Court System Overview

How It Works

Every matter brought before The Grand Panel follows a structured path. From filing to review to final ruling, the court moves each case through a clear process designed to test the record before any verdict is entered.

The Court Process

01. Clerk

The case is filed, structured, and entered into the record.

02. Bench

The filing is reviewed for clarity, fairness, and moral weight.

03. Advancement

The Bench determines whether the matter moves forward.

04. Grand Panel

Advanced cases proceed to final communal deliberation.

Step One: File with the Clerk

Every case begins with the Office of the Clerk. The Plaintiff submits an affidavit, identifies the dispute, and selects the Moral Code Violation that best describes the issue being brought before the court.

The Clerk reviews each filing for structure, clarity, and eligibility before it can move deeper into the system.

Step Two: Bench Review

Preliminary Hearing

The Bench may review a case during Preliminary Hearing to test the filing for coherence, omissions, fairness, and overall moral weight.

Ex Parte Review

In a one-sided filing, the Bench reviews only the Plaintiff’s record and applies stricter scrutiny before deciding whether the matter should move forward.

Bench Authority

The Bench may dismiss, hold, or advance a matter based on the strength of the record and the court’s current docket needs.

Step Three: Case Advancement

Not every filing becomes a hearing. Advancement depends on whether the case is clear, compelling, and strong enough to justify further review.

A case may be:

Dismissed

The filing lacks sufficient clarity, fairness, or moral weight to continue.

Held for Review

The court may retain the matter for further consideration without immediate advancement.

Cleared for Panel

The case is advanced into the next stage for full hearing and communal deliberation.

Step Four: The Grand Panel

Cases advanced by the Bench may proceed to The Grand Panel, where the deliberative body reviews the record and renders the final communal ruling.

At this stage, the Jury weighs the facts, intent, and impact of the conduct at issue. The Gallery may observe and react, but the ruling itself belongs to the authorized decision-makers.

Current Filing Status: Ex Parte filings are currently open. Inter Partes filings are not being accepted at this time.

What the Court Looks For

Clarity

The filing must clearly identify the dispute, the conduct at issue, and the relevant Moral Code Violation.

Fairness

The court expects the record to reflect the facts honestly, including the strongest version of the opposing side where applicable.

Moral Weight

The matter must present a meaningful issue worthy of court review, not a vague grievance or low-value complaint.

Enter the Record

Ready to bring your matter before the court? File with the Clerk or review the currently available filing pathways.

Go to the Clerk File Ex Parte

THE GRAND PANEL | HOW IT WORKS

Administrative overview of filing, review, advancement, and final deliberation.

DISCLAIMER: For entertainment purposes only. The Grand Panel is a social tribunal, not a court of law.