Kilbourn-v-Thompson
Movement claim (supported, with caveat): Kilbourn v. Thompson establishes that the English Court of Exchequer used a fiction (plaintiff as Crown debtor) to expand jurisdiction from crown-debt cases to general jurisdiction — and the Supreme Court warned that 'such an enlargement of jurisdiction would not now be tolerated in England, and it is hoped not in this country of written constitutions and laws.' The historical observation is correct and Supreme-Court-verified; the remedial inference (that individuals can decline modern federal jurisdiction as Exchequer fiction) doesn't follow.
An unusual verification result. Byron Beers's Treatise #5 cites Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.S. 168, 193 (1880), for the Court's discussion of how the English Court of Exchequer used a legal fiction (declaring the plaintiff a debtor of the Crown) to expand its jurisdiction from crown-debt cases to general common-law jurisdiction, with the Court warning that such fictional jurisdictional expansion 'would not now be tolerated in England, and it is hoped not in this country of written constitutions and laws.' The quote is real, the Court's reasoning is real, and the Court's structural concern about fiction-based jurisdictional expansion is genuine. Kilbourn is a Congressional contempt case: Hallet Kilbourn refused to testify before a House investigating committee inquiring into the Jay Cooke & Co. bankruptcy; he was imprisoned 45 days; the Court held Congress lacked authority to punish citizens for contempt in matters outside its legislative jurisdiction. The Exchequer-fiction passage is real and load-bearing in the opinion. The Court invoked the Exchequer analogy precisely to condemn the kind of jurisdictional overreach masked as creditor-collection fiction. Beers's historical observation is therefore well-supported — one of the relatively rare instances in the corpus where the Supreme Court explicitly warned against the pattern the framework identifies. The remedial inference Beers builds on it (that modern federal jurisdiction operates through Exchequer-style fictions, and that individuals can therefore decline federal jurisdiction) does not follow. The constitutional and statutory architecture of modern federal jurisdiction does not actually operate through fictions in Maine's sense. Federal jurisdiction expanded dramatically in the 20th century — much of it through statutory grants under the Necessary and Proper Clause and the Commerce Clause, some through interpretive expansion grounded in constitutional text. The expansion is at the legislative stage of Maine's three-instrument framework, not the fiction stage. The historical pattern Beers identifies is real; the operative-law remedy doesn't follow from it.
The Legal System for Sovereign Rulers: Treatise #5 and the Constructive-Trust Mechanism That Explains Its Own Escape-Proofness
Beers's most rigorous treatise — and its most analytically self-defeating. The constructive-trust enforcement-mechanism analysis has real explanatory power for features of modern government, and it explains with structural precision why Beers's own remedial strategy cannot work: constructive trusts don't require trustee consent, equity authority doesn't depend on recognition, and contempt power exists precisely to handle non-recognition. Beers describes a system designed to be escape-proof, then proposes to escape it. Two miscitations recur (Maine read backwards on Austin; Slaughter-House dissent treated as majority); Kilbourn's Exchequer-fiction warning is real.