Lawsuit: Pending Stoned Enterprise Corp v. Ministry of Development, Case 1 (Mag Ct., 2026)

SrICEKING

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SrICEKING
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Claimant: Stoned Enterprise Corp

Defendant: Ministry of Development (MOD)

I. Introduction

  1. This action arises from the Ministry of Development’s (MOD) unlawful and frivolous enforcement of zoning regulations against the Claimant’s property located at c-4-victoria-ln.
  2. MOD has issued a warning alleging that the property exceeds the build height limit by seven blocks.
  3. MOD has further threatened fines of £100 per day, despite its own regulations limiting such fines to £50 per day for build height violations.
II. Jurisdiction

  1. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to the relevant Acts of Parliament governing zoning enforcement and administrative review.
III. Statement of Facts

  1. , MOD issued a warning to the Claimant regarding alleged violations of the build height limit.
  2. MOD claimed the property exceeded the permitted height by seven blocks.
  3. MOD threatened to impose fines of £100 per day of non-compliance.
  4. The applicable regulations, MOD Zoning Regulations of August 28, Section 2, expressly state:
    • Violations of the Build Height Limit shall subject the plot owner to a £50 fine per day, provided that notice has been issued and a grace period of 14 days has expired.
    • No provision authorizes MOD to impose fines exceeding £50 per day for build height violations.
  5. MOD’s announcements of October 31 did not suspend or amend Section 2 of the August 28 regulations.
IV. Causes of Action

Count 1 – Frivolous Enforcement


  1. MOD’s enforcement action is frivolous in nature, as it seeks to impose penalties beyond those authorized by its own regulations.
  2. Such conduct constitutes an abuse of administrative discretion and undermines the principles of fair enforcement.
Count 2 – Exceeding Regulatory Authority

  1. MOD’s threatened fines of £100 per day exceed the statutory and regulatory limits of £50 per day for build height violations.
  2. MOD is empowered to issue fines not exceeding £200 per day in general, but Section 2 specifically caps build height violations at £50 per day.
  3. By threatening fines in excess of this cap, MOD has acted ultra vires (beyond its legal authority).
V. Relief Requested

The Claimant respectfully requests that this Court:

· Declare MOD’s threatened enforcement action unlawful and void.

· Enjoin MOD from imposing fines exceeding £50 per day for build height violations.

· Order MOD to reimburse the Claimant’s legal expenses in the amount of £1500, representing the fees incurred in retaining legal services (SrICEKING) to contest MOD’s frivolous and excessive enforcement.

· Award any further relief this Court deems just and proper, including costs associated with defending against MOD’s extravagenting of fines beyond the regulatory limit.

VI. Conclusion

MOD’s actions represent both frivolous enforcement and enforcement exceeding regulation. The Claimant seeks judicial intervention to restrain MOD from continuing such unlawful practices.







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This appears to be something that the Magistrates' court is capable of handling and is within their original jurisdiction of handling civil matters - K.A Const. §III Art. 16

As such this case will be remanded down to the Magistrates' Court for their review.​
 
here is the proof
 

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IN THE MAGISTRATES COURT OF ALEXANDRIA
WRIT OF SUMMONS
The Ministry of Development is required to appear before the Magistrates' Court In the case of
Stoned Enterprise Corp v. Ministry of Development, Case 1 (Mag Ct., 2026)
.

Failure to appear within 72 hours of this summons may result in a default judgment based on the known facts of the case.

All parties will make themselves aware of the Court Rules and Procedures (General and Magistrates).​
 
Soggeh T. Oast for the Ministry of Development, your honor.
 
IN THE MAGISTRATES COURT OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
RESPONSE TO COMPLAINT

Stoned Enterprise Corp

Applicant/Plaintiff
v.

Ministry of Development
Respondent/Defendant

I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT
1. The Crown AFFIRMS the MOD issued a warning to the Claimant regarding alleged violations of the build height limit.
2. The Crown AFFIRMS the MOD claimed the property exceeded the permitted height by seven blocks.
3. The Crown AFFIRMS that the MOD advised that non-compliance would result in fines of £150 per day.
4. The Crown AFFIRMS that MOD Zoning Regulations of August 28, Section 2, expressly state:
  • Violations of the Build Height Limit shall subject the plot owner to a £50 fine per day, provided that notice has been issued and a grace period of 14 days has expired.
However, the Crown DENIES the MOD Zoning Regulations of August 28 expressly state that no provision authorizes MOD to impose fines exceeding £50 per day for build height violations; however, the Crown acknowledges that MOD Zoning Regulations of August 28, Section 2 contain no provision that expressly authorizes MOD to impose fines exceeding £50 per day specifically for build height violations.
5. The Crown AFFIRMS the MOD’s announcements of October 31 did not suspend or amend Section 2 of the August 28 regulations.

II. DEFENSES
The Applicant simply has not articulated a coherent legal theory which establishes the necessity for any form of relief whatsoever. It is true that a warning was issued by the Ministry of Development, which advised that non-compliance would result in fines which succeed regulations imposed by their own internal ministry policy; however, these fines were never executed, the claimant never suffered financial loss, and the Applicant has failed to demonstrate any entitlement to relief. The Applicant has also argued the Ministry acted ultra vires, which is incorrect. The Ministry did not exceed its statutory authority granted by Parliament, and any departure from its own internal procedures, while problematic, does not constitute ultra vires conduct.

Respectfully submitted,

Soggeh T. Oast
Minister of Justice
Kingdom of Alexandria
 
Discovery shall now begin and last for seventy-two hours. Discovery may be abridged at the request of both parties, or extended if just cause is given.
 
Discovery has ended. Claimant has seventy-two hours to file their opening statement.
 
IN THE MAGISTRATES COURT OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA

Lux Group, Applicant/Plaintiff
v.
Ministry of Development, Respondent/Defendant

APPLICANT’S OPENING STATEMENT


Your Honor,

The Applicant, Lux Group LLC, respectfully submits this Opening Statement to clarify the core legal issues at stake and to demonstrate why the Respondent’s Answer is insufficient as a matter of law and fact.

I. The Central Issue: A Threat of Unlawful Action
This case does not concern whether a fine was collected, but whether a government ministry threatened to impose a fine it had no legal authority to impose. The Respondent’s Defense erroneously frames this as a mere internal procedural error with no consequence. This is a fundamental mischaracterization.

The Ministry of Development’s own promulgated Zoning Regulations of August 28 create a specific, limited penalty for build height violations: £50 per day, following notice and a 14-day grace period (Section 2). The Ministry’s warning to the Applicant explicitly threatened a fine of £150 per day—a penalty three times the lawful maximum.

A government agency’s formal threat to enforce a penalty that exceeds its statutory or regulatory authority is a quintessential example of ultra vires conduct. It is an assertion of a power not granted by law. The threat itself creates a tangible injury: it coerces compliance under an unlawful penalty scheme, distorts the legal relationship between the state and the citizen, and undermines the rule of law by placing the ministry above its own regulations.

II. The Respondent’s Admission and Flawed Defense
The Respondent’s Answer effectively concedes the pivotal fact. It AFFIRMS the warning threatened a £150/day fine. It AFFIRMS the August 28 regulations set a £50/day fine. It AFFIRMS no subsequent regulation amended this penalty. Its only hedge is a denial that the regulations “expressly state that no provision authorizes” a higher fine—a lawyerly distinction without a difference. The principle of delegated authority is clear: a ministry possesses only the powers expressly or necessarily granted. There is no grant of authority for a 300% penalty increase.

The Defense that “no fine was ever executed” and “no financial loss was suffered” is irrelevant and dangerously flawed. It suggests a ministry may threaten any unlawful action with impunity, so long as it does not finally execute it. This would eviscerate judicial review and allow the state to bully citizens with baseless threats. The injury is the threat of unlawful action, not merely its culmination.

Furthermore, the Defense’s claim that departing from “internal procedures… does not constitute ultra vires conduct” is incorrect. When those “internal procedures” are in fact the publicly promulgated regulations that define the scope of the ministry’s enforcement powers, a violation is a direct act beyond its legal authority.

III. The Need for Relief
The Applicant seeks a declaratory judgment from this Court. We require a clear ruling that:

  1. The Ministry of Development’s threatened fine of £150 per day for a build height violation exceeded its authority under the Zoning Regulations of August 28.
  2. The Ministry is bound by the penalties set forth in its own regulations.
Such a declaration is necessary and proper. It will prevent the Ministry from applying this unlawful penalty against the Applicant or any other citizen in the future. It reaffirms that the government and its citizens are equally bound by the law as written.

The Respondent’s position—that it can threaten penalties it cannot lawfully impose—is unsustainable. The Court should reject it, clarify the law, and grant the requested relief.

Respectfully submitted,

SrICEKING
legal Representive
 
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