status: https://faculty.washington.edu/kerim/nomic/cases/#3851 (This document is informational only and contains no game actions).
=============================== CFJ 3851 =============================== R. Lee attempted to perform a forbidden action in the message in evidence. ========================================================================== Caller: G. Barred: R. Lee Judge: Publius Scribonius Scholasticus Judgement: TRUE ========================================================================== History: Called by G.: 19 Jun 2020 02:49:52 Assigned to Publius Scribonius Scholasticus: 20 Jun 2020 00:26:04 Judged TRUE by Publius Scribonius Scholasticus: 26 Jun 2020 15:49:22 ========================================================================== Caller's Evidence: R. Lee wrote: > I intend, without objection, to amed the rules in the following > inconsequential way: > Amend every word in the ruleset except the rules at power 4 to read > "Meep" Caller's Arguments: In reference to: Attempting a forbidden action is PROHIBITED, and is the Class-4 Crime of Engaging in Forbidden Arts. We never really define "attempt" though we use it a lot in the rules. Generally, if you begin the prerequisites of a process to do something (i.e. announcing intent to perform an action in a legal way that begins a waiting period) a person would say you're "attempting" to do it. ("What was that announcement for?" "oh, e's attempting to win by apathy"). -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Gratuitous Arguments by R. Lee: Merely thinking and planning to commit murder isn't attempted murder, the acts carried out have to be "more than merely preparatory" (under English law). The same applies to this analogous crime, merely preparing to take the ossifying action is not an attempt; attempt is actually doing an action (even if that action fails, as it would ossify Agora). The thing my proposal had to do with it was that it removed the bit that said "intending to do a forbidden art is a crime" (or whatever). For what it's worth under the common sense factors, the fact that making a formal intent to do an action that would ossify the game was specifically removed from the rule means that it is unlikely the rule is meant to still criminalize it. rules tend to think intending anything you want is okay and criminalizing formal intent is bad, see the No Faking rule (exempting intent) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Gratuitous response by G.: I submit, m'lud, that the fact that my learned opponent believed the concept of "intent" was in the previous rule version shows that "attempt", in a natural sense, coveys the sense of intent in the (unremoved) text. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Judge Publius Scribonius Scholasticus' Arguments: First, let's look at the common language definition of "attempt", one of which is "[To] make an effort to achieve or complete".[0] By this definition, it seems clear that, since an intent is an effort to complete the intended action, R. Lee did attempt to perform a forbidden action; however, we should also look to the use of "attempt" as a term of art in jurisprudence. Here, we find possibly conflicting definitions: "Any act that is more than merely preparatory to the intended commission of a crime"[1] and "the crime of having the intent to commit and taking action in an effort to commit a crime that fails or is prevented".[2] The second of these is clearly fulfilled as R. Lee stated eir intent publicly and took action towards the commission of the crime, but the first rests upon whether the intent was "merely preparatory". Given that the statement of intent was a necessary condition for the later commission of the crime and could not have reasonably served any other purpose, I find that the intent was more than merely preparatory. Given that the three definitions are agreeable with respect to the circumstances, we need not further analyze which is best to use. As a result, I assign a judgment of TRUE to CFJ 3851. [0]https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/attempt [1] "attempt." In **A Dictionary of Law**, edited by Law, Jonathan. : Oxford University Press, 2018. [2]https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/attempt#legalDictionary ==========================================================================