Columns

A little empathy for the benefit plans I’ve sued for 25 years...just a little

June 04 ,2026

For the last twenty-five years, my legal practice has been devoted to bringing lawsuits against employers and employee benefit administrators who failed to provide my clients with the benefits they had rightly earned. 
:  
J.J. Conway

For the last twenty-five years, my legal practice has been devoted to bringing lawsuits against employers and employee benefit administrators who failed to provide my clients with the benefits they had rightly earned. 

There is an elegant simplicity to this aspect of employment law because benefit plans work like contracts. Like a contract, an employee’s consideration is providing work for the employer. In return, the employer pays for that work, in part through non-wage compensation such as healthcare, life insurance, retirement benefits, and disability insurance. The value of these benefits to an employee and the employee’s family has been steadily growing each year. 

Litigating these disputes has led to my forming a few biases. Forgive me, but I do not have the greatest regard for human resource departments, and there are a few insurance companies that I believe are actually bad actors, not just opponents.

But lately, I have come to empathize with my would-be adversaries . . . at least a little bit.  

The world of employee benefits — or should I say this new world of benefits — is becoming increasingly complex. It is fraught with new employee expectations, and there seems to be legal peril everywhere for employers and plan managers.  Just recently, the Department of Labor (which has been beset by scandals and resignations) issued its revised enforcement priorities, which, if relied upon, may result in legal troubles down the road should a new administration come into power with different priorities.  Today’s relief from regulatory enforcement could be tomorrow’s class action lawsuit. Benefit participants, in contrast, must tailor their cases to meet the moment, but benefit plans have a decades-long horizon. 

In an employee-side litigation practice, the legal process is straightforward. An employee has a benefit plan problem. The first attempt to solve the problem is by filing a claim for benefits. If that fails, there is an internal appeal with the plan. If the problem remains unsolved, then a lawsuit is filed. Benefit litigators review existing precedents, outline their legal cases, and work to see that their clients prevail. 

In the old days, employee benefit plans only had to monitor themselves for compliance with basic Department of Labor regulations and to be mindful of unique rules in insurance and banking that applied in states where a company operated. Most plans would receive regular updates on significant developments in case law across the U.S. It was all a bit sleepy and rote. 

In 2010, that started to change, led by the massive federal law requiring that healthcare plans be brought in line with the Patient Protection and Affordable Healthcare Act (“Obamacare”). That was a huge change; so huge, in fact, that the law itself contained a built-in mechanism giving plans years to adjust the implementation deadlines. Then, the regulatory authorities repeatedly extended those deadlines even further. 

Prior to this, federal regulations for employee benefit plans had been amended only a handful of times since 1975. After Obamacare, the applicable regulations and USDOL bulletins began changing with great regularity.  

Before and after the law was passed, the Tea Party erupted with intense criticism over the law, and in turn there were hundreds of attempts to change the law, eliminate it, or repeal its most controversial provisions through litigation. Obamacare today looks nothing like it did fifteen years ago. 

This sudden charged approach to what was, essentially, an employee benefits law, has led to increased plan litigation and other challenges as when the federal government tried to impose a fiduciary standard on financial advisors across all plans and into individual investors. This fiduciary duty rule has changed so many times that it is hard to keep up. It was recently struck down again by a federal court.  

Since 2025, the pace of proposed laws affecting employee benefit plans has been on fire.  Plans are suddenly being forced to grapple with some really “out there” issues.  

Consider what today’s benefit plans must now address:

1. New, unusual, and unproven medical treatments and requests for coverage based on influencers, streamers and politics. Podcasters and the current HHS Secretary regularly provide medical advice to the public in a way that is new, untested, and complicated. Suddenly, employee benefit participants are hearing about how injecting peptides can help them live longer, lose weight, and look better. Participants are being told not to vaccinate or to vaccinate themselves and their families differently. 

(Recently, the U.S. military ruled that mandatory flu vaccinations for active-duty personnel are considered “woke” and would be discontinued.) Proven cancer drugs that may have been covered by health insurance are suddenly being labeled “investigative” by the FDA. With plan participants being told to eat saturated fats, lard, heavy meat diets, and to stop eating plant-based foods and getting vaccinated, it remains to be seen what will happen for cardiac, cancer, rheumatology, and infectious disease costs over time for those plans. Plans have to keep up with this, and if all this medical advice turns out to be wrong, there will be additional pressure put on health insurers and self-funded healthcare plans to clean up the medical mess.

2. Expensive life-changing drugs are coming to market, and their arability is certain to increase rapidly with AI technology.  Today, there are potentially lifesaving and life altering genetic therapies that are being developed by doctors and scientists, but they are funded privately and access to the drugs are at the cost of millions of dollars per treatment. “60 Minutes” recently chronicled the rapid and remarkable development of life-saving gene therapies that cost millions per dosage. The takeaway from the lengthy report was that benefit plans have no idea how to deal with this and definitely have not established sufficient cost reserves. 

3. Political backlash surrounding medical treatments and coverage. The backlash against DEI programs generally, and certain medical treatments specifically, has led to complexities in the medical treatment offerings for the LGBTQ community.  This is a completely different environment than two years ago. Moreover, the DEI fights have led to massive cuts in medical research grants to American universities. So, now healthcare innovations are being outsourced to financial investment firms or the private credit markets for development on their timetables, not in our universities using grant money.  Again, how do benefit plans forecast healthcare claims over the next 20 years and will there be a backsliding in medical treatment options which, again, promises to increase care costs?

4. Political backlash surrounding the climate and retirement plan investments. States like Florida have required their retirement benefit plans to divest in investments that are marketed to help the environment and to redirect those funds to other investments, including fossil fuels. Florida actually passed a law that prohibits any type of investment that has as an objective the improvement of environment or climate. In our current political state, this may serve as a template for aggrieved plan members who object to similar investments by their own retirement plans and wish to litigate these issues.

5. Your home is now your 401k. In the retirement realm, plan administrators may have to develop rules allowing people to put their homes into their 401(k) plans. This will require harmonizing contribution limits with lending laws and reconciling ERISA’s prohibition on collection activity against a retirement plan with legal documents such as mortgages and home refinancing. 

6. Alternative investments in 401k plans. Also in the retirement plan realm, there is a push to open 401(k) plans to cryptocurrencies, hedge funds, and other alternative investments. The proposed regulation is more than 150 pages, single-spaced, and with all sorts of scenarios that add to the confusion surrounding the rules. 

7. The use of AI in administrative services contract administration for benefit plans. This is a small headache now, which promises to become a migraine soon, if it is not figured out. It is clear that many large insurers are experimenting with AI to cut down on labor costs, but it is unclear whether that complies with ERISA’s fiduciary standard.  AI generated claims management reveals itself when a claim is paid and the Explanation of Benefits forms continue to show the claim as denied. Ultimately, these types of problems find their way back to the company. 

This is a whole lot of change in a relatively short period. Plan designers have to keep up in a fast-changing world and plan administrators have to carefully monitor what is happening across the country. But empathy only goes so far. Not to worry, ERISA litigators will be there, too, watching closely to see how the plans navigate these changes.

  ——————————-

John Joseph (J.J.) Conway founder of Michigan-based J.J. Conway Law, is a national employee benefits and ERISA attorney and litigator representing clients in individual cases and class action lawsuits.


Scaffolding insurance coverage: What property owners, contractors, and insurers must know

June 04 ,2026

Scaffolding is essential on construction and renovation projects, but when something goes wrong, the consequences can be devastating. Fires, collapses, and structural failures involving scaffolding often lead to serious injuries, major property damage, and complex insurance disputes.
:  
Rabih Hamawi
Law Office of Rabih Hamawi

Scaffolding is essential on construction and renovation projects, but when something goes wrong, the consequences can be devastating. Fires, collapses, and structural failures involving scaffolding often lead to serious injuries, major property damage, and complex insurance disputes.

A recent large-scale construction fire in Denver—where more than 100 firefighters battled a multi-alarm blaze at an apartment project—highlights how quickly a construction-related incident can escalate into a multimillion-dollar loss affecting property owners, contractors, neighboring businesses, and insurers.

For businessowners, property owners, and policyholders in Michigan and across the United States, understanding scaffolding insurance coverage is critical. 

The question is not just what happened, but who is insured, under which policy, and for what damages.
 
Why scaffolding insurance coverage matters


Scaffolding incidents often involve multiple parties and layered insurance policies. When a loss occurs, insurers may dispute responsibility, deny coverage, or shift blame to other parties. 

 Scaffolding-related claims commonly arise from:

• Fires at construction or renovation sites

• Structural collapse or instability

• Falling tools, debris, or materials

• Damage to adjacent buildings or vehicles

• Injuries to workers, pedestrians, or residents 

In dense areas like Detroit, Chicago, or surrounding Midwest cities, a single scaffolding incident can affect an entire block—leading to evacuations, business interruption, and regulatory investigations.
 
Common insurance policies implicated in scaffolding losses 


Understanding which insurance policies may apply is the first step toward protecting your interests.

1. Commercial General Liability (CGL) 


CGL policies often serve as the primary coverage for bodily injury and property damage caused by scaffolding accidents. But coverage disputes frequently arise over:

• Whether the damage resulted from ongoing operations or completed work

• Policy exclusions related to construction defects or fire

• Additional insured status for property owners or developers

2. Builder’s Risk Insurance 


Builder’s risk policies may cover damage to the structure under construction, including losses caused by fire. Insurers may still deny claims by arguing:

• Improper installation or maintenance of scaffolding

• Violations of safety codes or project specifications

• Excluded causes of loss
 
3. Professional Liability / Errors and Omissions (E&O) 


When scaffolding design, supervision, or inspection is involved, claims may extend to engineers, architects, or project managers. These cases often hinge on whether professional judgment or a construction defect caused the loss.

 4. Excess and Umbrella Policies


Large losses frequently exceed primary policy limits. Excess and umbrella insurers may resist paying, leading to high-stakes litigation over policy language and trigger of coverage.
 
Key coverage disputes after a scaffolding incident 

Scaffolding claims often raise complex legal questions, including:

• Who qualifies as an insured or additional insured?

• Was the fire or collapse accidental or tied to an excluded peril?

• Do multiple insurers owe defense and indemnity?

• Can insurers shift responsibility through subrogation or contribution claims?

In large-scale fires like the Denver construction blaze, disputes often expand to include neighboring property owners, municipalities, and utility providers—each with separate insurance interests.
 
Practical steps after a scaffolding-related loss


If you are a property owner, contractor, or business affected by a scaffolding incident, early action is critical. Immediate steps to protect your claim include:

• Preserve contracts, insurance policies, and certificates of insurance

• Document damage with photos, videos, and expert reports

• Notify all potentially applicable insurers promptly

• Avoid recorded statements without legal guidance

• Consult counsel experienced in insurance coverage litigation

  ____________________
 
Attorney and Counselor Rabih Hamawi has extensive expertise in insurance coverage, business negotiations, and commercial litigation. He focuses his practice on representing businessowners, homeowners, property owners, and other insurance policyholders in fire, property damage, and insurance-coverage disputes with insurance companies and in errors-and-omissions cases against insurance agents. He can be reached at (248) 905-1133.

Moon mission should give us all pause for damage done to our planet

May 28 ,2026

I have been mesmerized by space travel since its beginning and copies of the famous photo, Earthrise, taken by Astronaut William (Bill) Anders on December 24, 1968, has been hanging on the walls of my office and home since it was distributed.
:  
Berl Falbaum

I have been mesmerized by space travel since its beginning and copies of the famous photo, Earthrise, taken by Astronaut William (Bill) Anders on December 24, 1968, has been hanging on the walls of my office and home since it was distributed.

I have never tired looking at it. It continually leaves me in awe.  The beauty!

Thus, I could feel my heart beat increase as I watched Artemis II take off for its 10-mission around the Moon. And I wished the four astronauts on board Godspeed.

But, at the same time, I have been distressed by a contradiction and irony.

Here we are working to make the unhabitable (the Moon, Mars) habitable for humans while we making the habitable (Earth) uninhabitable.

While the first objective is decades away, the latter is approaching quickly; it is a fait accompli; there is no avoiding the disaster for the planet.  

The actor, William Shatner, who, at age 90, was on a sub-orbital space flight -- Blue Origin NS-18 -- in 2021, was interviewed as Artemis took off, and he explained how much he was moved by the beauty of the Earth.

Then, he added quickly, how depressed and dismayed he was at the speed with which are destroying it.

Here is a short list of what we face:

--First, population growth. You don’t have to be a scientist to recognize that, given the problems we are experiencing at eight billion on the planet, any growth will be devastating.

--It is too late to cool the Earth. The present temperature increases are caked-in.  Even passionate environmentalists have accepted an increase of temperatures to 1.5° Celsius which is about 0.4 tenths more than we have experienced since the beginning of the pre-industrial revolution (around the mid-1800s).

--We can’t stop the melting of glaciers and the subsequent rising of the oceans that are drowning populated islands as I write this.

--Rainforests, the “lungs of the Earth,” so vital to our survival because they absorb CO2 are being destroyed daily. Haiti alone has lost 98 percent of its rainforests.

--Then we have water, soil, air pollution not to mention water shortages in much of the world. Eight hundred million people – 1 in 10 -- do not have access to clean water.

--More than a million animals and plants are threatened with extinction, according to scientific studies.

---Plastics are suffocating us. In 1950, we manufactured two million tons of plastic. We are approaching the manufacture of 500 million tons -- that’s 500 million tons. Microplastics have been found in human brains and blood. We are a Great Lakes state and 22 million tons of plastic are dumped in these lakes annually. Seventeen billion pounds go into the oceans each year.

--We cannot, it’s impossible, to cleanup our oceans, lakes, streams and other waterways. One scientist, testing a new submarine, found plastic trash bags at 36,000 feet below the surface, the deepest anyone has ever gone.

If you drive an SUV, consider it contains about 400 pounds of plastic.

--We are experiencing rage fires and wind storms around the world, the likes of which we have never seen before.

And, I might stress, these are just a few highlights -- more accurately, lowlights.

(Incidentally, we are polluting space as well. NASA itself has stated that there are 6,000 tons of materials in Low Earth Orbit, making it the “world’s largest garbage dump.” The International Space Station has had to initiate evasive maneuvers on many occasions to avoid crashing into this “junk.”)
Anyone who believes we can solve all the problems makes Pollyanna look like a pessimist.

It is not in the cards. The political will does not exist to tackle these issues nor do the economics.

There have been 30 annual international environmental summits called the Conference of Partners (COP) since 1995 and each year the environmental situation was worse than the previous meeting.

Lots of passionate speeches, promises and pledges.  Never any follow up.

In 1994, Carl Edward Sagan, astronomer, planetary scientist, cosmologist, and science communicator, wrote a book, “Pale Blue Dot:  A Vision of the Human Future in Space” (Random House).  In it, he included a photo of the Earth taken, in 1990, from some 3.75 billion miles from Earth by the space probe, Voyager 1. The Earth appears the size of a pinhead. Sagan concludes his description of the photo with the following:

“There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world.  To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we’ve ever known.”

Sadly, Sagan’s hope and wish have fallen on deaf ears.

In his essay, he also observed: “In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.”

How right he was. There is a word for doing it to ourselves: Suicide.
 
————————

 Berl Falbaum has written extensively about climate change, and the environment.

Correcting a misconception: Reconsider what zeal in advocacy really means

May 28 ,2026

Practicing law is demanding — long hours, unforgiving deadlines, and high stakes. Most lawyers expect those pressures as part of the calling. Conflict is also inherent to the work. 
:  
Sarah Kuchon

Practicing law is demanding — long hours, unforgiving deadlines, and high stakes. Most lawyers expect those pressures as part of the calling. Conflict is also inherent to the work. 

However, incivility and unprofessionalism should not be. Such conduct adds a weight that should never be part of the job. We understand that disagreement and advocacy are part of the profession, but what should be professional disagreements too often become personal attacks, and what should be intentional advocacy can become performative. As professionals, we must reconsider what zeal in advocacy actually requires. 

It is easier to see incivility in someone else’s conduct, but the only behavior lawyers can control is their own. Culture shifts one lawyer at a time, through the thousands of choices we make and how we show up in our professional work each day. Have you ever walked out of a conversation wishing for a do-over? 
Perhaps it was a curt reply, an email sent too quickly, or a defensive explanation. These moments remind us that incivility and unprofessionalism can be subtle and unintentional, shaped by pressure more than malice. One of my favorite quotes is from psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl, who wrote, 
“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.” Frankl reminds us that there will always be events that trigger us. Our power lies in pausing and considering our choice: Will we react impulsively or respond with reflection and intention? This practice, repeated one lawyer and one moment at a time, is how our profession grows in civility and professionalism.  

Reaction vs. Response  


A critical difference exists between reaction and response. A reaction is immediate and driven by the nervous system’s urge to reduce tension. Reaction narrows options and can escalate conflict. A response, on the other hand, includes a pause for reflection and consideration of objectives, tone, and long-term consequences. Response widens options and better serves the client’s interests. 

The “space” Frankl describes is what psychology calls “the window of tolerance,” a framework developed by psychiatrist Daniel Siegel that describes our capacity to pause, think clearly, regulate emotions, and act in alignment with our values. Outside of that window, we move into fight, flight, or shutdown, and our response yields to our survival reflex. Legal practice routinely pushes lawyers to the edges of that window with contentious hearings, demanding clients, and relentless deadlines. Without awareness, reaction can become our default. 

Correcting a Misconception 


The phrase “zealous advocacy” has taken on a life of its own in legal culture. Many lawyers have come to hear “zeal” as permission for aggression, hostility, or winning at any cost, often at the expense of civility and professionalism. However, the Michigan Rules of Professional Conduct never use the term “zealous advocate.” The comment to Rule 1.3 on diligence states only that a lawyer should act “with commitment and dedication to the interests of the client and with zeal in advocacy on the client’s behalf.” 

Zeal, by ordinary definition, means eagerness and enthusiastic interest in pursuit of a cause. Advocacy is the act of supporting a cause. Considered together, zealous advocacy is simply the enthusiastic pursuit of a client’s cause. That pursuit exists within the framework of ethics and professionalism. Within that framework, civility is not a courtesy but a professional discipline, and ethics calls us to to choose intention over impulsiveness.  When zeal is misunderstood as aggression rather than enthusiasm, self-interest can replace client interest.  That posture is not advocacy. It is reaction misnamed as zeal. 

A pause does not betray diligence. It protects it by preventing errors, aligning action with client objectives, ensuring competent representation, and promoting thoughtful execution. As lawyers, our ethics are guided by the Michigan Rules of Professional Conduct, which encompass core principles such as competence, diligence, candor, and fairness.  

These duties require professional judgment. A pause supports that judgment by creating space to consider obligations, options, and consequences and to notice whether we are serving the client’s interests or protecting our own comfort and image. The standard in our rules is reasonable promptness, not immediacy, and certainly not impulsive promptness. The canon implies deliberation. Incivility and unprofessional conduct often grow from reactivity rather than reflection. The pause helps us meet our ethical obligations. The challenge is learning how to widen the space when pressure narrows it. 

Widening Our Window 


Creating space is a practical skill. We widen our window of tolerance through ongoing awareness, reflection, and practice. We can practice in small, ordinary ways: delaying an email rather than pressing send in the heat of the moment, pausing to ask whether our conduct serves the client’s interests, using a brief recess to allow emotions to settle before proceeding, and, when all else fails, pausing to breathe. Slow, steady breathing signals safety to the nervous system, calming the stress response and allowing the thinking parts of the brain to come back online. One effective breathing technique to try is box breathing: inhale for four counts, hold for four, exhale for four, and hold again for four, like tracing the four sides of a box. Even 30 seconds of intentional breathing can change the course of an interaction. 

Practicing True Zeal 


Leadership in law is rarely dramatic. More often, it looks like steadiness in ordinary moments. It is the discipline to remain calm when provoked, the resolve to do what is right rather than what is easy, and the wisdom to know when to speak and when to remain silent. 

Lawyers shape the tone of litigation, courtrooms, and negotiations through their conduct. That influence calls us to be pillars of the profession, leaders who bring enthusiasm to their work while meeting pressure with professionalism, fortitude, and response over reaction. This form of leadership models true zeal in advocacy. 

Harper Lee’s character Atticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbird exemplifies zealous advocacy in action. When he sits outside the jail to protect his client, he is calm, collected, and unwavering in the face of threats. His courage is not theatrical; it is regulated and principled. The jail scene is only one of many moments in which Atticus demonstrates zealous advocacy — from his careful preparation to his respectful engagement — and unwavering fidelity to the rule of law. His conduct demonstrates what zeal in advocacy rightly means: advocacy anchored in enthusiasm, civility, and professionalism. 

When we choose response over reaction, we show colleagues, clients, and young lawyers that zealous advocacy is not loud, hostile, or aggressive. We model that strength can be calm, that professionalism can be firm without being harsh, and that passion for a client’s cause can coexist with respect for everyone involved. Our profession needs more people like Atticus Finch, advocates who prove day after day that true zeal is deliberate, principled, and humane.
 
———————————

Sarah E. Kuchon, of Hohauser Kuchon, is the 93rd president of the Oakland County Bar Association.

The law and your property insurance policy: Demystifying examinations under oath

May 21 ,2026

When your home or business suffers direct physical damage—whether from fire, water, or another covered event—you expect your insurance company to evaluate your claim fairly and promptly pay what is owed. But many policyholders are caught off guard when the insurer requests an Examination Under Oath as part of the claim's process.
:  
By Rabih Hamawi

When your home or business suffers direct physical damage—whether from fire, water, or another covered event—you expect your insurance company to evaluate your claim fairly and promptly pay what is owed. But many policyholders are caught off guard when the insurer requests an Examination Under Oath as part of the claim's process.

What is an Examination Under Oath (EUO)? 

An EUO is a formal proceeding where the insurance company questions you about your claim while you are under oath. 

Think of it as similar to a deposition—but it happens during the claim's process, not a lawsuit.

What to Expect:


You are placed under oath (sworn to tell the truth).

The insurer’s attorney asks detailed questions.

A court reporter records everything.

Your answers can be used to approve or deny your claim.
 
Why do insurance companies request an EUO? 


Insurance companies request an EUO as part of their investigation process, particularly when a claim involves complex facts or raises questions that require clarification. The primary goal is to verify the details of the loss, assess the accuracy and consistency of the policyholder’s statements, obtain information about damages sought, and evaluate overall credibility. In many cases, insurers also use the EUO to gather information that could justify limiting or denying coverage under the policy.

An EUO is more likely to be requested in situations involving large or high-value claims, where the financial exposure is significant.

 It may also be triggered by inconsistencies in prior statements, gaps or missing documentation, or circumstances that the insurer believes warrant closer scrutiny. In some cases, even without clear evidence, insurers may suspect potential fraud and use the EUO to explore that possibility. Claims involving business interruption or loss of income are also commonly subject to EUOs, as they often require detailed financial review and supporting documentation.
 
What to do if an EUO is requested after a property insurance claim

Take these steps immediately:

Do not ignore the request.

Timely submit a Sworn Statement in Proof of Loss.

Ask what documents are required.

Request clarification on topics to be covered.

Prepare thoroughly before attending.

Consider legal guidance early.

 What happens during an EUO?


Understanding the EUO process can help reduce stress and ensure proper preparation. During an EUO, you are placed under oath and questioned by the insurance company’s attorney about your claim, while a court reporter records everything in a transcript.

The questions typically cover the cause of the loss, the specific property that was damaged, your financial situation, and any prior claims history. You may also be asked to provide supporting documents, such as receipts, repair estimates, or photos of the damaged property. Preparing in advance and knowing what to expect can help you answer clearly and consistently, protecting your claim from unnecessary challenges or delays.

Practical mistakes to avoid during an EUO 


Even small missteps during an Examination Under Oath can put your claim at risk. Common mistakes include:

Guessing answers instead of saying “I don’t know.”

Volunteering extra information not asked by the insurer.

Appearing unprepared or without supporting documents.

Being defensive or argumentative during questioning.

Failing to review prior statements before attending.

Attending an EUO without an experienced insurance attorney by your side.

 Avoiding these mistakes helps ensure your testimony is accurate, consistent, and protects your claim from unnecessary challenges.

Why you need an attorney for your insurance claim


An EUO can be complicated, and small mistakes can lead to reduced or denied claims. An experienced insurance attorney helps you understand your policy, prepare documents, and answer questions accurately to protect your rights.

Attorney Rabih Hamawi is an experienced insurance-coverage attorney who has successfully handled hundreds of claims and recovered millions for policyholders. The Law Office of Rabih Hamawi can be reached at (248) 905-1133. 

Remember the ladies: Legal community has cause to celebrate women lawyers and judges

May 21 ,2026

In her March 31, 1776 letter, Abigail Adams wrote her husband, John Adams, “Remember the Ladies.”
:  
Zenell Brown

In her March 31, 1776 letter, Abigail Adams wrote her husband, John Adams, “Remember the Ladies.” Mrs. Adams reminded her husband of women’s need to have greater rights in the newly formed American government. Her request fell on deaf ears, but 250 years later on Women’s History Month in March, Women’s International Day, and International Day of Women Judges, the Detroit legal community had cause to remember and celebrate the women lawyers and judges, honoring our past and celebrating those who lift as they climb. 

“No women allowed, welcomed, or wanted” was the accepted business practice as women graduated from law schools in the late 1960s.  

Regardless of talent, women entered the legal profession facing challenges, barriers, restrictions, and stereotypes. Access to employment, elected positions, and professional associations was restricted. Dress and decorum were policed. It was an absurd thought that a woman could practice law or sit as a judge. 

The Michigan Supreme Court


The Michigan Supreme Court has existed since 1805. The first woman took the bench in 1973. Justice Mary Coleman was elected to the Michigan Supreme Court to a term of service beginning January 1, 1973. She was the first woman to serve as chief justice, holding that position from 1979 until her retirement in 1982. In her first year, she wrote a unanimous opinion that recognized married women's interest in their personal property. Since Justice Coleman, 14 women, many from the Detroit legal community, have served on the Michigan Supreme Court.  Currently, four women sit on the Michigan Supreme Court and Justice Megan Cavanagh serves as chief justice.  

Justices and Years of Service


Mary S. Coleman 1973–1982
Patricia Boyle 1983–1998
Dorothy Comstock Riley 1985–1997
Elizabeth A. Weaver 1995–2010
Marilyn Kelly 1997–2012
Maura D. Corrigan 1999–2006
Diane Hathaway 2009–2013
Mary Beth Kelly 2011–2015
Bridget Mary McCormack 2013–2022
Joan L. Larsen 2015–2017
Elizabeth T. Clement 2017–2025
Megan K. Cavanagh 2019–Present
Elizabeth M. Welch 2021–Present
Kyra Harris Bolden 2023–Present
Kimberly Ann Thomas 2025–Present

Their biographies are  in the Michigan Supreme Court historical Society website: https://www.micourthistory.org/justices/

The Michigan Court of Appeals


The Michigan Constitution of 1963 created the Michigan Court of Appeals. It commenced operations in 1965. In 1976, Dorothy Comstock Riley was appointed and became the first woman to sit on the Michigan Court of Appeals. Judge Karen Fort Hood was elected and became the first African-American woman on that bench in 2003. In 2022, Judge Sima Patel became the first woman of South Asian descent to serve on the Michigan appellate court. In 2025, Judge Mariam Bazzi was appointed, becoming the first Arab American woman to serve on the Michigan appellate court

Third Circuit Court


The news headlines read, “Justice dons a skirt” when Lila J Neuenfelt was the first woman elected judge to the Third Circuit Court in 1941.  Cornelia Kennedy followed as the second woman in 1966. In 1980, Judge Lucile Watts took the bench. She was the first Black woman to be elected as a circuit court judge in Michigan. In 1997, Judge Kirsten Frank became the first Presiding Judge of Third Circuit Court’s newly created Family Division.  In 2002, the Michigan Supreme Court appointed Judge Mary Beth Kelly the chief judge of the Wayne Circuit Court, making her the first woman to lead that court. Many women from the Third Circuit like Judge Kelly ascended to higher benches, but in 2004 Judge Kym Worthy left the bench and became the first woman to serve as the Wayne County Prosecutor and the first African-American woman to serve as a county prosecutor in Michigan. In 2005, Judge Charlene Elder was appointed, becoming the first Arab- American Muslim woman judge in the country. Judge Patricia Fresard in 2023, was named as chief judge, becoming the second woman and the first Hispanic person to hold the distinction. These judges have worn skirts, dresses, pants, and hijabs and have ensured justice is accessible to all.  

Detroit Recorder’s Court and District Courts in Wayne County


I am still learning and collecting pieces about women’s history and the Detroit Recorder’s Court and district courts in Wayne County. I look forward to sharing those in the future. In the meantime, here are a few women judge highlights:

 Martha W. Griffiths was the first woman elected as a judge of Detroit's Recorder's Court, taking the position in 1953. In 1966, Judge Geraldine Bledsoe Ford joined the bench, becoming the first Black woman judge in Michigan and the first Black woman in the United States elected to a judgeship without the benefit of a prior appointment. When Recorder’s Court merged with Wayne County Circuit Court in 1997, Judge Vera Massey Jones was serving as the chief judge. 

In 1974, Audrey Stroia was selected the first female Judge for the 33rd District Court. She was instrumental in the creation of a Downriver Bar Association as well as the Wayne County Family Bar Association.

In addition to the local judges, remember the women lawyers, women bar associations, the women in bar associations and women student associations in the local law schools.

Never underestimate the power of one: In 1970, Attorney Sue Weisenfeld, a Detroit practitioner advocated and won support of Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Brennan for women lawyers wearing pants in the courtroom. Chief Justice Brennan wrote,“ there is nothing inappropriate about trouser suits for women lawyers appearing in the Supreme Court, or any other court in the state. They have achieved wide acceptance among women of good taste in both business and social circles, and would not in these times be looked upon as mere sportswear.”

Local and Affinity Bar Associations


The local and affinity bar associations demonstrate the power of collective effort and collaboration to promote justice and the interests of women in the legal profession.

The Women Lawyers Association of Michigan was created in 1919 before women gained the right to vote.  Honorable Tanya Grillo is the current president. The Wayne reach encompasses Detroit and is led by its president, Jailah Emerson. WLAM Foundation Angel Carole Chiamp credited the association for breaking barriers and ensuring the right for women to enter the front doors of the Detroit Athletic Club and to sit unescorted at a bar.

Carole Chiamp was elected as the first woman President of the Detroit Bar Association in 1982. That was 18 years after Judge Cornelia Kennedy was the first woman named to the board of directors of the Detroit Bar Association. In the historical records at the Detroit Library, there is little mention of the women involved in the Detroit Bar other than the Ladies Reception Committee at a bar event. The Detroit Bar Association has had 10 women presidents since its inception in 1836. Stefanie Regan of Hickey Hauck Bishoff Jeffers & Seabolt will take the oath in June and become the 11th woman president.

The Black Women Lawyers Association of Michigan (BWLAM) was founded July 28, 1992 and incorporated on March 25, 1993.  BWLAM promotes civic education through law and the scholarship and opportunity for black women at all levels of education. Dorothy Dean is the current president and one of the 2026 initiatives is offering book awards for students to several law schools in the area.

State Bar of Michigan President Lisa Hamameh and President-Elect Erika Bryant, like many of the previous women presidents of the State Bar of Michigan, have strong ties to the Detroit’s local and affinity bars. 

Law schools


Phyllis Crocker served as the first woman Dean of the University of Detroit Mercy Law School (2014-2021).  During her tenure, the portrait of Judge Denise Langford Morris was installed in the school’s atrium, becoming the first official portrait of a woman on the wall. 
Judge Langford Morris was the first African American judge on the Oakland County Circuit Court. Jelani Jefferson Exum followed Phyllis Crocker as dean and became the first Black woman Dean for University of Detroit Mercy Law. 

 Wayne State University Law School had standouts as well. Joan Mahoney served as dean from 1998 to 2003. She was the first woman law school dean in Michigan. Prof. Frederica K. Lombard served as its first full-time female faculty member (starting in 1966), professor, and interim dean (2003-2004) until her retirement in 2007. She was a founding member of the school’s Commission on the Status of Women. 

The Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame, the Women Lawyers Association of Michigan, and the Black Women Lawyers Association of Michigan are dedicated collectors and the keepers of the records. Thanks to the individual efforts of those such as Lynn Seaks, Carrie Sharlow, Judge Cynthia Stephens, Attorney Nicole Smithson, Attorney Kristina Bilowus the history of Detroit women lawyers and judges is being preserved and remembered.