3 Factors of Jurisdiction in any Court of Law, which sets the - TopicsExpress



          

3 Factors of Jurisdiction in any Court of Law, which sets the Stage to Proceed (Pro Se) . If you are proceeding in a Court, for yourself, on your own behalf; in person, then it would be necessary to know the 3 main factors at law, prior to proceeding (Pro Se). In regards to in person, you must first state your person as a proper person, In Propria Persona, which sets your (1st factor): status (your standing in the community, and standing at Law). This sets Personum Jurisdiction; determines if the court has jurisdiction over you, your person. The 2nd factor regarding jurisdiction is Subject Matter / Venue Jurisdiction. This is where you ask for the Judicial Authority of the Court (Delegation of their Authority--D.O.A.O) to determine if the Court even has jurisdiction over the subject matter(s), in regards to what you may be proceeding (Pro Se) about. The 3rd factor is Adjudication, wherein they impose sentencing, fines, penalities, punishments, and imprisonment as remedy for the injury you have done. Before proceeding to Adjudication there must be an injured party before the Court, for you to bring remedy to. Look around, your Accuser must be present, for the record in the court. Is there an injured party? . These are all proper procedures in any Court of Law, and these things must be identified before you proceed (Pro Se). You must be careful not to proceed (Pro Se) in a Court of Law, that is colorable and has no jurisdiction. We advise you not to go Pro Se, as most of the Courts you deal in are in fact Colorable Courts, and they do not have jurisdiction over you, the person, or the subject matter, therefore, you cannot proceed, and they cannot adjudicate. However, to find out if they are not colorable, is to ask for their Delegation of Authority, not just their Oath of Office, but the Delegation of Authority for that said Court. So dont let them fool you with the Oath. The Oath is also a request that you would make for them to present that states their obligation to uphold the constitution, and implicates them when they are going against it. . Thank goodness for these 3 factors of Law. They are universal to any court, and are a guideline regarding whether you ought to proceed (Pro Se) in that court, or even be in that court. In essence status (Personum Jurisdiction) sets the stage, because if they have no jurisdiction over you, they have no jurisdiction over the matter. They could have jurisdiction over the matter, but not have jurisidiction over you. Jurisidiction is important, that is why it is the first issue at Law. Once the issue of Jurisdiction is placed before the Court, it must be satisfied BEFORE the court can proceed, and the issue of Jurisdiction can be brought up at any time. This is a fine line of opportunity for the court to confuse Pro Se and In Propria Persona, although they are two distinctly separate things, they take the opportunity to use a little bit of trickery, to trip you up, and gain jurisdiction early in the game over you, right at the juncture where you are in the process of stating your Status for the record that sets the stage to determine whether the court has jurisdiction to proceed over you.
Posted on: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 21:34:56 +0000

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