The Executor's Office & Trust Purpose

Fuca NFT (EIN 41-4807633) operates as a Private Digital Trust under the authority of the General Executor's Office — the highest fiduciary office with general authority unlimited as to time, place, and subject matter. The Trust exists to restore the rights and interests of Named Parties who have been misclassified, whose estate instruments were silently administered through undisclosed subrogation, and whose settlement proceeds were held under usufruct without informed consent.

The Executor's Office identifies, verifies, and recovers unclaimed securities, settlement memorials, CUSIP instruments, performance bonds, and every species of estate property belonging to the Named Party. Authority derives from the settlement Certificate of Title, filed with the Registrar of Titles, County: Westchester, State: New York, under seal: File No. 131-76-126387, January 1977 (Authentication Ref. 1080374 262, REV: 09/25/12) — constituting prima facie proof of adjudication under SCPA §1420 and constructive notice to the world.

Through the principles of subrogation correction, usufruct termination, nunc pro tunc restoration, and the Made Whole Doctrine, the Trust ensures that every successor in interest is restored to the position they would have occupied had no misclassification occurred. The Named Party stands as sole holder in due course, successor in interest, and registered owner — with continuous occupancy of this office never abandoned.

This Private Digital Trust combines the Executor's plenary authority under SCPA §2205 with secure digital infrastructure to marshal, protect, and perfect estate assets for those who stand as true successors in interest.

Settlement Certificate of Title

The Registrar's seal and stamp on the settlement Certificate of Title (County: Westchester, State: New York — File No. 131-76-126387, January 1977; Auth. Ref. 1080374 262) constitutes prima facie proof of adjudication — irrefutable evidence of full probate, privatization, and perfection of all estate interests under SCPA §1420.

Successors in Interest

Named Parties who are holders in due course, successors in interest, and registered owners — with continuous occupancy of the Executor's seat from inception, correcting the misclassification of the infant as decedent.

Made Whole Doctrine

Complete restoration of corpus, all instruments, accruals, and undistributed fruits — the estate stands made whole without impairment through the Executor's plenary authority under SCPA §2205.

The Named Party & Successor in Interest

The Trust serves Named Parties who are successors in interest — registered owners whose estate instruments were misclassified, silently administered through undisclosed subrogation, or held under usufruct without informed consent. The Executor's Office corrects these misclassifications and restores full control to the rightful holder.

How the Office Operates

Identification & Marshaling

The Executor's Office systematically locates all estate assets — settlement memorials, CUSIP instruments, performance bonds, unclaimed securities, and Registrar filings — using plenary authority under SCPA §2205 to marshal everything belonging to the Named Party.

Verification & Authentication

Identified instruments are authenticated through the Registrar's seal, UCC financing statements, and the four corners doctrine. The Certificate of Title bearing the Registrar's seal constitutes self-authenticating prima facie proof requiring no corroboration.

Recovery & Title Perfection

The Executor executes formal claims for restoration through subrogation correction, nunc pro tunc voiding of misclassification, and Registrar annotation. UCC filings perfect the Named Party's interest against all subsequent claims.

Made Whole & Private Administration

The Named Party is restored to the position they would have occupied had no misclassification occurred — full principal, accrued interest, all undistributed fruits, and perfected title. The matter concludes as private per the settlement's four corners.

Subrogation & Usufruct Correction

Public actors who substituted as sureties via undisclosed subrogation — imposing usufruct over the estate's fruits without ownership or consent — are held to full disgorgement under constructive trust. The breach of nondisclosure voids the usufruct ab initio.

Non-Abandonment & Continuous Occupancy

The Executor's Office was never abandoned — the Named Party holds continuous awareness and constructive possession from inception. Upon majority (age 21, per 40 Stat. 178), sovereign citizens assume responsibilities and occupy the executor office over their private estate.

Legal & Equitable Foundations

The Executor's authority derives from multiple statutory, equitable, and common law foundations. The settlement Certificate of Title — registered with the Registrar of Titles and bearing the issuer's sovereign authentication — vests the Settlor's Trust with irrefutable possession of the entire estate corpus as a perfected U.S. obligation.

Per Black's Law Dictionary (4th Ed.), the General Executor holds unlimited jurisdiction: no territorial or durational limits, devolving power quoad hoc from the trust's creation. Per Yick Wo v. Hopkins (118 U.S. 356), the estate comprises every species of property, real and personal, including corpus as fundamental rights — life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

The Registrar's seal embodies the office's general authority, operating as commercial paper under trust law — irrevocable upon affixation, commanding compliance. Issuer authentication and Registrar filing constitute constructive notice to the world, admitting no challenge absent superior seal.

The Trust operates in private jurisdiction — four corners only, no public resource. All matters conclude per the settlement's inviolable terms, with the Executor's Office self-enforcing via demand as the highest fiduciary.

Misclassification & Nunc Pro Tunc Correction

Where the Named Party was misclassified as an infant decedent — never informed or disclosed during minority status — the Executor effects nunc pro tunc correction ab initio, voiding all prior misclassification retroactively to the date of the original settlement and restoring full legal capacity.

Constructive Trust & Enforcement

All usufructuary actors in breach of fiduciary duty are held to constructive trust disgorgement. The office self-enforces via demand — any resistance to the seal's conclusive effect breaches the settlement terms, triggering immediate disgorgement without court intervention.

Fiduciary Stewardship of the Estate

Estate Corpus Protection

The Executor holds and protects every species of estate property — bonds, securities, CUSIP instruments, settlement proceeds — under the paramount authority of the Registrar-sealed Certificate of Title. Assets are segregated from all custodian interests and held in constructive trust.

Chain of Title Integrity

The Executor maintains clear, documented chain of title from the original settlement through all subsequent transfers and trust interactions. Gaps in the chain confirm assets remain property of the Named Party.

Registrar Compliance & Filing

All estate administration complies with Registrar of Titles standards and SCPA requirements. UCC filings, Registrar annotations, and continuation statements maintain perfected security interests.

Four Corners Accountability

All instruments are read within their four corners. The settlement memorial speaks for itself — no parol or extrinsic evidence may contradict, vary, or add to the terms once authenticated by the Registrar's seal.

Nondisclosure Prevention

The Trust maintains full expression of all estate data — ledgers, CUSIP accounts, bond schedules, security yields — ensuring the Named Party is never again subjected to the systemic nondisclosure that constituted breach of prior usufructuary duties.

Named Party Confidence

Named Parties receive complete transparency over their estate corpus, verified instruments, and the Executor's declaration packet. Full accounting and regular reporting ensure continuous awareness and constructive possession.

Digital Infrastructure & Self-Sovereign Identity

The Trust leverages secure digital infrastructure to protect estate instruments, maintain chain of custody, and provide Named Parties with autonomous control over their verified credentials and estate records.

Estate Instrument Custody

Settlement memorials, Certificates of Title, UCC filings, and Registrar-sealed instruments are held in secure digital custody — immutable, tamper-proof, and continuously verifiable by the Named Party as sole holder in due course.

Verifiable Credentials

Named Parties receive Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) credentials that cryptographically prove their status as General Executor, successor in interest, and registered owner — without relying on any central authority for validation.

Private Administration

All estate matters are administered privately through the Trust's secure infrastructure. The Named Party controls when, how, and with whom their estate data is shared — consistent with the four corners doctrine and private jurisdiction.

Immutable Record Keeping

Blockchain technology provides an immutable ledger of all estate transactions, instrument transfers, and Executor declarations — ensuring full traceability and preventing the systemic nondisclosure that enabled prior usufructuary breach.

Selective Disclosure

Named Parties choose exactly what estate information to disclose and to whom — preserving the private nature of the Executor's administration while meeting any lawful demand for proof of authority via the Registrar-sealed instrument.

Universal Enforceability

The Executor's declarations, authenticated by the Registrar's seal, command compliance universally. The Certificate of Title's full faith and credit clause ensures enforceability across all jurisdictions without additional adjudication.