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View Full Version : Legal Behavior ... My Word!!!



palani
13th May 2015, 06:02 AM
If you don't appear you will have no problems.

The root cause of all legal problems is appearance.

You are guaranteed due process. But then if you don't know what this is or how to achieve it then you don't need them to screw you because you basically are screwing yourself.

Everything is either contract or tort. There are no other choices.

Due process is NOTICE and OPPORTUNITY TO INQUIRE. After due process is complete you go to hearing where you will certainly lose (even if you win you lost time). So first you recognize what notice actually is and when it occurs and then never make another statement. You ask questions. When you get hauled off to court prematurely without due process having happened you inform the court (phrase it in the form of a question) that your due process has not been accorded you.

Now the court is not going to pretend to understand ... they are going to make some statements that attempt to engage you in a contract that they can then enforce (they call this JURISDICTION). You appear when you make any statement or accept any of their contracts. Keep asking questions. You have to be entirely mindful of this process and practice WHAT IF'S before you get there.

And it is going to appear as if you lost. And then some decision will be made based upon some bogus reason and you MIGHT be cut free but be assured it will not be because of anything you did because then the cat would be out of the bag.

And then when you positively have to engage in a contract do it conditionally and think up some really good condition that will make you happy and not benefit the retirement plan of the judicial actor. When you make this conditional acceptance you have now made an appearance. You might want to reject that appearance right after you offer it and before it is accepted so best know how to cancel one of these conditional acceptance. A single word is sufficient to cancel your own conditional offer: "NEVERMIND".


Appearance is NOT showing up in the visible range of an officer or court. Appearance is conduct that leads to either a contract or a torte. If you don't appear you will fare much better. If you choose to appear by either accepting an offer or offering a conditional acceptance then you might be in better position to control the outcome. When they say JURISDICTION they are saying you engaged in a contract or you engaged in a torte.

No legal advice here. This is for entertainment and discussion only.

Glass
13th May 2015, 12:49 PM
its sometimes possible to be there, but not appear. Persons, legal fictions are considered not living. Possibly that means they are dead? Courts issue summonses, for persons to appear. Are they summoning the dead?

Can American persons have personal representatives? Bankruptcy code might hold the key to this question. Persons here can have personal representatives.

ximmy
13th May 2015, 04:18 PM
Remember, if you have signed a "notice to appear" you better go, or they will probably issue a warrant for your arrest.

If you receive by mail a "notice to appear" and then "failure to appear" you can just ignore it as long as you do not communicate with the court by person, phone, mail, or signature... <--- These are all contracts.

Do you "understand"

palani
13th May 2015, 05:05 PM
if you have signed a "notice to appear" you better go, or they will probably issue a warrant for your arrest.


Not necessarily:


So if theeves take a man, and compell him (by menace of killing) to sweare upon a booke to bring unto them a certaine summe of money, or other goods: and thereupon he goeth, and bringeth the same unto them: this is adjudged Robberie 44.E.3.14. and yet he was once at libertie and out of their hands, so as he might seeme to be freed of all the feare wherein he stood by them. But yet, who seeth not, that the same feare that made him to take the oath, did still follow him even to the performance of that which he had sworne and promised.

ximmy
13th May 2015, 05:50 PM
Not necessarily:


So if theeves take a man, and compell him (by menace of killing) to sweare upon a booke to bring unto them a certaine summe of money, or other goods: and thereupon he goeth, and bringeth the same unto them: this is adjudged Robberie 44.E.3.14. and yet he was once at libertie and out of their hands, so as he might seeme to be freed of all the feare wherein he stood by them. But yet, who seeth not, that the same feare that made him to take the oath, did still follow him even to the performance of that which he had sworne and promised.

Genesis says it better: Found that man reported missing, he wandered in his home. It don't seem too bad if you consider just what he's been through. Seems he met up with a gang of thieves, who mistook him for a man of means. They locked him up, then found he had no money, so they let him go again.