The Keeley Lake Lodge is currently in the middle of a court dispute regarding its ownership. On one side of the case is the Niessner family, who insist that they still own 100% of the Keeley Lake Lodge. On the other side of the case is Timothy Cimmer, whose shares of the Keeley Lake Lodge were sold to him by Richard Lunemann after Lunemann acquired his shares from Charles Niessner.
What Cimmer is facing now is a Kangaroo Court, organized by the Niessners. A Kangaroo Court is wherein a court is unofficially set up by a collective in order to handle an unlawful act within a different area from where the court case was supposed to be pursued. The Niessners established a Kangaroo Court by taking the lawsuit to the United States because they knew they would not be successful had they continued pursuing the case in Saskatchewan court. This means that the Niessners are letting a lot of resources go to waste because of their choice to pursue their claim with a court that is more likely to agree with them. As a result, Tim Cimmer suffers from more financial losses as he defends what is rightfully his.