MULTIPLE LAYERS OF JURISDICTION
1. Jurisdiction of Incorporation.
a. The jurisdiction in which an entity is legally incorporated.
2. Jurisdiction of Headquarters Location.
a. The jurisdiction in which an entity’s headquarters is physically located.
3. Jurisdiction of other places of physical presence.
a. Other places where an entity maintains an ongoing physical presence sufficient to subject the entity and its actions to some or all of the laws of that jurisdiction (as Incorporation and Headquarters Jurisdiction do).
b. This may also determine whether an entity can be subject to suit in the courts of that jurisdiction (i.e., “personal jurisdiction”).
4. Jurisdiction for the law to be used in interpretation of contracts, etc. (Governing Law/Choice of Law) and actions of the Empowered Community.
a. The jurisdiction whose laws will be used to interpret the rights and responsibilities of parties to a contract, whether in the normal course of business or during a dispute (e.g., litigation, arbitration or other dispute resolution mechanism).
b. More broadly, the substantive law to be applied during a litigation, arbitration or other dispute resolution mechanism.
c. In matters involving agreements, the governing law may have been specified in the agreement (e.g., in a “choice of law” clause).
d. If no governing law is specified or in non-contract cases, the governing law will be determined by the judge, panel or other decision-maker using principles of “conflicts of laws”, typically after submissions by the parties.
5. Jurisdiction for the physical location of litigation of disputes (Venue).
a. The forum in which the dispute will be heard:
i) The type of proceeding (e.g., litigation (including the type of court), arbitration (including the provider/rules), IRP, etc.).
ii) The provider of that proceeding (e.g., Federal or national court, state or local court, an arbitration provider, etc.).
iii) The physical location (if any) in which the proceeding will take place (e.g., the country, state/province, city, etc.).
iv) A separate but related concept is “subject matter jurisdiction” (i.e., whether the court or other forum has the power to hear a case about a particular type of subject matter)
6. Relationships with national jurisdictions for particular domestic issues.
a. This “layer” was listed as one of the layers of jurisdiction in Annex 12.
7. Meeting NTIA requirements.
a. This “layer” was listed as one of the layers of jurisdiction in Annex 12.