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MALICIOUS Commercial Criminal PROSECUTION and JUDGEMENT ORDERED against the Living with malicious intent to harm by drawing

his blood of Life. A Commercial Criminal Judicial proceeding instituted against a Living Person out of the commercial prosecutor's and the commercial Judges malice and ill will, with the intention of injuring the Living Individual, without Jurisdiction and Just probable cause to sustain it, the process and proceedings being regular and formal, but not Justified by the FACTS when Offered in Peace and twice the commercial payment was offered but refused. For this Injury an Action on the case it now lies and holds true Justice Bound, called the "Action of Malicious Prosecution and Judgment." It is a well documented Case Law of a Commercial Merchant Trial, known as the Merchant of Venice. TAKE: 1. To lay hold of; to gain or receive into possession; To Seize; To Deprive one of the possession of; to assume ownership. Thus, it is a constitutional provision that a man's property shall not be taken for public uses without just compensation. 9 Ind. 433. 2. To obtain or assume possession of a chattel unlawfully, and without the owner's consent; to appropriate things to one's own use with felonious intent. Thus, an actual taking is essential to constitute larceny. 4 Bl. Comm. 430. 3. To seize or apprehend a person; to arrest the body of a person by virtue of Lawful Process. Thus, a capias commands the officer to take the body of the defendant. 4. To acquire the title to an estate; to receive an estate in lands from another person by virtue of some SPECIES of TITLE. Thus, one is said to "take by purchase," "take by descent," "take a life-interest under the DEVISE," etc. 5. To receive the verdict of a jury; to superintend the delivery of a verdict; to hold a court. The commission of assize in England empowers the judges to take the assizes; that is, according to its ancient meaning, to take the verdict of a peculiar species of jury called an "assize;" but, in its present meaning, "to hold the assizes." 3 Bl. Comm. 59, 185. TAKE UP. A party to a negotiable instrument, particularly an indorser or acceptor, is said to "take up" the paper, or to "retire" it, when he pays its amount, or substitutes other security for it, and receives it again into his own hands. TAKING: In criminal law and torts: The act of laying hold upon an article, with or without removing the same. TOOK AND CARRIED AWAY. In criminal pleading. Technical words necessary in an indictment for simple larceny. TRESPASS FOR MESNE PROFITS. A form of action supplemental to an action of ejectment, brought against the tenant in possession to recover the profits which he has wrongfully received during the time of his occupation. 3 Bl. Comm. 205. TRESPASS ON THE CASE. The form of action, at common law, adapted to the recovery of damages for some injury resulting to a party from the wrongful act of another, unaccompanied by direct or immediate force, or which is the indirect or secondary consequence of such act. Commonly called, by abbreviation; Case." TRESPASS QUARE CLAUSUM FREGIT. "Trespass wherefore he broke the close." The Common-Law action for damages for an Unlawful Entry or Trespass upon the plaintiff's land. In the Latin form of the writ, the defendant was called upon to show why he broke the plaintiff's close; i. e., the real or imaginary structure inclosing the land, whence the name. It is commonly abbreviated to " trespass qu. cl. fr." TRESPASS TO TRY TITLE. The name of the action used in several of the states for the recovery of the possession of real property, with damages for any trespass committed upon the same by the defendant. TRESPASS VI ET ARMIS: with force and arms. The common-law action for damages for any injury committed by the defendant; with direct and immediate force or violence against the plaintiff or his property. TRESPASSER: One who has committed trespass; one who unlawfully enters or intrudes upon another's land, or unlawfully and forcibly takes another's personal property.

TRESPASSER AB INITIO: Trespasser from the beginning. A term applied to a tort-feasor whose acts relate back so as to make a previous act, at the time innocent, unlawful; as, if he enter peaceably, and subsequently commit a breach of the peace, his entry is considered a trespass. Stim. Gloss.

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