Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
the fact that they have been incarcerated illegally! My vote is to leave that
hornets nest alone!
We American’s are so proud of the fact that we live in a Democracy! Now look
up the word “Democracy,” in a reputable Law Dictionary and see the legal
meaning. Democracy is defined as: “A Socialist form of government and
another form of Communism.” Do you remember the lies that President Reagan,
the Congress and the Media told America? The lie was that, “The Iron Curtain
fell without a shot being fired!” The truth is that the Iron Curtain came down
because Communist Europe found an ally in the West and there was no longer a
need for walls!
PS/ Your Federal Taxes constructed the Worlds largest automated vehicle and
munitions plant for the Soviet Union, during the dismantling of the Berlin Wall!
Shortly after making that statement, Reagan was shot by John Hinkley, who was
quickly declared insane, so that there never would be a public trial! If you recall,
President Reagan was never the same after that incident! The Masters don’t play
around – they eliminate problems or radically curve attitudes!
Constitutors
On September 17, 1787, twelve State delegates of the Thirteen State Colony’s
approved the United States Constitution, not the Colonists, and by their doing
so, the States became “constitutors.” A “constitutor” is defined under civil law
as, “One who by simple agreement becomes responsible for the payment of
another’s debt.” (See: Blacks Law Dictionary, 6th Edition.)
Many early immigrants to the United States arrived here as Bonded Slaves. A
person of wealth or substance became the payor by offering to pay or promising
to pay or bond the debts of another person, and usually paid the cost of his or her
voyage to America. This made the payor a constitutor and gave him title as
master over the debtor slave by written contract. A “Bonded Slave” is a
corporate fiction. The payor’s new title and power as the “Bond Master” of the
debtor, causes the immigrant to become “a Bond Slave” and the property of the
2
See: 31 Questions and Answers about the IRS;
http://www.supremelaw.org/sls/31answers.htm
21
BLACK'S i
LAW DICTIONARY
Definitions of the Terms and Phrases of
American and English Jurisprudence,
. Ancient and Modern
By
HENRY CAMPBELL BLACK, M. A..
Author of Treatises on Judgments, Tax Titles, Intoxicating Liquors,
Bankruptcy, Mortgages, Constitutional Law, Interpretation·
of Laws, Rescission and Cancellation of Contracts, Etc.
__. I
/
--···----~/
DEMESNE
assern
Demesne Lands N.Y., 51 F.Supp. 380, 382; Conners Marine Co. v. the u
Iri English law. · Those lands of a manor not Wathen, D.C.N.Y., 43 F.Supp. 283, 284. Under a the di
granted out in tenancy, but reserved by the lord demise charter, there is but a hiring of the vessel, repre:
:for his o\vn· use and occupation. Lands set apart under which no title passes to the charterer but ment
and appropriated by the lord for his own private merely the right to possess and control it for a the la
use, as for the supply of his table, and the main· limited period. McGahern ·v. Koppers Coal Co., as a •·
tenance of his family; the opposite of tenemental C.C.A.Pa., 108 F.2d 652, 653.
ToVI
lands. Tenancy and demesne, however, were not The word is also used as a synonym for "de- democ
:in' every sense the.opposites of each other; lands cease" or "death." In England it is especially gover
held, Jor years or at will being included among employed to denote the death of the sovereign. son, ~
demesne lands,· as well as those in the lord's ac· Dem
tual· possession. Spelman; 2 Bl. Comm. 90. -Demise and redemise. In conveyancing. Mu-
soverel
tual leases made from one party to another 0rt large 1
Demesne Lands of the Crown each side, of the same land, or something out of represc
it; as when A. grants a lease to B.· at a nominal withou
That share of lands reserved to the crown at rent (as of a pepper corn), and B. redemises the privllei
the original distribution of landed property, or In moe
same property to A. for a shorter time at a real, and F1
which· came to· it afterwards by forfeiture or substantial rent. Jacob; Whishaw. torate,
otlwrwise. · 1 J31. Comm. 286; 2 Steph. Coii?ID. 550. on wh
-Demise of the crown. The natural dissolution which
of the king is generally so called; an expression New I:
Demesnial
which signifies merely a transfer of property. DEM4
Pertai:iling to a demesne. By demise of the crown we mean only that, in or to
DEMI. French. Half; the half. Used chiefly in consequence of the disunion of the king's natural ticula
composition. body from his body politic, the kingdom is trans- party
ferred or demised to his successor, and so the public
As to demi "Mark," "Official/' "Vill," see those royal dignity remains perpetual. 1 Bl. Comm.
title~. 249; Plowd. 234.
DEMI-8~GUE, or DEMY-8ANGUE. Half-blood. -Several demises. In English practice. In the
DEMIDmTAS. In old records. A half or moiety. action of ejectment, it ·was formerly customary,
in case there were any doubt as to the legal es-
DEMIES. In some universities and colleges this tatE,! being in the plaintiff, to insert in the 9-eclara-
term is synonymous with "scholars." tion several demises from as many different per-
sons;. but this was rendered unnecessary by the
DEl.\IINUTIO. In the civil law. A taking away; provisions of the common-law procedure acts.
loss or deprivation. See Capitis Dehiinutio.
-8ingle demise. A declaration in ejectment
D.EMISE, v. In conveyancing. To convey or might contain either one demise or several. When
crea,~ an, ~state for years or life; to lease. The it contained only one, it was called a "declaration
usual a;nd 0 perative word in leases: "Have grant· with a single demise."
. ed, demised, ·and to farm let, and by. these pres·
·ents do; grf;lnt, demise, and to farm let." 2 Bl. DEMISI. Lat. I have demised or leased. Demisi,
Comm. ·317; 1 Steph. Comm. 476; Co; Litt. 45a; concessi, et ad firmam tradidi; have demised,
Carr'·V; King, 24 Cal.App. 713; 142 P. 131, 133. granted, and to farm let. The usual operative.
words in ancient leases, as the corresponding Eng-
DEMISE, "n. In conveyancing. A conveyance .of · lish words are in the modern forms. 2 Bl. Comm.
an estate to another for life, for years, or at will; 317, 318; Koch v. Hustis, 113 Wis. 599, 87 N.W.
most ,commonly for years; a lease. 1 Steph. 834.
Coinrti.. :475. Priddy v. ·Green, Tex.Civ.App., 220 DEMISSIO. L. Lat. A demise or letting. Chief-
S.W. 243, 248. Originally a posthumous grant; ly used in the phrase ex demissione (on the de~
commonly a lease or conveyance for a term of mise), which formed part of the title of the 'cause
years; sometimes applied to any conveyance, in in the old actions of ejectment, where it signified
fee,: tor life, m: for years. Pub. St. Mass. 1882, p. that the nominal plaintiff (a fictitious person)
1289. held the estate "on the demise" of, that is, by
".Demise" is synonymous with "lease" or "let." The use a lease from, the real plaintiff.
of the term in a lease imports a covenant for. quiet enjoy-
ment. . Evans v. Williams, 291Ky. 484, 165 S.W.2d 52, 55;
Sixty-Third & Halsted Realty Co. v. Chicago City Bank & DEMOBILIZATION. In military law. The dis-
Trust Co., 299 Ill.App. 297, 20 N.E.2d 162, 167; and implies missal of an army or body of troops from active
a· covenant by lessor of good right and title to make the rvice.
lease. · Evans v. Williams, 291 Ky. 484, 165 S. W.2d 52, 55.
A charter of ·a barge without motive power ac- DEMOCRACY. That form of government in
companied by bargee paid by owner; The Nat. E. which the sovereign power resides in and is ex-
Sutton, D.C.N.Y., 42 F.2d 229, 232; Harbor Tow- ercised by the whole body of free ·citizens, as dis-
boat Co: v. Lowe, D.C.N,Y., 47 F.Supp. 454, 456; tinguished from a monarchy, ·aristocracy, or oli-
or of' a tug or 9ther vessel under circumstances garchy. According to the theory of a pure de-
making·· charterer owner 'pro hac vice, Davison mocracy, every Citizen should participate directly
Chemical Corporation v. The Henry W. Card, D.C. in the business of governing, and the legislative
5
DEMURRANT
assembly should comprise the whole people. But DEMONSTRATIVE EVIDENCE. That evidence
co. v. the ultimate lodgment of the sovereignty being addressed directly to the senses without interven-
~der a the distinguishing feature, the introduction of the tion of testimony. Kabase v. State, 31 Ala.App.
ressel, representative system does not remove a govern· 7], 12 So.2d 758, 7-64.
!i' but ment from this type. However, a government of
for a the latter kind is sometimes specifically described
Demonstrative evidence of negligence has been applied to
that kind of negligence which is usually expressed by res
.leo., as a "representative democracy:"· ipsa loquitur.