Patriotdiscussions wrote:If you can not prove if my statement about prima facie law is true or false then your [sic] not as bright as you hoped.
Dan Evans is light years ahead of you in brightness, my boy.
And we're not here to "prove" whether a statement you make is true or false. We're here to explain the law, and to expose scams.
Your statement is gibberish in part because it's not properly constructed and, in part, because you don't understand the legal terms you used
in the specific context in which you used them.
The term "prima facie" when used to refer to a statute in the way you have done refers to the effect of referring to a particular publication of the law. The term "non-positive law" when used in the way you have done refers to an aspect of the status of the particular, actual physical document (or, in the internet age, perhaps the on-line version of same).
Let's look at the Internal Revenue Code as an example.
The "Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended" as published in the many physical paper volumes of the United States Statutes at Large is what we call "positive law."
The physical, paper object known as "Title 26 of the United States Code" -- which also happens to be called the "Internal Revenue Code", is what we call "non-positive law." This is a separate publication from the United States Statutes at Large.
However, except for one known typographical error in certain publications of "Title 26 of the United States Code" (if I recall correctly, in section 6104), the two texts are in relevant part IDENTICAL, right down to the last comma and period.
Under the law, "Title 26 of the United States Code", also known as the "Internal Revenue Code" is prima facie evidence of what is in the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended" as published in the United States Statutes at Large. That means that THE PERSON CLAIMING THAT THERE IS SOME SORT OF DISCREPANCY between the two has the burden of coming forward with evidence of the discrepancy. IF YOU DO NOT DO THAT, AND YOU DO NOT CONVINCE THE COURT THAT YOU ARE RIGHT, then blabbering with terms like "prima facie" and "non-positive law" is pointless.
Earth calling: The term "non-positive law" does NOT MEAN "NOT THE LAW." The term "prima facie" does not mean "not the law."
Further, many lawyers and judges don't even use these two publications. Many lawyers and judges use publications of these laws from private publishing companies, such as CCH, West, and so on.
THE SAME IS TRUE OF CASE LAW. Most lawyers and judges use re-prints of court cases from private publishing companies rather than the official copies issued by the courts. GENERALLY, NO ONE CARES --EXCEPT FOR CLUELESS AMATEURS.
Whether the actual physical document you are using (or the on-line version, if you're on-line) is "positive law" or, alternatively, "non-positive law" is irrelevant about 99.999999% of the time.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet