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Old 03-07-2006, 06:13 PM
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Satori Satori is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: The California republic
Posts: 255
While I'm somewhat new at this, and recently joined the Sui Juris community, I will share the information I have with you on this.

My research into Notice and Demand has primarily been with regards to commercial liens; hence, regardless of whether or not your N&D is based in commercial law, my research has been. Consequently, I found information regarding the time to respond to a N&D in the UCC. In CA, I seem to recall it being 30 days. (The cumulative time involved in sending N&D, waiting, sending Notice of Default and so forth takes it to about 90 days). I've read that it varies from federal zone to federal zone.

Why does it matter to a sovereign what the CA UCC says? Well, in my case, I'm evaluating commercial liens, so the entire point is to get my claims recognized (and enforced) by the commonly-accepted "authorities" to integrate my claim with this modern world's practices. So the point of their hoops is their co-operation (or rather, my ability to have a recognized claim in law against them for defying their own procedures).

In my research, and I didn't write down where I read this, I have also heard that the typical 30 day or 90 day periods in commercial law are due to the nature of the Law merchant (commercial law) being based in Judaic traditions and customs, where 3, and numbers divisible by 3, are important. Consequently, we have 3 day waiting periods for some things, 30 day waiting periods for others, 3 30 day (90 day) periods, and so forth. I cannot verify the accuracy of this information, but I share it in case it assists someone later.
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