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* ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': In "The Ensigns of Command," the ''Enterprise'' crew faces off against the Sheilak Corporate, a group of ScaryDogmaticAliens whose [[PlanetOfHats hat]] is [[RulesLawyer obsessing over rules and contracts.]] The Sheilak are planning to colonize a planet in their own territory, only to find a group of Federation settlers (descended from those who crashed their ship decades earlier) have made a home there. It will take three weeks for a transport vessel to move the settlers, but the Sheilak insist on sticking to the exact terms of their original treaty with the Federation and threaten to kill the colonists as soon as they arrive. Picard has his crew go through the document with a fine-tooth comb and eventually finds a never-used clause that allows him to name a neutral third party to arbitrate the dispute...and promptly selects a race that's currently hibernating and won't be awake for six months. The {{Outgambitted}} Corporate begrudgingly agrees to the three-week extension.
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* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler:gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler:ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]

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* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, stage since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler:gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler:ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight fight, he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]



* In ''The Eleven-Day Empire'' and ''Shadow Play'', the first two ''Franchise/FactionParadox'' audios, Lolita, a Homeworld agent, conspires to have the young Faction Cousin Justine granted the unique shadow of the Faction's Grandfather. However, it turns out that under the Faction's laws, "the shadow is more important that the flesh", automatically making her guilty of the Grandfather's crimes and giving her the perfect opening to LogicBomb the Eleven-Day Empire out of existence.

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* In ''The Eleven-Day Empire'' and ''Shadow Play'', the first two ''Franchise/FactionParadox'' audios, Lolita, a Homeworld agent, conspires to have the young Faction Cousin Justine granted the unique shadow of the Faction's Grandfather. However, it turns out that under the Faction's laws, "the shadow is more important that than the flesh", automatically making her guilty of the Grandfather's crimes and giving her the perfect opening to LogicBomb the Eleven-Day Empire out of existence.



* In an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming to get rid of Betty so she can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for the day, citing a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!

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* In an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming to get rid of Betty so she can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for the day, citing a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to leave ''with'' her, her since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!



* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler:kidnap Jerin]], so that they can then steal [[spoiler:Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler:the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.

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* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler:kidnap Jerin]], Jerin]] so that they can then steal [[spoiler:Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler:the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.



* In ''Literature/TheKnightsOfTheCross'', when all other ways to extricate [[DistressedDude Zbyszko]] from his pending execution fail, princess Anna remembers a little known law that a young man cannot be executed if a pure maiden claims him as her betrothed. Resulting in an iconic scene of [[LoveInterest Danusia]] doing just that.

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* In ''Literature/TheKnightsOfTheCross'', when all other ways to extricate [[DistressedDude Zbyszko]] from his pending execution fail, princess Anna remembers a little known little-known law that a young man cannot be executed if a pure maiden claims him as her betrothed. Resulting in an iconic scene of [[LoveInterest Danusia]] doing just that.



* ''Series/ForgedInFire'', like the name suggests, is a ''forging'' competition, meaning that the blades created for the challenges must be forged into their final shape. This rule went unnoticed for the first season and most of the second, because the metal used usually ''had'' to be forged to make a viable blade (and none of the contestants were stupid enough to try ''not'' forging it). However, in one late episodes where lawnmower blades were used, a contestant decided to ''grind'' the blade into a knife shape, instead of forging it. The resulting knife was not valid under the rules, resulting in the contestant's elimination.

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* ''Series/ForgedInFire'', like as the name suggests, is a ''forging'' competition, meaning that the blades created for the challenges must be forged into their final shape. This rule went unnoticed for the first season and most of the second, because the metal used usually ''had'' to be forged to make a viable blade (and none of the contestants were stupid enough to try ''not'' forging it). However, in one late episodes episode where lawnmower blades were used, a contestant decided to ''grind'' the blade into a knife shape, instead of forging it. The resulting knife was not valid under the rules, resulting in the contestant's elimination.



* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be. The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.
* In the last years of the UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic none of the governments had a positive parliamentary majority behind them. However, the chancellor was appointed by the President and the President was allowed to make "Emergency Orders" (Notverordnungen) under Article 48 of the Weimar constitution. While they could be thrown out by a majority of the parliament voting against them, the President also had the power to dissolve the parliament at any point he pleased and call new elections. When parliament was not in session, the Emergency Orders could not be voided by it and hence Brüning, von Papen and Schleicher (the last three chancellors before Hitler) could in essence govern without parliament so long as the President supported their agenda. This backfired ''hard'' and the Nazis got more and more votes until eventually (after the Nazis got 45% of the vote and could get a majority with a coalition with another far right party) President Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. Hitler proceeded to introduce and pass a law giving him the power to make any laws he wished, including those going against letter and spirit of the constitution. The question of whether the "AintNoRule" justification the Nazis used was legit has never been conclusively answered, but suffice to say the constitution of UsefulNotes/TheBonnRepublic and UsefulNotes/TheBerlinRepublic (which is the same document in essence) is anally retentive about none of that ever happening ever again.
* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' -- or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.
* In the 2004 U.S. presidential election, a Minnesota electoral college voter pledged to Democratic candidate John Kerry voted instead for Kerry's running-mate, John Edwards to be president. It's still unclear whether this was intentional or not, but the state legislature responded to this by changing electoral college votes to being public instead of anonymous, and barring electors from voting for candidates other than whom they were officially pledged. Come the 2016 election, another Minnesota elector tried to vote for Bernie Sanders instead of UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton (who had come dangerously close to being the first Democratic candidate to lose the state in 44 years), but thanks to the change in state law, was unable to do so.

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* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born "natural-born citizen" is supposed to be. The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because that if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, altogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.
* In the last years of the UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic none of the governments had a positive parliamentary majority behind them. However, the chancellor was appointed by the President and the President was allowed to make "Emergency Orders" (Notverordnungen) under Article 48 of the Weimar constitution. While they could be thrown out by a majority of the parliament voting against them, the President also had the power to dissolve the parliament at any point he pleased and call new elections. When parliament was not in session, the Emergency Orders could not be voided by it it, and hence Brüning, von Papen Papen, and Schleicher (the last three chancellors before Hitler) could in essence govern without parliament so long as the President supported their agenda. This backfired ''hard'' and the Nazis got more and more votes until eventually (after the Nazis got 45% of the vote and could get a majority with a coalition with another far right far-right party) President Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. Hitler proceeded to introduce and pass a law giving him the power to make any laws he wished, including those going against letter and spirit of the constitution. The question of whether the "AintNoRule" justification the Nazis used was legit has never been conclusively answered, but suffice to say the constitution of UsefulNotes/TheBonnRepublic and UsefulNotes/TheBerlinRepublic (which is the same document in essence) is anally retentive about none of that ever happening ever again.
* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year two-year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' -- or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.
* In the 2004 U.S. presidential election, a Minnesota electoral college voter pledged to Democratic candidate John Kerry voted instead for Kerry's running-mate, John Edwards to be president. It's still unclear whether this was intentional or not, but the state legislature responded to this by changing electoral college votes to being public instead of anonymous, anonymous and barring electors from voting for candidates other than whom they were officially pledged. Come the 2016 election, another Minnesota elector tried to vote for Bernie Sanders instead of UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton (who had come dangerously close to being the first Democratic candidate to lose the state in 44 years), but thanks to the change in state law, was unable to do so.



* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases -- [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).
* The 1999 Cricket World Cup had a rule to decide which team would go to the final if the semi-final was tied: the team that won the match played between the same opponents in the earlier stages. Rather dramatically, one of the semi-finals between Australia and South Africa ended in a tie, thus invoking this rule and letting Australia enter into the finals since they won the said previous match. South Africa would have easily won that previous match, if not for one of their best fielders, Hershchelle Gibbs dropping a catch letting off Australia captain, Steve Waugh, who went on to win the game for Australia. South Africa had dominated the World Cup until then, so the dropped catch and the defeat was considered mostly insignificant as South Africa were expected to win the World Cup anyway.

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* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.anymore.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game game, the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases -- [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).
* The 1999 Cricket World Cup had a rule to decide which team would go to the final if the semi-final was tied: the team that won the match played between the same opponents in the earlier stages. Rather dramatically, one of the semi-finals between Australia and South Africa ended in a tie, thus invoking this rule and letting Australia enter into the finals since they won the said previous match. South Africa would have easily won that previous match, if not for one of their best fielders, Hershchelle Gibbs dropping a catch letting off Australia captain, Steve Waugh, who went on to win the game for Australia. South Africa had dominated the World Cup until then, so the dropped catch and the defeat was considered mostly insignificant as South Africa were was expected to win the World Cup anyway.



* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballConferences conference]] in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].
* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Raiders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to rule it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.

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* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, conferences but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballConferences conference]] in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].
* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard 42-yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover.recovered. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Raiders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to rule it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.



* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].

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* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly thoroughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. adhered to. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked lower-ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked higher-ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, them and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, replaced if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].



* ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney'': The right to a closing argument is a mostly forgotten rule that was only discovered thanks to the use of an out of date law book.

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* ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney'': The right to a closing argument is a mostly forgotten rule that was only discovered thanks to the use of an out of date out-of-date law book.



* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other -- enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.

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* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which that enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like as she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other -- enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.



* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.

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* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown shut down Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
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* In ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' episode "My Fair Goalie", Ferb is affected by soccer's "Emu Curse", which states that if you're holding the ball and a herd of emus carries off your assistant coach, then you're cursed to never be on a winning team again. Despite the improbability of this happening in the middle of the United States, it happens, leading Ferb to abandon the game. The only way to break the Emu Curse is to have a boy in a Sunday bonnet sing E-flat above high C in front of the cursed one. During the game, Candace's Sunday bonnet falls off and falls onto Baljeet's head just before he's hit in the groin by the ball, causing him to scream at a frequency that just happens to be E-flat above high C while Ferb is in the vicinity, thus breaking his curse and allowing their team to win the game.

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[[folder:Fanfiction]][[folder:Fan Works]]



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* In ''Kaamelott'', King Arthur, who lusts after a knight's wife, avoids a deathmatch with his knight by using an outdated law that allows him to swap his wife for the knight's wife.



* In ''Series/{{Kaamelott}}'', King Arthur, who lusts after a knight's wife, avoids a deathmatch with his knight by using an outdated law that allows him to swap his wife for the knight's wife.



* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.
** The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.

to:

* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.
**
be. The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.



--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon -- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world -- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''

to:

--> '''Sigdi -->'''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon -- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world -- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler: gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler: ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]

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[[folder:Anime and & Manga]]
* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler: gets [[spoiler:gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler: ends [[spoiler:ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]



* In ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'', during Oliver's tenure as mayor of Star City, he took advantage of the phrasing of the city's 200 year old charter - specifically, that the mayor can legally marry any two "persons" to perform legal gay marriages. Later, he uses a similar stunt to ensure that his hand-picked successor will take over from him as mayor.

to:

* In ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'', during Oliver's tenure as mayor of Star City, he took advantage of the phrasing of the city's 200 year old 200-year-old charter - -- specifically, that the mayor can legally marry any two "persons" to perform legal gay marriages. Later, he uses a similar stunt to ensure that his hand-picked successor will take over from him as mayor.



* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it. It later turns out that it wasn't actually ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered enough evidence of wrongdoing to have them all legally removed soon enough ''anyway''.

to:

* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - -- "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it. It later turns out that it wasn't actually ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered enough evidence of wrongdoing to have them all legally removed soon enough ''anyway''.



* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler: kidnap Jerin]], so that they can then steal [[spoiler: Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler: the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.

to:

* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler: kidnap [[spoiler:kidnap Jerin]], so that they can then steal [[spoiler: Jerin]] [[spoiler:Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler: the [[spoiler:the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.



* In ''Literature/{{Raybearer}}'', a high-ranking judge is ''very'' upset with her emperor's attempts to erase minority cultures- one of which is the new law that families will be financially rewarded for giving their children non-minority names. So she digs up a much older law against "causing strife between a husband and wife", which no one has ever actually invoked (it was a holdover from tribal law), and finds a couple who disagree as to whether they should go for the money or not. Then she convicts the king of causing strife between them.

to:

* In ''Literature/{{Raybearer}}'', a high-ranking judge is ''very'' upset with her emperor's attempts to erase minority cultures- cultures -- one of which is the new law that families will be financially rewarded for giving their children non-minority names. So she digs up a much older law against "causing strife between a husband and wife", which no one has ever actually invoked (it was a holdover from tribal law), and finds a couple who disagree as to whether they should go for the money or not. Then she convicts the king of causing strife between them.



* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' - or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.

to:

* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' - -- or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.



* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases - [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).

to:

* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases - -- [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).



* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''

to:

* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - -- enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage [[spoiler:leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] [[spoiler:Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - -- but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just [[spoiler:Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- specifications -- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- Durkon -- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- world -- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''



* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.

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* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old 200-year-old prohibition law that was noted passed but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s Homer's crimes.
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[[folder:Video Games]]

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[[folder:Video Games]][[folder:Visual Novels]]
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[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney'': The right to a closing argument is a mostly forgotten rule that was only discovered thanks to the use of an out of date law book.
* ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorney'': The issue of evidence law comes up in the fifth episode. Previously nobody have had to worry about how evidence was presented to the trial.
[[/folder]]
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* In the {{TabletopGame/Mahjong}} manga ''"Tetsunaki no Kirinji"'' the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive discard" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.

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* In the {{TabletopGame/Mahjong}} manga ''"Tetsunaki no Kirinji"'' the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four "consecutive four wind abortive discard" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.
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* In the {{TabletopGame/Mahjong}} manga ''"Tetsunaki no Kirinji"'' the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.

to:

* In the {{TabletopGame/Mahjong}} manga ''"Tetsunaki no Kirinji"'' the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" discard" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* In the ''TabletopGame/Mahjong'' manga "Tetsunaki no Kirinji" the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.

to:

* In the ''TabletopGame/Mahjong'' {{TabletopGame/Mahjong}} manga "Tetsunaki ''"Tetsunaki no Kirinji" Kirinji"'' the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* In the TabletopGame/Mahjong manga "Tetsunaki no Kirinji" the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment.

to:

* In the TabletopGame/Mahjong ''TabletopGame/Mahjong'' manga "Tetsunaki no Kirinji" the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment.moment, wasting his almost guaranteed victory.
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* In the TabletopGame/Mahjong manga "Tetsunaki no Kirinji" the main protagonist is almost certain to win an important match with a great starting hand, however he is so distracted by his great fortune that he didn't notice the other 3 players discarding the same wind tile and he discards the fourth, meaning the match is aborted. This is due to the "four wind abortive draw" rule, that every mahjong player knows but it simply never appears in normal gameplay and thus the protagonist was careless in a crucial moment.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* In ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'', during Oliver's tenure as mayor of Star City, he took advantage of the phrasing of the city's 200 year old charter - specifically, that the mayor can legally marry any two "persons" to perform legal gay marriages. Later, he uses a similar stunt to ensure that his hand-picked successor will take over from him as mayor.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* In ''Literature/{{Raybearer}}'', a high-ranking judge is ''very'' upset with her emperor's attempts to erase minority cultures- one of which is the new law that families will be financially rewarded for giving their children non-minority names. So she digs up a much older law against "causing strife between a husband and wife", which no one has ever actually invoked (it was a holdover from tribal law), and finds a couple who disagree as to whether they should go for the money or not. Then she convicts the king of causing strife between them.
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[[folder:Live Action Television]]

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[[folder:Live Action Television]][[folder:Live-Action TV]]

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goddammit, how did this edit get so catastrophically bad


* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Riaders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to ruThis is when a rule or law that is usually not given much thought is suddenly invoked. This can happen because:
# The rule is obscure and outdated or little used, but it's dusted off because it can allow or disallow a course of action.
# The rule is well known, but is given little thought because it's expected that ''everyone'' will follow it--and then it comes into play when someone ''doesn't.''
# A RulesLawyer [[BotheringByTheBook uses the rule as a trump card]].
# The circumstances of the rule coming into play are unlikely.

This is distinct from LoopholeAbuse, which deals with getting around the rules, while this deals with following them, but there can be either overlap when invoking one rule allows someone to get around another, or exclusion when this means that a loophole that seemed to exist actually doesn't.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler: gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler: ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]

to:

* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Riaders Raiders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to ruThis is when a rule or law that is usually not given much thought is suddenly invoked. This can happen because:
# The rule is obscure and outdated or little used, but it's dusted off because
it can allow or disallow a course of action.
# The rule is well known, but is given little thought because it's expected that ''everyone'' will follow it--and then it comes
an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into play when someone ''doesn't.''
# A RulesLawyer [[BotheringByTheBook uses
field goal range and tied the rule as a trump card]].
# The circumstances of the rule coming into play are unlikely.

This is distinct from LoopholeAbuse, which deals with getting around the rules, while this deals with following them, but there can be either overlap when invoking one rule allows someone to get around another, or exclusion when this means that a loophole that seemed to exist actually doesn't.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime
game, before winning in overtime and Manga]]
* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers
going on to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since win the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue way to the climax, Super Bowl, starting the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler: gets out of the tournament, meaning Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that every time rule in particular as the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, Patriots had been on the Hero [[spoiler: ends up other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to one sai, with another hit he will continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]game.



[[folder:Audio Plays]]
* In ''The Eleven-Day Empire'' and ''Shadow Play'', the first two ''Franchise/FactionParadox'' audios, Lolita, a Homeworld agent, conspires to have the young Faction Cousin Justine granted the unique shadow of the Faction's Grandfather. However, it turns out that under the Faction's laws, "the shadow is more important that the flesh", automatically making her guilty of the Grandfather's crimes and giving her the perfect opening to LogicBomb the Eleven-Day Empire out of existence.

to:

[[folder:Audio Plays]]
[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* In ''The Eleven-Day Empire'' There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and ''Shadow Play'', cakes to students during examinations. They provided the first two ''Franchise/FactionParadox'' audios, Lolita, modern equivalent, a Homeworld agent, conspires to have the young Faction Cousin Justine granted the unique shadow of the Faction's Grandfather. However, it turns out that under the Faction's laws, "the shadow is more important that the flesh", automatically making her guilty of the Grandfather's crimes Coke and giving her the perfect opening a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to LogicBomb the Eleven-Day Empire out of existence.an equally forgotten law]].



[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'', the position of Mayor of Fabletown is ''technically'' elected, but no elections have been held since King Cole has been chosen Mayor at the town's founding centuries ago. Then Prince Charming calls for an election and runs for the position, thus throwing everything into turmoil. However, Charming then becomes a victim of this trope himself because he did not do enough research into what exactly the Mayor's powers were. Most importantly he did not realize that the witches' help is voluntary and cannot be compelled by the Mayor. They will help in emergencies but their magic is in limited supply and they refuse to use it to help Charming fulfill his campaign promises. King Cole only asked for their help in emergencies so they never had a reason to refuse before. Thus only a few Fables were aware of these restrictions and they chose not to warn Charming because they did not like him.
* In an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming to get rid of Betty so she can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for the day, citing a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!

to:

[[folder:Comic Books]]
[[folder:Video Games]]
* In ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'', the position of Mayor of Fabletown is ''technically'' elected, but no elections have been held since King ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole has been chosen Mayor at Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the town's founding centuries ago. Then Prince Charming calls Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for an election and runs for the position, thus throwing everything into turmoil. tracking devices first. However, Charming then becomes a victim of this trope himself it was mostly ignored because he not until the 27th year of the war did not do enough research into what exactly anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the Mayor's powers were. Most importantly he did not realize self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures
that the witches' help is voluntary and cannot be compelled by chain of command within the Mayor. They will help in emergencies Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but their magic is in limited supply and they refuse to use it to help Charming fulfill his campaign promises. King Cole only asked for their help in emergencies so they never had a reason to refuse before. Thus only a few Fables were aware also requires those of these restrictions and they chose superior rank not to warn Charming because they did give orders to those who do not like him.
* In an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming
report directly to get rid of Betty so she them, and can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area be grounds for the day, citing having a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].



[[folder:Fanfiction]]
* ''Fanfic/EmbersVathara'': No one has used the Shelter of Dragon's Wings rule for over 200 years, but it was still on the books. This allows Iroh to use a Fire Navy ship as shelter, despite several '''very''' good reasons they should burn him down where he stands.
* In ''Fanfic/ProjectDelta'', Jane has a lot of trouble getting the proper training due to an ancient law about outsiders being permitted on an asari colony.
* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it. It later turns out that it wasn't actually ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered enough evidence of wrongdoing to have them all legally removed soon enough ''anyway''.

to:

[[folder:Fanfiction]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* ''Fanfic/EmbersVathara'': No one The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has used been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the Shelter of Dragon's Wings rule for over 200 years, but it was still on the books. This allows Iroh to use a Fire Navy ship as shelter, despite several '''very''' good reasons they should burn him down where normal way, he stands.
* In ''Fanfic/ProjectDelta'', Jane has a lot of trouble getting the proper training due to
invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law about outsiders being permitted on an asari colony.
* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5
which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on owes him for not going through with their own volition marriage like she agreed, and actively act against so he volunteers her for the principles task. She can't get out of friendship it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it. It later turns out that it wasn't they actually ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor
evidence of wrongdoing that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used
to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o'
all legally removed soon enough ''anyway''. the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''



[[folder:Film]]
* During the final duel of ''Film/TheGamersHandsOfFate'', the BigBad seems to forget the small rule that a player may give away the reward for a quest they just completed to their opponent, who has no way of refusing it. This way, [[spoiler:Cass gives away his Apple of Life to the BigBad--which "resurrects" his entire ''undead'' army that promptly starves to death since it never had or needed any food production before]].
* In ''Film/ThePrincessDiaries 2'', Genovian law apparently says that women have to be married to take the throne, though this has never been upheld in practice. The villain brings it up because his nephew-by-marriage is next in line after Mia.

to:

[[folder:Film]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* During In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the final duel B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of ''Film/TheGamersHandsOfFate'', a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the BigBad seems to forget the small rule that a player may give away the reward for a quest they just completed to their opponent, who has no way of refusing it. This way, [[spoiler:Cass gives away his Apple of Life to the BigBad--which "resurrects" his entire ''undead'' army that promptly starves to death since it never had or paperwork needed any food production before]].
* In ''Film/ThePrincessDiaries 2'', Genovian law apparently says
for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that women have Rosie had to be married marry Mack to take prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition,
the throne, though this has city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been upheld in practice. The villain brings it up because his nephew-by-marriage enforced. Funnily enough, this is next in line [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after Mia.being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.




[[folder:Literature]]
* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler: kidnap Jerin]], so that they can then steal [[spoiler: Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler: the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.
* In ''Literature/DragonBones'', Ward is told that a slave has fled to his land, Hurog, and is hiding somewhere under the castle. The nobles who lost the slave would like to get her back, but Ward tells them that there is no slave, invoking an ancient law that says that a slave who sets foot on Hurog land is automatically free. Ward's father and grandfather were jerks who would have happily assisted the nobles in their search for the escaped slaves, but Ward decides to revive the tradition. The nobles are quite annoyed.
* From ''Literature/TheElenium'', Berit is a Novice, so he's not entitled to wear armour yet. When Sparhawk and company head off to Zemoch, they dust off the seldom-used rank of ''Apprentice'' Knight for Berit, which means he's not a full Knight, but ''is'' allowed to wear armour.
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** Sam Vimes comes from a poor family, that had been noble until his ancestor became a regicide, and has nothing but contempt for titles as a result (technically he's a knight[[note]]Until the end of Jingo, where he's made a duke.[[/note]], due to the title coming with his rank of Commander, but only the very brave or stupid would actually call him that). So when Vimes is trapped in Ankh-Morpork during the events of ''Literature/{{Jingo}}'', Vetinari sends him a letter that only says "Samuel Vimes, Knight". Vimes doesn't get it... until he realizes that [[spoiler:it means he's entitled to form a regiment under his command, allowing him to sail to Klatch and prevent a war]].
** In ''Literature/UnseenAcademicals'', one of the more absurd-seeming of the foot-the-ball rules is "The ball is the ball that shall be known as the ball". This comes in handy in the big match, when Trev Likely, who has never practiced with a spherical ball but is a master of kicking a tin can, uses it to say that, as long as the team ''treats'' the can as the ball, it's the ball.
* In ''By the Sword'', a [[Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar Valdemar]] novel by Creator/MercedesLackey, there's an old rule that says that a mercenary company that has lost enough members can call the Captaincy to vote. The Captain of the Skybolts, Ardana, gets the boot after a disastrous campaign.
* In ''Literature/TheBelgariad'', there is a clause in the Accords of Val Alorn with Tolnedra that says "Aloria shall maintain Riva and keep it whole." Thing is, at the time the treaty was signed, Aloria (the ancestral kingdom of the Alorns) hadn't existed in centuries: what was once that nation was split into the kingdoms of Riva, Drasnia, Cherekh, and Algaria. The last three each have peace treaties with Tolnedra. This clause comes into effect much later, when the Emperor, angered by a disastrous expedition to Riva, prepares for a full-scale invasion. The [[{{Ambadassador}} Cherekh ambassador]] (fully aware of the accords) sends a letter to the Emperor saying that if this invasion happens, Aloria will fulfill that clause and end Tolnedra. The Emperor realizes that while Drasnia, Cherekh, and Algaria have signed individual treaties with Tolnedra, ''collectively they are Aloria'', with whom Tolnedra has no treaties at all. The fear that the Alorns might band together to make war haunts the Tolnedran government for ''centuries''--and then Nyissan assassins murder the Rivan King, and Tolnedra's nightmares come true.
** One of the clauses in the Treaty of Vo Mimbre is that a Tolnedran Princess must come to Riva and await for the King to return. Ce'Nedra is ready to go through this formality that pays homage to a long-extinct dynasty [[spoiler:and discovers that Garion is the rightful Rivan King.]]
* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', the Ironborn people have restored their old tradition of ElectiveMonarchy, when the kings are elected on a council called Kingsmoot. A Kingsmoot is assembled, and a tyrannical evil sorcerer wins the election. Said sorcerer's niece and rival Asha Greyjoy goes into exile to the North, and one of her followers suddenly reminds her of one rule of Kingsmoot about which everyone forgot: if a Kingsmoot was assembled and at least one candidate with a significant claim to the crown was absent, it is invalid. Thus Asha decides to rescue her brother Theon from captivity in order to invalidate the Kingsmoot through him.
* In ''Literature/TheKnightsOfTheCross'', when all other ways to extricate [[DistressedDude Zbyszko]] from his pending execution fail, princess Anna remembers a little known law that a young man cannot be executed if a pure maiden claims him as her betrothed. Resulting in an iconic scene of [[LoveInterest Danusia]] doing just that.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action Television]]
* Reality TV competitions and Game Shows in general have many, many more rules than a casual viewer needs to know. Little-known and usually behind-the-scenes rules often only come up when they're about to be broken. For example, if ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' reminds viewers about requirements for teams to take a certain mode of transportation, you can be sure someone is about to mess up.
* For someone to be in ''Series/CanadasWorstDriver'' in the first place, they must be a legal driver, having both license and insurance. Thus, the only attention those rules usually get during the rest of the show is mere mentioning. But in Season 6, Scott Schurink's nominator (who let Scott drive on his insurance) realized what an ass Scott was ''and cancelled Scott's insurance during filming''. Since Scott couldn't pay for his own insurance (which would cost him $1,200 ''per month''), [[NonGameplayElimination he got kicked off the show]].
* ''Series/TheCommish''. In "Sleep of the Just", a rapist has DiplomaticImpunity, so the police harass him by ticketing for obscure and long-obsolete violations of the law, like sneezing in public (it frightens the horses). When he tears up the ticket and throws it away, he's cited for littering, which is illegal in any century.
* In ''Kaamelott'', King Arthur, who lusts after a knight's wife, avoids a deathmatch with his knight by using an outdated law that allows him to swap his wife for the knight's wife.
* In the ''Series/DoctorWho'' serial "Paradise Towers", the Doctor does this by ''making up'' a rule; he exploits the Deputy Chief Caretaker's simultaneous hyper-bureaucratic nature and imperfect knowledge of the rulebook by claiming there's an obscure rule in his rulebook which requires the guards to stand down, walk five paces away from the prisoner, close their eyes, put their hands over their heads and wait a minute and a half. This, not coincidentally, is exactly how long the Doctor needs to find the right keycard and escape.
* ''Series/ForgedInFire'', like the name suggests, is a ''forging'' competition, meaning that the blades created for the challenges must be forged into their final shape. This rule went unnoticed for the first season and most of the second, because the metal used usually ''had'' to be forged to make a viable blade (and none of the contestants were stupid enough to try ''not'' forging it). However, in one late episodes where lawnmower blades were used, a contestant decided to ''grind'' the blade into a knife shape, instead of forging it. The resulting knife was not valid under the rules, resulting in the contestant's elimination.
* In ''Series/GameOfThrones'', Yara Greyjoy expects to succeed her father, Balon, after his murder and become the first queen of the Iron Islands, since her brother has been castrated and failed so badly at a military campaign that he does not feel himself worthy of the throne. However, she is taken aback when she learns she must get the support of the islands' other nobles at the "kingsmoot", where her uncle Euron is chosen king instead.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Politics]]
* The Soviet Union was ''technically'' a confederation. When UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev relaxed the restrictive policies of the USSR, the constituent republics remembered this and [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere split off]].
* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.
** The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.
* In the last years of the UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic none of the governments had a positive parliamentary majority behind them. However, the chancellor was appointed by the President and the President was allowed to make "Emergency Orders" (Notverordnungen) under Article 48 of the Weimar constitution. While they could be thrown out by a majority of the parliament voting against them, the President also had the power to dissolve the parliament at any point he pleased and call new elections. When parliament was not in session, the Emergency Orders could not be voided by it and hence Brüning, von Papen and Schleicher (the last three chancellors before Hitler) could in essence govern without parliament so long as the President supported their agenda. This backfired ''hard'' and the Nazis got more and more votes until eventually (after the Nazis got 45% of the vote and could get a majority with a coalition with another far right party) President Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. Hitler proceeded to introduce and pass a law giving him the power to make any laws he wished, including those going against letter and spirit of the constitution. The question of whether the "AintNoRule" justification the Nazis used was legit has never been conclusively answered, but suffice to say the constitution of UsefulNotes/TheBonnRepublic and UsefulNotes/TheBerlinRepublic (which is the same document in essence) is anally retentive about none of that ever happening ever again.
* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' - or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.
* In the 2004 U.S. presidential election, a Minnesota electoral college voter pledged to Democratic candidate John Kerry voted instead for Kerry's running-mate, John Edwards to be president. It's still unclear whether this was intentional or not, but the state legislature responded to this by changing electoral college votes to being public instead of anonymous, and barring electors from voting for candidates other than whom they were officially pledged. Come the 2016 election, another Minnesota elector tried to vote for Bernie Sanders instead of UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton (who had come dangerously close to being the first Democratic candidate to lose the state in 44 years), but thanks to the change in state law, was unable to do so.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sports]]
* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases - [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).
* The 1999 Cricket World Cup had a rule to decide which team would go to the final if the semi-final was tied: the team that won the match played between the same opponents in the earlier stages. Rather dramatically, one of the semi-finals between Australia and South Africa ended in a tie, thus invoking this rule and letting Australia enter into the finals since they won the said previous match. South Africa would have easily won that previous match, if not for one of their best fielders, Hershchelle Gibbs dropping a catch letting off Australia captain, Steve Waugh, who went on to win the game for Australia. South Africa had dominated the World Cup until then, so the dropped catch and the defeat was considered mostly insignificant as South Africa were expected to win the World Cup anyway.
* In Olympic gymnastics, it was ''technically'' possible to get a 10/10 score--but this was so unlikely that scoreboards only went up to 9.99. Then Nadia Comăneci to pull off a perfect score in 1976--which, [[BrokeTheRatingScale due to the technical limitation]], was displayed as an abysmal ''1.00''. After that, scoreboards went up to 10.
* Creator/KeithOlbermann makes a point that "Merkle's [[HaveAGayOldTime boner]]", a famous mistake by a rookie in 1908 that won the Chicago Cubs the National League pennant and ultimately their last World Series until 2016, was this. See [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QVcGJwiO54 this video]].
* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballConferences conference]] in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].
* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Riaders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to rule it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.[[note]]It's likely [[/note]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.
[[/folder]]
----le it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.
[[/folder]]

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Changed: 6631

Removed: 229

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None


* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Riaders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to ruThis is when a rule or law that is usually not given much thought is suddenly invoked. This can happen because:
# The rule is obscure and outdated or little used, but it's dusted off because it can allow or disallow a course of action.
# The rule is well known, but is given little thought because it's expected that ''everyone'' will follow it--and then it comes into play when someone ''doesn't.''
# A RulesLawyer [[BotheringByTheBook uses the rule as a trump card]].
# The circumstances of the rule coming into play are unlikely.

This is distinct from LoopholeAbuse, which deals with getting around the rules, while this deals with following them, but there can be either overlap when invoking one rule allows someone to get around another, or exclusion when this means that a loophole that seemed to exist actually doesn't.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* A bit spoileriffic example from ''Manga/TheLawOfUeki'': The characters get special powers to participate in a tournament to decide who's gonna be the next God (since the current one wants to quit). There are two rules: If a participant attacks a normal person with his powers, the attacker loses one sai (talents, unique qualities of every person), and losing all your sais means you stop existing; but after a tournament fight, the winner gets a new sai. This becomes irrelevant after the first stage, since the rest of the tournament is held up in Heaven, there's not normal humans outside of contestants, and everyone who got that far already won a lot of sais. [softreturn] Cue to the climax, the BigBad gets cornered and [[spoiler: gets out of the tournament, meaning that every time the Hero attacks he loses one sai.]] Meanwhile, the Hero [[spoiler: ends up down to one sai, with another hit he will win the fight but also his existence will end. He attacks anyway but doesn't disappear because in the middle of the fight he accidentally blasted away a poor ComicRelief, which gave him an additional sai.]]



[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law]].

to:

[[folder:Urban Legends]]
[[folder:Audio Plays]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where In ''The Eleven-Day Empire'' and ''Shadow Play'', the university was first two ''Franchise/FactionParadox'' audios, Lolita, a Homeworld agent, conspires to provide tea (sometimes ale) have the young Faction Cousin Justine granted the unique shadow of the Faction's Grandfather. However, it turns out that under the Faction's laws, "the shadow is more important that the flesh", automatically making her guilty of the Grandfather's crimes and cakes to students during examinations. They provided giving her the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according perfect opening to an equally forgotten law]].LogicBomb the Eleven-Day Empire out of existence.



[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].

to:

[[folder:Video Games]]
[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The In ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'', the position of Mayor of Fabletown is ''technically'' elected, but no elections have been held since King Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted has been chosen Mayor at the town's founding centuries ago. Then Prince Charming calls for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens an election and runs for the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. position, thus throwing everything into turmoil. However, it was mostly ignored Charming then becomes a victim of this trope himself because he did not until do enough research into what exactly the 27th year of the war Mayor's powers were. Most importantly he did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures
not realize that the chain of command within witches' help is voluntary and cannot be compelled by the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, Mayor. They will help in emergencies but their magic is in limited supply and they refuse to use it also requires those to help Charming fulfill his campaign promises. King Cole only asked for their help in emergencies so they never had a reason to refuse before. Thus only a few Fables were aware of superior rank these restrictions and they chose not to give orders to those who do warn Charming because they did not report directly like him.
* In an ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming
to them, and get rid of Betty so she can be grounds have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for having the day, citing a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!



[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''

to:

[[folder:Webcomics]]
[[folder:Fanfiction]]
* The {{framing device}} ''Fanfic/EmbersVathara'': No one has used the Shelter of Dragon's Wings rule for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] over 200 years, but it was still on the books. This allows Iroh to use a Fire Navy ship as shelter, despite several '''very''' good reasons they should burn him down where he stands.
* In ''Fanfic/ProjectDelta'', Jane
has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in a lot of trouble getting the normal way, he invokes proper training due to an ancient law about outsiders being permitted on an asari colony.
* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition
and rarely-used magical law which enables him to actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be bound to a living human held prisoner until his trial. He figures such time that Lydia sort of owes him for the conflict is over as to not going through with their marriage like pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she agreed, found it and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get made use of it. It later turns out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they it wasn't actually like each other - ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor
evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling of wrongdoing to have them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o'
all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''legally removed soon enough ''anyway''.



[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.

to:

[[folder:Western Animation]]
[[folder:Film]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce During the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part final duel of a plan ''Film/TheGamersHandsOfFate'', the BigBad seems to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making forget the small rule that a million sprockets player may give away the reward for a quest they just completed to their opponent, who has no way of refusing it. This way, [[spoiler:Cass gives away his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat Apple of Life to the paperwork BigBad--which "resurrects" his entire ''undead'' army that promptly starves to death since it never had or needed for Spacely any food production before]].
* In ''Film/ThePrincessDiaries 2'', Genovian law apparently says that women have
to go back online would be married to take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had
throne, though this has never been enforced. Funnily enough, this upheld in practice. The villain brings it up because his nephew-by-marriage is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year next in line after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes. Mia.


Added DiffLines:


[[folder:Literature]]
* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', such a rule is part of the villains' plan. They hire someone else to [[spoiler: kidnap Jerin]], so that they can then steal [[spoiler: Jerin]] back from the criminals they hired, invoking a law that says that they're then allowed to keep [[spoiler: the man they rescued from his kidnappers]], as a reward for their victory over the criminals. Of course, for this to work, the hired helpers have to be killed (as the rule wouldn't apply if it was known everything was planned by one and the same family) but the villains show no remorse about this.
* In ''Literature/DragonBones'', Ward is told that a slave has fled to his land, Hurog, and is hiding somewhere under the castle. The nobles who lost the slave would like to get her back, but Ward tells them that there is no slave, invoking an ancient law that says that a slave who sets foot on Hurog land is automatically free. Ward's father and grandfather were jerks who would have happily assisted the nobles in their search for the escaped slaves, but Ward decides to revive the tradition. The nobles are quite annoyed.
* From ''Literature/TheElenium'', Berit is a Novice, so he's not entitled to wear armour yet. When Sparhawk and company head off to Zemoch, they dust off the seldom-used rank of ''Apprentice'' Knight for Berit, which means he's not a full Knight, but ''is'' allowed to wear armour.
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** Sam Vimes comes from a poor family, that had been noble until his ancestor became a regicide, and has nothing but contempt for titles as a result (technically he's a knight[[note]]Until the end of Jingo, where he's made a duke.[[/note]], due to the title coming with his rank of Commander, but only the very brave or stupid would actually call him that). So when Vimes is trapped in Ankh-Morpork during the events of ''Literature/{{Jingo}}'', Vetinari sends him a letter that only says "Samuel Vimes, Knight". Vimes doesn't get it... until he realizes that [[spoiler:it means he's entitled to form a regiment under his command, allowing him to sail to Klatch and prevent a war]].
** In ''Literature/UnseenAcademicals'', one of the more absurd-seeming of the foot-the-ball rules is "The ball is the ball that shall be known as the ball". This comes in handy in the big match, when Trev Likely, who has never practiced with a spherical ball but is a master of kicking a tin can, uses it to say that, as long as the team ''treats'' the can as the ball, it's the ball.
* In ''By the Sword'', a [[Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar Valdemar]] novel by Creator/MercedesLackey, there's an old rule that says that a mercenary company that has lost enough members can call the Captaincy to vote. The Captain of the Skybolts, Ardana, gets the boot after a disastrous campaign.
* In ''Literature/TheBelgariad'', there is a clause in the Accords of Val Alorn with Tolnedra that says "Aloria shall maintain Riva and keep it whole." Thing is, at the time the treaty was signed, Aloria (the ancestral kingdom of the Alorns) hadn't existed in centuries: what was once that nation was split into the kingdoms of Riva, Drasnia, Cherekh, and Algaria. The last three each have peace treaties with Tolnedra. This clause comes into effect much later, when the Emperor, angered by a disastrous expedition to Riva, prepares for a full-scale invasion. The [[{{Ambadassador}} Cherekh ambassador]] (fully aware of the accords) sends a letter to the Emperor saying that if this invasion happens, Aloria will fulfill that clause and end Tolnedra. The Emperor realizes that while Drasnia, Cherekh, and Algaria have signed individual treaties with Tolnedra, ''collectively they are Aloria'', with whom Tolnedra has no treaties at all. The fear that the Alorns might band together to make war haunts the Tolnedran government for ''centuries''--and then Nyissan assassins murder the Rivan King, and Tolnedra's nightmares come true.
** One of the clauses in the Treaty of Vo Mimbre is that a Tolnedran Princess must come to Riva and await for the King to return. Ce'Nedra is ready to go through this formality that pays homage to a long-extinct dynasty [[spoiler:and discovers that Garion is the rightful Rivan King.]]
* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', the Ironborn people have restored their old tradition of ElectiveMonarchy, when the kings are elected on a council called Kingsmoot. A Kingsmoot is assembled, and a tyrannical evil sorcerer wins the election. Said sorcerer's niece and rival Asha Greyjoy goes into exile to the North, and one of her followers suddenly reminds her of one rule of Kingsmoot about which everyone forgot: if a Kingsmoot was assembled and at least one candidate with a significant claim to the crown was absent, it is invalid. Thus Asha decides to rescue her brother Theon from captivity in order to invalidate the Kingsmoot through him.
* In ''Literature/TheKnightsOfTheCross'', when all other ways to extricate [[DistressedDude Zbyszko]] from his pending execution fail, princess Anna remembers a little known law that a young man cannot be executed if a pure maiden claims him as her betrothed. Resulting in an iconic scene of [[LoveInterest Danusia]] doing just that.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action Television]]
* Reality TV competitions and Game Shows in general have many, many more rules than a casual viewer needs to know. Little-known and usually behind-the-scenes rules often only come up when they're about to be broken. For example, if ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' reminds viewers about requirements for teams to take a certain mode of transportation, you can be sure someone is about to mess up.
* For someone to be in ''Series/CanadasWorstDriver'' in the first place, they must be a legal driver, having both license and insurance. Thus, the only attention those rules usually get during the rest of the show is mere mentioning. But in Season 6, Scott Schurink's nominator (who let Scott drive on his insurance) realized what an ass Scott was ''and cancelled Scott's insurance during filming''. Since Scott couldn't pay for his own insurance (which would cost him $1,200 ''per month''), [[NonGameplayElimination he got kicked off the show]].
* ''Series/TheCommish''. In "Sleep of the Just", a rapist has DiplomaticImpunity, so the police harass him by ticketing for obscure and long-obsolete violations of the law, like sneezing in public (it frightens the horses). When he tears up the ticket and throws it away, he's cited for littering, which is illegal in any century.
* In ''Kaamelott'', King Arthur, who lusts after a knight's wife, avoids a deathmatch with his knight by using an outdated law that allows him to swap his wife for the knight's wife.
* In the ''Series/DoctorWho'' serial "Paradise Towers", the Doctor does this by ''making up'' a rule; he exploits the Deputy Chief Caretaker's simultaneous hyper-bureaucratic nature and imperfect knowledge of the rulebook by claiming there's an obscure rule in his rulebook which requires the guards to stand down, walk five paces away from the prisoner, close their eyes, put their hands over their heads and wait a minute and a half. This, not coincidentally, is exactly how long the Doctor needs to find the right keycard and escape.
* ''Series/ForgedInFire'', like the name suggests, is a ''forging'' competition, meaning that the blades created for the challenges must be forged into their final shape. This rule went unnoticed for the first season and most of the second, because the metal used usually ''had'' to be forged to make a viable blade (and none of the contestants were stupid enough to try ''not'' forging it). However, in one late episodes where lawnmower blades were used, a contestant decided to ''grind'' the blade into a knife shape, instead of forging it. The resulting knife was not valid under the rules, resulting in the contestant's elimination.
* In ''Series/GameOfThrones'', Yara Greyjoy expects to succeed her father, Balon, after his murder and become the first queen of the Iron Islands, since her brother has been castrated and failed so badly at a military campaign that he does not feel himself worthy of the throne. However, she is taken aback when she learns she must get the support of the islands' other nobles at the "kingsmoot", where her uncle Euron is chosen king instead.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Politics]]
* The Soviet Union was ''technically'' a confederation. When UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev relaxed the restrictive policies of the USSR, the constituent republics remembered this and [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere split off]].
* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.
** The constitutional crisis is caused by a lack of stable/generally accepted leadership that allows many somewhat powerful politicians to either claim leadership for themselves or reject the leadership of someone else. The reason obscure laws or unorthodox interpretations are used is because if they say "screw it, all power to me" and ditch the rulebook (the constitution) alltogether, then it is a legitimate free-for-all for everyone, meaning their seats are contested as well. They want to get to the top of the pyramid without bringing it down.
* In the last years of the UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic none of the governments had a positive parliamentary majority behind them. However, the chancellor was appointed by the President and the President was allowed to make "Emergency Orders" (Notverordnungen) under Article 48 of the Weimar constitution. While they could be thrown out by a majority of the parliament voting against them, the President also had the power to dissolve the parliament at any point he pleased and call new elections. When parliament was not in session, the Emergency Orders could not be voided by it and hence Brüning, von Papen and Schleicher (the last three chancellors before Hitler) could in essence govern without parliament so long as the President supported their agenda. This backfired ''hard'' and the Nazis got more and more votes until eventually (after the Nazis got 45% of the vote and could get a majority with a coalition with another far right party) President Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. Hitler proceeded to introduce and pass a law giving him the power to make any laws he wished, including those going against letter and spirit of the constitution. The question of whether the "AintNoRule" justification the Nazis used was legit has never been conclusively answered, but suffice to say the constitution of UsefulNotes/TheBonnRepublic and UsefulNotes/TheBerlinRepublic (which is the same document in essence) is anally retentive about none of that ever happening ever again.
* Prior to the treaty of Lisbon there was no rule for leaving the EU (which is not to say it did not happen, both Greenland and the former French territory that is now Algeria were technically part of predecessors of the EU at some point in time), however that treaty explicitly introduced a rule, mostly summed up in article 50. Article 50 establishes that whatever the new relationship between the former EU member and the "rest-EU" is going to be has to be negotiated within two years, otherwise the new relationship will be the "default" of the EU relations to any non-EU country with no special rights or obligations. However, there is a way around the two year deadline, as Britain showed in light of the "Brexit" vote. The referendum ''technically'' being non-binding, Article 50 is not triggered until Parliament (the only body in Britain that can make laws) ''explicitly'' makes a law to leave the EU under article 50. And there AintNoRule that they have to do it ''now'' - or at any point from now until the sun turns into a red giant. So while Article 50 as originally worded provides for a (in political terms) quick and clean divorce, a loophole nobody seems to have foreseen enables countries to leave and not leave the EU at the same time.
* In the 2004 U.S. presidential election, a Minnesota electoral college voter pledged to Democratic candidate John Kerry voted instead for Kerry's running-mate, John Edwards to be president. It's still unclear whether this was intentional or not, but the state legislature responded to this by changing electoral college votes to being public instead of anonymous, and barring electors from voting for candidates other than whom they were officially pledged. Come the 2016 election, another Minnesota elector tried to vote for Bernie Sanders instead of UsefulNotes/HillaryClinton (who had come dangerously close to being the first Democratic candidate to lose the state in 44 years), but thanks to the change in state law, was unable to do so.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sports]]
* On July 24, 1983, Major League UsefulNotes/{{Baseball}} slugger George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hit a two-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning, giving his team a 5-4 lead. Then, New York Yankees manager [[MagnificentBastard Billy Martin]] brought to the attention of the umpire that Brett's bat had too much pine tar on it. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Pine tar is used so the player can have a better grip on the bat. The rules of the time said you couldn't have more than 18 inches of pine tar on the bat, but Brett regularly used more than 24 inches. The rule was originally made to keep the home team from having to replace too many discolored balls, but as time progressed and balls became cheaper, the rule's reason wasn't valid any more.[[/labelnote]] Martin had known that Brett was using more pine tar than the rules allowed for quite some time, but nobody else noticed and Martin kept it to himself until it proved useful during a game. The umpire ruled Brett out on an illegally batted ball, which meant the Yankees won. After the game the Royals protested to the league, and the AL president upheld the protest, so the game was restarted on August 18th from the point of Brett's home run (the Royals won 5-4, but not before Martin tried to have Brett called out for not touching all the bases - [[OutGambitted his intent was frustrated]] when the umpire [[CrazyPrepared pulled out a signed affidavit from the umpires of the first game saying that Brett did in fact touch them all]]). [[{{Nerf}} The rule was later modified]] to say that if nobody complained before the batter hit a ball, the violation doesn't nullify the play. See the whole thing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbEHAsZxRYo here]] (Brett makes a particularly nice DynamicEntry at 2:40 when he's called out).
* The 1999 Cricket World Cup had a rule to decide which team would go to the final if the semi-final was tied: the team that won the match played between the same opponents in the earlier stages. Rather dramatically, one of the semi-finals between Australia and South Africa ended in a tie, thus invoking this rule and letting Australia enter into the finals since they won the said previous match. South Africa would have easily won that previous match, if not for one of their best fielders, Hershchelle Gibbs dropping a catch letting off Australia captain, Steve Waugh, who went on to win the game for Australia. South Africa had dominated the World Cup until then, so the dropped catch and the defeat was considered mostly insignificant as South Africa were expected to win the World Cup anyway.
* In Olympic gymnastics, it was ''technically'' possible to get a 10/10 score--but this was so unlikely that scoreboards only went up to 9.99. Then Nadia Comăneci to pull off a perfect score in 1976--which, [[BrokeTheRatingScale due to the technical limitation]], was displayed as an abysmal ''1.00''. After that, scoreboards went up to 10.
* Creator/KeithOlbermann makes a point that "Merkle's [[HaveAGayOldTime boner]]", a famous mistake by a rookie in 1908 that won the Chicago Cubs the National League pennant and ultimately their last World Series until 2016, was this. See [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QVcGJwiO54 this video]].
* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballConferences conference]] in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].
* The old "tuck rule" used by the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague from 1999 until 2013, where if a passer's arm is going forward when he is being hit and loses control of the football it counts as an incomplete pass rather than a fumble, even if his arm is going towards his body to tuck the ball away for ball security. It had been on the books for a couple years, but most football fans will remember it for affecting the outcome of the "Tuck Rule Game", the AFC Divisional Round game in the 2001-02 playoffs between the Oakland Raiders and New England Patriots. Raiders are up 13-10, but the Patriots are able to get to Oakland's 42 yard line with 1:50 left in the 4th quarter. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady then gets hit while bringing his arm forward and loses the ball, which the Raiders recover. It was initially ruled a fumble, which would have meant the Riaders would win because they could run out the clock as the Patriots had no timeouts, but the referees pulled in the tuck rule to rule it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.[[note]]It's likely [[/note]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.
[[/folder]]
----le it an incomplete pass, letting the Patriots keep the ball. With the second life, the Patriots got into field goal range and tied the game, before winning in overtime and going on to win the rest of the way to the Super Bowl, starting the Patriots dynasty. Patriots coach Bill Belichick remembered that rule in particular as the Patriots had been on the other end of that ruling earlier in the season back in September against the New York Jets where Jets quarterback Vinny Testeverde had lost the ball on a similar play as the Jets were driving down but the tuck rule meant the Jets were able to continue their drive, kick a game-tying field goal, and later win the game.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Urban Legends]]
* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''Literature/HaloFirstStrike'': The Cole Protocol is a series of rules drafted for human fleets listing numerous steps they must follow to prevent [[ScaryDogmaticAliens the Covenant]] from finding Earth, such as never hyper-space jumping directly to Earth, destroying navigation intel, etc. One of the rules, Subsection 7, said to never bring back a captured Covenant vessel without throughly checking it for tracking devices first. However, it was mostly ignored because not until the 27th year of the war did anyone ever capture a Covenant vessel without [[TakingYouWithMe its crew hitting the self-destruct]].
* In ''Videogame/FalloutNewVegas'', one of the rules of the Brotherhood of Steel, "The Chain that Binds", ensures that the chain of command within the Brotherhood is always adhered. It's mostly just invoked when a lower ranked member is insubordinate to a higher ranked one, but it also requires those of superior rank not to give orders to those who do not report directly to them, and can be grounds for having a Brotherhood Elder demoted and replaced, if you decide to support Paladin Hardin's attempt to depose Elder [=MacNamara=].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The {{framing device}} for ''Webcomic/CobwebAndStripes'' is that [[Film/{{Beetlejuice}} Betelgeuse]] has been arrested for an unspecified crime. Rather than serve out his sentence in the normal way, he invokes an ancient and rarely-used magical law which enables him to be bound to a living human until his trial. He figures that Lydia sort of owes him for not going through with their marriage like she agreed, and so he volunteers her for the task. She can't get out of it, so she goes along with it, and they're both surprised to find that they actually like each other - enough to continue the relationship even after they're no longer bound.
* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' the threat of this is used as [[spoiler: leverage on Antimony's father to force him to return]]. The Court caught [[spoiler: Antimony]] cheating on her schoolwork, but rather than address academic dishonesty in any normal fashion they instead threaten to pretend to not have noticed until the last moment, then use it to expel her immediately before graduation. There's minor evidence that this is a pattern. They employ obvious obstacles students can get around while also surveilling them through subtler methods, then they do nothing about any rules they break - but if the Court wants something suddenly those rules can be very important.
* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'', Cogswell bribes a crooked commissioner to enforce the B.E.B.O.P law (Basic Electro Bionic Operations Permit) as part of a plan to shutdown Spacely's factory to prevent him from making a million sprockets for his millionth cog ([[ObstructiveBureaucrat the paperwork needed for Spacely to go back online would take four weeks]]). One of the side effects of the trick was that Rosie had to marry Mack to prevent him from being melted down.
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' hinges on this. When several vocal townspeople protest alcohol consumption and demand prohibition, the city officials are ready to dismiss them out of hand until a clerk in the room happens to find a 200 year old prohibition law that was noted but had never been enforced. Funnily enough, this is [[InvertedTrope inverted]] at the end of the episode when the same clerk finds on the same parchment that the law was repealed a year after being put in place, invalidating Homer’s crimes.
[[/folder]]
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* In Olympic Gymnastics, it was ''technically'' possible to get a 10/10 score--but this was so unlikely that scoreboards only went up to 9.99. Then Nadia Comăneci to pull off a perfect score in 1976--which, [[BrokeTheRatingScale due to the technical limitation]], was displayed as an abysmal ''1.00''. After that, scoreboards went up to 10.

to:

* In Olympic Gymnastics, gymnastics, it was ''technically'' possible to get a 10/10 score--but this was so unlikely that scoreboards only went up to 9.99. Then Nadia Comăneci to pull off a perfect score in 1976--which, [[BrokeTheRatingScale due to the technical limitation]], was displayed as an abysmal ''1.00''. After that, scoreboards went up to 10.



* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other conference in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].

to:

* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other conference [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballConferences conference]] in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].

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Added an NCAA example.


* Keith Olbermann makes a point that "Merkle's [[HaveAGayOldTime boner]]", a famous mistake by a rookie in 1908 that won the Cubs the Pennant and ultimately their last world series until 2016 was this. See [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QVcGJwiO54 this video]]

to:

* Keith Olbermann Creator/KeithOlbermann makes a point that "Merkle's [[HaveAGayOldTime boner]]", a famous mistake by a rookie in 1908 that won the Chicago Cubs the Pennant National League pennant and ultimately their last world series World Series until 2016 2016, was this. See [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QVcGJwiO54 this video]]video]].
* In 1987, the UsefulNotes/{{NCAA}} passed a rule change that allowed any conference with at least 12 [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball football]] members to split into divisions and hold a championship game between the divisional winners, with said game not counting against either team's limit on regular-season contests. The rule was proposed by two Division II conferences, but applied throughout the NCAA. The two D-II conferences that proposed the change ended up not implementing it immediately due to changes in that division's playoff format. However, Roy Kramer, then commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, one of the leagues that would eventually become part of the so-called [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballPower5Conferences Power Five]], noticed that the SEC had 10 members. If it added two more... you get the picture. Cue the SEC adding Arkansas and South Carolina in 1991 and launching its championship game the next year. The game was enough of a [[MoneyDearBoy cash cow]] that every other conference in what is now Division I FBS eventually [[FollowTheLeader followed suit]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Ammendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.

to:

* Surprisingly, many U.S. constitutional crises are ultimately due to this. Either a rule was formulated once and then largely forgotten or a rule was worded very unclearly and its interpretation in modern times makes for endless debates. Just take the Second Ammendment Amendment or whatever a "natural born citizen" is supposed to be.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Transplanted Page


* ''Fanfic/{{Embers}}'': No one has used the Shelter of Dragon's Wings rule for over 200 years, but it was still on the books. This allows Iroh to use a Fire Navy ship as shelter, despite several '''very''' good reasons they should burn him down where he stands.

to:

* ''Fanfic/{{Embers}}'': ''Fanfic/EmbersVathara'': No one has used the Shelter of Dragon's Wings rule for over 200 years, but it was still on the books. This allows Iroh to use a Fire Navy ship as shelter, despite several '''very''' good reasons they should burn him down where he stands.
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* ''Series/TheCommish''. In "Sleep of the Just", a rapist has DiplomaticImpunity, so the police harass him by ticketing for obscure and long-obsolete violations of the law, like sneezing in public (it frightens the horses). When he tears up the ticket and throws it away, he's cited for littering, which is illegal in any century.
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* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just destroyed said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]

to:

* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just destroyed caused a falling rock to destroy said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
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Added DiffLines:

--> '''Sigdi Thundershield:''' Were ye really so dumb ta think fer one second tha ye could beat Durkon-- '''Durkon''' o' all the folks in this great big beaut'ful world-- in a fight tha revolved around '''followin tha rules?!?'''
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Added DiffLines:

* Used to literally save the world in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'': [[spoiler: Just before the vampire-dominated dwarven council can finish a vote that would have resulted in the gods destroying the world, one of the non-dominated elders suspends the session because the rules require them to meet at a table with certain specifications-- and Durkon's thrown hammer has just destroyed said table. This prevents the vote from taking place until they can replace it, which gives the heroes plenty of time to deal with the vampires.]]
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* In an ''Franchise/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming to get rid of Betty so she can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for the day, citing a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!

to:

* In an ''Franchise/ArchieComics'' ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' scene at Veronica's backyard pool, Veronica is scheming to get rid of Betty so she can have Archie all to herself. When Betty pushes a fully dressed Archie into the pool, Veronica promptly has her banned from the pool area for the day, citing a "No horseplay" rule. Betty agrees, but slyly points out that Archie has to leave ''with'' her, since he violated a rule against being in the pool with his clothes on!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law.

to:

* There was a student at an English university who invoked a law where the university was to provide tea (sometimes ale) and cakes to students during examinations. They provided the modern equivalent, a Coke and a burger... [[MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours then fined him for not wearing his sword according to an equally forgotten law.law]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Sam Vimes comes from a poor family, that had been noble until his ancestor became a regicide, and has nothing but contempt for titles as a result (technically he's a knight[[note]]Until the end of Jingo, where he's made a duke.[[/note]], due to the title coming with his rank of Commander, but only the very brave or stupid would actually call him that). So when Vimes is trapped in Ankh-Morpork during the events of ''Discworld/{{Jingo}}'', Vetinari sends him a letter that only says "Samuel Vimes, Knight". Vimes doesn't get it... until he realizes that [[spoiler:it means he's entitled to form a regiment under his command, allowing him to sail to Klatch and prevent a war]].
** In ''Discworld/UnseenAcademicals'', one of the more absurd-seeming of the foot-the-ball rules is "The ball is the ball that shall be known as the ball". This comes in handy in the big match, when Trev Likely, who has never practiced with a spherical ball but is a master of kicking a tin can, uses it to say that, as long as the team ''treats'' the can as the ball, it's the ball.

to:

** Sam Vimes comes from a poor family, that had been noble until his ancestor became a regicide, and has nothing but contempt for titles as a result (technically he's a knight[[note]]Until the end of Jingo, where he's made a duke.[[/note]], due to the title coming with his rank of Commander, but only the very brave or stupid would actually call him that). So when Vimes is trapped in Ankh-Morpork during the events of ''Discworld/{{Jingo}}'', ''Literature/{{Jingo}}'', Vetinari sends him a letter that only says "Samuel Vimes, Knight". Vimes doesn't get it... until he realizes that [[spoiler:it means he's entitled to form a regiment under his command, allowing him to sail to Klatch and prevent a war]].
** In ''Discworld/UnseenAcademicals'', ''Literature/UnseenAcademicals'', one of the more absurd-seeming of the foot-the-ball rules is "The ball is the ball that shall be known as the ball". This comes in handy in the big match, when Trev Likely, who has never practiced with a spherical ball but is a master of kicking a tin can, uses it to say that, as long as the team ''treats'' the can as the ball, it's the ball.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it.

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* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it. It later turns out that it wasn't actually ratified, though by that point Blueblood's gathered enough evidence of wrongdoing to have them all legally removed soon enough ''anyway''.
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* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': In chapter 5 of the sequel ''Diplomat at Large'', Twilight invokes a law dating back to the first Noble Council - "In the time where our allies are under attack, all those who deliberately deny or delay Equestria's support on their own volition and actively act against the principles of friendship that our nation was founded on, shall have their wealth and citizenship revoked, and be held prisoner until such time that the conflict is over as to not pose as a potential enemy within our own nation." In short, it lets her ''legally'' remove a majority of the nobles from power so the Princesses can declare war on the Storm King and his armies without interference. This rule is ''literally'' over a thousand years old and is still on the books, but she found it and made use of it.

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