Sorta like this is "down for maintenance":bmxninja357 wrote:it was only down for maintenance.

Moderator: Burnaby49
Sorta like this is "down for maintenance":bmxninja357 wrote:it was only down for maintenance.
MetaMeta
Freeman on the Land
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That's the crux of the matter.
Why did the home dweller agree to pay. Now he/she is obligated to pay.
Dont you think he/she should have re-negotiated the Mortgage so it was plain the Mortgage was already paid upon signing the paper?
Actually, he has. The refrigerator company told him to just keep the box.Burnaby49 wrote:I wonder if Meta's ever tried it.
Instead of conceding to unassailable logic of his arguments and extinguishing his mortgage, as he seemed to expect, the bank did what all Canadian banks seem to do nowadays with Freemen deadbeats and went straight to foreclosure. I suppose experience has taught them that they are just racking up unnecessary legal expense by making futile attempts to deal rationally with them.In February 2014, after research of the uncitral, Bills of Exchange act, Bank of Canada Act, Bank Act, and various other gov't acts and laws. I learned about the bank lending us our own money we created with our signature, and I learned about Birth Certificates, persons, and the debt slave system., I asked for a meeting at the bank and asked to see my mortgage documents. They didn't have them in house and said they could fax them from Montreal. I asked to have the originals brought in with my signature, so he said it would take 5-7 days and I said that's fine.After waiting for them to call, I called them on the 8th day. The same representative said, Oh they just came in yesterday.
I went in to the bank the next day to find fax copies of a mortgage agreement and mortgage approval with no signatures that had arrived the day after my first meeting. I set up an appointment with the manager and when I went to see her a brought with me a notarized promissory note to pay for the mortgage and a conditional acceptance letter. The bank manager said, "I can't honor that, it's made out to you." I said, "Yes it is, according to the bills of exchange act." Since she would not accept my payment, I gave her a conditional acceptance letter.
The series of notices continued unanswered and I have gone into arrears from nonpayment since April 2014. During this process I have since become a secured party creditor by placing a lien on my person and have also copyrighted my name if that has any effect, I'm not sure.On Aug 1 I received a Demand Letter from the banks' solicitors and will go ahead with power of sale if the arrears are not received by Aug 8. I sent the solicitors a notice to provide evidence of the signed mortgage note, and that I had complete title of the property and they would need my permission to go ahead with a power of sale.
I spoke to Micheal Tellinger after his stop in Canada in May 2014. I asked him about the secret to having the bank accept a promissory note. He said to go to the bank headquarters and deliver it through the mail room to the chief financial officer. As the bank is going to do a power of sale of my property, I sent the lawyers my note to see if they would accept it and they would not. They say it is not lawful money of Canada. I hopped on a plane and flew to Toronto the next day after receiving their letter denying my payment. I delivered a joint and several note (promissory note) to settle the full amount of the mortgage to the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. As the note and cover letter were not in an envelope they called up to the CFO and read off the note. The CFO's office said they would accept it. I tried to get a delivery stamp but they don't have a stamp. I received a manifest for the package I delivered. I put the papers in an envelope and they received it.
This happened on September 10, 2014 and I received a letter on October 2, 2014 from the bank's lawyer stating again that this is not lawful money of Canada. I'm getting frustrated with this whole issue and not sure what to do next. I have paid my mortgage with money in the form of a financial instrument. Do I have to sue the bank now? Any help would be greatly appreciated as this situation is very stressful to get them to acknowledge the law. According to the bills of exchange act this debt can be set-off with a note. What is your opinion on this matter and what would you do? This morning I was informed that my property has been listed in the newspaper for mortgage sale. The auction is in 1 month.
The "claims" for which bmxninja357 presents zero evidence is his statement that motorhead10's methods don't work. Personally I think that the real world evidence of motorhead10's imminent eviction through foreclosure is evidence enough but what do I know compared to JackieG's fever dreams? Unlike bmxninja357's unsupported statements JackieG has presented unimpeachable evidence to prove his position, his own unsupported statements! Works for me! Here it is along with what I assume is a touch of anti-Semitism;JackieG
Ninj,
You are simply a disgusting little man with no idea about anything to do with freedom. Many here wish you would simply disappear. The main reason this forum has gone to hell in a hand bag lies at your doorstep. As usual you make claims and off zero evidence.
Although, if "thousands" have won in court I'd assume that JackieG has at least a few citations he could cite to back this claim up. I guess I'm just quibbling.To date there are literally thousands of cases where the so called "borrower" walked out of court in possession of their home with no one to make the mortgage payments to.
Is that illegal like ninj suggests?
According to ninj that isn't right.
Anyone Who, has read the original post I made in The Five Letters will get the idea who ninj supports.
Ninj supports the racial group that started banking.
Its ingrained into him and he can not help himself.
Everyone pray for ninj.
If people who favour the customer over the lender are able to use the law to stimulate change, any imbalance created by giving people their real estate for free will best correct itself through a change in banking laws and practice, NOT through perpetuation of the present system of GRAND THEFT of the entire wealth of society by the banking cartels.Under the present system, someone HAS to get something for NOTHING. There is no other way.
Either the bankers continue to get interest payments for NOTHING at risk, or customers get free real estate after "borrowing"that was created out of NOTHING and having the "loan" either canceled for fraud, or discharged in bankruptcy, or the lender gets the real estate from the customer for NOTHING, following a foreclosure on the loan that was created out of Nothing[/u].
The answer is to stop basing bank lending on NOTHING.
The federal courts in Canada have stated that either the common man wake up and use the common law, the rights and freedoms available to him....or lose it for ever.
That is your choice
Oh dear. Anti-semitism on WFS?Ninj supports the racial group that started banking.
How is that possible?Jeffrey wrote:Oh dear. Anti-semitism on WFS?Ninj supports the racial group that started banking.
JackieG then did produce a citation: Boyko 2007 Foreclosure Decision -- Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Steele, 2008 WL 111227Burnaby49 wrote:Although, if "thousands" have won in court I'd assume that JackieG has at least a few citations he could cite to back this claim up. I guess I'm just quibbling.JackieG wrote: To date there are literally thousands of cases where the so called "borrower" walked out of court in possession of their home with no one to make the mortgage payments to.
Thanks.Burnaby49 wrote:... So many mortgages were "forgiven" in the sense that the owner of the mortgage could not provide proof that the morgagee actually owed the money. ...
The issue wasn't that the mortgagor couldn't prove the mortgagee owned the property, titles were all recorded properly. The problem was proving the existence of the mortgage. The collateralized mortgages were bundled together often with hundreds, perhaps thousands of mortgages in one security. but in the frenzy of 2005-2007 (I believe) to issue these things the lending institutions were incredibly sloppy about paperwork. It was just lend money, bundle the mortgages, and sell them before they exploded. The security holders were pension funds, mutual funds etc, institutions who knew nothing about mortgages. So when property values started collapsing and mortgage borrowers who'd maxed out and were right on the financial edge stopped paying the security holders were overwhelmed. In many cases the original issuers were so lax about paperwork that there was nothing the mortgage holders could take to court to prove the debt. Everybody knew that there were mortgages but the courts required proof. These are probably the cases that jackieg claims support his moronic opinion.littleFred wrote:Thanks.Burnaby49 wrote:... So many mortgages were "forgiven" in the sense that the owner of the mortgage could not provide proof that the morgagee actually owed the money. ...
I'm curious: what happened to the ownership of the property? If the residents stopped paying the mortgage, and no lender could prove they owned the property, could the residents then sell the property and buy another, entirely free of any mortgage?
Naturally, relying on toxic debts and poor paperwork in hope of escaping a mortgage would be high risk. But not quite a stupid as relying on promissory notes, I think.
Apparently in his world a silver dollar is worth more than $575 of "fiat currency". If this is how he runs his financial life I can see why he got foreclosed.motorheadv10
NOW ONLINE Newbie on the Land
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I went to the auction today. The banks' lawyer was there as well. The bank bid $11,500 and i bid 21 silver dollars. Sold for 11500.. I said hey my bid is worth more!! Silver trumps paper. Your fiat currency is worthless compared to my silver. But ignorance prevailed in this case. I asked the lawyer what the definition of lawful money was and he didn't know. I told him it was gold and silver coins. So now I'm wondering if I should take the auctioneer to court for disregarding my bid. What a mess this has become for me. I may just call the lawyer Monday and try to settle because this fight sounds good but holy fuck it's difficult and stressful.
And as a side note i don't like all the negativity on my thread. Quit fighting each other.
Thanks
I'm no expert, but I think he's realized the attractiveness of making nice too late; once the bank has finished the auction it's already done everything the hard way, and he's thrown away his last leverage.Burnaby49 wrote:Motorhead10 returned WFS for an update posting. He's still living in the illusion;
Apparently in his world a silver dollar is worth more than $575 of "fiat currency". If this is how he runs his financial life I can see why he got foreclosed.motorheadv10
NOW ONLINE Newbie on the Land
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I went to the auction today. The banks' lawyer was there as well. The bank bid $11,500 and i bid 21 silver dollars. Sold for 11500.. I said hey my bid is worth more!! Silver trumps paper. Your fiat currency is worthless compared to my silver. But ignorance prevailed in this case. I asked the lawyer what the definition of lawful money was and he didn't know. I told him it was gold and silver coins. So now I'm wondering if I should take the auctioneer to court for disregarding my bid. What a mess this has become for me. I may just call the lawyer Monday and try to settle because this fight sounds good but holy fuck it's difficult and stressful.
And as a side note i don't like all the negativity on my thread. Quit fighting each other.
Thanks
Old mobile home on a rental pad probably.Also, $11,500? What was he living in, a used car?
If no one else was bidding, the bank had no reason to bid higher. The house might be worth much more.Also, $11,500? What was he living in, a used car?
Weren't you paying any attention? There was a higher bidder; motorhead10 offered 21 silver dollars. That was clearly a much higher bid that the purported winning bid of $11,500 paid with that fiat garbage that I'm ashamed to call Canadian currency. The only explanation is the one that motorhead10 so insightfully realized, collusion between the auctioneer and the bank.Dr. Caligari wrote:If no one else was bidding, the bank had no reason to bid higher. The house might be worth much more.Also, $11,500? What was he living in, a used car?
I'll take door number 2.if his stated position on Silver dollar value is correct rather than just Freeman babbling.