II. Sovereign
2.1 Sovereign Claim
Article 26 - Claim of Right
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.
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.