Fieger v. Cox

734 N.W.2d 602, 274 Mich. App. 449
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2007
DocketDocket 266264, 267309
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 734 N.W.2d 602 (Fieger v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fieger v. Cox, 734 N.W.2d 602, 274 Mich. App. 449 (Mich. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

SAAD, J.

These consolidated appeals arise from an investigation conducted by defendants into plaintiffs’ alleged criminal violations of the Michigan Campaign Finance Act (MCFA), MCL 169.201 et seq. We hold that plaintiffs improperly sought to challenge district court *451 orders by initiating original civil actions for superintending control, mandamus, and injunctions and that the circuit court erred by failing to dismiss the cases.

I. NATURE OF THE CASE

The Attorney General investigated attorney Geoffrey Fieger for illegal interference with the election of a justice to our Supreme Court, as well as attempts to circumvent the campaign finance and reporting laws promulgated by our Legislature. These consolidated appeals involve equally serious questions regarding an attempt by Fieger and others to thwart the Attorney General’s investigation through the manipulation of our court system. The chief law enforcement officer of Michigan, the Attorney General, pursuant to law, was asked by the chief election officer of our state, the Secretary of State, to investigate possible felony violations of the MCFA by plaintiffs, including attorney Geoffrey Fieger. Specifically, the Attorney General was asked to investigate Fieger and his associates for improperly attempting to influence the outcome of the 2004 Michigan Supreme Court election.

The MCFA is designed to ensure openness and honesty in our elections by mandating certain reporting requirements and by prohibiting corporations (including law firms operating as limited liability companies) or their lawyers or agents from making monetary contributions to influence elections. It was alleged that Fieger violated these laws by financing almost half a million dollars’ worth of campaign advertisements to defeat a Supreme Court justice in the 2004 election while concealing his involvement.

By properly following statutorily mandated procedures, the Attorney General conducted the felony investigation by seeking warrants and subpoenas in the *452 district court. 1 Those investigative tools uncovered the suspected Fieger funding of the campaign ads to defeat a justice of the Supreme Court. After the investigation and subpoenas disclosed Fieger’s involvement, instead of filing an appeal to challenge the district judge’s issuance of the warrants and subpoenas, as the law requires, plaintiffs instead engaged in forum-shopping by filing two separate civil actions to obtain a judge more to plaintiffs’ liking who would undo the district judge’s work and stop the Attorney General’s investigation. Plaintiffs violated Michigan statutes and court rules by circumventing well-established, standard litigation rules that required plaintiffs to appeal if they disagreed with the ruling of the district court. Indeed, by improperly filing separate actions in the circuit court, plaintiffs got a judge to improperly reverse the district judge’s rulings and thwart the Attorney General’s investigation. Clearly, the circuit judge should have refused to hear a matter that should have been appealed if plaintiffs were dissatisfied with the district court’s orders. Instead, the circuit judge exceeded his authority and then improperly rewarded plaintiffs’ forum-shopping, first, by wrongfully taking the case and, second, by improperly interfering with a legitimate and proper investigation by the Attorney General.

Beyond the interests of the parties directly involved in this appeal, these cases present an institutional *453 conflict of considerable public significance. 2 We cannot countenance the circumvention of the rule of law by any litigant (especially one who is an attorney) who seeks, *454 with the participation of a circuit judge, to thwart a legitimate felony investigation through technical gamesmanship involving our judicial system. Indeed, to do so would encourage other litigants to do the same.

II. FACTS

During the 2004 general election, various media outlets broadcast advertisements urging voters to vote “No” on the reelection of Michigan Supreme Court Justice Stephen Markman. The advertisements were identified as being sponsored by Citizens for Judicial Reform (CJR). CJR first came to the attention of the Department of State (DOS) in October 2004, when a complaint was filed with the DOS pursuant to MCL 169.215(5) that alleged that CJR had violated several provisions of the MCFA, including MCL 169.247, by failing to include mandatory disclaimer language in the television commercials, and MCL 169.224, by failing to file a statement of organization with the Secretary of State. After CJR filed its statement of organization, the Secretary of State investigated the complaint, as mandated by MCL 169.215(9), and resolved it informally, MCL 169.215(10), by notifying CJR of its obligations under MCL 169.247.

CJR next came to the attention of the DOS after CJR failed to file a report of its fall 2004 campaign activity by January 31, 2005, as required by MCL 169.233(3). According to MCL 169.216(6), a DOS “filing official shall determine whether a statement or report that is required to be filed under this act is in fact filed.” As explained in the October 26, 2005, affidavit of Anne Corgan, director of the Legal and Regulatory Services *455 Administration of the DOS, the DOS mailed to CJR in February 2005 a notice of its tardy report, and in early March 2005 sent CJR notice of the late filing fee it owed. Corgan averred that on March 16, 2005, after the late filing fee notice “was returned as undeliverable,” she “requested the assistance of the Attorney General’s Office in bringing CJR into compliance with the MCFA” because CJR had failed to file its report under MCL 169.233(3) and had not responded to the DOS notices. Corgan’s notification of the Attorney General clearly complied with MCL 169.216(8), which provides that “[a]fter 9 business days and before 12 business days have expired after the deadline for filing the statement or report, the filing official shall report errors or omissions that were not corrected and failures to file to the attorney general.” (Emphasis added.)

In late April 2005, CJR filed with the DOS an amended statement of organization that altered the identity of its treasurer, but continued to identify its “official depository” as “Peoples State Bank” in Hamtramck. After receiving Corgan’s report concerning CJR’s delinquent filing of its campaign statements required under MCL 169.233(3), a special agent of the Attorney General on April 25, 2005, obtained the first in a series of search warrants; the Attorney General had apparently gleaned the identity of CJR’s official depository from its October 2004 statement of organization, and the 54-B District Court approved a warrant that authorized the Attorney General to search the “Keeper of the Records, People’s State Bank,” for CJR records. The district judge later authorized a second warrant to search People’s State Bank for records relating to CJR’s agent, J.L. Barlow & Associates, Inc., doing business as Client Media Buying.

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Bluebook (online)
734 N.W.2d 602, 274 Mich. App. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fieger-v-cox-michctapp-2007.