Christopher Lee Duncan v. State of Michigan ( 2010 )


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  • Order                                                         Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    July 16, 2010                                                            Marilyn Kelly,
    Chief Justice
    139345-7(108)(109)                                                 Michael F. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth A. Weaver
    Maura D. Corrigan
    Robert P. Young, Jr.
    CHRISTOPHER LEE DUNCAN, BILLY JOE                                  Stephen J. Markman
    BURR, JR., STEVEN CONNOR, ANTONIO                                  Diane M. Hathaway,
    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
    2
    MICHIGAN,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _________________________________________/
    On order of the Court, the motion for reconsideration of this Court’s April 30,
    2010 order is considered, and it is GRANTED. We VACATE our order dated April 30,
    2010. On reconsideration, leave to appeal having been granted and the briefs and oral
    argument of the parties having been considered by the Court, we REVERSE the June 11,
    2009 judgment of the Court of Appeals for the reasons stated in the Court of Appeals
    dissenting opinion. The defendants are entitled to summary disposition because, as the
    Court of Appeals dissenting opinion recognized, the plaintiffs’ claims are not justiciable.
    Accordingly, we REMAND this case to the Ingham Circuit Court for entry of summary
    disposition in favor of the defendants. The motion for stay is DENIED.
    MARKMAN, J. (concurring).
    I concur with the order granting defendant’s motion for reconsideration, vacating
    this Court’s order of April 30, reversing the Court of Appeals, and remanding to the trial
    court for entry of summary disposition in favor of defendants. In our prior order, we
    affirmed the result of the Court of Appeals, asserting that because “[t]his case is at its
    earliest stages and, based solely on the plaintiffs’ pleadings in this case, it is premature to
    make a decision on the substantive issues.” This was error for two reasons. First, as
    defendants observe, this order vacated the Court of Appeals opinion without articulating
    any governing standards. Second, it is not premature to decide this case because the
    precise issue presented is whether plaintiffs have stated a claim on which relief can be
    granted, and this, as well as the threshold justiciability issues, can be determined on the
    face of the complaint. Defendants, in my view, are entitled to summary disposition for
    the following reasons set forth in the Court of Appeals’ dissent:
    (1) The U.S. Supreme Court in Gideon v Wainwright, 
    372 US 335
     (1963), and
    Strickland v Washington, 
    466 US 668
     (1984), “was concerned with results, not process.
    It did not presume to tell the states how to assure that indigent criminal defendants
    receive effective assistance of counsel.” 
    284 Mich App 246
    , 357 (2009).
    (2) Plaintiffs’ claims would have “the judiciary override the Michigan system of
    local control and funding of legal services for indigent criminal defendants,” despite the
    absence of any constitutional violation. 
    Id. at 358
    .
    (3) Plaintiffs’ claims are not sufficient to create a presumption of either prejudice,
    or prejudice per se, that would warrant either declaratory or injunctive relief. 
    Id. at 361
    .
    (4) Plaintiffs lack standing, and, therefore, their claims are not justiciable. 
    Id. at 371
    .
    3
    (5) Plaintiffs’ claims are not ripe for adjudication, and, therefore, their claims are
    not justiciable. 
    Id. at 371, 376
    .
    (6) Plaintiffs’ claims are not justiciable and, therefore, the relief they seek should
    not be granted. 
    Id. at 385
    .
    (7) In finding a justiciable controversy, the Court of Appeals erred in adopting a
    number of assumptions that are conjectural and hypothetical, including assumptions that
    plaintiffs and the class they purport to represent will be convicted of the crimes with
    which they are charged; that such convictions will result from prejudice stemming from
    ineffective assistance of counsel; that such ineffective assistance will be attributable to
    the inaction of defendants; and that trial and appellate judges will be unable or unwilling
    to afford relief for such violations of the Sixth Amendment. 
    Id. at 368-370
    .
    (8) There is no constitutional precedent that “guarantees an indigent defendant a
    particular attorney” or an “attorney of a particular level of skill”; that requires a
    “predetermined amount of outside resources be available to an attorney”; or that requires
    that there be a “meaningful relationship with counsel.” 
    Id. at 370
    .
    (9) The Court of Appeals assertions that affording plaintiffs injunctive relief
    “could potentially entail a cessation of criminal prosecutions against indigent
    defendants,” 
    id. at 273
    , and “that nothing in this opinion should be read as foreclosing
    entry of an order granting the type of relief so vigorously challenged by defendants,” 
    id. at 281
    , accurately describe the potential consequences of its opinion, which consequences
    would constitute an altogether unwarranted and improper response to plaintiffs’ claims.
    
    Id. at 380-385
    .
    (10) The Court of Appeals has “issued an open invitation to the trial court to
    assume ongoing operational control over the systems for providing defense counsel to
    indigent criminal defendants in Berrien, Genesee and Muskegon counties.” And with
    that invitation comes a “blank check” on the part of the judiciary to “force sufficient state
    level legislative appropriations and executive branch acquiescence” in assuming similar
    control over the systems in every county in this state, while “nullifying the provisions” of
    the criminal defense act and “superseding the authority of the Supreme Court and the
    State Court Administrator.” 
    Id. at 383-384
    .
    For all of these reasons, I agree with the Court of Appeals dissent that defendant’s
    motion for summary disposition should have been granted.1
    1
    Specifically, however, I do not agree necessarily with the Court of Appeals dissent that
    our state “has not fully met its obligations” under Gideon and Strickland. Id. at 398. It is
    unnecessary to address this issue at this time.
    4
    CORRIGAN and YOUNG, JJ., join the statement of MARKMAN, J.
    KELLY, C.J. (dissenting).
    The motion for reconsideration should be denied. It adds nothing new to warrant
    an outcome different from the one correctly reached in this Court’s April 30, 2010 order.
    Thus, there is no basis for this Court’s decision to reverse the Court of Appeals.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This case involves a class action suit brought by indigent criminal defendants in
    Berrien, Genesee, and Muskegon counties. Plaintiffs allege that they, as well as future
    indigent defendants subject to felony prosecutions, are being denied their state and
    federal constitutional rights to counsel and the effective assistance of counsel. Plaintiffs
    allege that these constitutional violations stem directly from the indigent defense systems
    currently used in those counties.
    The trial court certified plaintiffs’ claims as a class action and denied defendants’
    motions for summary disposition. Defendants filed an interlocutory appeal in the Court
    of Appeals, which affirmed the trial court in a divided opinion.2 Judge WHITBECK
    dissented and would have granted summary disposition to defendants. He concluded that
    plaintiffs lacked standing, that their claims were neither ripe nor justiciable, and that the
    class had been erroneously certified.3
    Defendants appealed to this Court, and we granted leave to appeal.4 We heard oral
    argument in April 2010. On April 30, 2010, we issued an order affirming the result
    reached by the Court of Appeals.5 The order was premised on the important
    consideration that this case is at its earliest stages. Given that we must rule solely using
    plaintiffs’ pleadings, it is premature to make a decision on the substantive issues. Finally,
    our order vacated the trial court’s grant of class certification and remanded the case to
    that court for reconsideration in light of our decision in Henry v Dow Chemical.6
    Notably, no justice dissented from that order.
    2
    Duncan v State of Michigan, 
    284 Mich App 246
     (2009).
    3
    
    Id. at 371, 376, 380, 388
     (WHITBECK, J., dissenting).
    4
    Duncan v State of Michigan, 
    485 Mich 1003
     (2009).
    5
    Duncan v State of Michigan, 
    486 Mich 906
     (2010).
    5
    Defendants filed this motion for reconsideration on May 21, 2010. In it,
    defendants restate the same arguments from their application for leave to appeal. Their
    only new argument criticized our April 30 order as failing to provide proper guidance for
    the lower court.
    WHAT HAS CHANGED?
    Our court rules require that in order to be entitled to relief7 a litigant seeking
    reconsideration must demonstrate that our previous ruling rested on a “palpable error.”
    Yet there is nothing in defendants’ motion for reconsideration of which we were not fully
    aware when we issued our previous order. What has changed warranting a different
    outcome now? Defendants complain that this Court’s original order affirms the result of
    the Court of Appeals decision and vacates its reasoning without articulating any
    governing standards. However, we were certainly aware when we issued our previous
    order that, by affirming only the result reached by the Court of Appeals, we were
    remanding the case without a controlling standard.
    Indeed, the only arguments proffered in favor of granting reconsideration are a
    revival of arguments that our previous order rejected. In their answer, plaintiffs correctly
    note that defendants’ motion merely repeats the arguments it made earlier and that
    defendants are effectively asking this Court to issue an advisory opinion.
    PLAINTIFFS’ CLAIMS ARE JUSTICIABLE
    Regarding the substantive issues in this case, our prior order correctly affirmed the
    result that the Court of Appeals majority reached. The concerns about the justiciability of
    plaintiffs’ claims spelled out in Judge WHITBECK’s dissenting opinion and accepted by
    the majority here are premature. Virtually all of those concerns relate to the type of relief
    sought by plaintiffs. The dissent criticized the majority for accepting four “assumptions”
    by allowing the case to go forward.8 Yet the dissent failed to acknowledge that its
    6
    Henry v Dow Chemical, 
    484 Mich 483
     (2009).
    7
    MCR 2.119(F)(3).
    8
    Duncan, 284 Mich App at 369-370 (WHITBECK, J., dissenting):
    For [plaintiffs’] claims to be resolved pre-conviction requires at least
    four basic assumptions:
    6
    reasoning rested on four unsupported assumptions of its own: (1) that plaintiffs would
    prevail on the merits, (2) that the trial court would order sweeping declaratory and
    injunctive relief beyond the scope of its authority, (3) that such relief would necessarily
    entail the judicial branch taking “operational control” of the indigent defense systems in
    the counties in question, and (4) that if all of the above occurred, proper appellate review
    at that juncture would somehow be inadequate.
    I find the assumptions of the Court of Appeals majority less troubling than those
    of the dissent, particularly given that this case is before us at a very preliminary stage.
    Thus, I agree with the Court of Appeals majority that “the trial court has jurisdiction and
    authority to order declaratory relief, prohibitory injunctive relief, and some level of
    mandatory injunctive relief, the full extent of which we need not presently define.”9
    At this preliminary stage, plaintiffs’ claims adduce facts that establish that they
    have standing, and that their claims are ripe. Also, they state a claim upon which relief
    can be granted. Today’s order slams the courthouse door in plaintiffs’ face for no good
    reason.
    CONCLUSION
    The majority’s decision to grant reconsideration and reverse the Court of Appeals
    judgment rests on no new information and on no “palpable error.” Because I
    • That the Duncan plaintiffs, and the class members they purport to
    represent, will in fact be convicted of the crimes with which they are
    charged or of some lesser offense;
    • That inactions of the state and the Governor will have caused such
    convictions; that is, these inactions will have so prejudiced the defense that
    the Duncan plaintiffs and the class they purport to represent will have been
    denied their Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial;
    • That the trial courts in the three named counties will be unable or
    unwilling to correct such results by ordering new trials on the basis of a
    finding of deficient performance and prejudice to the individual defendants;
    and
    • That it is likely that if the Duncan plaintiffs are granted the
    preconviction declaratory and injunctive relief they seek, this will redress
    the situation for them and for the class they purport to represent.
    9
    Duncan, 284 Mich App at 254-255.
    7
    continue to believe that our order of April 30 correctly rejected defendants’ arguments in
    favor of its motions for summary disposition, I dissent.
    CAVANAGH and HATHAWAY, JJ., join the statement of KELLY, C.J.
    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.
    July 16, 2010                       _________________________________________
    d0714                                                                 Clerk
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 139345

Filed Date: 7/16/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014