0:02 Hi everyone, this is John Jay's, June 29. Thanks for joining today. I want to talk about easements before I do, I just wanted to list a few of the services. 0:09 I've set up, as you all know, many of you know, ... dot com, you'll see a lot of content up there. 0:15 We also the cryptic acco...

0:02
Hi everyone, this is John Jay's, June 29. Thanks for joining today. I want to talk about easements before I do, I just wanted to list a few of the services.
0:09
I've set up, as you all know, many of you know, ... dot com, you'll see a lot of content up there.
0:15
We also the cryptic accounting dot com and Accounting Service where the account cannot be testifying against. You will never help the IRS at an audit.
0:23
And everything's provided there, the, the accounting firm that we set up, they understand that crypto is another sort of taxable, then I can actually not going to ask you, but all kinds of the unnecessary disclosure statements. So that's why I set that up, I got tired of referring. People qualify and re qualify. So we just weren't set up a firm last year.
0:44
So, so far though, looking pretty good. It's working. Pretty good.
0:47
Of course, there's the video membership area, which is proxy dot IO.
0:54
Have a lot of new content now. Some of the content I'm actually breaking off because it's going to be large, it's going to be larch, it's going to be not.
1:02
So uh, it's going to be a little different than the content I've had been publishing for a couple of years there.
1:08
Yeah.
1:09
So I've been talking about that last couple of months.
1:13
one of the I have a video series on publishing that has to do with post mutual agreements and as a method of divorcing the State, getting it out of your your family, your marriage or your living relationship, OK.
1:26
So there's a way to do this We can actually use existing rules.
1:30
Actually instead of just saying hey guys, here's contractors what you do, I decided to create a video series.
1:35
I've got three in the series right now, it's not Polish, but that will be through privacy IO, and you'll see it as a separate subscription, and then I've got, I'm doing several others on the security agreement.
1:46
Right now, I'm 1 by 1, working with everyone who's working with me on the security agreements, Then we took on Google, May in many cases, I'm showing people how to find out what they're buying, is where a file in the county, and the next step, once that gets done, we're gonna go into the Secretary of State's office. So, that's unrolling right now, but pretty much we're going to have a subscription on that, And then we're going to talk about more on the ... Covenants and Easement, which I want to talk about this evening.
2:14
Um, someone really great question yesterday and she asked me if we did discuss it today and certainly it's a pretty good subject.
2:23
I just figured it's very powerful, OK?
2:27
This whole idea behind easements, it gives us control back of our property.
2:32
And the question was, what's to stop someone wants to prevent someone from defeating a mortgage. We're using an easement this way.
2:40
And the answer is not that.
2:41
What's more interesting is, once you do this, you'll have the courts and the police that will back you up.
2:49
They will enforce your rights on an Easement.
2:51
This is not a question.
2:53
This is not a question, just have to get the title holder to grant the easement. You can write, isn't it?
3:02
And then, B, serviette or the grantee of the Easement rights cannot be titleholder. It's that simple.
3:12
Once you get past that, OK, now it's an art of just deciding how you're gonna use the property.
3:17
There's no argument.
3:19
You don't have to sue anybody.
3:23
Someone has to try to see you. They probably won't, because you can't get around the easement because it's a subtle matter.
3:30
You can't go up route it. You can't change it, You have to have an interest in the easement or the authority. And nobody does except you and the previous title holder.
3:39
And if he's long gone, then it's only you and the new title holder. And then basically, you're the boss.
3:45
That's how this works.
3:47
So just think about how when the Europeans came over to the Americas and they took the land from the audience, all the Indians were taking the land from each other anyway.
3:56
We just we're just the new culture with different technology to do the same thing that they were doing.
4:03
So how did the Indians have land?
4:06
I'm not a History professor. I just know a few things, But The Indians What did they do?
4:12
Went to Home Depot and got markers, strengths, Strong comparative.
4:15
Barbed wire fencing has merit, now their ownership of land was that they were using it. So there's a family, and this is not how Indians Live by bandwidth payday lending, community, inactive.
4:27
It's a biological factor, gay, People need to have communities, a minimum, 150 people to make it work, OK, for growth for survival?
4:38
So, imagine back then, you have hundreds and thousands of Indians and they had a claim on land. They didn't record in the public.
4:46
Now, they fought to the death to keep, they're opponents off of it.
4:51
The land had food, it had shelter, it had no nutrients, resources, it had waterways, et cetera. You all know this. And so that's where that, that's, that's where their money was.
5:04
So there, the law of the land with the Indians was the possession that they had.
5:09
And the only way they could retain possession is that they could use the land.
5:14
You don't see a, you never would see a situation like where Bill Gates is gonna buy thousands of acres or millions of acres of land.
5:21
Either do nothing with it or destroy it.
5:24
You'd never see that.
5:26
Well, how does that exist? Because people from Europe came over here. Think about this.
5:31
If I'm, if I'm the chief of an Indian tribe and I'm going to describe to the Chief of another Indian tribe when my ... property is, I'm going to say you see that mountain range over there. You go straight from here to that mountain range. And then if you go do with, you know, whatever you're going to describe that based on what you can see with landmarks pretty much.
5:50
How do you tax that?
5:53
You don't.
5:55
You don't. What happens is other tribes come and try to take it.
5:58
So so when the English came over to actually study English, but the Europeans came over here, of course, they had a system of taxation that was well established against, and the English common law.
6:08
Not just saying, I mean, you know, how things do work back then after the, after the fall of the Roman Empire Cay when the church basically started running that part of the world.
6:18
They would literally announce laws and policies about Square.
6:21
That's how the charter and things, which is fine that's supposed to be in any case.
6:25
You can tax things by being specific.
6:28
So, to be specific, when, when you can describe property by boundaries in the end, if you want to tax it. Well, then, if you can describe it, you have to tell everybody else what that is.
6:38
And so, that's where you have public records, and you have title to the property. And then, it's, I don't believe, had titles, per se.
6:46
I don't think they had an owner.
6:47
I think that I think that the the tribes that were possessing the land were using it, and that was, that was there, their claim on the land.
6:57
They physically possess that use it, so in any case, not to make a long story, but you had these titles, and over time, we've got become used to rely upon titles.
7:08
We don't even think about possession.
7:10
Yet, that is the history of land use. Throughout the last quarter billionaires, how many people who have been on the planet. There's only a record of human being on earth for about a quarter of my ears. There's no ancestry with primates, and that's all I, Darwin was wrong, All that sort of thing.
7:24
So we've been here about a quarter million years, where we come from our outlet the story.
7:30
Kudos. In any case.
7:32
So, up until recently, we said we then started using the titles.
7:41
Oops.
7:43
It's going unfilled.
7:45
So we started using the titles.
7:48
And that's how we think about. So now, when we talk about easements, this is where we probably get lost. Easements.
7:55
I'm talking about how the image design.
7:58
This is not some crazy idea.
8:00
This is, this is what our English system recognizes. So there's two aspects to real estate. Let's talk about residential. There's the title.
8:09
OK, and then there's the possession. So as you know, when there's a foreclosure, that can happen.
8:14
And then one of the title holder is Dispossessed and his title. The next title holder then, has the right to the previous title holder, which are what to enjoy the use of the property.
8:26
Now, let's say, the first title holder doesn't leave, but he gets this dispossessed on paper, but he stays, well, he's retaining possession of the property.
8:34
There's a separate legal process by which you can get the court involved, and the police involved.
8:40
You would seek to get rid of ejectment, right, or rid of possession, and that would allow the police to physically remove the person, and his belongings.
8:53
This is nothing special.
8:56
Now, if the person who was the title holder was foreclosed upon, let's say, but before he was foreclosed upon it, he granted, easement rights to an organization or his brother, somebody who was not the title, which I'm not going to go into too much detail on that.
9:12
And he, any granted, these arise, OK, and he gets foreclosed upon.
9:17
Uh, if he, if, if anyone tries to take possession to remove him, they would have to, except the easement rights, if the even the rights has a possession, the entire profit.
9:33
So the easement rights would then control.
9:35
And it would prevent anyone from taking possession is as long as the easement right covered that.
9:43
So if these are the rights were now held by his brother, this rather turned around and said, hey, you can use the property to keep on live in there.
9:51
Then, he has the right to be there because his brother said, so, it wouldn't matter what the title holder was.
9:56
So now the title holder has the title.
9:58
Yay, can't use the property.
10:01
You can enjoy the same way as the one who had possession.
10:05
That's how powerful this is.
10:07
I'm not saying we should cheat investors, but what we need to do is take back control over property.
10:13
We need to start paying the property taxes.
10:16
We need to recreate how our money is being spent. Now, imagine this.
10:21
All for supporting art, but things we enjoy in our society.
10:24
I mean, traffic is one of the best things government does. It's probably the only good thing.
10:30
Yeah.
10:32
But if we're not going to pay property taxes, you know full well, that money is going towards the road maintenance and all this sort of thing.
10:38
For property taxes, let's say nobody pay the property tax residential.
10:42
Well, the money would still need to be collected, because your governments are going into debt and don't really go into debt, is when the lender knows the bond buyers.
10:52
The banks know that the government is going to collect taxes, won't or can't collect the taxes from private property owners. It will collect the taxes from another tax base, and guess who will pay for that?
11:06
You and me, ultimately, we all do, and I'm fine with that, because I think the right now me, my landlord Shana raise the rent about twice in one year, it boosted 30%.
11:21
It was cheap RF is so cheap, in fact, it was so cheap, I felt that I added more money to the right?
11:26
And then she, she didn't want to take it, and then about a year after that, she said, I have to raise the rent, because the taxes insurance, and she's still breaking even. She's very humble person that.
11:38
The owners are very humble couples, and they are just, they're happy to have this year and they're not trying to make a lot of money. Although they could, they could easily make another two, $300 a month if they wanted to. And I pay the problem.
11:49
But what I'm saying is so, um, you have total control over the easements.
11:56
Um, it's a different way too.
12:00
Have the property and this is going to allow us. I think you can definitely do it It's going to allow us to recover this control.
12:09
And what happens to all the mineral rights? I don't know yet.
12:11
I think I think also easements can have something to do with that, but I think also we need to start researching how to update the land patten through the Bureau of Land Management and regain our mineral rights if we can.
12:23
And mineral rights are separate from water rights in many cases, So I'm not sure about all that.
12:28
I'm speaking at a school when it comes to it, but these are also property rights, and of course, you have the land rights above your, you know, your land up into the air. We talked about that.
12:37
I believe there's a de facto trust, I think that the resource is, is not being managed properly, but we still get to fly airplanes and that sort of thing. We can use the rights of way, whatever.
12:49
So that's, that's a different subject, more complex part of the subject.
12:53
So I just wanted to bring this up.
12:55
So the answer to the question is, you know, what's to prevent someone from now pay? His mortgage will nothing because this is the whole idea.
13:03
Cleanup, using claims on your property, the use of your property.
13:08
Clean it up and let the people that are actually living on the property, get the full benefit of it without interference by another party. Let's just start over.
13:18
Let's reset. We don't have to get new legislation, we'd have to argue with our own government.
13:22
All we do is take back control, possession of the property, and we should sit there and use it properly, use it properly. We can do that through the HLA comment, but we can also do that through the easement I'm going to talk about.
13:35
Is that does anybody want to buy it?
13:38
The technical aspects?
13:40
How an easement will be created. By the way, I'm writing I am writing a generic one right now, and I'm going to use it. A few cases we will modify for each case, but I want to share it. In fact, what I'm gonna do is, I'm going to create a Series A, B, A series, explain what's going on with that.
13:55
Say, you have a complete understanding of how this works out, and what you're actually trying to do.
14:06
I'm going to answer a couple of these, Is it, is, it possible to Completely cut? All ties in the state. Yeah! If you haven't got an easement right?
14:16
I mean, look at it This way, You already have these things on your property.
14:20
Because you get one, It does indicate when all this stuff. OK, these are the result of easements. So the easements are already there. I'm just saying it's a terrible. Or you create an additional set of easements as far as getting out of the state. Yeah you can go how big is that property taxes?
14:35
That's pretty much everything, right?
14:37
How about city code violations?
14:39
I mean, city codes are important because many cases, engineers wrote them, and they're based on safety, but when you, when you're solely about taxes and just for asking people, and it's, I've seen somebody horrible cases with that, OK, let's just cut the drama, you know, the stupid stuff in New York City, you have to let what foreigners stay in your house criminals or something, I don't know what they're doing.
15:01
OK, um, I'm just going to ignore equals and put it. It does not matter.
15:10
I don't care what you do now.
15:11
Oh, by the way, take me out your tax shows that they want. I'm just not going to send you more tax dollars.
15:17
It's the same.
15:21
Do is there's so much power and you get you don't want to argue.
15:25
You don't want to get into a power struggle I Use my wife as example She doesn't know that I do that too much just you know, I listen to or from another room leave me with my two daughters please go wash the dishes I Let it go on for 30 minutes then I walk in I see like for things barrels either wash the dishes or and I say it so, so low and so calmly.
15:52
They know, they need to wash the dishes now.
15:56
And as I'm walking out of the room, I glance over my shoulder, look at my wife, and she's like.
16:03
They cannot plead with them.
16:05
You are the boss.
16:07
So, this lets us take, control back and say, the party's over, we're the boss!
16:14
So, if that answers your question, can't cut all topics.
16:19
OK, I guess, I mean, I think we should be, It's a resource that we pay for, OK. I'm not sure. We want to cut all ties. We just want to be the ones to make the rules again.
16:29
Mean, do you think people are making the rules says, Hey, we should let people that we don't know that are dangerous to our families live with us?
16:37
I mean, I don't want my mother-in-law living with us She knows that to veterans.
16:42
Can even be established between when a foreclosure process begins. Yeah, as long as they're the foreclosure is not completed So like I said, as long as your name is on the title, put it this way, if you have the right to sell the property.
16:54
Up until that moment you don't, you have the right to record an easement.
17:01
Be diligent.
17:03
Don't wait.
17:05
So, yeah, If it's a foreclosure sale at the moment, the auctioneer closes that sale offering of the auction.
17:18
It's over, I know, that, there's paperwork to do, but when it's in the public, and it's been auctioned off that moment, there's a buyer even if it's an REO. Even if the bank buys back like a Real Estate Loan.
17:30
You don't any longer have the right to be the grant or to the grantee. Isn't that right?
17:38
Typically uses utilities, most Communist utilities, they're useful, useful. They're going to be used.
17:46
Like I said, interviews, and we can, we can do some things here.
17:49
We can do some things, I, without even really, get, are getting into an argument, um, the title holder modify the physical structure of the property. If There's an easement, OK. So, nobody can interfere with Easement.
18:05
That's the whole point of an easement.
18:10
Then they, titleholder, let's say you wanted to give you some brief, OK. It's gonna record an easement.
18:16
Typically, this is a new title holder consumer, and I'm not trying to insult people, but yeah, it's typically going to be a stoop consumer.
18:26
or it's an unsophisticated person, OK.
18:29
Or it's going to be an investor. What's the investor going to do?
18:33
He's going to go to a lawyer is going to say, Man, it's public record.
18:38
I can't do anything for you.
18:41
There's nothing they can do.
18:44
How imagine if you wanted to impede the the Easement that is for your, your cable service.
18:53
Yeah.
18:56
You've heard of people being arrested for interfering with smart meter installations because they were impeding the easement rights.
19:04
This is how important it is.
19:06
John, got your hand raised.
19:08
What would you have in mind?
19:12
I just wondered, like, we have the, to separate the township's on one property.
19:20
Junior volume up.
19:21
Now, here, Each in your volume up.
19:26
Can't hear, I can't hear you that well.
19:32
I'll have to try again.
19:35
I gotta go back into my study.
19:37
OK, Or that you can show that we care. So by the mute button on Zoom, it may change for you.
19:47
OK, comment.
19:49
Yeah. You know what date when you're explaining the state was what to eat.
19:52
And it really does is, it empowers our rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
19:58
Because in the state, Constitution, it shares, the whole Constitution should, the first, starts off with guarantees, right?
20:06
Right? Liberty, life, liberty, and property.
20:09
And they ignore.
20:11
Alright, any Property, how do you, How do you exercise that, right?
20:15
Well, this is how you do it. You exercise that right?
20:18
You don't ask someone else to do it for you.
20:20
You have to, it's like, and when I talk about privacy, is a property, right?
20:26
You have to take your privacy, because someone stole it.
20:30
Well, you let him.
20:31
I gotta take that mm, hm.
20:34
So, yeah. We don't talk about the Constitution with an argue with people.
20:37
Did it work on something?
20:41
Did that better, I'll just say, just talk loud.
20:47
OK, I just think we have a trust for the property and how to separate deeds.
20:57
And, one is the.
20:59
but one trust then, should we make the easement with A LLC and have the what if I'm a trustee on the trust, but I'm a member of The LLC? Would have a problem? No. No, it wouldn't.
21:14
So, let me get my standard it this way.
21:16
I'm going to do it unless somebody, I'll tell me to do a different way but right.
21:21
And whoever's the title or the literal we're words on the title, it's on quitclaim deed recorded.
21:29
That is the grand tour.
21:30
It could be anybody can be.
21:31
You could be trust the grantee survey, the state. I, I would like to do it like this.
21:38
I would like to, just for one of the day.
21:40
It's, so, I would call, OK, I would set up an LLC Registered in that state, doesn't need a tax on Rebecca, just did an LLC, and I would name the LLC.
21:53
I would use the address of the property as the name of the LLC.
21:57
My common thing I did.
21:59
And then I would be the LLC, what would be as the trustee or, and then it would be a trust, I will make an LLC, the trustee for this trust.
22:13
Neither of them have to actually like paperwork.
22:16
You just need to put the name and the document in the Easement and then Recorded.
22:20
So, it's not that speaker better now? Yes, Yes. Yes. Very good.
22:25
I've found it. Yeah, I misspoke. Why do have an LLC as the trustee of the trust?
22:32
So then if we want to create the easement to protector for my generations down the road, and then what does the easement, what's the suburbia? Suburbia mean. Like, should we put on out another LLC and all then be members, or name them individually?
22:48
Whoever's affiliated with the Soviets is that it has the right under the easement.
22:54
So you could just say that wherever you want. I mean as you add new people come in your family, right, new births and things like that, those people also benefit. We can describe that in Eastern as well.
23:05
Well, like an easement, we'll put something like, it'll be the grantee, is going to be this LLC a trustee, then we'll go further and say, it'll be anyone who's affiliated with this organization.
23:17
So then all we have to do is keep a list of whoever's affiliated with it.
23:21
That was kind of challenging, but just the same, that's how it works.
23:25
See you, you make the servant, A group of people, go to your family, and we just give it a name, LLC, S trustee for the trust.
23:39
Complicated either, Yeah, you can even give your brother these rights. It doesn't have to be that complicated. You just can't give it to yourself if you're the title.
23:48
The other thing I wouldn't do is if if the titleholder I have 100% the official intrusion, I wouldn't make myself the certain state.
23:58
Just because my name is not the title because there's the official interests are equal.
24:04
So I'm not sure of any rulings on the courts. I'm gonna, again, I'm gonna guess that if there isn't really on this and I'm not going to bother doing the research is not worth it.
24:12
I'm just going to think that the beneficial interest are the same from the grant. your grant. Do you like that? That there is no easement.
24:19
So, just keep that in mind.
24:27
Yeah.
24:27
Alter ego, so, um, there's no alternate ego situation, as I just described. You have to, you have to have truly, truly, different beneficial interests.
24:37
And if you name your whole family, that your whole family is the owner of the property, that your whole family can be the beneficiaries of it over the grantee.
24:49
So it's not alter ego, that's not the issue.
24:51
That would be something like, I'll try to go over, they call it.
24:57
Arm's length or something like that.
25:02
Something like that. So. Yeah.
25:05
The way that case law reads, is that, if there's the same person, ultimately, however, you call him, if it's truly the same person, from the grand tour to the grantee on the easement. Then. No easement.
25:18
And because there's no easement, it can never be created.
25:22
No matter what language you play, the partners are essentially the same.
25:26
You'll never get an easement. Now, you can act like it.
25:29
If someone would reset is smart enough, it can figure it out. And you can go to the court and get it the Easement. It can get quite title on the property.
25:39
Is there isn't it doesn't exist? And take an objective per property.
25:42
So that's, that's the scope of it.
25:50
South Dakota. User rights?
25:56
Yeah. Well, I'm sure that's happening.
25:57
I mean, planning, OK, So, on the carbon capture pipeline, this is total bullshit, I mean, you guys gotta attack this from the beginning, there's no need for this.
26:08
This is destroying our environment. There's no carbon problem.
26:13
It's code word for people problem.
26:15
That's what I'm looking right?
26:16
We face and say, Yeah, we want to nyala you and your whole family, or linear engineer, your legacy, and everything is, here just useless eaters.
26:23
That's what they mean by carbon footprint where the carbon.
26:27
So you guys start at the beginning, but as far as using the right, some of this doesn't claim, isn't it, right?
26:32
Yeah, it has to be a matter of public record.
26:34
If it's not, there's probably other ways But the easement rights, OK, By the way, these are the rights.
26:42
Don't have to be a public record, but they have to be, um, published, to be enforceable against the party. They care, so, when you're saying they're claiming, isn't it right?
26:53
I'm thinking your government is claiming rights of Eminent Domain and this is what's happening in California.
27:01
There's so much land to steal there because you want to build this high speed train, train, and among other things, they want to turn California the elite californians like Lagos themselves.
27:13
Instead of using a domain in the court system, they just burn everything down military.
27:19
They look, make it look like nature, So, you know, I'd have to look more at that.
27:26
As far as someone trying to do railroad tracks or pipeline, though, yeah, you know, you got railroad tracks, but they want to do a pipeline.
27:39
OK, easements, let me let me describe it.
27:43
Let's look at modern modern history. So where can I find the first legal reference?
27:49
Um, look at your first records of trails in America.
27:58
Pick America, If you pick Europe, I mean, you, you'll find some stuff from, you know, 2000 years ago.
28:04
America, you'll find something that's more, it's probably easier to understand.
28:08
It's more something we can relate to.
28:10
So, what you'll find is that easement rights on the public rights of way it came from private property owners. There is no other place to get them. The private property owners, maybe they got them from the government, right? That 48 hours and in your 600 acres.
28:25
But ultimately, the easement rights came from private property owners and they were because the people that own the property, recognize that there trails on their property.
28:37
Those trails had existed for, you know, probably centuries, like someone was nice enough to suddenly a book on childhood was quite interesting.
28:44
Trails are developed by people.
28:47
And so these trails, sometimes, if it's useful enough, they end up as a public right away, and then we need to police them and so forth.
28:56
So I would, I would go back and look at early trails of the American settlers.
29:03
That subject right there with you will probably find a lot of that.
29:07
And then find out what happened.
29:09
Are you going to be the only farmer?
29:10
That it's got, you know, 57,000 acres and you're the only farmer that's not gonna let that wagon train keep on coming by.
29:21
Mean everybody else's, why are you going to be the one that makes it go round? And they'll do is they'll go round If you say, No, we can't use my land, now you're not gonna do that. So yeah, highways you build it out. I'll give you an easement, right?
29:34
No.
29:36
All right. Person.
29:38
Yeah, one person.
29:40
Well, OK, I've got a case where an hour, there's two people the title, once big a jerk.
29:47
However, it's joyfulness with right of survivorship.
29:51
What are its income, And I'm not sure how, it will both have the same rights, OK.
29:56
So, to answer your question about, can one person on the title make an easement.
30:00
It's my understanding that. Yes.
30:03
So, to keep all the title, equal rights now, they can't dispossess each other. Like one of them can't sell the property and take it away from the L one.
30:11
Both have to sell a property, but one can issue eastern rights. Why? Because he has the right to do so.
30:17
It cannot impair the other person's use of the property, which they wouldn't.
30:23
Makes sense.
30:24
So, as long as you're not going to pay the other person's use of the property, I don't see a problem of that.
30:31
What about animals?
30:35
Um, you know.
30:36
Animals make trails too, sir. Yeah, and then, people will. People will take them over and say, Well, hunting.
30:43
It, mean, that's, that's another thing about hunting. To go out to the words you can find out where they keep on walking.
30:49
All these animals, they set up a trap and wait.
30:54
From, which, you can recognize that sort of thing.
30:57
It's better if every titleholder regrets the easement, right.
31:01
But I don't believe it's necessary. Haven't seen a case. I've thought about this.
31:05
I can't see a case where it would have been necessary, Because at some point, the only thing that matters is these are right, because the title holders are gone or changed.
31:16
So now we're just left with easement rights.
31:20
So, one person didn't take advantage of that, is problem.
31:27
Yeah. So, yeah, I've gone through the course name, like, I'll say it.
31:33
It's bad situation on a divorce.
31:35
My recommendation is it is many important agreements, as you can, in writing as quickly as possible when there's going to be the boards.
31:47
And I would suggest to you that you, one of the agreements you get into would be two, submit the divorce proceeding to binding arbitration.
31:56
The reason being is that you can then decide what kind of standards you want to implement such as if there's going to be alimony or child support.
32:04
You can decide what kind of standards, if that's even possible. And I believe should be something you can sell, It fits your soon to be X to agree to.
32:13
Because I can tell you right now, who wants to have the stupid, state legislature, The stupid group? It's a gang of people, OK, it's an insane person. It's a corporation.
32:26
Why are you going to let that creature come into your family and apply some arbitrary standards about who gets what, when?
32:34
Those standards are already established in your family? That's what I'm saying. If you go to binding arbitration, then you then have the freedom without the Court's intervention without the statutes.
32:45
You then have your the power to go and look at your actual living expenses and decide how much money was needed for John, how much money was needed presented.
32:55
Know, and come up with your own ratios and don't follow the states as the state's like a sledgehammer doesn't fix everything with a sledgehammer.
33:05
Let Chris. Somebody's gotta ask you. This is a great charter grants, DB two different trust.
33:10
Be very careful with this.
33:14
OK, because you don't want to have, you don't want to have the same beneficial interests.
33:19
So be careful.
33:22
Yeah, make sure this is different.
33:25
Beneficial, interests behind them.
33:30
All right, good question.
33:31
All right, John.
33:35
Would there be any verbiage to put in the easement in regards to any HLA agreements that we put on the property or they didn't work independent of each other?
33:47
Yeah, they're complimentary.
33:50
The HLAA is the foundation.
33:52
So it gets the last word.
33:54
Uh, there shouldn't be any conflicts.
33:56
So you would have a provision as it says like something like notwithstanding, notwithstanding any other provision or notwithstanding, any conditions within the deed restrictions, recorded as such and such page such as known as the HLAA covered it.
34:15
You would identify that set of restrictions and say that, if there's a conflict, let's just say, then you're going to do the following, like if there's a conflict, the HLA Ds and restrictions, control oriente, there's conflict the easement rights control.
34:35
You have to kind of think that through.
34:38
And if something comes up you never thought of before, it's important, you can always supplement or amend the easement.
34:45
You can even add, you can even add a new easement to gear up the conflict.
34:52
Like legislation.
34:56
Does one easement supersede the other one based on filing date?
35:00
If they have that kind of like, again, they're like this a man's this one, it depends on the date of an incident, and otherwise no.
35:09
Otherwise, it depends on the date of an incident when someone's trying to exercise the right. It's expressed in an easement, OK. These myths out there maybe didn't have the right, So, these have been recorded.
35:19
Yeah, you didn't have the right, but other than that, you know you can use coupons.
35:24
Addy overlays of easements.
35:28
I won't go too crazy with it, be cautious with that.
35:31
But, residential, I don't see any religious more than one.
35:37
If you have something that can be farmland maybe you have different segments of the layer you get you can break it apart into different easements to get financing.
35:46
Thanks I'll do this modeling.
35:49
They want to, they want, you can exclude the banks they see they'll see it, they're smart, they have underwriter's.
35:56
If they see we're doing one easements, they will run far and fast from you.
36:01
Now, an investor, You'll be glad you are willing to give them an easement, right?
36:07
That's what you want. You want to eliminate the criminals?
36:13
OK, thanks.
36:17
So there's, there's plenty of use cases.
36:21
I think it is, you can make money with this.
36:23
I think you can control property, the possession of it, and you can do it in a way that eliminates the need for the person that, let's say you want to keep somebody on the property known as residential.
36:33
It doesn't have to deal with all the drama.
36:35
if you're willing to and you should be, what will be the problem with aye.
36:41
Hypothetically, let's say, someone, separate globalization. So you go to your friend, Hey, you're in foreclosure where a reason probably you're able to pay half the mortgage.
36:52
What about if they have to mortgage?
36:54
If she's not to pay property taxes, they've got a lot of leverage here. What about homeowner's insurance?
37:00
What's your foreclosure? Forget homeowner's insurance. It's not, you're not cover.
37:04
Stop paying back.
37:06
So how about if I charge you half of what you're paying just to the mortgage, and I'll make sure all these other creatures leave you alone.
37:13
You want to make profit, then I'll take care of it, just pay me half of the mortgage payments for awhile.
37:18
Know, don't don't give something for free. I mean, but it helps to personal temporarily.
37:24
And then what you want to do is have that person this you're helping get a retro ..., not have homeowners insurance. Because you're not going to be covered as well.
37:34
They'll get a retro policy or some other policy. There's all kinds of ways to cover your interest in the property.
37:41
All kinds of ways we can probably take There's a list of things you can do do a fixture on the land. Like a house.
37:49
So where you could You can reduce the need, for Sure.
37:52
So I want to say 80%, 80%.
37:56
Your need for insurance should be for catastrophic coverage like flooding and tornadoes.
38:02
Earthquake buyers.
38:05
She's like, well, I like that, maybe Burger.
38:10
Or, you know, people getting injured seriously injured. I mean, so maybe somebody from Steven under houser.
38:15
Maybe you had a roofer up on the house and you got an issue.
38:18
Yeah. Something like that.
38:20
That's where you need to need to outsource the financial risk.
38:23
When the risk is overwhelming, not for stupid stuff You can already fix yourself. You can prevent it just by having quality fixtures.
38:32
Another example.
38:39
So, anyways, what I'll do is I'm gonna, I'm gonna put together a sample that can be used on residential. I'm going to give a series of videos on this and then I'm going to I'm going to make that available.
38:53
I'm going to make that available series of videos on this use of easements.
38:57
And I'm going to continue to add to that.
39:01
So what I'm doing is um, I'm building out the content on using easements. This is how my line, this is how important it is.
39:10
I want to be focused on it.
39:11
I don't want to have a hodgepodge of videos in a member's area that, you know, maybe I'm talking about that three other things In the same video. I want to be very focused because it can do a lot of good for people.
39:21
And the message I'm wanting to give people is, stop getting bullied by your governments, stopping their property taxes, not to get out of the taxes, that forced them to be re-allocated. In a way that serves you and your community.
39:35
This makes total sense, OK?
39:37
If we're angry, or we're fearful of our government, it's our problem, We created it, and, yeah, there's corruption and they do break the rules. But, still, we have to own that, because if you don't, you, you can't have control over that.
39:51
If you don't take responsibility for failing and succeeding, you can't. You can't succeed.
39:57
You have to take responsibility for the thing that doesn't work, because that's the only way you can fix it.
40:03
Alex.
40:06
Hey, John, Jay.
40:07
So have you used one of these in a residential situation yet?
40:12
Have you actually done this yet, or not the way I discussed, not in the way of described?
40:18
I'm going to do for three properties that are in foreclosure.
40:22
Do you know anybody who has done it?
40:25
No. No, I don't think anyone has, no, I don't think anyone is using, these are right in the way I describe it.
40:30
No one's ever looked at, looked at that. We just like, no one's ever used the ... Covenant in the way I described it back in 20 20. I started talking about that in 20 20.
40:39
I just, I just looked up a bunch of trail easement links. Talks about I looked up Appalachian Trail. Yeah, it's, It's an easement, basically.
40:50
All kinds of different trails are There's quite a few links to that when you search for that.
40:56
But none of them mention, one of them does talk about how it's an altruistic kind of donation to, you know, to the state sometimes for that people want to donate plan for parks and things of that nature.
41:11
That is how it's typically used, right now, that the state, It was really easy, it was amazing! I just thought, I just thought they did a great job. There's a couple of things I didn't like, the State did. But, I thought that, It was really classically the way they did this. This guy had so much land, tens of thousands of acres, I think it was.
41:30
And, it was so, Christine is so beautiful, the way they describe it, I didn't see it, but the way the state describe it isn't a contract.
41:38
I said, OK, what the heck? Just go ahead, You know, the guy, David, somebody you didn't have to, but he gave them the easily use data to them because of the use that they described for that property.
41:49
And they described that they were just going to take care of it, and they're going to keep it in a pristine condition.
41:57
So, that's a much better use of that, then, having its own in private hands.
42:02
I mean, I think, anyways, I mean, what do you want the resources of the state behind something like that? So, yeah, that's typically what Easterners have been used for.
42:09
Preserve it. Right.
42:10
There's, There's no mention of it being used privately because they probably wouldn't want anybody to shoot at stopping us, But what I Can describe, what I'm suggesting that we use it for is to establish possession over the property without regard to whoever the title holders Because give me give me an example of what happens down the road, you know let's say somebody puts and he's been on their property They they foreclose the property.
42:40
What happens with that property in the future?
42:44
The OK? there's no way to sell it, right the titleholder can't do anything with it.
42:50
And there's no fault to the Eastern holder because it was public record. So we're bought it. It's on him.
42:56
So, it just comes off the grid, basically, well, temporarily because it's still going to be defining recognize, it's not gonna have the title and the or buyer that got it is going to be at the title to a point.
43:09
At some point, it doesn't make sense to put money on it, because you're not, you don't control it, right? You don't control it, you can't use it. It's just like a toxic waste. Essentially, right? So, my thinking is, this is theoretical boggley, this world, power play out after a certain period of time. I'm gonna say a year to three years.
43:28
The person who's on the title, he can't even.
43:31
What does he mean? The only thing he could do is deeded over to a dead end, like a trust, so that way it's not going to be a liability form.
43:39
That's what I would do.
43:40
Came back my loss, OK. So when that happens, it's going to be an abandoned title.
43:46
And you can then apply the courts require title, which means the person who holds the easement rights then acquire the title for a quiet title action and then become the title holder.
43:57
Or another person.
43:59
And how do they do that?
44:00
You would apply to the court for a quiet title.
44:03
You follow quiet title, actually, because the titles quiet.
44:06
Now, let's make a claim site anymore.
44:09
That's something that's going to happen.
44:11
So, it'll return to what we have now.
44:13
What will happen is, we'll have reasserted our property rights, to a point where the governance kind of like, oh ****, OK. What? It was too many taxes. Oh. Oh, you didn't like what we're doing here, children. Yeah, how can we understand, et cetera.
44:29
Our Board of supervisors was, ignoring you at the meetings, oh, sorry about that.
44:35
Answer, bad, people, know, you took away our money, and now you're, you've recovered the properties back to normal.
44:42
Now, we're completely out of the picture, because, yeah, you wasted your money. So, that's what I think is going to happen.
44:51
Excellent, thanks.
44:56
Yeah, so, let's see.
44:57
Yeah, OK, all right, John, Yup.
45:02
I see your message.
45:04
Yeah, So, once we get to say in the county, which I've started doing a list right now on the, Well, I'm sure that's when we get to the Easement.
45:12
I should have it ready pretty soon, we'll say a couple of weeks, then I'm gonna start making them specific to each one of what you're doing. I've got three cases right now, where I would put those on.
45:25
So, that way, the plaintiffs in those cases can foreclose there.
45:29
So there's a foreclosure in California, and someone hasn't really nice property, and we're going to keep that.
45:36
So, Uh, it's going to happen this year, We're going to have quite a few of them and not safer from the security agreement.
45:48
So I'm gonna get into that too much, but that's all going to start taking place.
45:52
And so by the time we hit next year, will have a nice history to talk about.
45:57
I'm very curious to see how the reaction is because it's very passive.
46:01
It's not in anybody's face, believes just sitting out there. And then you get to a point where you can't take possession.
46:07
Is this quiet?
46:09
You just can't take possession.
46:11
If, think about it like this, if an attorney sees what he did by the foreclosing Party's closing party has an attorney either closes the attorneys not paying attention, so he forecloses for its clients.
46:22
Then he realizes that you're still there.
46:24
So, is to apply for a jacket, or possession, or possession.
46:31
Well, when he does it, he's probably going to check the public records, just because he's an attorney. That's what they do.
46:39
And then he's going to go, Oops.
46:43
Is going to be in trouble because he was supposed to know that or he advises clients, buy this property.
46:50
Coach them on that.
46:53
I think that's, so what happens then, is nothing.
46:58
I think the attorney wouldn't even bring a case.
47:02
That's why I think the screening is a factor.
47:05
Michael, what you have in mind?
47:11
That question, say, person owns property, they can pay grant themselves rights, or something like that.
47:21
then, or, yeah, their LLC grants and human rights granted to their brother new buyer comes out of foreclosure.
47:29
That easement is only for one person. But that does that easement others.
47:35
The Easement includes only what it says it includes and it doesn't go away.
47:40
So the title changes, but these are still there for whoever it was given to.
47:45
OK, but let's say, I did it to, my brother has an easement, nice JSON on the property, somebody buys it, you can kick me out here and say, OK, that's fine, but I'm coming here to, Yeah, I, how realistic is, what's the person going to mean you're going to create?
48:09
Yeah, it's not realistic, but I just thought, that's it. I mean, it's a good question.
48:13
It's just, it's, it's just one of those things that, it's not likely that results in going anywhere, Who's going to do that?
48:19
Who's gonna, how long is that going to last?
48:22
Yeah.
48:24
Exactly. You want to come on the property that ended up getting yourself arrested for trespassing.
48:29
May think about it.
48:30
If you have the Israelites and seminars coming there and try to do some because he's the title holder, you've got all the power.
48:36
You can never have removed for trespass, isn't that right?
48:43
All right, Because the easement is going to say that you have the right to enjoy the property in any manner, one can enjoy the property.
48:50
It can apply.
48:54
OK, I got another question.
48:58
You had mentioned this I signed up for Lane's, et cetera.
49:05
Now, I talk about this to people and they want to do an LLC. I set up my PM. Yeah, sorry, I got to talk to you, I want to do this.
49:16
If I help them do that, stepping on my view, or should I just said, no, I encourage it, please, please help people. But I really want you to know that what you're doing I want you to really be the expert of that.
49:29
OK, If you want, I just wanted to make sure, you thank you for asking. I'll tell you over the years.
49:37
This is not. It's like owning the rain. You don't.
49:40
If you, if you pay me for help, you're paying for my actual on the job expertise. If you understand the legal process well enough, by all means, do it.
49:50
And I'll even help you, OK? And over the years, I've had people steal my work. They thought they did, and they were selling it. They would, they would package up differently than they would sell it, and then they did not support it, and I found out they were doing that.
50:03
Some of them, I know may discourage them from doing it, but some of them, I reached out to offer my training and it never worked me. I want P I will, I will actually take time to help train you, to understand this, if you want to help other people.
50:19
There's plenty of, but there's plenty of money out there. There's plenty of things to do. And I appreciate you asking.
50:26
one more thing, sometimes when I go to your website and making it shut off my VPN, that's intentional. I don't want that.
50:33
I want you guys to have privacy.
50:34
I gotta talk to my app, my tech guy.
50:38
OK, and I just got another round that just got things from you, said. We got some new videos up and they're paid.
50:48
I mean, at what point, I mean. Yeah.
50:52
I pay for that. That over and above the ultimate.
50:57
I don't know what videos.
50:58
The latest videos I've been sending, um, are part of the ultimate section separately.
51:05
And they should just, as I tell, I tell George exactly what to put on.
51:09
We're with them.
51:10
So, I don't know. I'd have to go find out what's, what's you're talking about.
51:14
OK? They were just in the last couple days, and I went there. I went to go to them, and they asked for another key.
51:19
And I didn't know if they were part of the ultimate are, OK?
51:23
Can you see the titles?
51:27
Yeah, I can, I could probably look it up.
51:31
Yeah, let me know. Let me know what they are.
51:34
OK, I content to my ultimate section, but when it comes to these other specific subjects, there's going to be different subscription.
51:43
I didn't do anything yet on those. Now, I have a series of videos. I just haven't given them anybody out there sitting on my computer.
51:50
OK, but there's going to be another series of videos over and above The Ultimate.
51:54
Yes, yes. OK, I'm going to be more specific.
51:57
There are actually lessons, like lesson one, lesson two, lesson three, More specific.
52:07
Yeah, thanks for letting me know, but can you tell me what phishing or because I don't. I don't recall that I've put anything that's there yet that's ready for that.
52:15
OK, yeah, just came out last couple of days. Check out my new video, and I went to the ultimate, and they said, You're not signed up to just clarify.
52:25
OK, Alaska, storage.
52:28
Thanks for letting me know.
52:30
Next step.
52:34
Interesting VPN, I want you guys, though. These are all things I don't if you, if you don't know who you are.
52:43
So I'll have to ask them about them.
52:47
Europeans.
52:49
All right. Well, thank you so much for the questions, and stay on top. I kinda collection one more.
52:54
Yeah, OK, shall shall you do this with somebody go into foreclosure that and then they would be the, the survey in a state you would be the dominant.
53:06
And then you say, OK, you stay there. Millimeter, have to pay and a half years now, normally, but then they decide, but we're not going to pay. So you just actually just create a lawsuit. Get them out and your property rights or what would, I don't know, what kinda? Maybe there have to be a mechanism inside the air.
53:23
Well, OK, you're really easy, right? Right?
53:26
Right, and that person is not so you could get a repossession OK.
53:34
That person is trespassing.
53:35
If you say, sir, So you want to control that in that situation, It looks kind of like a rental type situation.
53:43
I would want to control it so I would take the property and hold it in my trust and allow that person to stay there. As long as the entity doesn't pay, then, I wouldn't get over possession.
53:54
I wouldn't try to get it for trespass because that's not. That's kind of heavy handed.
53:59
I would just get a repossession.
54:03
OK, good question.
54:04
Good question.
54:09
Good call.
54:11
Imagine that you imagine. Gosh, you can just go around your neighborhood. You see foreclosures, let me go. Get Home Snap, OK. Guys on snap.
54:21
Download it for free, put it on your phone, go to somebody's house.
54:26
Point at the front door, snap, take a picture and it'll give you all the data on the, on the house. They don't give you the debt service, it'll give you everything.
54:34
Now there's a paid version and a paid version, I think the free version does not own snare.
54:40
Hom snap, yeah, OK, OK, oh, my friend. He's a real estate investor. It comes to town Plaza. Yeah. Oh my god.
54:50
Yeah. So you can just walk up, knock on the door, and make a deal. Because you already know what the debt services already, know what you're getting into everything. It's almost like a title search.
54:58
So you can do that because there's they show, I'm gonna pay remote, mainly mayors, is the one just for closing a mortgage electronic registration system. That's out there to do a show is there. So I go and look at all your foreclosure, has. Just make sure they still have time.
55:16
And I mean, it only takes a data or something.
55:18
unless you go, if you go to the county recorder's office in person, you can write that, you can watch the recording then an hour.
55:28
Now wouldn't make any some states, your non judicial foreclosure ... do it before they sell that the current assets. Yeah. Make sure you do it before there's a judgement of foreclosure on the case and the ....
55:44
Yeah, This is yeah.
55:47
Fantastic.
55:49
Thing my phone, a blow it up and say, say yeah, you get rid of this. I mean, it's just a whole new way of doing it. There's only 18 people on this call. I'm looking at YouTube channels with lawyers talking about how to run a trust or something or how to use an LLC. There's like a half million people, subscribe.
56:10
Maybe, I don't, I don't know.
56:13
I don't, I'm not a good job of marketing, good, not good at marketing. But, still, this is outrageous genius. Yes! Information is, like, it's game changing for everything.
56:24
It solves a lot of problems that we have.
56:27
It allows us to take responsibility, We have to take responsibility the fathers, We don't know how mm. Hm. Hm. Hm. Hm. This is maybe one tool.
56:36
Millimeter Hm.
56:37
Yeah.
56:37
I mean, like on the property tax, because I mean, the School Boards need to quit getting paid property tax and tax pushing perversion.
56:49
That's not school.
56:51
Cool.
56:57
Somebody else?
56:59
Yeah, Michael You know, I put in the chat those videos I was talking about That OK, great, OK, appreciate that.
57:08
All right, I'll check it out, I want to make sure that was what I intended And let me know if there's something you want Let me know. I can get you a private economy.
57:19
I just you know what I really want is I want to have a bigger membership to where new people but never heard of you before. They come in three months from now. It access to all this information for a fee.
57:31
I mean, like you guys pay.
57:32
No, I want to make it equal.
57:39
OK, well, thanks so much. I'm good, I'm going to hand it for tonight.
57:43
It's like hey, I'll enjoy your for it.
57:45
You thank you, freedom, labor, do blow stuff up.
57:51
In the American way, my gosh, I know you will match Sunday. Alright. Alright, Alright, yeah.

Summary

1. John Jay discussed the concept of easements, the right to use another person’s property, and its implications for property control and taxation.
2. He emphasized that understanding easements could help eliminate property taxes, foreclosure, and code enforcement, providing property owners with increased security and freedom.
3. He suggested the use of easements could possibly be traced back to early American land disputes among indigenous tribes and European settlers.
4. John underlined that easements allow the person who holds them to use the property, regardless of who holds the title. This power makes easements a significant tool in property law.
5. He also clarified that while the title holder cannot utilize the property in the same way as the person who holds the easement, the former can still make money from the property.
6. John described the process of creating easements, which requires careful writing and modification to fit each case.
7. He addressed concerns about property control, stating that nobody can interfere with an easement and that the person holding it should exercise their right to use the property.
8. He also commented on the potential for easements to interfere with government claims of eminent domain, particularly in states like California where land acquisition for infrastructure projects is common.
9. John highlighted the possibility of creating different easements on the same piece of land, depending on its potential uses, such as farming.
10. He concluded the discussion by touching on the potential use of easements in residential situations and how they can be leveraged to protect land and resources.