tz_strawberry Wrote:I'm still confused by the wording(s)...they are kind of abstruct.
("A matter of fact", "any matter of fact", "category" etc...)
Could anyone provide examples of what it says??
Thanks.
Let me try to clear things up a little bit.
Take felony case and civil case for example.
Here are two matter of facts: (1) A murdered B, (2) C refuses to return some cash borrowed from D.
First, we need to classify the persons and actions in order to see which legal category the two cases fall in, respectively.
"The application of a rule to a particular case, involves a decision on whether the facts fall within the categories in the rule". Does the fact (1) fall into felony case or civil case? What about the fact (2)?
The last sentence of the stimulus states that: This decision establishes the legal effect of what happened
rather than matter of fact.
In this classification step, do we need to establish A really murdered B, or C factually refused to return the cash? No, not in this classification step. Therefore, classification "whether the facts of a case fall into a relevant category" is not itself a matter of fact.
A: wrong, matters of fact does not concern classification of things.
B: wrong, the stimulus does not say that matters of fact can be expressed in general term.
C: wrong, It does involve matters of fact, but does not establish matter of fact.
D. wrong, out of scope, the judge is not mentioned in the stimulus.