Re: Boston Legal vents against "the System" - NOT



Addendum to the following - - -
PRIVATE PROPERTY, absolutely owned by an individual is specifically
mentioned in the fifth amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Private property
shall not be taken for public use without just compensation.
However, there is no equal protection for estate that is taken for public
use with unjust compensation.

As stated in previous post, since 1935, all condemnations under "eminent
domain" have been against estate, not private property, due to national
socialism.

The importance of any American's inherent birthright of absolute ownership
of land, houses, and chattels (like his own body) is based on the fact that
all law is the protection of property rights. All else is policy and policy
requires consent.

To illustrate the importance of absolute ownership (dominion) of one's land,
one need understand that sovereignty and property are inseparable. One
cannot assert sovereignty without having a domain.

That simple fact underlies the pervasive reprogramming of our language to
call ourselves "residents" who "reside" at "residences".

What is the alternative to being a resident?

"INHABITANT -One who resides actually and permanently in a given
place, and has his domicile there."
 - - - Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, p.782
 
 "DOMICILE - A person's legal home. That place where a man has his true,
fixed, and permanent home and principal establishment, and to which
whenever he is absent he has the intention of returning."  
- - - Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, p.484

Please note that a domicile is a PERMANENT HOME (*not subject to
confiscation, i.e., private property), and a LEGAL HOME.

If you thought a "legal residence" is the same thing, you are mistaken.

RESIDENCE - Place where one actually lives ... Residence implies
something more than physical presence and something less than
domicile. The terms 'resident' and 'residence' have no precise legal
meaning... [One can have many residences but only one domicile]
 - - - Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, p.1308

Why would the "system" encourage us to use a vague legal term without
precise legal meaning, instead of using the more accurate "inhabitant" and
"domicile"?

If you claim you are a resident living at a residence, it is not a domicile.
In short, you're claiming to be a transient (vagrant) without a legal home.

Did you know that pursuant to the 14th amendment, U.S. citizens can only
"reside" in a state. They cannot have their domicile there. If one
establishes a foreign domicile, they lose their U.S. citizenship (*not
their American nationality. Nationality and citizenship are two different
things).

Coincidentally, no state will grant a license to a non-resident inhabitant.
But, then, no inhabitant needs to ask the government's permission for a
license to live, work, travel, marry, build a house, gather food from wilds
and waters, have a dog, etc., etc.

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

Jet Graphics wrote:

References:

Let's start with the big misconception about land.
Most Americans are led to believe that all land is "real estate".

"REAL ESTATE .... is synonymous with real property"
Black's Law dictionary, sixth ed., From p.1263

"REAL PROPERTY ... A general term for lands, tenements, heriditaments;
which
on the death of the owner intestate, passes to his heir." Black's Law
dictionary, sixth ed., p.1218

"ESTATE - The degree, quantity, nature and extent of interest which a
person has in real and personal property. An estate in lands, tenements,
and
hereditaments signifies such interest as the tenant has therein." - -
-Black's Law dictionary, sixth ed., p.547

Recapping: Real estate = real property = estate.
Estate is held with an "interest".

INTEREST - ...More particularly it means a right to have the advantage of
accruing from anything ; any right in the nature of property, but less
than title. - - -Black's Law dictionary, sixth ed., p. 812

Recapping:
Estate is anything of the nature of property but not held with a title. A
"title deed" to estate is not a title to private property. (A deed is for
conveying estate, not for private property).

"PRIVATE PROPERTY - As protected from being taken for public uses, is such
property as belongs absolutely to an individual, and of which he has the
exclusive right of disposition. Property of a specific, fixed and tangible
nature, capable of being in possession and transmitted to another, such as
houses, lands, and chattels." - - - Black's Law dictionary, sixth ed.,
p.1217

"OWNERSHIP - ... Ownership of property is either absolute or qualified.
The ownership of property is absolute when a single person has the
absolute dominion over it... The ownership is qualified when it is shared
with one or more persons, when the time of enjoyment is deferred or
limited, or when the use is restricted. " - - -Black's Law dictionary,
sixth ed., p. 1106

Private property is that which is held by absolute ownership by an
individual.

"TITLE - ... a short hand term used to denote the facts which, if proved,
will enable a plaintiff to recover possession or a defendant to retain
possession of a thing." Cribbet, Principles of the Law of Property 15
(1962)" - - - Barron's Law Dictionary, p. 210

THE LAST WORD -

LAND. ... The land is one thing, and the estate in land is another thing,
for an estate in land is a time in land or land for a time.
- - -Black's Law dictionary, sixth ed., p.877

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