I don't think it was clear what I was trying to say:
If you conquer a province you must, under the rules, immediately declare whether or not you will allow it to become a part of the King's domain. If you conquer a province which isn't yet ratified by an edict (Something I expect to happen fairly often) that declaration could give the King ample time to block the province's ratification, leaving a noble at war with the King over something he no longer can possess under the rules.
My suggestion is simply that the province's conqueror need not declare his willingness to hand over the province until the process of ratification is complete. If it is completed beforehand then at the time of conquest, but if ratification comes after then the noble need only declare after ratification is assured. If the province is not ratified then no one need know the noble's intent.
This is more logical and lets people be sneaky.
Alternately let the declaration of war with the King by refusing to hand over control void the necessity of the ratification process, so that the noble automatically gets possession of the land. This provides incentive to go to war, and is, naturally, my preferred option.
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