Relationship to the parties and subject matter is relevant

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Relationship to the Parties and Subject Matter Is Relevant

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This entry affirms that lawful competence under Tsm’syen law depends in part on relationship to the parties involved and the subject matter at issue. Relationship shapes understanding, responsibility, and the capacity to address matters correctly.

Core Principle

Relationship to the parties and subject matter is relevant.

Meaning

Relationship refers to lawful connection to:

  • The people involved
  • The land or territory affected
  • The history and consequences of the matter
  • The responsibilities carried by houses or clans

Authority exercised without relationship is limited in competence.

Relationship to Parties

Competence is strengthened by:

  • Proximity to those affected
  • Shared responsibility or accountability
  • Recognition by the parties involved
  • Understanding of relational consequences

Distance from the parties limits the ability to act lawfully.

Relationship to Subject Matter

Competence also depends on connection to the subject itself.

This includes:

  • Knowledge of the land, waters, or resources involved
  • Familiarity with the specific ayaawx governing the matter
  • Awareness of relevant adaawk and precedent
  • Understanding of how consequences unfold over time

Abstract authority lacks the context required for lawful resolution.

Limits of Detached Authority

Authority lacking relationship may:

  • Misread harm or responsibility
  • Apply law at the wrong level
  • Undermine witnessing and public memory
  • Produce outcomes that appear final without restoring balance

Detachment weakens legitimacy.

Relationship and Standing

Standing is affected by relationship.

Those lacking lawful relationship:

  • May observe
  • May offer information

but do not acquire jurisdiction or decision-making authority by default.

Continuity

By recognizing relationship as a condition of competence, Tsm’syen law ensures that decisions remain grounded, accountable, and capable of preserving balance across generations.


See also: Competent Jurisdiction