I'm working on a complete revision of the judicial system. My proto is not yet complete: there are a couple of rules still to do. Here is what I have so far, for discussion of the concepts:
{{{ [--------------------------] [Part I: new judicial rules] [--------------------------] Retitle rule 991 to "Judicial Cases Generally", leave its power unchanged at 2, and amend it to read A judicial case, also known as a call for judgement (CFJ), is a procedure to settle a matter of controversy. There are subclasses of judicial case with particular features defined by other rules. Subclasses of judicial case exist only as defined by the rules. The Clerk of the Courts (CotC) is an office, responsible for managing judicial activity. The CotC's report includes the status of all judicial cases that either require a judge or have at least one applicable judicial question that has no judgement. Retitle rule 1868 to "Judge Assignment Generally", change its power to 2, and amend it to read At any time, a judicial case either has no judge assigned to it (default) or has exactly one entity assigned to it as judge; this is a persistent status that changes only according to the rules. To recuse a judge from a case means to deassign em as judge. To assign a judge to a case implicitly recuses any existing judge. At any time, a judicial case either does not require a judge (default) or requires a judge; this is not a persistent status, but is evaluated instantaneously. When a judicial case requires a judge and has no judge assigned, the CotC CAN assign a qualified entity to be its judge by announcement. Whenever this situation arises the CotC SHALL make such an assignment as soon as possible. Except where modified by other rules, the entities qualified to be assigned as judge of a judicial case are the active players. Being unqualified to be assigned as a judge does not inherently prevent an entity from continuing to be judge if already assigned. [TODO: amend R1871: The Standing Court] Enact a rule with title "Judicial Questions", power 2, and text Within a judicial case, one or more judicial questions may arise. Each judicial question is either inapplicable (default) or applicable; this is not a persistent status but is evaluated instantaneously. Each judicial question either is open (default), suspended, or has a particular judgement; this is a persistent status that changes only according to the rules. The possible types of judgement for a judicial question vary according to the type of question. When a judicial case has an applicable open judicial question, it requires a judge, and its judge CAN assign a valid judgement to that question by announcement. Whenever there is a judge assigned to a judicial case with an applicable open question, the judge SHALL assign such a judgement to the question as soon as possible. Whenever a judicial case has an judicial question that has remained applicable and open, while the same judge has been assigned to the case, continuously for the past week, the CotC CAN recuse that judge by announcement. Whenever a judicial case has an judicial question that has remained applicable and open, while the same judge has been assigned to the case, continuously for the past two weeks, the CotC SHALL so recuse the judge as soon as possible. Among the possible judgements of a judicial question, some subset of them are appropriate. Judgements are appropriate only where so defined by the rules. A judge SHALL NOT assign an inappropriate judgement. Where more than one appropriate judgement is available, the choice between them is at the judge's discretion. Retitle rule 591 to "Inquiry Cases", change its power to 1.7, and amend it to read There is a subclass of judicial case known as an inquiry case. An inquiry case's purpose is to determine the veracity of a particular statement. An inquiry case CAN be initiated by any person, by announcement which includes the statement to be inquired into. An inquiry case has a judicial question on veracity, which is always applicable. The valid judgements for this question are: * FALSE, appropriate if the statement was factually and logically false at the time the inquiry case was initiated * TRUE, appropriate if the statement was factually and logically true at the time the inquiry case was initiated * UNDECIDABLE, appropriate if the statement was logically undecidable, nonsensical, too vague, or otherwise not capable of being accurately described as either false or true, at the time the inquiry case was initiated * IRRELEVANT, appropriate if the veracity of the statement at the time the inquiry case was initiated is not relevant to the game * UNPROVEN, appropriate if the information available to the judge is insufficient to determine which of the FALSE, TRUE, and UNDECIDABLE judgements is appropriate. The judgement of the question in an inquiry case SHOULD guide future play, including future judgements, but does not directly affect the veracity of the statement. The rulekeepor is ENCOURAGED to annotate rules to draw attention to relevant inquiry case judgements. Retitle rule 1504 to "Criminal Cases", change its power to 1.7, and amend it to read There is a subclass of judicial case known as a criminal case. A criminal case's purpose is to determine the culpability of a particular person, known as the defendant, for an alleged breach of the rules, and to punish the guilty. A criminal case CAN be initiated by any player, by announcement which clearly identifies the defendant and specifies the action (which may be an omission) by which the defendant allegedly breached the rules. The initiation of a criminal case begins its pre-trial phase. During the pre-trial phase, the case requires a judge. In the pre-trial phase the judge SHALL as soon as possible inform the defendant of the case and invite em to rebut the argument for eir guilt. The pre-trial phase ends one week after the defendant has been so informed. During the pre-trial phase, the defendant CAN disqualify one person from assignment as judge of the case, by announcement. If e disqualifies the judge, then the judge is recused. A criminal case has a judicial question on culpability, which is applicable at all times following the pre-trial phase. The valid judgements for this question are: * ALREADY TRIED, appropriate if judgement has already been reached in another criminal case with the same defendant and substantially the same alleged act * LAW ABIDING, appropriate if the alleged act was not proscribed by the rules at the time it allegedly occurred * INNOCENT, appropriate if the defendant did not perform the alleged act * UNPROVEN, appropriate if the information available to the judge is insufficient to determine beyond a reasonable doubt whether or not the defendant performed the alleged act * EXCUSED, appropriate if the defendant has good reason why e could not avoid breaching the rules in a manner at least as serious as alleged * GUILTY, appropriate if none of the above judgements is appropriate A criminal case has a judicial question on sentencing, which is applicable if the question on culpability is applicable and has a judgement of GUILTY. The valid judgements for the question on sentencing are: * DISCHARGE, appropriate only in extraordinary circumstances, if any available non-null punishment would be manifestly unjust * APOLOGY with a set of up to ten words (the prescribed words), appropriate for rule breaches of small consequence * CHOKEY with a duration (the tariff) between 30 days and 60 days multiplied by the power of the highest-power rule allegedly broken, appropriate for rule breaches of intermediate severity * EXILE with a duration (the tariff) up to 60 days multiplied by the power of the highest-power rule allegedly broken, appropriate for severe rule breaches amounting to a breach of trust If a criminal case has an applicable question on sentencing which has a judgement, the defendant is hereafter known as the ninny, and things happen according to the judgement: * If DISCHARGE, nothing happens. * If APOLOGY with a set of prescribed words, the ninny SHALL within 72 hours publish a formal apology of at least 200 words, including all the prescribed words, explaining eir error, shame, remorse, and ardent desire for self-improvement. * If any judgement with a tariff, then the judgement is thereafter either active or not. The judgement is inactive if the question on sentencing is inapplicable, or if the judgement was assigned to the question less than a week ago. In other situations, the judgement is active if and only if judgements of the same type on the same question have been active for a total duration less than the tariff. The CotC's report includes the status of all active judgements. * While a judgement of type CHOKEY is active, the ninny is in the chokey. No entity is in the chokey except as required by this rule. * While a judgement of type EXILE is active, the ninny is exiled. No entity is exiled except as required by this rule. If an exiled entity is ever a player, e is deregistered. An exiled entity CANNOT register. An appeal concerning any assignment of judgement in a criminal case within the past week, other than an assignment caused by a judgement in an appeal case, CAN be initiated by the defendant by announcement. Retitle rule 911 to "Appeal Cases", change its power to 1.7, and amend it to read There is a subclass of judicial case known as an appeal case. An appeal case's purpose is to determine the appropriateness of a judgement that has been assigned to a judicial question, and make remedy if the judgement was poorly chosen. The assignment of judgement being questioned (appealed against, or appealed) is referred to as the prior assignment; the word "prior" in this rule is used to refer to the circumstances of the prior assignment. An appeal concerning any assignment of judgement in a non-appeal case within the past two weeks, other than an assignment caused by a judgement in an appeal case, CAN be initiated by any player with 2 support. [TODO: judge should be a board of multiple persons, not a single person] An appeal case has a judicial question on disposition, which is applicable if and only if the prior question is applicable. The valid judgements for the question on disposition are: * AFFIRM, appropriate if the prior judgement was appropriate for the prior question * REMAND, appropriate if there is serious doubt about the appropriateness of the of the prior judgement but the judge believes that the judge of the prior case can make a better judgement if given a new opportunity * REASSIGN, appropriate if there is serious doubt about the appropriateness of the of the prior judgement * OVERRULE with a valid replacement judgement for the prior question, appropriate if the prior judgement was inappropriate in the prior question and the replacement judgement is appropriate for the prior question Initiation of an appeal case renders the prior question suspended. It remains suspended as long as the question on disposition in the appeal case has no judgement. When the question on disposition has a judgement, things happen according to that judgement: * if AFFIRM, the prior judgement is assigned to the prior question again * if REMAND, the prior question is rendered open again * if REASSIGN, the judge of the prior case (if any) is recused, and the prior question is rendered open again * if OVERRULE with a replacement judgement, the replacement judgement is assigned to the prior question [TODO: amend R1742 to a "Civil Cases" rule] [----------------] [Part II: repeals] [----------------] Repeal rules 889 ("The Clerk of the Courts"), 897 ("Barring Players from Judgement"), 2024 ("Linked Statements"), 2132 ("Excess CFJs"), 698 ("Always an Eligible Judge"), 2133 ("Pragmatic Judicial Assignments"), 408 ("Late Judgement"), 217 ("Judgements Must Accord with the Rules"), 1575 ("Standards of Proof"), 1565 ("Dismissal of a CFJ"), 1826 ("Motions"), 1365 ("Concurring and Dissenting Opinions"), 1564 ("Initiating Appeals"), 1447 ("Final Judgement upon Appeal"), 1804 ("Appeal of Judicial and Sentencing Orders"), 1805 ("Appellate Orders"), 1503 ("Rules Violations"), 908 ("Formal Apologies"), and 2129 ("Dishonor Rolls"). [----------------------------------] [Part III: consequential amendments] [----------------------------------] Amend rule 1794 by deleting the items labelled "(b)" and "(c)" and then changing the item label "(d)" to "(b)". [The new judicial system doesn't use orders.] Amend rule 1769 by replacing the text nor may any Call for Judgement, Judgement, notice of Appeal, Decision of Appeals Boards, or Opinion be published by the Clerk of the Courts with nor may any judge be assigned to any judicial case, nor may any judge assign a judgement to any judicial question [CotC publication isn't used for anything any more. Judgement itself is the closest equivalent.] [--------------------------------] [Part IV: transitional provisions] [--------------------------------] For the purposes of applying rule 1586 to the amendments made in this proposal, * "Pre-reform" refers to the state in which the rules and other game entities were immediately before the adoption of this proposal. * "Post-reform" refers to the state in which the rules and other game entities will be immediately after this proposal has completed taking effect. * Each pre-reform CFJ continues to exist as a post-reform inquiry case. * Each pre-reform CFJ with a judge assigned has the same judge assigned in its post-reform form. * For each pre-reform CFJ with an unappealed judgement, the post-reform inquiry case has a judgement assigned to its question on veracity, according to this translation: + pre-reform FALSE judgement corresponds to post-reform FALSE, + pre-reform TRUE judgement corresponds to post-reform TRUE, + any other pre-reform judgement corresponds to post-reform UNDECIDABLE. * For each pre-reform CFJ which is dismissed (and not subsequently reopened) without judgement, the post-reform inquiry case has a judgement of UNDECIDABLE assigned to its question on veracity. * For each pre-reform CFJ with an incomplete appeal of judgement, the post-reform inquiry case has its question on veracity suspended. * For each pre-reform CFJ neither with an unappealed judgement, nor dismissed (and not subsequently reopened) without judgement, nor with an incomplete appeal of judgement, the post-reform inquiry case has its question on veracity open. * Each pre-reform appeal of anything other than a judgement is a detail of the CFJ (post-reform inquiry case) to which it is attached, and does not continue to exist as a distinct post-reform entity. * Each pre-reform appeal of a judgement continues to exist as a post-reform appeal case regarding the assignment of that judgement to the question on veracity in the inquiry case. [TODO: more detail probably required on appeals] }}} -zefram