The Executor's Office
The paramount fiduciary authority of the Settlor's Trust — administering estate restoration, perfecting title, and ensuring every Named Party is made whole.
The Highest Office
The Executor's Office is the paramount private authority within the Fuca NFT trust structure. As General Executor, the office holds unlimited jurisdiction over time, place, and subject matter — exercising fiduciary supremacy over every dimension of the estate's administration. This is not a delegated role or a borrowed title; it is the apex of the trust hierarchy, recognized through authenticated settlement and Registrar's seal.
The office exists because of a fundamental injustice: Named Parties — living individuals with rightful claims to settlement proceeds, securities, and financial instruments — were systematically misclassified as infant decedent estates. They were never informed, never disclosed to, and never given the opportunity to exercise their rights. The Executor's Office was established to correct this wrong, acting as the fiduciary bridge between what was taken and what must be restored.
Under New York Surrogate's Court Procedure Act (SCPA) §2205, the Executor holds authority to marshal assets, defend title, and distribute per the settlement terms. This authority is not granted by any public entity — it is inherent to the office, perfected by the Registrar's filing, date, stamp, and seal establishing prima facie probate (SCPA §1420).
Authority & Legal Framework
General Executor Authority
The General Executor holds authority unlimited as to time, place, and subject matter — a jurisdiction without territorial or durational limits, devolving power from the trust's creation itself. No public role supersedes this private office.
Registrar's Seal & Probate Finality
The Settlement Certificate of Title, registered with the Registrar of Titles, County: Westchester, State: New York (File No. 131-76-126387, January 1977; Authentication Ref. 1080374 262, REV: 09/25/12), constitutes conclusive probate court finality — irrefutable proof of privatization and perfection of all estate interests.
Nunc Pro Tunc Restoration
The office effects restoration retroactively — nunc pro tunc ("now for then") — correcting every prior misclassification, voiding subrogation and usufruct violations ab initio, as if the deprivation never occurred. The seal speaks and the record is made right.
Why This Office Exists
The Executor's Office was established to address three systemic failures that denied Named Parties their rightful claims:
Misclassification
Named Parties were classified as infant decedent estates — a designation that stripped them of legal capacity and placed their assets under public administration. This misclassification was not incidental; it was structural, affecting the entire chain of title from settlement inception through the Named Party's age of majority and beyond.
Non-Disclosure
No disclosure was ever made to the Named Party regarding the existence of the settlement, the securities held in their name, or the fiduciary duties owed to them. Prior actors administered the estate without informing the rightful owner — a material breach of every trust obligation recognized in equity. The Named Party was wholly uninformed, yet continuously entitled.
Subrogation & Usufruct
Public actors substituted themselves as sureties over the estate through equitable subrogation — stepping into the shoes of the principal without consent. They then exercised usufruct rights: exploiting the fruits, incomes, interest, and accruals of the estate without ownership transfer, restoration, or fiduciary accounting to the true executor. This silent administration converted private estate to public benefit.
Passage of Time
Upon reaching age of majority (recognized under 40 Stat. 178 — the congressional resolution affirming that sovereign citizens assume responsibilities), Named Parties should have been informed and given control. Instead, the misclassification persisted, prolonging public administration of private estate assets indefinitely. The Executor's Office corrects this by asserting non-abandonment: the office was never vacated, the seat never forfeited.
What the Office Administers
Settlement Execution
The office files the Declaration of Full Settlement Execution — confirming that the settlement memorial constitutes complete estate execution. This declaration, filed with the Registrar of Titles, triggers nunc pro tunc restoration under SCPA §2205 and demands annotation confirming the Named Party's perfected title under UTC §401.
Named Party Restoration
Through the Affidavit of Age of Majority and Non-Disclosure, the office establishes the Named Party's survival, confirms their attainment of legal capacity, and documents the systematic non-disclosure they suffered. This affidavit is the foundation for voiding the misclassification and restoring all rights nunc pro tunc.
Claims & Restoration
The Executor's Claim for Restoration demands full accounting: subrogation of settlement rights (SCPA §1420 seal), UCC §9-502 financing statement perfection, probate finality via original markers, and IRC §643(e) trust funding rights preserved for FGT/domestic trusts. The estate must be made whole — completely and without impairment.
Trust Chain Administration
The office perfects the trust chain: from Foreign Grantor Trust (FGT) as holder in due course, through domestication to a U.S.-compliant trust structure, to final distribution of usufruct, equities, and beneficial interests to the Named Party. Legal title transfers via UCC-1 financing statement; equitable title flows to beneficiaries through the corrected chain.
Private Supremacy Over Public Claims
In the hierarchical trust structure, the Executor's Office holds paramount authority over the estate's corpus — superior to any subrogated or usufructuary interest. This is not a claim of authority; it is the consequence of authentication.
Public actors — registrars, clerks, custodians, and any fiduciary of record — derive whatever derivative authority they hold from the estate itself. But the Executor, as authenticated registered owner and successor in interest, stands as the principal holder post-probate seal. Public roles are limited to ministerial acts: filing, sealing, and recording certificates. They hold no equitable ownership — they are custodians under constructive trust when the estate has been undisclosed.
When the Executor interfaces with public offices, the declarations command compliance. The seal-registered instrument governs. The settlement, as the conclusive agreement terminating all disputes with voluntary dismissal of litigation, renders public dealings subordinate. The office embodies the estate's sovereign will — and public entities must defer or face breach.
The Declaration Packet
The Executor's Office files a comprehensive declaration packet with the Registrar of Titles. This packet constitutes full restoration proof:
Executor's Declaration
The Declaration of Full Settlement Execution, citing SCPA §2205, confirming that the settlement memorial constitutes complete private execution within the four corners of the instrument.
Named Party Affidavit
The Affidavit of Age of Majority and Non-Disclosure, sworn under oath, establishing survival, legal capacity, and documenting the systematic failure to disclose settlement interests.
Notice of Private Declaration
Formal notice to the Registrar that the settlement has been executed per the four corners. Demands acknowledgment for file notation. The matter is private — no public disclosure required.
Claim for Restoration
The Executor's Claim demanding Registrar annotation confirming probate finality, Named Party restoration as living successor, and preservation of IRC §643(e) trust funding rights for FGT/domestic trusts.
Registrar Acknowledgment
The custodial acknowledgment of receipt (Uniform Rules §207.44), confirming annotation of the nunc pro tunc restoration and the Named Party's perfected title under UTC §401.
Certified Settlement Memorial
The original authenticated document — the Settlement Certificate of Title — bearing the Registrar's filing number, date, stamp, and seal. This is the foundational instrument from which all authority flows.
Enforceability of the Office & Its Seals
The Executor's declarations, affixed with the trust seal referencing the Registrar-sealed Certificate of Title, bind universally through three self-executing mechanisms:
Probate Finality
The issuer's authentication and Registrar filing constitute constructive notice to the world. Known parties receive direct service; unknown parties are bound by the public record's incontrovertible perfection, admitting no challenge absent superior seal.
Seal as Sovereign Act
The seal embodies the office's general authority, operating as commercial paper under trust law — irrevocable upon affixation, commanding compliance. Parties dealing with the estate post-seal subordinate to it automatically.
Nunc Pro Tunc Effect
Enforcement is retroactive. Any resistance breaches the settlement terms — the dispute-ending agreement — triggering constructive trust disgorgement without court intervention. The office self-enforces via demand, as the highest fiduciary.
Trust Structure & Title Flow
The Executor's Office operates within a carefully structured trust chain that ensures proper title flow from origin to beneficiary:
Foreign Grantor Trust (FGT)
The FGT serves as the original holder in due course — a foreign entity registered in a non-U.S. jurisdiction that maintains private enforcement via subrogation. The grantor retains powers (revocable, income control, principal reversion), providing asset protection and estate planning across borders.
Domestic Successor Trust
The FGT establishes a domestic trust that passes U.S. court and control tests, becoming the successor in interest. This domestic trust petitions as interested party, confirming the probate seal's effect and transferring corrected title. The Executor administers through this structure, filing UCC amendments and assigning usufruct to beneficiaries.
The Executor's fiduciary duty is to marshal assets, defend title, and distribute per the settlement. The office operates as a DBA (doing business as) under the Executor's authority — an alias that carries the full weight of the authenticated seal, not an independent entity. All assets flow through the corrected chain to the trust's beneficiaries, with IRC §679, §6048, and §643(e) compliance maintained throughout.
Non-Abandonment & Continuous Occupancy
A critical element of the Executor's authority is the doctrine of non-abandonment. The office was never vacated. The seat was never forfeited. Despite misclassification, despite non-disclosure, despite the passage of decades — the Executor holds continuous, unabandoned occupancy of the office from the moment of majority attainment.
This is not a retroactive assertion of rights that were lost. It is the recognition of rights that were always held but never disclosed. The settlement memorial remained on file. The Registrar's seal remained affixed. The authentication remained valid. The only thing missing was the Named Party's knowledge — and knowledge withheld through non-disclosure cannot constitute abandonment.
The office's declarations correct the record: the Named Party is alive, has attained majority, holds continuous constructive possession, and now occupies the seat with full awareness and authority. Prior usufruct and subrogation claims are revoked nunc pro tunc. The estate is restored. The office is occupied. The matter is concluded.
Understanding the Executor's authority is the first step toward restoration.
If you are a Named Party or successor in interest seeking to establish your rightful claim, the Executor's Office is here to guide the process.
Contact the OfficeUnder Seal & Private Jurisdiction
The Executor's Office operates under seal. This is not a metaphor — it is a legal condition with binding force that governs every aspect of the office's administration.
The Half-Proof Doctrine (Semi-Plena Probatio)
A sealed instrument carries half-proof — probatio semi-plena — meaning the instrument itself constitutes sufficient evidence of its own authenticity. The Registrar's seal on File No. 131-76-126387 imports consideration, truth, and regularity. The burden falls entirely on any challenger to overcome not merely the evidence but the presumption of regularity that attaches to a sealed public record. Under SCPA §1420, this prima facie proof becomes conclusive once the decree is final and unappealable. The seal proves itself (probat se ipsum).
Post-Probate Finality — Cannot Be Probated
The Executor's Office is post-probate. Probate has been completed and sealed under the Registrar's authority (January 1977). Under the doctrines of res judicata, estoppel by record, and merger, what has been probated cannot be probated again. SCPA §1420 provides that a decree admitting an instrument to probate is conclusive as to all persons until reversed or modified on appeal. No reversal has occurred in forty-nine years. No court possesses jurisdiction to reopen, re-examine, or re-probate this matter. Any attempt to do so is void ab initio.
The Seal as Private Jurisdiction
When the Executor's Office operates under seal, it operates within the private jurisdiction established by the instrument of settlement and the Registrar's seal affirming probate finality. The sealed instrument creates a closed universe — public authorities have no jurisdiction to interpret, modify, or override its operative provisions. All instruments, communications, and declarations issued by this office carry the full weight and authority of the seal. The four corners doctrine applies absolutely: the instrument speaks for itself, and no parol evidence may be admitted to contradict, vary, or supplement its terms.
Self-Executing Authority
The Executor's declarations are self-executing — they derive from a sealed, final, conclusive instrument and require no further court order to activate their legal effect. The seal is both the source and the proof of authority. Third parties receiving communications from the office are on constructive notice of the seal's authority and are bound to honor it. The authentication commands universal full faith and credit under Article IV, Section 1 of the United States Constitution.