Send Us Hatemail ! mailbag@conservativecave.com
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Boojatta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Sat Apr-25-09 02:19 PMOriginal messageDoes the law allow you to bring a civil suit against yourself? Should it? Updated at 3:17 PM For example, suppose that you have two contracts with yourself and you see that it is possible to argue, based on one contract, that some money should go into a certain bank account devoted to certain purposes, but that it is also possible to argue, based on the other contract, that the money should go elsewhere.In case anyone is wondering, I wrote this Original Post after pondering the phrase "social justice." In the above scenario, you would be relying upon an institution (the court system) that includes many people. However, you would be using that institution to achieve ordinary justice rather than to achieve the special kind of justice that you try to achieve when the scenario involves more than one person.
OK.. you made 2 contradictory contracts with yourself and now you might sue?whoa is the DUmmie
Boojatta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Sat Apr-25-09 02:19 PMOriginal messageDoes the law allow you to bring a civil suit against yourself? Should it?
So I gotta ask, are ya goin' to hire two lawyers? Which one of your split personalities is going to pay the fees?
QuoteBoojatta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Sat Apr-25-09 02:19 PMOriginal messageDoes the law allow you to bring a civil suit against yourself? Should it? Updated at 3:17 PM For example, suppose that you have two contracts with yourself and you see that it is possible to argue, based on one contract, that some money should go into a certain bank account devoted to certain purposes, but that it is also possible to argue, based on the other contract, that the money should go elsewhere.In case anyone is wondering, I wrote this Original Post after pondering the phrase "social justice." In the above scenario, you would be relying upon an institution (the court system) that includes many people. However, you would be using that institution to achieve ordinary justice rather than to achieve the special kind of justice that you try to achieve when the scenario involves more than one person.
I reccommend mediation.
I recommend MEDICATION....In gigantic quantities....
Translated : Is it possible to get the Government and the Taxpayers to make decisions for me ?
I suggest that this is actually the cause - not the solution.
If someone walked up and shot this idiot in the head do you think he'd notice?Cindie
This is why you don't eat a bag of magic mushrooms before posting on the internet.
So far not one of the self proclaimed attorneys on the Island have joined around the camp fire.
They aren't contracts, legally speaking. A contract is a promise given by one party to another, in exchange for a consideration. There aren't two parties involved, ergo, no contract. Boojatta knows about as much about law as it knows about reality.
Robert Lee Brock, a prisoner at the Indian Creek Correctional Center in Chesapeake, filed a handwritten, seven-page lawsuit last month in federal court."I partook of alcoholic beverages in 1993, July 1st, as a result I caused myself to violate my religious beliefs. This was done by my going out and getting arrested," wrote Brock, who is serving 23 years for breaking and entering and grand larceny."I want to pay myself 5 million dollars," he continued, "but ask the state to pay it in my behalf since I can't work and am a ward of the state."Judge Rebecca Beach Smith was unimpressed by Brock's ingenuity.She dismissed the lawsuit Thursday as frivolous.