After closing the door, Hesta turned on the computer and began to verify everything she heard tonight.
Yi Ti’s mastery of Common Language is not proficient enough, and there are often some understandable but strange wordings in her narration. Fortunately, her framework is very clear. The overall context is to follow the chronological order, focusing on introducing Ava into the world. The three most influential major cases after Livable Place were extracted, and some of Ava’s public statements were extracted as supporting evidence.
Therefore, as long as he follows those keywords, Hestad can completely retrieve what he heard tonight on his own.
According to Yi Ti, as a region where aboriginal people transition from wilderness to livable land, in the early years there were often situations where some habitable land laws could not be fully applied. For this reason, the third district government specially established a special project in Niah Province. An "out-of-court" court was established to deal with cases that would be difficult for regular courts to deal with.
Generally speaking, the out-of-court court needs to consider the specific wilderness context in the case to adjust the sentence and sentencing to reflect the fairness of the livable place and consideration for the new residents.
The so-called "out-of-court court" has a total of three judges. Any case that flows into the "out-of-court court" will eventually be decided by these three judges. Unlike ordinary courts, these three judges are not allowed to abstain from voting. There will be no one-on-one draw.
At first, Hesta searched for "Outside the Court", but there were very few results that met her expectations. After several attempts, she entered "Nia Province. Ava. Court", and a new term immediately jumped into her eyes - —
Adjudicator's Court.
The word "adjudicator" made Hesta's eyes dazzle, and she couldn't help but frown - in any case, she was a mercury needle who grew up in the third district. Even if the province of Nia was not her permanent residence, she It shouldn't be ignored...especially since this is the position Ava once held.
After a cursory reading of the Adjudicator's Tribunal introduction, Hestad understood why. This court was established in 4577. In 4615, the fifty-six-year-old Ava became the first and last female adjudicator in the adjudicator's court.
In 4617, the Adjudicator's Court system was abolished, and all cases handled by this court were sent back to the ordinary courts for trial, and all decisions must be placed under the laws of the habitable place.
Hesta did the math and found that in 4617... he was still in Short Call Alley at that time.
In the introduction to the adjudicator's court, the fact that "the adjudicator is not a judge" is emphasized several times. Although after the Tribunal began operating, few people really cared. However, when this "court" was first established, the founders obviously intentionally separated the two, otherwise they would not have specifically proposed the new concept of "adjudicator". The biggest difference between the two is that judges base their judgments on legal provisions, while "adjudicators" base their judgments on the "public order and good customs" of wilderness life.
Hestad almost immediately smelled the danger. There was still a huge gray area between the law and real life, not to mention "public order and good customs"... The ambiguous part was bound to give some people the privilege of "definition".
Soon, Hestad began to search for the three cases mentioned by Yi Ti: the estate case of William Allebe, the case of Nicola Sommerset's job search, and the case of deprivation of civil rights in Dominica. In the three years that Ava briefly became the "adjudicator," she spent a lot of time on these three cases, and all of them, without exception, revolved around male victims.
The first is the case of Albey’s estate. Alebe was a young man from the Doji Wilderness. After being allowed to enter the Niah Province, he fell in love with Dusan, the daughter of a bakery owner here, and got married the following year. This marriage aroused strong opposition from Dusan's parents, so they kicked their daughter out and announced that they would no longer have any contact with each other.
After the marriage, Alebe and Dusan had a good relationship, and the two soon had a daughter. In the third year after their marriage, the baker and his wife died of a sudden illness. In the same year, Dusan and her brother had a dispute over the inheritance left by their parents. The baker and his wife did not leave a will, and the brother believed that since the sister had violated her parents' wishes, After she got married and left home, she had no share in the family property. However, her sister argued hard, saying that through various mediations and help from her mother in the past two years, she had almost reached a reconciliation with her father. The brother and sister went to court, but before the verdict was handed down, Dusan died in a car accident, leaving only Albe and his daughter to live a difficult life.
On the one hand, after the death of his wife, he was unable to apply for childcare subsidy for his family, which is a welfare benefit specially provided to families who have lost their main source of income - usually unemployed and widowed women. As an able-bodied man, you will be rejected in the first round of screening.
On the other hand, Dusan's brother took back the apartment where Albey and his wife lived. The reason was that although Dusan had always lived in the apartment, it had always been a property in his mother's name, so it also belonged to the bakery owner and his wife. property. Alebe must immediately pay back the rent for the past year, otherwise he must move out with his children within three months.
As an immigrant from the wasteland, Albey had few relatives and friends in the province of Nia. When he had nowhere to turn, he remembered that he had been in the habitable land for less than five years and was still not a complete citizen of the habitable place. , the desperate Albey wrote a letter to the then adjudicator's court with the attitude of giving it a try... and this letter happened to be sent to Ava's desk.
Nine months later, Alebey received the property of the apartment and a third of the deposit from the bakery owner and his wife.
The second case, the job search case of Nicola Somoser, was about a young immigrant from the wasteland who mistakenly wrote his name in the feminine form when filling out his personal information when entering the country. Therefore, even though his gender was listed as "Male," most of the business letters or receipts he received were addressed as "Ms. Nicola." This was originally a harmless misunderstanding. However, when Nikolai tried to find an electrician-related job through the employment center, the employment consultant repeatedly suggested that he consider receiving a one-and-a-half-year nursing training, claiming that in addition to this job There are currently no positions suitable for him.
Nikolai had no choice but to attend this training. After about a year, his employment counselor retired and he was assigned to a young woman. The new counselor was very puzzled after reading his resume carefully. : You already have four or five years of experience as an electrician. Why don't you just find a related job instead of attending a nursing training that is beyond your reach?
Nicholas ran to the old consultant to ask the reason. The old consultant who saw Nicholas in person for the first time widened his eyes and said, "Oh! So you are a young man! I always thought you were a little girl!"
After learning the real reason, the angry Nicholas filed a complaint and took the original consultant to court. After hearing about the case, Ava took the initiative to add it to her to-do list.
About half a year later, Nicholas received a public apology from the old employment consultant and a financial compensation of 150,000 robi, but he still insisted on completing the nursing training and later successfully found a position in a hospital with a fairly good salary. ——At least much better than ordinary electricians.