Muggy21
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Brief
IN THE SUPREME OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
Certified Question - in re QC: Alter-Egos of Long-Deported Players | [2026] SCR 14
Mister Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, greetings! I humbly submit this application to this Honourable Court to assist in solving the deadlock or conflict within the following cases:
Multiman155 et al v. slapout [2026] FCR 52
ScaryHacker1 v. slapout [2026] DCR 58
TweedyApple255 v. quickrip [2026] DCR 74
Factual Basis in Support of the Certified Questions
The following facts, as established on the record of [2026] FCR 52, provide the context for the certified questions:
1.The Defendant in these proceedings, slapout, was confirmed by staff to be one of three accounts operated by a single real-world player. The three accounts are quickrip, slapout, and yatblue, as confirmed by staff and noted on the record by the Federal Court at Post #50.
2.The account slapout was permanently deported by staff during the pendency of these proceedings for the use of alternative accounts, as reflected in Exhibit P-999 and confirmed at Post #23.
3.Following a Motion to Compel granted by the Federal Court, staff subsequently confirmed yatblue as an alternative account of slapout (Post #26). The Federal Court thereafter treated yatblue as an alter-ego of slapout for the purposes of the Emergency Injunction previously issued.
4.The account yatblue was subsequently subject to a long deportation, as noted by the Plaintiff at Post #53 and supported by Exhibit P-916. The long deportation of yatblue occurred after the permanent deportation of slapout and at a different time.
5.At the time the Emergency Injunction was issued against slapout, yatblue had not yet been identified as an alternative account and had not yet been separately deported. Transactions involving yatblue occurred during this window, giving rise to disputes as to whether those transactions violated the Court's injunction.
6.Counsel, UrbanDispatchMC, entered an appearance purportedly on behalf of the defense. The Federal Court noted that counsel's authorization to represent was referable to yatblue rather than slapout, and ruled that counsel could represent yatblue only, as a permanently deported account is not permitted a personal defense (Post #47).
The Alter-Ego Discussion
The Commonwealth's legal harmony has, until now, operated on an implicit assumption that each account is a discrete legal person. Contracts are entered into by accounts. Court proceedings are commenced by and against accounts. Rights and obligations attach to accounts. The Constitution itself, in granting citizenship upon joining the server for the first time, ties citizenship to the act of joining, which is necessarily an act performed by an account rather than by a real-world player in the abstract. This framework functions adequately where a player operates a single account. The account and the player are, for all practical purposes, the same legal person. The complications that arise in the present case are a direct consequence of the server permitting, or at least not preventing until detected, the operation of multiple accounts by a single player.
There are two competing sides, which in this writer's humble opinion, do merit discussion:
The Federal Court respectfully submits that the Supreme Court should consider whether the alter-ego doctrine, as applied in the context of multiple accounts controlled by a single player, should operate in this targeted way rather than as a wholesale identification of all accounts. The alternative, treating the permanent deportation of one account as automatically extinguishing the standing of all alter-ego accounts, would be a more sweeping conclusion with consequences that may not always be just. For example, it is conceivable that a player who operated a second account in complete ignorance of the prohibition on alting, or who operated a second account for entirely separate and legitimate purposes before being detected, could find that account stripped of standing and its assets frozen without any independent wrongdoing being established in relation to that account. Although this question is well within the purview of the Federal Court's jurisdiction, its impact is far too wide-reaching across multiple cases, across multiple legal questions, and speaks directly to a fundamental right that, again in this writer's opinion, must be resolved by the Supreme Court.
Certified Questions
On the above discussion, the Federal Court sua sponte submits the following questions to the Supreme Court as permitted under the Judicial Standards Act.
I. Where staff have confirmed that two or more accounts are operated by the same real-world player and the Courts have recognized those accounts as alter-egos of one another, does the permanent deportation of one account operate to extinguish the procedural standing of all alter-ego accounts before the courts of the Commonwealth, regardless of whether those accounts have themselves been separately deported? Alternatively, does each account retain independent legal personhood such that only the specifically deported account loses standing, with surviving accounts retaining full rights until separately acted upon by staff?
II. Where a court order, including an emergency injunction or asset freeze, is issued against a named account and that account is subsequently identified as sharing a controlling player with one or more alternative accounts, does the order apply retroactively to the assets and activities of those alternative accounts from the moment of the order's original issuance, or does it apply only prospectively from the moment the Court formally extends the order to the identified alternative accounts? What are the consequences for transactions conducted by an alternative account in the window between the original order and the Court's formal extension of that order to the alternative account?