|
theghost
Being a registered voter or voting or not voting has exactly nothing to do with owning property or with the taxes laid thereon. Voting is a constitutional right subject to the laws of your state. property taxes are a result of state law, and you can find the one in your state by looking up the property tax statutes. Hate to burst your delusions bubbalah, if you were born within the boundaries of the united states, you are a US citizen, by law, and by custom, just as it has been since the founding of the Republic in 1789.
Congratulations, you are now aware of something that everyone else who didn’t sleep through Civics class has known since the 9th grade. Jurors have always been drawn from the voting list since the times of colonial government when you couldn’t vote or hold office unless you were a property owner. The 14th amendment has nothing to do with the paying of property taxes, or any other taxes for that matter.
The property tax lien is established in your state’s constitution and in your state’s statutes, you might try looking, it will be there, or you can always just ask the tax assessor, they will have the citations to the state law concerning property taxes. The tax liability always exists, regardless of what you are doing with the property. I think you maybe ought to read whatever the “transfer tax stamp document” is, we don’t have such things in my state, but we used to have a transfer tax, which was nothing more than a sales tax on land transfers, they no longer do it.
True, there is nothing that says you have to ever register title at all, but that won’t change the tax liability, it will just go to the former owner. The tax assessor assumes, by law, that whoever is the last listed owner of the property is the actual owner, and that is who they will notify. If the taxes aren’t paid the property will then be sold for taxes and you will lose it that way, whether you record the title or not. The last registered title takes precedence over any unregistered titles there may be.
Allodium as it is used in the context you are referring to means that it is held in fee simple not in feudal tenure, but that does not alter the State’s rights of eminent domain, or the tax liability that applies to all property. There is NO taxing clause in deeds, and there is no contractual agreement to pay taxes, it is all a matter of statute and always has been. If you will tell me what state you are in I will be happy to show you the property tax statutes.
Our government was and is a Republic as established by the Constitution in 1789, the voting base has changed over the centuries, but it still remains republican in format and makeup.
|