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Case: Pending Aero Nox v. Azalea Isles (2026) CV 21

Aero

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Aeronox4
Aeronox4
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Aero Nox, Plaintiff
v.
Azalea Isles, Defendant

Civil Complaint

This is a constitutional challenge to Civil Suit Reform Act §§2.d–e (the “Challenged Provisions”), which require that every putative class member (a) sign a written agreement to be part of a class and to be represented by counsel and (b) sign a pre‑agreed payout agreement, and that those documents be filed with any class complaint.
Plaintiff Aero Nox brings this action individually (not as a class representative) seeking a declaratory judgment that the Challenged Provisions are unconstitutional on their face and as applied, and injunctive relief enjoining their enforcement against all citizens.

Parties:​

  • Plaintiff: Aero Nox
  • Defendant: Azalea Isles

Factual Allegations:​

(All dates and time are in Eastern Daylight Time, which is UTC-4.)
  1. On May 10, 2025, Parliament passed the Civil Suit Reform Act (the "Act"). (Exhibit P-001)
  2. On May 15, 2025, the Crown ratified the Act. (Exhibit P-001)
  3. The Act requires that any putative class proceeding initiated by plaintiffs include, at filing, (i) a roster identifying every named class member, (ii) each member’s signed agreement to be part of the class and to be represented by counsel, and (iii) each member’s signed agreement to any payout arrangement that will be binding if the class prevails. The statute further provides that a class acting as Plaintiff may be represented only by a single legal entity and that all consents must be compiled and filed at the time of filing. (Civil Suit Reform Act §§2.d–e.)
  4. On April 25, 2026, the District Court dismissed Plaintiff’s prior class filing sua sponte without prejudice for failure to include the documents required by §§2.d–e. The Supreme Court of Azalea Isles declined review of that dismissal, advising Plaintiff to pursue a separate constitutional action if he wished to press constitutional claims. (Exhibit P-002)
  5. The statutory pre‑filing requirements operate as a substantive barrier to collective redress where class members are numerous, dispersed, transient, anonymous, or otherwise impracticable to identify and collect signatures from prior to judicial fact‑finding or court‑supervised notice processes.
  6. The Challenged Provisions effectively transfer to Parliament a core judicial responsibility - determining class composition, adequacy of representation, and fairness of any class payout - by requiring private pre‑filing contractual commitments rather than permitting courts to evaluate and manage certification and notice procedures.
  7. Prior proceedings (including a public governmental writ proceeding titled “Writ of Requisition for the Dead,” publicly available at https://www.cityrp.org/threads/writ-of-requisition-for-the-dead.3008/) have been carried out by government actors and adjudicated or processed without identical pre‑filed individual consents in analogous circumstances, demonstrating inconsistent application and resulting inequality in access to court remedies.

Legal Claims:​

I. The Act’s Mandatory Pre‑filing Consent and Payout Requirements Violate Article 1’s Guarantees of Equal Treatment, Freedom of Association, and Access to Courts.

A. Article 1 guarantees inviolable protections including equal treatment and freedoms of assembly/association subject only to reasonable limits prescribed by law. The challenged provisions are not reasonable: they deny plaintiffs practical access to collective litigation by imposing impossible preconditions where class members are numerous, anonymous, or transient.​
B. Requiring every putative member’s signed consent and payout acceptance prior to filing operates as a substantive bar to collective redress for the poor, dispersed, or transient, creating de facto unequal access to remedies - contrary to equal treatment.​
C. The statute chills freedom of association by converting litigation‑association into a contractual obstacle enforceable before judicial adjudication, deterring ad hoc or spontaneous collective actions.​

II. The Act Denies Procedural Due Process by Forcing Pre‑Adjudicative Contractual Certification and Foreclosing Court‑Managed Notice and Certification.

A. Due process in class litigation fundamentally depends on judicially supervised mechanisms: the court must determine commonality, adequacy, and manage notice and opt‑in/opt‑out protections to protect absent parties and defendants alike.​
B. By shifting the factual and procedural burden of assembling signed memberships and payout agreements to plaintiffs before the court evaluates certification, the Act deprives courts of their gatekeeping role and denies absent members procedural protections (e.g., independent notice, meaningful choice, and court oversight of settlement fairness).​
C. Such pre‑filing contractual requirements produce arbitrary outcomes across claimants and districts and fail to provide the individualized procedural safeguards required before binding absent persons to a payout agreement.​

III. The Act Unconstitutionally Encroaches on Judicial Power, Violating Article 3 and Separation of Powers.

A. Article 3 vests the Judiciary with authority to interpret law and manage court procedures. Class certification and pre‑trial process are quintessential judicial functions - assessing commonality, adequacy of counsel, fairness of settlements, and issuing notices.​
B. The Act attempts to prescribe outcome‑determinative prerequisites for court access and adjudication - substantive rules of preclusion and certification - that divest courts of their constitutional role and usurp judicial process.​
C. Where Parliament seeks to regulate litigation procedures, it must do so within constitutional bounds and without removing the Judiciary’s core adjudicative responsibilities. The challenged provisions effectively legislate away those responsibilities.​

IV. The Statutory Scheme Is Overbroad and Not Narrowly Tailored; Less Restrictive Alternatives Exist.

A. Even assuming Parliament may set reasonable litigation qualifications, the Act is overbroad: it forbids collective litigation unless plaintiffs perform burdensome, often impossible pre‑filing feats; this sweeps in ordinary collective harms (consumer defects, tenant blockages, environmental harms) and prevents judicial resolution.​
B. Narrowly tailored alternatives protect defendants and ensure fairness while preserving access: conditional certification, court‑supervised notice and opt‑in/opt‑out, preliminary hearings to determine class composition, and judicial review of settlement terms.​
C. Because less restrictive means are available and commonly used in constitutional systems to balance interests, the Act’s blunt mandatory consent/payout preconditions cannot stand.​
V. Unequal Application Demonstrated by Prior Judiciary Practice Requires Invalidation.

A. The Court should consider the practical application of the statute - how it has been enforced. The public record in the “Writ of Requisition for the Dead” (https://www.cityrp.org/threads/writ-of-requisition-for-the-dead.3008/) proceeding shows a governmental writ applied against a class without the presence of individually filed consents or payout agreements, and the matter proceeded. That precedent demonstrates selective or inconsistent enforcement that exacerbates the Constitution’s equal‑treatment concerns.​
B. Unequal enforcement of legislative prerequisites that determine access to courts demands strict scrutiny because the statute’s burden on rights operates arbitrarily and discriminatorily; such inconsistent practices strengthen the Appellant’s claim that the statutory scheme is unconstitutional in both text and application.​

Prayer for Relief:​

  1. A declaratory judgment that Civil Suit Reform Act §§2.d–e are unconstitutional both facially and as applied to Plaintiff, in violation of Articles 1 and 3 of the Constitution of Azalea Isles;
  2. A permanent injunction permanently enjoining enforcement of §§2.d–e against Plaintiff and similarly situated parties;
  3. An award of costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees to the extent permitted by law;
  4. Such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.

Verification:​

I, Aero Nox, hereby affirm that the allegations in the complaint AND all subsequent statements made in court are true and correct to the best of the plaintiff's knowledge, information, and belief and that any falsehoods may bring the penalty of perjury.

Evidence​


 
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Writ of Summons

Azalea Isles District Court, Civil Case (CV)


Case No. CV-26-21​
Plaintiff: Aero Nox
Defendant: Azalea Isles
The Defendant is required to appear before the court in the case of Aero Nox v. Azalea Isles (2026). Failure to respond within 48 hours may result in a default judgement. Both parties are asked to familiarize themselves with the relevant court documents, including proper formats, as well as the laws referenced in the complaint. Ensure that you comply with any court orders.

Please indicate in your response whether you wish to conduct the proceedings in person at the Azalea Courthouse. If you do not wish to hold the trial at the Azalea Courthouse, you must also state this in your response. The Court will try to work with both parties to hold live hearings at convenient times.
Signed,
Hon. Judge Milk Crack
 
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