C in Re farris/white Minors ( 2022 )


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  •              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 FARRIS/WHITE, Minors.                                           February 24, 2022
    No. 357743
    Wayne Circuit Court
    Family Division
    LC No. 2020-000837-NA
    Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and CAMERON, JJ.
    RONAYNE KRAUSE, J. (concurring)
    I concur with the majority in almost all respects, but I respectfully disagree that this Court
    lacks jurisdiction. Rather, I would dismiss this appeal for failure to pursue this appeal in
    conformity with the court rules.
    As the majority states, this Court has jurisdiction over appeals of right “filed by an
    aggrieved party” from certain judgments and orders. MCR 7.203(A). An “aggrieved party”
    means, generally, a person whose own interests were actually harmed by the decision of the trial
    court. Federated Ins Co v Oakland Co Road Comm, 
    475 Mich 286
    , 290-292; 715 NW2d 846
    (2006). Because respondent’s parental rights were terminated by the trial court, respondent is
    obviously an “aggrieved party” under the circumstances, and I do not understand the majority to
    suggest otherwise. Rather, the majority concludes that because the appellate counsel appointed
    for respondent filed the claim of appeal without input from respondent, the appeal was not “filed
    by an aggrieved party” as required by MCR 7.203(A). I respectfully disagree.
    It is relatively uncommon for parties to file their own appeals. Rather, appeals are generally
    filed and prosecuted by an attorney, who acts as an agent for the aggrieved party. See Uniprop,
    Inc v Morganroth, 
    260 Mich App 442
    , 447; 678 NW2d 638 (2004). Thus, “filed by an aggrieved
    party” essentially means, in reality, “filed by an aggrieved party or by an attorney representing
    the aggrieved party.” The authority of an attorney “may be governed by what he is expressly
    authorized to do as well as by his implied authority.” 
    Id.
     Because this appeal was filed by an
    attorney who was appointed on behalf of respondent for the express purpose of appealing from the
    trial court’s decision, in combination with the jurisdictional nature of timing requirements and the
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    commonality of attorneys claiming appeals on behalf of their clients, I would conclude that
    appellate counsel here clearly had the implied authority to file the appeal in this matter.
    I understand why the majority concludes that appellate counsel should not have been
    appointed. Because respondent did participate at one point and was aware that trial counsel had
    been appointed on his behalf, he may have been entitled to assume that his trial counsel would stay
    the course despite respondent’s absence. See In re Collier, 
    314 Mich App 558
    , 571-572; 887
    NW2d 431 (2016). However, notwithstanding respondents’ right to representation, respondents
    bear some responsibility for pursuing that right, and that right may be waived through respondents’
    conduct. See In re Hall, 
    188 Mich App 217
    , 221‐ 222; 469 NW2d 56 (1991), discussing former
    MCR 5.915(B)(1), which is now substantively located at MCR 3.915(B)(1). By the time appellate
    counsel was appointed, respondent had clearly waived any right to such appointment.
    Nevertheless, it is commendable that the trial court and the involved attorneys sought to protect
    respondent’s rights by appointing appellate counsel and filing this appeal. Furthermore, critically,
    the appointment actually occurred. Having been appointed, whether rightly or wrongly, appellate
    counsel necessarily had the implied authority to claim an appeal by right on behalf of respondent,
    even in the absence of express direction from respondent. Therefore, I consider it irrelevant
    whether the appointment was proper, and I would conclude that this appeal was “filed by an
    aggrieved party” within the meaning of MCR 7.203(A).
    Conversely, as the majority also points out, appellate counsel was unable to contact
    respondent during the pendency of this appeal. Trial counsel had likewise been unable to contact
    respondent for several months by the time trial counsel filed a request for appellate counsel, so
    appellate counsel did not even have second-hand direction from respondent. I cannot conclude
    that appellate counsel’s implied authority extended to prosecuting the appeal without any input
    whatsoever from an absent client, and respondent’s rights do not extend to relying on the
    appointment of appellate counsel. Indeed, in the absence of any input from respondent, it is
    impossible to know whether respondent even wants to retain his parental rights—or, as was
    speculated in the trial court, whether respondent is even still alive.
    I note that appellate counsel’s efforts to pursue this appeal were commendable. However,
    I would conclude that it was not within appellate counsel’s implied authority to pursue the appeal
    beyond the initial filing; and with no input from respondent, pursuing the appeal was also not
    within appellate counsel’s express authority. I would therefore treat respondent’s brief as not
    having truly been filed on his behalf. In other words, I believe this Court should treat respondent
    as having failed to comply with the requirement of MCR 7.212(A)(1)(a) that “[t]he appellant shall
    file . . . a brief with the Court of Appeals.” As a result, I believe that the appeal should be dismissed
    pursuant to MCR 7.216(A)(10) for “failure of the appellant . . . to pursue the case in conformity
    with the rules.”
    I recognize that the majority and I arrive at the same outcome, and our paths to that same
    outcome may appear to be a distinction without a difference. However, I regard the distinction as
    of grave importance, because a lack of jurisdiction deprives this Court of the power to consider
    the matter at all and is therefore deeply fundamental. I consider it inimical to the core principles
    of our legal system to foreclose consideration of a matter on what is effectively a pure technicality
    of whether a document was signed by a party personally or by an attorney who had been expressly
    appointed for the purpose of appeal. Even though respondent waived any right to representation,
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    parental rights are nevertheless of the utmost importance, and as noted, it was commendable that
    the trial court and the attorneys did what they could to protect those rights in the event respondent
    turned up later. Because timing is essential to this Court’s jurisdiction over an appeal by right,
    protecting respondent’s rights required prompt action. Although ultimately futile in this case,
    because respondent in fact never reappeared, I would not foreclose the possibility by holding that
    this Court lacked jurisdiction. In all respects other than the specific grounds for dismissing this
    appeal, I concur with the majority.
    /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
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Document Info

Docket Number: 357743

Filed Date: 2/24/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/5/2022