Lapeer County Clerk v. Lapeer Circuit Judges

640 N.W.2d 567, 465 Mich. 559
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2002
DocketDocket 118091, 118102
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 640 N.W.2d 567 (Lapeer County Clerk v. Lapeer Circuit Judges) 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
Lapeer County Clerk v. Lapeer Circuit Judges, 640 N.W.2d 567, 465 Mich. 559 (Mich. 2002).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The plaintiffs filed this superintending control action challenging the Lapeer Circuit Court’s plan for the operation of the family division of the circuit court. The Court of Appeals granted part of the *561 relief sought, finding that the plan improperly denied the county clerk the right and duty to function as clerk of the court for the family division. We conclude that the Court of Appeals lacked jurisdiction of the superintending control action, and reverse.

i

In 1996 PA 388, the Legislature created the family division of the circuit court. See MCL 600.1001 el seq., effective January 1, 1998. The act consolidated in the family division jurisdiction of many types of proceedings formerly heard in the circuit court and the probate court. See MCL 600.1021.

MCL 600.1011(1) provides for the development of a plan for the operation of the family division in each judicial circuit:

Not later than July 1, 1997, in each judicial circuit, the chief circuit judge and the chief probate judge or judges shall enter into an agreement that establishes a plan for how the family division will be operated in that circuit....

On February 25, 1997, this Court issued Administrative Order No. 1997-1, entitled “Implementation of the Family Division of the Circuit Court.” The order required all chief circuit and probate judges to “develop a plan for the implementation and operation of the family division, and to identify the manner in which services will be coordinated to provide effective and efficient services to families by the family division of the circuit court.” Chief judges were required to seek input from judges, court staff, and other entities providing service to families within the jurisdiction or who will be affected by the operation of the family division. The order required filing of *562 plans with the State Court Administrative Office and approval by that office before implementation.

According to the affidavit of the chief judge of the Lapeer Circuit Court, he followed the implementation directive and met with the judges in the circuit. It was agreed that the family division would be staffed with the employees of the probate court, who were trained in and accustomed to dealing with juvenile cases and other matters formerly within the jurisdiction of the probate court. To implement the plan, Local Administrative Order No. 2000-1 was adopted on Februaiy 2, 2000, providing:

In order to implement the changes required by the legislation creating the Family Division of the Circuit Court (PA 374 and 388 of 1996), to enhance and clarify the procedures to be followed in the new Family Court, to clarify the role of the County Clerk in the operations of the Family Court, to merge the procedures previously followed in juvenile, child protective proceedings and ancillary proceedings into the Family Court, to maintain the Court’s data entry system, and to adopt new procedures for efficient administration of the Family Court, the Court issues the following administrative order:
1. The County Clerk will continue to accept pleadings, maintain files and complete entries into the Court’s data system in all domestic cases and ppos and shall be responsible for the care and maintenance of those records.
2. The Family Court staff will continue to accept filings, maintain files, prepare orders and complete entries into the Court’s data system in all juvenile cases, child protective proceedings, name changes, adoptions, and ancillary proceedings and shall be responsible for the care and maintenance of those records.
3. The Family Court staff will be responsible for scheduling all juvenile cases, child protective proceedings, name changes, adoptions, and ancillary proceedings. In addition, the Family Court staff will be responsible for making refer *563 rals, scheduling hearings, preparation of orders and arranging pretrials and trials in domestic cases. The Family Court staff will make appropriate entries into the Court’s data systems of these proceedings.
4. The County Clerk staff will continue to manage the motion day dockets, no-progress docket and non-service dismissals in domestic cases. The County Clerk staff will continue to attend the domestic motion docket sessions of the Family Court and make appropriate entries into the Court’s data system of those proceedings.
5. The Family Court staff shall continue to be responsible for all filing fees, receipts, disbursements and accountings for support payments, restitution, administrative and program fees, and child care funds received in juvenile cases, child protective proceedings, name changes, adoptions and ancillary proceedings. The County Clerk shall continue to accept all filing fees in domestic cases for the Family Court.
6. Local Administrative Order 1999-2 is hereby rescinded and replaced by this order.
This order is issued pursuant to MCR 8.112 and will be effective upon approval by the State Court Administrator. The matters covered in this order will be reviewed on an ongoing basis and this order will expire on December 31, 2000, unless extended by order of the Court.

On February 9, 2000, the Acting Director of Trial Court Services for the State Court Administrative Office advised the circuit court that

we have reviewed the above referenced Administrative Order and find that it conforms with the requirements of MCR 8.112(B). This order is being accepted and filed until advised by your court of any change.

n

The Lapeer County Clerk and the Michigan Association of County Clerks filed this original action in the *564 Court of Appeals requesting a writ of superintending control. Their complaint alleged, among other things:

17. The Court’s Administrative Order, No. 2000-1 violates Michigan’s Constitution, laws, and court rales by preventing the Clerk from performing her constitutional and statutorily mandated duties. Specifically, by issuing and implementing Administrative Order No. 2000-1, the Court usurped the Clerk’s constitutional and statutory duties with respect to Paragraphs 2, 3, and 5 of the Order.
* * *
18. Both family division judges in Lapeer County (Judges Preisel and Higgins) prohibit the County Clerk from performing her circuit court duties with respect to juvenile matters by preventing her from opening new cases, maintaining the care and custody of the court records, entering data into the Court’s Jis system, performing court room functions, preventing the Clerk from assisting the public as well as other judicial staff and employees, and accounting for the court’s finances.
* * *
20. Judges Higgins and Preisel further refuse to allow the County Clerk to perform as Clerk of the circuit court with respect to trials.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
640 N.W.2d 567, 465 Mich. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapeer-county-clerk-v-lapeer-circuit-judges-mich-2002.