Lawsuit: Adjourned ZxRiptide, Co-Plaintiff Pepecuu, and Co-Plaintiff Jakkuwu v. MasterCaelen and Co-Defendant MJL [2026] FCR 21

Status
Not open for further replies.

Closing Statement


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CLOSING STATEMENT

There are two primary issues at hand, I will address both issues in IRAC format separately.

ISSUE 1 - Pepecuu's Contract
This issue here is whether Pepecuu proved, by a balance of probabilities, that a valid and enforceable $1.7 Million mortgage agreement existed between Pepecuu and MasterCaelen.

The rule related to this case is the Contracts Act (I note at the time of writing a bill to repeal this Act is awaiting assent, however, this is still the governing law regarding contracts at the time of this dispute), in particular Section 4(2), which outlines the requirements of a contract as follows:

(a) Offer. An offer is a clear and unequivocal communication expressing a party's willingness to enter into a contract, either explicitly stated or reasonably inferred from the circumstances.
(b) Acceptance. Acceptance is the positive and unambiguous response to an offer communicated to the offeror, mirroring the terms of the offer and conveyed through various means.
(c) Consideration. Consideration, an essential element, involves the exchange of something of value between parties, with sufficiency though not necessarily adequacy. Consideration can be tangible or intanglbie.
(d) Intent. Parties must demonstrate a clear intention to create legal obligations for the contract to be valid.
(e) Capacity. Parties entering into a contract must possess the legal capacity to do so. Players with low playtime may lack the capacity to fairly enter a contract.

We then apply this clear and unequivocal rule to the case at hand:

Did Pepecuu make a clear an unequivocal communication expressing their willingness to enter a contract? No, because the message which is allegedly the offer was clearly edited in Exhibit P-P003 (in Post #26), making it ambiguous and therefore not "unequivocal."
Did MasterCaelen accept the offer with a positive and unambiguous response, mirroring the terms of the offer? No, because while there is evidence he accepted some offer, it could not have been the offer displayed in the evidence, as the evidence contains the "(edited)" Discord label.
Was Consideration present? If the contract is real, which it clearly is not, there is consideration in the form of plots and money.
Was intent established? It seems as though there was intent by MasterCaelen. It is unclear to me whether Pepecuu intended to establish a valid contract.
Was there capacity? Both players have the legal capacity to enter a contract on behalf of themselves.

After applying the rule to the issue, the conclusion is obvious:

Because there was no valid contract, the court should find no enforceable mortgage agreement. The Defendant is not required to return any money Pepecuu chose to gift him, and certainly the alleged "collateral" is not able to be claimed by Pepecuu.
ISSUE 2 - C006
The issue here is whether MJL's claim to C006 is valid.

Once again, the rule related to this case is the Contracts Act (I note at the time of writing a bill to repeal this Act is awaiting assent, however, this is still the governing law regarding contracts at the time of this dispute), in particular Section 4(2), which outlines the requirements of a contract as follows:

(a) Offer. An offer is a clear and unequivocal communication expressing a party's willingness to enter into a contract, either explicitly stated or reasonably inferred from the circumstances.
(b) Acceptance. Acceptance is the positive and unambiguous response to an offer communicated to the offeror, mirroring the terms of the offer and conveyed through various means.
(c) Consideration. Consideration, an essential element, involves the exchange of something of value between parties, with sufficiency though not necessarily adequacy. Consideration can be tangible or intanglbie.
(d) Intent. Parties must demonstrate a clear intention to create legal obligations for the contract to be valid.
(e) Capacity. Parties entering into a contract must possess the legal capacity to do so. Players with low playtime may lack the capacity to fairly enter a contract.

It is also worth noting that Redmont does not have Adverse Possession laws, Squatters Rights, etc. The only way by which the situation MJL and MasterCaelen could have resulted in a transfer of the plot would be a gift or a contract.

MJL points to [2025] DCR 71 as precedent to uphold a gift, however this is a fundamentally different scenario. In DCR 71, the plot had already been transferred and the court proceeded to declare there was no contract. In the case at hand, the plot is still owned by MasterCaelen, and not MJL. In DCR 71, the court refused to reverse a gift that was already given. In this case, MJL is asking the court to enforce a gift be given.

We apply all this to the current situation, and we find there was no clear offer, no unambiguous and positive acceptance, no consideration, and no clear intent to enter a contract; although both players had Capacity, obviously.

This comes to only one conclusion:
MasterCaelen owns C006. He gave MJL access to the plot without a contract, and allowed them to use it as though it were his, but Redmont lacks laws which support Adverse Possession, giving MJL no legal claim over the plot.

 
Last edited:

Closing Statement


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CLOSING STATEMENT

There are two primary issues at hand, I will address both issues in IRAC format separately.

Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE

Rule 1.4.2.1 (Decorum & Respect towards Judicial Officers) requires all parties to respect decorum in this court and implies a basic level of respect should be shown to all parties.

My pronouns are they/them. I ask this court to amend his complaint to reflect that fact and admonish him for not providing the minimum amount of respect towards my gender identity.

If that sounds harsh, then I will remind this court that this is not the first time I have to correct someone during legal proceedings (ko531 v. Incarnation__ & Jakkuwu_ et. al [2026] FCR 47 Post #92), and I am tired of having to do so.

 

Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE

Rule 1.4.2.1 (Decorum & Respect towards Judicial Officers) requires all parties to respect decorum in this court and implies a basic level of respect should be shown to all parties.

My pronouns are they/them. I ask this court to amend his complaint to reflect that fact and admonish him for not providing the minimum amount of respect towards my gender identity.

If that sounds harsh, then I will remind this court that this is not the first time I have to correct someone during legal proceedings (ko531 v. Incarnation__ & Jakkuwu_ et. al [2026] FCR 47 Post #92), and I am tired of having to do so.

I have made the requested change.

It was a simple mistake, not an intentional act of disrespect.
 

Objection


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - BREACH OF PROCEDURE

Rule 1.4.2.1 (Decorum & Respect towards Judicial Officers) requires all parties to respect decorum in this court and implies a basic level of respect should be shown to all parties.

My pronouns are they/them. I ask this court to amend his complaint to reflect that fact and admonish him for not providing the minimum amount of respect towards my gender identity.

If that sounds harsh, then I will remind this court that this is not the first time I have to correct someone during legal proceedings (ko531 v. Incarnation__ & Jakkuwu_ et. al [2026] FCR 47 Post #92), and I am tired of having to do so.

As a reminder this case was filed before June 6 and is thus operating under the old Court Rules.
 

Verdict


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
VERDICT


ZxRiptide, Co-Plaintiff Pepecuu, and Co-Plaintiff Jakkuwu
Plaintiff

v.

MasterCaelen
Defendants

v.

MJL
Co-Defendant

ZxRiptide, Co-Plaintiff Pepecuu, and Co-Plaintiff Jakkuwu v. MasterCaelen and Co-Defendant MJL [2026] FCR 21

I. Facts​

This case arises from several alleged loan, consulting, and collateral agreements involving Defendant MasterCaelen before and after his deportation. The original action was filed by ZxRiptide, who alleged that he and MasterCaelen entered into a consulting agreement on February 27, 2026. Under that alleged agreement, MasterCaelen was to pay ZxRiptide $250,000 every fourteen days. ZxRiptide further alleged that the agreement was amended on March 8, 2026, to include numerous properties and the sole proprietorship of Kantonic as collateral. One of the properties listed in that alleged collateral schedule was C006.

MasterCaelen was later deported on March 24th, 2026, for six months. ZxRiptide alleged that this deportation triggered the collateral provision in the consulting agreement because the deportation exceeded the contract’s payment period. ZxRiptide therefore sought the transfer of the listed collateral. The Court initially entered an emergency injunction preventing the listed collateral properties from being sold, auctioned, or transferred while the case remained pending.

MJL entered the case because C006 appeared on ZxRiptide’s alleged collateral list, but MJL claimed that MasterCaelen had already conveyed C006 to them. MJL asserted that they were the lawful owner of C006 and that the property should not be treated as MasterCaelen’s asset. MJL has maintained that their involvement in the case is limited to protecting their claimed ownership interest in C006.

Pepecuu later filed a separate complaint against MasterCaelen. Pepecuu alleges that, on March 3, 2026, Pepecuu and MasterCaelen entered into a Pepecuu further alleges that C639 was identified as collateral under the agreement and that MasterCaelen defaulted by failing to make the first payment due on April 3, 2026, and by transferring C639 without Pepecuu’s consent.

Pepecuu alleges that she entered into a mortgage agreement with Defendant MasterCaelen. Under that agreement, Pepecuu was the lender, and MasterCaelen was the borrower. Pepecuu loaned MasterCaelen $1,700,000 at a fixed interest rate, with monthly payments of $488,750 per month for four months, for a total repayment amount of $1,955,000 owed under the agreement. In return, MasterCaelen granted Pepecuu a security interest in collateralized plots.

Pepecuu submitted five pieces of evidence, labeled P-001 through P-005. P-001 is the alleged contract between Pepecuu and MasterCaelen. P-004 establishes that Pepecuu transferred $1,700,000 to MasterCaelen on March 3, 2026.

The ownership and status of C639 are disputed. PurgePlanet testified that he obtained C639 on July 3, 2024, from an eviction auction, that this occurred before the alleged Pepecuu-MasterCaelen agreement, and that he never authorized C639 to be used as collateral. On cross-examination, PurgePlanet further testified that someone had contacted him about purchasing C639 almost a year earlier, that he rejected the offer, and that MasterCaelen never contacted him about C639 or the sale of any of PurgePlanet’s plots.

II. Procedural Posture​

This matter began as a civil action by ZxRiptide against MasterCaelen seeking enforcement of an alleged consulting contract and collateral agreement, with Pepecuu and Jakkuwu later joining as co-plaintiffs on separate alleged loan or mortgage agreements involving MasterCaelen. MJL was joined as a co-defendant because one disputed property, C006, was claimed as collateral but is also claimed by MJL as their own property. MasterCaelen is long-deported and is represented procedurally by Dartanboy in his role as Public Defender.

Since filing, the case has narrowed substantially. ZxRiptide voluntarily moved to dismiss his claims via nolle prosequi, and the court dismissed ZxRiptide’s complaint with prejudice. Jakkuwu also asserted claims against MasterCaelen. Jakkuwu alleged that, around March 7 or March 8, 2026, he entered into a loan agreement with MasterCaelen for $660,000, with weekly interest and twenty-five unnamed plots as collateral. That claim is no longer active because the Court later dismissed Jakkuwu’s claims with prejudice after determining that Jakkuwu’s long deportation prevented him from continuing as a plaintiff. Pepecuu is now the only remaining plaintiff. The live merits issue is Pepecuu’s claim that MasterCaelen breached an alleged $1.7 million mortgage/loan agreement secured by collateral, including disputed property C639.

MJL remains in the case as a self-represented co-defendant because the court has not resolved whether C006 belongs to MJL or should be treated as MasterCaelen’s asset. Although Pepecuu sought to dismiss MJL after the other plaintiffs were dismissed, the court denied that request, holding that the C006 ownership issue remains live.

III. Legal Analysis​

The alleged agreement provided that Pepecuu would lend MasterCaelen $1,700,000, with repayment to occur over four monthly payments. In exchange, MasterCaelen offered the following plots as collateral:

  • C119, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C143, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C144, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C145, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C146, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C147, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C148, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C149, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C150, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C366, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C368, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C369, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C370, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C371, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C589, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C614, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C635, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C636, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C637, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C638, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C639, Reveille, Redmont.
  • C643, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S002, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S016, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S041, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S042, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S043, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S044, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S109, Reveille, Redmont.
  • S117, Reveille, Redmont.
(See P-001). Upon review of the record, the Defendant did show that the status of C639 was owned by someone else. Other than that plot, the Court treats the collateral list as correct and complete for purposes of this verdict.

A valid contract is formed where there is offer, acceptance, consideration, intent, and capacity (see Contracts Act, § 4(2)(a)–(e), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/contracts-act.20790/). Pepecuu alleges that each element is satisfied. The Court agrees.

There was an offer. Pepecuu offered to lend MasterCaelen $1,700,000 under the terms of the mortgage agreement. There was consideration. Pepecuu received the right to repayment with interest and security in collateralized plots, while MasterCaelen received the $1,700,000 loan. There was acceptance. MasterCaelen signed the agreement on March 3, 2026. There was intent. The agreement was a formal loan and mortgage arrangement, not a casual promise or gratuitous transfer. There was capacity. No evidence before the Court establishes that either party lacked the capacity to enter the agreement.

The Defendant argues that there was no valid agreement because the offer was allegedly edited, and therefore was not a clear and unequivocal communication. The Court rejects that argument. On the balance of probabilities, the alleged edit did not undermine mutual assent. The operative offer was not merely the message communicating the possibility of a loan; the operative offer was the mortgage agreement itself. That agreement was signed by MasterCaelen and followed by Pepecuu’s transfer of $1,700,000. The Court also judicially notices, from the relevant Discord search and the submitted screenshot, that the transfer occurred on March 3, 2026.

The Defendant also implies that the contract may have been fabricated. The Court does not find that argument persuasive on this record. On the balance of probabilities, it is highly unlikely that Pepecuu would have transferred $1,700,000 to MasterCaelen as a gift. The transfer strongly supports the conclusion that the parties intended to act under a binding agreement. The Defendant abandoned that argument in their closing statement. Accordingly, the Court finds that a valid and enforceable mortgage agreement existed between Pepecuu and MasterCaelen.

A breach of contract occurs when a party fails to fulfill contractual obligations (see Contracts Act, § 7(1), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/contracts-act.20790/). A contract may be terminated due to a material breach, and a material breach is a significant failure to fulfill contractual obligations (see Contracts Act, §§ 9(1), 14(9), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/contracts-act.20790/).

The Redmont Civil Code Act also recognizes breach of contract as a strict liability civil violation where a person fails to perform obligations under a valid and enforceable contract without lawful excuse (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part VI, § 1(a), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). Strict liability violations require proof only that the prohibited act occurred and caused harm; intent or negligence is not relevant to establishing liability (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part II, § 9(4), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/).

Pepecuu transferred $1,700,000 to MasterCaelen. MasterCaelen then failed to perform the repayment obligations under the agreement because he was long deported. Additionally, MasterCaelen offered up a plot that was not his as collateral, despite assurances within the Contract that all collateral was clear of title and free of encumbrances. (See P-001, “Borrower warrants that they have marketable title to The Properties, free and clear of all encumbrances except those disclosed in this Agreement”). These failures constitute a material breach of the agreement under the Contracts Act. It also constitutes a breach of contract under the Redmont Civil Code Act. The Court therefore finds in favor of Pepecuu on the breach of contract claim against MasterCaelen.

Where a civil violation provides no fixed remedy, the plaintiff may request any remedy available under the Redmont Civil Code, and the Court determines the appropriate remedy based on the circumstances of the case (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part II, § 7(12), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). Civil remedies may include damages, specific performance, injunctions, or other equitable relief (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part II, § 7(6), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). Specific performance is a court order requiring a party to fulfill contractual obligations. (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part II, § 7(9), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/).

Pepecuu’s requested relief focuses primarily on collection of the collateralized properties or the collection of compensatory damages of the loan itself. The Court finds that specific performance and foreclosure-style transfer of the collateral is the appropriate remedy here. Accordingly, MasterCaelen shall transfer to Pepecuu all collateralized plots listed in the mortgage agreement and identified in this verdict.

Next, the Court considers whether punitive damages are warranted based on MasterCaelen’s conduct in offering C639 as collateral.

Punitive damages are awarded to punish outrageous conduct and to deter the defendant and others from similar conduct in the future (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 3(1)(a), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). Punitive damages may be awarded where the defendant’s conduct is outrageous, meaning conduct that demonstrates a substantial departure from acceptable standards of behavior and reflects a willful, dishonest, oppressive, reckless, or grossly negligent disregard for the rights, interests, or safety of others (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 3(2)(a)–(b), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/).

Conduct is outrageous where, among other things, the defendant intended to cause harm or loss, acted knowing that the conduct was likely to disadvantage, harm, or seriously inconvenience another person, acted with reckless indifference as to whether harm or loss would occur, or where the conduct involved dishonesty, deception, bad faith, or abuse of trust or power (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 3(2)(b)(i)–(iv), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/).

Here, MasterCaelen offered C639 as collateral under the mortgage agreement. However, C639 was not owned by MasterCaelen. It was owned by RurgePlanet. MasterCaelen therefore represented, as part of a secured loan transaction, that he could provide collateral in property over which he did not have ownership rights.

A borrower who offers property as security is representing that the property can meaningfully secure the lender’s recovery if the borrower defaults. Offering collateral owned by a third party substantially undermines the lender’s security interest and creates the risk that the lender will be left with less protection than the bargain required. As such, the Court finds that MasterCaelen’s conduct constitutes outrageous conduct under the Redmont Civil Code Act. At a minimum, MasterCaelen acted with reckless indifference as to whether Pepecuu would suffer harm or loss. The conduct also involved dishonesty, deception, bad faith, or abuse of trust because MasterCaelen pledged property as collateral despite lacking ownership of that property.

In assessing punitive damages, the Court considers the character of the Defendant’s act, the nature and extent of the harm caused or intended, and the Defendant’s wealth (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 3(2)(d), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). The character of the act weighs strongly in favor of punitive damages because the misconduct occurred during the formation and performance of a high-value secured loan agreement. The nature of the harm also weighs in favor of punitive damages because Pepecuu advanced $1,700,000 in reliance on a collateral package that included at least one plot MasterCaelen did not own. The amount of the loan and the value of the pledged collateral show that this was not a minor transaction.

The Court next addresses Co-Defendant MJL’s asserted claim to plot C006. C006 was not part of the collateral securing Pepecuu’s mortgage agreement. As far as the Court is aware, C006 is unencumbered by Pepecuu’s collateral claim and is not otherwise subject to the mortgage agreement at issue in Pepecuu’s claim.

MJL argues that MasterCaelen conveyed C006 to them as a gift. MJL relies on statements by MasterCaelen indicating that MJL could have the plot or that MasterCaelen wanted MJL to have it.

However, the plot information available through /rl info C006 shows that MasterCaelen remains the owner of C006, while MJL is merely an added player. The record also shows that MJL was added to the plot. Being added to a property is not the same as receiving full ownership. It may demonstrate access, permission, or possession in trust, but it does not establish a completed transfer of property rights.

The precedent in Plura72 v. The Redmont Beach Party et al. [2025] DCR 71 holds that gifts, once lawfully completed, are irrevocable absent fraud, duress, or other unlawful acts (see https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/plura72-v-the-redmont-beach-party-et-al-2025-dcr-71.32044/). That principle does not assist MJL here because the gift was never lawfully completed. A statement of donative intent is not enough. The property and its accompanying rights must actually be transferred. Because MasterCaelen never completed the transfer of C006 to MJL, MJL cannot establish lawful ownership of C006. MJL’s claim to C006, therefore, fails.

For illustrative effect, the Court will run a hypothetical on this matter. Though MasterCaelen has few legal rights at the moment, he may still return at the end of his six-month long deportation. If C006 were to be evicted by the DCT at this moment, the notice of eviction would fall to MasterCaelen and not to MJL. MJL could, theoretically, have an opportunity to remedy the eviction notice themself since they have access to the property. However, if the plot were to be evicted, renumeration for the eviction would fall to MasterCaelen. And if the plot were to be sold, the new owner would have the right to remove MJL as an added player on the plot. This, among other reasons, shows why MJL does not have true ownership of the plot. True ownership of a plot only occurs when a transfer of ownership of that plot happens.

Legal fees are awarded to the prevailing party at a rate of 30% of the case value, subject to the applicable minimums and rules in the Redmont Civil Code Act (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 7(2)(a)–(e), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/). Legal fees for ancillary claims are assessed separately from the original claim based on the value of each claim, and the prevailing party on each claim is entitled to legal fees for that claim (see Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, § 7(3)(a)–(b), https://www.democracycraft.net/threads/redmont-civil-code-act.34107/).

Pepecuu is the prevailing party against MasterCaelen. MasterCaelen shall pay Pepecuu’s legal fees, payable to Pepecuu’s counsel, AsexualDinosaur.

MJL loses on their C006 claim. Legal fees on that claim shall be awarded to the prevailing opposing party, payable to counsel Dartanboy.

IV. Order​

ZxRiptide’s claims remain dismissed with prejudice. Jakkuwu’s claims remain dismissed with prejudice.

Judgment is entered in favor of Pepecuu and against MasterCaelen. Judgment on the crossclaim is entered against MJL in favor of MasterCaelen.
  1. Staff shall transfer to Pepecuu all collateralized plots identified in this verdict, except for C639 as that plot is owned by PurgePlanet.
  2. MJL’s claim to ownership of C006 is denied.
  3. MasterCaelen shall pay Pepecuu $200,000 in Punitive Damages as regards to C639.
  4. MasterCaelen shall pay Pepecuu’s legal fees, payable to AsexualDinosaur, in the amount of $646,500.
  5. Because MJL’s failed claim concerned only C006, legal fees for Dartanboy are assessed separately from the principal claim and calculated at 30% of the value of C006, subject to the Federal Court minimum of $6,000. If C006 is valued at $20,000 or less, the award is $6,000.
So ordered.

 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top