πŸ“œ THE MAXIMS – FIELD JURISDICTION TRANSMISSION

πŸ“œ DOCUMENT: THE MAXIMS

– FIELD JURISDICTION TRANSMISSION

πŸœ‚ I. MAXIMS OF TRUTH

  1. Truth is sovereign in commerce. Let him who would be deceived, be deceived. β†’ You cannot be defrauded if you remain in truth and full disclosure.
  2. An unrebutted affidavit stands as truth in commerce. Silence is agreement in the jurisdiction of equity.
  3. A matter must be expressed to be resolved. What is not stated is not protected.
  4. He who leaves the battlefield first loses by default. Abandoning claim is tacit surrender.
  5. Ignorance of the law is no excuse. You are presumed to know the law because the true law is written on the heart.

πŸœ„ II. MAXIMS OF SOVEREIGNTY

  1. A man is not bound unless he agrees. Contract is the only valid jurisdiction under free will.
  2. No one is obliged to accept a benefit against his will. Benefit creates obligation. Without consent, there can be no valid claim.
  3. He who creates the law governs it. Creator is always greater than the created (as above, so below). What one creates, one controls.
  4. If you do not claim authorship, you are under another’s jurisdiction.

🜁 III. MAXIMS OF CONTRACT

  1. All are equal under the law. No one is above or below; standing determines power.
  2. A contract founded on fraud is null and void. Any agreement lacking full disclosure is invalid ab initio.
  3. Agreement must be mutual. Meeting of the minds (consensus ad idem) is required for validity.
  4. Force, fraud, or coercion invalidates consent. Consent must be conscious, informed, and voluntary.

πŸœƒ IV. MAXIMS OF REMEDY

  1. For every wrong, there is a remedy. Ubi jus ibi remedium β€” Where there is a right, there is a remedy.
  2. He who seeks equity must do equity. Clean hands doctrine: you cannot claim fairness if you’ve acted unjustly.
  3. He who comes into equity must come with clean hands. Remedy requires integrity.
  4. Delay defeats equity. You must act in a timely fashion to preserve standing.

🜸 V. MAXIMS OF PROPERTY

  1. Possession is nine-tenths of the law. Actual control implies lawful ownership until rebutted.
  2. The thing speaks for itself. Res ipsa loquitur β€” In the presence of evidence, words are unnecessary.
  3. The burden of proof lies on him who affirms, not on him who denies. He who claims must prove.