Legal Question in Administrative Law in New York

Can I use issues on the unwritten laws in traffic court's, subject matter jurisd

I have been doing alot of research on unwritten laws, Laws before the legislative was in effect. And subject matter jurisdiction. Challenging the presumption of authority of the police/courts using knowledge/facts. The agenda of the constitution. Thomas Jefferson did state all authority belongs to the people. Which I do take that as us,and the courts are a form of government. ''We are Sovereigns'' To my understanding the courts operate under laws of the sea (Maritime Admirality Laws). And we are subject of those Laws even though we live on land because we are classified as a product. My question. Is it adviseable to use this pholisphy on the courts,(traffic tickets) and has anyone ever been successful using this method in NY or any other states? Thanks alot for your time in reading a situation of mine and I'm looking forward to an answer on my delimma.


Asked on 8/03/05, 11:52 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

Andrew Nitzberg Andrew Nitzberg & Associates

Re: Can I use issues on the unwritten laws in traffic court's, subject matter ju

Avoid this nonsense. This is no period in American history where there was no legislative authority. Think about it; there were town councils, appointed governors, and the authority of the British government. The US laws and legislatures succeeded these authorities.

The time you refer to is 'pre-history'; before writing.

Please do not ask me to debate this further.

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Answered on 8/03/05, 1:48 pm


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