No. 19-7992

Glenn Sinatra Davis v. Bank of New York Mellon Corporation, as Trustee for Specialty Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust, Series 2005-BC3

Lower Court: Alabama
Docketed: 2020-03-13
Status: Denied
Type: IFP
IFP
Tags: civil-procedure constitutional-rights continuance court-motion discovery due-process equal-protection fair-trial fairness judicial-fairness justice legal-procedure notice notice-of-motions notice-of-rights
Key Terms:
AdministrativeLaw DueProcess
Latest Conference: 2020-05-15
Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether a Citizen of the United States have a right to 'Due Process' under the law

Question Presented (OCR Extract)

QUESTION PRESENTED Whether a Citizen of the United States, have a right to “Due Process” under the law. \ Whether the fundamental principle of Fairness and Justice in all legal matters, both civil and criminal, especially in the trial courts, is that all legal procedures set by statute and court practice, including proper notice of rights and proper notice of motions, must be followed for each individual so that no prejudicial or unequal treatment will result. Whether the Petitioner was arbitrarily denied his open court motion for a court ordered discovery and/or a continuance thus violating his right to an impartial and fair ruling. ¢ ; {

Docket Entries

2020-05-18
Petition DENIED.
2020-04-23
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 5/15/2020.
2020-01-06
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due April 13, 2020)
2019-11-20
Application (19A549) granted by Justice Thomas extending the time to file until January 6, 2020.
2019-11-07
Application (19A549) to extend the time to file a petition for a writ of certiorari from November 7, 2019 to January 6, 2020, submitted to Justice Thomas.

Attorneys

Glenn Sinatra Davis
Glenn Sinatra Davis — Petitioner