Lawsuit: In Session Singeheart, Addams and Associates V hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68

Aelia_SingeH3art

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CASE FILING
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

CIVIL ACTION

Singeheart, Addams and Associates
Plaintiff

v.

Wallavan Donovan and hadethegod
Defendants

COMPLAINT

The Plaintiff complains against the Defendants as follows:

WRITTEN STATEMENT FROM THE PLAINTIFF

I. PARTIES

1. Plaintiff Singeheart, Addams and Associates is a law firm operating within the Commonwealth of Redmont.
2. Plaintiff is represented in this action by Aelia Singeheart.
3. Defendant Wallavan Donovan is an individual who had access to company funds belonging to the Plaintiff.
4. Defendant hadethegod is an individual who received funds originating from the Plaintiff and is alleged to have knowingly retained and benefited from those funds.

II. FACTS

1. On June 1, 2026, at approximately 4:25 AM EST, Defendant Wallavan Donovan transferred funds belonging to Singeheart, Addams and Associates without authorization.
2. The transferred funds were sent directly to Defendant hadethegod's buisness HL-Bank.
3. Plaintiff did not authorize the transfer of these funds.
4. Prior to the transfer, Defendant Wallavan Donovan expressed dissatisfaction regarding not receiving equity or ownership within the Plaintiff's firm.
5. Plaintiff alleges that the transfer was carried out in retaliation for the firm's refusal to provide Defendant Wallavan Donovan with equity in the business.
6. Plaintiff further alleges that both Defendants made derogatory and misogynistic remarks regarding the firm's status as a woman-led organization.
7. After receiving the funds, Defendant hadethegod retained possession of the funds and failed to return them to the Plaintiff.
8. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant hadethegod subsequently utilized funds originating from the Plaintiff to place bounties against Aelia Singeheart and engage in continued harassment.
9. As a direct result of the Defendants' actions, Plaintiff suffered financial loss, disruption to business operations, and additional damages arising from the loss and misuse of company funds.

III. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF

1. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Wallavan Donovan wrongfully removed company funds without authorization.
2. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant hadethegod knowingly received and retained funds belonging to the Plaintiff.
3. Plaintiff alleges that both Defendants acted together to deprive the Plaintiff of lawful ownership and control of company property.
4. Plaintiff alleges that the actions of the Defendants constitute Fraud, Embezzlement, Aggravated Theft, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime, Concealment of Criminal Proceeds, Accomplice Liability, Market Manipulation, and False Credentials under DemocracyCraft law.
5. Plaintiff seeks all civil remedies available as a result of these actions.

IV. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

The Plaintiff seeks the following relief from the Defendants:

1. Full restitution of all funds transferred from Singeheart, Addams and Associates.
2. Joint and several liability against both Defendants for the full amount of damages suffered by the Plaintiff.
3. Interest on all unpaid amounts at a rate deemed appropriate by the Court, or as otherwise permitted by law.
4. Compensation for losses resulting from the misuse of company funds and subsequent harassment.
5. Court costs, filing fees, and any other expenses incurred in bringing this action.
6. Any further relief that the Court deems just and proper.

WITNESSES

1. Aelia Singeheart (Aelia_SingeH3art)
2. Morticia Addams (morticiaaa)
3. unalign (unalign)

EVIDENCE

1. Transaction logs showing the transfer of company funds.
2. Screenshots and records showing receipt of funds by hadethegod.
3. Any statements demonstrating retaliatory intent, conspiracy, or misogynistic conduct.

DAMAGES SOUGHT

$55,000, plus interest and costs.

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 2nd day of June 2026.
 

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Motion

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

The plaintiff requests that all of Hadethegod, HL-Bank and Wallavan Donovan’s assets be frozen for the remainder of this case and that the Department of commerce does not liquidate them for the remainder of this case, doing so could harm the Plaintiffs reputation and can be used for continued Harassment.
 

Writ of Summons

@hadethegod & @Wallavan Donovan is required to appear before the District Court in the case of Singeheart, Addams and Associates V hadethegod et. al., [2026] DCR 68.

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.

 
Your Honor, I will be representing hadethegod and Wallavan.

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Motion





IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68

MOTION TO DISMISS

Your Honor,

Defendants hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank, by counsel, move under Rule 5.5 (Lack of Claim), and pursuant to Rule 5.3 as to defective claims for relief, to dismiss the Complaint in whole or in part.

The Defence also requests that the deadline to file an Answer be tolled pending resolution of this Motion, or, in the alternative, that the Court confirm whether an Answer remains due while this Motion is pending. If the Motion is denied in whole or in part, the Defence requests 48 hours from the Court’s ruling to file an Answer and any counterclaims permitted under Rule 3.9.

I. STANDARD

Rule 5.5 permits dismissal for failure to state a claim for relief, or where a claim has insufficient support for the charge asserted. Rule 5.1 requires this Motion to apply the rule using law, case facts, evidence, or prior decisions.

Where Plaintiff seeks civil damages arising from alleged criminal conduct, the pleaded facts must support the criminal conduct alleged. The Redmont Civil Code Act, Part III, Section 1 applies its damages rules to claims for civil damages arising from criminal conduct. The listed offences are governed by the Criminal Code Act.

Civil damages arising from criminal conduct are not criminal sanctions. Plaintiff may not use this civil action to seek criminal punishment, fines, penalties, incarceration, or prosecution. Plaintiff may seek civil relief only if the Complaint pleads facts supporting a legally cognisable claim against each specific Defendant.

This Motion challenges facial pleading defects, not disputed facts. The defects below appear on the face of the Complaint and may be decided without weighing evidence. To the extent the Court considers any Rule 5.5 issue better reserved until the close of discovery, the Defence asks that the Court decide the purely facial defects now and reserve only issues that require discovery.

II. THE COMPLAINT IMPROPERLY GROUPS ALL DEFENDANTS TOGETHER

The operative claim alleges, in a single sentence, that “the actions of the Defendants constitute Fraud, Embezzlement, Aggravated Theft, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime, Concealment of Criminal Proceeds, Accomplice Liability, Market Manipulation, and False Credentials.”

That is an undifferentiated list of offence names, not a properly pleaded claim. The Complaint does not plead the elements of any of the eight offences, does not identify which Defendant committed which offence, and does not separate Wallavan Donovan’s alleged transfer from hadethegod’s alleged receipt or HL-Bank’s alleged role as the business to which funds were sent.

A pleading that groups three Defendants together despite different alleged roles does not state each offence against each Defendant.

III. HL-BANK SHOULD BE DISMISSED

HL-Bank appears in the case title and in the Plaintiff’s emergency motion to freeze assets, but the Complaint pleads no act by HL-Bank itself.

It does not allege that HL-Bank made a misrepresentation, took property, held entrusted assets, concealed proceeds, manipulated a market, claimed a false credential, conspired, or assisted a crime. At most, the Complaint describes HL-Bank as the business to which funds were sent.

A business is not liable merely because funds moved through it. The Complaint pleads no facts showing HL-Bank itself knew the funds were criminal proceeds or took any separate act to conceal, disguise, or convert them. Even assuming HL-Bank is properly named as a Defendant, the Complaint pleads no injury-causing conduct by it. HL-Bank should therefore be dismissed.

IV. hadethegod SHOULD BE DISMISSED

The Complaint’s own facts cast hadethegod only as the alleged recipient. It alleges that Wallavan Donovan transferred the funds and that hadethegod received and retained them. On those facts, no offence is properly pleaded against hadethegod.

Theft and Aggravated Theft require that the accused take property belonging to another without consent. hadethegod is alleged to have received funds, not taken them. With no taking pleaded against him, neither offence attaches.

Embezzlement requires misappropriation of assets entrusted to the accused or coming into their possession by virtue of office, employment, or position of trust. The Complaint does not allege that Plaintiff entrusted anything to hadethegod or that he held any office, employment, or position of trust with Plaintiff.

Concealment of Criminal Proceeds requires concealing, disguising, or converting funds known to be derived from criminal activity. The Complaint’s statement that hadethegod “knowingly received” funds is a conclusion, not a pleaded fact. It pleads no facts showing that hadethegod knew the funds were derived from criminal activity, and no act of concealment, disguise, or conversion separate from mere receipt or retention.

Conspiracy to Commit a Crime and Accomplice to a Crime are not pleaded with facts. The assertion that the Defendants “acted together” pleads no facts showing hadethegod intended to commit any object offence. Receiving funds after a transfer is not assistance in committing the transfer. No offence named “Accomplice Liability” exists in the Criminal Code Act. If Plaintiff intended to plead Accessory to a Crime, it was required to say so and plead facts supporting that offence.

Fraud fails because the Complaint pleads no misrepresentation, omission, reliance, or harm caused by reliance against hadethegod. Market Manipulation and False Credentials fail because the Complaint alleges no public company or public asset value manipulation, no security price or trading-volume conduct, and no credential-based representation.

Because no offence is properly pleaded against hadethegod, all claims against him should be dismissed.

V. THE CLAIMS AGAINST WALLAVAN DONOVAN SHOULD BE NARROWED

For purposes of this Motion only, the Defence acknowledges that the Complaint alleges Wallavan Donovan transferred funds without authorization. At most, that pleads a disputed unauthorized-transfer theory against Wallavan Donovan. It does not plead the remaining offences listed against “the Defendants” collectively.

Fraud fails because the Complaint pleads no misrepresentation, omission, reliance, or harm caused by reliance. Market Manipulation and False Credentials fail because the Complaint alleges no public asset or security-market conduct and no credential-based representation.

Concealment of Criminal Proceeds fails because the Complaint does not plead facts showing that Wallavan Donovan concealed, disguised, or converted funds known to be derived from criminal activity. A transfer alone is not pleaded as concealment, disguise, or conversion of known criminal proceeds.

Conspiracy to Commit a Crime and Accomplice Liability fail because the Complaint pleads no facts showing Wallavan Donovan’s intent to commit any object offence, and no facts showing that he knowingly assisted another person in committing a principal crime. If Plaintiff intended to plead Accessory to a Crime, it was required to say so and plead facts supporting that offence.

To the extent Plaintiff intends to pursue Theft, Aggravated Theft, or Embezzlement against Wallavan Donovan, those are the only theories even arguably connected to the pleaded transfer. Even then, the Complaint does not plead the scope of Wallavan Donovan’s authority, the facts showing the transfer exceeded that authority, or the specific aggravating circumstance relied upon for Aggravated Theft.

Accordingly, any surviving claim against Wallavan Donovan should be limited to the alleged unauthorized-transfer theory actually pleaded.

VI. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

Because the Complaint pleads no legally supported claim against hadethegod or HL-Bank, the Prayer for Relief states no basis for holding either Defendant liable for Plaintiff’s requested damages.

As to Wallavan Donovan, the Defence does not contend that Plaintiff pleads no damages at all. The defect is that the requested relief is tied to an undifferentiated list of criminal offences rather than properly pleaded claims showing which offence was committed by which Defendant and what damages flow from that specific offence.

To the extent Plaintiff seeks criminal punishment, fines, penalties, incarceration, or any other criminal sanction through this civil action, that relief is unavailable and should be rejected.

VII. CONCLUSION

The Defence respectfully requests that the Court:

  1. Dismiss all claims against hadethegod under Rule 5.5;
  2. Dismiss HL-Bank from the case for want of any pleaded claim against it;
  3. Dismiss all unsupported claims against Wallavan Donovan, including Fraud, Market Manipulation, False Credentials, Concealment of Criminal Proceeds, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime, Accomplice Liability, and Aggravated Theft to the extent Plaintiff relies on any aggravating basis other than the alleged value of the transfer;
  4. Limit any surviving claim against Wallavan Donovan to the alleged unauthorized-transfer theory actually pleaded;
  5. Reject any request for criminal punishment, fines, penalties, incarceration, or other criminal sanctions in this civil case;
  6. Toll the deadline to file an Answer pending resolution of this Motion, or confirm whether an Answer remains due while this Motion is pending;
  7. Grant the Defence 48 hours from the Court’s ruling to file an Answer and any counterclaims permitted under Rule 3.9 if the Motion is denied in whole or in part; and
  8. Grant any further relief the Court finds just and proper.


 
Your Honor,

The Defence respectfully requests that the Answer deadline be tolled pending resolution of the Motion to Dismiss above.
 

Answer to Complaint





IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ANSWER TO COMPLAINT


I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT

  1. Defendants DENY each and every allegation not expressly AFFIRMED or DOES NOT CONTEST herein.
  2. Defendants AFFIRM that this civil action was filed by Singeheart, Addams and Associates against hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank.
  3. Defendants DENY that the Complaint properly states claims for Fraud, Embezzlement, Aggravated Theft, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime, Concealment of Criminal Proceeds, Accomplice Liability, Market Manipulation, or False Credentials against all Defendants collectively.
  4. Defendants DENY that hadethegod took property from Plaintiff, embezzled property from Plaintiff, made any misrepresentation to Plaintiff, concealed criminal proceeds, conspired to commit a crime, acted as an accomplice or accessory, committed Market Manipulation, or committed False Credentials.
  5. Defendants DENY that HL-Bank committed any act giving rise to liability in this case. Defendants further DENY that HL-Bank took property, embezzled property, concealed proceeds, conspired, acted as an accomplice or accessory, manipulated a market, claimed false credentials, or made any misrepresentation.
  6. As to Wallavan Donovan, Defendants DENY that the Complaint properly pleads Fraud, Market Manipulation, False Credentials, Concealment of Criminal Proceeds, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime, Accomplice Liability, or any criminal sanction against him.
  7. Defendants DENY that Plaintiff is entitled to criminal punishment, fines, penalties, incarceration, prosecution, or any criminal sanction through this civil action.
  8. Defendants DENY that Plaintiff is entitled to damages from hadethegod or HL-Bank.
  9. Defendants DENY that Plaintiff is entitled to any relief not supported by properly pleaded facts and law.
II. DEFENCES

  1. Failure to State a Claim: The Complaint fails to state a legally sufficient claim against hadethegod and HL-Bank.
  2. Group Pleading: The Complaint improperly groups all Defendants together and fails to identify which Defendant allegedly committed which offence.
  3. Lack of Causation: Plaintiff has not pleaded facts showing that hadethegod or HL-Bank caused Plaintiff’s alleged damages.
  4. No Criminal Sanctions in Civil Action: Plaintiff may not seek criminal punishment, fines, penalties, incarceration, prosecution, or any criminal sanction through this civil case.
  5. Lack of Misrepresentation or Reliance: Plaintiff has not pleaded facts showing any actionable misrepresentation, omission, or reliance as to Defendants.
  6. Lack of Knowledge or Intent: Plaintiff has not pleaded facts showing that hadethegod or HL-Bank knew funds were criminal proceeds, intended to commit an offence, or knowingly assisted an offence.
  7. Pending Motion to Dismiss: This Answer is filed pursuant to the Court’s direction and without waiving the pending Motion to Dismiss.
Defendants respectfully request that the Court deny Plaintiff’s requested relief against hadethegod and HL-Bank, narrow any surviving claim against Wallavan Donovan to the alleged unauthorized-transfer theory actually pleaded, reject any request for criminal sanctions in this civil action, and grant any further relief the Court finds just and proper.

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 June 2026

 

Brief


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
AMICUS BRIEF

Your Honour, I am appointing Attorney Morticia Addams as Second chair in this case, as I am actively at the hospital IRL dealing with my diabetes putting me into DKA. She will be dealing with the case until I am back home

 

Brief

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
AMICUS BRIEF

Good evening, Your Honor. I am Morticia Addams and will be presiding over this case until further notice. Thank you.

 

Objection



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - Breach of Procedure


The Defence objects to the filings styled as “Amicus Briefs” on the grounds of Breach of Procedure.

Under Rule 6.7, an amicus applicant must request permission and affirm that they have no personal, pecuniary, or outcome-based interest in the disposition of the case.

Morticia Addams is listed as a Plaintiff witness and identifies herself as Head Attorney/Managing Partner for SingeHeart, Addams, and Associates, the Plaintiff firm. She therefore cannot properly appear as amicus.

The Defence does not object to Plaintiff seeking second chair or substitute counsel if properly noticed. However, that is not an amicus brief. The Defence respectfully requests that the Court disregard the “amicus” characterization and require Plaintiff to clarify whether Morticia Addams is appearing as counsel, witness, or both.


 

Objection



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - Breach of Procedure


The Defence objects to the filings styled as “Amicus Briefs” on the grounds of Breach of Procedure.

Under Rule 6.7, an amicus applicant must request permission and affirm that they have no personal, pecuniary, or outcome-based interest in the disposition of the case.

Morticia Addams is listed as a Plaintiff witness and identifies herself as Head Attorney/Managing Partner for SingeHeart, Addams, and Associates, the Plaintiff firm. She therefore cannot properly appear as amicus.

The Defence does not object to Plaintiff seeking second chair or substitute counsel if properly noticed. However, that is not an amicus brief. The Defence respectfully requests that the Court disregard the “amicus” characterization and require Plaintiff to clarify whether Morticia Addams is appearing as counsel, witness, or both.


This was already addressed. You did not need to object here and the objection will be ignored.
 
This was already addressed. You did not need to object here and the objection will be ignored.
Your Honor,

My apologies. I had sent the objection before seeing that the issue had already been addressed by the Court.
 
My apologies for the incorrect formating, Your Honor. I will see to it that it doesn't happen again for the duration of this lawsuit. For further clarification, I am both a witness and the presiding attorney on this lawsuit. Thank you.
 
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Response


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank

PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE IN OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiff Singeheart, Addams and Associates respectfully opposes Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and states as follows:

  1. INTRODUCTION
Defendants seek dismissal by characterizing Plaintiff’s allegations as unsupported conclusions. However, the Complaint alleges that company funds were transferred without authorization, received by Defendant hadethegod through HL-Bank, retained despite knowledge of their source, and subsequently used for purposes adverse to Plaintiff.
At the Motion to Dismiss stage, the Court must accept Plaintiff’s factual allegations as true and determine whether or not those allegations are sufficient to state claims for relief. Defendants’ Motion improperly attempts to resolve factual disputes that are more appropriately addressed through the discovery and trial period.
  1. THE COMPLAINT SUFFICIENTLY ALLEGES CLAIMS AGAINST HADETHEGOD
Defendants argue that hadethegod was merely a passive recipient of funds. Plaintiff disputes this characterization.
The Complaint alleges that hadethegod knowingly received funds belonging to Singeheart, Addams and Associates and retained possession of those funds after becoming aware of their origin. Plaintiff possesses transaction records, communications, and additional evidence demonstrating that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to the Plaintiff and nevertheless retained and benefited from them.
Furthermore, Plaintiff possesses evidence showing that hadethegod was aware of the ownership of the funds shortly after, and in some instances before, the transfer occurred, Such evidence directly contradicts Defendants’ assertion that no facts exist supporting knowledge or intent.
Whether or not hadethegod knowingly participated in the transfer, knowingly retained misappropriated funds, or cooperated with Defendant Wallavan Donovan are factual questions that cannot properly be resolved or addressed on a Motion to Dismiss.
  1. HL-BANK SHOULD REMAIN A PARTY
Defendants argue that HL-Bank was merely the destination of transferred funds. Plaintiff alleges otherwise.
HL-Bank is owned, operated, and controlled by Defendant hadethegod. The transferred funds were received through HL-Bank and subsequently retained within an entity controlled by hadethegod.
Plaintiff alleges that HL-Bank was not a passive third party but instead the vehicle through which the disputed funds were received, controlled, and used. Whether or not HL-Bank functioned as an instrumentality for retaining or benefiting from the transferred funds is a factual matter requiring discovery.
Because Plaintiff alleges that HL-Bank directly received and held the disputed funds while under the control of hadethegod, dismissal at this stage would be premature.
  1. THE COMPLAINT DOES NOT IMPROPERLY GROUP DEFENDANTS
Defendants argue that Plaintiff improperly grouped all Defendants together. This is incorrect.
The Complaint specifically alleges that:
  1. Defendant Wallavan Donovan transferred company funds without authorization;
  2. Defendant hadethegod knowingly received and retained those funds; and
  3. HL-Bank received and held those funds under the ownership and control of hadethegod.
These allegations provide each Defendant with clear notice of the conduct attributed to them and the basis for Plaintiff’s claims.
  1. DISCOVERY IS NECESSARY
Defendants’ Motion repeatedly argues that Plaintiff has not demonstrated knowledge, intent, participation, or coordination among Defendants.
Those arguments concern disputed factual issues.
Plaintiff possesses evidence, including transaction logs, communications, records regarding ownership and control of HL-Bank, and other documentary evidence supporting its allegations. Discovery will allow the parties to fully develop these facts and permit the Court to evaluate the merits on a complete record.
Dismissal prior to discovery would prevent Plaintiff from presenting evidence directly relevant to the issues presented by Defendants.
  1. PLAINTIFF DOES NOT SEEK CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
Defendants repeatedly argue that Plaintiff may not seek criminal punishment, incarceration, prosecution, criminal fines, or other criminal sanctions through this civil action.
Plaintiff agrees.
At no point does the Complaint request incarceration, criminal prosecution, criminal fines, criminal penalties, or any other criminal sanction. Plaintiff’s Prayer for Relief seeks civil remedies only, including restitution of transferred funds, compensatory damages, interest, court costs, and such further relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Defendants therefore devote the majority of their Motion to addressing relief that Plantiff has never requested.
The Complaint references criminal offenses because the conduct alleged may constitute violations of Redmont law and because those actions form the basis for Plaintiff’s civil damages. Identifying conduct that may violate criminal statutes does not turn this civil action into a criminal prosecution, nor does it constitute a request for criminal punishment.
Plaintiff seeks recovery for financial losses caused by Defendants’ conduct. The fact that the alleged conduct may also violate Redmont law does not prevent Plaintiff from pursuing civil remedies arising from that conduct.
Accordingly, Defendants’ arguments regarding criminal punishment, incarceration, prosecution, or criminal sanctions provide no basis for dismissal of Plaintiff’s claims and, therefore, should be rejected.
  1. ALTERNATIVELY, PLAINTIFF REQUESTS LEAVE TO AMEND
Should the Court determine that any allegation requires additional factual specificity, Plaintiff respectfully requests leave to amend the Complaint rather than dismissal.
Any perceived pleading deficiencies can be fixed through amendment, and dismissal with prejudice would be inappropriate where Plaintiff possesses evidence supporting the claims asserted.
  1. CONCLUSION
For the reasons listed above, Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Court:
  1. Deny Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss;
  2. Permit discovery to proceed regarding the transfer, receipt, retention, and use of the disputed funds;
  3. Allow Plaintiff’s claims against Wallavan Donovan, hadethegod, and HL-Bank to proceed;
  4. Reject Defendants’ argument that Plaintiff seeks criminal punishment, as Plaintiff seeks only civil remedies including restitution, damages, interest, costs, and other relief as permitted by Redmont law;
  5. Alternatively, grant Plaintiff leave to amend any portion of the Complain the Court finds insufficiently specific; and
  6. Grant such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.

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 June, 2026.

Respectfully submitted,

Morticia Addams
Counsel for Plaintiff
Singeheart, Addams and Associates.

 
We shall now be moving towards Discovery. Discovery will end in 5 days. Discovery can be voluntarily ended or extended with both parties agreeing to do so. Please remember the following rules:

Rule 4.2 (Submission Required For Use)​

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.

Rule 4.5 (Consent to End Discovery Early)​

If both parties consent to end Discovery early, they may request the presiding Judicial Officer to move to the next phase of the trial.

Rule 4.9 (Witness Protocol)​

A party may submit a list for witnesses at any time before the end of discovery. In order for a witness to be called during witness testimony, they must be announced under this rule, during discovery. Any witness may be objected to according to the objections laid out within rule 6.3.

Failure to adhere to the timelines of this rule may subject that party to a contempt of court charge at the presiding judge’s decision. The presiding judge shall include a warning regarding the timeline when summoning the witness.

Please remember that we are under the old Court Rules & Procedure for this case!
 

Response


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank

PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE IN OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiff Singeheart, Addams and Associates respectfully opposes Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and states as follows:

  1. INTRODUCTION
Defendants seek dismissal by characterizing Plaintiff’s allegations as unsupported conclusions. However, the Complaint alleges that company funds were transferred without authorization, received by Defendant hadethegod through HL-Bank, retained despite knowledge of their source, and subsequently used for purposes adverse to Plaintiff.
At the Motion to Dismiss stage, the Court must accept Plaintiff’s factual allegations as true and determine whether or not those allegations are sufficient to state claims for relief. Defendants’ Motion improperly attempts to resolve factual disputes that are more appropriately addressed through the discovery and trial period.
  1. THE COMPLAINT SUFFICIENTLY ALLEGES CLAIMS AGAINST HADETHEGOD
Defendants argue that hadethegod was merely a passive recipient of funds. Plaintiff disputes this characterization.
The Complaint alleges that hadethegod knowingly received funds belonging to Singeheart, Addams and Associates and retained possession of those funds after becoming aware of their origin. Plaintiff possesses transaction records, communications, and additional evidence demonstrating that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to the Plaintiff and nevertheless retained and benefited from them.
Furthermore, Plaintiff possesses evidence showing that hadethegod was aware of the ownership of the funds shortly after, and in some instances before, the transfer occurred, Such evidence directly contradicts Defendants’ assertion that no facts exist supporting knowledge or intent.
Whether or not hadethegod knowingly participated in the transfer, knowingly retained misappropriated funds, or cooperated with Defendant Wallavan Donovan are factual questions that cannot properly be resolved or addressed on a Motion to Dismiss.
  1. HL-BANK SHOULD REMAIN A PARTY
Defendants argue that HL-Bank was merely the destination of transferred funds. Plaintiff alleges otherwise.
HL-Bank is owned, operated, and controlled by Defendant hadethegod. The transferred funds were received through HL-Bank and subsequently retained within an entity controlled by hadethegod.
Plaintiff alleges that HL-Bank was not a passive third party but instead the vehicle through which the disputed funds were received, controlled, and used. Whether or not HL-Bank functioned as an instrumentality for retaining or benefiting from the transferred funds is a factual matter requiring discovery.
Because Plaintiff alleges that HL-Bank directly received and held the disputed funds while under the control of hadethegod, dismissal at this stage would be premature.
  1. THE COMPLAINT DOES NOT IMPROPERLY GROUP DEFENDANTS
Defendants argue that Plaintiff improperly grouped all Defendants together. This is incorrect.
The Complaint specifically alleges that:
  1. Defendant Wallavan Donovan transferred company funds without authorization;
  2. Defendant hadethegod knowingly received and retained those funds; and
  3. HL-Bank received and held those funds under the ownership and control of hadethegod.
These allegations provide each Defendant with clear notice of the conduct attributed to them and the basis for Plaintiff’s claims.
  1. DISCOVERY IS NECESSARY
Defendants’ Motion repeatedly argues that Plaintiff has not demonstrated knowledge, intent, participation, or coordination among Defendants.
Those arguments concern disputed factual issues.
Plaintiff possesses evidence, including transaction logs, communications, records regarding ownership and control of HL-Bank, and other documentary evidence supporting its allegations. Discovery will allow the parties to fully develop these facts and permit the Court to evaluate the merits on a complete record.
Dismissal prior to discovery would prevent Plaintiff from presenting evidence directly relevant to the issues presented by Defendants.
  1. PLAINTIFF DOES NOT SEEK CRIMINAL SANCTIONS
Defendants repeatedly argue that Plaintiff may not seek criminal punishment, incarceration, prosecution, criminal fines, or other criminal sanctions through this civil action.
Plaintiff agrees.
At no point does the Complaint request incarceration, criminal prosecution, criminal fines, criminal penalties, or any other criminal sanction. Plaintiff’s Prayer for Relief seeks civil remedies only, including restitution of transferred funds, compensatory damages, interest, court costs, and such further relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Defendants therefore devote the majority of their Motion to addressing relief that Plantiff has never requested.
The Complaint references criminal offenses because the conduct alleged may constitute violations of Redmont law and because those actions form the basis for Plaintiff’s civil damages. Identifying conduct that may violate criminal statutes does not turn this civil action into a criminal prosecution, nor does it constitute a request for criminal punishment.
Plaintiff seeks recovery for financial losses caused by Defendants’ conduct. The fact that the alleged conduct may also violate Redmont law does not prevent Plaintiff from pursuing civil remedies arising from that conduct.
Accordingly, Defendants’ arguments regarding criminal punishment, incarceration, prosecution, or criminal sanctions provide no basis for dismissal of Plaintiff’s claims and, therefore, should be rejected.
  1. ALTERNATIVELY, PLAINTIFF REQUESTS LEAVE TO AMEND
Should the Court determine that any allegation requires additional factual specificity, Plaintiff respectfully requests leave to amend the Complaint rather than dismissal.
Any perceived pleading deficiencies can be fixed through amendment, and dismissal with prejudice would be inappropriate where Plaintiff possesses evidence supporting the claims asserted.
  1. CONCLUSION
For the reasons listed above, Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Court:
  1. Deny Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss;
  2. Permit discovery to proceed regarding the transfer, receipt, retention, and use of the disputed funds;
  3. Allow Plaintiff’s claims against Wallavan Donovan, hadethegod, and HL-Bank to proceed;
  4. Reject Defendants’ argument that Plaintiff seeks criminal punishment, as Plaintiff seeks only civil remedies including restitution, damages, interest, costs, and other relief as permitted by Redmont law;
  5. Alternatively, grant Plaintiff leave to amend any portion of the Complain the Court finds insufficiently specific; and
  6. Grant such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.

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 June, 2026.

Respectfully submitted,

Morticia Addams
Counsel for Plaintiff
Singeheart, Addams and Associates.

Brief



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68

DEFENCE REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS

Your Honor,

The Defence files this limited Reply for the narrow purpose of addressing Plaintiff’s reliance, throughout its Response, on material that is not in the case record. The Defence does not re-argue the Motion and leaves its timing and disposition to the Court’s discretion.

I. PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE RESTS ON FACTS THE COMPLAINT DID NOT PLEAD

Plaintiff defends the Complaint by pointing to matters that appear nowhere in it: that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff before the transfer, that Plaintiff holds communications proving knowledge and intent, and that HL-Bank is owned, operated, and controlled by hadethegod.

The Defence does not dispute that Plaintiff may develop evidence in discovery. The point is narrower: a Response that must supply these facts to survive the Motion confirms that the Complaint, as filed, did not plead them.

II. PLAINTIFF MAY NOT USE UNSUBMITTED MATERIAL AS AFFIRMATIVE PROOF THAT ITS CLAIMS ARE SUFFICIENT

Plaintiff does not merely argue that discovery should proceed. It argues that the claims survive because Plaintiff “possesses evidence showing” hadethegod’s knowledge and HL-Bank’s control.

Under Rule 4.2, material not entered into the case is inadmissible, and an argument built on it may be voided. The Defence respectfully requests that, in ruling on the Motion, the Court disregard those portions of the Response that rely on unsubmitted material to assert the elements are met.

Plaintiff remains free to develop that material in discovery. It cannot use it now to cure a pleading.

III. PLAINTIFF’S OWN RESPONSE CONFIRMS THE KNOWLEDGE DEFECT

The Complaint pleads only the bare conclusion that hadethegod “knowingly received and retained” the funds, meaning knowledge at receipt.

Plaintiff’s Response then relocates that knowledge, asserting both that hadethegod became aware “after” receiving the funds and that he was aware “in some instances before the transfer occurred.”

Knowledge is the load-bearing element of every offence alleged against hadethegod. An allegation that moves from receipt, to after receipt, to before the transfer within a single brief does not plead that element against him with any fixed factual content.

IV. THE REMAINING POINTS DO NOT CURE THE DEFECTS

Plaintiff’s clarification that it seeks only civil remedies is accepted and was never in dispute. It does not address the defect, which is that the relief is tied to an undifferentiated list of eight offences rather than claims showing which Defendant committed which offence.

Plaintiff’s request for leave to amend is, at a minimum, an acknowledgment that the Complaint may require amendment. The Defence notes only that an amendment cannot supply facts that do not exist, and that any amended Complaint would remain subject to Rule 4.2 and to any proper motion should discovery show the pleaded facts to be unsupported or in error.

V. CONCLUSION

The Defence respectfully requests that, in deciding the Motion, the Court disregard the unsubmitted material relied on in Plaintiff’s Response pursuant to Rule 4.2, and otherwise rule on the Complaint as pleaded.

The Defence does not oppose the discovery proceeding as the Court has ordered.

 

Brief




IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT


Singeheart, Addams and Associates

v.

hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68



DEFENCE DISCOVERY REQUESTS AND INTERROGATORIES

Your Honor,

Pursuant to Rule 4.7 and Rule 4.8 of the Court Rules and Procedures, the Defence submits the following requests and interrogatories to Plaintiff.

Each request is relevant to an allegation in Plaintiff’s Complaint or an assertion in Plaintiff’s Response, and is directed to material Plaintiff has stated it possesses. The Defence requests that the Court compel production of any item below that Plaintiff opposes.

I. REQUESTS FOR DISCOVERY UNDER RULE 4.7

The Defence requests that Plaintiff produce the following:

  1. All transaction logs showing the alleged transfer of funds from Singeheart, Addams and Associates to Wallavan Donovan, hadethegod, HL-Bank, or any account or entity allegedly controlled by any Defendant.
  2. All records showing the exact amount allegedly transferred, including the source account, destination account, date, time, and recipient.
  3. All records Plaintiff relies on to show that HL-Bank is owned, operated, or controlled by hadethegod.
  4. All records showing that HL-Bank itself received, held, transferred, spent, concealed, disguised, converted, or otherwise used the disputed funds.
  5. All communications, messages, or screenshots Plaintiff relies on to show that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff before the transfer occurred.
  6. All communications, messages, or screenshots Plaintiff relies on to show that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff at the time of receipt.
  7. All communications, messages, or screenshots Plaintiff relies on to show that hadethegod learned the funds belonged to Plaintiff after the transfer and continued to retain them.
  8. All communications, messages, or transaction records Plaintiff relies on to show that funds originating from Plaintiff were used to place bounties against Aelia Singeheart, including any record connecting the alleged bounty funds to the transferred funds.
  9. All screenshots, chat logs, or messages Plaintiff contends contain derogatory or misogynistic remarks by either Defendant, identifying for each the speaker and the date.
  10. All communications, messages, or screenshots Plaintiff relies on to show that Wallavan Donovan and hadethegod coordinated or acted together regarding the transfer.
  11. The complete, unedited message thread or source for each screenshot or image Plaintiff has submitted or intends to rely on, including the surrounding context and timestamps.
  12. All documents and records reflecting how Plaintiff calculated the $55,000 in damages, including the amount allegedly transferred and any records supporting each additional component of the total.
II. INTERROGATORIES UNDER RULE 4.8

Plaintiff is requested to answer the following truthfully and to the best of its ability:

  1. State the exact point at which Plaintiff alleges hadethegod first knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff, specifying whether that knowledge is alleged to have arisen before the transfer, at the time of receipt, or after receipt.
  2. Identify the specific evidence Plaintiff relies on to support its allegation that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff prior to the transfer.
  3. State the basis for Plaintiff’s claim that HL-Bank is owned, operated, or controlled by hadethegod, including the source of that information.
  4. Identify each specific act Plaintiff alleges HL-Bank itself committed, separate from being the destination of the transferred funds.
  5. For each Defendant individually, state which offences alleged in the Complaint Plaintiff continues to pursue against that Defendant, and the principal factual basis for each.
III. WITNESS RESERVATION

Plaintiff has listed Morticia Addams as a witness, and Morticia Addams has also stated she is appearing as counsel for Plaintiff. The Defence reserves all rights to object under Rule 4.9 and Rule 6.3 to any witness testimony, including any attempt to use counsel argument as witness testimony.

 

Brief



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68

DEFENCE REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS

Your Honor,

The Defence files this limited Reply for the narrow purpose of addressing Plaintiff’s reliance, throughout its Response, on material that is not in the case record. The Defence does not re-argue the Motion and leaves its timing and disposition to the Court’s discretion.

I. PLAINTIFF’S RESPONSE RESTS ON FACTS THE COMPLAINT DID NOT PLEAD

Plaintiff defends the Complaint by pointing to matters that appear nowhere in it: that hadethegod knew the funds belonged to Plaintiff before the transfer, that Plaintiff holds communications proving knowledge and intent, and that HL-Bank is owned, operated, and controlled by hadethegod.

The Defence does not dispute that Plaintiff may develop evidence in discovery. The point is narrower: a Response that must supply these facts to survive the Motion confirms that the Complaint, as filed, did not plead them.

II. PLAINTIFF MAY NOT USE UNSUBMITTED MATERIAL AS AFFIRMATIVE PROOF THAT ITS CLAIMS ARE SUFFICIENT

Plaintiff does not merely argue that discovery should proceed. It argues that the claims survive because Plaintiff “possesses evidence showing” hadethegod’s knowledge and HL-Bank’s control.

Under Rule 4.2, material not entered into the case is inadmissible, and an argument built on it may be voided. The Defence respectfully requests that, in ruling on the Motion, the Court disregard those portions of the Response that rely on unsubmitted material to assert the elements are met.

Plaintiff remains free to develop that material in discovery. It cannot use it now to cure a pleading.

III. PLAINTIFF’S OWN RESPONSE CONFIRMS THE KNOWLEDGE DEFECT

The Complaint pleads only the bare conclusion that hadethegod “knowingly received and retained” the funds, meaning knowledge at receipt.

Plaintiff’s Response then relocates that knowledge, asserting both that hadethegod became aware “after” receiving the funds and that he was aware “in some instances before the transfer occurred.”

Knowledge is the load-bearing element of every offence alleged against hadethegod. An allegation that moves from receipt, to after receipt, to before the transfer within a single brief does not plead that element against him with any fixed factual content.

IV. THE REMAINING POINTS DO NOT CURE THE DEFECTS

Plaintiff’s clarification that it seeks only civil remedies is accepted and was never in dispute. It does not address the defect, which is that the relief is tied to an undifferentiated list of eight offences rather than claims showing which Defendant committed which offence.

Plaintiff’s request for leave to amend is, at a minimum, an acknowledgment that the Complaint may require amendment. The Defence notes only that an amendment cannot supply facts that do not exist, and that any amended Complaint would remain subject to Rule 4.2 and to any proper motion should discovery show the pleaded facts to be unsupported or in error.

V. CONCLUSION

The Defence respectfully requests that, in deciding the Motion, the Court disregard the unsubmitted material relied on in Plaintiff’s Response pursuant to Rule 4.2, and otherwise rule on the Complaint as pleaded.

The Defence does not oppose the discovery proceeding as the Court has ordered.

This is not going to be taken into consideration as reply briefs are not a thing in Redmont.
 

Response



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

SingeHeart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank

PLAINTIFF’S DISCOVERY SUBMISSION



Your Honor, the Plaintiffs would like to label previously submitted evidence screenshots as the following:

P-001:

WallavanFraud1.png

P-002:
WallavanFraud2.png

P-003:
Admittance.png

P-004:
Harrassment3.png

P-005:
Harrassment2.png

P-006:
Harrassment.png

In addition to the evidence previously submitted within the complaint, and in accordance with Rule 4.6 and 4.9, the Plaintiffs would also like to submit the following screenshots and witnesses into evidence:

1. WITNESSES
Unalign
Morticia Addams
Aelia SingeHeart

2. EVIDENCE

P-007:
hadeopening HLBANK.png

P-008:
hadethegod and HL-BANK.png


3. RELEVANCE

The evidence submitted by Plaintiff is directly relevant to the claims and defenses at issue in this action.

The submitted transaction records demonstrate the transfer of approximately $55,000 from the SHAAssociates business account to the HL-Bank business account. Additional records identify Defendant hadethegod as the owner and controller of HL-Bank. These records are relevant to establishing the destination of the transferred funds, the identity of the individuals and entities involved, and the relationship between Defendant hadethegod and Defendant HL-Bank.

The submitted communications are further relevant because they concern the circumstances surrounding the transfer, the reasons allegedly motivating the transfer, Defendants' knowledge of the ownership of the funds, and statements regarding Plaintiff's woman-owned law firm. Such communications are probative of intent, motive, knowledge, coordination between Defendants, and the damages suffered by Plaintiff.

This evidence directly addresses issues raised in Defendants' Motion to Dismiss and Answer, including Defendants' assertions that hadethegod lacked knowledge of the funds, that HL-Bank was merely a passive recipient, that no coordination existed between Defendants, and that Plaintiff has failed to plead facts supporting its claims.

Accordingly, the evidence is relevant because it tends to make the existence of Plaintiff's allegations more probable and assists the Court in determining the factual issues underlying the parties' claims and defenses.

 

Response



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

SingeHeart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank

PLAINTIFF’S DISCOVERY SUBMISSION



Your Honor, the Plaintiffs would like to label previously submitted evidence screenshots as the following:

P-001:


P-002:

P-003:

P-004:

P-005:

P-006:

In addition to the evidence previously submitted within the complaint, and in accordance with Rule 4.6 and 4.9, the Plaintiffs would also like to submit the following screenshots and witnesses into evidence:

1. WITNESSES
Unalign
Morticia Addams
Aelia SingeHeart

2. EVIDENCE

P-007:

P-008:


3. RELEVANCE

The evidence submitted by Plaintiff is directly relevant to the claims and defenses at issue in this action.

The submitted transaction records demonstrate the transfer of approximately $55,000 from the SHAAssociates business account to the HL-Bank business account. Additional records identify Defendant hadethegod as the owner and controller of HL-Bank. These records are relevant to establishing the destination of the transferred funds, the identity of the individuals and entities involved, and the relationship between Defendant hadethegod and Defendant HL-Bank.

The submitted communications are further relevant because they concern the circumstances surrounding the transfer, the reasons allegedly motivating the transfer, Defendants' knowledge of the ownership of the funds, and statements regarding Plaintiff's woman-owned law firm. Such communications are probative of intent, motive, knowledge, coordination between Defendants, and the damages suffered by Plaintiff.

This evidence directly addresses issues raised in Defendants' Motion to Dismiss and Answer, including Defendants' assertions that hadethegod lacked knowledge of the funds, that HL-Bank was merely a passive recipient, that no coordination existed between Defendants, and that Plaintiff has failed to plead facts supporting its claims.

Accordingly, the evidence is relevant because it tends to make the existence of Plaintiff's allegations more probable and assists the Court in determining the factual issues underlying the parties' claims and defenses.

Acknowledged. Plaintiff you need to respond to the interrogatories and discovery requests made of you or object to them.
 

Verdict


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CIVIL ACTION

Singeheart, Addams and Associates

Plaintiff

v.

hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank
Defendants

Singeheart, Addams and Associates v. hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank [2026] DCR 68

I. Background​

This matter comes before the Court. The Plaintiff, Singeheart, Addams and Associates, is a law firm suing the Defendants, hadethegod, Wallavan Donovan, and HL-Bank. The Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants were owners and operators of a business known as HL-Bank.

The facts alleged are that Wallavan Donovan transferred the Plaintiff's company funds into HL-Bank without authorization. There was dissatisfaction regarding whether Wallavan Donovan received equity or ownership in the firm. Wallavan Donovan is allegedly a former lawyer for the firm. The Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants retained possession of the funds and did not return them, nor had proper authorization to use take the funds in the first place.

II. Legal Analysis

A Rule 5.5 motion is a motion for lack of claim. It may be filed for failure to state a claim for relief, or against a claim for relief that has insufficient evidence to support the civil or criminal charge (Old Court Rules & Procedure, Rule 5.5, Information - Court Rules and Procedures [Deprecated]). Under the developing standard for Rule 5.5, a claim fails where, even accepting the facts alleged, the claim and prayer for relief cannot produce a tangible legal result. (see Lawsuit: In Session - Ko531 v. Commonwealth of Redmont [2026] FCR 39 ("At the dismissal stage, the question is whether or not the first claim for relief, read in light of these factual allegations, would fail to support that actions were taken under "color of law" even if all facts (and reasonable factual inferences) were resolved in Plaintiff's favor.")).

The Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants’ conduct constitutes fraud, embezzlement, aggravated theft, conspiracy to commit a crime, concealment of criminal proceeds, accomplice liability, market manipulation, and false credentials under DemocracyCraft law.

With the exception of fraud, each of these theories are a criminal offense rather than a civil cause of action. The Redmont Civil Code Act constitutes a non-exhaustive listing of civil violations, but a plaintiff seeking relief for a non-codified harm must show support in common law principles or judicial precedent (see Redmont Civil Code, Part II, § 3(1)(a), Act of Congress - Redmont Civil Code Act). Existing common law torts remain actionable unless expressly abolished by the Civil Code (see Redmont Civil Code, Part II, § 3(1)(b), Act of Congress - Redmont Civil Code Act).

Where a wrong constitutes both a crime under the Criminal Code and a violation under the Civil Code, the plaintiff may pursue civil remedies under the Civil Code, civil damages arising from the crime under the Criminal Code, or both, so long as there is no double recovery (see Lawsuit: Dismissed - MMiqa v. ZachOfPotatoes10 [2026] DCR 67 (citing Redmont Civil Code, Part II, § 4(3)(a)–(c), Act of Congress - Redmont Civil Code Act); see also Lawsuit: Dismissed - Le9endz_ v. AussieBloke25 [2026] DCR 59 ("The Redmont Civil Code Act ("RCCA") does indeed allow for civil action regarding a criminal violation, but typically only supports that action where both the RCCA and the Criminal Code Act ("CCA") reference the underlying claim")).

Here, all of the charges alleged are under the Redmont Criminal Code, but not the Civil Code. As such, the Plaintiff cannot pursue damages under the Civil Code, which precludes him from all damages. Accordingly, the claims for embezzlement, aggravated theft, conspiracy to commit a crime, concealment of criminal proceeds, accomplice liability, market manipulation, and false credentials are dismissed under Rule 5.5.

The only claim that could plausibly survive under a common law theory is fraud. The Defendants argue that the complaint pleads no misrepresentation, omission, reliance, or harm caused by the Defendants. The Court agrees. Even treating the pleaded facts as true, the Plaintiff must allege facts that could establish a legally cognizable fraud claim. The facts alleged show that funds were transferred into HL-Bank and that the Plaintiff claims those funds should not have been retained. But the complaint does not identify a specific misrepresentation or omission made by the Defendants as part of the transaction. It also does not plead facts showing reliance on that misrepresentation or omission. Without those allegations, the Court cannot find that the Plaintiff has pleaded fraud in a form capable of producing legal relief. Thus, the fraud claim is also dismissed under Rule 5.5.

Discovery was offered and completed without any amendment to the complaint. The defects identified here are not merely technical formatting errors. The complaint fails to identify civil causes of action for most claims and fails to plead the necessary basis for fraud. Because the Plaintiff had the opportunity to develop the record and amend the pleading but did not cure these defects, dismissal with prejudice is appropriate.


III. Order​

The Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED.

The claims for embezzlement, aggravated theft, conspiracy to commit a crime, concealment of criminal proceeds, accomplice liability, market manipulation, and false credentials are DISMISSED. The fraud claim is DISMISSED for failure to state a claim.

The Plaintiff must pay $16,500 dollars in mandatory legal fees to the Defendant. (See Redmont Civil Code, Part III, § 7, Act of Congress - Redmont Civil Code Act).

This case is dismissed with prejudice.


So ordered.

 
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Motion



IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT

MOTION TO COMPEL DISCOVERY

The Plaintiff respectfully moves this Honorable Court for an Order compelling the production of discovery pursuant to the Court Rules and Procedures, and in support thereof respectfully alleges:

1. Discovery is presently open in this matter, and the requested materials are directly relevant to the claims and defences before the Court.

2. Throughout these proceedings, Defendants have asserted that there is insufficient evidence demonstrating that Defendant hadethegod possessed knowledge of the origin of the transferred funds, knowingly retained those funds, or coordinated with Defendant Wallavan Donovan.

3. The Plaintiff seeks production of all transaction logs reflecting transfers between Wallavan Donovan, hadethegod, HL-Bank, or any account under their ownership or control during the period beginning seven (7) days prior to the disputed transfer and ending seven (7) days thereafter.

4. The Plaintiff further seeks production of all communications between hadethegod and Wallavan Donovan during that same period, including but not limited to in-game messages, Discord messages, direct messages, forum messages, or any other written or electronic communications in either Defendant's possession, custody, or control.

5. These materials are reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence concerning:
a. whether the transfer was coordinated between the Defendants;
b. whether hadethegod possessed prior or contemporaneous knowledge of the transfer;
c. whether the disputed funds were knowingly received and retained;
d. the disposition and movement of the disputed funds following receipt; and
e. the extent of any damages or restitution owed to the Plaintiff.

6. Defendants have repeatedly placed these factual issues at the centre of their defence. Production of the requested records will permit the parties and the Court to determine these issues on the basis of objective evidence rather than speculation.

7. The requested discovery is narrowly tailored in scope, limited in duration, and proportional to the issues before the Court. It does not impose an unreasonable burden upon the Defendants.

WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter an Order:

1. Compelling Defendants to produce all transaction logs pertaining to the stolen funds.
2. Compelling Defendants to produce all communications between hadethegod and Wallavan Donovan during the requested period of May 29th to June 3rd
3. Requiring production within a timeframe established by the Court

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 14th day of July, 2026.

Respectfully submitted,

Aelia SingeHeart
Counsel for Plaintiff
SingeHeart, Addams and Associates

 
NOTICE OF SUPPLEMENTAL EVIDENCE

Your Honour, The plaintiffs would also like to submit Exhibit G (p-007) into the case. It is a screenshot of hadethegod admitting to the actions committed by Wallavan Donovan

Respectfully Submitted,
 

Attachments

  • admittance2.png
    admittance2.png
    25 KB · Views: 12
Any opposition to the motion, I am noting that I am keeping discovery open for the discovery requests.
Your Honour,


I have been occupied with work and travelling and respectfully request 48 hours to respond to the Plaintiff’s motion. I do intend to file a response within that timeframe.


Thank you for your consideration.
 
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