Strollin Pettifogger - More Defendants knowingly create constitutional conflicts.
by Robert Hedges ©



Plaintiff HEDGES also filed a case in Jefferson Circuit against the several non-judiciary tort-feasors in this matter. This case is based on the constitutional and common law right to a vested interest in property, and is a tort case against all the individuals who caused the realty of the Hedges Farm to change hands away from Robert Hedges, depriving him involuntarily of his vested interest in the historical location. That lengthy case clearly lists the factual events, unjust, illegal, unconstitutional, and/or merely unethical, which have prevented me from keeping a Kentucky bluegrass horse farm, purchased in 1830, paid for and kept by the Hedges family ( those who did not move away), until the Commonwealth of Kentucky via its salaried employees participated in the takeover or failed to act to prevent its loss to the original family, and ultimately to the state itself.


The Jefferson Circuit (Judge Ken Conliffe) dismissed this case (95-CI-002191) on a summary dismissal motion. He assessed Rule 11 sanctions to take a fee from Plaintiff in favor of the defendant, permanently enjoined Plaintiff from further suits against the defendants on speculation, and described the very clear case as frivolous. Appeal followed. Judge Conliffe then issued a fee ruling for $1100. which was garnisheed againt Robert Hedges while the underlying case was on appeal. If a simple Motion to dismiss (containing no case law and clearly not researched or based on law - thus being frivolous) is worth $1100. in legal fees, then the many appeals described in this article, and the federal cases are literally $100,000. worth of litigation.


Plaintiff Hedges was unable to pick up mail from his PO Box for several months during late 95 and Jan 1996. He was also not prepared to spend to reprint the entire Appeal Brief in this case at that time. Thus the Court of Appeals denied the appeal, claiming Hedges was "unable to comply with the rules". The Court of Appeals has used the page counting technicality to deny a hearing on the merits of the Conliffe appeal/trial de novo/summary dismissal.
Conliffe first violated Rule 52, in signing a document he failed to read.