What is the Meaning of the Word “County” in Written - TopicsExpress



          

What is the Meaning of the Word “County” in Written Law? Federal law simply defines “county” as the territory owned by or subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States of America. The States of the second Union, the United States, use the “county” to create a judicial system around an elected “District Attorney” and county court judges who will preside in the “criminal cases” brought by the DA. The proof is found in the Constitution of the State of California: Article 3 Section 1. “The State of California is an inseparable part of the United States of America, and the United States Constitution is the supreme law of the land.” Decoded, that means the State of California is the land the Confederacy owns in California and the United States Constitution is the written law there. The State of California in its Code of Civil Procedure Section 203 tries to make all persons eligible and qualified to be prospective trial jurors in order to expand the size of the “district” within the county lines. Three State of California juror qualifications confirm that the “county” is a federal district: jurors must be citizens of the United States, not less than 18 years of age, and domiciliaries of the State of California. Title 1 of the United States Code, General Provisions, Chapter 1—Rules of Construction, Section 2. “County” as including “parish”, and so forth 1 USC Sect. 2: The word “county” includes a “parish”, or any other equivalent subdivision of a State or Territory of the United States. The State governments of the fifty-six States of the United States define the word “county” by proper name and geographical boundaries called “county lines.” The State and federal definitions of “county” are joined in the Historical And Revision Notes to Chapter 5 of United States Code Title 28—Judiciary and Judicial Procedure: “Sections 81-131 of this chapter show the territorial composition of districts and divisions by counties as of January 1, 1945.” Section 81 is the State of Alabama; Section 81A is the then Territory of Alaska; the list proceeds to name the rest of the forty-eight States of the United States, the Territory of Hawaii, the Possession Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia completes the list of States, Territories, a Possession and a District. The territory owned by or subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States of America is the only territory located in the States of the United States, the Territories, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia and is, therefore, the territorial composition of the counties which comprise the districts and divisions of the United States district courts. Early English kings used counties to manage the realm, so it should come as no surprise that the States used counties to create judicial systems which would eventually replace the English common law. Dr. Eduardo M. Rivera
Posted on: Thu, 25 Jul 2013 14:30:38 +0000

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