A person injured in an out-of-state motor vehicle crash is not eligible for personal injury protection benefits through the Michigan Assigned Claims Plan, and that eligibility is not supported by opposing sections of the No-Fault Act, a unanimous Court of Appeals panel ruled Thursday.
A mother's parental rights were terminated in error by the Lenawee Circuit Court because notices and summonses were improperly served and because the mother lacked effective counsel, 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.
A Court of Appeals panel on Thursday split the difference in a pair of premises liability cases that questioned whether the Michigan Supreme Court's overturning of key precedent affecting those cases had retroactive effect, reversing in one case and affirming in the other.
The estate of a man who died from fatal injuries when he collided with a snow-making machine at a ski resort pleaded premises liability claims when it sued the owner in circuit court, but the claim was abrogated by the state law regulating ski area safety, the Court of Appeals ruled Thursday in a unanimous decision.
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 Court of Appeals on Thursday reaffirmed its stance that the University of Michigan's ordinance prohibiting firearms on campus buildings did not violate the Second Amendment after a case challenging the ordinance's intersection with the U.S. Constitution was remanded from the Michigan Supreme Court.
Warren Mayor Jim Fouts remains ineligible to seek a fifth term per an amendment to the Warren City Charter after the Michigan Supreme Court on Wednesday denied leave to a Court of Appeals challenge.
Long-time Warren Mayor Jim Fouts is ineligible to seek a fifth term in 2023 following an amendment to the Warren City Charter in 2020, a Court of Appeals panel ruled Friday.