Read what real lawyer says about Frivolous Complaint. (manifesto).


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Supreme Law Firm Discussion Forum ] [ FAQ ]

Posted by Post a Followup on October 15, 1998 at 01:45:13:

In Reply to: Re: Public international law, London?Stephen Mitchell?BIOGRAPHYLink? posted by First Middle Last on October 15, 1998 at 00:53:11:




Points & Authorities for Rinder Demurrer and Motion to Strike


JOINT
MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES IN SUPPORT


OF DEMURRER AND MOTION TO STRIKE VERIFIED
COMPLAINT FOR LIBEL

I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

Specifically abjuring the authority of,
among other things, the California Civil Code and the California Code of
Civil Procedure (Paragraphs l, 8-12),[1] "construing" this Court as the
"seventeenth judicial district of" some unidentified "district court" (Paragraph2),
declaring the valid and controlling California Constitution to be the 1849
version of that charter as amended through 1878 but not thereafter (Paragraphs
6a, 6b),), and alleging that the Internal Revenue Service "is a foreign
entity'' that "provides collection services for undisclosed foreign principals"
and that persons not employed by the federal government have no obligation
to pay federal income tax (Paragraphs 3 5-3 8), plaintiffs sue defendant
Mike Rinder for libel in a church bulletin that warns a religious congregation
that plaintiffs' refusal to recognize their legal obligation to pay federal
income taxes is an illegal act.

___________________________________________________________

FOOTNOTE 1. All references of "Paragraph"
followed by a number are to the correspondingly numbered paragraph of plaintiffs'
Verified Complaint for Libel ("Complaint").

Plaintiffs, apparently acting wth the "assistance"
of a non-lawyer "counsel," have not filed a complaint. Instead, they have
filed what amounts to a manifesto espousing anarchy and mob rule. While
their pleading offers abundant political rhetoric, revisionist history
and tortured constructions of law, it fails to state facts sufficient to
constitute a cause of action against Mr. Rinder (or anyone else) for libel
(or anything else). Plaintiffs have specifically alleged that the current
laws of California--to which they decline to adhere--are nullities which
do not form any basis for their supposed cause of action, and that they
are defamed when their conduct is characterized as "criminal" because they
do not regard federal income tax evasion as a crime.

Since plaintiffs can never pursue any claim
under superseded California law and--whether they like it or not--income
tax evasion is criminal conduct, not only are defendant's demurrer and
concurrently filed Motion to Strike the Complaint both well taken, it is
also clear that the Complaint can never be converted from a polemic into
a cognizable claim. Accordingly, the Complaint should be dismissed without
leave to amend.

II THE COMPLAINT

Appearing in propria persona, but emphatically
not "pro se," and with the "assistance of 'counsel' by Right" under the
superseded 1849 version of the state constitution (Paragraph1), plaintiffs
begin their Complaint by declaring the 1849 version of the California Constitution
as amended through 1878 to be the operative charter and that all succeeding
versions are null (Paragraphs 1, 6a-6b). Plaintiffs then declare themselves,
the defendants, and this Court to be subject to that version of the state
constitution and not any succeeding version of it and further declare that
neither they, the defendants, nor the Court is subject to either the Civil
Code or the Code of Civil Procedure (Paragraph 1) upon some incoherent,
but lengthy, theory about a defect in legislative procedure that supposedly
occurred in 1872 (Paragraphs 1, 7-12).

Having liberated themselves from the existing
state constitution and having construed as void ab initio all California
statutes affecting civil causes end civil procedure passed since 1872 (Paragraphs
1, 8-1 2). plaintiffs next inform the Court that, for the purposes of this
action, it is to regard itself as the "seventeenth judicial district" of
some sort of "district court," as defined by the 1849 version of the state
constitution and some vaguely referenced public law of 1872 which plaintiffs
apparently are willing to tolerate as valid (Paragraph5). Plaintiffs also
"demand that the Court take Judicial notice" of their arcane constitutional
interpretation and adopt the 1849 constitution as amended through 1878
to the exclusion of the actual Constitution (Paragraphs 6a-6b) and warn
defendant that his reliance upon the operative statutes of this state will
be "expressly construed by the plaintiffs" in accordance with their bizarre
legal conclusion that this is 1872 rather than 1997 and dealt wth accordingly
(Paragraph 12).

Nearly half of the Complaint is devoted
to the foregoing legal gibberish. When they do attempt to define the libel
upon which they purport to sue, they reveal their alleged cause of action
to be as grotesque and legally defective as their interpretation of California
legal history. Pointing to a February 9, 1997 church bulletin (Paragraph
13), which they ascribe to defendant Rinder because (1) he is "the head
of the Office of Special Affairs International" (Paragraph 3), (2) the
bulletin of which they complain displays the legend " 1997 CSI"' (Paragraph
15A), and (3) "the ultimate authorty" to produce the bulletin "would have
to have come from Mike Rinder" (Paragraph 19, emphasis deleted), plaintiffs
claim to have been defamed. The bulletin (Complaint, Ex. A) warns parishioners
of the Scientology religion that so- called tax avoidance schemes espoused
by plaintiffs and others--whom the Internal Revenue Service designates
as "tax protestors" (Complaint, Ex B)) amount to income tax evasion and
are illegal under criminal provisions of federal law, and that advocates
of such schemes have been prosecuted and jailed. Plaintiffs apparently
object to the bulletin's characterizations of them and their activities
as "illegal" (Paragraph 23), the bulletin's use of the word "facts" in
some general sense (Paragraphs 24-26) and the bulletin's characterization
of persons who promote such schemes as "criminals" (Paragraph 26)

Plaintiffs' libel allegations then continue
along their fatal course to their ultimate legal
demise.
Plaintiffs allege that the statements they characterize as libelous "cannot
be true"
(Complaint, p. 10, 1) because
they are under no legal obligation to pay federal income tax.
The
allegations that lead plaintiffs to that remarkable legal conclusion are
their averments
that:

* Congress never created the Bureau of
Internal Revenue (Paragraph 29), nor authorized its name to be changed
to the Internal Revenue Service (Paragraph 30);


* The IRS "and/or the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms" is not an agency of the United States Department
of the Treasury (Paragraph 31);


* The federal government has no authority
to establish revenue districts or extend the authority of the Treasury
Department or its personnel into or within "any of the several states"
(Paragraphs 32-32d, emphasis deleted);


* The Code of Federal Regulations defines
"revenue agent" and "secretary" as used in the Internal Revenue Code and
its regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury of Puerto Rico and commonwealth
revenue agents of the Department of Treasury of Puerto Rico (Paragraphs
33-33c, emphasis deleted);


* The Internal Revenue Code contains no
provisions for assessment or collection of income taxes by the IRS or BATF
other than in the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin
Islands (Paragraph34).


* While "everyone is "led to believe"'
that the IRS collects revenue for "the benefit of constitutional United
States government operation" (Paragraph 36), it in reality "is a foreign
entity" (Paragraph35), "contracted to provide collection services for the
Agency for International Development"" (Paragraph 36) which apparently
represents the interests of "the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank" (Paragraph 36); and


* The only persons specifically liable
for federal income taxes under the Internal Revenue Code are "federal officers
and employees" (Paragraphs 37-38).

Accordingly, "[t]he plaintiffs, and each
of them, hereby aver that they are not presently such a 'federal officer
or employee', and are therefore not subject to the Internal Revenue Service,
and the libel herein is hereby conclusively proven." (Paragraph 38).

III, ARGUMENT

A. The Complaint Fails to State Facts Sufficient
to Constitute a Cause of Action Against Mr. Rinder and No Possible Amendment
Can Convert Plaintiffs' Pleading Into a Legally Cognizable Claim.

The sole function of a demurrer is to challenge
the legal sufficiency of a pleading. Century Indemnity Co. v Superior Court
(1996) 50 Cal. App. 4th 1115, 1118 n. 6, 58 Cal. Rptr. 2d 69, 71 n. 6,
quoting Committee on Children's Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp.
(1983) 35 Cal. 3d 197, 213, 197 Cal Rptr. 783, 793. A demurrer is properly
sustained when the Complaint, taken as a whole and reading its parts in
context, fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action
against the demurring defendant. C.C.P. Section 430.10 (e), Cross v. Bonded
Adjustment Bureau (1996) 48 Cal App. 4th 266, 275, 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d 801,
805.[2]

___________________________________________________________

FOOTNOTE 2 In demurrer procedure, parties
such as plaintiffs, appearing in propria persona, are ''to be treated like
any other party and [are] entitled to the same, but no greater consideration,
than other litigants and attorneys." Barton v. New United Motor Manufacturing,
Inc. (1996) 43 Cal. App. 4th 1200, 1210, 51 Cal. Rptr. 2d 328, 334.

For purposes of that legal analysis, the
demurrer provisionally admits "all material facts properly pleaded, but
not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law....," Cross v.
Bonded Adjustment Bureau, supra, at 275, 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 805 quoting
BIank v. Kirwan (1985) 39 Cal 3d 311, 318, 216 Cal. Rptr 718, 721. That
is a critical distinction here, where the Complaint is more a tract than
a pleading, and consists essentially of legal conclusions regarding plaintiffs'
eccentric interpretations of federal and state law.

Here, casting aside the Complaint's extraneous
commentary and immaterial conclusory matter, the alleged cause of action
is that the characterizations of plaintiffs and their conduct is defamatory
because neither they, nor anyone else not employed by the federal government,
are legally obliged to pay federal income taxes. Such a cause of action
is impossible because their legal conclusions about federal taxation are
contrary to law, and nothing can ever change the fact that on February
7, 1 997--the date of the purported libel--that they were indeed obliged
to pay such taxes. As their alleged cause of action rises or falls on their
assertion that they are not so obliged--and there can be no question about
either the existence of that obligation[3] or the exclusive jurisdiction
of the federal court system even to address the vitality of the Internal
Revenue Code--plaintiffs have failed to state facts sufficient to state
a cause of action.

___________________________________________________________

FOOTNOTE 3: The Internal Revenue Code
imposes a tax on the income of every individual who is a citizen or resident
of the United States. 26 U.S.C. Section l(c); Treas. Reg. Sections1.1-l(a)(l),
1.1-l(b). Plaintiffs' contention that income tax can only be assessed in
federal enclaves and the District of Columbia has been repeatedly rejected
as patently meritless. See, e.g., In re Becraft (9th Cir. 1989) 885 F.2d
547, 548 n. 2. United States v. S1udley (9th Cir. 1986) 783 F 2d 934, 937.

Since no repleading or amendment can correct
that fatal flaw, this demurrer should be sustained without leave to replead.
"Leave to amend should be denied where the facts arc not in dispute, and
the nature of the plaintiff's claim is clear, but, under the substantive
law, no liability exists. Obviously, no amendment would change the result."
5 B. WITKIN, CALIFORNIA PROCEDURE (4th ed .) Pleading Section 946, p. 403
(1997); Heckendorn v. San Marino (1986) 42 Cal. 3d 481, 489, 229 Cal. Rptr.
324, 329.

In this case, the nature of plaintiffs'
actual claim is clear enough, but the substantive law of federal taxation
is even clearer that no liability can ever flow from the Complaint. Maintenance
of this action would represent only an unfair financial burden on the defendant
and an unnecessary imposition on the time and resources of the Court. Accordingly,
the demurrer procedure is properly employed to terminate the action with
prejudice:

How does a court, confronted with a defective
pleading of nondescript appearance and uncertain ancestry, determine whether
the pleading is susceptible of future domestication into the recognizable
flock of justiciable causes of action? In final analysis, the court is
required to look at the existing pleading and hazard its best judgment
whether behind the words of the pleading anything of legal substance lies,
whether on further revision the pleading can honestly state a cause of
action.

Hills Transportation CO. vs. Southwest
Forest Industries (1968) 266 Cal. App. 2d 702, 709, 72 Cal. Rptr. 441,
446 (upholding grant of demurrer without leave to amend when amended pleading
suppressed destructive facts pled in a superseded version of the pleading).
The circumstance here does not allow for any amendment to overcome what
already has been pled--i.e., that the alleged libel is defamatory because
plaintiffs are not obliged to pay federal income taxes. It would be an
exercise in futility to permit plaintiffs another opportunity to plead
the impossible, because the fundamental premises of the Complaint conclusively
foreclose any statement of facts that might render their purported claims
viable.

Thus the Complaint is ripe for dismissal
without leave to amend because there is no reasonable possibility that
the defect--impossibility as a matter of law--can be cured by amendment.
"The burden of proving such reasonable possibility is squarely on the plaintiff...."
Blank v Kirwan supra, 39 Cal. 3d at 318. 216 Cal. Rptr. at 722. That is
a burden these plaintiffs cannot meet.

H. A Motion to Strike Is Properly Granted
Against a Complaint That Fails to identify a Primary Right to Be Vindicated.

On a motion to strike brought under C.C.P.
Section 435 (b)(1),[4] the Court is empowered to
"[s]trike
out all or any part of any pleading not drawn in conformity with the laws
of this
state...." C.C.P Section 436
(b). This Complaint, in which plaintiffs specifically abjure the

validity of the Civil Code (which contains
the statutory basis for bringing libel claims in
California))
and the Code of Civil Procedure (which governs maintenance and prosecution
of
all civil clams), as well, all constitutional
doctrine in this state from 1878 until the present,
is
patently "not drawn in conformity with the laws of this state." It thus
should be stricken
altogether and with
finality.

___________________________________________________________

FOOTNOTE 4 C.C.P. Section 435 (b)(1) provides,
in pertinent part, that: Any party, within the time allowed to respond
to a pleading may serve and file a notice of motion to strike the whole
or any part thereof....

Motions to strike complaints in whole or
in part are well taken when the complaint amounts to a sham or when it
fails "to state facts showing a primary right of the plaintiff and a primary
duty of, or wrong committed by, the defendant." PH ll, Inc. v. Superior
Court (1995) 33 Cal. App. 4th 1680, 1683, 40 Cal. Rptr. 2d 169, 171 (claim
for attorney's fees against attorney for withdrawing, without client consent,
a claim for third-party accounting malpractice after Supreme Court ruled
in another case that there is no such liability); Ricard v. Grobestein,
Goldman, Stevenson, etc. ( 1992) 6 Cal. App. 4th 157, 162, 8 Cal. Rptr.
2d 139. 142 (sham complaint stricken as plaintiff admitted it was filed
solely to circumvent an earlier adverse ruling); Lodi v. Lodi (1985) 173
Cal. App. 3d 628, 630-31 , 219 Cal. Rptr. 116, 118

In Lodi, the plaintiff, acting in propria
persona as "reversioner" of a trust supposedly created by his birth certificate
sued himself as "beneficiary" of that "trust," and appeared in propria
persona in his own defense as well. In analyzing what it characterized
as "a slam- dunk frivolous complaint" id. at 630, 219 Cal. Rptr. at 118,
the court held that every lawsuit in California must present "a primary
right possessed by the plaintiff, and a corresponding primary duty devolving
upon the defendant" as well as "a delict or wrong done by the defendant
which consisted in a breach of such primary right and duty." Id. at 631,
219 Cal. Rptr. at 1 18 (emphasis in original).

The cause of action, as it appears in the
complaint when properly pleaded, will therefore always be the facts from
which the plaintiff's primary right and the defendant's corresponding primary
duty have arisen, together with the facts which constitute the defendant's
delict or act of wrong.

Id. (emphasis in original).

This Complaint is as devoid of a cause
of action as was the Lodi complaint. There is
no
primary right, no primary duty, and no breach of that duty in a circumstance
where
plaintiffs allege that characterizations
of their refusal to pay federal income taxes as illegal
or
criminal arc libelous because plaintiffs insist that only employees of
the federal
government are legally
obligated to pay such taxes. Consequently, the holding of the Lodi

court is controlling here. Thus, just as in
Lodi:

[P]laintiff's complaint fails to state
facts showing a primary right by plaintiff or a primary duty devolving
on defendant or a wrong done by defendant.... Consequently, the complaint
was not drawn in conformity with the laws of this state and was thus properly
subject to the court's own motion to strike under section 436, subdivision
(b).

Id.; see PH II, inc. v. Superior Court,
supra, at 1682, 40 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 171 (when substantive defect is apparent
on the face of the complaint, "the defendant should not have to suffer
discovery and navigate the often dense thicket of proceedings in summary
adjudication").

IV. CONCLUSION

For all the foregoing reasons, and for
the sake of preventing this "slam-dunk frivolous complaint" from occupying
any more of the time and resources of a busy Court, this demurrer should
be sustained in full without leave to amend, and the accompanying Motion
to Strike should be granted so the Complaint is forever stricken. Nothing
more or less is warranted by a Complaint that is a legally meaningless
adventure in extremism.

Dated: August 25, 1997

Respectfully submitted,

LAW OFFICES OF WILLIAM T. DRESCHER

By: (SIGNATURE:WILLIAM T. DRESCHER)

William T. Drescher

Attorneys for Defendant MIKE RINDER










Follow Ups:



Post a Followup

Name:
E-Mail:

Subject:

Comments:

Optional Link URL:
Link Title:
Optional Image URL:


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Supreme Law Firm Discussion Forum ] [ FAQ ]