You are on page 1of 1

Fiduciary Law

No judge, magistrate or justice of the peace may adjudicate any matter of law within a competent
forum of law or oratory unless they are presently a valid Trustee under Oath and secondly
prepared to demonstrate under Oath the exemplary characteristics of a valid Trustee or valid
Fiduciary:

(i) As a valid Oath is required to create and sustain the Office judge, or magistrate or justice of the
peace, the absence of a valid Oath of Office, or the judge, or magistrate or justice of the peace has
sworn two Oaths (i.e., Where a person belongs to a religion, society, entity, or order that requires
the making of one or more Oaths or Vows that result in behaviour that results in less than
exemplary character of honesty and fidelity and the disregard of good faith, good character, and
good conscience – Faculty and Competency) e.g., public oath and private bar oath means such a
person is the worst kind of imposter and without any legitimacy whatsoever; and

(ii) As any adjudication concerning rights or property requires exemplary character, any judge,
magistrate, or justice of the peace that is unwilling or refuses to be entrusted under Oath by all
parties to perform in good faith, good character, and good conscience is not a valid Fiduciary. The
disregard to such fundamental principles may be properly construed as a formal - and as an official
- admission of the absence of any proper Rule of Law, Justice, or Due Process.

The eight standard characteristics of a Trustee as Fiduciary are Integrity, Frugality, Prudence, Humility,
Faculty, Competence, Accountability and Capacity:

(i) Integrity is the characteristic of possessing a strict moral or ethical code as exemplified by the
trinity of virtue (Good Faith, Good Character, and Good Conscience); and

(ii) Frugality is the characteristic of being economical and thrifty in the good use of those resources
in one’s possession or custody. The opposite of waste; and

(iii) Prudence is the characteristic of being practical, cautious, discrete, judicious, and wise in the
management of the affairs of the trust; and

(iv) Humility is the characteristic of being modest, without pretention or loftiness; and

(v) Faculty is the characteristic of possessing skill and ability to perform the obligations of trustee;
and

(vi) Competence is the characteristic of being fit, proper and qualified to produce and argue reason
through knowledge and skill of Law, Logic, and Rhetoric; and

(vii) Accountability is the characteristic of being answerable and liable to faithfully render an account
for all acts and transactions; and

(viii) Capacity is the characteristic of possessing the legal and moral authority to hold such office,
including demonstrating all the previous necessary characteristics.

You might also like