
The supreme court building is here at 401 7th Ave. North in Nashville. (Photo Google Earth)

My case is roughly 2:30 p.m. on the 1 p.m. docket.
The commissioners of revenue and safety are defending their universal mandatory auto insurance scheme in operation since 2002 in a suit filed by NoogaRadio Network journalist David Tulis.
The hearing at 401 7th Ave. North in Nashville will be live streamed at www.tncourts.gov and will appear on YouTube 20 days later on the court system’s page, according to a notice from appellate court clerk James Hivner.
In the case in which I represent the state, I am presenting the law to the commissioner of safety, Jeff Long, and the commissioner of revenue, David Gerregano, bagmen for the insurance cartel.
Davidson County Chancery Court Judge Anne Martin dismissed the petition, saying it failed to give her subject matter jurisdiction because I had not exhausted my administrative remedies.
In play are questions regarding sovereign immunity, due process rights, whether the courts are open, the exhaustion of administrative remedies as a defense, and whether officials acting under color of law and outside their offices have a right to do so.
I argue that Judge Martin erred in dismissing the case because I do not have any standing to make a petition under the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine. I say that safety had not revoked me (giving me no standing) and that revenue has no authority to hold hearings under the TFRL (meaning, no subject matter jurisdiction).
In a separate case, I am suing the department of revenue. But the case is legally null and void, and it’s native figures into the instant case. That case is on appeal in Hamilton County chancery court before Judge J.B. Bennett. A third case is in U.S. diistrict court in Nashville.
The fighting and mercy reporter at GiveSendGo

I request one witness to sit in thegallery. One witness. Maybe you?