Canonum De Ius Fidei
Canons of Fiduciary Law

one heaven iconIII.   Fund

3.2 Capital Fund

Article 131 - Capital Fund

Canon 7596 (link)

A Capital Fund is a type of True Fund, or Superior Fund or Inferior Fund conceived under the authority and rules of an existing Religious Fund by a select body of people claiming supreme sovereign and legislative authority over a population, territory or culture, according to some governing instrument.

Canon 7597 (link)

A Capital Fund is by definition a Fund and therefore the computation and derivation of value of underlying Rights and Uses as contentious Property held in some temporary Trust underlying some Estate. A Capital Fund cannot exist without the underlying Trust as the source of Property and the pre-existing Religious Fund as the source of claimed authority.

Canon 7598 (link)

The essential elements for the claim or existence of a Capital Fund, as distinct from other types of Funds are:

(i) A distinct set of written Religious Doctrines and Dogmata expressed through a unique Creed or Canons of an existing Religious Fund in which the supremacy of the select body or person claiming sovereign and legislative authority over a population, territory or culture is referenced; and

(ii) Unique Sovereign Rights or Property identified by the written Doctrines and Dogmata to which the Members claim custody, possession, authority and jurisdiction; and

(iii) A defined, written and executed Covenant or Constitution forming the Sovereign Body of the Capital Fund and defining the rights and nature of Sovereign members and the vesting of the unique Sovereign Rights and Property of the Fund; and

(iv) One or more Sovereign Members who have pledged themselves by Oath to the constituting Sovereign Body, usually through the process of creation of the Capital Fund during a formal ritual such as Coronation; and

(v) Acknowledgement of the Covenant or Constitution, name and Fund by the Statutes or Will or Testament of the higher Religious Fund.

Canon 7599 (link)

A Capital Fund cannot exist unless a Religious Fund already exists prior to its creation. The creation of a Capital Fund before the Religious Fund that is supposed to give it life and authority renders such Capital Fund null and void by all forms of valid law.

Canon 7600 (link)

A Capital Fund dissolves and ceases to exist, with all laws, statutes, property and rights created by such a Fund ceasing to have any effect of law when:

(i) The Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person of the Capital Fund dissolves, or physically dies (as in the case of the death of a monarch); or

(ii) The Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person as Principal of the Capital Funds fundamentally breaches the terms of Trust and the authority of the Religious Fund and deliberately, knowingly and willfully fails to remedy such Breach of Trust such that they default and are delinquent and wretched and thus cause the oaths of such Trust to be dissolved, causing the Fund to cease to exist; or

(iii) The contention that caused the property to be placed into a Temporary Trust is resolved and satisfied, causing the Estate and any further derivatives (such as a Fund) to be dissolved.

Canon 7601 (link)

Examples of fundamental Breaches of Trust by a Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person of a Capital Fund that if failed to be remedied would cause default and delinquency and the dissolution of the Fund including, but are not limited to:

(i) A failure to cure any alleged breach within the time limit prescribed by the covenant or constitution forming the Fund and the waiving of the right to appeal; or

(ii) The Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person claiming themselves to be a god, or deity and thus repudiating and contradicting the dogmata and doctrina of the Religious Fund under whose authority the Capital Fund functions; or

(iii) The Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person surrenders, abrogates, abandons, cedes, grants, bestows, delegates or assigns their own office and authorities in contradiction to the maxim Delegata potestas non potest delegari meaning “one to whom power is delegated cannot himself further delegate that power”; or

(iv) The Sovereign Body or Sovereign Person claims, or grants, or bestows, or delegates or assigns certain rights and authorities beyond the limits of its own powers and authorities.