Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of August 24, 2023

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down one opinion today in an interesting case addressing the applicability of the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine that yielded a total of four opinions. The Court also granted cert in three significant cases covering three very different areas of law: (1) a direct criminal appeal where the COA affirmed a conviction of sexual battery over a dissent finding a Confrontation Clause violation, (2) a PCR case where the COA held an indictment was defective but the claim was procedurally barred, and (3) a civil case where the COA reversed summary judgment because it said there was a question of fact whether car wreck was the proximate cause of opioid misuse and death.


Beachy v. Mississippi District for Assemblies of God, 2021-CA-01007-SCT (Civil – Contract)
Reversing the chancellor’s ruling in a dec action brought by the District against a particular church and its board of trustees that had sought to disaffiliate with the District and remove a reverter clause in its constitution and bylawys that would have caused the church’s property to revert to the District, holding that issues concerning disaffiliation are church-governing matters and that the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine deprived the chancellor of jurisdiction over but that there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning the issue of property ownership.
(5-2-2: Maxwell specially concurred, joined by Coleman, Beam, and Chamberlin, and joined in part by Ishee; Ishee concurred in part and dissented in part joined in part by Maxwell; Randolph dissented, joined by Griffis)


Other Orders

Hathorne v. State, 2021-CT-00306-SCT (granting cert) (a 2-4-4 COA affirmed denial of motion for PCT, holding that the indictment was defective for failing to charge a crime but that the claim was procedurally barred)

Barfield v. State, 2021-CT-00660-SCT (denying cert)

Pitts v. State, 2021-CT-00740-SCT (granting cert) (a 6-1-2 COA affirmed conviction of sexual battery after a screen was placed between the child and the defendant; Judge Wilson’s dissent argued that the use of the screen was a violation of the Confrontation Clause)

Clark v. Tippah County Dept. of CPS, 2021-CT-01209-SCT (denying cert)

Smith v. Minier, 2021-CT-01284 (granting cert) (the COA reversed summary judgment dismissing wrongful death claim where decedent died of chronic liver failure five months after a car wreck, holding that there was a fact question as to whether the at-fault driver’s actions were proximate cause of decedent’s use of pain meds, misuse of pain meds, and resulting death)

Penn-Star Ins. Co. v. Thompson, 2022-IA-00106-SCT (denying rehearing)


Hand Down Page

Author: Madison Taylor

Shareholder at Wilkins Patterson in Mississippi handling appeals as well as all stages of liability and workers' compensation matters. Admitted to the bar in Mississippi, Tennessee, and North Carolina.

Leave a comment