This is a fine line, Thailand courts have no common law jurisdiction or power, but only those expressly conferred by the Constitution and statutes and those necessarily implied to make the express effective.
The question of jurisdiction of the court over the case filed before it is to be resolved on the basis of the law or statute providing for or defining its jurisdiction.
The jurisdiction of a court to try a criminal action is determined not by the law in force at the time of the commission of offense but by the law in force at the time of the institution of the action.
Then you have to take in marshall law at the time simple saying (If the coup was illegal, then any convictions made during the period and indeed under any military coup government must also be illegal.) is a big leap !!
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