Competent Jurisdiction
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Competent Jurisdiction
Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This page defines the concept of competent jurisdiction within Tsm’syen law. It clarifies who has lawful authority to hear, interpret, and address matters affecting Tsm’syen people, houses, lands, and relationships.
This page exists to prevent automatic deferral to external legal systems without lawful basis.
General principles
- Jurisdiction arises from law, not convenience.
- Competence is determined by knowledge, authority, and relationship.
- Law must be addressed at the appropriate level.
- External jurisdiction is not presumed.
- Jurisdiction without competence is invalid.
JURISDICTION
Meaning
- Jurisdiction refers to the lawful authority to address a matter.
- Authority is grounded in ayaawx and recognized governance structures.
- Jurisdiction is specific, not universal.
- No body holds unlimited jurisdiction.
COMPETENCE
Lawful capacity
- Competence requires understanding of the law being applied.
- Knowledge of ayaawx and adaawx is required for Tsm’syen matters.
- Relationship to the parties and subject matter is relevant.
- Authority without competence cannot produce lawful outcomes.
INTERNAL JURISDICTION
Tsm’syen law
- Houses have jurisdiction over internal house matters.
- Clans may hold jurisdiction in inter-house matters.
- Elders may interpret law where clarity is required.
- Higher-level matters may require broader recognition.
- Jurisdiction follows the scope of the issue.
EXTERNAL JURISDICTION
Outside legal systems
- External courts do not automatically possess competent jurisdiction.
- Jurisdiction must be established, not assumed.
- Matters rooted in Tsm’syen law require Tsm’syen competence.
- Deference to external systems without consent undermines law.
RELATIONSHIP
Context and standing
- Jurisdiction depends on relationship to the matter.
- Distance from the people, land, or law limits competence.
- Standing is affected by conduct and recognition.
- Outsiders lack jurisdiction absent lawful basis.
LIMITS
Constraints
- No authority may exceed its lawful scope.
- Jurisdiction may be refused if competence is lacking.
- Misuse of jurisdiction undermines legitimacy.
- Lawful refusal preserves balance and autonomy.
CONTINUITY
Protection of law
- Clear jurisdiction protects the integrity of law.
- Proper placement of authority prevents erosion.
- Teaching jurisdiction supports long-term self-governance.
To be developed
- Examples of jurisdictional determination
- Relationship to dispute resolution processes
- Interaction with external legal claims
- Source citations
Navigation >> Structure of the Nation >> Wilp and Waap Governance >> Elders as Interpreters of Law >> Inter-House and Inter-Tribal Dispute Law >> Principles of Restorative Justice >> Ayaawx >> Adaawx