Appeal: Pending [2026] FCR 32a - Appeal

MJL

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MJL_
MJL_
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Brief


IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
Brief - INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL

Sergeant__Balls and Loose_Leaf_,
Appellants

v.

Hon. Magistrate Muggy21,
Appellee

On 29 April, ko531 v. Incarnation__ & Jakkuwu_ et. al [2026] FCR 32a was filed by ko531 against Incarnation__ and Jakkuwu_ ("initial parties"). The initial parties did not include the Appellants, but they were added in a Motion to Amend on 9 May (Post #45).

Since then, various procedural errors have denied the Appellants their constitutional rights. As the cases for each of my clients (the Appellants) diverge somewhat in their facts, I will introduce them separately. Needless to say, the case of one is more extreme than the other. Both, however, seek the same relief.

Appellant One. Sergeant__Balls.
The case against Sergeant__Balls ("Appellant 1") is easily one of the grossest misuses of the legal process of our time. I do not say that lightly. Let us start by examining how Appellant 1 was brought into this case.

I. STAFF-2
During the case with the initial parties, ko531 ("Plaintiff") filed a motion to compel which resulted in the submission of evidence since labeled Staff-2. Both appellants were found to be within Staff-2, and this gave cause for the Plaintiff to amend his complaint to enjoin appellants to the case.

Here is the entirety of Appellant 1's appearance in Staff-2:
> 9.91/d ago + Sergeant__Balls picked up x1 kelp. (x1390/y70/z1991/Reveille)
> 9.91/d ago + Sergeant__Balls picked up x1 paper. (x1390/y70/z1989/Reveille)

As can be seen are two very critical facts.

(1) Appellant 1 only picked up 2 items. These items were, according to Plaintiff's own estimations, were of a value of less than $100. Appellant 1 should never have been enjoined to a federal court case with compensatory damages this low. Plaintiff never made any attempt to retrieve the items from Appellant 1, and he refused any settlement negotiations made in good faith by myself.

(2) The coordinates shown in the logs demonstrate Appellant 1 only had access to Plaintiff's property where it was open to the public. Fact 3 of the amended complaint states, "The block located at 1381, -30, 1969 was broken by Incarnation__ given Jakkuwu, Loose_Leaf_ and Sergeant Balls access to my buffs (P-007, P-002, Staff-1 and Staff-2)" However, Plaintiff's own evidence demonstrates this is factually untrue. It is further shown with Exhibit D-L01 submitted by Appellants in their answer to the amended complaint.

The facts for Appellant 1 show no care was taken as to whether to enjoin him to this case by not examining the evidence thoroughly enough.

It should also be noted, in the next section, it will be shown he made to have (jointly with the other appellant) $536,000 in assets frozen. This is for a product with a value less than $100 according to the plaintiff; though it is disputed how much less.

II. Emergency Injunction (Appellant 1)
To only make the situation worse, Plaintiff filed to have $536,000 in Appellant 1's (jointly with Appellant 2) assets frozen less than a minute after I made my first post to the case. This was initially granted in less than 3 minutes by Appellee before he was even issued a summons (Post #49) but later stayed after he realized his mistake.

During sidebar, I was instructed to make a response to the motion for emergency injunction and did so promptly in Post #62. The emergency injunction was then pending for five additional days.

However, Appellee granted the motion for an emergency injunction once again. This was not after a motion for reconsideration, but because the previous grant was stayed. I am not aware of any judicial decision done like this but did my best to follow judicial instructions.

Regardless, this EI was not necessary to prevent harm per the standard set by Commonwealth v. Bardiya_King [2023] SCR 23. $536,880 in assets were already frozen by the court. That represents the full amount of that could be awarded in compensatory damages (Post #7). Why did the appellee feel the need to freeze an additional $536,880 in assets from the appellants? It is unreasonable and only has prevented them from engaging in lawful business dealings.

Neither of the appellants have anywhere close to $536,800 in assets. They each one a single residential plot for housing. Neither had plans to sell their houses, so a court order preventing them from doing so was not an issue. However, each engages in a variety of business dealings which they can no longer engage in due to the freeze in their assets. This has been detrimental to their motivation as entrepreneurs and likely resulted in them having less assets for the Plaintiff to recover than if their assets were left unfrozen due to their inability to invest in their companies with personal funds.

As stated by Justice Matthew100x in his grant of an emergency injunction, "Accordingly, the applicable balancing standard is clear. This Court must craft a narrow remedy that does not broadly dictate what the non-moving party may or may not do." (RiggoSoft V. Dimitre977 [2026] DCR 25; further reading: INTERLOCUTORY MasterCaelen v. Hon. Magistrate Dr_Eksplosive [2026] FCR 14.) It is simply argued that Appellee's ruling failed that standard.

III. Failure to State Claim (Appellant 1)
Please see "II. Failure to State Claim (Appellant 2)" which is incorporated here by reference.

Appellant Two. Loose_Leaf_.
While the case for Loose_Leaf_ ("Appellant 2") is not as extreme as Appellant 1, he still has been deprived of his constitutional rights all the same.

I. Emergency Injunction (Appellant 2)
Please see "II. Emergency Injunction (Appellant 1)" which is incorporated here by reference.

II. Failure to State Claim (Appellant 2)
Both Appellant 2 and Appellant 1 were deprived of their due process rights following an erroneous grant by Appellee to allow him to amend his complaint after discovery.

Both Rule 3.3 (Amendment to Complaint) and Rule 3.7 (Mandatory Time for Amending an Answer) make it clear amendments are meant to be entertained during the course of discovery. This follows the established legal principles of ensuring that the defence can fully answer any complaint made by a plaintiff (See Gnomewhisperer and GnomeCorp v Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 47 which denied a motion to amend meant to overcome a motion to dismiss for lack of standing; DocTheory v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2025] FCR 42 where an objection on procedure was sustained preventing plaintiff from amending complaint to add a witness after discovery).

In the common law country of the United States, the standard used for these types of matters can be found in Foman v. Davis (371 U.S. 178). Among other things, US federal courts do not grant post-deadline amendments to complaints where it would be prejudice to the opposing party. I see no compelling reason (or conflicting precedent in our own common law system) why this standard would not applied in my case. Granting the motion to amend prejudices my pending motion to dismiss (Post #106). If allowed, there would be no appropriate time for a party to motion to dismiss for lack of claim. That this particular amendment was granted after discover closed also means that I cannot amend my own answer to the complaint per Rule 3.7.

Concluding Matters
(1) Grounds for Interlocutory Appeal. As demonstrated this meets the criteria for interlocutory appeals under the Judicial Standards Act. There is a clear legal mistake present in these decisions by the appellee. This error substantially impacts the the fairness or accuracy of the ongoing proceedings. If the matter is left delayed to final resolution, it would cause irreparable harm.

(2) Prayer for Relief.
(a) Declaratory Relief. The Appellants request that the Supreme Court declare:
(i) That the Federal Court's Emergency Injunction to be overbroad and cause more harm to the Appellants than (a) is necessary for preventing harm to the Plaintiff, and (b) than would be prevented by issuing the Emergency Injunction in the first place;
(ii) That the Federal Court granting of a Motion to Amend Complaint following the end of discovery to be unlawful.
(b) Other Relief. Any further equitable, monetary, or injunctive relief as the Supreme Court may see fit to enter, including legal fees if applicable.

 

Motion


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

As stated in my brief above, the emergency injunction above is causing my clients immediate and unnecessary harm. They cannot rent or purchase properties, invest in their commercial enterprises, or conduct regular business dealings. They need to be able to rent properties to sell their goods, but they have not been able to do despite the largest market of customers recently coming to the server.

Please, just free them from this burdensome emergency injunction. There is not justified reason to maintain it, and it only prevents them from building wealth (which helps no one).

 
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