Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Questions About Your Right To Own Private Property In Minnesota

1.  Can the government take your home or part or all of your land?

2.  Can the government give a corporation or another person the power to take your home or your land if they convince the politicians or bureaucrats that they can do better things with it than you can?

3.  Do tenants have rights if the government takes their landlord's property?

4.  If the government takes a 50-foot strip off your land, but you do not know that until you re-survey the property thirty years later, can you still deserve compensation?

5.  Is your homestead still protected if a family member is convicted of a drug crime?

6.  If the government takes your land, how is a fair level of compensation to be determined?

7.  If a regulation or a road project cuts off your access to your land, can you get a new route or access?

8.  What happens when a government regulation destroys or sharply reduces the value of your land?

9.  What happens when politicians say you can no longer have your campground, a golf course, ur your store in your city?

10.  What happens when your local government gives you a permit to build a house, but a state agency says you cannot, even though the state agency does not have the authority to block you?

11.  What happens when bureaucrats delay your efforts to get a permit, sometimes for over ten years, without making a decision?

12.  Is it your fault if you ignore limits in your permit if you claim you never read your permit?

13.  If you own your house and 2.4 acres in the country, can your neighbor block you from adding a room where you want to do yoga and arts and crafts?

14.  Can the local government search your property without a warrant or probable cause to believe you have violated laws or local rules?

15.  Will your rights be enforced if you get involved in losing or buying a foreclosed property?

16.  Can you avoid "check-kiting" charges if you protest by intentionally using a bad check to "pay" your property taxes with a bad check?

17.  Can a City avoid a ban on taxing church property by disguising an assessment as a "fee" as a "tax?"

You have federal and state rights when someone interferes with your property rights.  You need Chief Justice Lorie Skjerven Gildea to assess  the facts, apply the aw, and protect your rights!









No comments:

Post a Comment