MN Plumbing Pro Motion Hearing in Carver

- Motion hearing for MN Plumbing Pro, LLC (case 10-CV-24-597) regarding a motion for summary judgment. - Scheduled 10:00 AM on Thursday, April 23, 2026 at the Carver County District Court (public courtroom calendar). - Official calendar listing: mncourtsdocs.courts.state.mn.us

A Carver County judge is set to hear a summary-judgment motion Thursday morning in a civil case involving MN Plumbing Pro, LLC. (mncourtsdocs.courts.state.mn.us) The hearing is listed for 10 a.m. on Thursday, April 23, 2026, before Judge Eric J. Braaten on the Carver County District Court daily calendar. The courthouse is the Carver County Justice Center at 604 E. Fourth Street in Chaska. (mncourtsdocs.courts.state.mn.us) (mncourts.gov) The calendar entry identifies the matter as case 10-CV-24-597 and labels the proceeding “Motion Summary Judgment.” Minnesota Court Records Online says public users can search hearings and case details for district court matters through its system. (mncourtsdocs.courts.state.mn.us) (www.mncourts.gov) A summary-judgment motion asks a judge to decide a case, or part of it, without a trial when the moving party says the key facts are not genuinely disputed. Minnesota Rule 56 says the court may grant that relief if the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (www.revisor.mn.gov) Minnesota’s civil rules also set timing limits for these motions. Rule 56 says a summary-judgment motion generally cannot be filed more than 30 days after discovery closes unless the court orders otherwise, and it must be served at least 14 days before the hearing. (www.revisor.mn.gov) MN Plumbing Pro describes itself as a plumbing contractor serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro from Zimmerman, Minnesota. Third-party business listings identify the company as an active Minnesota limited liability company formed in November 2018. (mnplumbingpro.com) (www.bizapedia.com) The public calendar confirms the hearing is on the court’s schedule, but the calendar entry does not describe the underlying claims or identify which side filed the motion. Court records for filings and orders are generally accessed through Minnesota Court Records Online. (mncourtsdocs.courts.state.mn.us) (publicaccess.courts.state.mn.us) What happens next is straightforward: Judge Braaten can grant the motion, deny it, or narrow the issues for trial. Thursday’s hearing is the point where the case could move toward an early ruling instead of a full fact trial. (www.revisor.mn.gov)

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