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Maxims Relative to Transfers of Property

Turn Rights into Motion / Order / Notice. We are inalienable AND OUR RIGHTS NEVER DIE, but we have to be doing something more than just believing it to be true. It is proper that the legal title to the property moved to an entity that can hold it for my benefit. Grant me the time needed to navigate the procedural labyrinth as I was mistakenly ignorant of the proper form, and my rights are wholly independent of the statute of limitations. Gibson. 70 note 36.
65. Notice, and Its Effects. No one can transfer to another a greater right to a thing than he himself possesses; and no one can, in reason and conscience, expect to acquire a greater right than the vendor could rightfully sell. The following are some of the principal Maxims Relative to Transfers of Property:

1. Alienation includes every act by which the right to property is transferred.1 2. The assignee is entitled to the rights of the assignor.2 There is no indication here that there is a living entity with a higher, primary right or superior first-hand knowledge. 3. Let the purchaser beware: he who buys what is another's is bound to know what he is buying.3 4. Whoever transfers anything to another is deemed to transfer that without which the transfer would be void.4 5. The title to property cannot be in pendency. The title may be in dispute, but it nevertheless rests in him who is adjudged to be the owner.5 6. Two persons cannot exclusively own the same thing.6 7. No one can transfer to another a greater right than he himself has.7 8. While a suit is pending no change can be made in the ownership of the property in litigation so as to affect the rights of the parties to the suit.8

9. He who takes the benefit must take it with its burden. A partner who shares in the profits must share in the losses; and he who takes title to property must take it with its encumbrances.9 10. He who takes the place of another as to any right or property holds it subject to all the rights of the assignor.10 11. What is mine cannot be lost to me or transferred to another, without my deed or default.11 12. Whatever belongs to a thing goes with it. Or. as our lawyers sometimes translate it, the tail goes with the hide.12 13 13. He who buys land takes it subject to all liens and encumbrances resting upon it. 14. When anything is granted that also is granted without which the grant itself cannot be made effectual. Ubi aliquid conceditur, conceditur et id sine quo
res ipsa non potes

64-11. Ex nudo pacto non oritur actio. (No suit can be brought upon a contract without a supporting consideration.)

1 2

Alienatio est omnis actus per quern dominium transfertur. Assignatus utitur jure auctoris. Move to strike everything

the attorney-at-law says regarding primary equitable rights.


3

Caveat emptor: qui ignorare non debuit quod jus alienum emit. This maxim applies to Court sales. See post, 640-641, notes. 4 Cuicunque aliquis quid concedit concedere videtur et id sine quo res ipsa esse non potuit. 5 Dominium non potest esse in pendenti. 6 Duo non possunt in solido nnam. rem possidere. 7 Nemo potest plus juris ad alium transferre quam ipse habet. 8 Pendente lite nihil immovetur.

Qui sentit commodum sentire debet et onus. Qui in jus dominiumve alterius succeedit litre ejus utl debet. 11 Quod meum est, sine facto meo vel defectu meo, amitti vel in alhtm transferri non potest. 12 Res accessaria sequitur rem principalem. 13 Transit terra cum onere.
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Maxims Relative to Transfers of Property


We claim our rights are inalienable. OUR RIGHTS NEVER DIE. We are doing something more than just believing it to be true. It is proper that the legal title to the property moved to an entity that can hold it for my benefit. Grant me the time needed to navigate the procedural labyrinth as I was mistakenly ignorant of the proper form, and my rights are wholly independent of the statute of limitations. 1 Ex nudo pacto non oritur actio. 2 No suit can be brought upon a contract without a supporting consideration. No one can transfer to another a greater right to a thing than he himself possesses; and no one can, in reason and conscience, expect to acquire a greater right than the vendor could rightfully sell. The following are some of the principal Maxims Relative to Transfers of Property : 3 1. Alienation includes every act by which the right to property is transferred. 2. The assignee is entitled to the rights of the assignor. 4 3. Let the purchaser beware: he who buys what is another's is bound to know what he is buying. 4. Whoever transfers anything to another is deemed to transfer that without which the transfer would be void. 5. The title to property cannot be in pendency. The title may be in dispute, but it nevertheless rests in him who is adjudged to be the owner. 6. Two persons cannot exclusively own the same thing. 7. No one can transfer to another a greater right than he himself has. 8. While a suit is pending no change can be made in the ownership of the property in litigation so as to affect the rights of the parties to the suit. 9. He who takes the benefit must take it with its burden. A partner who shares in the profits must share in the losses; and he who takes title to property must take it with its encumbrances. 10. He who takes the place of another as to any right or property holds it subject to all the rights of the assignor. 11. What is mine cannot be lost to me or transferred to another, without my deed or default. 12. Whatever belongs to a thing goes with it. Or. as our lawyers sometimes translate it, the tail goes with the hide. 13. He who buys land takes it subject to all liens and encumbrances resting upon it. 14. When anything is granted that also is granted without which the grant itself cannot be made effectual. ________________________
1 Gibson. 2 Gibson.

Treatise on Suits in Chancery. 70 note 36. 64-11. 3 Gibson. 65. Notice, and Its Effects. 4 There is no indication here that there is a living entity with a right higher, or a primary right or superior first-hand knowledge in this matter. The legal title may be vested where the Counter-Plaintiff's primary equitable rights are not infringed, by continuing

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