Peaceful Inhabitants
Do you claim that you’re the name, you, person, defendant, "owner", occupant, citizen, resident, tenant etc. or that you "own" things, including the name you use? Can you “prove” these claims?
Do you try explaining what you did/didn't do and/or why you did/didn't do it? If so, why? Are you assuming that you're the name, you, person etc.? Are you "taking it personally"?
Does the title of every court case contain the word "versus", indicating a controversy? If someone else seems to believe that you're involved in a controversy, could it be wise to ask if there's any evidence? If someone seems to believe there is evidence that you're involved in controversy, could it be wise to say that you believe there's been a mistake, and ask how you can help settle the matter honorably?
We have had had some remarkable success in dealing with a mortgage and also in a couple of other legal issues.
I believe that the whole system is based on military law. With a focus on elements of the Lieber Code, admiralty, and the 1907 Hague Convention, etc.
a number of words used are largely unfamiliar with most people, such as “usufruct” and “usufructuary”- which are roughly synonymous with “res” and “beneficiary” in trust law; but which are far more powerful.
P.S., the following is a list and definition of some of the key words:
BAIL transitive verb; to deliver (personal property) in trust to another for a special purpose and for a limited period
BERTH, n. [from the root of bear.]
1.A station in which a ship rides at anchor, comprehending the space in which she ranges. In more familiar usage, the word signifies any situation or place, where a vessel lies or can lie, whether at anchor or at a wharf.
2.A room or apartment in a ship, where a number of officers or men mess and reside. 3.The box or place for sleeping at the sides of a cabin; the place for a hammoc, or a repository for chests, &c.
To berth, in seamen’s language, is to allot to each man a place for his hammoc.
BAILOR “person who delivers personal property to another to be held in bailment- the one who places the thing in trust.” 27 S.E. 487, 488. The bailor need not be the owner of the property involved.
BAILMENT “delivery of personal property in trust,” 277 S.W. 2d 695, 698; “delivery of a thing in trust for some special object or purpose and upon a contract, express or implied, to conform with the object or purpose of the trust,” 75 S.W. 2d 761, 764; also, that relationship which arises where one delivers property to another to keep for hire, and control and possession of the property passes to the keeper or bailee. 108 A. 2d 168, 170. “An express agreement between the parties is not always necessary. The element of lawful possession, however created, and the duty to account for the article as the property of another is sufficient,” 351 P. 2d 840, 842; e.g., the finder of mislaid property becomes a bailee thereof. Bailment is ended when its purpose has been achieved, when the parties agree that it is terminated, or when the bailed property is destroyed. A bailment created for an indefinite period is terminable at will by either party, as long as the other party receives due notice of the intended termination. Once a bailment ends, the bailee must return the property to the bailor or possibly be liable for conversion.
CHATTEL: an item of tangible movable or immovable property except real estate and things (as buildings) connected with real property. Hence the NAME (ESTATE) is PLEDGED as BAIL and used as CHATTEL.
LIVERY
PLEDGE
1a : a bailment of a chattel as security for a debt or other obligation without involving transfer of title
b : the chattel so delivered
c : the contract incidental to such a bailment
2a : the state of being held as a security or guaranty
b : something given as security for the performance of an act
REVERISON
SURRENDER, estates, conveyancing.
1. A yielding up of an estate for life or years to him who has an immediate estate in reversion or remainder, by which the lesser estate is merged in the greater by mutual agreement, Co. Litt. 337, b.
2. A surrender is of a nature directly opposite to a release; for, as the latter operates by the greater estate descending upon the less, the former is the falling of a less estate into a greater, by deed. A surrender immediately divests the estate of the surrenderer, aud vests it in the surrenderee, eve without the assent (q. v.) of the latter. Touchs. 300, 301.
3. The technical and proper words of this conveyance are, surrender and yield up; but any form of words; by which the intention. of the parties is sufficiently manifested, will operate as a surrender, Perk. _607; 1 Term Rep. 441; Com. Dig. Surrender, A.
4. The surrender may be express or implied. The latter is when an estate, incompatible with the existing estate, is accepted or the lessee takes a new lease of the same lands. 16 Johns. Rep. 28; 2 Wils. 26; 1 Barn. & A. 50; 2 Barn. & A. 119; 5 Taunt. 518, and see 6 East, R. 86; 9 Barn. & Cr. 288 7 Watts, R. 128. Vide, generally, Cruise, Dig. tit. 32, c. 7; Com. Dig. h. t.; Vin. Ab. h. t.; 4 Kent, Com. 102; Nels. Ab. h. t.; Rolle’s Ab. h. t. 11 East, R. 317, n.
5. The deed or instrument by which a surrender is made, is also called a surrender. For the law of presumption of surrenders, see Math. on Pres. ch. 13, p. 236; Addis. on Contr. 658-661.
usufructThe right of enjoying a thing, the property of which is vested in another, and to draw from the same all the profit, utility and advantage which it may produce, provided it be without altering the substance of the thing.
usufructuary
One who has the right and enjoyment of an usufruct. The duties of the usufructuary are,
1. To make an inventory of the things subject to the usufruct, in the presence of those having an interest in them.(The certificate of live birth / birth certificate)
2. To give security for their restitution; when the usufruct shall be at an end. (Promise to pay: contract under seal = state as usufrucut)
3. To take good care of the things subject to the usufruct.
4. To pay all taxes, and claims which arise while the thing is in his possession, as a ground-rent. 5. To keep the thing in repair at his own expense.
VASSALAGE,
1.The state of being a vassal or feudatory.
2.Political servitude; dependence; subjection; slavery. The Greeks were long held in vassalage by the Turks.
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