judge shall specially instruct the jury that no inference
|
|
of guilt is to be drawn against em for that cause.
|
|
|
|
It is a Felony to bribe, threaten, or intimidate a witness, in an
|
|
attempt to alter the outcome of a trial. Punishment will be the same as
|
|
for the Crime Embracery in the Miscellaneous Crimes section.
|
|
|
|
G.Records of all decisions Must be stored by the Courts who made them and
|
|
be available at cost to all who ask for them. Records may be deleted one
|
|
century after the last action made in the Court on the matter in
|
|
question. Clerical or other errors found in these records may be
|
|
appended to these records as corrections, but the original records may
|
|
not be altered. To alter them would be considered Treason of the third
|
|
degree.
|
|
|
|
H.Attorneys. Anyone can declare emself an attorney. Of course, private
|
|
groups could certify or blackball attorneys whom they think are capable
|
|
or not capable of doing the job.
|
|
|
|
I.Arrest. A private Person may arrest another:
|
|
|
|
for a Crime committed, or attempted, in eir presence.
|
|
|
|
when the Person arrested has committed a Felony, although not in eir
|
|
presence.
|
|
|
|
when a Felony has been in fact committed, and ey has reasonable
|
|
evidence in believing the Person arrested to have committed it.
|
|
|
|
If the Person to be arrested has committed a Felony, and the arrestor,
|
|
after notice of eir intention to make the arrest, is refused admittance;
|
|
ey may break open any outer or inner door or window of a dwelling for
|
|
the purpose of making the arrest.
|
|
|
|
The use of force to resist an arrest or search is justified:
|
|
|
|
If, before the accused offers any resistance, the officer (or Person
|
|
acting at eir direction) uses or attempts to use greater force than
|
|
necessary to make the arrest or search.
|
|
|
|
When and to the degree the accused reasonably believes the force is
|
|
immediately necessary to protect emself against the officer's (or
|
|
other Person's) use or attempted use of greater force than necessary.
|
|
|
|
J.The amount of Bail shall be set by the jury. Excessive bail shall not be
|
|
required, nor excessive Fines imposed. Bail and Fines may not be imposed
|
|
without informing the accused of the nature and cause of the accusation.
|
|
A bail hearing can be requested with one hour notice. Bails and all
|
|
other requests for money by the Court of Oceania will be accepted in all
|
|
convertible currencies.
|
|
|
|
If the Defendant neglects or refuses to pay the judgment against em
|
|
within ten days after eir conviction, that amount may be subtracted from
|
|
the Bail.
|
|
|
|
If the Defendant shall die, be acquitted or be imprisoned, eir Bail Must
|
|
be refunded. Ey Must receive all of eir bail money back in exactly the
|
|
same form in which it was posted when ey appears at eir Court date as
|
|
promised. If the Person who posted bail for an Oceanian fails to pick up
|
|
eir bail money after the accused has attended eir Court date, then bail
|
|
money Must be mailed to the Person who posted bail within 24 hours.
|
|
|
|
K.Bench Warrant. If the Defendant has been discharged on bail, or has
|
|
deposited money instead thereof, and does not appear to be arraigned
|
|
when eir personal attendance is necessary, the Court, in addition to the
|
|
forfeiture of the recognizance, or of the money deposited, may direct
|
|
the clerk to issue a bench warrant for eir arrest if the original Crime
|
|
the Defendant was being tried for could have given em a jail sentence.
|
|
|
|
L.Contempt of Court. If any one but the Defendant or Plaintiff is
|
|
convicted of Contempt of Court by a jury they shall be fined no more
|
|
than 100 grams of gold on their first offense and be removed permanently
|
|
from the trial on their second offense along with a fine of no more than
|
|
100 grams of gold.
|
|
|
|
If the Defendant or Plaintiff is convicted of Contempt of Court by a
|
|
jury they shall be fined no more than 100 grams of gold on their first
|
|
offense and be convicted of no more than 200 grams of gold on any
|
|
additional offenses.
|
|
|
|
In both cases, the jury may not convict someone of Contempt of Court
|
|
without first being asked to by the Defendant or Plaintiff.
|
|
|
|
M.Proceedings. All actions done by a Court are to be voted upon by a jury.
|
|
The judge is just an administrator and referee to uphold court
|
|
procedure; not the one who decides the outcome of a trial. Even the
|
|
charge of contempt of Court may only be given by a jury.
|
|
|
|
The Defendant is entitled: First, to a speedy and public trial; Second,
|
|
to appear and defend in Person or with counsel; and, Third, to produce
|
|
witnesses on eir behalf, and to be confronted with the witnesses against
|
|
em in the presence of the Court. Witnesses may be disguised, and their
|
|
testimony may be considered by the jury.
|
|
|
|
No Person can be convicted of a Crime unless by verdict of a jury,
|
|
accepted and recorded by the Court, or upon a plea of guilty.
|
|
|
|
A jury may not issue a warrant for someone's arrest for failing to
|
|
appear in defense of a civil or criminal Crime that does not carry a
|
|
penalty of imprisonment. The jury may simply issue a monetary judgment.
|
|
These judgments may be secured by liens on the offender's Property.
|
|
|
|
Disputes that were supposed to be handled with Courts that have gone out
|
|
of business will be processed in the Court of Oceania unless the
|
|
Contract between the two parties says otherwise.
|
|
|
|
No Person can be punished for a Crime except upon legal conviction in a
|
|
Court having jurisdiction.
|
|
|
|
No Person shall be subject to a second prosecution for a public offense
|
|
for which ey has once been prosecuted and duly acquitted. This includes
|
|
the practice of having different levels of the Government prosecute one
|
|
Person for similar Crimes.
|
|
|
|
The time between accusation and trial may not be more than 30 days
|
|
unless both the Plaintiff and Defendant agree otherwise. The same
|
|
applies to time between appeals.
|
|
|
|
There may not be more than one hour between the time of appearance set
|
|
by the Court and the time that the trial or hearing begins. Those
|
|
responsible for such a delay will be sentenced to not less than 30 days
|
|
nor more than six months plus fined not more than 100 grams of gold.
|
|
|
|
N.Questions of Authentication for documents or other evidence may be
|
|
decided by a jury. Using seals, notaries, and affidavits are some of the
|
|
many ways a document may be authenticated. It is recognized that as
|
|
technology advances, the accepted methods of authentication will change.
|
|
|
|
O.Insanity. The plea of innocence by reason of insanity is not accepted in
|
|
the Court Of Oceania. If someone convicted is truly insane, ey may be
|
|
put in a mental hospital for the duration of eir jail sentence. It take
|
|
a unanimous vote by a jury to declare someone to be insane.
|
|
|
|
The defense of pleading insanity due to eating a twinkee is
|
|
particularly abhorred.
|
|
|
|
A person shall be considered of sound mind who is neither an idiot or
|
|
lunatic, or affected with insanity.
|
|
|
|
P.Media. All decisions of the Court of Oceania Must be released to the
|
|
media within 24 hours of being made.
|
|
|
|
If both the Defendant and Plaintiff wish, a trial can be closed to the
|
|
public entirely with the exception of the transcripts of the trial. If
|
|
both the Defendant and Plaintiff wish, a trial can be both open to the
|
|
public and put on camera. In any other cases, the trial is open to the
|
|
public but not to the camera. A television or other media company may
|
|
pay these parties to encourage them to allow cameras or other devices in
|
|
the Court.
|
|
|
|
If the Government is the Plaintiff, then it is declared to want a
|
|
trail open to the media so the trial will either be open to the
|
|
public or open to the media and the public based on what the
|
|
Defendant wishes.
|
|
|
|
Q.Money. If the accused does not have the money to pay eir Fines the Court
|
|
can negotiate with the accused for schedule of payments.
|
|
|
|
There is no specified money of account in Oceania. In all judgments and
|
|
decrees, rendered by any Court, for any Debt, damages, Fines, or costs,
|
|
the amount shall be computed in any currency or commodity that the Court
|
|
selects.
|
|
|
|
If a prison runs out of money to keep a prisoner in jail, it must give
|
|
two week notice before releasing such prisoner. This will give time for
|
|
other parties to raise such money.
|
|
|
|
R.Arresting Property. While an item may not arrested, such as a car used
|
|
in a hit-and-run, its owner may be declared to be partially or wholly
|
|
responsible for the Crime committed by the item. It is up to a jury to
|
|
decide how responsible the owner was for the Crime committed by the
|
|
item.
|
|
|
|
S.Board of Parole. A Board of Parole determines whether a Convict has
|
|
engaged in "good behavior" and therefore should be released early. Under
|
|
the Constitution of Oceania, a Convict may not be released early for
|
|
"good behavior". Therefore there are no Boards of Parole in Oceania.
|
|
|
|
At the Plaintiff's option, a Convict may be allowed to work while in
|
|
prison to reduce eir jail time. A prisoner may earn three hours off eir
|
|
sentence for every hour worked. Wages earned by prisoners will first be
|
|
used to pay the prisoner's Court Costs (including prison costs),
|
|
secondly Fines, and are thereafter the Property of the prisoner.
|
|
|
|
Also at the Plaintiff's option, the Convict may be allowed to pay a Fine
|
|
to the Court in place of serving jail time. The Court may not levy Fines
|
|
except at the Plaintiff's request, and the amount of the Fine will be
|
|
fixed at one Gram of Gold for every day the Convict would have spent in
|
|
jail.
|
|
|
|
At any time while a Convict is serving time, the Plaintiff may release
|
|
em from eir obligation for jail time, or may give explicit instructions
|
|
forbidding such release, to be binding em and eir successors as
|
|
Plaintiff. Of course, a Plaintiff may not release a prisoner serving
|
|
time for Crimes against a different Plaintiff.
|
|
|
|
T.Conviction. Every person sentenced to imprisonment in any penal
|
|
institution shall be under the protection of the law, and any
|
|
unauthorized injury to eir person shall be punished in the same manner
|
|
as if ey were not so convicted or sentenced. A conviction of crime shall
|
|
not work a forfeiture of any Property, real or personal, or any right or
|
|
interest therein. All forfeitures in the name of deodands, or in case of
|
|
suicide or where a person flees from justice, are abolished.
|
|
|
|
The selection of the jail that the Convict shall reside in, shall be
|
|
done by the trial jury. It will be considered Fraud if the jail does not
|
|
live up to the terms presented by it to the trial jury. In addition, any
|
|
prison that violates rights of a Convict not expressly repressed by the
|
|
terms of eir conviction shall be guilty of the relevant Crime.
|
|
|
|
Writs
|
|
|
|
A. Writ of Habeas Corpus. Every Person committed, detained, confined,
|
|
or restrained of eir liberty, under any pretense whatever, may prosecute
|
|
a writ of Habeas Corpus to inquire into the cause of such imprisonment
|
|
or restraint. Application for such writ shall be made by petition,
|
|
signed either by the party for whose relief it is intended, or by some
|
|
Person in eir behalf, and shall specify:
|
|
|
|
who is being imprisoned, who is imprisoning em, and the place. If
|
|
names of people or places are not known then descriptions of people or
|
|
places will be accepted.
|
|
|
|
If the imprisonment be alleged to be illegal, the petition Must also
|
|
state why this is believed.
|
|
|
|
The petition Must be verified by the oath of the party making the
|
|
application.
|
|
|
|
Such writ of Habeas Corpus may be processed by any Court and Must be
|
|
done without delay. A delay longer than one hour is considered to be
|
|
False Imprisonment and will be published accordingly.
|
|
|
|
The writ Must be served to those holding said Person by an officer of
|
|
the Court. The writ will include the time that the Court would like both
|
|
the jailer and the prisoner to be brought before the Court. If the
|
|
jailer to whom such writ is directed cannot be found or refuses to speak
|
|
to the officer of the Court, the writ may be delivered by leaving it at
|
|
the home of the jailer, or at the place where the prisoner is being
|
|
held. If the jailer does not comply with the writ within one hour ey
|
|
shall be sentenced to at least thirty days in jail, and the prisoner in
|
|
eir custody shall be brought before the Court.
|
|
|
|
The jailer should respond to the writ with the following sworn
|
|
statement:
|
|
|
|
Whether ey has or does not have the party in eir custody, or under eir
|
|
power or restraint.
|
|
|
|
If ey has the party in eir custody or power, or under eir restraint,
|
|
ey shall state the authority and cause of such imprisonment or
|
|
restraint.
|
|
|
|
If the jailer upon whom such writ has been served does not have the
|
|
prisoner in eir custody but transferred the prisoner to someone else's
|
|
custody ey shall state when, where, and why the transfer took place.
|
|
|
|
If the writ of Habeas Corpus is served, the Person or officer to whom
|
|
the same is directed shall also bring prisoner in eir custody, according
|
|
to the command of the writ, except in the cases specified in the next
|
|
paragraph.
|
|
|
|
If the prisoner is too sick or too weak to be transferred the jailer
|
|
Must state this in eir response to the writ. If the Court does not
|
|
believe the prisoner is too sick or weak to be transferred, it may order
|
|
someone to pick em up.
|
|
|
|
The Court before whom a writ of Habeas Corpus shall be returned shall,
|
|
immediately after the return thereof, proceed to hear and examine the
|
|
return. Such Court shall have full power and authority to require and
|
|
compel the attendance of witnesses by process of subpoena and
|
|
attachment, and to do and perform all other acts and things necessary to
|
|
a full and fair hearing and determination of the case. If no legal cause
|
|
be shown for such imprisonment or restraint, or for the continuation
|
|
thereof, such Court shall discharge such party from the custody or
|
|
restraint under which ey is held.
|
|
|
|
If the prisoner can show the Court no reason why ey should be released
|
|
ey will be remanded by the Court. If it appears on the return of the
|
|
writ of Habeas Corpus that the prisoner is in custody by a Court
|
|
decision, such prisoner may be discharged in any one of the following
|
|
cases, subject to the restrictions of the preceding paragraph:
|
|
|
|
when the jurisdiction of such Court has been exceeded.
|
|
|
|
when the imprisonment was at first lawful, yet by some act, omission,
|
|
or event, which has taken place afterwards, the party has been
|
|
entitled to be discharged.
|
|
|
|
when the process is defective in some matter of substance required by
|
|
law, rendering such process void.
|
|
|
|
when the process, though proper in form, has been issued in a case not
|
|
allowed by law.
|
|
|
|
when the Person having the custody of the prisoner is not the Person
|
|
allowed by law to retain em.
|
|
|
|
where the process is not authorized by any judgment, order, or decree
|
|
of any Court, nor by any provision of law.
|
|
|
|
where a party has been committed on a criminal charge without
|
|
reasonable or probable cause.
|
|
|
|
If any Person is committed to prison, or is in custody of any office on
|
|
any criminal charge, by virtue of any warrant, such Person shall not be
|
|
discharged from such imprisonment or custody on the ground of any defect
|
|
of form in such warrant or commitment. No writ of Habeas Corpus shall be
|
|
disobeyed for defect or form.
|
|
|
|
No Person who has been discharged by the order of the Court upon a writ
|
|
of Habeas Corpus issued pursuant to the provisions of this act, shall be
|
|
again imprisoned, restrained, or kept in custody for the same cause,
|
|
except in the following cases:
|
|
|
|
If ey shall have been discharged from custody on a criminal charge,
|
|
and be afterwards committed for the same offense by legal order or
|
|
process.
|
|
|
|
If after a discharge for defect of proof, or for any defect of the
|
|
process, warrant, or commitment, in a criminal case, the prisoner be
|
|
again arrested on sufficient proof, and committed by legal process for
|
|
the same offense.
|
|
|
|
If any Judge, after a proper application is made, shall refuse to grant
|
|
an order for a writ of Habeas Corpus, or if the officer or Person to
|
|
whom such writ may be directed shall refuse obedience to the command
|
|
thereof, ey shall forfeit and pay to the Person aggrieved a sum not
|
|
exceeding 500 Grams of Gold, to be recovered by an action of Debt in any
|
|
Court having cognizance thereof.
|
|
|
|
Any Person having in eir custody a Person for whom a writ of Habeas
|
|
Corpus has been issued for eir relief, and who then tries to elude this
|
|
writ by transferring control of this Person or by concealing the place
|
|
of eir confinement or restraint, shall be deemed guilty of Kidnapping as
|
|
defined in Crimes Against Liberty..
|
|
|
|
Every Person who shall knowingly aid or assist in any offense specified
|
|
in the preceding paragraph, shall be guilty of Kidnapping or Accessory
|
|
to Kidnapping and shall be punished appropriately.
|
|
|
|
B.Writ of Mandamus may be issued by any Court or Grand Jury to request the
|
|
performance of an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty
|
|
resulting from an office. A Person who has reason to suspect that a
|
|
mandatory act of public duty will not be performed, may ask the Court to
|
|
grant such a Writ. While such a Writ has no actual legal force, it is
|
|
hoped that a Person presented with such a Writ would be more likely to
|
|
follow its recommendations than those of an ordinary Oceanian.
|
|
|
|
C.Writ of Prohibition is the counterpart of the Writ of Madamus. It
|
|
requests the halt of proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or
|
|
Person, whether exercising functions judicial or ministerial, when such
|
|
proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such
|
|
tribunal, corporation, board or Person. A Person who has reason to
|
|
suspect that a Crime will be committed, may ask the Court to grant such
|
|
a Writ. While such a Writ has no actual legal force, it is hoped that a
|
|
Person presented with such a Writ would be more likely to follow its
|
|
recommendations than those of an ordinary Oceanian.
|
|
|
|
D.Writ of Quo Warranto is a writ ordering a Person to show by what Right
|
|
ey exercises an office, franchise, or privilege.
|
|
|
|
A lawsuit may be filed in a Local Court against any Person unlawfully
|
|
holding or exercising any public office within Oceania; or when any
|
|
public officer has done any act which works a forfeiture of eir office.
|
|
If the Defendant loses the case, ey shall pay up to 200 Grams of Gold
|
|
and/or suffer six months' imprisonment. At that time, the correct
|
|
Person will be given the office as determined by the Court.
|
|
|
|
E Writ of Attachment. The Plaintiff, at the time of issuing the summons,
|
|
or at any time afterwards, may have the Property of the Defendant
|
|
attached, as security for the satisfaction of any judgment that may be
|
|
recovered, unless the Defendant gives security to pay such judgment, as
|
|
hereinafter provided in the following cases:
|
|
|
|
In an action upon a Contract for the direct payment of money, made, or
|
|
by the terms thereof, payable in Oceania, which is not secured by
|
|
mortgage, or pledge upon real or personal Property situated in
|
|
Oceania. If so secured, when such secured has been rendered worthless
|
|
by the act of the Defendant.
|
|
|
|
In an action upon a Contract against a Defendant not residing in
|
|
Oceania.
|
|
|
|
F.Writ of Garnishment. At the time of issuing a writ of Attachment in an
|
|
action, or at any time thereafter, the Plaintiff may have a writ of
|
|
Garnishment issued, and thereupon attach the credits, effects, Debt, and
|
|
other personal Property of the Defendant in the possession or under the
|
|
control of any third person, as garnishee, for the security of any
|
|
judgment the Plaintiff may recover in such action against the Defendant
|
|
|
|
G.Writ of Restitution. This writ is issued by the Court after conviction
|
|
and entitles the Plaintiff to receive restitution from the Defendant.
|
|
The amount of this restitution may not be larger than the amount of
|
|
damage caused by the crime.
|
|
|
|
H.Writ of Assistance is an order authorizing a Person to compel the aid of
|
|
others, as by police compelling assistance in a search. Such Writs will
|
|
not be issued by the Court of Oceania and those issued by other Courts
|
|
will subject such Courts to prosecution for Fraud.
|
|
|
|
I.Writ of Error operates as a supersedeas. It has the effect of a request
|
|
to stay, on good cause shown, some ordinary proceedings which ought
|
|
otherwise to have proceeded. It has the same legal effect and power as a
|
|
Writ of Prohibition.
|
|
|
|
J.Writ of Execution shall be issued by the Court of Oceania by the
|
|
unanimous vote of a jury. It shall contain the Court where the judgment
|
|
was filed, the names of the parties, the judgment, and if it be for
|
|
money, the amount thereof and the amount actually due thereon. And if
|
|
made payable in a specific kind of money or currency, the execution
|
|
shall also state the kind of money or currency in which the judgment is
|
|
payable.
|
|
|
|
The Court may hire an Entity to use this Writ of Execution to put liens
|
|
on property, seize property, or sell property in order to fulfill the
|
|
judgment in the Writ of Execution. If not enough property shall be
|
|
found, the Court may imprison the convicted instead according to the
|
|
laws involving petit or grand larceny.
|
|
|
|
K.Writ of Certiorari shall never be issued by the Court of Oceania as all
|
|
Courts in it have equal jurisdictional power and therefore it is never
|
|
necessary to remove a case from one court and transfer it to a higher
|
|
one because the lower one does not have the jurisdiction to handle such
|
|
a case.
|
|
|
|
L.Writ of Injunction is a writ requiring a Person to refrain from a
|
|
particular act. The writ may be granted by the Court in which the
|
|
action is brought and when made may be enforced on the order of the
|
|
Court.
|
|
|
|
An Injunction may be granted in the following cases:
|
|
|
|
When it shall appear by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled
|
|
to the relief demanded, and such relief or any part thereof consists
|
|
in restraining the commission or continuance of the act complained of,
|
|
either for a limited period or perpetually
|
|
|
|
When it shall appear by the complaint or affidavit that the commission
|
|
or continuance of some act, during the litigation, would produce great
|
|
or immeasurable injury to the Plaintiff.
|
|
|
|
When it shall appear, during the litigation, that the Defendant is
|
|
doing or threatening, or is about to do, or is procuring or suffering
|
|
to be done, some act in violation of the Plaintiff's rights respecting
|
|
the subject of the action, and tending to render the judgment
|
|
ineffectual.
|
|
|
|
Outline of a Trial
|
|
|
|
I.Formal allegations. Pleadings are the formal allegations by the parties
|
|
of their respective claims. Neither a departure from the form or mode
|
|
prescribed by law, in respect to any pleadings or proceedings, nor an
|
|
error or mistake therein, shall render the same invalid.
|
|
|
|
The Complaint shall contain:
|
|
|
|
The title of the action, specifying the name of the Court and the name
|
|
of the county in which the action is brought, and the names of the
|
|
parties to the action, Plaintiff and Defendant.
|
|
|
|
A statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, in ordinary
|
|
and concise language.
|
|
|
|
A demand for the relief which the Plaintiff claims. If the recovery
|
|
of money or damages be demanded, the amount thereof shall be stated.
|
|
|
|
The default venue for the trial is the closest Court to the crime scene.
|
|
Crime's without a known scene shall be tried in the closest Court to the
|
|
Defendant's home.
|
|
|
|
Joinder of Causes of Action. A Plaintiff may ask the Court to unite
|
|
several causes of action into one trial. The Court Must ask the
|
|
Defendant(s) if (th)ey will consent to this, but the jury will make the
|
|
decision. Such trials may be used to unite several causes of action upon
|
|
one Defendant, or as class-action complaints.
|
|
|
|
The Defendant may Demur to the complaint within the time required in the
|
|
summons to answer, when it appears upon the face thereof, either:
|
|
|
|
that the Court has no jurisdiction over the person of the Defendant,
|
|
or the subject of the action
|
|
|
|
that the Plaintiff has not legal standing to sue
|
|
|
|
that there is another action pending between the same parties for the
|
|
same cause
|
|
|
|
that there is a defect or misjoinder of parties, Plaintiff or
|
|
Defendant
|
|
|
|
that several causes of action have been improperly united
|
|
|
|
that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a
|
|
cause of action
|
|
|
|
that the complaint is ambiguous, unintelligible, or uncertain
|
|
|
|
The Court may accept or reject such demurrer. If it is accepted, no
|
|
trial will be held on the complaint, though a complaint may be filed at
|
|
a later time under different circumstances. If the demurrer is rejected
|
|
by the Court, trial will begin within the time prescribed.
|
|
|
|
Instead of Demurring, the Defendant may plead guilty at this time and
|
|
accept eir Punishment.
|
|
|
|
II. Pretrial Discovery
|
|
|
|
Before a trial begins, the Plaintiff and Defendant Must each prepare eir
|
|
case for presentation to the Court. The Defendant has the Right to
|
|
demand that trial begin no more than 30 days after eir arrest if ey
|
|
wishes. If the Defendant wants time to prepare eir defense, ey may
|
|
demand as much additional time as the time elapsed between the
|
|
commission of the Crime in question and eir arrest up to a total of 120
|
|
days. A trial may begin at a sooner or later time if the litigants
|
|
agree.
|
|
|
|
The Plaintiff and Defendant Must each give to the other, and to the
|
|
Court, a list of witnesses and physical evidence that ey intends to
|
|
subpoena. Any such evidence that comes to light during the progress of a
|
|
trial will be admitted, as long as the opposing litigant is given 24
|
|
hours to prepare for its rebuttal.
|
|
|
|
III. Jury Selection
|
|
|
|
Trial Juries are selected at random from a list of jury volunteers.
|
|
Prospective jurors volunteer their services by giving the Court their
|
|
names, a list of fields in which they have expertise, and the salary for
|
|
which they are willing to work.
|
|
|
|
The Defendant may request either a random jury or a jury randomly
|
|
selected from a those with expertise in certain fields. Ey may also
|
|
request a certain number of random jurors plus a certain number of
|
|
jurors with some expertise. If enough jurors are not available with the
|
|
required expertise, ey Must either select a different expertise for the
|
|
remaining jurors, or request random jurors, or request less jurors in
|
|
the Jury. Juries are convened for one day or for one case, whichever
|
|
amount of time is longer. The Court may pay juries for their time to
|
|
increase the amount of volunteers given, and may pay jurors for specific
|
|
cases or specific hours of operation, such as night shifts, but may not
|
|
under any circumstances pay them based on judgments or results. The
|
|
Defendant and the Plaintiff may specify the maximum amount jurors will
|
|
be paid, and only jurors willing to work for the lesser of these amounts
|
|
will be selected.
|
|
|
|
Either the Defendant or the Plaintiff may ask prospective jurors "Is
|
|
there any reason in this case that you cannot give a fair and unbiased
|
|
judgment?" and "Are you capable of understanding the evidence?" Jurors
|
|
may excuse themselves at this time if they feel that they are biased or
|
|
lack the necessary expertise. Under no circumstances may the Court or
|
|
either litigant excuse a prospective juror who is willing and able to
|
|
serve.
|
|
|
|
A Jury Must have a least twelve jurors at the start of a trial. If
|
|
jurors are unable to stay throughout the duration of the trial, or
|
|
choose to excuse themselves because of bias or lack of understanding,
|
|
the trial will still be considered valid if at least nine stay
|
|
throughout the duration of the trial. It is expected that the litigants
|
|
will estimate the expected length of a trial and empanel enough extra
|
|
jurors to ensure sufficient number for judgment.
|
|
|
|
People may be removed from the jury for three reasons:
|
|
|
|
they don't wish to participate in the case
|
|
|
|
a grand jury or the juror determines that there is a conflict of
|
|
interest between the potential juror and the case
|
|
|
|
a grand jury or the juror determines that the juror is unable to
|
|
understand the evidence
|
|
|
|
Trial by jury may be waived by the Defendant in the manner following:
|
|
|
|
By failing to appear at the trial.
|
|
|
|
By written consent, in person or by attorney, filed with the Clerk.
|
|
|
|
By oral consent in open Court, entered in the minutes.
|
|
|
|
A Defendant may also request a jury composed of less than twelve members
|
|
if ey wants to save on court costs. In such cases, ey may also set the
|
|
minimum number of jurors needed to make a valid decision.
|
|
|
|
The power of the Court to discharge a jury without the consent of the
|
|
Defendant, in accordance with established legal rules and a sound legal
|
|
discretion is impossible because such laws or rules would be
|
|
unconstitutional.
|
|
|
|
IV. Changes of Venue
|
|
|
|
The Defendant may ask the jury for a change of venue. For example, to
|
|
better suit the needs of the witnesses. The jury may change venue at
|
|
the Defendant's request if it so wishes. No one but the Defendant may
|
|
ask the jury for a change of venue.
|
|
|
|
V.Opening Statements and Motion for Dismissal
|
|
|
|
The Plaintiff first makes eir opening statement by describing the Crime
|
|
and the nature of the evidence against the Defendant. The Defendant
|
|
responds by either pleading guilty or by rebutting these arguments. Time
|
|
limits for these arguments may be set by the jury if it desires (and
|
|
Must be equal for the two litigants).
|
|
|
|
After the Defendant's opening statement, ey may move for immediate
|
|
dismissal of the action. Such dismissal Must be unanimously decided by
|
|
the jury, and serves as an acquittal.
|
|
|
|
VI. Arguments and Witnesses
|
|
|
|
A. Instructions to the Jury.
|
|
|
|
The judge Must notify the jury of its common law Right and duty to
|
|
decide if a law is fair and just as it applies to the specific case they
|
|
are judging. The jury Must also be informed that laws in violation of
|
|
the Constitution are invalid.
|
|
|
|
The jury Must be instructed that every witness is potentially biased,
|
|
that all eyewitness testimony is potentially fraudulent, and that it
|
|
Must decide the credibility of the witnesses and evidence presented.
|
|
|
|
The judge may, from time to time during the trial, inform the jury that
|
|
certain pieces of evidence being presented to it are irrelevant,
|
|
inflammatory, or otherwise inappropriate. Ey may not prevent the jury
|
|
from hearing such evidence or prevent the litigants from presenting it.
|
|
Eir instruction to the jury is purely a recommendation. Ey may also
|
|
instruct the jury about points of law, but the jury is free to make its
|
|
judgment in direct conflict with eir instruction.
|
|
|
|
B. Direct Examinations
|
|
|
|
The Plaintiff and Defendant alternate in presenting witnesses,
|
|
depositions, and other evidence with the Plaintiff calling eir first
|
|
witness first. Each litigant may, when eir turn to present a witness
|
|
comes up, decline to do so, passing eir turn to the other litigant.
|
|
After the opposing litigant has used eir turn, ey Must once again give a
|
|
turn to eir opponent. If both Litigants pass their turns consecutively,
|
|
the witness phase of the trial is over and the litigants Must present
|
|
closing arguments.
|
|
|
|
In each turn, a litigant will directly examine the witness, after which
|
|
the opposing litigant will cross examine. Redirects may be allowed by
|
|
the jury upon request, and of course will be followed by another cross
|
|
examination. After the litigants have sufficiently examined a witness,
|
|
the jury may ask questions of the witness. Each litigant may then
|
|
perform one last cross-examination of the witness, after which ey will
|
|
be dismissed. Note that under these rules, witnesses for the prosecution
|
|
will be examined last by the Defendant, and vice versa.
|
|
|
|
Any time limits the jury has placed upon the litigants apply to its
|
|
questioning as well.
|
|
|
|
C. Cross Examinations
|
|
|
|
Cross examinations should only cover areas of evidence already
|
|
introduced by the direct examination. If issues are raised in cross
|
|
examination that were not raised in direct examination, the judge should
|
|
notify the jury of this so that it will allow a Redirect for this
|
|
witness. If a witness refuses to answer a question in cross examination
|
|
that is directly related to eir direct testimony, the judge should
|
|
notify the jury that this witness's direct testimony is unreliable.
|
|
|
|
D. Objections. If one of the litigants raises an objection during eir
|
|
opponent's examinations, the judge may inform the jury of the cause for
|
|
such objection (for example, a question assuming facts not in evidence,
|
|
or an irrelevant question) and his opinion on its validity, but may not
|
|
strike such testimony from the record or prevent such questions from
|
|
being asked.
|
|
|
|
E. Continuance.
|
|
|
|
When an application is made for a continuance on the ground of the
|
|
absence of a witness, it is up to the discretion of the jury, after
|
|
hearing arguments for and against why the witness is necessary, to
|
|
either grant or deny the continuance.
|
|
|
|
F. Deposition.
|
|
|
|
In the case of witnesses that cannot appear in Court, depositions of any
|
|
form including signed statements, video tape, or audio tape are allowed
|
|
to be submitted as evidence to the jury. The opposing side should be
|
|
allowed to access the names and addresses of all persons being
|
|
depositioned so that they can be questioned and redepositoned by that
|
|
side. Depositions that do not meet these requirements should be weighed
|
|
less heavily by the jury.
|
|
|
|
Affidavits are considered depositions.
|
|
|
|
G. Without Prejudice.
|
|
|
|
At any time during the trial, the Defendant and the Plaintiff may agree
|
|
to request that the lawsuit be dismissed without prejudice. This means
|
|
that the suit can be refiled if the dispute is not resolved.
|
|
|
|
VII. Closing Statements
|
|
|
|
Closing statements are made by first the Plaintiff and then by the
|
|
Defendant. These statements can be of any form chosen by the parties
|
|
making them. If statements are made in closing arguments that are
|
|
outside of, or conflict with, evidence presented during the trial, the
|
|
judge should inform the jury of this, but make no attempt to prevent the
|
|
argument.
|
|
|
|
VIII. Judgment
|
|
|
|
After closing statements are made, the jury will retire to a private
|
|
chamber to discuss the case and make a judgment. The speaker for the
|
|
jury announces their judgment to the Plaintiff and Defendant.
|
|
|
|
IX. Appeals and Countersuits
|
|
|
|
Appeal may be made from a Local Court to a County Court and from a
|
|
County Court to the Supreme Court.
|
|
|
|
A Defendant acquitted of a crime may immediately countersue the
|
|
Plaintiff for false arrest and have eir case tried in the same Court by
|
|
the same jury. A Defendant either acquitted or convicted may immediately
|
|
countersue for the use of unnecessary Force in eir arrest. Witnesses
|
|
subpoenaed to testify in the case may sue for false arrest at this time
|
|
as well.
|
|
|
|
If a jury finds a suit to be frivolous and unjustified, it may return a
|
|
harassment judgment against the Plaintiff.
|
|
|
|
The judge and the Court itself are also subject to immediate countersuit
|
|
to be heard by the same jury and different judge if either litigant
|
|
wishes to sue for bias or illegal procedure. Only the litigants have
|
|
this standing to sue, but others in the courtroom, including public
|
|
audience members, may serve at witnesses. Jurors who fail in their
|
|
responsibilities may be sued in a different Court.
|
|
|
|
It is desired that the same Court that has heard all of the
|
|
evidence of a case should decide whether the arrests were
|
|
justified, whether unnecessary Force was used, and whether the
|
|
Court itself was biased. The use of unnecessary Force in an
|
|
arrest may be prosecuted as assault and battery or murder, as
|
|
appropriate.
|
|
|
|
5.Elections
|
|
|
|
While Elections are run by private entities, there is a significant threat
|
|
of tyranny from certain acts of these Entities. Therefore the Constitution
|
|
allows the people of Oceania to regulate them by passing laws through
|
|
referendum.
|
|
|
|
The actual method of voting is up to the private Entities hired to
|
|
administer voting, but the method Must allow Voters to vote in secret, that
|
|
is, without the possibility of anyone else influencing or discovering how a
|
|
particular Voter decides. No votes may be made by absentee ballot, because
|
|
they cannot guarantee secrecy. Votes may be done electronically or by any
|
|
other methods that referendums have not banned with the exception of
|
|
absentee ballots. Voters who will not be in Oceania during election day may
|
|
vote in person during the 30 days before election day.
|
|
|
|
Election Fraud is prosecutable as Treason against Oceania. This includes
|
|
voting more than once, voting on behalf of another Person, denying ballot
|
|
access to legitimate candidates or referendums, bribing or intimidating
|
|
Voters, accepting ballots not delivered in person, misrepresenting the
|
|
content of a ballot, and breach of specific written promises made by
|
|
candidates to Voters. See the Miscellaneous Crimes section for more
|
|
details.
|
|
|
|
The media Must be notified at least thirty days before any general or
|
|
special election using a notice like the following:
|
|
|
|
"Notice is hereby given that on the first Tuesday, the ------ day of ------
|
|
next, at the house of ------ (in city, town, district, or precinct) of ----
|
|
--, in the County of ------, an election will be held for State, county,
|
|
district, town, or township offices (naming the offices to be filled, as
|
|
the case may be), which election shall be opened not later than six o'clock
|
|
A.M. and shall continue until eight o'clock P.M. the same day."
|
|
|
|
Between thirty and fourteen days before the election, the time and place of
|
|
the election Must be provided to all registered Voters. At the same time,
|
|
descriptions of each candidate and explanations of referendums will be
|
|
provided. Each candidate will be given at least one side of a 8 1/2 by 11
|
|
page to describe eirself. The candidate will be allowed to submit a camera
|
|
ready page of any font type, with any black and white pictures, etc. These
|
|
descriptions and explanations will also be available at polling places on
|
|
the day of the election.
|
|
|
|
Every aspect of the counting of votes by the private vote counting
|
|
companies may be witnessed by any Oceanians. The same applies to any
|
|
transpiration of ballots.
|
|
|
|
A person offering to vote may be orally challenged by any Oceania, upon the
|
|
ground that ey is not the person entitled to vote as claimed, or has voted
|
|
before on the same day, in which case the Oceanian shall tender em the
|
|
following oath: "You do swear that you are the person whose name is entered
|
|
upon the registry list of this precinct." In case such person refuses to
|
|
take the oath so tendered, ey shall not be allowed to vote and the private
|
|
vote counting company clerks shall write the word "Challenged" opposite the
|
|
name of each person challenged upon the registry.
|
|
|
|
In the case of ties in elections, a coin toss will determine the winner.
|
|
If the tied contestants wish, a test of skill such as arm wrestling may be
|
|
done instead.
|
|
|
|
If it can be shown that illegal or tainted votes were cast, and the number
|
|
of votes cast in this manner were enough to change the election, a new
|
|
election will be held. This will hold true even if it can not be proven
|
|
with party the illegal votes favored. It will be assumed that the illegal
|
|
votes favored the winning party.
|
|
|
|
All Oceanians have the right to file a mandamus and obtain all documentary
|
|
evidence required to show election tampering.
|
|
|
|
Every person charged with performance of any duty under the provisions of
|
|
election laws, who willfully neglects or refuses to perform it, or who in
|
|
eir official capacity, fraudulently acts in violation of any election laws,
|
|
shall be deemed guilty of Election Fraud.
|
|
|
|
Every person who, after being required by the jury at any election, refuses
|
|
to be sworn, or who, after being sworn, refuses to answer any pertinent
|
|
question propounding by such jury touching eir right or the right of any
|
|
other person to vote, is guilty of Election Fraud.
|
|
|
|
Every Government official who prints materials at Government expense that
|
|
tell Oceanians which way they should vote in an election is guilty of
|
|
Election Fraud.
|
|
|
|
A general election shall be held on June tenth, and every year thereafter,
|
|
at which there shall be chosen all such officers as are by law to be
|
|
elected in each year, unless otherwise provided for.
|
|
|
|
It shall be the duty of the people by referendum to set off and establish
|
|
election precincts or districts when it may be necessary.
|
|
|
|
Counting of signatures on petitions shall be done by private vote counting
|
|
companies who are paid for this service. The Entity that collects these
|
|
signatures Must give this money to the vote counting company.
|
|
|
|
It shall be the duty of all vote counting companies to furnish the public
|
|
with copies of their poll books. These poll books Must be available at
|
|
request for a ten year period following the election.
|
|
|
|
Any Adult or Teen not currently in jail may run for any elective office. At
|
|
the discretion of the Entity administering elections, candidates may be
|
|
required to present a petition with the signatures of 100 Voters eligible
|
|
to vote for that office before that candidate is granted ballot access.
|
|
This should only be done to prevent ballots from containing hundreds of
|
|
names of frivolous candidates. It is normally recommended that all
|
|
candidates desiring access be granted it. No fee may be levied for access
|
|
to a ballot.
|
|
|
|
For each elective office, the ballot will list all candidates running, as
|
|
well as "None of the Above" and "Remove This Office". Each Voter will
|
|
indicate on eir ballot which, if any, of the candidates listed ey approves
|
|
of for each office. The Voter may approve of none, one, or any number of
|
|
candidates for an office. The candidate receiving the greatest number of
|
|
approvals will be given the office. If "None of the Above" receives the
|
|
greatest number of approvals, then the office will remain vacant and
|
|
unfunded for its normal term. If "Remove This Office" wins, the elective
|
|
office itself will be retired. Of course, no candidate may run under the
|
|
names "None of the Above" or "Remove This Office".
|
|
|
|
No Oceanian may hold an office for more than four years in a row. Once
|
|
these four years are up, ey may not run for that office again until four
|
|
more years have passed.
|
|
|
|
6.Political Campaigns
|
|
|
|
Political candidates do not surrender their Right to Free Speech. It is
|
|
illegal to require limits on campaign spending or to require candidates to
|
|
reveal their sources of funding. The Government and Entities administering
|
|
elections do not have this Right. It is forbidden for them to print
|
|
materials that tell citizens which way they should vote in an election.
|
|
|
|
Oceanians have the Right to form political parties. Political parties
|
|
cannot be given any Rights or Privileges not given to individuals running
|
|
for elective office. A petition for candidacy may be written to indicate
|
|
that in the event of the death or incapacity of the named candidate, the
|
|
ballot access granted to that candidate may be given to another Person
|
|
designated by the party. Of course, one Person may form a political party
|
|
and have the same Right.
|
|
|
|
The purpose of a political party is to give the Voters some idea of what
|
|
philosophies and opinions are shared by members of a party, to aid them in
|
|
their decision. Political parties have the Right to run any candidate they
|
|
choose, and to refuse to run anyone they choose. Under no circumstances
|
|
should political parties be used as a means to deny ballot access to those
|
|
who want it, or to grant special Privileges to members of major parties
|
|
that are denied to minor parties.
|
|
|
|
It is legal for political parties to pay Oceanians to register voters for
|
|
their party. Anyone convicted of falsely registering someone into the
|
|
wrong party will be convicted of Election Fraud.
|
|
|
|
7.The Right to Vote
|
|
|
|
All Adults and Teens in Oceania not currently in jail are Voters, and may
|
|
vote in elections. Children, including older Oceanians who have been
|
|
declared Children by a Court, may not vote. A Person under the age of
|
|
sixteen who has been declared a Teen or Adult by a Court may vote. The
|
|
Right of Adults and Teens to vote shall not be denied or abridged because
|
|
of race, creed, sex, sexual preference, handicap, or any reason other than
|
|
being in jail for a Crime. The reason for this restriction is that grand
|
|
juries and other officers of the Court are elected, and could be too
|
|
influenced by organized Crime if prisoners could vote.
|
|
|
|
8.Changing Laws
|
|
|
|
Oceanians do not give up their sovereignty as individuals by voting for any
|
|
Person. Oceanians have a direct Government and do not need anyone to
|
|
represent them in vital issues.
|
|
|
|
A.Passing Major Laws: Major laws Must be passed by referendum, as
|
|
described below.
|
|
|
|
B.Passing Minor Laws: The President of Oceania may bring minor laws and
|
|
Contracts to a grand jury and pass them with two-thirds consent. A
|
|
waiting period of 60 days Must then elapse before the law becomes valid.
|
|
If, in that 60-day period, a petition with the signatures of 1% of the
|
|
Voters is presented to the President, the law becomes a major one and
|
|
Must be brought before the people as a referendum.
|
|
|
|
C.Repealing Major Laws: Laws passed by referendum may be repealed by
|
|
referendum. The Anti-Law Department may request that the repeal of a law
|
|
be placed on a referendum.
|
|
|
|
D.Repealing Minor Laws: Laws that were instated by a jury vote may be
|
|
removed by a jury vote at the request of the President or the Anti-Law
|
|
Department. They may also be repealed in the same way that major laws
|
|
are.
|
|
|
|
E.Conflicting Laws should both be repealed by grand jury vote.
|
|
|
|
F.Referendums: For a referendum to gain ballot access, a petition
|
|
containing signatures of 1% of the Voters in the jurisdiction affected
|
|
by the referendum Must be presented to the election administrators. The
|
|
President of Oceania and the Anti-Law Department may also put
|
|
referendums on the ballot. Voters may vote either "yes" or "no" to a
|
|
referendum. If 66% of those voting on the referendum vote "yes", the
|
|
referendum passes and becomes law (assuming it is constitutional),
|
|
unless a different percentage is specified in this Constitution. The
|
|
vote for a referendum Must be held no later than 60 days after it gains
|
|
ballot access.
|
|
|
|
A referendum may be held to recall a public office holder, or to
|
|
eliminate the office entirely. In the case of imprisonment of an
|
|
election public office holder, ey will be prohibited from exercising eir
|
|
powers until a special election for that office is held. Such a special
|
|
election will automatically be called immediately after eir
|
|
imprisonment.
|
|
|
|
9.Election Results
|
|
|
|
There will be no central Government agency collecting or reporting vote
|
|
results. Election administrators will report directly to the press or other
|
|
Entities with whom they have contracted to do so. Candidates for office
|
|
Must discover for themselves who has won the office they seek, and in case
|
|
of disputes, Must resolve their conflict in Court. Election administrators
|
|
and their information may be subpoenaed for such cases.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER EIGHT
|
|
Naturalization Laws
|
|
|
|
|
|
For a Person to be declared a Permanent Oceanian ey Must go in front of a
|
|
jury which will decide if ey has met the twelve months residency
|
|
requirement. It takes a unanimous vote by the jury against em for em to not
|
|
become a Permanent Oceanian. The residency requirement may be met by anyone
|
|
who is physically present in Oceanian territory for twelve months. It is
|
|
not necessary that they be consecutive months, and it is not necessary that
|
|
the resident own or rent property. Children less than twelve months old are
|
|
also declared to be Permanent Oceanians.
|
|
|
|
Spouses and other relatives of Permanent Oceanians may only become
|
|
Permanent Oceanians by meeting the twelve months residency requirement.
|
|
|
|
An Oceanian will not lose the status of Permanent Oceanian by joining the
|
|
military of another country unless that country is on the Government's
|
|
official enemies list. It is the duty of the Commander in Chief to make
|
|
such a list, which may be modified by referendum
|
|
|
|
Passports are given to Permanent Oceanians. They are good for ten years
|
|
after issuance. Passports are provided by private agencies and their design
|
|
and form is determined by the original founders of Oceania or by any
|
|
referendums passed by the people of Oceania.
|
|
|
|
It is recognized that in the first twelve months of Oceania's
|
|
existence almost no one will qualify as a Permanent Oceanian. Not
|
|
even the founders of Oceania will be able to get a passport.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER NINE
|
|
|
|
Abortion
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for this law is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
After the first three months of pregnancy, an abortion is illegal except in
|
|
the cases of rape, incest, or endangerment of a mother's life. There are no
|
|
restrictions in the first three months.
|
|
|
|
A doctor who knowingly performs an illegal abortion will get one quarter
|
|
the penalty that the mother gets because ey will be an accomplice to the
|
|
crime. Therefore if the mother was sentenced to one year in jail and fined
|
|
100 grams of gold, the doctor would be sentenced to three months and fined
|
|
25 grams of gold. None of this would be deducted from the mother's
|
|
punishment.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER TEN
|
|
|
|
Death
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these common law definitions is Article 4,
|
|
Section 3.
|
|
|
|
Clinical Death is the state reached by a patient when breathing and heart
|
|
action cease.
|
|
|
|
Biological Death is when the patient has stopped lung and heart activity
|
|
and eir brain cells die. Lethal changes usually begin to take place in the
|
|
brain within four to six minutes after breathing stops. This process may be
|
|
delayed by cold temperatures.
|
|
|
|
Scientific Death is when the patient no longer has the brain cells that
|
|
contain eir memory. In 1993, this includes most of the cells in the brain
|
|
as their exact functions are not yet known.
|
|
|
|
This law recognizes that avoiding Scientific Death is more important than
|
|
avoiding Clinical or Biological Death.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER ELEVEN
|
|
Symbols
|
|
|
|
The constitutional authority for these laws is Article 4, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
These symbols and observances are, of course, matters of personal
|
|
expression. Oceanians are free to celebrate as they choose, to display,
|
|
burn, refuse to display, or otherwise treat flags as they choose, and
|
|
otherwise express themselves freely. The name of Oceania, its flag, and its
|
|
passports will serve to identify it to the other nations of the world, but
|
|
Oceanians may use them or not as they choose. Constitutional authority for
|
|
these laws is Article 2, Section 3.
|
|
|
|
A.The Flag of Oceania has a background of two colors: dark-sky blue in the
|
|
upper left, and sea green in the lower Right. The two colors come
|
|
together in a curved surface. Two white dolphins create a circle in the
|
|
upper Right, with the dolphin on the left of the circle head up and the
|
|
other dolphin head down.
|
|
|
|
B.The fourth of July, the Independence Day of our country, is a national
|
|
holiday. Fireworks, which are legal in Oceania, may be used to celebrate
|
|
it. This is the day that Oceania was founded and the Age of Tyranny
|
|
ended and the Age of Justice began. The Constitution will be signed and
|
|
effective on that date.
|
|
|
|
C.The Oath of Oceania is the following:
|
|
|
|
"I, ------, do solemnly swear that I will support, protect, and defend
|
|
the Constitution of Oceania, against all enemies, whether domestic or
|
|
foreign. I do not believe in the initiation of Force or Fraud against
|
|
our people by the Government or others. Like the peaceful dolphin, I
|
|
believe such actions should only be used in defense. I disagree with
|
|
governments who imitate the shark and use Force and Fraud to extract
|
|
wealth from their citizens. And further, I will well and faithfully
|
|
perform all the duties of [the office of ------], on which I am about to
|
|
enter under pain of perjury.
|
|
|
|
[] may be replaced with [a witness] or other duties as required.
|
|
|
|
Elected Officials of Oceania Must only swear or affirm to uphold the
|
|
Constitution, but it is recommended that they take the full oath.
|
|
|