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Supreme Reversal -
MI Supreme Ct: Direction reverses, divide remains
By DAVID N. GOODMAN, Associated Press Writer
DETROIT, Jan. 1, 2010 (AP): The Michigan Supreme Court underwent
a major transformation in 2009, when a Democrat, who defeated a
Republican incumbent, set in motion a series of rulings that
favor injured people with damage claims and tighten judicial
ethics.
One thing that hasn't changed is a bitter ideological split that
has led to sharp attacks, ridicule, and mockery by justices
against their colleagues.
Conservative forces that dominated the court for a decade lost
their majority after the November 2008 election, when Democrat
Diane Hathaway beat Republican Chief Justice Clifford
Taylor.
Candidates are nominated by parties but their party affiliations
don't appear on the ballot.
``There have been a number of cases when the changing of the
guard—the arrival of Justice Hathaway in place of Justice
Taylor—made the difference,'' said prominent Detroit appellate
lawyer Mark Bendure, who often represents people suing companies
for damages.
The GOP still has a 4-3 majority, but Elizabeth Weaver
has clashed with fellow Republicans Maura Corrigan, Stephen
Markman, and Robert Young Jr. for years and frequently sides
with the Democrats on civil cases and organizational matters.
In January 2009, Weaver joined Hathaway and Democrats Michael
Cavanagh and Marilyn Kelly to select Kelly as chief justice.
Personal conflicts aside, the new court issued several 4-3
rulings in favor of people claiming damages. Three came in July
alone when the narrow majority:
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Let the family of a woman who died after childbirth claim loss
of child care and household services in their medical
malpractice suit against a Monroe hospital and doctors.
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Allowed a paralyzed gunshot victim to move ahead with her
lawsuit against a Detroit 911 operator who asked if she was ``a
mental patient'' when she called for help.
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Ordered the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association to fully
reimburse insurance companies for the cost of 24-hour care for
two men who sustained brain damage in vehicle crashes.
``Justice Weaver has been the swing vote,'' said Bendure. ``In
personal injury cases, her tendency has been to vote with the
Democratic bloc. In criminal cases, she has been more
conservative.''
Bendure said he hopes the court will prove more sympathetic to
people seeking damages from insurers, doctors, and others.
That's what worries those who represent defendants in civil
suits.
They express concern for whether the new majority will respect
precedents set by past state Supreme Courts or will attempt to
reshape Michigan's judicial philosophy to reflect their own
views.
``Everyone is watching the court to see if it is going to hold
fast to a large number of existing precedents'' or start rolling
them back, said Mary Massaron Ross, a prominent corporate
defense lawyer. ``A court should be slow to overturn past
precedents, in order to create stability in the law.''
Signs that the court was ready to reconsider past decisions came
early.
In December, the previous court voted 4-3 to direct the state
Court of Appeals to consider a challenge to a circuit court
ruling against an oil field wastewater discharge permit. In
February—after Hathaway unseated Taylor—the high court
reinstated the Otsego County decision.
``There are a number of cases where the court has specifically
asked whether a given case should be revisited,'' Massaron Ross
said. ``That of course heightens the concern about stability.''
Bitterness spilled over in November, when Weaver joined Kelly,
Hathaway and Cavanagh in a 4-3 vote to approve a policy letting
the full court consider whether specific justices should be
barred from hearing cases in which they have possible conflicts
of interest.
Kelly cited the policy as a leading accomplishment of her first
year as chief justice.
``I believe that this rule will foster greater public confidence
that the court is fair and unbiased,'' she told The Associated
Press in an e-mail Tuesday.
Conservatives sharply attacked the new rule and those who passed
it.
``The majority has created a 21st century Star Chamber,'' wrote
a dissenting Young, referring to a secretive English court
abolished in 1640.
Corrigan warned that the policy would worsen divisions on the
court and said ``cancerous vitriol'' was ``sure to spew from
justices' pens'' as the policy is implemented.
``I'm troubled by the divisiveness of the court,'' Bendure said,
saying it's increasingly become a battleground between opposing
political camps, rather than a place of reasoned legal
discourse. |