State high court to hear oral arguments

 Can interest and administrative fees for delinquent taxes be waived in a Michigan Tax Tribunal proceeding in which the county treasurer was not a party; was the county treasurer in a legal relationship with the township for purposes of waiving interest and fees; and does the plaintiff’s complaint for relief fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal? These are issues before the Court in the first case of the term, which begins at 9:30 a.m. on October 7 in the historic Supreme Court courtroom on the third floor of the State Capitol building.

Starting the afternoon of October 7 and continuing on October 8 and 9 beginning at 9:30 a.m., the Court will hear 10 other cases, including issues of funding a legislative mandate, the Public School Employees Retirement Act, the Public Employee Retirement System Investment Act (PERSIA), breach of contract, criminal offenses, the Opening Meetings Act (OMA), and governmental immunity. The Court will hear the cases in its courtroom on the sixth floor of the Michigan Hall of Justice.
Oral arguments are open to the public and live-streamed. Please note the stream is available only while the Court is in session and on the bench. Streaming will begin shortly before the hearing starts; audio will be muted until the Court takes the bench. 
 
Tuesday, October 7
Morning Session – Historic Supreme Court Courtroom, Third Floor, State Capitol Building – 9:30 a.m.
Docket No. 147384
Sal-Mar Royal Village v. Macomb County Treasurer
Issues: Can interest and administrative fees for delinquent taxes be waived in a Michigan Tax Tribunal proceeding in which the Macomb County Treasurer was not a party; was the Macomb County Treasurer in a legal relationship with Macomb Township for purposes of waiving interest and fees; and does the plaintiff’s complaint for relief fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal?
 
Afternoon Session – Sixth Floor, Hall of Justice
Docket No. 147860
The Service Source, Inc. and The Service Source Franchise, LLC, v. DHL Express (USA), Inc.
Issues: Are the parties’ agreements requirements contracts, and if so, does that affect the issue of the defendant’s alleged breach of contract; was summary disposition appropriately granted to the plaintiffs on the issue of liability; and, assuming that the defendant is liable for breach of contract, what is the period for which the defendant is responsible for the plaintiffs’ lost profits?
 
Docket No 148347
People of the State of Michigan v. Randall Scott Overton
Issue: Was the evidence sufficient to show that the defendant engaged in the “intrusion, however slight, of any part of a person’s body or of any object into the genital or anal openings of another person’s body,” such that his conviction of first-degree criminal sexual conduct under MCL 750.520b can be sustained?
 
Wednesday, October 8
Morning Session – 9:30 a.m.
Docket No. 146763
Heather Lynn Hannay v. Department of Transportation
Issues: The plaintiff was injured when the car she was driving was struck by a State of Michigan truck. Under the motor vehicle exception to governmental immunity, a governmental agency can be liable for “bodily injury.” Does economic loss, in the form of wage loss, qualify as a “bodily injury” under the motor vehicle exception, MCL 691.1405? Did the plaintiff present such evidence in this case?
 
Docket No. 147335
Harold Hunter, Jr. v. David Sisco and Auto Club Insurance Association and City of Flint Transportation Department
Issues: The plaintiff was injured when the car he was driving was sideswiped by a dump truck operated by a city employee. Is the plaintiff’s tort claim against the city transportation department barred by governmental immunity? Do damages for pain and suffering, or emotional distress, qualify as a “bodily injury,” so that the plaintiff’s claim falls under the motor vehicle exception to governmental immunity, MCL 691.1405?
 
Docket No. 147743
People of the State of Michigan v. Robert Richard-Howard Nelson
Issues: Was the defendant denied his constitutional right to the effective assistance of trial counsel? Was the defendant denied the right to present a defense? Is the defendant entitled to a new trial?
 
Afternoon Session
Docket No. 147296
Wayne County Employees Retirement System and Wayne County Retirement Commission v. Charter County of Wayne and Wayne County Board of Commissioners
Issues: What is the source and nature of the County’s power to move funds from the Inflation Equity Fund (IEF)? Does the movement of IEF assets to the defined benefit plan without a corresponding offset to the County’s Annual Required Contribution violate the Public Employee Retirement System Investment Act (PERSIA)? Does the movement of $32 million in IEF assets to the defined benefit plan constitute a “transaction” within the meaning of MCL 38.1133(8)?
 
Docket No 148617
Kenneth J. Speicher v. Columbia Township Board of Trustees and Columbia Township Planning Commission
Issue: Does MCL 15.271(4) authorize an award of attorney fees and costs to a plaintiff who obtains declaratory relief regarding claimed violations of the Open Meetings Act, or must the plaintiff obtain injunctive relief as a necessary condition of recovering attorney fees and costs under MCL 15.271(4)?
 
Thursday, October 9
Morning Session – 9:30 a.m.
Docket No 147794
Daniel Adair, et al., v. Michigan Department of Education, Budget Director, Treasurer, and Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State of Michigan
Issues: Which party – the state or the plaintiff school districts — has the burden of proving underfunding of a legislative mandate in a challenge under Const 1963, art 9, § 29 (the Headlee Amendment), what elements of proof are necessary to sustain such a claim, and does acceptance of a general appropriation from the Legislature waive any challenge to the funding level for those requirements?
 
Docket No. 148748
AFT Michigan, et al, and Michigan Education Association v. State of Michigan and State Treasurer, et al.
Issue: 2012 PA 300, which amended the Public School Employees Retirement Act, requires public school employees to pay for retiree healthcare benefits by paying a 3% levy on their salary or to opt out of receiving retiree healthcare benefits. 2012 PA 300 also requires current public school employees to choose between various retirement benefit options, including paying a 4% levy on salary to stay in the defined benefit retirement program. The plaintiff school labor unions argue that 2012 PA 300 is unconstitutional and a breach of contract; the Court of Appeals upheld the law.
 
Docket No. 147735
People of the State of Michigan, v. Thabo Jones
Issues: Does a legislative provision barring consideration of a necessarily included lesser offense violate the separation of powers doctrine? Does MCL 257.626(5) violate a defendant’s right to a jury trial by foreclosing a jury instruction on a lesser offense? Is MCL 257.601d a necessarily included lesser offense of MCL 257.626(4)?

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