🇲🇦 moroccan empire state government fiduciaries retake hybrid offices in morocco [America]

moroccan empire state national flag
moslem moor court seal

universal sovereign rebuttal to cesti que act 1666 is nous qui vivions lawe june 21 1440 by empress light

custodial resignations accepted by appointed estate fiduciaries

What is a fiduciary in law?

When someone has a fiduciary duty to someone else, the person with the duty must act in a way that will benefit someone else, usually financially. The person who has a fiduciary duty is called the fiduciary, and the person to whom the duty is owed is called the principal or the beneficiary.

A relationship in which one individual owes another a fiduciary duty to act in the other’s interest. Certain interactions may give rise to a fiduciary relationship, regardless of the parties’ intent.

 If you are responsible for overseeing an estate or trust, you are the fiduciary of that estate or trust.

example: JOHN A. MOORE (Principal or Beneficiary) minor in law

John A. Moore Bey (fiduciary) + moroccan estate trustee

*Bey = nobility title for lands

custodian (n.) 1781, “one who has the care or custody of anything” (a library, a lunatic, etc.), from custody (Latin custodia) + -an. In this sense Middle English had custode (late 14c.), custodier (late 15c.). As “janitor,” by 1944, American English, short for custodian-janitor (by 1899). Related: Custodianship. source etymonline

example: JOHN A. SMITH or John A. Smith (custodian) – esquire, hybrid person

subject (n.) early 14c., “person under control or dominion of another,” specifically a government or ruler, from Old French sogit, suget, subget “a subject person or thing” source: etymonline

protege (n.) “one who is under the care or protection of another,” 1778, from French protégé (fem. protégée) “one who is protected,” noun use of past participle of protéger “protect,” from Latin protegere (see protect; also see protection). Usually in italics in English before 1820s. source: etymonline

Grocery Stores and using most favored nation status

Most Favored Nation:  A clause frequently included in bilateral investment treaties (“BITs”) which provides that a host state shall treat all of its trading partners equally. Under such a clause, if the host state lowers a tariff for one trading partner, it must lower it for all trading partners.

sources:

moroccan article III courts, consular courts, article III courts, consuls, treaty of peace and friendship, constitution of the United States of America, BARRON’S DICTIONARY OF LEGAL TERMS 5th ed, http://www.law.cornell.edu.com, etymonline

we own no rights to these videos or photos and information contain or reported may not be the expressed views of the sceptre of judah website, moroccan empire news media.

this information is reported as article III court moroccan law, public notice, news, study, research and education for community improvement throughout the world. te king

2 Comments

Leave a Reply