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Old 03-09-2005, 10:01 AM
KITCHIE KITCHIE is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 397
Talking

My friend who helped me write the Notice and Demand for discovery sent me this. I know this is true and my friend has paid a bail with computer paper that had S's with one line through it -- $. The judge accepted it as payment. Also I have another friend who is the President of the Internal Revenue Service State of Nevada and he paid child support with several pieces of paper that had noting more than $ typed on it. The research he is referring to is an affidavit writen by Todd Walker in December of 03.

Kitchie -- This is what I was telling you about last night. Do you want to do the research on the questions of "What is the substance of the money of account?" and "When there is no "Dollar Symbol" on the billing it is arbitrary and void for failure to state a "value". This could be very interesting research. pd

The two symbols for dollar have been defined: The original with 2 vertical lines meant the constitutional money of account dollar and the one with 1 vertical line is said to mean the UCC debt/credit dollar. I remember that, but not its source. Might have been from "Miracle on Main Street" by F. Tupper Saussy.

I was involved with "Gene's Bean's" case in Michigan where JC Penney sued a fellow for what his wife had run up on their credit account and the Judge (who became really pissed when we called the Wall Street Journal on his ruling) shouted: "I don't care if you pay it in coffee beans!" when queried by Gene as to the substance of the money of account the Judge could ORDER it paid in! The Judge knew he had blown it right then as his pencil went flipping up in the air and he said "Damn!"

No appeal taken as the plaintiff won a judgment and the defendant "paid" it in coffee beans! Case closed!

I used to have a court case that stated if there was no "Dollar Symbol" on the billing it was arbitrary and void for failure to state a "value". Numbers without the symbol are not "denominated in money"! It was a case involving a "tax bill" and I think it was a State Appeals Court that made the ruling! Do not remember the State off hand! Possibly Indiana or Ohio!

Kitchie
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