A lawsuit surrounding a 2015 law that triggered an income tax cut has reached the Michigan Supreme Court, as the plaintiffs seek to invalidate a Court of Appeals opinion that held the rate was to be reduced for one year only.
A unanimous Court of Appeals panel on Thursday sided with the state in its determination that the 2015 law triggering an income tax cut does so for one year only.
A trial court erred when it refused to expunge a criminal sexual conduct conviction following the set aside of two marijuana felonies that previously blocked the action, a Court of Appeals panel ruled this week.
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.
State rules setting limits on PFAS in drinking water were issued without a proper regulatory impact statement, a 2-1 Court of Appeals ruled this week, deeming the rules invalid.
The Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court ruling that it correctly exercised jurisdiction under the Uniform Child-Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act in a child custody case involving orders in Michigan and California.
The state's highest court will hear an appeal to a lawsuit surrounding the 2018 Legislature's adopt-and-amend tactic to gut two citizen-initiated referendums for paid sick leave and a minimum wage increase.
Administrative prison sanctions enforcing Department of Corrections policies are not the same as criminal proceedings, and protections against double jeopardy do not apply if prosecutors choose to bring charges against prisoners for crimes at correctional facilities, the Court of Appeals ruled Thursday in a unanimous decision.
A 2018 law change designed to allow victims of Larry Nassar to bring suit does not permit an individual to sue Catholic Diocese for alleged abuse from 1999 as the Legislature did not intend for the acts to be retroactive, the Court of Appeals ruled recently.
The life sentence without possibility of parole for a 21-year-old convicted of first-degree murder is constitutional, the Court of Appeals has ruled.