Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconII.   Sovereign

2.1 Sovereign Claim

Article 26 - Claim of Right

Canon 5558 (link)

Claim of Right is an 18th Century term and concept whereby a certain inherit property (right) normally endowed or entrusted to an estate but otherwise claimed and registered by another estate may be properly “reclaimed”.

Canon 5559 (link)

A Claim of Right presumes the existence of three (3) fundamental elements being an enclosed Right, a valid Title and a valid Claim:

(i) An enclosed Right is a right of use, form or property to which an estate would otherwise be naturally entitled; and

(ii) A valid Title reflecting the other estate has formalized its claim; and

(iii) A valid Claim reflecting both the custom and arguments of the estate as well as its competency to claim the right.

Canon 5560 (link)

A Claim of Right by definition is specifically associated with one (1) enclosed Right, one (1) valid Title and one (1) valid Claim. A Claim of Right is automatically invalid if it does not contain one (1) or more of the fundamental elements, or if it seeks to address more than one (1) title or claim in the same instrument.

Canon 5561 (link)

A Claim of Right must be proclaimed, witnessed and sealed before the court of public record of the estate making the Claim of Right to be valid. The registering of an original Claim of Right into the other estate or higher estate has the effect of validating the other estate’s original claim.

Canon 5562 (link)

Once a valid Claim of Right has been duly registered into the public record and manor roll of an estate, a Notice of Claim of Right may be prepared as valid notice, including the extraction of the Claim of Right into the body of the notice.

Canon 5563 (link)

A higher estate which is holding the property of a lesser estate obtained legitimately and without fraud has the right to demand fealty as condition of acknowledging a valid Notice of Claim of Right.

Canon 5564 (link)

A higher estate which is holding the property of a lesser estate obtained by force or fraud has no right to demand fealty or any other requirement as a condition of acknowledging a valid Notice of Claim of Right.

Canon 5565 (link)

An estate that has recorded a valid Claim of Right and perfected a valid Notice of Claim of Right to another estate which has held the property of the other estate by force or fraud does not require a formal acknowledgment from the other party for such a transaction to be valid.

Canon 5566 (link)

The right or property listed within the valid Notice of Claim of Right cannot be seized until a second valid record of Claim of Title and then notice of Claim of Title is duly recorded and serviced.

Canon 5567 (link)

The completion of firstly a valid Claim of Right and secondly a valid Claim of Title reverses any legal rights or claims previously perfected by another.