One of two prosecutors leading the failed Flint water criminal investigation appeared furious, dismayed and dead set on finding a way to keep the charges alive in the months following the Michigan Supreme Court's dismissal of the cases.
The Public Service Commission did not reversibly err when it modified Consumers Energy's reconciliation plan to disallow costs associated with the extension of a planned outage, a unanimous Court of Appeals panel ruled Thursday.
A unanimous Court of Appeals panel on Thursday upheld a nearly identical sentence for a man convicted of shooting a woman on his doorstep – convictions initially vacated by the Michigan Supreme Court on double jeopardy grounds.
The Oakland Circuit Court did not err when it granted summary disposition to a person who sued his insurer over damages sustained in a kitchen area in the plaintiff's restaurant, a unanimous Court of Appeals panel ruled Thursday.
Judge Brock Swartzle is now the lead judge for the Court of Claims, the Michigan Supreme Court ordered Wednesday.
A Macomb Circuit Court decision to dismiss an auto no-fault case involving the retroactive application of the 2019-enacted medical fee schedule and the one-year-back rule was vacated last week by a unanimous Court of Appeals panel.
The Oakland Circuit Court did not err when it held that a plaintiff in an auto no-fault case had waived his allowable personal injury protection coverage benefits in exchange for a reduced premium, a hallmark of reforms passed in 2019, the Court of Appeals ruled Thursday.
The Kent Circuit Court erred when it ruled that grandparents and grandchildren were not to be regarded as immediate family members in cases of bystanders bringing claims for negligent infliction of emotional distress, a unanimous Court of Appeals panel ruled Thursday.
The Court of Appeals on Thursday in a complex set of consolidated auto no-fault cases affirmed some of the rulings from the lower courts while vacating and reversing others, as some of the claims dealt with duplicative and burdensome discovery demands and the others asserted that the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association violated the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act by leveraging its position to influence rates.
Retirement benefits outlined in a collective bargaining agreement that were modified under a temporary order under circumstances that no longer exist remain beholden to the agreement that was brokered before the order was put in place, the Court of Appeals ruled in a 2-1 decision issued Thursday.