So the conditions of the dismissal that you are contesting are.......the fact that you have to return the docs, and..........? Why contest it at all, especially after it was what you were asking for....the them to stop the suit? I don't mean to sound sarcastic, but realy trying to understand why you went all that time asking for the lawsuit to be dropped, and when it was dropped, you contested it.
If they really wanted to drop the suit, they wouldn't be trying to set things up to sue me again by dropping it without prejudice, taking all our documents away when they have no legal basis for doing so, and threatening to drag us into court again not 90 minutes after the status conference in which the suit was dismissed.
You may not understand it, and that's all right.
Long ago I read
History of the Waldenses by Wylie. More than once those peace loving people got snookered by the foes who couldn't conquer them. "Just do this or that to show your good faith, and we'll leave you alone to worship God as you please." And they trusting those lying, thieving butchers, and then the slaughter began.
The one occasion that stands out in my mind was when they consented to allow the soldiers to stay with them for a few days in their homes to show their good will. Can you believe that? They went along with it and got slaughtered.
I don't trust Danny or his cronies, and Simpson has proven himself to be a man not of his word. I'm not giving up the substantial advantage we have simply because they say, "Trust us."
So the judge actually states that he didn't read your briefs? OR are you suggesting that he could not have read them because his ruling did not agree with your briefs. I believe the judge would have a HUGE problem from more that you and Gailon had he made a ruling without considering all the facts and evidence in the case.
In the case of the dismissal, when Gailon told him we had filed an opposition, he asked when that was. If he had just read through 235 pages worth in the previous hour, he would not have asked that question.
In the case of the motion for costs, he ruled on the motion for costs two days before he ruled on the motion to file under seal, which was part of our reply to Danny's response to our motion. If he had read our reply, you would think he would rule on both motions at the same time, since the motion for costs depended on the motion to file under seal.
In ruling on the motion to file under seal, he stated that the Remnant documents didn't seem to be relevant, which is impossible. If the Remnant documents showed that Remnant didn't pay Danny one cent, they'd still be relevant because they would exonerate Danny of some of the allegations against him. If they do show payments to Danny, then of course they are relevant, since Danny perjuriously didn't report that income on his financial affidavit, which is a topic Danny himself put into Danny's own complaint in Danny's ownlawsuit.
In the court's Oct. 26, 2009, ruling on our motions, he said that we should have returned the documents some time ago, according to the confidentiality order. We had pointed out in five filings from about December 2008 to about June or July 2009 that the confidentiality order requires no such thing. If he had read our filings, I do not see how he could have made that statement.