Land Ownership Discuss Land Patents, Allodial Titles, and other methods of protecting sovereign land owner rights.


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  #61  
Old 02-11-2008, 09:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jetgraphics
Though most legal authorities imply that common law writs are out of date, etc, etc. I filed a common law writ in my own case, and was quite pleased with the results.

(Check out Writ of Error Coram Nobis)

http://books.google.com/books?id=rwg...g4KwAL4C--FtmA

In this country the proper designation is coram vobis in all cases according to the author.
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United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or right of soil in Alabama or any of the new states which were formed ... The United States has no Constitutional capacity to exercise municipal jurisdiction, sovereignty or eminent domain, within the limits of a state or elsewhere, except in the cases in which it is expressly granted ...
[Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212 (1845)]

Last edited by rottweiler : 02-11-2008 at 09:53 PM.
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  #62  
Old 02-11-2008, 10:06 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by farmer_giles_of_ham
Just finished reading the link provided by Rottweiler on land patents. Seems that these establish highest claim and are immune from any attack, except for mistake or fraud.

But...that just covers the land parcel itself. Everything on the land is fair game. Including equitable relief, like letting someone else use the property to pay for a debt.

So the upshot as I see it is that for mortgages and the like, the possession could be taken away in equity, until the debt is paid OR expires under the Statute of Limitations.

Which means that in the 7th year, or maybe sooner, the whole thing could be clear.

Then there are property taxes. Same applies as far as any outstanding debt- but the question remains: how to avoid incurring any new debt...

So patent or no, the tax issue is going to be resolved by obtaining an exclusion, somehow (or an exemption).

A true exclusion will have the property out of the system w/o a #, just like the excluded folks- private freeholders etc.

Or, perhaps in the system but w/o any new taxes levied- practically similar to exempt.

But excluded is better: this means also excluded from regulations, like zoning.

If the property t'ain't in the computer- it's not real.

Just like the folks who aren't persons.

"A Man w/o a Person, is a Man w/o Prejudice""

I came across this while reading Corpus Juris. In Pennsylvania around the late 1800's Pa put a tax on mortgages called a property tax. The purpose was to put an onus on having a mortgage and make it more sensible to pay the buying price all at once. After the mortgage was paid off there was a remedy available in equity to have the land removed from the taxing rolls. One of the reasons for the onus was a legal relationship where the debtor is placed into debtors prison for failure to pay or the property is taken and worked until the debt is paid off. Blackstones Commentaries as well as Hammurabis Code makes mention of this relationship. It is theft to borrow money and then not pay it back.
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  #63  
Old 02-12-2008, 05:59 AM
andrewmitch andrewmitch is offline
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Italy and Penn.

The same thing can be observed in other countries. In Italy, once the house is paid off the property tax automatically goes away.

So there is definitely remedy, it's just a matter of cracking it.

Rott - I believe I was refering to the last audio tape re Sovereignty.
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  #64  
Old 02-12-2008, 07:21 AM
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I figured as much but after the third listen I still did not hear it like that that. I guess I need to stop playing internet spades while listening to such things. I'll give it one more shot.

I did hear him talk about paying the exaction of tribute to perfect the crime and then suing them, but I also heard him say he wants to sell the judgements to banks on a different file. Thorton says some great stuff, he also shoots out a few turds now and then.

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewmitch
Rott - I believe I was refering to the last audio tape re Sovereignty.
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United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or right of soil in Alabama or any of the new states which were formed ... The United States has no Constitutional capacity to exercise municipal jurisdiction, sovereignty or eminent domain, within the limits of a state or elsewhere, except in the cases in which it is expressly granted ...
[Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212 (1845)]
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  #65  
Old 02-12-2008, 08:03 AM
andrewmitch andrewmitch is offline
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affidavit for title

No matter what, you have to filter the stuff out

I wonder if you could use the Affidavit process to prove your ownership? Maybe get the past owners to sign one?
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  #66  
Old 02-13-2008, 07:09 AM
jetgraphics jetgraphics is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rottweiler
http://books.google.com/books?id=rwg...g4KwAL4C--FtmA

In this country the proper designation is coram vobis in all cases according to the author.

JG: Which country is that?
FWIW, Writ of Error Coram Nobis is filed in the State court that emitted the erroneous judgment.
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  #67  
Old 02-13-2008, 07:17 AM
jetgraphics jetgraphics is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rottweiler
ARTICLE III Section 2.
The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority;--- to all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls; --- to all Cases of admiralty and maritime Jurisdiction;

JG: If you are augmenting the original statement that there are no constitutional "common law" courts, great. If not, I have no evidence or authority that states that there are constitutional common law courts.
(I did find old cites wherein one ruled that the common law was too harsh for a democracy)

However, I first learned of it while reading the Encyclopedia of Georgia Law. It stated that at the ratification of the USCON, all common law courts in Georgia were abolished. Interestingly, in the Federalist Papers, it mentions that Georgia (before CON) had nothing but common law courts.

If I infer correctly, the power to convene a common law court is the prerogative of a sovereign. Since all state governments have submitted to the supremacy of the U.S.CON, they ceased to have the standing to convene common law courts. (The English monarchy empowers common law courts in the commonwealth, apparently.)

However, that does not prevent private property owners with sovereign status from exercising their natural liberty.

A good example is the power to inflict capital punishment without convening a trial, as in the case with private property posted with "No Trespassing, Trespassers will be shot."

I assume that a sovereign property owner might convene a trial before shooting the trespasser, but it's unnecessary.
:-)
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  #68  
Old 02-13-2008, 12:45 PM
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What country? Virginia.

No offense, but I trust a book entered into the Library of Congress before I would take you at your word.


Quote:
Originally Posted by jetgraphics
JG: Which country is that?
FWIW, Writ of Error Coram Nobis is filed in the State court that emitted the erroneous judgment.
__________________
United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or right of soil in Alabama or any of the new states which were formed ... The United States has no Constitutional capacity to exercise municipal jurisdiction, sovereignty or eminent domain, within the limits of a state or elsewhere, except in the cases in which it is expressly granted ...
[Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212 (1845)]

Last edited by rottweiler : 02-13-2008 at 05:31 PM.
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  #69  
Old 02-13-2008, 05:29 PM
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I am not augmenting, I am absolutely disagreeing.

Court of Record
COMMENTARY

This writer concludes, from the definitions below, that a
court of record is a court which must meet the following
criteria:

1. generally has a seal
2. power to fine or imprison for contempt
3. keeps a record of the proceedings
4. proceeding according to the common law (not statutes or codes)
5. the tribunal is independent of the magistrate (judge)

Note that a judge is a magistrate and is not the tribunal.
The tribunal is either the sovereign himself, or a fully
empowered jury (not paid by the government)
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., 425, 426

COURT. ...

INTERNATIONAL LAW

The person and suite of the sovereign; the place where the
sovereign sojourns with his regal retinue, wherever that may be.
....

CLASSIFICATION

Courts may be classified and divided according to several
methods, the following being the more usual:

COURTS OF RECORD and COURTS NOT OF RECORD. The former being
those whose acts and judicial proceedings are enrolled, or
recorded, for a perpetual memory and testimony, and which have
power to fine or imprison for contempt. Error lies to their
judgments, and they generally possess a seal. Courts not of
record are those of inferior dignity, which have no power to fine
or imprison, and in which the proceedings are not enrolled or
recorded. 3 Bl. Comm. 24; 3 Steph. Comm. 383; The Thomas
Fletcher, C.C.Ga., 24 F. 481; Ex parte Thistleton, 52 Cal 225;
Erwin v. U.S., D.C.Ga., 37 F. 488, 2 L.R.A. 229; Heininger v.
Davis, 96 Ohio St. 205, 117 N.E. 229, 231.

A "court of record" is a judicial tribunal having attributes
and exercising functions independently of the person of the
magistrate designated generally to hold it, and proceeding
according to the course of common law, its acts and proceedings
being enrolled for a perpetual memorial. Jones v. Jones, 188
Mo.App. 220, 175 S.W. 227, 229; Ex parte Gladhill, 8 Metc. Mass.,
171, per Shaw, C.J. See, also, Ledwith v. Rosalsky, 244 N.Y.
406, 155 N.E. 688, 689.

....
----------------------------------------------------------------
Webster's New Practical Dictionary, 386 (1953)
G. & C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass.

MAGISTRATE

A person holding official power in a government; as: a The
official of highest rank in a government (chief, or first,
magistrate). b An official of a class having summary, often
criminal, jurisdiction.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Merriam-Webster On-Line Dictionary

MAGISTRATE

an official entrusted with administration of the laws

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., 1103

MAGISTRATE

Person clothed with power as a public civil officer. State
ex rel. Miller v. McLeod, 142 Fla. 254, 194 So. 628, 630.

A public officer belonging to the civil organization of the
state, and invested with powers and functions which may be either
judicial, legislative, or executive. But the term is commonly
used in a narrower sense, designating, in England, a person
intrusted with the commission of the peace, and, in America, one
of the class of inferior judicial officers, such as justices of
the peace and police justices. Martin v. State, 32 Ark. 124; Ex
parte White, 15 Nev. 146, 37 Am.Rep. 466; State v. Allen, 83 Fla.
655, 92 So. 155, 156; Merritt v. Merritt, 193 Iowa 899, 188 N.W.
32, 34.
....

The word "magistrate" does not necessarily imply an officer
exercising any judicial functions, and might very well be held to
embrace notaries and commissioners of deeds. Schultz v.
Merchants' Ins. Co., 57 Mo. 336.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

California Penal Code

7. Words and phrases....The following words have in this
code the signification attached to them in this section, unless
otherwise apparent from the context:....

9. The word "magistrate" signifies any one of the
officers mentioned in Section 808. ....

807. Magistrate defined. A magistrate is an officer having
power to issue a warrant for the arrest of a person charged with
a public offense. (Enacted 1872.)

808. Persons designated as magistrates The following
persons are magistrates:

1. The judges of the Supreme Court

2. The judges of the courts of appeal.

3. The judges of the superior courts.

4. The judges of the municipal courts.

5. The judges of the justice courts.


Quote:
Originally Posted by jetgraphics
JG: If you are augmenting the original statement that there are no constitutional "common law" courts, great. If not, I have no evidence or authority that states that there are constitutional common law courts.
(I did find old cites wherein one ruled that the common law was too harsh for a democracy)

However, I first learned of it while reading the Encyclopedia of Georgia Law. It stated that at the ratification of the USCON, all common law courts in Georgia were abolished. Interestingly, in the Federalist Papers, it mentions that Georgia (before CON) had nothing but common law courts.

If I infer correctly, the power to convene a common law court is the prerogative of a sovereign. Since all state governments have submitted to the supremacy of the U.S.CON, they ceased to have the standing to convene common law courts. (The English monarchy empowers common law courts in the commonwealth, apparently.)

However, that does not prevent private property owners with sovereign status from exercising their natural liberty.

A good example is the power to inflict capital punishment without convening a trial, as in the case with private property posted with "No Trespassing, Trespassers will be shot."

I assume that a sovereign property owner might convene a trial before shooting the trespasser, but it's unnecessary.
:-)
__________________
United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or right of soil in Alabama or any of the new states which were formed ... The United States has no Constitutional capacity to exercise municipal jurisdiction, sovereignty or eminent domain, within the limits of a state or elsewhere, except in the cases in which it is expressly granted ...
[Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212 (1845)]

Last edited by rottweiler : 02-13-2008 at 05:34 PM.
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  #70  
Old 02-13-2008, 05:35 PM
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rottweiler rottweiler is offline
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Part 2

Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., 1602, 1603

SUIT

Old English Law

The witnesses or followers of the plaintiff. 3 Bl. Comm.
295. See Secta.

Modern Law
A generic term, of comprehensive signification, and applies
to any proceeding by one person or persons against another or
others in a court of justice in which the plaintiff pursues, in
such court, the remedy which the law affords him for the redress
of an injury or the enforcement of a right, whether at law or in
equity. See Kohl v. U.S., 91 U.S. 375, 23 L.Ed. 449; Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 464, 7 L.Ed. 481; Syracuse Plaster Co. v.
Agostini Bros. Bldg. Corporation, 169 Misc. 564 7 N.Y.S.2d 897.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Ed., 1677

TRIBUNAL

The seat of a judge; the place where he administers justice.
The whole body of judges who compose a jurisdiction; a judicial
court; the jurisdiction which the judges exercise. See Foster v.
Worcester, 16 Pick. (Mass.) 81.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Webster's New Practical Dictionary, 707 (1953)
G. & C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass.

TRIBUNE
1. In ancient Rome, a magistrate whose special function was
to protect the interests of plebeian citizens from the patricians.
2. Any defender of the people.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Merriam-Webster On-Line Dictionary

COURT

1. the residence of a sovereign or similar dignitary
2: a sovereign and his officials and advisers as a
governing power
3: an assembly of the retinue of a sovereign
4: an open space enclosed by a building or buildings
5: a space walled or marked off for playing a game (as
tennis or basketball)
6: the place where justice is administered; also: a judicial
body or a meeting of a judicial body


-----------------------------------------------------------------


A "minute order" issued by a judge is not part of the record.

RECORD

The proceedings of the courts of common law are records. But every minute made by a clerk of a court for his own future guidance in making up his record is not a record. 4 Wash. C.C. 698. See 10 Penn. St. 157; 2 Pick. Mass. 448; 4 N. II. 450; 6 id. 567; 5 Ohio St. 545; 3 Wend. N.Y. 267; 2 Vt. 573; 6 id. 580; 5 Day, Conn. 363; 3 T. B. Monr. Ky. 63.

"The Common-Law Record consists of the Process, the Pleadings, the Verdict and the Judgment. After Judgment, such Errors were Reviewable by Writ of Error. Errors which occurred at the Trial were not part of the Common-Law Record, and could be Reviewed by a Motion for a New Trial, after Verdict and before Judgment; by Statute, such Errors could be Reviewed after judgment by incorporating them into the Record by means of a Bill of Exceptions. It was therefore essential to keep clearly in mind the distinction between Matter of Record and Matter of Exception.

"UNDER the ancient practice, the Proceedings in a litigated case were Entered upon the Parchment Roll, and when this was completed, the end product became known as the Common-Law Record. It consisted of Four Parts, the Process, which included the Original Writ and the Return of the Sheriff, by which the Court acquired Jurisdiction over the defendant; the Pleadings, presented by the Parties in the prescribed order to develop an Issue of Law or of Fact, and which included the Declaration and all subsequent Pleadings, together with the Demurrers, if any; the Verdict; and the Judgment. These Four Elements formed the Common-Law Record, but it should be observed that at the point where the Retrospective Motions come into play, the Record has not been developed beyond the Stage of Entering the Verdict upon the Roll. At this point it should also be recalled that between the time when the Pleadings Terminated in an Issue, which Joinder in Issue was duly Recorded on the Parchment Roll, and the time when an Entry of the Verdict was made, nothing was Recorded on the Parchment Roll. The reason for this was that between the Joinder of Issue and the Rendition of the Verdict, the Trial takes place, and what occurs during this Trial does not Appear upon the Face of the Common-Law Record. Thus, Offers and Rejection of Evidence, the Court’s Instruction of the Jury, or its Refusal to Instruct as requested by Counsel, or any Misconduct Connected with the Trial, such as Prejudicial Remarks on the Part of the Court, and the like—that is—any Error that occurs at the Trial—cannot be corrected by resort to the Common-Law Record because not Apparent Upon its Face. Such Errors were preserved only in the notes made by the Presiding Judge, or in his memory, and were reviewable, after Verdict and before Final Judgment, by a Motion for New Trial made before the Court En Banc at Westminster, within four days after the Commencement of the Next Term following the Rendition of the Verdict. As each of the Judges of the Court had Motions of a similar character coming up for decision from the Trials over which they had presided, the natural inclination of each Judge was to support the Rulings of his brother Jurists, and thus Overrule the Motion for a New Trial. Furthermore, Errors that occurred at the Trial were not Reviewable after Judgment on Writ of Error, because Not Apparent on any one of the Four Parts of the Common-Law Record. To remedy this Defect, Parliament enacted Chapter 31 of the Statute of Westminster II in 1285,6 which provided for Review of such Errors through the use of what came to be known as a Bill of Exceptions.

"Thus, it appears that in four out of five Retrospective Motions, the Court is permitted to consider only Defects Apparent Upon the Face of Part of the Common-Law Record—the Process, the Pleadings, and the Verdict—and Errors Occurring at the Trial were regarded as extraneous and not to be considered in rendering Judgment upon the Motions. Matters extraneous to or outside of the Record could be tested after Verdict and before Judgment only by a Motion for a New Trial. A distinction is made between Matter of Record and Matter of Exception, Matter of Record referring to those Errors Apparent upon the Face of the Common-Law Record and hence Reviewable after Final Judgment upon a Writ of Error, and Matter of Exception referring to those Errors which Occurred at the Trial, and were Not Apparent on the Face of the Common-Law Record, hence Reviewable after Final Judgment only by incorporating such Errors into the Record by means of a Bill of Exceptions, as authorized by Chapter 31 of the Statute of Westminster II in 1285."
Koffler: Common Law Pleading 567-568

Proceedings in courts of chancery are said not to be, strictly speaking, records; but they are so considered. Gresley, Ev. 101. And see 8 Mart. La. N. S. 303; 1 Rawle, Penn. 381; 8 Yorg. Tenn. 142; 1 Pet. C. C. 352.
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 14th Ed. (1870)

MINUTE

In practice. A memorandum of what takes place in court, made by authority of the court. From these minutes the record is afterwards made up.

Toulier says they are so called because the writing in which they were originally was small; that the word is derived from the Latin minuta (scriptura), in opposition to copies which were delivered to the parties, and which were always written in a larger hand. 8 Toullier, n. 413.

Minutes are not considered as any part of the record. 1 Ohio, 268. See 23 Pick. Mass. 184.
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 14th Ed. (1870)

MINUTE BOOK

A book kept by the clerk or prothonotary of a court, in which minutes of its proceedings are entered.
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 14th Ed. (1870)

http://www.1215.org/lawnotes/lawnotes/courtrec.htm
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United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or right of soil in Alabama or any of the new states which were formed ... The United States has no Constitutional capacity to exercise municipal jurisdiction, sovereignty or eminent domain, within the limits of a state or elsewhere, except in the cases in which it is expressly granted ...
[Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212 (1845)]
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