Lawsuit: Pending ToadKing v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 18

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Motion


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

Judge AmityBlamity was confirmed by the Senate to the Federal Court on 4 September 2025, in direct violation of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act. The nominee provided zero financial disclosure during their confirmation hearing, despite Section 5(2) of the Act explicitly requiring:

(2) These disclosures must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee’s opening statement.
Section 5(3) provides that:
(3) Failure to provide complete and accurate disclosure shall disqualify the nominee from consideration.

Judge AmityBlamity is currently presiding over active cases and making judicial decisions despite the fundamental defect in their appointment. These actions, if allowed to continue, will cause irreversible harm to the administration of justice, the integrity of the courts, and the parties appearing before this illegally-confirmed judge, in addition to undermining the rule of law and Congressional intent behind the Conflict of Interest Standards Act.

Thus, Plaintiff ask that for the duration of this case:
  • All cases currently assigned to Judge AmityBlamity be immediately frozen and stayed
  • Judge AmityBlamity be prohibited from presiding over any cases, issuing any orders, or exercising any judicial authority
  • All cases currently assigned to Judge AmityBlamity be reassigned to other Federal Court judges


Case Filing


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CIVIL ACTION

ToadKing
Plaintiff

v.

Commonwealth of Redmont
Defendant

COMPLAINT

The Plaintiff complains against the Defendant as follows:

WRITTEN STATEMENT FROM THE PLAINTIFF

On 23 August 2025, Congress enacted the Conflict of Interest Standards Act, establishing mandatory disclosure requirements for all judicial nominees. This Act explicitly requires nominees to provide detailed financial disclosures in their opening statement during confirmation hearings. Despite this clear legal requirement, the Commonwealth proceeded to confirm AmityBlamity as Federal Court Judge on 4 September 2025, without the nominee having provided any financial disclosure whatsoever during their confirmation hearing.

I bring this action not out of any personal grievance against Judge AmityBlamity, but to uphold the rule of law and ensure that our government officials - particularly those in the judiciary - are appointed in accordance with the law. If we allow this violation to stand, we establish a precedent that compliance with appointment requirements is optional, and that the Senate may confirm nominees regardless of whether they meet statutory requirements.

I. PARTIES

1. ToadKing
2. Commonwealth of Redmont

II. FACTS

1. On or around 23 August 2025, the Conflict of Interest Standards Act was signed into law and enacted immediately upon signature. (P-001)
2. The Conflict of Interest Standards Act applies to "all positions within the Judicial Branch, including but not limited to: Chief Justice, Justice, Judge, and Magistrate."
3. Section 5(1) of the Act mandates that "All nominees for positions covered by this Act must provide a detailed financial disclosure statement, including:
  • (a) All business ownership interests
  • (b) All executive officer positions held in the past 3 months
  • (c) All significant financial investments and assets"
4. Section 5(2) of the Act explicitly states: "These disclosures must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee's opening statement."
5. Section 5(3) provides the consequence for non-compliance: "Failure to provide complete and accurate disclosure shall disqualify the nominee from consideration."
6. On or around 30 August 2025, President JuniperFig nominated AmityBlamity for the position of Federal Court Judge, occurring seven days after the Conflict of Interest Standards Act took effect. (P-002)
7. On or around 30 August 2025, AmityBlamity provided an opening statement during their confirmation hearing. (P-003)
8. AmityBlamity's opening statement contained only information about their qualifications, legal experience, and goals for the position.
9. AmityBlamity's opening statement contained zero information regarding:
  • Business ownership interests
  • Executive officer positions held in the past 3 months
  • Significant financial investments and assets
10. Throughout the entire confirmation hearing, which lasted from 30 August through 4 September 2025, no financial disclosure statement was ever provided by the nominee in any form. (P-003)
11. No Senator questioned the nominee about potential conflicts of interest or requested financial disclosures during the hearing.
12. On or around 4 September 2025, the Senate voted to confirm AmityBlamity as a Federal Court Judge.
13. The confirmation occurred despite the nominee's complete failure to comply with Section 5 of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act.
14. Since confirmation, and as of 25 October 2025, Judge AmityBlamity has presided over and/or made rulings in eight Federal Court cases:
15. As of 25 October 2025, Judge AmityBlamity currently presides over five active Federal Court cases:
16. The Commonwealth has taken no action to remedy this violation despite the clear language of Section 5(3) that non-disclosure "shall disqualify the nominee from consideration."

III. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF

1. Violation of Mandatory Statutory Requirements​

The appointment of Judge AmityBlamity to the Federal Court is fundamentally defective because it violated mandatory requirements established by the Conflict of Interest Standards Act.

As this Court held in Plura72 v. Realimza [2025] SCR 17:
In a 2-0 vote, the Supreme Court dismisses this case sua sponte for lack of standing under rule 2.1(3). The only standing the Plaintiff alleges before the Supreme Court is through the removal of office of Representative Imza. This is a remedy available in very few circumstances—only through criminal prosecution or after proving a defect in the manner in which the government official obtained their office. See Plura72 v. JuniperFig [2025] SCR 16; zLost v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 14; ToadKing v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 13; ToadKing v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 12; bigpappa140 v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 11.

We have made it abundantly clear at this point that we, the Supreme Court of Redmont, may only remove an individual from office using our constitutional powers under limited circumstances. These include if the State is prosecuting a crime, or if there was an alleged defect, mistake, or otherwise illegitimate background to the defendant's obtaining the office that the plaintiff is asking us to remove the defendant from.
This case presents exactly such a defect. The Conflict of Interest Standards Act established clear, mandatory requirements for judicial appointments:
  • Section 5(1) requires detailed financial disclosure statements from all judicial nominees
  • Section 5(2) mandates that these disclosures "must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee's opening statement"
  • Section 5(3) provides the consequence: "Failure to provide complete and accurate disclosure shall disqualify the nominee from consideration"
The use of "shall" in Section 5(3) is mandatory, not discretionary.

Judge AmityBlamity provided zero financial disclosure during their confirmation hearing (P-003). This is not a matter of incomplete disclosure or technical deficiency - it is complete non-compliance with a mandatory statutory requirement. The nominee's opening statement contained only career qualifications and goals, with no mention whatsoever of business interests, executive positions, or financial investments (P-003).

The Senate confirmed this nomination despite this clear violation. Whether this occurred through oversight, ignorance of the new law, or deliberate disregard is immaterial. The law was in effect, the requirement was mandatory, and the confirmation proceeded in violation of that law.

This creates a fundamental defect in how Judge AmityBlamity obtained their office. The confirmation was not merely procedurally irregular - it was legally invalid. Section 5(3) states that failure to disclose "shall disqualify the nominee from consideration." Once disqualified, a nominee cannot be validly confirmed, regardless of the Senate's vote.

2. Ongoing Violation of Law​

The Commonwealth's continued allowance of Judge AmityBlamity to serve constitutes an ongoing violation of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act.

Section 5(3) provides that failure to disclose "shall disqualify the nominee from consideration." The plain meaning of "disqualify" is to render ineligible or unfit. A disqualified nominee cannot become a validly appointed judge, regardless of Senate confirmation.

By allowing Judge AmityBlamity to continue serving despite never having provided the mandatory disclosure, the Commonwealth is effectively nullifying Section 5(3) of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act. The Commonwealth cannot simply ignore mandatory statutory requirements because they prove inconvenient or because the violation was not caught until after confirmation. The rule of law requires that government officials, particularly judicial officers, be appointed in accordance with the law.

3. Undermining Judicial Integrity​

The Constitution, Section 21 states:
21. Judicial Officers ‌
They are responsible for presiding over and delivering unbiased verdicts in all lawsuits.
The entire purpose of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act is to "preserve the integrity of public service" and ensure "all government appointees can serve the public interest and provide for a clear separation between public and private interests."

Congress determined that mandatory financial disclosure was essential to prevent conflicts of interest and maintain public confidence in judicial appointments. The Act clearly states:
(3) The appointment of individuals with clear conflicts of interest to positions of public trust constitutes an affront to the Commonwealth and undermines public confidence in government.
By confirming a judge without the mandatory disclosure, the Commonwealth has:
  • Undermined the integrity safeguards that Congress specifically enacted
  • Created uncertainty about whether Judge AmityBlamity has conflicts of interest
  • Made it impossible for the public to assess whether the judge should have been disqualified under Section 4
  • Established a precedent that compliance with appointment requirements is optional
The harm is not merely theoretical - it is extensive and ongoing. Since their illegal confirmation, Judge AmityBlamity has:
  • Presided over and/or made rulings in eight cases that could potentially be subject to appeal on grounds of judicial illegitimacy
  • Currently presides over five active cases where parties are being denied their right to appear before a legally confirmed judge
Every one of these eleven cases is now tainted by the defect in Judge AmityBlamity's appointment. The parties in Dartanboy v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 101, Nimq_ v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 92, and Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32 may reasonably seek to appeal their verdicts on the grounds that the presiding judge was never legally confirmed.

The parties in The parties in DeltaruneTMRW v. Culls [2025] FCR 111, Vendeka Inc. and Pepecuu v. Department of Commerce [2025] FCR 107, KingBOB99878 v. truffleboy123 [2025] FCR 104, Gribble19 v. The Exchange Inc [2025] FCR 102, and 12700k v jb4bass [2025] FCR 93 are currently litigating before a judge who should have been disqualified from consideration.

This is precisely the type of systemic harm to judicial integrity that the Conflict of Interest Standards Act was designed to prevent.

IV. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

The Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Honourable Court:

1. Declare that the confirmation of AmityBlamity as Federal Court Judge was legally defective due to the violation of mandatory requirements in the Conflict of Interest Standards Act;

2. Remove AmityBlamity from the office of Federal Court Judge pursuant to this Court's constitutional authority under Section 20(1)(a);

3. Order that the five active cases currently assigned to Judge AmityBlamity be immediately reassigned to other Federal Court judges;

4. Declare that the three verdicts issued by Judge AmityBlamity (Dartanboy v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 101, Nimq_ v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 92, and Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32) were issued by an illegally-confirmed judge, and that parties in those cases have grounds to seek appropriate remedies;

5. Order that the Commonwealth implement procedures to ensure future judicial nominations comply with the Conflict of Interest Standards Act.

EVIDENCE:

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P-001.png
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P-003.png

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 15th day of October 2025

 

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Due to a conflict I am recusing from this case.
Is the Plaintiff able to know the nature of the conflict, and/or if it is defined in the 'Non-exhaustive grounds for recusal' in the Motions page?
 

Writ of Summons



@Attorney General's Office is required to appear before the Supreme Court in the case of ToadKing v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 18.

Failure to appear within 72 hours of this summons will result in a default judgement based on the known facts of the case.

Both parties should make themselves aware of the Court Rules and Procedures, including the option of an in-game trial should both parties request one.





In a 2-0 vote, Supreme Court will not be granting an emergency injunction. As discussed in the dissenting opinion in zLost v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 10, the alleged defect in this matter is purely technical in nature: ". . . Even if [the reason for the EI was true,] it does not make sense that for such a minor deficiency all policy changes should be halted with no nuance for over a month. . . . If nothing else, freezing an entire department's ability to change policy . . . can have a far greater permanent impact [than] letting [policy change.]"

Were the alleged defect to be related to Amity's qualifications to be a Judge, we would consider placing her on immediate furlough. However, given that the alleged defect is only technical in nature, the harm done by removing one third of all Judges for perhaps a month or more is far greater than allowing her to continue her work. Parties involved in a case presided by Judge Amity may move to have her recused if they believe she posses a conflict of interest.​
 
The Commonwealth is present, your honour.
 

Answer to Complaint


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

ToadKing
Plaintiff

v.

Commonwealth of Redmont
Defendant


I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT
1. AFFIRM that “On or around 23 August 2025, the Conflict of Interest Standards Act was signed into law and enacted immediately upon signature.”
2.
AFFIRM facts 2 through 5, which cite law.
6.
AFFIRM that “On or around 30 August 2025, President JuniperFig nominated AmityBlamity for the position of Federal Court Judge, occurring seven days after the Conflict of Interest Standards Act took effect.”
7.
AFFIRM that “On or around 30 August 2025, AmityBlamity provided an opening statement during their confirmation hearing.”
8.
AFFIRM that “AmityBlamity's opening statement contained only information about their qualifications, legal experience, and goals for the position.”
9.
AFFIRM that “AmityBlamity's opening statement contained zero information regarding:

  • Business ownership interests
  • Executive officer positions held in the past 3 months
  • Significant financial investments and assets”
10. AFFIRM that “Throughout the entire confirmation hearing, which lasted from 30 August through 4 September 2025, no financial disclosure statement was ever provided by the nominee in any form.”
11.
AFFIRM that “No Senator questioned the nominee about potential conflicts of interest or requested financial disclosures during the hearing.”
12.
AFFIRM that “On or around 4 September 2025, the Senate voted to confirm AmityBlamity as a Federal Court Judge.”
13.
AFFIRM that the confirmation occurred but DO NOT CONTEST that Her Honour’s actions constituted a “complete failure to comply” with the law, NOTING that this is an interpretation of law rather than a fact.
14.
AFFIRM the list of cases completed under Her Honour up to October 25th.
15. AFFIRM the list of Her Honour’s active cases up to October 25th.
16. DO NOT CONTEST that “The Commonwealth has taken no action to remedy this violation[...]” NOTING that the Commonwealth was not notified of the alleged error prior to a lawsuit taking place, and NOTING that qualifying the action as a violation is an interpretation of law, and not a fact.

II. DEFENCES
1. AmityBlamity does not, in fact, have any conflicts of interest that would disqualify her from her position as per the Conflict of Interest Standards Act. The only alleged error related to Her Honour’s ascension to office is the failure to include an overt statement of financial disclosure. The error is therefore, as pointed out by this Court in its earlier ruling on the emergency injunction, exclusively technical in nature.
2. While the Conflict of Interest Standards Act prescribes the remedy of removal, the Supreme Court has full discretion over when and how to use its constitutional authority to remove public officials. The Court has shown through its repeated refusal to consider removal, even in similar situations of alleged technical error, that it is apprehensive to use this power unless absolutely necessary. This case does not pose such a necessity.
3. The Plaintiff sought no alternative remedy before taking outright legal action. Alternative actions could have included notifying Congress for consideration of impeachment charges, notifying the Department of Justice regarding a breach of procedure, or any number of other available avenues.
4. The doctrine of de minimis empowers the Court to disregard trifling matters, such as technical errors in administration that do no harm, even when law has been broken from a strictly textual viewpoint. De minimis, explicitly named or not, has been used in past cases within the Commonwealth to dismiss or refuse to award available remedies when law has been broken but no harm done. In line with verdicts such as
ToadKing v. Commonwealth [2025] FCR 106 and the Learned Justice Smallfries4’s dissenting opinion in zLost v. Commonwealth [2025] SCR 10, the Court must consider whether applying extreme measures in cases of minor error would, in fact, do more harm than solely recognising the error in abstract.

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 24th day of October 2025

 
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The defence will call AmityBlamity as a witness.
 
Pursuant to Rule 3.3 (Amendment to Complaint), the Plaintiff amends the Complaint as follows:

II. FACTS

14. Since confirmation, and as of 25 October 2025, Judge AmityBlamity has presided over and/or made rulings in eight concluded Federal Court cases:
15. As of 25 October 2025, Judge AmityBlamity currently has presides over five active Federal Court cases:
16. The Commonwealth has taken no action to remedy this violation despite the clear language of Section 5(3) that non-disclosure "shall disqualify the nominee from consideration."


III. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF

3. Undermining Judicial Integrity​

The harm is not merely theoretical - it is extensive and ongoing. Since their illegal confirmation, Judge AmityBlamity has:
  • Presided over four and/or made rulings in eight cases that could potentially be subject to appeal on grounds of judicial illegitimacy
  • Currently presides over five active cases where parties are being denied their right to appear before a legally confirmed judge
Every one of these eleven cases is now tainted by the defect in Judge AmityBlamity's appointment. The parties in Dartanboy v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 101, Nimq_ v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 92, and Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32 may reasonably seek to appeal their verdicts on the grounds that the presiding judge was never legally confirmed.

The parties in DeltaruneTMRW v. Culls [2025] FCR 111, Vendeka Inc. and Pepecuu v. Department of Commerce [2025] FCR 107, KingBOB99878 v. truffleboy123 [2025] FCR 104, Gribble19 v. The Exchange Inc [2025] FCR 102, and 12700k v jb4bass [2025] FCR 93, and Pepecuu v MattTheSavvy [2025] FCR 100 are currently litigating before a judge who should have been disqualified from consideration.


IV. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

3. Order that the five active cases currently assigned to Judge AmityBlamity be immediately reassigned to other Federal Court judges;


These amendments are made to update the previous and current list of cases that Judge AmityBlamity has presided over.
 
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Brief


The Plaintiff respectfully requests clarification from this Honourable Court regarding the application of Court Rules and Procedures Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use) to the citation of case precedent in closing statements.

I. BACKGROUND​

Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use) states:
All material used in legal arguments must have either been included in the case prior to the submission. Material must have been included within the complaint, within the answer, within an amendment to a complaint, within an amendment to an answer, or within a discovery submission. Otherwise the material will be deemed inadmissible and the argument can be voided by the presiding judge.
Two Federal Court cases of this year have produced seemingly conflicting interpretations of this rule as it applies to the citation of case precedent in closing statements.

II. THE CONFLICT​

1. FlyingBlocks v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 1​

In FlyingBlocks v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 1, the Plaintiff objected to the Defendant's closing statement for citing case precedent:
Breach of Procedure
The plaintiff requests permission to further respond to the new precedent which the defence has used in it's closing statement and not previously mentioned throughout discovery or opening statements.

Otherwise, the plaintiff requests that it be struck.
The Defendant responded:
Your honor, it is not a breach of procedure to present legal arguments including precedent. It is on the plaintiff for not having researched the case enough to find the precedent themselves and counter it — this is not new evidence, it is public record that we incorporated into our argument.
The presiding judge overruled the objection, stating:
It is no fault of the Defense that the Plaintiff failed to consider case precedent available to the public.
Their closing statement will not be struck, and this trial is hereby in recess pending verdict.
This ruling suggests that case precedent, being public record, may be cited in closing statements without prior disclosure.

2. Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32​

In Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32, the judge addressed a closing statement that "cited 12 unique and previously unmentioned cases to develop novel defences."

The presiding judge ruled:
Defendant's Closing Statement used facts not disclosed in Discovery and cited 12 unique and previously unmentioned cases to develop novel defenses. The facts which weren't brought up in Discovery or prior will be disregarded pursuant to Court Rules and Procedures Rule 4.2. As for the legal arguments raised, I'm granting Plaintiff 72 hours to submit a brief responding to them. If you need more time, please request an extension before the deadline.

Finally, with respect to what was mentioned in the prior paragraph, Defendant's prior counsel is warned to avoid ambushing opposing parties in the future. The arguments you present may not necessarily be faulty, but if they are, they can not be challenged if they're presented in a way that disallows the opposing party a response. The Court recognizes that this was likely a mistake and not intentional, but it will not be tolerated in the future.
This ruling suggests that citing previously unmentioned case precedent in closing statements violates Rule 4.2 and requires allowing the opposing party additional time to respond.

III. REQUEST FOR CLARIFICATION​

The Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court clarify whether, under a proper interpretation of Court Rules and Procedures Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use):
  1. May parties cite case precedent in their closing statements without having introduced those cases during the complaint, answer, or discovery phases?
  2. If case precedent may be cited without prior disclosure, are there any limitations on this practice?
  3. If case precedent cited in closing statements was not previously disclosed, must the presiding judge grant the opposing party additional time to respond?

 

Brief


The Plaintiff respectfully requests clarification from this Honourable Court regarding the application of Court Rules and Procedures Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use) to the citation of case precedent in closing statements.

I. BACKGROUND​

Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use) states:

Two Federal Court cases of this year have produced seemingly conflicting interpretations of this rule as it applies to the citation of case precedent in closing statements.

II. THE CONFLICT​

1. FlyingBlocks v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 1​

In FlyingBlocks v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 1, the Plaintiff objected to the Defendant's closing statement for citing case precedent:

The Defendant responded:

The presiding judge overruled the objection, stating:

This ruling suggests that case precedent, being public record, may be cited in closing statements without prior disclosure.

2. Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32​

In Vanguard & Co v. Naezaratheus [2025] FCR 32, the judge addressed a closing statement that "cited 12 unique and previously unmentioned cases to develop novel defences."

The presiding judge ruled:

This ruling suggests that citing previously unmentioned case precedent in closing statements violates Rule 4.2 and requires allowing the opposing party additional time to respond.

III. REQUEST FOR CLARIFICATION​

The Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court clarify whether, under a proper interpretation of Court Rules and Procedures Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use):
  1. May parties cite case precedent in their closing statements without having introduced those cases during the complaint, answer, or discovery phases?
  2. If case precedent may be cited without prior disclosure, are there any limitations on this practice?
  3. If case precedent cited in closing statements was not previously disclosed, must the presiding judge grant the opposing party additional time to respond?

What relevancy does asking about closing statements have to the context of the trial we are currently in? This seems irrelevant, and an attempt to summon from us a dispositive ruling on an issue that is not before this court.
 
What relevancy does asking about closing statements have to the context of the trial we are currently in? This seems irrelevant, and an attempt to summon from us a dispositive ruling on an issue that is not before this court.
The Plaintiff will rely on this ruling when drafting his closing statement, and seeks clarification whether to introduce case precedent directly beforehand, or if it shall be permitted in the closing statement.
 
The Plaintiff will rely on this ruling when drafting his closing statement, and seeks clarification whether to introduce case precedent directly beforehand, or if it shall be permitted in the closing statement.
"Material" as written within rule 4.2 refers to facts, evidence, and testimony generally. Statutes, the Constitution, rulings by sitting judicial officers, and the law generally exist in the realm of public knowledge and therefore do not need to be affirmatively presented during discovery before presentation, as they exist already within the context of the courts themselves.

However, it is unwise (and perhaps uncouth) to present novel cases and revelations of law at the end of a case or argument, especially when opposing counsel has limited or no ability to respond. New cases and precedent introduced without prior discussion should tend towards supporting an argument already made, not creating a new argument. All arguments produced are to the benefit of the trier of fact—the Judge. Ambushing opposing counsel with new information where they cannot respond is not helpful if the Judge sees this tactic and believes that the ambushing party's point is weak due to their fear of response.

Parties should ensure they act in good faith when presenting their case. Clever tricks of timing and last-minute smoking guns do not advance justice and are not helpful in courts of law, and are more the realm of childlike "gotchyas" and grade-school debate. Your efforts in court should promote your own view and the truth, not obscure the truth or burden the other side from promoting their own view.
 
The Defence will amend our Answer to Complaint from:

14. DENY the list of cases completed under Her Honour; it is incomplete.
15. DENY the list of Her Honour’s active cases; it is incomplete.

To:

14. AFFIRM the list of cases completed under Her Honour up to October 25th.
15. AFFIRM the list of Her Honour’s active cases up to October 25th.
 
The Plaintiff is content to end Discovery if the Defence are.
 
Defence is content to end Discovery.
 
At this time, the Plaintiff (@ToadKing) shall have seventy-two hours to file an opening statement.
 

Opening Statement


Before addressing the merits, I want to acknowledge and thank this Court for its thoughtful clarification regarding Rule 4.2 and the citation of case precedent. I understand the Court's guidance that while case law exists in the realm of public knowledge and need not be disclosed during discovery, presenting novel legal arguments at the last minute does not serve justice and burdens opposing counsel's ability to respond effectively. I accept this principle wholeheartedly.

With that said, let me turn to the substance of this case.

This case comes before this court with a rare clarity. The facts are not in dispute. The Defence has affirmed nearly every material fact alleged in the complaint - from the enactment of the Conflict of Interest Standards Act on 23 August 2025, to Judge AmityBlamity's nomination seven days later, to the complete absence of any financial disclosure in her opening statement, to the Senate's confirmation despite this omission. The Defence has affirmed that "Throughout the entire confirmation hearing, which lasted from 30 August through 4 September 2025, no financial disclosure statement was ever provided by the nominee in any form." They've updated their Answer to affirm the full scope of cases affected - eight completed and five active proceedings, thirteen cases in total.

What the Defence seems to contest is not what happened, but whether what happened matters. They characterise the Plaintiff's interpretation that this constitutes "complete failure to comply" as merely one possible reading of the law, rather than its plain and obvious meaning. But when every factual element of a statutory violation has been admitted, calling it an "interpretation" doesn't make the violation disappear.

I. The Law Speaks Candidly​

The Conflict of Interest Standards Act established a mandatory process for, among other roles, judicial confirmations. Section 5 could not be more explicit:
5 - Disclosure Requirements
(1) All nominees for positions covered by this Act must provide a detailed financial disclosure statement, including:
(a) All business ownership interests
(b) All executive officer positions held in the past 3 months
(c) All significant financial investments and assets

Where must this disclosure be made? Section 5(2) answers:
(2) These disclosures must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee’s opening statement.

And what happens if a nominee fails to provide this disclosure? Section 5(3) helpfully provides this very answer:
(3) Failure to provide complete and accurate disclosure shall disqualify the nominee from consideration.

Notice the language chosen. Section 5(1) & 5(2) don't say: "All nominees [...] should provide" or "These disclosures may be made available." It says they "must provide a detailed financial disclosure" and "must be made available to the confirming body." Section 5(3) doesn't say failure "should disqualify" or "may disqualify." It says failure "shall disqualify."

The words "must" and "shall" carry specific legal weight. This Court has previously addressed the distinction between permissive and mandatory language. In xEndeavour v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2024] SCR 11, this Court held that:
"Should" does not create the mandatory requirement of law as the words "shall," "will," "need," "must," and so forth.
The opinion explained this through a simple example:
I explained this in a simple example to former Justice Dartanman. If I tell you that you should eat an apple, it is your choice to eat the apple. If I tell you that you must eat an apple, you are being commanded to eat an apple.

Consider also what "disqualify" means when paired with "shall." A plain English definition of "disqualify" is:
To "declare (someone) ineligible for an office, activity, or competition because of an offence or infringement."
Section 5(3) doesn't say failure "shall provide grounds for disqualification" or "shall authorise disqualification proceedings" - language that would give someone discretion to pursue disqualification or not. It says failure "shall disqualify" - active voice, present tense, automatic operation. The statute itself performs the disqualification. The moment a nominee fails to provide complete and accurate disclosure, Section 5(3) operates to disqualify them. No additional action is required. No one needs to invoke the provision. The disqualification happens by operation of law.

The Defence has affirmed that Judge AmityBlamity provided zero financial disclosure in her opening statement. Under Section 5(2), she must have provided it. She didn't. Under Section 5(3), that failure shall disqualify her from consideration. It did. Once disqualified, she could not be validly confirmed, because you cannot confirm someone who has been rendered ineligible by statute. The Senate's vote doesn't override statutory disqualification any more than a Senate vote could confirm someone who doesn't meet mandatory playtime requirements.

The language in Section 5 is not an accident, not an oversight, and not mere emphasis. Those words were deliberately chosen to create mandatory, non-waivable requirements with clear automatic consequences. "Must" creates a mandatory requirement. "Shall" creates a mandatory consequence. Together, they create a mandatory legal framework that no one - not the nominee, not the Senate, not this Court - has authority to override.

The Defence might argue this is simply one interpretation. But there is no ambiguity here. The statute establishes a requirement. The requirement was not met. The statute specifies a consequence. That consequence - disqualification - necessarily followed.

II. Addressing the Defence's Arguments​

1. The Irrelevance of Actual Conflicts​

The Defence emphasises that Judge AmityBlamity has no actual conflicts of interest. They will likely offer her testimony to establish this point. The Court should acknowledge this testimony and then set it aside as legally irrelevant to the question before you.

Section 5 establishes two distinct mechanisms. Section 4 lists specific conflicts that prohibit serving in a specified role: Business Ownership Conflicts, Corporate Executive Conflicts, Legal Practice Conflicts, and Financial Conflicts. If someone has these conflicts and serves anyway, they violate Section 4. But Section 5 creates a separate requirement: the mandatory disclosure process. This process exists precisely because the confirming body - the Senate - cannot evaluate whether Section 4 conflicts exist without the information Section 5 requires them to receive.

The Defence's argument will likely amount to: "We broke the law, but it turned out okay, so the violation doesn't matter." But whether Judge AmityBlamity has conflicts is not the question before this Court. The question is whether someone who provided no mandatory disclosure, in violation of the clear mandatory requirement for said disclosure, can validly hold judicial office. The answer must be no. To hold otherwise would mean Section 5 is merely advisory - that compliance is optional so long as you can prove after the fact that you had nothing to hide.

This cannot be the law. The Act established the disclosure requirement for a purpose: to ensure the Senate has the information necessary to evaluate nominees before confirmation, not to create a meaningless formality that can be ignored. The absence of any actual conflicts does not cure the statutory violation that rendered Judge AmityBlamity ineligible for consideration in the first place.

2. This Court's Precedent on Procedural Violations​

The Defence claims this Court has "repeatedly refused to consider removal, even in similar situations of alleged technical error." That's simply not true. This Court has a clear and consistent record of removing individuals from office when the process by which they obtained that office violated mandatory legal requirements.

Start with Prodigium & Partners at Law v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2021] SCR 1. Congress passed constitutional amendments expanding both the House and Senate, adding new seats to each chamber. Supermajorities in both chambers. Presidential Assent. Every box appeared checked. But the Constitution required a public referendum to be posted within 48 hours, and this simply didn't happen. The amendments were being enforced, and legislators were sitting in the newly created seats, able to submit and vote on bills; able to exercise their power.

This Court could have found the referendum requirement merely procedural. Instead, this Court held that mandatory constitutional procedures must be followed. Two Representatives and two Senators were removed from office as a result. These people had done nothing wrong. They'd been validly elected to seats that existed under enacted amendments. But the amendments themselves were unconstitutional because proper procedure wasn't followed, which meant the seats were invalid, which meant the legislators had to go.

When mandatory procedures for creating an office are violated, the resulting office cannot stand, regardless of whether the occupants themselves bear any fault. The Conflict of Interest Standards Act established mandatory procedures for confirming judges. Those procedures weren't followed. The principle of [2021] SCR 1 applies directly.

Consider the case of The Patriotic Coalition of Redmont v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] SCR 1. The House election was conducted according to proper timing and format. But when the Department of State counted the votes, they miscounted. Two candidates who should have won - McBrittle147 and bigpappa140 - lost. Two candidates who should have lost - zLost and RylandW - were declared winners and seated in Congress. They took office and exercised legislative power.

The Commonwealth admitted the error. The Defence could have argued that a recount was sufficient, or that the Representatives should serve out their terms since the error wasn't their fault. This Court removed them anyway. The Representatives who obtained office through a defective process - even one they had no role in creating - were replaced with the rightful winners. When someone obtains office through a process that fails to follow mandatory requirements, the legitimacy of that office is fundamentally compromised. Judge AmityBlamity bears no personal blame for the Senate's failure to ask for disclosure. But to be clear about what Section 5 actually requires. It doesn't say "the Senate must demand disclosure." It says the nominee "must provide" disclosure. Section 5(2) places the obligation squarely on the nominee: "These disclosures must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee's opening statement." The nominee must provide them. Not "the Senate must request them" or "disclosure should be provided if asked." The statute makes the nominee responsible for ensuring disclosure happens.

Finally, in Kycnn1703 v. Department of State [2022] SCR 8, the Oakridge town constitution established clear requirements for mayoral candidates: active in the Oakridge community, on Oakridge's Discord, on the forums, with experience in town government. WackJap and Deadwax didn't meet these requirements. The Department of State, responsible for administering the election, placed them on the ballot anyway. They won and became mayor and deputy mayor.

The Department of State argued that "being an active part of the community is not limited to the Oakridge community" - that federal activity should count. This Court rejected that interpretation. Town constitutional requirements "only apply to the district in which the constitution holds authority." More importantly, "the Department of State is obliged to follow the election laws and requirements set forth by the applicable town Constitution" and "does not have the authority to bypass town election laws and requirements."

WackJap and Deadwax were removed from office. They won a legitimate election by vote count and served as mayor and deputy mayor. But they should never have been on the ballot in the first place. The Department of State's failure to enforce eligibility requirements meant their election was invalid from the start. The Senate had a statutory obligation under Section 5(2) to receive financial disclosure in the opening statement. They failed to require it. Judge AmityBlamity should never have been confirmed - just as WackJap and Deadwax should never have been on the ballot. The Senate's failure to enforce the requirement doesn't validate an invalid confirmation.

Three cases. Three different scenarios. One consistent principle: when mandatory procedures are violated in obtaining office, removal is the appropriate remedy. It doesn't matter whether the violation involves constitutional amendments, election miscounts, or failure to enforce eligibility requirements. In each case, individuals were removed not because they personally did anything wrong, but because the process by which they obtained office violated mandatory legal requirements.

The Defence would try to distinguish these cases on the ground that Judge AmityBlamity's confirmation involved only a "technical error." None of these were malicious acts. All were "technical" in the sense that they involved procedural requirements rather than substantive qualifications. Yet this Court removed individuals in every single case. Why should Judge AmityBlamity be treated differently?

There is no ambiguity whatsoever. Section 5(2) states that disclosures "must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee's opening statement." No interpretation makes zero disclosure comply with this requirement. The Defence has affirmed that "throughout the entire confirmation hearing, which lasted from 30 August through 4 September 2025, no financial disclosure statement was ever provided by the nominee in any form." This is not a matter of following procedures imperfectly, tardily, or under a reasonable misapprehension. It is full non-compliance with a statutory requirement that uses mandatory verbiage: failure to disclose "shall disqualify."

3. The Question of Alternative Remedies​

The Defence argues the Plaintiff should have pursued other avenues before filing this lawsuit. Let me address each suggested alternative.

First, impeachment. The Defence suggests the Plaintiff could have notified Congress of potential impeachment proceedings. But impeachment is fundamentally a political process. The Impeachment Act makes this explicit in Section 2(1):
2 - Reasons
(1) The impeachment process is a political one internal to the legislature. The Courts should not be intervening in the process.
Impeachment exists to address officials who have committed "serious constitutional offences". That's not what is alleged here.

The Plaintiff does not argue that Judge AmityBlamity committed a crime. She didn't violate the Constitution through nondisclosure. She failed to provide mandatory disclosure during her confirmation hearing, which rendered her disqualified under Section 5(3). Asking Congress to impeach someone for a defect in their confirmation process would be asking them to rectify their own error through a political trial. The impeachment process requires a supermajority in both the House to bring charges and the Senate to convict - the same Senate that confirmed Judge AmityBlamity despite the disclosure violation. The political nature of impeachment makes it precisely the wrong forum for determining whether a statutory disqualification occurred.

Second, the Department of Justice. The Defence suggests notifying the DOJ about this "breach of procedure." The Conflict of Interest Standards Act did create a criminal offence - "False Financial Disclosure" under the Criminal Code Act. But that offence requires someone to "knowingly provide false, incomplete, or misleading information" or "willfully omit material information." This is a mens rea offence requiring proof of knowledge and intent.

More importantly, even if the DOJ had prosecuted this offence, such a prosecution would come before... this Court. Criminal prosecutions that result in removal from office are heard by the Supreme Court. We would end up right here, except via criminal process rather than civil. The criminal offence focuses on punishing false disclosure, not on remedying defective confirmations. The appropriate penalty listed in the statute is "disqualification from holding a position covered in §3 of the Conflicts of Interest Standards Act, for up to 2 months" - a temporary ban. But the issue before this Court is not punishment; it's whether someone who was disqualified under Section 5(3) can hold office at all.

Third, the Defence vaguely references "any number of other available avenues" without identifying what these might be. The Constitution, under Section 20(1)(a), gives this Court original jurisdiction over "removing and/or banning individuals from public office". This court has explicitly held in Plura72 v. Realimza [2025] SCR 17:
We have made it abundantly clear at this point that we, the Supreme Court of Redmont, may only remove an individual from office using our constitutional powers under limited circumstances. These include if the State is prosecuting a crime, or if there was an alleged defect, mistake, or otherwise illegitimate background to the defendant's obtaining the office that the plaintiff is asking us to remove the defendant from.
That is precisely the situation before you. A nominee who was statutorily disqualified was nevertheless confirmed - that is a defect in obtaining office. This Court is not merely an appropriate forum for addressing this issue; it is the constitutionally designated forum.

The Plaintiff authored the Conflict of Interest Standards Act. He understands its purpose and intended operation. When he saw the Act he wrote being violated, he brought this case to the Court with proper jurisdiction to address it. The Defence's argument about alternative remedies is not really a defence at all - it's a suggestion that someone else should have fixed this problem. But this is the right case, in the right court, brought by a plaintiff with standing. The Defence's discomfort with that fact doesn't make it wrong.

4. This Is Not De Minimis​

Finally, the Defence seems to imply this is merely a "trifling matter," a "technical error in administration that [does] no harm." They invoke the doctrine of de minimis and cite two cases: ToadKing v. Commonwealth [2025] FCR 106 and the dissenting opinion in zLost v. Commonwealth [2025] SCR 10. Let me address each.

[2025] FCR 106 involved a dispute over the timing of Executive Orders awarding state honours. The Plaintiff argued the President violated the State Commendations Act by issuing honours after a presidential election concluded, rather than "in the last two weeks before a Presidential Election." The Federal Court dismissed that case on multiple grounds, including that the Plaintiff lacked standing and that the alleged violation was "minor and not worth judicial intervention."

That case is fundamentally different from the matter before you. In [2025] FCR 106, the dispute mostly centred on interpreting when an "election" begins for purposes of calculating a two-week window. The Court found the violation too ambiguous and too inconsequential to justify intervention. The honours had been awarded. Nobody's rights were violated. The proper functioning of government was not impaired.

Here, by contrast, we have a clear statutory requirement. Section 5(2) says disclosure "must be made available to the confirming body in the nominee's opening statement." There is no ambiguity about when an opening statement occurs or what it must contain. The Defence has affirmed that no disclosure was provided. And the consequences are not trivial - the proper functioning of the judiciary depends on judges being confirmed according to law. Thirteen cases have been affected. We're not talking about the timing of ceremonial honours; we're talking about whether someone who was disqualified by statute can exercise judicial power over citizens.

The Defence also cites Justice Smallfries' dissenting opinion in [2025] SCR 10. That case involved the appointment of an individual to the position of Secretary for the Department of Public Affairs, who allegedly did not meet requirements laid out in executive policy. The Plaintiff sought to have the appointment undone.

Let me explain why that case, far from supporting the Defence's position, actually reinforces why removal is appropriate here.

The critical distinction is the nature of the violated requirement. In [2025] SCR 10, the requirements at issue came from executive policy - internal administrative guidelines created by the executive branch itself. Executive policies are not laws passed by Congress. They don't carry the force of statute. When the executive branch creates its own policies and then decides whether to enforce them, courts properly exercise restraint. The political branches have wide latitude in managing their own internal affairs.

This case involves something fundamentally different: a violation of statutory law. The Conflict of Interest Standards Act is not executive policy. It is an Act of Congress, passed by the House and the Senate, and enacted into law. When Congress establishes mandatory requirements using statutory language, such as "disclosures must be made" and "shall disqualify," those requirements carry the full force of law. The executive branch cannot waive them. The Senate cannot ignore them. And courts cannot treat them as merely advisory.

Moreover, [2025] SCR 10 dealt with an appointment to a Cabinet position - a purely political role within the executive branch, where the President has broad discretion over appointments. The Secretary serves at the pleasure of the President and can be removed at will. Federal Court Judges, by contrast, are judicial officers who exercise the sovereign power to interpret law and adjudicate disputes. The judiciary is a co-equal branch of government. Judicial appointments require Senate confirmation precisely because judges don't serve at anyone's pleasure - they serve until removed through constitutional processes or until they resign.

The stakes are also vastly different. If the Secretary in [2025] SCR 10 was improperly appointed, the remedy is simple: the President can appoint someone else at any time. No judicial decisions are tainted. No verdicts need to be questioned. But when a judge is improperly confirmed, every decision they make carries the shadow of illegitimacy. The Defence has affirmed that Judge AmityBlamity has presided over thirteen cases. Every party in those cases can ask: "Did I have my day in court before a properly confirmed judge?"

Even accepting the dissent's framework in [2025] SCR 10 - that courts should exercise restraint and avoid "extreme measures" for "minor errors" - this case falls outside that framework. Justice Smallfries' dissent argued for recognising errors without imposing severe remedies when the error is truly minor and causes no real harm. But what makes an error "minor"? An error is minor when it violates only internal policy rather than statutory law. An error is minor when it affects political appointees who serve at will rather than judicial officers who exercise sovereign power. An error is minor when it can be easily corrected without calling into question official acts already taken.

None of those factors favours the Defence here. This is a statutory violation using mandatory language. It affects a judicial officer whose cases are now tainted. And it cannot be corrected without removing Judge AmityBlamity from office, because the statute doesn't permit "curing" a disqualification after confirmation has occurred. Section 5(3) states that failure to disclose "shall disqualify the nominee from consideration" - not "shall disqualify the nominee unless she's already been confirmed and might be doing a good job."

If anything, [2025] SCR 10 should make the Defence's position harder, not easier. If an executive policy violation regarding a political appointee warranted judicial consideration (even if ultimately dismissed), surely a statutory violation regarding a judicial officer warrants the remedy the statute itself prescribes: disqualification.


III. Conclusion​

The Defence might ask you to exercise restraint, to find that this violation doesn't warrant removal; to treat Section 5(3) as merely advisory despite its mandatory language. But this Court's role is not to determine whether Congress chose the right remedy when it wrote "shall disqualify." This Court's role is to apply the law as written.

The law is clear. Judge AmityBlamity failed to provide the required disclosure. That failure triggered a statutory disqualification under Section 5(3). A disqualified nominee cannot be validly confirmed. The confirmation was therefore defective, and Judge AmityBlamity obtained her office through a process that violated statutory law.

This Court has removed individuals from office for procedural defects before. It did so in [2021] SCR 1 when constitutional amendments failed to follow proper procedure. It did so in [2025] SCR 1 when an election was miscounted. It did so in [2022] SCR 8 when eligibility requirements weren't enforced. The principle is the same here: when mandatory procedures are violated, the resulting office cannot stand.

The Defence has affirmed the facts. The law establishes the consequence. All that remains is for this Court to apply that consequence and reaffirm that in Redmont, even the process of confirming judges must follow the law.

Thank you.

 
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