Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

High Vibe Tribe

79.3k members • Free

14 contributions to Checkmate The Matrix
Affidavid as ID
Talk of digital IDs got me wondering whether an affidavit from a parent with witnesses be a legit form of ID? Or do I absolutely need a notary?
2 likes • Oct '25
Thanks Dave, popped into our local notary and they said anything between 90 to 150 pounds depending what it is. Then they said they need proof of address for identification purposes. Sounds a little strange considering the nature of the document. Is this correct?
2 likes • Oct '25
@Dave DimeBar thanks Dave, I will look into it
Companies House overreach
How many people on here are affected by Companies House's changes? I have a dormant limited company in my name and have now trademarked my name. I am the sole director. I am not prepared to send them my photo ID or pay an accountant to produce non-existent accounts. Do we have any remedies for this please?
0 likes • Oct '25
@Dave DimeBar how does an individual assign to a trust, what does that physically look like. Would it be a written agreement I assume?
Insurance for Vehicles in Private Trusts
Changed keeper details to trust name, current insurer classes this as 'other' owner and premium has ballooned. Anyone managed to insure affordably in similar situation, and if so I'd appreciate details.
0 likes • Aug '25
I've not found a way of doing this and it not be more expensive to insure.
1 like • Aug '25
@Matt Rowlands cheers Matt, who do you insure the Lam with?
Hello to all.
I am from Essex/East London area, I have helped people in the past with Penalty Charge Notice regarding parking & Parking Charge Notice which have always been successful, and they have always said, (this time, as a gesture of goodwill, we will cancel this ticket) 🤣 After seeing Peter’s videos, it hit a nerve (in a good way) and something clicked and I wanted to know more, so now my journey with this community begins, I am really looking forward to learning more.
4 likes • Aug '25
I am more from the herts side of the three counties. Fine avoidance has become a new found hobby. Or the only hobby I can afford! Anyhow, welcome!
Private trusts according to chatGPT
Just interrogated AI about private trusts… each approach I took it said I’d still need to register it… can Dimebar or pete explain how our equity law private trusts avoid the statutory demand for registration? It’s kind of knocked me sideways. It seems to contradict ‘equity trumps statute law’. # **Key Legal Reality: Equity and Statute Are Not Separate in Practice** While your **trust may be expressed under equity**, it still operates **within the UK's legal framework**, which includes: 1. **Common law and equitable principles**, and 2. **Statutory obligations**, including modern legislation like: - The **Trust Registration Regulations** under **Money Laundering laws**, and - The **Finance Acts** (governing tax compliance) Under **UK jurisprudence**, **statute overrides equity** where they conflict. Courts apply equity **subject to statute**, not outside or above it. --- ### So: Can You Decline to Register a Trust Because It's "Outside Statute Law"? **Not successfully, no.** Here's why: - **HMRC and UK courts will not recognise the trust as exempt** from registration merely because it’s "expressed under equity" or “private.” - **If the trust meets the criteria** (UK asset, UK trustee, UK business relationship, or tax exposure), it **must be registered**, or it will be treated as **non-compliant**. - Failure to register can result in: - **Fines or penalties** - **Inability to open bank accounts or engage professionals** - **Legal invalidation of the trust in certain contexts** --- ### Common Misconception: There is a belief in some circles that trusts (or individuals) can operate entirely in the “private” or “common law” space and avoid modern statutory obligations. **This has been consistently rejected by UK courts**, including in tax avoidance and regulatory compliance cases. --- ### Final Thought: You're free to **believe in and structure** your affairs according to equity, but **if your trust interacts with any UK-regulated systems** (banks, land registries, professionals, etc.), then **statutory obligations apply**—regardless of how the trust is declared.
2 likes • Jul '25
Heard this a few times, about how god's law is built on the three golden rules... A) do no harm B) be kind and C) the right to engage in private commerce... No mention of ai or registration anywhere!
1-10 of 14
Andrew Silver
3
23points to level up
@andrew-silver-7581
Time to shine

Active 28d ago
Joined Feb 11, 2025
Powered by