If you are presumed to be the “trustee” over property (which is usually
the case in pretty much any court in the US), and you do not carry out
your “fiduciary duties” as trustee, you are in breach of trust.
In God we Trust
What if you were using “property” of the US Government… and you claimed
it as your own? Would that not be a “breach of trust”? You are NOT your
STATE ISSUED IDENTIFICATION! YOU are NOT a PERSON! Do not claim that
commercial fictional entity as yourself! If you do, you are presumed to
be trustee over state property, and as trustee, you are LIABLE for ALL
corporate (trust) policy and can be held accountable for it. Remove the
presumption that YOU are property of the STATE. Say that you do not wish
to act in fraud, and that the LEGAL FICTION that they are looking for
belongs to the UNITED STATES. Give it back! And you will be protected
(USC 12 95(a)) EVEN IF YOU DON’T DO IT RIGHT! You only have to make a
good faith effort!
Abuse of power, or failure (whether or not deliberate, dishonest, or
negligent) to carryout the general and fiduciary duties of a trustee.
Trustees are personally liable for any loss to the trust caused directly
or indirectly by the breach, and must hand over (to the trust) any
profit made from the breach (whether or not the trust suffered any
loss).
BREACH OF TRUST Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004) , Page 566
breach of trust.A trustee’s violation of either the trust’s terms or the
trustee’s general fiduciary obligations; the violation of a duty that
equity imposes on a trustee, whether the violation was willful,
fraudulent, negligent, or inadvertent. • A breach of trust subjects the
trustee to removal and creates personal liability.
BREACH OF TRUST. Bouvier’s 1856 dictionary
The wilful misappropriation, by a trustee, of a thing which had been lawfully delivered to him in confidence.
2. The distinction between larceny and a breach of trust is to be found
chiefly in the terms or way in which the thing was taken originally into
the party’s possession; and the rule seems to be, that whenever the
article is obtained upon a fair contract, not for a mere temporary
purpose, or by one who is in the. employment of the deliverer, then the
subsequent misappropriation is to be considered as an act of breach of
trust. This rule is, however, subject to many nice distinctions. 15 S.
& R. 93, 97. It has been adjudged that when the owner of goods parts
with the possession for a particular purpose, and the person who
receives them avowedly for that purpose, has at the time a fraudulent
intention to make use of the possession as the weans of converting the
goods to his own use, and does so convert them, it is larceny; but if
the owner partwith the property, although fraudulent means have been
used to obtain it, the, act of conversion is not larceny. Id. Alis.
Princ. c. 12, p. 354.
3. In the Year Book, 21 H. VII. 14, the distinction is thus stated:
Pigot. If I deliver a jewel or money to my servant to keep, and he flees
or goes from me with the jewel, is it felony ? Cutler said, Yes : for
so long as he is with me or in my house, that which I have delivered to
him is adjudged to be in my possession; as my butler, who has my plate
in keeping, if he flees with it, it is felony. Same law; if he who keeps
my horse goes away with, him: The reason is, they are always in my
possession. But if I deliver a horse to my servant to ride to market or
the fair and he flee with him, it is no felony; for e comes lawfully to
the possession of the horse by delivery. And so it is, if I give him a
jewel to carry to London, or to pay one, or to buy a thing, and he flee
with it, it is not felony : for it is out of my possession, and he comes
lawfully to it. Pigot. It can well be: for the master in these cases
has an action against him, viz., Detinue, or Account. See this point
fully discussed in Stamf. P. C. lib. 1; Larceny, c. 15, p. 25. Also, 13
Ed. IV. fo. 9; 52 H. III. 7; 21 H. VII. 15.
0