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New York lawyer pulls a Tyrion Lannister, demands a trial by combat

Published Aug 7th, 2015 9:45PM EDT
New York Lawyer Trial Combat
Image: Screenshot / HBO

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Luckily for us, life on Earth isn’t governed by Game of Thrones-style laws anymore, but some people still think otherwise. One Staten Island lawyer has gone ahead and asked for a trial by combat in a lawsuit in which he and his firm happen to be co-defendants. This isn’t a joke, it really happened.

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Richard A. Luthmann filed documentation with a New York trial court to explain his reasoning, The Washington Post reports.

“Defendant demands trial by combat,” a section of the document is titled. “Defendant invokes the common law writ of right and demands his common law right to Trial By Combat as against Plaintiffs and their counsel, whom plaintiff wishes to implead into the Trial By Combat by writ of right,” the lawyer writes.

Luthmann went ahead and explained the history of trial by combat in eight of the 17 pages of the brief, telling the court that it was introduced in common law of the Kingdom of England following the Norman Conquest. The law remained in use for the duration of High and Late Middle Ages, he noted.

He then said that in 1774, “as part of the legislative response to the Boston Tea Party, Parliament considered a bill which would have abolished appeals of murder and trials by battle in the American colonies.” The bill was opposed by Member of Parliament John Dunning, “who called the appeal of murder ‘that great pillar of the Constitution.’”

Furthermore, Luthmann also said that the Ninth Amendment preserved the right to trial by combat as one of the rights that were “retained by the people.”

You can see Luthmann entire document, which contains many other hilarious passages, at the source link. From the looks of it, Luthmann’s firm doesn’t think too much of the Plaintiffs and this complex trial by combat request is actually just his way of asking for the complaint to be dismissed.

Chris Smith Senior Writer

Chris Smith has been covering consumer electronics ever since the iPhone revolutionized the industry in 2007. When he’s not writing about the most recent tech news for BGR, he closely follows the events in Marvel’s Cinematic Universe and other blockbuster franchises.

Outside of work, you’ll catch him streaming new movies and TV shows, or training to run his next marathon.