Unified Doctrinal Map With Explicit personPRI / personPUB Distinctions and Capacity Conversion Techniques

1. PERSONHOOD CAPACITIES (Core Layer)

personPRI — Private‑Law Capacity

A natural person acting in a private, non‑governmental capacity.

  • Private individual
  • Private corporation
  • State citizen (political status)
  • Holder of private rights
  • Subject to external federal authority
  • Subject to state police power
  • Not part of federal internal operations

personPUB — Public‑Law Capacity

A statutory or constitutional person acting as part of the federal government.

  • Federal officer
  • Federal employee
  • Federal agency
  • Federal instrumentality
  • Holder of public duties
  • Subject to internal federal authority
  • Exercises delegated sovereign power

Structural rule:

Internal federal authority binds personPUB. External federal authority binds both personPRI and personPUB.

2. INTERNAL FEDERAL AUTHORITY (personPUB only)

Authority the national government exercises over itself.

Who is subject

  • personPUB only

What it governs

  • Civil service
  • Federal personnel rules
  • Agency management
  • Federal property
  • Federal territories
  • Procurement, grants, benefits
  • Internal rulemaking exceptions (5 U.S.C. § 553(a)(1)–(2))

Forms of law

  • Civil statutory law (internal management)
  • Criminal law (misconduct by officers)
  • No common law (federal government has no general common law)

3. EXTERNAL FEDERAL AUTHORITY (personPRI + personPUB)

Authority the national government exercises over persons outside the federal government.

Who is subject

  • personPRI
  • personPUB (when acting externally)
  • States
  • Corporations
  • Foreign nationals

What it governs

  • Federal criminal law
  • Federal taxation
  • Interstate commerce
  • Immigration
  • Civil rights
  • Environmental regulation

Forms of law

  • Civil statutory law
  • Criminal law
  • Common law & equity (borrowed from states unless preempted)

4. DOMESTIC JURISDICTION (Inside U.S. territory)

Who is subject

  • personPRI
  • personPUB
  • States

What it governs

  • Internal Revenue Code
  • Federal criminal code
  • Civil rights statutes
  • Commerce‑based regulation
  • Federal courts’ Article III jurisdiction

Forms of law

  • Civil statutory
  • Criminal
  • Common law & equity

5. EXTRATERRITORIAL JURISDICTION (Outside U.S. territory)

Who is subject

  • personPRI (foreign income, sanctions, terrorism statutes)
  • personPUB (military, diplomatic personnel)
  • Foreign nationals
  • Foreign governments (limited)

What it governs

  • Foreign commerce
  • Anti‑terrorism statutes
  • Sanctions
  • Military operations
  • Certain tax rules for foreign income
  • Immigration enforcement at borders

Forms of law

  • Civil statutory
  • Criminal
  • International law
  • No common law extraterritorially

6. CIVIL vs. POLITICAL STATUS (Capacity‑Aware)

Political Status (Constitutional)

  • U.S. citizenship
  • State citizenship
  • Nationality
  • Allegiance

Capacity alignment:

  • Attaches to personPRI
  • personPUB derives from political status but is not identical

Civil Status (Statutory)

  • Taxpayer
  • Resident
  • Nonresident
  • Alien
  • Employee
  • Officer

Capacity alignment:

  • Can attach to personPRI or personPUB
  • personPUB is always a public‑law civil status
  • personPRI is always a private‑law civil status

7. FEDERAL vs. STATE SPHERES (Capacity‑Aware)

Federal Sphere

  • Enumerated powers
  • Federal property
  • Foreign affairs
  • National defense
  • Immigration
  • Interstate commerce
  • Federal taxation

Capacity alignment:

  • Governs personPUB internally
  • Governs personPRI externally

State Sphere

  • Police power
  • Property law
  • Contract law
  • Family law
  • Intrastate commerce
  • State taxation
  • State criminal law

Capacity alignment:

  • Governs personPRI primarily
  • Governs personPUB only when acting within state jurisdiction

8. FORMS OF LAW (Integrated With personPRI / personPUB)

A. Civil Statutory Law

  • Regulatory statutes
  • Tax statutes
  • Administrative law
  • Federal benefits
  • Federal property rules

personPRI: subject when statute applies personPUB: subject internally and externally

B. Criminal Law

  • Federal crimes
  • State crimes
  • Military crimes (UCMJ for personPUB in military capacity)

personPRI: subject to federal & state criminal law personPUB: subject to federal criminal law + special duties

C. Common Law & Equity

  • State common law (torts, contracts, property)
  • Federal courts apply state common law unless preempted
  • Equity doctrines (injunctions, trusts, fiduciary duties)

personPRI: primary subject personPUB: subject only when acting outside internal federal capacity

9. DOMESTICC, DOMESTICP, FOREIGNC, FOREIGNP (Your Four‑Quadrant Grid)

These four categories combine civil vs. political with domestic vs. foreign.

DomesticP — Domestic Political Status

  • U.S. citizen
  • State citizen
  • personPRI (political capacity)
  • Constitutional allegiance

DomesticC — Domestic Civil Status

  • Taxpayer
  • Resident
  • Employee
  • Officer (if state‑level)
  • personPRI or personPUB depending on statute

ForeignP — Foreign Political Status

  • Non‑U.S. national
  • Non‑resident alien (political sense)
  • personPRI (foreign political capacity)

ForeignC — Foreign Civil Status

  • Foreign corporation
  • Foreign trust
  • Foreign taxpayer (IRC sense)
  • personPRI or personPUB depending on statutory classification

10. SYNTHESIS MATRIX (Final, Fully Integrated)

CategorypersonPRIpersonPUBDomesticCDomesticPForeignCForeignPCivil StatutoryCriminalCommon Law
Internal Federal Authority✔️✔️Derived✔️✔️
External Federal Authority✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️
Domestic Jurisdiction✔️✔️✔️✔️LimitedLimited✔️✔️✔️
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction✔️✔️LimitedLimited✔️✔️✔️✔️
Political Status✔️Derived✔️✔️
Civil Status✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️
Federal Sphere✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️✔️Limited
State Sphere✔️Limited✔️✔️LimitedLimited✔️✔️✔️

11. PUB/PRI DOCTRINAL ATLAS