Ronald F. Avery
1955
830/372-5534
January 31, 2008
HAND DELIVERED TO:
Tax Assessor Collector Office
307 W. Court Street
830/379-2315
Dear Ms Murphy and Employees of the
Please find herewith a check for all the outstanding “property taxes” related to the two “Moses Baker tracks” in the amount of ____________________ as told me by the clerk.
As you now know; no Texas citizen can complain in the Texas courts about unconstitutional taxation unless they can show the unconstitutional tax harmed them in a way that was separate or unique from the rest of their fellow citizens (read it at www.SueIT.org and then click on 4th COA Memo-Opinion-Judgment). In what way could any citizen be harmed separately or uniquely from an unconstitutional tax that was charged to all their fellow citizens? This is the insane illogical “rule of common or case law” that the judicial system used to unlawfully circumvent Article 1 Section 13, 17; Article 8 Section 1e1 and Article 17 to prevent me from demonstrating to all citizens in Texas that they do not own land or buildings or homes or anything else but rather they rent them from the State and that the sole purpose of public education is to teach the principles of property under Article 7 Section 1. The “judicial logic” is that if all are injured they should get together and affect the legislature by democratic vote to change something. This is flawed unconstitutional reasoning. One person in the pursuit of their own rights, whether harmed independently or together with the rest of their fellow citizens, has access to the law through the courts and the courts have a duty to correct the legislature and democratic process when it infringes upon the property rights of one or all guaranteed by the constitution of Texas.
Therefore, I involuntarily surrender the amount above for payment of the “unconstitutional taxes” in knowledge that the so-called “courts” of the so-called “State of Texas” are closed to citizens in the pursuit of their constitutional rights that are guaranteed in the said articles by the cunning miscarriages of the so-called “Texas judicial system.” I have no hope of defending my property or constitutional rights in any form or fashion and all I have left to do is use my fingers to type a letter. However, I am happier as a citizen of a state that no longer exists than I would be as an enforcer of rules made by those who destroyed the state. I wish no one any harm to their property and dream of a day when we will have lawful government.
Sincerely,
Ronald F. Avery