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Act 25: I'm Ordered To Show Cause
When I opened my mailbox on Friday, October 26, 2001, it contained only one envelope, and the return address said that the letter was from the Court. Maybe you get used to receiving letters from the Court if you're a lawyer, but I'm not (a lawyer or used to it). Every time I open a letter from the Court, I assume that it's going to say something like this:
But this particular note didn't say that. (Whew!) Here's what it did say.
View the Original Order (in a separate window)
Having said that, I still had a few problems. I had to figure out where to find the Sunbeam decision. (I had already located Bally on the Web as the only "sucks.com" case ever decided under federal trademark law, Bally has been discussed extensively online.) I had to figure out what "pinpoint citations" meant. (I thought I knew, but I needed to be certain.) And I had to comply with "E.D. Mich. L.R. 5.1" which meant that I first had to figure out what "E.D. Mich. L.R. 5.1" was. This was all the more problematic because of time limitations. The order was dated on October 22nd, but I hadn't received it until the 26th. The judge had seemingly given me two weeks to respond but since I wouldn't be able to find out anything about "E.D. Mich. L.R. 5.1" until I called the court clerk on Monday, October 29 (I had been unable to learn anything online), and since I would have to mail my response on Friday, November 2, at the latest, I basically had five days to figure out what the judge wanted me to do, and then do it. And the timing was even more troublesome because of all of the documents I'd sent to the Court after the judge had actually written his order. In that time, I had submitted (among other things) an answer to the complaint, a motion to dismiss the complaint, a motion for a change of venue, and a response to the request to amend the injunction. So because it took so long for this order to reach me, I might have wasted all of that time creating all of those documents. Even worse, the judge might think that one of the documents that I had submitted might have been in response to his order and that I had ignored his specific instructions about how he wanted me to submit it. One major advantage that Ms. Greenberg had over me in this dispute (in addition to having some idea of what she was doing) was that every hour she devoted to this case was one more hour that her firm could bill to their client. On the other hand, every hour that I devoted to this case was one less hour that I could bill to my clients. So whereas I was getting poorer and poorer the longer this dragged on, the lawyers were getting richer and richer! Maybe I was in the wrong business... |
Next: I Respond to the Order To Show Cause
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