1) Plaintiff filed lawsuit against KittyKind for Failure to Return Money and
Failure to pay for Services Rendered.
3) On or About April 23
Plaintiff delivered all Discovery requested to Defendant’s office
5) June 19 Hearing #2
Judge Wright informed Defendedant that Mediation is not binding
Both parties sent into Mediation by court
Defendant’s attorney brought up June 8 Settlement offer
Offer is now off the table
Defendant alleged that all or most of the cat were not KittyKind cats
Stipulation signed by both parties agreeing to finish Discovery requests by 7/7/07
Defendant agreed to give Plaintiff all Discovery by 6/28/07
Defendant claimed to have a signed contract by Plaintiff and was ordered to bring it
to next Hearing
6) August 8 Hearing #3
Judge asked to see alleged signed contract
Defendant gave email taken out of context from Mediation with Jane Hoffman
2nd Judge to inform Defendant that Mediation is not binding
Judge asked if there was a limit to costs of medical care provided per cat
Defendant’s attorney said no
Judge asked Plaintiff if Plaintiff made agreement and now wanted more money
Plaintiff replied “No”
Defendant admitted that there is no signed contract
Plaintiff showed Judge Defendant’s Response to Discovery
Judge advised Plaintiff to file Motion to Compel
Defendant’s attorney said that Jane Hoffman would make an appearance in court
within 20 minutes and asked if he could wait for her.
Judge asked if I wanted to go to trial at that time. I said yes, however did not have
my receipts with me. A new hearing date was set.
o Any stalling has been due to Defendant’s claims of having a signed contract
when in fact it did not exist
At Motion to Compel on August 29, Judge Hagler changed trial date from Sept
18 to Oct 15 in order to give Defendant 30 days to send Discovery materials and
affidavits ordered by the Court
13) Judge advised Defendant’s attorney that Rejection of Deposition is not part of
our Justice System and that they could not make up the rules as they went along.
He also advised them that in this particular case he believed that this
organization had taken advantage of a softhearted person in the amount of
$25,000. Attorney tried in vain to convince him that KittyKind is a “wonderful,
caring organization”.