Comments Off on Trial by Jury, Jurors Needed, Common Law

We need able men across the country who are willing to provide godly aid for jury determinations in Common Law proceedings.

If the Lord would so lead you to commit contact the court clerks office at >        courtclerk107@gmail.com

This court will utilize the internet to provide due process for each participant. The safest adjudicating hands on earth are of those of a Christian based jury.

Federal* Supreme Court, of the People,   (< styled name.)

Common Law Venue; Original and Exclusive Jurisdiction,

A superior court sitting with the power of a circuit, in ‘United States of America’*,

in and of de jure counties.

Court record of – ‘Independent Jural Society Community Court’.

(This court is fully validated with US court rulings, and thousands of years of operation. Come and see how attorneys use this court to get justice that is often not available in US statutory courts.)

– 7th Amendment, Bill of Rights, US Constitution – “In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.”

– NW Ordinance 1787, Art. 2 “… Trial by Jury, and of judicial proceedings according to the course of the Common Law.”

– (a) Saving to suitors, in all cases, the Right to a Common Law Remedy, where the Common Law is competent to give it;

– Christian Law and Common Law is synonymous” – Strauss v. Strauss, 3 So. 2nd 772 at 728 (1941).

– “the Law of the Land” means “the Common Law“. – State v. Simmon, 2 Spears 761, at 767 (1884).

 

Terms Defined:

United States of America‘* – proper noun. A country, a people, occupying most of the southern half of North America and including also Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands.

federal*, adjective – having or relating to a system of government in which several states, man, form a unity, for a specific purpose, but remain independent in general.

Comments are closed.