Order Michigan Supreme Court
Lansing, Michigan
October 19, 2007 Clifford W. Taylor,
Chief Justice
132792(63) Michael F. Cavanagh
Elizabeth A. Weaver
Marilyn Kelly
Maura D. Corrigan
AMYRUTH L. COOPER, by her Next Friend, Robert P. Young, Jr.
SHARON L. STROZEWSKI, and LORALEE Stephen J. Markman,
Justices
A. COOPER, by her Next Friend, SHARON L.
STROZEWSKI,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v SC: 132792
COA: 261736
Washtenaw CC: 03-000367-NF
AUTO CLUB INSURANCE ASSOCIATION,
Defendant-Appellee.
_________________________________________/
On order of the Court, the motion for recusal is considered and it is DENIED.
WEAVER, J., states as follows:
I object to Justice Young’s failure to state his reasons for denying plaintiff’s
motion for Justice Young’s recusal and write separately to again state that a justice has a
duty to supply the public, and thereby future litigants, with his or her reasons for
nonparticipation.
As I wrote over two years ago in Scalise v Boy Scouts of America, 473 Mich 853,
854 (2005) (Weaver, J., dissenting):
Const 1963, art 6, § 6, which states that “Decisions of the supreme
court . . . shall be in writing and shall contain a concise statement of the
facts and reasons for each decision . . .” requires that justices give written
reasons for each decision.[1] There is no more fundamental purpose for the
1
Article 6, § 6 of the 1963 Michigan Constitution states, in full:
Decisions of the supreme court, including all decisions on
prerogative writs, shall be in writing and shall contain a concise statement
of the facts and reasons for each decision and reasons for each denial of
2
requirement that the decisions of the Court be in writing than for the
decisions to be accessible to the citizens of the state. Because a justice’s
decision to not participate in a case can, itself, change the outcome of a
case, the decision is a matter of public significance and public access and
understanding regarding a justice’s participation or nonparticipation is vital
to the public’s ability to assess the performance of the Court and the
performance of the Court’s individual justices. Thus, the highest and best
reading of art 6, § 6 requires that a justice’s self-initiated decision not to
participate, or a challenged justice’s decision to participate or not
participate, should be in writing and accessible to the public.
As summarized in my dissenting statement in the order denying the motion for
stay in Grievance Administrator v Fieger, 477 Mich 1228, 1240 (2006), I first raised the
issue of justice recusal (participation or nonparticipation) over four years ago when, in In
re JK, 468 Mich 202 (2003), I had reason to examine the rules governing my own
participation in that case:
During the consideration of In re JK, I was informed that unwritten
“traditions” governed the decision and that MCR 2.003, the court rule
concerning disqualification of all other Michigan judges, did not apply to
justices of the Michigan Supreme Court. I was further informed that it was
a “tradition” of the Court that the decision whether a justice would
disqualify himself or herself was left to the individual justice and that no
reasons for the decision whether to participate or not participate in a case
were to be given.
I concluded that these unwritten traditions and the unfettered
discretion violate Michigan’s Constitution, which requires justices to give
written reasons for each decision, including a decision to participate in or
be disqualified from a case.
A justice’s decision to participate or not participate in a case implicates a bedrock
principle of our judicial system—the impartiality of the judiciary. Without a record of a
justice’s reasons to not participate in a case, how can future litigants be guaranteed that
the same reasons are not present in their cases? Moreover, how can the people of
Michigan be sure that a justice is not simply refusing to work on a case to avoid some
controversy that the case might involve—for example, a controversy that might call into
question his or her impartiality on an issue or make reelection more difficult? The
impartiality of the judiciary preserves the ethics of judicial administration, protects
decision-making, and ensures the public’s, and thereby future litigants’, trust and
confidence in the judiciary.
leave to appeal. When a judge dissents in whole or in part he shall give in
writing the reasons for his dissent.
3
What are needed are clear, fair, enforceable, written, and published rules
concerning the participation, nonparticipation, or disqualification of justices. Such rules
would enhance the accountability of justices to the public. They would provide a way for
the public to have some knowledge about how justices conduct the public’s business so
that the public could accurately assess the justices’ performance of their duties.
As I have urged previously, although MCR 2.003 is inadequate and in need of
reform, which reform I have urged this Court to undertake action and achieve without
success for over four years,2 the disqualification of justices is governed by the
disqualification procedure contained in MCR 2.003. Although the majority of four
asserts the contrary, the past four years have exposed inconsistencies in the standards that
individual justices apply to themselves when making their decision to participate, or not
to participate, in a case. At times the justices have applied the court rule governing the
disqualification of judges, MCR 2.003, to themselves, and at times they have not.
For example in Adair v Michigan, 474 Mich 1027, 1043 (2006), Chief Justice
Taylor and Justice Markman stated that “[p]ursuant to MCR 2.003(B)(6), we would each
disqualify ourselves if our respective spouses were participating as lawyers in this case,
or if any of the other requirements of this court rule were not satisfied.” Justice Young
concurred fully in this legal analysis. Id. at 1053. Similarly, in Grosse Pointe Park v
Michigan Muni Liability & Prop Pool, 473 Mich 188 (2005), then-Chief Justice Corrigan
used the remittal of disqualification process of MCR 2.003(D). At other times, however,
the same justices have not followed the provisions of MCR 2.003. For example, in
Gilbert v DaimlerChrysler Corp, 469 Mich 883 (2003), then-Chief Justice Corrigan and
Justices Taylor, Young, and Markman denied a motion for reconsideration of the Court’s
2
Since May 2003, I have repeatedly called for this Court to recognize, publish for public
comment, place on a public hearing agenda, and address the need to have clear, fair,
orderly, and public procedures concerning the participation or disqualification of justices.
See, e.g., statement or opinion by Weaver, J., in In re JK, 468 Mich 202, 219 (2003);
Gilbert v DaimlerChrysler Corp, 469 Mich 883 (2003); Advocacy Org for Patients &
Providers v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 472 Mich 91 (2005); McDowell v Detroit, 474 Mich
999, 1000 (2006); Stamplis v St John Health Sys, 474 Mich 1017 (2006); Heikkila v
North Star Trucking, Inc, 474 Mich 1080 (2006); Lewis v St John Hosp, 474 Mich 1089
(2006); Adair v Michigan, 474 Mich 1027, 1044 (2006); Grievance Administrator v
Fieger, 476 Mich 231, 328 (2006); Grievance Administrator v Fieger, 477 Mich 1228,
1231 (2006); People v Parsons, 728 NW2d 62 (2007); Ruiz v Clara’s Parlor, 477 Mich
1044 (2007); Neal v Dep’t of Corrections, 477 Mich 1049 (2007); State Auto Mutual Ins
v Fieger, 477 Mich 1068, 1070 (2007); Ansari v Gold, 477 Mich 1076, 1077 (2007);
Short v Antonini, 729 NW2d 218 (2007); Flemister v Traveling Med Svcs, PC, 729
NW2d 222, 223 (2007); McDowell v Detroit, 477 Mich 1079, 1084 (2007); Johnson v
Henry Ford Hosp, 477 Mich 1098, 1099 (2007); Tate v Dearborn, 477 Mich 1101, 1102
(2007); Dept of Labor v Jordan, Docket No. 133017 (2007).
4
order denying the motion for disqualification and did not refer the motion to the State
Court Administrator for assignment to another judge for review de novo, as would be
proper under MCR 2.003(C)(3).
Assertions that justices can continue to look into their consciences and conclude
they are able to accord fair, impartial, and equal treatment to parties’ counsel and clients
without any independent check on justices’ decisions are incorrect. This method is
insufficient and inadequate to preserve the due process rights of parties and their counsel.
Further, while it appears to continue to be for some justices a “tradition” of this Court for
a justice who disqualifies himself or herself from a case to not give written reasons, and
to sometimes apply MCR 2.003 to himself or herself, and to sometimes not, it is a
“tradition of secrecy” and inadequacy that must for all justices end now. An impartial
judiciary is “ill served by casting a cloak of secrecy around the operations of the courts
. . . .”3
KELLY, J., states as follows:
I do not participate in the decision regarding the motion for recusal. The Court’s
established procedure is to leave the decision to the discretion of the challenged justice.
However, I continue to urge the Court to establish and put in writing a better procedure to
handle motions to disqualify a Supreme Court justice from participation in a case.
CAVANAGH, J., joins the statement of KELLY, J.
3
Scott v Flowers, 910 F2d 201, 213 (CA 5, 1990).
I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
October 19, 2007 _________________________________________
p1016 Clerk