as you can now start to see all nations under municipal law (almost the whole planet) are all playing within a second level of trustparzival wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2019 2:10 am The
Florida
Municipal
Officials’
Manual
http://www.floridaleagueofcities.com/do ... 70d6ded5_0A. THE ENGLISH BACKGROUND
The origins of American municipal government lie in English history. As England emerged from the
non-urbanized medieval period and began to develop urban centers, citizens with vested interests in
the development of their communities as trade centers sought authority from the Crown to exercise
some control over local aff airs. The king (or queen) would respond to these requests by granting “charters” to these groups, whereby they were empowered to promote local improvements and to regulate
certain aspects of community life. The charter was viewed as a grant only of those powers which were
specifi cally and explicitly granted therein; in other words, the grant of authority was narrowly defi ned
and strictly limited. Eventually, these chartered groups came to be recognized as “municipal corporations,” similar to private, commercial corporations, which also were authorized by the Crown. At fi rst,
such grants of authority were given only to narrowly defi ned groups, usually the leading businessmen
of the community. Over time, as democratic institutions developed, control of charters shifted from
such narrow groups to the general population of the community, complete with the democratic election of leaders to exercise the granted powers.
This pattern for the formation of English municipal governments was extended to the American
colonies. In America, municipal charters were granted by the Crown to a handful of urban centers. When
the Revolution transformed the colonies into states, the state governments assumed the role of the
Crown as the source of municipal- government authority; that is the state governments assumed the
role of granting municipal charters. From this practice evolved the traditional American legal principle
that a municipality is a creature of the state, may exist only with the consent of the state, derives its powers from the state, and enjoys only those powers wIn short, the Legislature was free to control municipal aff airs by means of local acts.
it is like when best buy and future shop join, the employees move with the sealing and sale of the agreement (constitution), yet the building may be leased, yet all the things within the building is now best buys products as soon as the agreement is settled.
best buy can also write laws for its employees, yet only with the rules of the state of prov the corporation resides in and where the employees work IN....
best buy can make laws outside of state and prov, and can even make laws that are not allowed, and the only way the unjust law written outside the rules of the state will be found unjust if ones makes issue,
so if no one makes issue for lets say 100 years, or even 50 years, can it become law?
sure of the people of that territory create a new constitution agreeing to be subject to it, then those in best buy would now be required to do what was previously a wrong.....
yet, this new rule and constitution only applies to that RESIDE as a permanent domicile .......
the rules of domicile determine what law one is subject too, and who is assumed owner is the one with equitable rights and duties under municipal law as life tenants....
so what happens when the domicile is not one of a municipal territory?
what happens when a life tenant interact with one that is not a life tenant, what laws apply to each?
the subjects of a state volunteered to that state authority, so what happens when that state authority is required to return a reversionary interest within the common law that has a right of entry for failure to comply with an act that requires one to transfer the said property (of any kind) to another within a set amount of time like in the LOP Act?
is this getting any clearer? or does one have to literally walk you through every aspect of YOUR OWN SYSTEM.....