Civil Code of the Order of the Holy Lakes
General Provisions
Purpose
This Statute regulates civil status, marital unions, descent, adoption, inheritance, contracts, and the recognition of public acts within the Order of the Holy Lakes and in relation to foreign jurisdictions.
Definitions
For the purposes of this Statute:
- Order means the Order of the Holy Lakes.
- realm means any realm under the jurisdiction of the Order.
- citizen means any person holding citizenship of the Order, whether or not a member of the Order.
- resident means any person domiciled or lawfully present in the territory of the Order, including aliens.
- public act includes registrations, judgments, and civil records issued or certified by a competent authority.
- contract means a lawful agreement enforceable under civil law.
- marital union means a legal union solemnized or recognized under this Statute.
- marriage means a marital union between two spouses.
- marital community means a marital union between three or more spouses forming a single communal legal unit.
- dissolution means the termination of a marital union.
- annulment means a declaration that a marital union was void ab initio.
- descendants means all persons in direct line from an individual, inheriting per stirpes.
- Population Register means the civil register for citizens and residents, who are not inscribed in the Almanac of the Holy Lakes.
- Almanac of the Holy Lakes means the register for the members of the Order of the Holy Lakes.
- order public refers to the fundamental principles of law and justice of the Order, as determined by the Senate of the Lakes.
Full faith within the Order
Mutual Recognition
Public acts, judgments, registrations, and marital unions issued in one realm shall be recognized and enforceable in every other realm.
Non-Discrimination Between Realms
No realm may refuse recognition of a civil status originating in another realm on grounds of religion, culture, legal tradition, ethnicity, or gender.
Conflicting Judgments
Where conflicting judgments arise, the judgment from the realm of domicile at the time of the dispute shall prevail, subject to appeal to the Senate.
Recognition of Foreign Public Acts
General Rule
Foreign public acts concerning births, names, marital unions, dissolutions, deaths, adoptions, guardianship, and contracts shall be recognized if valid where issued.
Exception on Grounds of Order Public
Recognition shall be refused where the act is against order public, including:
- unions involving a person below fifteen years of age;
- absence of free and informed consent;
- incestuous unions within prohibited degrees;
- slavery, servitude, prostitution, or human ownership;
- fundamentally coercive or unjust contracts;
- unions that deny equal legal dignity of spouses.
Hierarchical Foreign Unions
- A foreign marital union with unequal or hierarchical status (e.g., concubinage systems) shall only be recognized if all parties jointly petition for recognition as an equal-status marital union or marital community under Order law.
- If equality is not accepted, the union is not recognized as a marital union. Civil or contractual relations between the parties may still be recognized where lawful.
- Already-recognized unions shall not be affected by this rule.
Marital Unions
Freedom of Marital Union
Any consenting adults may enter a marital union, without restriction based on gender, sex, faith, ethnicity, nationality, or age difference, subject to the exception on grounds of order public.
Forms of Union
- A marriage is between two spouses.
- A marital community is between three or more spouses.
- Consent of all existing spouses is required to add a spouse to a marriage or existing marital community.
Age and Consent (Domestic)
Marital unions solemnized within the Order require all spouses to be at least eighteen years of age and fully consenting.
Equality of Spouses
All spouses in a marital union share equal legal status, rights, and duties.
Dissolution And Annulment
- The dissolution of a marital union where none of the spouses is a member of the Order by reason of blood, adoption, or induction shall be governed by, and recognized in accordance with, the law and competent authorities of the realm of residence of the spouses, or, where the spouses reside in different realms, the realm of residence of the spouse first petitioning for dissolution. Such dissolution shall be recorded in the Population Register upon presentation of valid documentation.
- Annulment of a marital union where none of the spouses is a member of the Order shall likewise be determined in accordance with the law and competent authorities of the realm of residence, subject only to the Order Public clause of this Statute. Annulments so granted shall be recorded in the Population Register.
- Where at least one spouse is a member of the Order by reason of blood, adoption, or induction, the dissolution of the marital union shall be recognized by the Chancellor or Commander of the Order upon either:
- a public declaration jointly made by the spouses that the union has been dissolved; or
- in the absence of such declaration, a valid court order issued by a competent authority dissolving the union.
- Where at least one spouse is a member of the Order, annulment of the union may be granted by the Chancellor or Commander on grounds of fraud, coercion, fundamental defect, or violation of order public. Any interested party may petition for annulment. Interested parties shall include any spouse, any member of the Senate, and any member of the Secretariat.
Contracts
Validity of Contracts
Contracts lawfully entered into by citizens or residents, in the Order or abroad, shall be recognized unless against order public.
Surrogacy Contracts
Contracts concerning surrogacy or the transfer of parental rights prior to birth are void and without legal effect as against order public.
Descent, legal parentage, and adoption
Maternal Rule and Parentage
- The person who gives birth is a legal parent at birth. Persons who have contributed sperm or egg cell to the formation of the child are also legal parents.
- A child may have more than two legal parents.
Adoption
- Adoption is permitted only of unmarried persons under the age of eighteen years.
- The outset of an adoption is the inclusion of further legal parents, but an adoption may, if it is in the best interests of the child, exclude an already legal parent in favour of another.
- Adoption requires:
- consent of the adopting parent(s);
- consent of the existing legal parent(s), unless overridden in the best interests of the child;
- consent of the child aged 15–17;
- assent of the child aged 7–14.
- Adoption creates full legal kinship.
- Appeals lie to the Senate.
Recognition of Foreign Adoption
Foreign adoptions are automatically recognized if valid where issued, subject only to verification of authenticity and unless against Order Public.
Removal of legal parentage
A legal parent may be removed from legal parentage by an appropriate court (or, in the case of members of the Order, by the Chancellor or Commander) if it is in the best interests of the child.
Inheritance
Equal Inheritance of Descendants
All descendants inherit equally, without discrimination on grounds of sex, religion, legitimacy, or marital structure of the parents. If a descendant is deceased, their descendants inherit per stirpes.
Titles Excluded
This Section applies to property, not succession to chivalric or noble titles.
Registration
Population Register
All civil status events concerning citizens and residents shall be recorded in the Population Register.
Almanac of the Holy Lakes
The civil status of members of the Order shall be recorded in the Almanac.
Jurisdiction
Competent Authorities
Realms administer civil status within their territory. Appeals and inter-realm disputes fall under the jurisdiction of the Senate.
Determination of Order Public
The Senate shall have final authority to determine the scope of order public.
Final provisions
Supremacy
This Statute supersedes any inconsistent realm law on matters governed herein.
Entry into Force
This Statute enters into force upon adoption.