Jack Phillips (Image: Alliance Defending Freedom YouTube screen grab)

When Colorado baker Jack Phillips decided to become a cake maker by trade, he probably never figured he’d be spending his life and court. Bakers aren’t doctors. No one speaks of “baker malpractice.”

Then in 2012 it happened. A same-sex couple with plans to marry asked Phillips to bake their wedding cake. When he declined, claiming the request ran counter to his Christian beliefs, the men sued — and won. Phillips claimed that this decision cost him 40% of his business. (RELATED: Per the Constitution, Christian baker should win his religious liberty fight: Here’s why he won’t)

Ultimately, following appeals, the case made its way all the way up to the Supreme Court, which in 2018 7-2 in Phillips’s favor.

Now Jack Phillips is back in court. This time, the suit was brought by woman who asked Phillips to make a cake to celebrate her “gender transition” and, like the gay couple before her, was denied.

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The plaintiff, a trans activist and Colorado attorney named Autumn Scardina, is seeking more than $100,000 in damages, fines, and attorney’s fees, according to The Christian Post.

called Phillips’ Denver-area bakery to order a custom made gender-transition cake. Scardina waited past the appeal deadline so he could file a new lawsuit in a different court.

Scardina is seeking more than $100,000 in damages, fines, and attorney’s fees.

Oral arguments in the case are set to take place on Thursday. As was the case in the same-sex wedding cake suit, Phillips is being represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). The ADF writes at its blog: