
Strollin' Pettifoggers - Part3
by Robert Hedges ©
The right of appeal is based upon the right of meaningful access to the court, under the Constitution, and the right to be treated equally with any other litigant, under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. If appeal is available to one litigant in certain mandated circumstances, then it is available to all other litigants in the same circumstances. It thus becomes a right.
The dismissed appeals are usually vague to a degree which makes defining exactly what their shortcomings are, impossible to determine. This is not constructive criticism, which would guide an individual to correct his deficiencies in later appeals. One appeal differs from the others, and is clearly dismissed as if appeal were a discretionary decision by the Court of Appeals, and thus is an unconstitutional denial of appeal.
The jurisdictional rule of appeal is that a Notice of Appeal
must
be
filed within 30 days of a judgment, in the trial court. The
Court
of Appeals dismissed the Partitioning Appeal (CA-1440) as if it
were an appeal made after the 30 days. It was not made late.
There
were earlier judgments also attached to the Notice, but
jurisdiction
of the Court "attached" based upon the Final and Appealable
Order,
identified and dated, in the body of the Notice. This is a
constitutional deprivation, because the Judge tried to make my
appeal
discretionary, and deprived me of "meaningful access" to the
court.
If the US Supreme Court required the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals to reopen the constitutional deprivation case, this issue might be adjudicated.
Vexatious, wouldn't you say. ?
This is the federal case complete with case law which is
against
an appellate level judge or court.
I will address this complaint to Judge J. Stumbo, rather than
the
above-
named trio, because I am unable to determine who has instigated
the
violation of the spirit and seemingly the letter of the Rules of
Civil
Procedure, and deprived a litigant thereby of an appeal, which
is
a
constitutional right under equal circumstances due all
litigants.
I
can identify the signature however.
The case from which these events spring is an action to
partition
100 acres, brought by plaintiff's against Robert Hedges as
defendant.
This case is the same partition case which has necessitated a
complaint against the presiding Circuit Judge Richard L. Hinton.
No appeal has yet been heard by the Court of Appeals.
Again the Complainant Robert Hedges sought a state remedy,
rather
than
desiring a costly and time-consuming confrontation in Federal
Court.
Judicial economy says to avoid the vexation which is placed
before me.
[w]hen appeal is afforded. . . . it cannot be granted to some
litigants and capriciously or arbitrarily denied to others
without violating the equal protection clause. Griffin v
Illinois, 351 US 12 at 18 (1955); Smith v Bennett, 365 US 708,
(1961); Lane v Brown, 371 US 477, (1963); Long v Dist Court of
Iowa, 385 US 192, (1966); Gardiner v Calif, 393 US 367, (1969);
Lindsay v Normet, 405 US 56 at 77, (1971); Cochran v Kansas, 316
US 255, (1942);
Frank v Mangum, 237 US 309 at 327, (1914) appeal is an element
of Due Process and protected by the 14th Amendment .
[D]ue process is secured by the laws operating on all alike, and
not subjecting the individual to the arbitrary exercise of the
power of government unrestrained by the established principles
of private right and distributive justice. Maxwell v Dowell,
176 US 581 at 602, (1899), cites Leeper v Texas, 139 US 462 at
467, (1891)
[n]o state can deprive particular person or classes of persons
of equal and impartial justice under the law without violating
the provisions of the 14th amendment of the constitution. . .
due process of law within the meaning of the constitution is
secured where the law operate on all alike and no one is subject
to partial or arbitrary exercise of the powers of the
government.
. . Caldwell v Texas, 137 US 692 (1891) cited in Merchant v
Penn RR, 153 US 380 at 382, (1893)
. . . [i]n this court the state admits, as it must, that a
discriminatory denial of the statutory right of appeal is a
violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment .
. . .
Cochran v Kansas, 316 US 255, as cited in Dowd v Cook,US, 340 US
206 at 208 (1950)
Harper v Va Board of Elections, 383 US 663 at 673, (1966) Black
J.
[d]istinctions and discriminations which violate Equal
Protection
class are irrationality; irrelevant; unreasonable; arbitrary;
invidious;
[T]he great purpose of the requirements of due process is to
exclude everything that is arbitrary and capricious. . . we are
constrained to conclude that they [the requirements of due
process]
do not leave room for the play and action of purely personal and
arbitrary power. - Pennoyer v Neff, 95 US 714 at 733, (1877);
Davidson v N Orleans, 96 US 97, 104, 107, (1878); Hurtado v
Calif,
110 US 516, (1883); Missouri RR v Humes, 115 US 512 at 519,
(1884/5);
as cited in Dent v W VA, 129 US 114 at 122/24, (1888)
. .[a]ny . . . state statute - must be applied uniformly . .
. . . ;
otherwise the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment is
violated.
Regan v NY, 349 US 58 at 66, (1954) -
[a]lthough not specifically mentioned in the constitution, the
right of court access is based upon the 1st and 14th Amendment -
Vaughn v Trotter, 516 F Supp 886 at 892, (MD Tenn 1980)
[a]ppellate jurisdiction attaches upon notice of appeal -
Lewis v Alexander, 987 F2d 396, (6th Cir 1993)
- [s]ince 1979 appeal is not valid while Motion exists in lower
court, but before 1979 appeal removed jurisdiction from lower
court - Griggs v Provident Consumer, 459 US 56, 716 F2d 892,
(1982)
[a] motion pursuant to CR 59 converts a final judgment into an
interlocutory judgment. CR 73.02(1)(e) - State Personnel Board
v Heck, 725 SW2d 13 at 18 , (Ky 1986)
[D]ue process requires jurisdiction, and jurisdiction requires
the statute to be followed conferring power upon the court to
try
and determine the issue. Scott v McNeal, 154 US 34, (1893)
[j]urisdiction is the authority to act officially in the matter
then at hand. . . power to hear and determine a case. .
McGlasker
v Calton, 397 F Supp 525 at 530,(MD Alab ND1975) 524 F2d 1230
affirmed-
[i]t follows that if the court was without jurisdiction. . . the
decree is utterly void. . Dick v Foraker, 155 US 404, (1894) at
414
US v Silliman, 167 F2d 607 at 618, (3rd Cir 1948)-335 US 825,
denied -
[e]very court in this country is a "court of limited
jurisdiction"
[W]e no longer approach pleadings searching for a flaw, a
technicality upon which to strike down a claim or defense as was
formally the case at common law - Bertlesman & Phillips, Ky
Practice,
Vol 6 at p. 144. - Smith v Isaacs, 777 SW2d 912 at 715?, (1989)
[T]he Federal Rules reject the approach that pleading is a game
of skill in which one misstep by council may be decisive to the
outcome and accept the principle that the purpose of pleading is
to facilitate a proper decision on the merits. Conley v Gibson,
355 US 41 at 48, (1957); Schiavone v Fortune, 477 US 21 at 27,
39,
(1985); Zenith Radio v Hazeltine, 401 US 321 at 335, (1970);
Williard Dairy v Nat Dairy, 373 US 934 at 935, (6th Cir 1962)
denied-
Black J dissent; US v Hougham, 364 US 310 at 317, (1960);
Foman
v
Davis, 371 US 178 at 181, (1962); Mayor v Ed Equality League,
415
US
605 at 634, n1, (1973) White J dissent-
[t]he principle function of procedural rules should be to serve
as
useful guide to help, not hinder, persons who have a legal right
to
bring their problems before the court. Sup Ct New Rule Order,
346
US
945 at 946, (1954) Black CJ, as cited in Schiavone v Fortune,
AKA
Time Inc., 477 US 21, (1986)
[i]n determining whether rights were denied we are governed by
the
substance of things and not mere form. . L&N v Schmidt, 177 US
230
at 236, (1899) as cited in Simon v Craft, 182 US 427 at 436,
(1900);
In Re Summers, 325 US at 567, (1944) citing Nashville C&RR v
Wallace,
288 US 239 at 249, (1918); Central Vermont RR v White, 238 US
507 at
511, (1914) as cited in US v Obermeier, 186 F2d 243, (1950)
. . [d]ue process of law guaranteed by the 14th Amendment has
regard
to substance of right and not to matters of form and procedure.
.
.
the entire course of proceedings, and not merely one step, must
be
considered. . . Frank v Mangum, 237 US 309, (1916)
[d]ecisions on the merits are not to be avoided on the basis of
"mere technicalities" Foman v Davis, 371 US 178 at 181, (1962);
NAACP v Alabama, 377 US 288, (1964); Hovey v Elliott, 167 US 409
at 413/14, ( 1897);
[W]hile technical rules of pleading are maintained to protect
rights of parties, under the code system technical rules should
not be used to defeat the ends of Justice. Catron vs Jones, 135
SW2d 419, (1940); Roe v Gentry, 162 SW2d 208 at 210, (1942);
Jordan v Olive Hill, 162 SW2d 229 at 231, (Ky 1942); Logan v
Bradford,
178 SW2d 607, (Ky 1944); Stivers v Baker, 9 SW 491 at 492, (Ky
1888);
Ashland Oil v Hudson, 275 SW2d 585, (Ky 1955); Maggard v
Johnson,
229 SW2d 764, (Ky 1950); McBride v Moss, 437 SW2d 726, (1969);
. . . [t]he state may violate the constitution by failing to
provide an appropriate procedural response. There is a
constitutional duty to provide fair procedures to give the
citizen the opportunity to try to prevent the deprivation.
Daniel v Williams, 474 US 327 at 337/8, (1985)
[t]he right to procedural due process is "absolute" in the sense
that it does not depend upon the merits of a claimant
substantive
assertions. Organized society requires procedural due process.
Carey v Piphus, 435 US 247, (1978)
[w]hether individual has [a] defense. . . .is not important.
To assume that he has none and therefore that he is not entitled
to a day in court, is to assume against him the very point he
may
wish to contest. Rees v City of Watertown, 19 Wall 107 at 123,
(1973) as cited in L&N v Schmidt, 177 US 230 at 236, (1899)
[d]ecisions of the US Supreme Court rendered by written opinion
are
binding on all courts, state and federal. The court's holding is
stare
decisis and cannot be overruled except by the court itself. Even
the
court's dicta has persuasive precedential value. Jordan v
Gilligan,
500 F2d 701 at 707, (6th Cir ND Ohio 1974)
. . .[a] pro se complaint " however inartfully pleaded" must be
held to "less stringent standards than formal pleadings drafted
by
lawyers" and can only be dismissed for failure to state a claim
if
it appears" beyond a doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set
of
facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.
Conley v Gibson, 355 US 41 at 45/6, (1957); Haines v Kenner, 404
US
519, (1972) cited in Estell v Gamble, 429 US 97, (1976); also
Hughes v Rowe, 449 US 5 at 10, (1980); Little v Streater, 452 US
1
at 5/6, (1981) due process ; Wilwording v Swenson, 404 US 249
at 250/51, (1971); Wright v Collins, 766 F2d 841 at 846, (4th
Cir
1985);
Jacobson v Filler, 790 F2d 1362 at1367, (9th Cir 1986);
Borzeka v Heckler, 739 F2d 444 at 447 n2, (9th Cir 1984);
Garaux v Pully, 739 F2d 437 at 439, (9th Cir 1984);
Parisie v Greer, 705 F2d 882 at 898, (7th Cir 1983);
Moore v Fla, 703 F2d 516 at 520, (11th Cir 1983); Meritt v
Faulkner, 697 F2d 761 at 769, (7th Cir 1983); Myers v US, 636
F2d 166 at 168/69, (6th Cir 1981); Gordon v Leeke, 574 F2d 1147
at 1152/53, (4th Cir 1978); Roseboro v Garrison, 528 F2d 309,
(4th Cir 1975);
[p]ro se plaintiffs failure to disclose in complaint the basis
of any jurisdiction is not basis for dismissal for lack of
jurisdiction - Urbano v Calissi, 353 F2d 196 at 197, (3rd Cir
1965)
SEC v Vanco, 283 F2d 304 at 305, (3rd Cir 1960) [v]ague pro se
appeal will be heard
Complainant Robert Hedges states that he was arbitrarily and
improperly denied this timely appeal. The remedy may be to make
a complaint in Federal Court to this effect.