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  • Sign Declaration on behalf?

    Posted by Esther on September 11, 2023 at 4:52 pm

    Hi, I have a question regarding this:

    Am I able to sign p.p.(per procurationem) on a Declaration for my son who is indefinitely is in America?

    On his behalf, I mean. Or is this too legally binding of a document to do this?

    I am holding position on a fine in his name that we did a BOE for.

    What to do for this part?

    Ant_made replied 1 year, 9 months ago 2 Members · 3 Replies
  • 3 Replies
  • Ant_made

    Member
    September 11, 2023 at 9:32 pm

    You are the Grantor to the Trust in your sons name. You hold the Power to that and no Judge has the power to question your will. There is the remedy right there. If you speak up as the Grantor, the Judge/Public Official is the Trustee, the one obligated to perform and has a duty of care for both your best interests. Also, If your son has okayed it, verbally or in email/writing, then that is a Private Agreement that you both entered and have accepted, and no one has the power to question it. If there is an adverse claim against the Name and you are the Grantor and the Judge is the Trustee, then shouldn’t they be the ones fixing it, for the benefit of your son, the true Beneficiary.

  • Esther

    Member
    September 11, 2023 at 9:56 pm

    So would i sign as my name (By:….) and under that stating that i am the grantor? or how would the actually signature go?

    And does this change any wording in the Declaration and Affidavit?

    Thank you!!!

    • Ant_made

      Member
      September 12, 2023 at 9:16 am

      You can write Grantor beside your name, underneath or it could be the start of the Title, by the Grantor, Esther……, you could even put (Mother) next to your name here. It is a claim that you are making, by expressing it with your intent of your position. You are the Grantor of the Original Trust Document, The Source document (COLB/SOB), which they hold in custody. A Trust works with 3 main elements, A Grantor, the one granting the property to a Trustee, who holds the Property (in trust) for the benefit of the Beneficiary. So the Original Title (paperwork, not substance) is the main document that the other trusts (BC, TFN, SSN), are built on.

      Whatever document, declaration, affidavit, etc you are signing, you are doing as the Grantor, Expressing your Will and your Intent to what is happening. It was your Signature, that granted it in the first place.