Results 1 to 10 of 11

Thread: "Court" Opinion On Land Patents - More malarkey from criminals posing as government.

Threaded View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by djlamb View Post
    If one has a private land contract with another living being (who owns said land; of course, this is questionable, if that being has been paying property taxes), trades (pays) the land with either lawful money or something else (gold/silver/pearls/whatever), does not REGISTER a DEED, does not SIGN any contract with the MUNICIPALITY, and no longer uses or recognizes an ADDRESS, the living man will STILL be FORCED off his land, if he chooses NOT to "pay property tax"?? I am in the process of finding the patent for someone's land (not easy; I am currently at a standstill due to a missing document at the register of deeds), so we can then draft up the claim for the forever rights that are probably written on that lawful document. This is the first thread I have read under this topic. Maybe my answers can be found posted in a different thread?
    Federal Land Patents offer researchers a source of information on the initial transfer of land titles from the Federal government to individuals. In addition to verifying title transfer, this information will allow the researcher to associate an individual (Patentee, Assignee, Warrantee, Widow, or Heir) with a specific location (Legal Land Description) and time (Issue Date). We have a variety of Land Patents on our site, including Cash Entry, Homestead and Military Warrant patents. Survey plats are part of the official record of a cadastral survey.

    Search

    Surveying is the art and science of measuring the land to locate the limits of an owner's interest thereon. A cadastral survey is a survey which creates, marks, defines, retraces or re-establishes the boundaries and subdivisions of Federal Lands of the United States. The survey plat is the graphic drawing of the boundaries involved with a particular survey project, and contains the official acreage to be used in the legal description. http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/default.aspx


    What happened when the chain of land (160 acres) per owner died; who then claimed the land? Heir a person legally entitled to the property or rank of another on that person's death: who then picked up this allodial title?

    Search
    Last edited by Chex; 12-14-14 at 11:31 PM.
    "And if I could I surely would Stand on the rock that Moses stood"

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •