Claims on Your Titles to Land, Life, & Soul
Claims on Your Titles to Land, Life, & Soul
1302. Pope Boniface VIII issued the
Papal Bull Unam Sanctam, the first Express Trust, claiming Papal
Supremacy over the Earth, such that “every human creature be
subject to the Roman Pontiff”. In celebration, he commissioned an
elaborate crown.
1455. The 1st Crown of Crown Land
Pope Nicholas V issued the Papal Bull
Romanus Pontifex, claiming all “real estate”. This is one of
three Papal Bulls to include the line "For a perpetual
remembrance." It conveyed Real Property from the Express Trust
Unam Sanctam to the Pontiff and his successors in perpetuity. Hence,
all land is claimed as "crown land". While Pope Boniface
VIII was the first to create the concept of a Trust, this was the
first Testamentary Trust.
● This 1st Crown is represented by
the 1st Cestui Que Vie Trust created when a child is born, depriving
them of their entitlement rights on the land.
1481. The 2nd Crown of the Commonwealth
Pope Sixthus IV issued the Papal Bull
Aeterni Regis, claiming all “personal property”. This second
Testamentary Trust, meaning “Eternal Crown”, created what is
known as the "Crown of Aragon", later the “Crown of
Spain”, the highest sovereign and steward under the rule of the
Roman Pontiff. Spain lost the crown in 1604 when it was granted to
King James I of England by Pope Paul V after the successful passage
of the "Union of Crowns" or Commonwealth in 1605. It was
finally lost by England in 1975 when it was returned to Spain and
King Carlos I, where it remains to this day.
● This 2nd Crown is represented by
the 2nd Cestui Que Vie Trust created when a child is born, being the
sale of the birth certificate as a Bond to the private central bank
of the nation, depriving them of Title over their flesh (Life),
making them a bond servant (slave).
1537. The 3rd Crown of the
Ecclesiastical See
Pope Paul III issued the Papal Bull of
“Convocation” claiming all "lost souls". The Venetians
assisted in the creation of this third and final Testamentary Trust
by their support of England's 1st Cestui Que Vie Act of 1540 as the
basis for the Ecclesiastical authority of Henry VIII. This Crown was
secretly granted to England for the "reaping" of lost
souls. The Crown was lost in 1815 due to the deliberate bankruptcy of
England and granted to the Temple Bar, which became known as the
Crown Bar, or simply the Crown. The Bar Associations have been
responsible ever since for administering all three Cestu Que Vie
Trusts.
● This 3rd Crown is represented by
the 3rd Cestui Que Vie Trust created when a child is
baptized, being the gift of title of
the soul. Thus, without legal title over one's own soul, a man or
woman may be "legally" denied the right to stand as a
soulful Man/Woman. This is why the Bar Association is able to impose
Maritime law against men and women, who are treated as “things”,
like cargo.
The Three Cestui Que Vie Trusts
The Three Cestui Que Vie Trusts are the
specific denial of your Rights to your Estates of “Land”, “Life”,
and “Soul”. For most men and women, this process corresponds to
the three forms of law available to the Bar Association courts.
1. Real Property – Land. The 1st form
of law is Commercial corporate (UCC Uniform Commercial Code),
effective because of the 1st Cestui Que Vie Trust (a Foreign Situs
Trust), when you become a “ward of the State” and “act” as a
legal “person”, having no legal Title to Lands.
2. Personal Property – Life. The 2nd
form of law is Admiralty Maritime and Trust law, effective because of
the 2nd Cestui Que Vie Trust, when you are “lost at sea” and
“declared dead,” having no “Personal Property”, being the
Title to your Life.
3. Ecclesiastical Property – Soul.
The 3rd form of law is Talmudic and Roman Cult law, effective because
of the 3rd Cestui Que Vie Trust, when, or if, you are Baptised,
surrendering the Title to your Soul.
ESTATE. 1. In its most extensive sense, it is applied to signify every thing of which riches or, fortune may consist and includes personal and real property; hence we say personal estate, real estate. [Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 1856 Edition]
CESTUI QUE TRUST. A barbarous phrase,
to signify the beneficiary of an estate held in trust. He for whose
benefit another person is enfeoffed or seised of land or tenements,
or is possessed of personal property. [Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 1856
Edition]
CESTUI QUE VIE. He for whose life land
is holden by another person; the latter is called tenant per auter
vie, or tenant for another's life. [Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 1856
Edition]