Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 2011
Docket139345
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan (Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan, (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

Order Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

January 13, 2011 Robert P. Young, Jr., Chief Justice

139345-7 (121) Michael F. Cavanagh Marilyn Kelly Maura D. Corrigan Stephen J. Markman CHRISTOPHER LEE DUNCAN, BILLY JOE Diane M. Hathaway BURR, JR., STEVEN CONNOR, ANTONIO Mary Beth Kelly, TAYLOR, JOSE DAVILA, JENNIFER Justices O’SULLIVAN, CHRISTOPHER MANIES, and BRIAN SECREST, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v SC: 139345 COA: 278652 Ingham CC: 07-000242-CZ STATE OF MICHIGAN and GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, Defendants-Appellants. _________________________________________/ CHRISTOPHER LEE DUNCAN, BILLY JOE BURR, JR., STEVEN CONNOR, ANTONIO TAYLOR, JOSE DAVILA, JENNIFER O’SULLIVAN, CHRISTOPHER MANIES, and BRIAN SECREST, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v SC: 139346 COA: 278858 Ingham CC: 07-000242-CZ STATE OF MICHIGAN and GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, Defendants-Appellants. _________________________________________/ CHRISTOPHER LEE DUNCAN, BILLY JOE BURR, JR., STEVEN CONNOR, ANTONIO TAYLOR, JOSE DAVILA, JENNIFER O’SULLIVAN, CHRISTOPHER MANIES, and BRIAN SECREST, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v SC: 139347 COA: 278860 Ingham CC: 07-000242-CZ STATE OF MICHIGAN and GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, Defendants-Appellants. _________________________________________/

This Court’s order of December 29, 2010 denying the defendants’ motion to deem will be published in the Michigan Reports as follows: 2

On order of the Court, the motion to deem this Court’s release of Chief Justice KELLY’s, Justice CORRIGAN’s and Justice MARKMAN’s statements on December 22 to be the Court’s final order is considered, and it is DENIED.

The motion was untimely because it was filed December 28, 2010. The statements issued on December 22 did not constitute an order and did not modify the substance of the November 30, 2010 order of the Court. Pursuant to MCR 7.313(E), the period for reconsideration expired December 21, 2010, which was 21 days after November 30, 2010, the date of the Court’s order. An order is effective on the date it is entered, except in circumstances not applicable here. See MCR 7.317(D).

Defendants’ claim that they did not have the benefit of this Court’s full reasoning until December 22 is incorrect. Concurring and dissenting statements are not binding authority and do not speak for the Court. They convey the reasoning of the individual justices who sign them, not the reasoning of the Court.

No motion for reconsideration of this order will be entertained.

MARILYN KELLY, C.J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part). Justice CORRIGAN’s dissenting statement repeats her belief that “counsel for a losing party cannot properly decide whether to file a motion for reconsideration or [decide] what to include in such a motion without knowing where the entire Court stands on an issue.” I disagree. Although knowing how all the justices stand is sometimes helpful, often it is not. And, regardless of whether it is or is not helpful, parties often must decide whether to file a motion for reconsideration without such knowledge.

For example, consider cases in which blanket denial orders enter, stating only that “we are not persuaded that the question presented should be reviewed by this Court.” We often issue such orders without additional comment irrespective of the fact that the vote in favor of the order is not unanimous. Indeed, only a minority of our orders disposing of cases include statements. And even when they do, the statements do not speak for the Court.

Moreover, Justice CORRIGAN’s argument that releasing an order without a justice’s statement contravenes art 6, § 6 of the Michigan Constitution cannot be correct. First, taken to its logical conclusion, her interpretation would require a dissenting justice to write a statement of his or her reasons for dissenting in every case in which the Court lacks unanimity. This would include every case in which the Court’s vote is split, but the justices whose views did not prevail decline to have their position shown on the order. Given the inevitable frequent disagreement among the justices on our Court, we would be quickly bogged down writing statements if Justice CORRIGAN’s interpretation of our Constitution were correct. 3

Second, nothing in art 6, § 6 requires that the reasons for a dissent must be issued simultaneously with the Court’s order. It does not “benefit” a losing party to have the reasoning in any one justice’s statement in order to persuade the other justices because they have already had an opportunity to consider those arguments. In this case, Justice CORRIGAN’s statement of December 22 and her statement issued today are an almost verbatim restatement of the reasoning set forth in defendants’ briefing to this Court; they do not provide independent reasoning to support defendants’ position. Thus, defendants were themselves already aware of, and had already set forth, the arguments advanced in Justice CORRIGAN’s dissenting statements.

Finally, no precedent exists for updating an order’s entry date to the date of later- issued statements about that order. Always in the past, the statements have been treated as amendments or additions to the original order. The order became effective on the date it was entered, and later-issued statements have not affected that date. See People v Limmer, 461 Mich 974 (2000); MCR 7.317(D).

In Limmer, we issued an order on March 8, 2000 denying leave to appeal but stating that then-Chief Justice WEAVER and Justices CORRIGAN and MARKMAN would grant leave to appeal and dissenting statements would follow. On April 18, 2000, a dissenting statement by Justice CORRIGAN, joined by then-Chief Justice WEAVER and Justice MARKMAN was issued. The effective date of the denial order continued to be March 8. 1

For these reasons, we should not treat the date of issuance of our December 29 order as having been changed by today’s issuance of Justice CORRIGAN’s dissenting statement.

CORRIGAN, J. (dissenting).

I dissent from the order denying defendants’ motion to deem the December 22, 2010 order as this Court’s final order. Defendants filed this motion on December 28, 2010, after the Court issued Chief Justice KELLY’s concurring statement and Justice MARKMAN’s and my dissenting statements to the Court’s November 30, 2010 order granting plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration on December 22, 2010. The majority summarily denied defendants’ motion to deem on December 29, 2010, without my dissenting statement. On the same day, the majority also denied defendants’ motion for reconsideration of the November 30, 2010 order, to which I also dissented. See Duncan v State of Michigan, ___ Mich ___ (2010). 1 See also ADM Order No. 2006-08, 477 Mich clii (2006) (stating that the order was entered December 6, 2006 and became effective immediately and stating that dissenting statements would follow. Then-Justice WEAVER’s dissenting statement entered on December 20, 2006, but, as in Limmer, did not affect the effective date of the order). 4

In my dissenting statement to the denial of defendants’ motion for reconsideration of the November 30, 2010 order, I opined that the majority erroneously denied defendants’ motion for reconsideration because that motion had been filed without the full reasoning of the Court. Specifically, I stated:

My dissenting statement was not issued until December 22, 2010, which was one day after defendants were forced into filing their motion for reconsideration on December 21, 2010, in order to satisfy the 21 day deadline for motions for reconsideration. See MCR 7.313(E). Thus, defendants had to file their motion without having the opportunity to review and assess my dissenting statement. This wrongly deprived them of an opportunity to consider the thinking of the full Court in violation of our state constitution. [Duncan, ___ Mich at ___ (CORRIGAN, J. dissenting).]

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Related

Duncan v. State
774 N.W.2d 89 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2009)
People v. Limmer
612 N.W.2d 395 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2000)
Lee v. City of Utica
269 N.W.2d 267 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1978)

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Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-lee-duncan-v-state-of-michigan-mich-2011.