in Re E J Smith Minor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2021
Docket353861
StatusPublished

This text of in Re E J Smith Minor (in Re E J Smith Minor) 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
in Re E J Smith Minor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR PUBLICATION In re E. J. SMITH, Minor. January 28, 2021

No. 353861 Grand Traverse Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 19-004787-NA

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and BORRELLO and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

RONAYNE KRAUSE, J. (dissenting)

I respectfully dissent. I agree with the majority’s recitation of the underlying facts. As the majority observes, this appeal appears to be moot as to these particular parties at this time. As the majority also observes, the nature of the issue in this appeal is of great importance and likely to recur, albeit involving different parties. I respectfully do not share the majority’s confidence that future disputes of this nature will not evade judicial review. I would therefore address the substantive issues in this matter and conclude that, rather than simply deferring to the unadjudicated parent, the trial court should have resolved the vaccination dispute under the Child Custody Act.

I. MOOTNESS

This Court reviews mootness de novo, and “mootness is a threshold issue that a court must address before it reaches the substantive issues of a case.” Can IV Packard Square, LLC v Packard Square, LLC, 328 Mich App 656, 661; 939 NW2d 454 (2019) (quotations and citations omitted). Mootness may, and in some instances should, be raised sua sponte by an appellate court. People v Richmond, 486 Mich 29, 35; 782 NW2d 187 (2010). As the majority observes, the courts generally may not address issues that are merely hypothetical. In re Smith, 324 Mich App 28, 41; 919 NW2d 427 (2018). An issue is moot if the courts cannot craft an order having “any practical legal effect upon a then existing controversy.” League of Women Voters of Mich v Sec’y of State, __ Mich __, __; __ NW2d __ (2020) (Docket No. 160907); slip op at 11 (quotation omitted).

However, there is an exception to mootness: “even though an issue is moot, it is nevertheless justiciable if the issue is one of public significance that is likely to recur, yet may evade judicial review.” Richmond, 486 Mich at 37. This is a two-prong test. League of Women Voters, ___ Mich ___, ___ n 26; slip op at p 14 n 26. The Court in League of Women Voters

-1- focused on whether there would be a future controversy involving the specific parties to that case. However, the exception has historically been employed where a matter carries significance to persons other than the specific parties to the case but may evade judicial attention in the future. Milford v People’s Community Hosp Authority, 380 Mich 49, 55-56; 155 NW2d 835 (1968); People v Kaczmarek, 464 Mich 478, 481; 628 NW2d 484 (2001). In the absence of a clear pronouncement, I would not infer from our Supreme Court’s opinion in League of Women Voters that the Court intended to craft a new rule drastically narrowing the scope of the “capable of repetition yet evading judicial review” exception to mootness. Rather, the Court appears simply to have been addressing the particulars of the case before it. Thus, we unanimously agree that the first half of the test is satisfied: the issue in this matter is likely to recur.

The majority concludes that this kind of issue is not likely to evade judicial review because it is only by happenstance that the issue has become moot in this case. I respectfully disagree. Michigan courts have tended to apply or refuse to apply the exception to mootness depending on whether the party seeking appeal or the party opposing appeal has done something affirmative (or has the ability to do so) to render the appeal moot for the purpose of precluding further review. See Richmond, 486 Mich at 37-41.1 The fact that this issue became moot by happenstance simply precludes that line of reasoning. Indeed, in the situation of a parole hearing, our Supreme Court expressly applied the exception to mootness precisely because the underlying proceedings might come to an end before the matter could be judicially reviewed. Kaczmarek, 464 Mich at 481. The majority aptly observes that it is not uncommon for child protective proceedings to be protracted. Nevertheless, the goal is to achieve stability and safety for the child within a reasonable time, and a parent motivated to seek vaccination for a child would likely also be motivated to undertake whatever must be done to achieve reunification. It may well be that a similar dispute will eventually drag on long enough. However, I find that line of reasoning unpersuasive.

“[W]hen our courts are entrusted with safeguarding the interests of minor children,” it is especially important to take care not to apply preclusion doctrines in the interest of “lighten[ing] the loads” of the courts.2 In re Bibi Guardianship, 315 Mich App 323, 335-336; 890 NW2d 387 (2016). Whether the issue is custody, termination, or adoption, “unquestionably, the focus of Michigan law is to advance the best interests of the children.” In re MJG, 320 Mich App 310, 316; 906 NW2d 815 (2017). Vaccination can have both immediate and lifelong consequences. A child cannot be “unvaccinated” if they receive a vaccination contrary to a parent’s objection; simultaneously, a child cannot be “unkilled” if they die as a result of an infection that a timely vaccination could have prevented.3 The old saying that “justice delayed is justice denied” has

1 The United States Supreme Court recognizes a similar rule, but regards it as equitable. See Azar v Garza, ___ US ___; 138 S Ct 1790, 1792-1793; 201 L Ed 2d 118 (2018). 2 I do not mean to suggest that the majority is intentionally seeking to shirk its duties, but only that I believe its analysis is inappropriately narrow for the circumstances. 3 It is, after all, possible for the situation in the instant matter to be inverted: an adjudicated parent might object to vaccination while the unadjudicated parent does not. Because by default vaccination is mandatory, MCL 333.9205, the majority’s holding essentially guarantees that such

-2- medical reality here: children might suffer permanent health consequences that could render an appeal moot for entirely different, and far more tragic, reasons. Our Supreme Court indicated that a need for “dispatch” does not inherently require invocation of the exception to mootness. League of Women Voters, ___ Mich at ___ n 26, slip op at pp 14-15 n 26. However, our Supreme Court seemingly trusted that the class of cases before it would actually receive that dispatch—yet, here we are, more than a year after a dispute as to vaccination was first raised as an issue, and almost half a year after we granted leave in this matter. This does not inspire the same degree of faith that future disputes of this nature will, in fact, “receive a timely decision on the merits.” Id.

Put most simply, the exception to mootness for issues of public importance that are capable of repetition yet evading review does not have as high of a threshold as the majority appears to believe, and nothing in League of Women Voters has altered the law on point. The possibility that an inevitable similar issue might someday manage to survive long enough to be judicially reviewed is not the dispositive analysis. Rather, the dispositive analysis is whether it is likely that a future vaccination dispute between an adjudicated and an unadjudicated parent involving a child under the jurisdiction of a court will not reach judicial review. The pendency of the instant matter, the need for vaccinations or decisions regarding vaccinations to be made timely, and the potential dire or irreversible consequences of failing to make such a decision strongly suggest a likely repeat performance of the instant situation.

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Bluebook (online)
in Re E J Smith Minor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-e-j-smith-minor-michctapp-2021.