• @EmoDuck@sh.itjust.works
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    201 year ago

    What if the judge uses eminent domain to legally take ownership of the house when handing out the warrent? The state would become legal owner of the house, sends in the vampire police, and hand it back to the original owner later?

    • I like the rule lawyering, but the fuzzy conception of vampire law is that they require an invitation to enter a home, but nobody would expect an abandoned home to stop them, indicating a holistic rather than a technical definition. The state can repossess the home, but if the entire police force is vampires they’ll be unable to cross the threshold so long as those living there view it as a home.

      For example, a worker drone that keeps a bed at their office and lives there part-time, it makes sense that a vampire could enter their office without invitation because it isn’t a home despite living there. However, alter the situation to an even sadder worker drone that lives full-time in their office and considers it to be their home, can the vampire enter? I posit nay, the vampire will need an invitation to enter their sad office home.

    • @Singar@citizensgaming.com
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      81 year ago

      It’s not about house ownership. You can be in someone elses house and still not let them in.

      The concept is that the people INSIDE the house must let the vampire OUTSIDE in. A warrant doesn’t accomplish that.

    • Nukemin Herttua
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      31 year ago

      Or if the actual owner is the bank that the resident is in debt with. You fail to pay your debt and the bank invites repossessers and the police to evict you and take your stuff.

      If I was a vampire, I’d definitely look for a job as a repossesser or a cop.