Design prototype — Founder review. All ideas © Walter Spraggins / OwnerManager.org

The legal basis
for citizen ownership.

This page presents the argument behind OwnerManager — the documents, the cases, and the reasoning. Some of what follows is established constitutional doctrine. Some is an original interpretation developed over two decades of research. Both are clearly labeled.

Where the argument begins

Most Americans were taught that their citizenship is a status — something you have, like a passport. OwnerManager begins with a different premise: that citizenship is a legal condition of ownership, carrying rights and responsibilities that most citizens have never been shown how to use.

This is not a radical claim. It is a reading of the founding documents — taken together, in sequence — that reveals a framework for citizen authority that has been present since 1776.

"The citizens of America are equal as fellow citizens, and as joint tenants in the sovereignty."

— Chief Justice John Jay, Chisholm v. Georgia, 1793

The six founding documents

OwnerManager's framework rests on six documents, read together as a single legal architecture — what this community calls the American Social Construct of Law. Each document contributes one piece of the ownership argument.

Document 1  ·  July 4, 1776

The Declaration of Independence

Established principle

The Declaration establishes "the People" as the sovereign source of all political authority and government as an agent created to serve them. The key passage — "to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed" — is the constitutional foundation of popular sovereignty.

This framework's reading

The Declaration does not merely describe a philosophy. It identifies "the People" as Primary Party One in the American compact — the authors and owners of the enterprise — and government as Primary Party Two: a created entity, bound to serve. The Declaration also establishes the citizens' right — and duty — to hold that government to account when it fails its purpose.

Document 2  ·  1785 – Present

The Public Land Survey System (PLSS)

Established fact

The Public Land Survey System is the legal mechanism by which the territory of the United States was surveyed and recorded as public land — held in trust for the citizens of the nation. It is the physical, legal expression of public ownership of American territory.

This framework's reading

The PLSS is not merely a surveying system. It is evidence — tangible, documented, recorded in law — that "America" as a physical enterprise is owned by its citizens. It connects the abstract principle of popular sovereignty to actual terrain. Citizens do not merely inhabit the land. They hold it.

Document 3  ·  March 1, 1781

The Articles of Confederation

Established fact

The Articles of Confederation were the first governing document of the United States — ratified by all thirteen original states. They established a "perpetual Union" among the states and defined the operating structure of the new nation before the Constitution replaced them in 1789.

This framework's reading

The Articles are the first operating agreement of the American enterprise in self-governance — evidence that the nation was understood, from its earliest days, as a structured enterprise created by and for "the People" of the several states.

Document 4  ·  September 3, 1783

The Treaty of Paris

Established fact

The Treaty of Paris formally ended the Revolutionary War. In it, King George III recognized the independence of the thirteen United States and relinquished British claims to the territory of the former colonies. It is the foundational international legal document of American sovereignty.

This framework's reading

The Treaty is the root title document — the deed — of the American enterprise. When the King relinquished "absolute title and dominion" of America, that title passed to "the one People" of the new nation. Not to Congress. Not to the states. To the People. Every generation of American citizens since has inherited that title — a legal succession that has never been interrupted.

Document 5  ·  1787, Ratified 1788

The Constitution (including the Preamble)

Established principle

"We the People of the United States... do ordain and establish this Constitution." The Preamble is the statement of authorship. The People created this document. Government is its creation, not its creator.

This framework's reading

The Constitution, in this reading, is the operating agreement of the American enterprise — written by the first generation of citizens and bequeathed, explicitly, to "ourselves and our Posterity." That bequest clause — "our Posterity" — is what makes citizenship a constitutional inheritance. Each generation receives it whole. The Preamble's six purposes ("form a more perfect Union... secure the Blessings of Liberty...") are the owner's mandate to the enterprise they created.

Document 6  ·  Ratified December 15, 1791

The Bill of Rights

Established principle

The first ten amendments to the Constitution enumerate specific protections for citizens against government overreach. The 9th Amendment clarifies that rights not listed are not thereby denied. The 10th reserves all unenumerated powers to the states or to the People.

This framework's reading

Three amendments are especially important to the ownership argument. The 1st Amendment — guaranteeing the right to peaceably assemble — is the legal basis for OwnerManager itself: citizens exercising their right to organize as an owner-body. The 9th Amendment confirms that the rights of citizens are not limited to those listed. The 10th Amendment reserves ultimate power — beyond what the Constitution delegates to government — to "the People." That reservation is not symbolic. It is the constitutional acknowledgment that the People remain the superior party.

The case law: Chisholm v. Georgia (1793)

The first significant ruling handed down by the United States Supreme Court was not about commerce or criminal procedure. It was about who, in America, holds sovereign power.

Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 U.S. 419 (1793) held, in a 4-1 decision, that a citizen of one state could sue another state in federal court. The deeper significance was in the reasoning. Chief Justice John Jay — the first Chief Justice, a Founding Father, and co-author of The Federalist Papers — wrote that in America, sovereignty does not reside in government. It resides in the citizenry.

"At the Revolution, the sovereignty devolved on the people; and they are truly the sovereigns of the country, but they are sovereigns without subjects... and have none to govern but themselves."

— Chief Justice John Jay, Chisholm v. Georgia, 1793

The 11th Amendment, ratified in 1795, modified the specific jurisdictional holding of Chisholm — limiting citizens' ability to sue states in federal court. It did not overturn, and was not intended to overturn, the underlying principle of citizen sovereignty that Jay articulated. That principle remains embedded in the constitutional structure.

What "life estate" means

This framework's interpretation

In property law, a life estate is a legal interest in property that a person holds for the duration of their life — real, enforceable, and personal. It cannot be transferred. It ends at death. And it carries with it real rights: the right to use the property, to benefit from it, and to protect it.

This framework applies that concept to American citizenship. Your citizenship is not merely a status. It is a life estate — a personal, non-transferable share of ownership in the enterprise of self-governance. You received it at birth (or naturalization). You hold it for life. It comes with rights, powers, and responsibilities. And when you die, the next generation inherits — as every generation before them has — the same estate, undiminished.

This is not a metaphor borrowed from property law. It is an argument that the founding documents, read together, establish citizenship as precisely this kind of legal holding.

What "Primary Party One" means

This framework's interpretation

Every legal compact has parties. The American social compact — established by the Declaration, formalized in the Constitution — has two.

Primary Party One is "the People": all bonafide American citizens, collectively. They are the authors of the compact, the owners of the enterprise, and the superior party in the relationship.

Primary Party Two is government: the entity created by Primary Party One to serve specific purposes, funded by Primary Party One, and accountable to Primary Party One. In the language of modern employment, government is the hired help — skilled, necessary, and essential — but employed in service to the owners.

This framing does not diminish government. It clarifies the constitutional relationship. The founders designed a system in which citizens hold continuous, organized authority over their government — not just at election time. OwnerManager exists to make that authority real.

Read the argument. Then decide.

OwnerManager asks nothing of you but an open mind. If the case holds up to your scrutiny, the community is waiting.

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