This Video demonstrates how objections are made to the Magistrate Court Judge's Findings and Recommendations, to the District Court Judge, to Dismiss Plaintiff's Complaint.
The judge dismissed my complaint and I file a judicial complaint on him for misconduct filed a motion for reconsideration and was finally granted relief thank Jehovah god 🙏🏾
Wow. This is beautiful. Yes, facts, the law, and plausibility are of supreme importance. To my fellow pro se Plaintiffs, stay on course. Expect a protracted fight. The magistrate in my case was so corrupt, reprobate and incompetent, that she STRUCK my complaint (in order to protect defendant) and refused to give legal foundations for blocking my complaint. Thanks fir sharing this, counselor. All the way in...
It's great to see these results. Keep teaching what you are teaching. For some Pro Se litigants that follow procedures, this is great information. I commend your teaching. I would love to see a course where you teach and go into more depth about the Fed R. Civ. Pro. I'm just saying.😂😂😂
Hi. Thank you for your encouragment. I truly enjoy empowering. Your idea of indepth discussion on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is a good one. I'll take it into consideration. Best!
I was shocked to have a District Judge dismiss my case before it started. Because I filled out a fee waiver, apparently the waiver put me under jurisdiction of 28 USC 1915 and the Court screened my complaint to find there was no private right of action under my claim.
A plaintiff can file a notice of dismissal, as long as the defendant has not responded to the complaint or filed a motion for summary judgment. Once dismissed, the case becomes closed. Read F.R.C.P. 41 for other grounds on which plaintiff's complaint may or may not be dismissed. Then you have the motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment scenarios, where the court may dismiss plaintiff's complaint for failure to state a claim, or dismiss the lawsuit for failure to demonstrate that there is a genuine dispute as to any material fact, to survive summary judgment. However, "closing a case" doesn't necessarily mean the case is dismissed. For example, a prosecutor may close a case and reopen it after having received certain information. I hope this helps.
Hi. Here is a link for petiton for rehearing. www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frap/rule_40#:~:text=The%20petition%20must%20state%20with,for%20panel%20rehearing%20is%20permitted.