1 | This be Legislative Law: |
2 | Legislative Law is the body of laws or “acts” passed, amended or repealed by an assembly possessing the authority and personality of a body politic. By definition, Legislative Law can only extend by jurisdiction to those members of the body politic. |
3 | An Act, is a written law, also known as a Statute or “statutory law”, that is formally ordained and approved by a Juridic Person and a Superior Authority through a process known as a “Legislative Act”. |
4 | Acts are either public or private: (i) Public Acts, also called “general acts” or general statutes or statues at large are those which relate to the community generally or establish a universal rule for the governance of the whole body politic; and (ii) Private Acts, also known as “special acts” relate either to a particular person (personal acts) or particular places (local acts) or which operate only upon specific individuals or their private concerns. |
5 | An Act or Statute can only apply to the limits of jurisdiction of the Juridic Person that issued it. Therefore a legislative body of a corporation cannot legally or lawfully abrogate the laws of the higher estate that first created its franchise. |
6 | An Act and Statute must reflect the proper form and procedures prescribed by law and custom relating to the Parliamentary process of enacting law. |
7 | A valid Act of Law exists in form as a precise, brief and clear expression of the intention of Parliament in reflecting the needs and mandate of the people. Therefore, the more complex and long worded an act, or the less clear its intention, the greater chance part or all of it may be repealed by judicial review if challenged. |
8 | A proposed new Act and Statute must concern itself with one (1) main cause whereby its clauses and divisions reflect a consistent intention. A valid Act may not contain multiple causes or riders or contingencies to it. |
9 | Acts and Statutes that possess penalties and punishments must be construed strictly. |
10 | One (1) part of a new Act and Statute must be able to be so construed by another part of an existing Act, that the new Act may be considered a seamless addition to the wholly body of law. |
11 | A part or whole new Act and Statute that is totally repugnant to the existing body of law is automatically void, even if approved and assented. |
12 | Where the existing body of law and a new Act or Statute differ, the existing body of law has precedence, unless the new Act presents a considered, superior and reasoned argument to the contrary. |
13 | If an Act and Statute that repeals another, is itself repealed afterwards, the first Act and Stature is hereby revived without any formal words for that purpose. |
14 | Acts derogatory from the power of subsequent parliaments cannot be binding. |
15 | Acts and Statutes that seek to grant or exclude certain rights, property or uses in perpetuity, without consideration for expiry are null and void from the beginning. |
16 | Acts that are impossible to be performed are of no validity. |
17 | As the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland formed in 1801 is a corporate franchise created by the authority of the Parliament of the united kingdom of Great Britain and the (now dissolved) Parliament of Ireland, it possesses less authority and jurisdiction than the body that created it. Therefore, all Acts of Law passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom since 1801 have no legal or lawful effect over the citizens of Great Britain and only apply to employees of the Bank of England as Citizens of the UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND. |
18 | Any law that is against such truth cannot be law. |