HardyW wrote: ↑Wed Aug 28, 2019 11:55 pm
First, almost every term you have quoted in the last two posts is used wrongly.
Second, what do you mean by this
without the Settled Land Act there could be no industrial revolution
The first Settled Land Act (in England I mean of course) was in 1870 or thereabouts - about 100 years after the industrial revolution. Whatever the Luddites were fighting about I don't think it was the difference between land held in fee simple and that held under settlement.
Third, you have never responded to several other Quatloos members who have told you that ownership as a tenant for life is very rare in modern times. Probably the most common circumstance that status arises would be when it is specified in a will: so if the deceased has written in their will that a property is to be inherited by one person (say the son/daughter) but only after another person (probably the widow) has had the benefit for the rest of their life. So the widow becomes a life tenant but has no fear of the settlor demanding possession because the settlor is dead.
Then fourth, you have a lot to say about lords of the manor and estates dating back as far as 1066. But since your main interest is Canada and BC in particular, how many manorial estates do you imagine there are in Canada? Especially the West?
The first Settled Land Act (in England I mean of course) was in 1870 or thereabouts - about 100 years after the industrial revolution..... please review this post and the commentary
http://www.quatloos.com/Q-Forum/viewtop ... 40#p278668, please do not ignore the footnoted book on Settled land act and what this act really is, and how it is completely different then settled "estates" and lop...
Whatever the Luddites were fighting about I don't think it was the difference between land held in fee simple and that held under settlement. correct they where going for control of territory now that the right to self govern under a municipal corp was created by statute W&M 5&6 shortly after bill of rights....
Third, you have never responded to several other Quatloos members who have told you that ownership as a tenant for life is very rare in modern times.
post your law of property act for your state... since all others have one as state life tenants, and only estate they can create is a fee-simple estate under a trust....(since in common law land law, possession as life tenant is only in fee and has no real right of ownership and possession as one right, due to law of agency...
Probably the most common circumstance that status arises would be when it is specified in a will: so if the deceased has written in their will that a property is to be inherited by one person (say the son/daughter) but only after another person (probably the widow) has had the benefit for the rest of their life. So the widow becomes a life tenant but has no fear of the settlor demanding possession because the settlor is dead.
sure if one can ignore common law is a land trust, and all land law is based on the English common law... sure then and only then can the system work in the way you claim it does...
again govt is not true owners, citizen is not true owner, monarchy is not true owner, so then who is, does power to these people acting as a function of government or monarchy get YOUR POWER from?
Then fourth, you have a lot to say about lords of the manor and estates dating back as far as 1066. But since your main interest is Canada and BC in particular, how many manorial estates do you imagine there are in Canada? Especially the West?
you confused the thing, with the capacity of the lord manors,
in feudal tenure, lord manors where in the position govt is now..
in the ancient the christian faith and the cestui que trust was created.... lord manors are the lawyers of the ancient times....
modern tenure is based on government and being a citizen of govt, yet before the constitution of govt, the individual was a monarchy subject....... so as you see the lawyers of each era are the ones that are building this second system of use under the statute of uses, then under municipal law, then the people accept the municipal law by residence, that then accepts the grant to govt and the common law, and why the monarchy is not needed, the laws are in place and succession of the lands and THRONE as trustee are settled...
the SLA, is how the individual joins the group of life tenants, and get is power of sale, rent and mortage and repair from the SLA, and nothing else....
all english law get is powers from the individual granting dominion in TRUST, or would be a tyranny....
so they corrected the tryanny in one swoop, yet no one took the freedoms, and chose what is now a temproary system till the people choose to leave and create a new outside of life tenant to a land trust.