one Kentucky Baptist Church In winning one of the first injunctions to compensate the Supreme Court for one of the attorneys’ fees and court fees to claim the Supreme Court’s efforts to recover attorneys’ fees and court fees.
Maryville Baptist Church In Louisville, the Superior Court has been asked to decide whether The church’s In an injunction lawsuit, refusal to repay the legal expenditure violates due process rights. A group of groups of separate lawsuits on the worship ban were awarded compensation for legal fees, but no church.
“Here, the court can compare two cases involving the same facts side by side, the same law, the same injunction, the same judicial panel, but with different results” The church’s Read the petition.
May 2020, Maryville Baptist Church Win the first U.S. coalition-related ban on Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear’s March 2020 ban on large face-to-face gatherings, including at a “faith-based” meeting.
However, church members who filed similar lawsuits were granted the “Preval Party” status by federal courts and were allowed to recover the fees and legal fees of lawyers. church itself.
this church appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit because they did not receive the same treatment. The Court of Appeal initially agreed and returned the case to the lower court, but the District Court again denied the church’s compensation.
The Sixth Circuit later confirmed the lower court’s ruling, and the Supreme Court ruled in 2024 to win a preliminary injunction – just like church And colleagues did-no certainty to the “Preval Party” status and expense compensation.
“fact, churchpastors and people are the same. The governor’s unconstitutional order is the same. The preliminary ban is the same. The right to prevails party identity also gives the same rights. The result should be the same.” The church’s The lawyer said in the Supreme Court petition.
Meanwhile, sir BeshearIn this case, Democrats and designated defendants urged the judge not to consider The church’s Plea. He said in the submission of the documents church Confuse its case with cases with different facts.
“In the entire case of this case, the petitioner improperly relevance the facts,” the governor’s application reads. “Here, the preliminary injunction does not provide all the relief they seek: a permanent injunction that allows them to attend Sunday services indefinitely.”
The case is Maryville Baptist Church v. Beshear.
Four judges will be required to vote for the case, namely, to arrange oral debates during the 2025-2026 semester that begins in October.
For more information, visit the Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.