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Username: xEndeavour
I am representing myself
What Case are you Appealing?: [2025] FCR 44
Link to the Original Case: Lawsuit: Adjourned - End v Commonwealth [2025] FCR 44
Basis for Appeal: Point of Law
The Federal Court has erred in finding s5 of the Redmont Legal Code Act constitutional. Reasoning provided that because Congress retains legislative authority and the President theoretically retains the power to assent or veto legislation, there is no constitutional breach. This analysis fails to address the second order effect of s5, which enables Congress to unilaterally enact legislation by motion alone — bypassing the executive entirely.
This directly violates the doctrine of separation of powers, a core principle of Redmont’s constitutional framework. Under the Constitution, legislation requires bicameral passage and executive assent. s5 allows legislation to take effect without the assent of the executive, and the Court’s suggestion that the President may 'pre-emptively assent' to an unknown and undefined law is legally and absolutely absurd. Assent is a review mechanism - it must be granted after a bill is passed, not before it is proposed.
The Court further erred in suggesting that the Redmont Legal Code Act and the Legislative Standards Act (LSA) are of equal standing. To suggest that LSA - as the years old foundation of Redmont’s legislative system - is at the same level as the Legal Code Act is absurd. The LSA governs how laws are introduced, debated, passed, and enacted, and by implication, would certainly carry a higher structural significance. By holding that the Redmont Legal Code Act effectively amended the LSA by implication, the Court has allowed a procedural shortcut to override the entire legislative process without indicating any intention to do so in law.
The Court has effectively allowed and sanctioned:
The removal of Presidential assent from the legislative process;
The ability for Congress to delegate law making power to itself or to a committee without constitutional checks;
Changing the law making process without an express amendment to the LSA or the Constitution.
A precedent which conflicts with constitutional principles.
s5 of the Redmont Legal Code Act is an unconstitutional overreach on the separation of powers, and the Federal Court's respectfully must be overturned.
In making this appeal, I seek that the decision in End v. Commonwealth [2025] FCR 44 be overturned.
Supporting Evidence: