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Old 10-01-2007, 01:13 PM
gldskr's Avatar
gldskr gldskr is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Arizona state
Posts: 438
Quote:
Again, state statutes (Connecticut) give the town the power to assess the property tax. How do I circumvent state statutes?
You must first dispell from your mind that a statute is a law, that it applies to people, that it has any authority to subjugate your rights. A statute is a term of a contract that applies to PERSONS. Nothing more.

Secondly, the state, the county, the recorder of deeds, the mortgage company, the bank, the title company, etc. are all the same entity with different names and specific functions. Their common goal is to perpetually extract money from your wallet. There are two ways they can do this. By robbing you at the point of a gun or persuading (conning) you into a voluntary contract. Which method do you suppose they use?

Statutory real estate transactions only apply to PERSONS.
Registration of property only applies to PERSONS.
Obtaining a mortgage only applies to PERSONS.

So, as rottweiler explained, the first step is to pay off the mortgage. This contract contains the whole ball of detrimental wax. You may want to consider downsizing to something more affordable or private financing.

Your ace in the whole is your constitutional guarantee of the unlimited right to contract. Use it the next time you buy property instead of being led by the nose.

gldskr
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