[Private] Request for Review: Gross Misconduct and Vagueness

Zyvetskistaahn

TNPer
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TNP Nation
Zyvetskistaahn
Discord
zyvet.
Saintpeter has filed a request for review on behalf of his client, Pigeonstan, concerning the constitutionality of the law on Gross Misconduct, as applied to the citizenship oath. The request is here.

I am contemplating whether recusal is required in this instance, but I am at this stage minded to say that it is not. While I think it is something to be aware of, given we accepted the indictment, I do not think the challenge is really expressed as being to our decision. The same points, I think, could have been raised by way of collateral challenge in the course of the prosecution and I think it is fairly obvious we would not have been bound to recuse then.

On standing, it is quite clear from the decision on the Sentence Issued by the Court in the case of The North Pacific v Whole India that counsel can bring requests on behalf of their clients, presuming the client could bring the request in their own right. I do want to think more on whether it is right to say that Pigeonstan has standing at the moment or whether their right to due process would be affected at a later point (that is, if we found them guilty); the Court has made clear (much though I disagree) in the decision on Court Review of RA Proposals that prospective reviews are impermissible.

(EDIT: I would also note that the other challenge to the constitutionality of a criminal law that I can think of (on the Constitutionality of Prohibiting Sedition) was decided prior to the adoption of a standing requirement (as well as being long before the Court started to actually take standing seriously), so does not provide assistance on the standing question)

EDIT2: Depending on your views, I may ask the Petitioner specifically about the question of whether this is a prospective review and/or whether has to be raised in the trial itself, particularly given the argument is actually quite specific to the application of part of the oath to a given Defendant and not to the law generally.

On the merits, I think this is really related to the point I raised about count 7 in discussions on the acceptance of the indictment, so I think there is perhaps something in saying that it is too nebulous to be enforceable, though I personally would be more inclined to say that the threshold for criminally irresponsible action is simply very high and so difficult to prove, rather than being impermissibly vague.

(EDIT3: for reference, basically the only decision that considers gross misconduct in any detail: on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements.)
 
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This overuse of the process is getting out of hand, I suggest we reject the request as it is better addressed in the court trial proceedings instead of in an R4R.
 
I am not so sure that simply because a matter would be better addressed in the trial it follows there can be no review on it. To my mind, so long as standing is demonstrated, the Court should not reject a view unless there is some bar on it. I do wonder whether there is a bar in relation to criminal questions, considering the decision on the Delegate’s Authority to Staff the Executive Branch. I can see the thinking behind it but I would want to give an opportunity for the saintpeter to address it before rejecting, given that it would be relatively novel.
 
I have thought further on this and considered the answers of saintpeter to the questions I have asked. I think I am persuaded that the review is not prospective and that the question that the review seeks to be answered is not one which requires findings on the Defendant's conduct which would interfere with the trial.

It seems to me that there is a distinction to be drawn between fact-specific questions and abstract ones, in that the Court has suggested that the former may sometimes be inappropriate to answer without the safeguards of a trial. The question the review asks is a question that can be answered in the abstract, so I do not think that the criminal processes are needed in resolving the question. While I think that the review is not necessary to determine the question and that it could be more efficiently dealt with in the trial, as it could be raised as a defence in the trial, I do not think that alone gives reason to reject a review and it seems to me that it is open to to saintpeter to pursue the review.

Given that you (LRW) are also minded to accept the request for review, I will do so.
 
Why are we downsizing from the usual 5 days on this one?
The review necessarily delays the trial, which impacts on the Defendant’s right to a speedy trial and, more broadly, on the efficiency of the trial. So long as the most obviously interested parties (the defence and prosecution in the trial) are able to submit briefs, I think that it is appropriate to reduce that delay.
 
I think that I am satisfied there is standing. I am persuaded that there is an effect on rights simply from being tried. While I think it would have been more efficient for it to be dealt with in the trial, I don’t think that prevents review except arguably where there are some factual (ie, has the Defendant sent this message) or evaluative (ie, is this statement misleading) for the Court, in which cases the safeguards of a trial are needed.

I am not as yet wholly sure where I stand on the resolution of this, but I do have some preliminary thoughts. I think it boils down to a few questions:
  1. Does the Bill of Rights restrict crimes from being too vaguely defined, whether for reasons of prior notice or equal treatment or both;
  2. What standard do we use to decide what is too vague;
  3. Do the above also apply to the content of an oath where the crime is defined by reference to that oath;
  4. If crimes can be too vague including when defined by reference to an oath, what is the scope of Gross Misconduct, in particular where it is by violation of a pledge of “responsible action”; and,
  5. Is the scope of Gross Misconduct too vague.
I would be minded to say that the Bill of Rights does prevent crimes that are too vague. It seems to me that saintpeter is right to say that it inherent in the notion of prior notice that a nation should be able to look at the Legal Code and be able to say whether or not they are committing a crime. The requirement of the Bill of Rights and the Legal Code that crimes be set out in the Legal Code is an extension of this principle, though I don’t think it is the limit of the principle.

An example I would give would be a crime along these lines ““Endotarting” is defined as having too many endorsements”. Such a crime would, I suggest, be so vague as to be unconstitutional. A nation would be left to guess how many endorsements are too many and the Court would effectively have to decide the level in any case that was brought, which could vary from Court to Court. This issue is not due to any underlying issue with a crime of endotarting, it could be defined as we have actually chosen to define reckless endorsement gathering in the security law and thereby be valid, it is a result of imprecision in the definition.

I think that there are obvious limits to this idea: laws are by their nature general, so some imprecision is to be expected and edge cases should not be thought to mean the law is inherently too vague; our laws, in particular, are made by a citizen legislature most members of which are not lawyers or legal draughtsman (and even those who are have different legal traditions). For that reason, I am struggling to think of a way to judge vagueness that would be satisfactory for us, though I think there must be a way to.

I do not think that there is a real difference, for this purpose, between defining a crime wholly in the Criminal Code or by reference. Returning again to the endotarting example, the answer, to my mind, should be the same whether there was a specific crime as indicated above or whether there was an oath reading “I pledge not to have too many endorsements”. The nation is left in a similar position of guessing, as is the Court, and there should be no encouragement of drafting crimes in a more circuitous manner so as to evade a bar on vague crimes. The one point that may make me think differently is the fact that an oath may only apply to a limited number who can thereby take steps to limit their liability, whether by not taking or by disclaiming the oath (EDIT2: in relation to this, On WA Nation Disclosure Requirements may be helpful in thinking on it), but I think that is not a reason to say a crime defined an oath, in principle, cannot be vague, but is a reason to say a crime defined by a particular oath is not.

On Gross Misconduct, I am going to borrow from some public discussion of the crime by me previously.

In terms of the strict requirements of the offence, it requires: "violation of an individual's [...] sworn oath", which can be by act or omission, depending on the terms of the oath; that the oath be "legally mandated" which forms a circumstantial element of the offence; and that the violation be "willful" or "through negligence" which are mental elements.

Beginning with the "legally mandated" requirement, it is suggested that this, at minimum, relates to oaths that a person is required to take under the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, or the Legal Code (whether it extends to oaths required by rule is a matter that the Court has taken no decision on and which seems to be arguable). There oaths are required under this definition: the oath of office which is required by the Constitution, art 7, cl 8 and the Legal Code, s4.1; the citizenship oath (replicated below) which is required by the Legal Code, s6.1, cl 2; and, the NPA oath which is require by the Legal Code, s7.6, cl 37.

Moving to the mental elements, "willful" has been addressed by the Court which held that it was synonymous with "intentional" and, in relation to Fraud the Court specifically addressed "intentional" when considering the purpose of a deception as being "for some benefit or to damage another individual" (see: Legal Code, s1.3, cl 12) in Re: the Standard of Proof and Intent. In that case the Court considered that the this could be satisfied by an objectively reckless intention, that is where the consequence would be something a reasonable person could have expected and by which a Defendant can be reasonably expected to have expected or recklessly ignored the risk of.

“Negligence" has not been discussed by the Court, however, it logically requires something less than what is required by "willful" and I note that the offence was originally addressed only at the conduct of officials with specific duties to meet, so I would suggest it likely amounts to a failure to take care that a person is meeting a duty placed on them, though plainly it must be of a degree that warrants criminal sanction.

The one point which I am struggling with is question of what it is the “responsible action” part of the oath requires, which really is the key question. It seems to me that we can’t and shouldn’t try to define this exhaustively. If the Assembly wanted to make an exhaustive definition it could have, it is quite clear that it is supposed to be a broad and principle based point.

I do not think that that the material in the debate on the oath revision assists us here, while I think it is open on principle for us to consider such discussions when a provision is vague to help us decide meaning (see: On RA Membership Requirements for Candidates), the discussions here do not actually show what the members in question thought “responsible action” entailed, simply that some weren’t sure what it meant. I may look back to see if I can find the discussions on the older oath, which was in a similar form, albeit the grammar differed slightly, but it may prove just as unhelpful.

I think that, absent some standard based definition sufficient to meet the requirements of precision for crimes, we would need to hold with the Petitioner. I am not presently sure what that standard would be, without being circular or effectively saying that “we know it when we see it”. I would prefer to set out such a standard than to give a finding of unconstitutionality, as I think we should tend towards a saving construction, but I am having difficulty thinking of a satisfactory way to do so.

EDIT: Discussions on the proposals that introduced Gross Misconduct and that expanded it to cover the citizenship oath, for reference: Criminal Law (Amendment) Bill (introduces the crime); Oaths Amendment Bill (expands it).
 
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I think the oath should stand since if they are not enforceable then they are meaningless. "Responsible action" to me just means acting in a way that is beholden to an office and not going further than it or abusing it. I wish to hold that the oath is binding and the charge upheld.
 
I personally lean towards the petioner in the matter, and agree with Zyvet in being unable to think of any proper test for responsible action that doesn't circle around to whether or not they committed some other crime
 
I have started to go put together a ruling on this matter. At the moment I have only gathered together what I think seem to be relevant laws and decisions and drafted a section on standing. I am not sure whether I would be minded to use all of the decisions included at the moment (particularly, I think that the decisions on when oaths start and end binding are quite tangential and well known, so may not need citing), but I thought it may be helpful to see them.

I do note what is said above, but I am still wavering on this one. I think the Court should generally try to interpret the Legal Code so as to comply with the Constitution and Bill of Rights, rather than finding parts of it unconstitutional (obviously, there will be times where that is not possible). Also while reading the decision on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements (below), I noted that the Court there did not seem to consider "responsible" to be insurmountable and, additionally, I noticed that the oath of office also includes an obligation to exercise power "responsibly". I do therefore want to approach this carefully.

I was mulling over a standard interpreting violation of the requirement of responsible action as being conduct that is "obviously and seriously irresponsible to the reasonable citizen" or something similar, with the additional caveat that exercising rights protected by the Bill of Rights could not be criminalised by the oath. There is still vagueness and some circularity to it, as one could perhaps raise questions about how obvious or serious conduct needs to be or the fact that it defines responsibility by reference to irresponsibility, but there are limits to the precision of language that need to be recognised. I also think that there is something in an argument along the lines of that in the decision on WA Nation Disclosure Requirements, after all citizenship is voluntary and can be ended at any time, so a nation can say with certainty whether they would be subject to the oath, and, moreover, citizenship carries with it fairly significant power over other nations, such as deciding the conditions on which they can be banned. Perhaps those factors can justify a crime that applies only to limited numbers which would, if it applied to every nation, be too vague.

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Ruling of the Court of The North Pacific
In regards to the judicial inquiry filed by saintpeter on behalf of Pigeonstan on the Constitutionality of Vague Laws and Gross Misconduct
Opinion drafted by [[name]], joined by [[name(s)]], with [[name(s)]] [abstaining | dissenting]

The Court took into consideration the inquiry filed here by saintpeter.

The Court took into consideration the legal briefs filed by Dreadton and saintpeter.

The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Constitution of The North Pacific:

Article 4. The Court:
2. Reviews of laws or government policies and actions must be made by request of an affected party unless there is a compelling regional interest in resolving it.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Bill of Rights of The North Pacific:
Bill of Rights for all Nations of The North Pacific:
7. When charged with criminal acts, Nations of The North Pacific shall have a fair, impartial, and public trial before a neutral and impartial judicial officer. In any criminal proceeding, a Nation is presumed innocent unless guilt is proven to the fact finder by reasonably certain evidence. A Nation may be represented by any counsel of the Nation's choosing. No Nation convicted of a crime shall be subject to a punishment disproportionate to that crime.

[...]

9. Each Nation in The North Pacific is guaranteed the organization and operation of the governmental authorities of the region on fundamental principles of democracy, accountability, and transparency. No action by the governmental authorities of the region shall deny to any Nation of The North Pacific, due process of law, including prior notice and the opportunity to be heard, nor deny to any Nation of The North Pacific the equal and fair treatment and protection of the provisions of the Constitution. No governmental authority shall have power to adopt or impose an ex post facto law or a bill of attainder as to any act for purposes of criminal proceedings.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Legal Code of The North Pacific:
Section 1.9: Gross Misconduct:
25. "Gross Misconduct" is defined as the violation of an individual's legally mandated sworn oath, either willfully or through negligence.
Section 6.1: Citizenship Applications:
2. Any resident may apply for citizenship using their regional forum account, by providing the name of their nation in The North Pacific, and swearing an oath as follows:
I pledge loyalty to The North Pacific, obedience to her laws, and responsible action as a member of her society. I pledge to only register one nation to vote in The North Pacific. I pledge that no nation under my control will wage war against the North Pacific. I understand that if I break this oath I may permanently lose my voting privileges. In this manner, I petition the Speaker for citizenship in The North Pacific.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Sentence Issued by the Court in The North Pacific v Whole India:
The Court has determined that Deropia does have the standing to bring this request for review on behalf of Whole India. Whole India, as the defendant whose sentence is being challenged, has obvious and unassailable standing to raise concerns about impropriety in their own sentencing. Criminal defendants have the right to be represented by counsel during their trial, and that right to representation must necessarily extend to other issues raised with the court pertaining to that trial, even if they do not occur during the official trial process.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on Oath Violations by Former Members of the Regional Assembly:
The Court had determined that the matter is twofold. If the violation occurs after the time in which the nation is no longer a member of the Regional Assembly then they are not violating their oath as they are not bound to that oath at the current moment. Whereas if the violation occurs during the time in which the nation was a member of the Regional Assembly and was bound by that oath they may be tried for an Oath Violation.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on WA Nation Disclosure Requirements:
On the third point, the Court must examine the law in its entirety to determine whether or not WA Membership is a requirement, or a choice. At no point, under the Constitution or any element of the Legal Code, is World Assembly membership a requirement to participate. Membership alone is a choice. Choices come with consequences; some choices ease burdens, others impose them. The protections in the Bill of Rights are intended to protect all Nations of the North Pacific from unfair burdens imposed by their government. WA membership, however, is a choice, not an obligation.

Participation in activities which require WA membership is a choice, not an obligation. As such, any duty to report WA nations is, in effect, willingly shouldered by those players who choose to participate in such activities. The reporting requirements are imposed fairly, on all nations. That some nations choose to join the WA, thereby triggering this reporting requirement, is not a choice made for those players; it is a choice made by them. As such, the burden of reporting is willingly shouldered, and is not an unfair burden.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on RA Membership Requirements for Candidates:
It is worth also examining the intent of the regional legislative body, the Regional Assembly, while drafting the constitutional clause in question. In the thread in the Regional Assembly discussing the Constitutional Omnibus Act of August 2012, when asked about the meaning of the definite article in Article 6, Clause 1, then Speaker Gulliver stated: "The "the" there is deliberate. It means specifically the 15 days before the election in question, not any random 15 days, so it's not possible to argue that "I was in the assembly 15 days already, even if it wasn't continuous, therefore I'm good to run"."

It should be noted that taking the intention of the Regional Assembly into consideration when interpreting a statute is appropriate only when said statute is ambiguous or absurd. Neither of these is true in this case, as Article 6, Clause 1 of the Constitution unambiguously indicates that the requirement for candidates is that they have been in the Regional Assembly continuously for the fifteen days immediately preceding the opening of nominations. However, the legislature's intent here is in agreement with the actual meaning of the clause, and corroborates the interpretation adopted by the Court.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Time at which Oaths Become Binding:
It is the opinion of the Court that the Regional Assembly membership oath found in Section 6 Clause 2 of the Codified Law of the North Pacific becomes legally binding on RA applicants if and when they become members of the Regional Assembly, and remains binding only so long as they remain members.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Standard of Proof and Intent:
To start, the Court opines that "willful deception" is synonymous with "intentional deception", and that the difference in word choice does not require a different standard of proof between the two crimes.

As for the standard itself, there are two types of intention in the commission of fraud. The first is demonstrable intent, wherein the defendant can be shown, by their own statements or actions relating to the alleged crime, to have engaged in deception as defined previously in this ruling.

The second is reckless intent, wherein intent is established by argumentation on reasonable expectations. The harmful or beneficial consequence of the deception must be something a reasonable person could have expected, by which the defendant can themselves be reasonably expected to have either expected or recklessly ignored the risk of that consequence. Either is sufficient.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements:
Question Three - Is it a crime for a nation that is not the Vice Delegate to have the second most endorsements in the region?

It's not a crime merely to have more endorsements than the Vice Delegate: crimes are strictly defined in the criminal code (as per clause 1), and that's not one of them. In general, Reckless Endorsement Gathering is not a crime, but is a cause for ejection.

However, a Citizen could conceivably commit Gross Misconduct by violating their oath as citizen in egregious cases of Reckless Endorsement Gathering:

I, the leader of The North Pacific nation of [INSERT YOUR TNP NATION], pledge loyalty to The North Pacific, obedience to her laws, and responsible action as a member of her society. I pledge to only register one nation to vote in The North Pacific. I pledge that no nation under my control will wage war against the North Pacific. I understand that if I break this oath I may permanently lose my voting privileges. In this manner, I petition the Speaker for citizenship in The North Pacific.

However, where Reckless Endorsement Gathering is cause for ejection but not a crime, Gross Misconduct is a crime but is not cause for ejection:

8. Gross Misconduct will be punished by removal from office and the suspension of voting rights for whatever finite duration the Court sees fit.

[...]

Question One - Did Vice Delegate Bootsie, Security Counselor Plembobria, or Delegate Lord Ravenclaw break the law when the nation of Plembobria passed Bootsie's nation of Guslantis' endorsement count, or when Cheongji passed Guslantis' endorsement count?

The Court cannot give a criminal verdict in a request for review, nor rule on an indictment sight unseen.

However, the answers to questions two through five suggest that Lord Ravenclaw did not break the law by declining to eject either Cheongji or Plembobria, that as no claim has been made that Guslantis failed to have at least 75% of the serving Delegate's endorsement count there is no basis presented to consider Bootsie to have committed Gross Misconduct, and that as no case has been made that Plembobria acted irresponsibly there is no basis presented to consider Plembobria to have committed the same.
The Court opines the following:

Standing

This is a request for review concerning the crime of Gross Misconduct. The Petitioner filed this request as counsel on behalf of their then client Pigeonstan, the Defendant in the trial The North Pacific v Pigeonstan. While the Petitioner has ceased to act for Pigeonstan, the Court does not consider this makes a material difference in respect of standing. When counsel file a request for review they do not assert any standing of their own, but their client's standing, which ordinarily would survive a change of counsel. Where counsel cease to act for a client, the request for review lives on unless the client or new counsel withdraw it.

The request asserts that there is standing to challenge a specific aspect of the crime of Gross Misconduct, namely where the crime is committed by violation of the citizenship oath's pledge of "responsible action as a member of [The North Pacific's] society". It is contended that this is so vague that it deprives Pigeonstan, and other citizens, of due process of law, including prior notice, and of equal and fair treatment, contrary to Article 9 of the Bill of Rights. Pigeonstan is said to be affected at this stage because they are currently facing the jeopardy and stigma of a criminal trial.

The Court agrees that the jeopardy and stigma that a criminal indictment creates are sufficient for a defendant to be an affected party in relation to the crimes they are charged with and there is a clear connection between those laws and the effect. The Court does, therefore, accept this request, but does so cautiously. Requests for review are an inappropriate venue to decide criminal matters that call for decisions on matters of fact or for the exercise of judgement that depends on factual issues; the safeguards of the criminal process are not present in requests for review and such decisions in the absence of those safeguards could risk a fair trial. This request does not call for such decisions but poses a more abstract question that is not dependent upon the underlying facts of Pigeonstan's case, so does not pose such a risk.

Vagueness in Principle

The first question raised by the review is whether the Bill of Rights does restrict crimes from being too vaguely defined. The request argues that the effect on article 9 of the Bill of Rights is that, for criminal laws at least, there is requirement that laws be sufficiently precise.

Article 9 of the Bill of Rights contains a number of rights relevant to this question. It guarantees due process of law, which specifically includes a right to prior notice, and fair and equal protection of the provisions of the Constitution.

The Court accepts that these provisions do render overly vague criminal laws unconstitutional. If a law is so vague a nation cannot tell whether their conduct is criminal, that law does deprive that nation of prior notice of criminal liability and, thereby, of the opportunity to ensure their conduct is lawful. Moreover, it impacts on their right to due process of law more broadly, a crime with an amorphous boundary infringes on a nation’s ability to know what criminal conduct it is accused of and to mount an effective defence.

The right to equal and fair protection of the provisions of the Constitution can also be infringed by such laws. An unclear law not only impacts on a nation’s ability to assess its conduct, but also on the Court’s ability to do so. An overly vague criminal law may lead to different defendants being receiving different verdicts for the same conduct, due only to different subjective understandings by the Courts that try them. Such would be unfair and unequal.

Assessing Vagueness

This conclusion leads to a second question: how is the Court to decide whether a law is too vague.

It is obvious that there will be some imprecision in laws. There are limits to the precision of language and laws, in particular, aim to apply generally, such that it is almost inevitable that there will be hard cases at the margins. It appears to the Court, therefore, that it is not enough to merely say a law is vague in some respect or in some scenarios.

Further, it is a fact, and many would say a strength, of our constitutional structure that it incorporates a citizen legislature. That is an important factor for the Court to consider. Our laws, unlike those in many other jurisdictions, are not drawn up with precision by lawyers and trained draughtsmen but are hammered out by the citizens themselves. A degree of imprecision may be expected to follow from that and the Court should not sanction the choice of a citizen legislature by adopting an overly exacting standard in deciding on vagueness.

The Court also considers there may be other factors relevant to assessing particular laws. If a nation can avoid the effect of a law entirely, it may be that they have willingly shouldered its burdens as the Court held in its decision on WA Nation Disclosure Requirements, including, potentially, areas of vagueness in the law. If a law regulates officials, some vagueness may be the price those officials pay to exercise greater power over other nations. These factors are merely examples and others may also be relevant.

Set against these points are the rights of nations under article 9. Those rights is as just as much part of our constitutional structure and must be protected. The Court considers that, in general, the question for the Court when assessing whether a law is too vague is whether the law leaves a reasonable nation unable to say with reasonable certainty whether would risk criminal liability in relation to a substantial range of conduct. As noted, particular circumstances may sometimes justify a modified approach.

[[Whatever else it is we opine]]

EDIT: I have also now spent some time trying to get my thoughts on vagueness in general set out in the form of an opinion and added that to the above.
EDIT2: spelling
 
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I decided to try to write an opinion to expand on the idea that I suggested above of adopting a fairly restricted interpretation of "responsible action", together with other reasons why some vagueness might be allowable in relation to gross misconduct, to see if it maybe bridges some of the space between us. I think, as I've thought about this more, I am more attracted to it as an idea, but I do admit that I have some concern that it is kind of kicking the can further down the road. I am, of course, open to changes in general (to that which is below and that which is above) and, particularly, to a more precise statement of the test I have set out for "responsible action".

Gross Misconduct
Moving on to consider Gross Misconduct in particular, it is useful to set out the crime's elements, for the context in which "responsible action" to be interpreted.

The criminal conduct caught by the crime is that which violates a nation's legally mandated sworn oath. This covers, at least, the three oaths now provided for by the Legal Code, namely the oath of office, the citizenship oath, and the NPA oath. The citizenship oath, as held by the Court in its decisions on Oath Violations by Former Members of the Regional Assembly and on the Time at which Oaths Become Binding, applies only to a nation's conduct while a citizen. As a result, a nation cannot be guilty of gross misconduct in relation to conduct before becoming, or after ceasing to be, a citizen.

Further, the conduct is punishable only where a requirement of willfulness or negligence is met. The Court, in its decision on the Standard of Proof and Intent, addressed willfulness in the context of Fraud and held it to be equivalent to intention, which was also addressed in that decision. Negligence must mean something lesser than that and the Court would find that it means a failure to take reasonable care to do what is required by law.

Responsible Action

It is with those features of the crime in mind that the Court must determine what "responsible action" means and whether its meaning is so vague as to be unconstitutional.

The Court has been referred by both briefs to the discussions of the Regional Assembly when amending the oath in order to help ascertain the meaning of "responsible action". It can, as the Court's decision on RA Membership Requirements for Candidates notes, be appropriate and useful to refer to the Assembly's discussions where a law may be ambiguous or absurd and the Court considers that it is right to say that there is ambiguity in "responsible action" sufficient to look at those discussions. However, the statements made in the course of debating the phrase do not provide only limited assistance in determining its meaning. While one member put forward a potential meaning, that member was not the proposer of the Bill and there were other members who considered the phrase ambiguous and concerned about a potentially subjective reading of it. A statement that a person considers a phrase is ambiguous, self-evidently, does not provide insight as to the meaning of the phrase.

The request, effectively, proceeds on the basis that the meaning of "responsible action" can be reduced to a simple, subjective question of whether a given nation considers conduct responsible or irresponsible, as the case may be. A number of examples of conduct that could be covered by the crime of Gross Misconduct on this understanding are set out: a nation standing in an election it will lose; a nation telegramming another a mild swear; a nation filing an unmeritorious request for review. The Court agrees that this is a possible meaning of the phrase and that, if this were its proper meaning for the purposes of Gross Misconduct, it would be unconstitutionally vague; such a subjective meaning would deprive a reasonable nation of any meaningful ability to say whether its conduct is criminal.

However, the Court is also of the view that, where the wording of the law can bear different meanings and some of them would be unconstitutional, the Court should generally look to a meaning that would not be. Further, the Court is of the view that it is unlikely that the Regional Assembly could have meant to pass a law that was so broad as to be unconstitutional, particularly where, as noted, a number of members expressed concern about criminalising conduct on a subjective basis. These points have their limits: the Court should not adopt a meaning that does not fit plausibly with the particular wording of the law or that would be contrary to its surrounding context.

The Court notes that, in its decision on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements, some consideration was given to Gross Misconduct committed by citizens. In that decision the Court stated that "a citizen could conceivably commit Gross Misconduct by violating their oath as citizen in egregious cases of Reckless Endorsement Gathering". This lends credence to the possibility that Gross Misconduct is not committed merely by some minor breach of the law or trivial irresponsibility, but that something greater is required.

The Court concludes that, in this case, the Court ought to adopt a narrower interpretation of "responsible action" than that envisioned in the request. Doing so would comply with the requirements of the Bill of Rights, it would avoid finding unconstitutional an otherwise viable law, and it would not be contrary to the law's wording or its context. A violation of the pledge of "responsible action", for the purposes of Gross Misconduct, is conduct which a reasonable citizen would find obviously and seriously irresponsible; further, conduct which amounts to a nation exercising one of its rights protected by the Bill of Rights, even if it could fall within that meaning, is not a violation of that pledge.

The Court finds that, with this meaning, "responsible action" is not so vague as to be unconstitutional. A reasonable nation would be able to say for most conduct whether it is covered by the crime of Gross Misconduct and, while there may remain areas of some doubt, the Court considers, as noted above, that cases falling at the margins would not be enough to render it otherwise. In so finding the Court also has regard to other factors relevant to the issue, particularly: that the crime is not satisfied by conduct alone but requires either willfulness or negligence; that citizenship is voluntary, so a nation can guarantee with certainty that it is outside of the scope of Gross Misconduct by not seeking or by renouncing citizenship; and that citizens, though not exercising power on the same level as officials, do wield power over their fellow nations, by making laws for them and choosing the officials that administer them, and so have (and in the oath accept) a greater need to act with responsibility.

Conclusion

The Court agrees with the request that criminal laws can be so vague as to be unconstitutional, as they infringe on a nation's right to due process, including prior notice, and to fair and equal protection of the provisions of the Constitution. Whether a given criminal law is unconstitutional is generally to be answered by considering whether the law leaves reasonable nation unable to say with reasonable certainty whether it would risk criminal liability in relation to a substantial range of conduct, but other factors may also be relevant to considering particular laws.

Gross Misconduct by violation of the pledge of "responsible action" cannot be satisfied only by conduct that could be subjectively thought irresponsible. Such an interpretation would be unconstitutional and the Court considers it improper to adopt it where there are other constitutional interpretations that are open to the Court. Instead, the Court concludes that the pledge is only violated by conduct that a reasonable citizen would find obviously and seriously irresponsible and that, where the conduct is protected by the Bill of Rights, it does not violate the pledge even where it could otherwise be characterised as irresponsible.

The Court finds that, applying that meaning and considering other factors relevant to Gross Misconduct, the crime of Gross Misconduct committed by violation of the pledge of "responsible action" is not unconstitutionally vague. The Court, therefore, decides that the indictment filed was permissible and does not consider any further order is required.
 
I am in full agreement. Of course there could be situations where the vagueness is unreasonably applied, but this case isn't one of those.
 
As indicated above, I have made some changes for spelling and grammar. More significantly, I have tried to reduce the length of the opinion a bit and have cut out some points that were not needed for this case (such as defining negligence).

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Ruling of the Court of The North Pacific
In regards to the judicial inquiry filed by saintpeter on behalf of Pigeonstan on the Constitutionality of Vague Laws and Gross Misconduct
Opinion drafted by Zyvetskistaahn, joined by Wonderess and Lady Raven Wing

The Court took into consideration the inquiry filed here by saintpeter.

The Court took into consideration the legal briefs filed by Dreadton and saintpeter.

The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Constitution of The North Pacific:

Article 4. The Court:
2. Reviews of laws or government policies and actions must be made by request of an affected party unless there is a compelling regional interest in resolving it.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Bill of Rights of The North Pacific:
Bill of Rights for all Nations of The North Pacific:
7. When charged with criminal acts, Nations of The North Pacific shall have a fair, impartial, and public trial before a neutral and impartial judicial officer. In any criminal proceeding, a Nation is presumed innocent unless guilt is proven to the fact finder by reasonably certain evidence. A Nation may be represented by any counsel of the Nation's choosing. No Nation convicted of a crime shall be subject to a punishment disproportionate to that crime.

[...]

9. Each Nation in The North Pacific is guaranteed the organization and operation of the governmental authorities of the region on fundamental principles of democracy, accountability, and transparency. No action by the governmental authorities of the region shall deny to any Nation of The North Pacific, due process of law, including prior notice and the opportunity to be heard, nor deny to any Nation of The North Pacific the equal and fair treatment and protection of the provisions of the Constitution. No governmental authority shall have power to adopt or impose an ex post facto law or a bill of attainder as to any act for purposes of criminal proceedings.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of the Legal Code of The North Pacific:
Section 1.9: Gross Misconduct:
25. "Gross Misconduct" is defined as the violation of an individual's legally mandated sworn oath, either willfully or through negligence.
Section 6.1: Citizenship Applications:
2. Any resident may apply for citizenship using their regional forum account, by providing the name of their nation in The North Pacific, and swearing an oath as follows:
I pledge loyalty to The North Pacific, obedience to her laws, and responsible action as a member of her society. I pledge to only register one nation to vote in The North Pacific. I pledge that no nation under my control will wage war against the North Pacific. I understand that if I break this oath I may permanently lose my voting privileges. In this manner, I petition the Speaker for citizenship in The North Pacific.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Sentence Issued by the Court in The North Pacific v Whole India:
The Court has determined that Deropia does have the standing to bring this request for review on behalf of Whole India. Whole India, as the defendant whose sentence is being challenged, has obvious and unassailable standing to raise concerns about impropriety in their own sentencing. Criminal defendants have the right to be represented by counsel during their trial, and that right to representation must necessarily extend to other issues raised with the court pertaining to that trial, even if they do not occur during the official trial process.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on WA Nation Disclosure Requirements:
On the third point, the Court must examine the law in its entirety to determine whether or not WA Membership is a requirement, or a choice. At no point, under the Constitution or any element of the Legal Code, is World Assembly membership a requirement to participate. Membership alone is a choice. Choices come with consequences; some choices ease burdens, others impose them. The protections in the Bill of Rights are intended to protect all Nations of the North Pacific from unfair burdens imposed by their government. WA membership, however, is a choice, not an obligation.

Participation in activities which require WA membership is a choice, not an obligation. As such, any duty to report WA nations is, in effect, willingly shouldered by those players who choose to participate in such activities. The reporting requirements are imposed fairly, on all nations. That some nations choose to join the WA, thereby triggering this reporting requirement, is not a choice made for those players; it is a choice made by them. As such, the burden of reporting is willingly shouldered, and is not an unfair burden.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on Oath Violations by Former Members of the Regional Assembly:
The Court had determined that the matter is twofold. If the violation occurs after the time in which the nation is no longer a member of the Regional Assembly then they are not violating their oath as they are not bound to that oath at the current moment. Whereas if the violation occurs during the time in which the nation was a member of the Regional Assembly and was bound by that oath they may be tried for an Oath Violation.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Time at which Oaths Become Binding:
It is the opinion of the Court that the Regional Assembly membership oath found in Section 6 Clause 2 of the Codified Law of the North Pacific becomes legally binding on RA applicants if and when they become members of the Regional Assembly, and remains binding only so long as they remain members.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on the Standard of Proof and Intent:
To start, the Court opines that "willful deception" is synonymous with "intentional deception", and that the difference in word choice does not require a different standard of proof between the two crimes.

As for the standard itself, there are two types of intention in the commission of fraud. The first is demonstrable intent, wherein the defendant can be shown, by their own statements or actions relating to the alleged crime, to have engaged in deception as defined previously in this ruling.

The second is reckless intent, wherein intent is established by argumentation on reasonable expectations. The harmful or beneficial consequence of the deception must be something a reasonable person could have expected, by which the defendant can themselves be reasonably expected to have either expected or recklessly ignored the risk of that consequence. Either is sufficient.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on RA Membership Requirements for Candidates:
It is worth also examining the intent of the regional legislative body, the Regional Assembly, while drafting the constitutional clause in question. In the thread in the Regional Assembly discussing the Constitutional Omnibus Act of August 2012, when asked about the meaning of the definite article in Article 6, Clause 1, then Speaker Gulliver stated: "The "the" there is deliberate. It means specifically the 15 days before the election in question, not any random 15 days, so it's not possible to argue that "I was in the assembly 15 days already, even if it wasn't continuous, therefore I'm good to run"."

It should be noted that taking the intention of the Regional Assembly into consideration when interpreting a statute is appropriate only when said statute is ambiguous or absurd. Neither of these is true in this case, as Article 6, Clause 1 of the Constitution unambiguously indicates that the requirement for candidates is that they have been in the Regional Assembly continuously for the fifteen days immediately preceding the opening of nominations. However, the legislature's intent here is in agreement with the actual meaning of the clause, and corroborates the interpretation adopted by the Court.
The Court took into consideration the relevant portions of its decision on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements:
Question Three - Is it a crime for a nation that is not the Vice Delegate to have the second most endorsements in the region?

It's not a crime merely to have more endorsements than the Vice Delegate: crimes are strictly defined in the criminal code (as per clause 1), and that's not one of them. In general, Reckless Endorsement Gathering is not a crime, but is a cause for ejection.

However, a Citizen could conceivably commit Gross Misconduct by violating their oath as citizen in egregious cases of Reckless Endorsement Gathering:

I, the leader of The North Pacific nation of [INSERT YOUR TNP NATION], pledge loyalty to The North Pacific, obedience to her laws, and responsible action as a member of her society. I pledge to only register one nation to vote in The North Pacific. I pledge that no nation under my control will wage war against the North Pacific. I understand that if I break this oath I may permanently lose my voting privileges. In this manner, I petition the Speaker for citizenship in The North Pacific.

However, where Reckless Endorsement Gathering is cause for ejection but not a crime, Gross Misconduct is a crime but is not cause for ejection:

8. Gross Misconduct will be punished by removal from office and the suspension of voting rights for whatever finite duration the Court sees fit.

[...]

Question One - Did Vice Delegate Bootsie, Security Counselor Plembobria, or Delegate Lord Ravenclaw break the law when the nation of Plembobria passed Bootsie's nation of Guslantis' endorsement count, or when Cheongji passed Guslantis' endorsement count?

The Court cannot give a criminal verdict in a request for review, nor rule on an indictment sight unseen.

However, the answers to questions two through five suggest that Lord Ravenclaw did not break the law by declining to eject either Cheongji or Plembobria, that as no claim has been made that Guslantis failed to have at least 75% of the serving Delegate's endorsement count there is no basis presented to consider Bootsie to have committed Gross Misconduct, and that as no case has been made that Plembobria acted irresponsibly there is no basis presented to consider Plembobria to have committed the same.
The Court opines the following:

Standing

This is a request for review concerning the crime of Gross Misconduct. It was filed by counsel on behalf of their then client Pigeonstan, Defendant in the trial The North Pacific v Pigeonstan. While the Petitioner has ceased to act for Pigeonstan, the Court does not consider this makes a material difference to standing. A request filed by counsel is not based on their own standing, but their client's standing, which ordinarily would survive a change of counsel.

The request challenges Gross Misconduct committed by violation of the citizenship oath's pledge of "responsible action as a member of [The North Pacific's] society". It is contended that this pledge is so vague that it deprives Pigeonstan of due process of law, including prior notice, and of equal and fair treatment, contrary to Article 9 of the Bill of Rights. Pigeonstan is said to be affected because they face the jeopardy and stigma of a criminal trial.

The Court agrees that a criminal charge is sufficient for Pigeonstan to be an affected party in relation to the crimes they are charged with and there is a clear connection between those laws and an effect on their rights. The Court, therefore, accepts this request, but does so cautiously. Requests for review not the appropriate venue to decide criminal matters that call for decisions on matters of fact or for the exercise of judgement that depends on factual issues; the safeguards of trials are not present in requests for review and such decisions in the absence of those safeguards could risk a fair trial. However, this request poses an abstract question that is not dependent upon the underlying facts of Pigeonstan's case, so does not pose such a risk.

Vagueness in Principle

The first question raised by the review is whether the Bill of Rights restricts crimes from being too vaguely defined.

Article 9 of the Bill of Rights guarantees due process of law, specifically including a right to prior notice, and fair and equal protection of the provisions of the Constitution.

The Court accepts that those protections do render overly vague criminal laws unconstitutional. If a law is so vague a nation cannot tell whether their conduct is criminal, that nation is deprived of prior notice of criminal liability and, thereby, of the opportunity to ensure their conduct is lawful. Moreover, it impacts on their right to due process of law more broadly: a crime with an amorphous boundary infringes on a nation’s ability to know what it is accused of and to mount an effective defence.

Equal and fair protection of the provisions of the Constitution can also be infringed by such laws. An unclear law not only impacts on a nation’s ability to assess its conduct, but also on the Court’s ability to do so. An overly vague criminal law may lead to different defendants receiving different verdicts for the same conduct, due only to differing subjective understandings of the Courts that try them. That would be unfair and unequal.

Assessing Vagueness

This conclusion leads to a second question: how to decide whether a law is too vague.

There will always be some imprecision in laws. There are limits to the precision of language and laws, in particular, aim to apply generally. It is inevitable that there will be hard cases at the margins. Therefore, it is not enough to merely say a law is vague in some respect or in some scenarios.

Further, it is a fact, and many would say a strength, of our constitutional structure that it incorporates a citizen legislature. That is an important factor for the Court to consider. Our laws, unlike those in many other jurisdictions, are not drawn up with precision by lawyers and trained draughtsmen but are hammered out by the citizens themselves. A degree of imprecision may be expected to follow and the constitutional choice of a citizen legislature should not be sanctioned by the adoption of an overly exacting standard in deciding on vagueness.

The Court also considers there may be other factors relevant to assessing particular laws. If a nation can avoid the effect of a law entirely, it may be that they have willingly shouldered its burdens as the Court held in its decision on WA Nation Disclosure Requirements, including, potentially, areas of vagueness in the law. If a law regulates officials, some vagueness may be the price those officials pay to exercise greater power over other nations. These factors are only examples and others may also be relevant.

Set against these points are the rights of nations under article 9. Those rights are just as much part of our constitutional structure and must be protected. The Court considers that, in general, when assessing whether a law is too vague the question is whether the law leaves a reasonable nation unable to say with reasonable certainty whether would risk criminal liability in relation to a substantial range of conduct. As noted, particular circumstances may justify some deviation.

Gross Misconduct

It is useful to set out Gross Misconduct’s elements, to understand the context in which "responsible action" is to be interpreted.

The conduct caught by the crime is that which violates a nation's legally mandated sworn oath. This covers, at least, the three oaths now in the Legal Code: the oath of office; the citizenship oath; and the NPA oath. The citizenship oath, as held in the Court’s decisions on Oath Violations by Former Members of the Regional Assembly and on the Time at which Oaths Become Binding, applies only to a nation's conduct while a citizen. A nation cannot be guilty of gross misconduct in relation to conduct before becoming, or after ceasing to be, a citizen.

Further, the conduct is punishable only where it is willful or negligent. The Court, in its decision on the Standard of Proof and Intent, addressed the meaning of willful in the context of Fraud and held it to be equivalent to intentional, which was also considered in that decision.

Responsible Action

It is in that context that the Court must determine what "responsible action" means and whether its meaning is unconstitutionally vague.

The Court has been referred to the discussions of the Regional Assembly when amending the oath. As the Court's decision on RA Membership Requirements for Candidates notes, it can sometimes be appropriate and useful to refer to the Assembly's discussions where a law is ambiguous or absurd. The Court considers that there is ambiguity in "responsible action" sufficient to look at those discussions. However, the statements made in the course of debating the phrase give only limited assistance. While one member put forward a potential meaning, they were not the proposer of the Bill and there were other members who considered the phrase ambiguous and were concerned about a potentially subjective reading of it.

The request, effectively, proceeds on the basis that "responsible action" could be reduced to a subjective question of whether a given nation considers conduct responsible or irresponsible. Examples of what could be covered on this understanding are set out: a nation standing in an election it will lose; a nation telegramming another a mild swear; a nation filing an unmeritorious request for review. The Court agrees that this is a possible meaning of the phrase and that, if it were its proper meaning for the purposes of Gross Misconduct, it would be unconstitutionally vague. Such a subjective meaning would deprive a reasonable nation of any meaningful ability to say whether its conduct is criminal.

However, the Court is of the view that where a law can bear different meanings and some of them would be unconstitutional, the Court should generally look to a meaning compliant with the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Further, the Court finds it unlikely that the Regional Assembly could have meant to pass a law that was so broad as to be unconstitutional, particularly where a number of members expressed concern about criminalising conduct on a subjective basis. These points have their limits: the Court should not adopt a meaning that does not fit plausibly with the particular wording of the law or that would be contrary to its surrounding context.

The Court notes that, in its decision on Endorsement Count Requirements and the Solicitation of Endorsements, some consideration was given to Gross Misconduct committed by citizens. The Court stated that "a citizen could conceivably commit Gross Misconduct by violating their oath as citizen in egregious cases of Reckless Endorsement Gathering". This lends credence to a view that Gross Misconduct is not committed merely by some trivial irresponsibility, but that something greater is required. The very name of the crime supports this also, it is Gross Misconduct.

The Court concludes it ought to adopt a narrow interpretation of "responsible action". This would comply with the requirements of the Bill of Rights, it would avoid finding unconstitutional an otherwise viable law, and it would not be contrary to the law's wording or its context. A violation of the pledge of "responsible action", for the purposes of Gross Misconduct, is conduct which a reasonable citizen would find obviously and seriously irresponsible. Further, where the conduct could not be criminalised due to being protected by the Bill of Rights, even if it could fall within the above meaning, it is not a violation of the pledge.

The Court finds that, with this meaning, "responsible action" is not so vague as to be unconstitutional. A reasonable nation would be able to say for most conduct whether it is covered by the crime of Gross Misconduct and, while there may remain areas of some doubt, the Court considers that cases falling at the margins would not be enough to render the meaning unconstitutional. In so finding the Court also has regard to other factors relevant to the issue, particularly: that the crime is not satisfied by conduct alone but the conduct must be willful or negligent; that a nation can guarantee that it is outside of the scope of Gross Misconduct by not seeking or by renouncing citizenship; and that citizens, though not exercising power on the same level as officials, do wield power over their fellow nations, by making laws for them and choosing the officials that administer them, and so have (and in the oath accept) a greater need to act with responsibility.

Conclusion

The Court finds that criminal laws can be so vague that they are unconstitutional, as they can infringe on a nation's rights under Article 9. Whether a criminal law is too vague is generally to be answered by considering whether it leaves reasonable nation unable to say with reasonable certainty whether it would risk criminal liability in relation to a substantial range of conduct, but other factors may also be relevant to considering particular laws.

Gross Misconduct by violation of the pledge of "responsible action" cannot be satisfied only by conduct that could be subjectively thought irresponsible. Such an interpretation would be unconstitutional and the Court considers it improper to adopt it where there are other constitutional interpretations that are open to the Court. Instead, the Court concludes that the pledge is only violated by conduct that a reasonable citizen would find obviously and seriously irresponsible and that conduct protected by the Bill of Rights does not violate the pledge even where it could be characterised as irresponsible.

The Court finds that, applying that meaning and considering other factors relevant to Gross Misconduct, the crime of Gross Misconduct committed by violation of the pledge of "responsible action" is not unconstitutionally vague.
 
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