Lawsuit: In Session Rubilubi55 v. Crown, Case 13 (Ch. 2025)

IN THE HONOURABLE CHANCERY OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
CLOSING STATEMENT


Your honours,
first I would like to point out the following: In their Opening statement the defendant submitted.

Parliament would not seek to create legal obligations on the Chancery for how they should vote. The Crown would not seek to enforce such a law on the judiciary. Yet, plaintiff asks this Court to allow itself to interpret the standing orders of parliament, which are nothing more than a rules resolution with no legal functionality.
This comparison is partially incorrect; using it the other way around would imply that I asked the Judiciary to impose obligations on the parliament regarding how to vote. This is not right. This case is about allowing the Judiciary to legally interpret the parliament's standing orders. This is important, as the standing orders are not just resolutions, at least not yet. This is mainly what this court case is about. Do we allow Parliament, especially the speaker, to ignore by parliament set standing orders, or do we allow the Judiciary to interfere, should they do so?

As the Standing orders, the Government Organization Act, and the Crown recognize, the Standing orders themselves are not laws. Similar to a resolution of parliament, they have no legal effect and the executive does not enforce them.
I would also like to answer to this part, even though the standing orders are technically not laws, the Judiciary should still have the power to interpret them. This is the same as with Executive Policies, these are not passed by parliament but are also under the jurisdiction of the Judiciary. So why should we check the Executive's internal procedures but not the Parliament ones? In addition, the Judiciary also rules on Contracts, which, with the plaintiff's interpretation, should not fall under the Judiciary's jurisdiction either.

Therefore, I ask this court to rule in favour of the plaintiff. We need to keep a working system of Checks and Balances, a working system in a sense of not giving parliament the power to operate and possibly cause harm without juridical interference. A system where the Speaker could not do what they want. Because the standing orders are not just "rules resolution", these are called traditions.

Respectfully submitted,
Rubi Semsrott-Sloth (Rubilubi55)

I would like to apologise again for such a big delay, as well as a seemingly rushed Closing Statement due to limited time.
 
Your honour,

I have resigned and left the server. Please instruct the government to find a new counsel for this case.

Best of luck,

Joseph Ibney0
 
Following the resignation of the Crown's current legal counsel, the Government is hereby ordered to provide new legal counsel within 72 hours, extendable via a Writ of Continuance.
 
IN THE CHANCERY OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
ENTREATY FOR CONTINUANCE


Your Honor, given that there is an election on at the moment, it is uncertain who will be leading the Ministry of Justice. Accordingly, the Crown requests continuance in this case until a new government is formed and the incoming Minister of Justice can assign someone to this case.
 
IN THE CHANCERY OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
ENTREATY FOR CONTINUANCE


Your Honor, given that there is an election on at the moment, it is uncertain who will be leading the Ministry of Justice. Accordingly, the Crown requests continuance in this case until a new government is formed and the incoming Minister of Justice can assign someone to this case.
This is granted.
 
IN THE CHANCERY OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
CLOSING STATEMENT

JURISDICTION


The Constitution vests the Chancery with the authority to interpret law, not to adjudicate on internal parliamentary procedures. Standing Orders are not laws because their force does not come from Parliament’s legislative power vested by the Constitution, but from its inherent constitutional privilege to regulate its own operations.

While the Chancery may exercise some jurisdiction over internal executive policies, the same does not extend to Parliament’s Standing Orders. Executive policies have legal effect, as they are enforced by the Executive and can directly impact the rights of players. On the other hand, Standing Orders restrict only the internal operations of Parliament and do not restrict outside of its own legislative process. They have no legal effect, and therefore any intervention would intrude on the clear boundary established by the Constitution between the Chancery and Parliament.

SEPARATION OF POWERS

Following K.A. Const. § I Art. 3.1, Parliament holds the exclusive power to “pass laws by debating, scrutinizing, and voting on bills.” Parliament's authority to make laws is not subject to inference by any other branch of government. Any restriction imposed by the Chancery on the time, manner, or method by which Parliament conducts its own internal legislative operations would undermine its sovereignty.

Respectfully submitted,

Soggeh T. Oast
Minister of Justice
Kingdom of Alexandria
 
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