Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of September 22, 2022

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions today. Two are criminal cases dealing with issues that occurred during voir dire. In one, the issue was an inculpatory exclamation by the defendant. In the other, the issue was two jurors’ undisclosed connection the defendant. The third opinion is a journey through contempt law.


Scott v. State, 2021-KA-01015-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of burglary, holding that the court did not abuse its discretion denying the defendant’s attorney’s request for a mistrial after the defendant exclaimed during voir dire that he was “guilty as hell.”
(9-0)

Note – This decision seems correct to me.


Watts v. State, 2021-KA-00873-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming denial of a JNOV after the defendant was convicted of conspiracy to commit armed robbery, attempted armed robbery, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and a denial, holding that although two jurors did not disclose that they were related to a man who was murdered by the defendant’s brother in 2006 the court did not commit clear error in determining after an evidentiary hearing that those jurors lacked substantial knowledge of their connection with the defendant during voir dire.
(9-0)


Seals v. Stanton, 2020-CA-00741-SCT (Civil – Domestic Relations)
This decision waded into a morass of contempt and affirmed the chancellor in part, reversed and remanded in part, and vacated in part. The Supreme Court affirmed the chancellor’s finding that two attorneys handling a divorce proceeding were in direct criminal contempt for missing a hearing, vacating the penalty for that because it exceeded statutory authority and remanded on that issue, and affirmed an award of attorney’s fees to the other side. The Supreme Court vacated judgment of direct criminal contempt against another attorney and remanded for proceedings on under the constructive criminal contempt standards. The Supreme Court held that the chancellor erred in finding these attorneys in direct criminal contempt for violating a court order and remanded for a determination of whether an indirect civil contempt proceeding should be commenced.
(6-3: Justice Kitchens dissented, joined by Justice King and Justice Coleman.)

Practice Point – Don’t miss hearings. Don’t violate orders. If you have further questions about what went wrong here or about the intricacies of direct criminal contempt, indirect/constructive criminal contempt, and civil contempt I refer refer you to the opinion and wish you the best.


Other Orders

Hamer v. State, 2019-CT-01633-SCT (denying cert)
Nowell v. Stewart, 2020-CT-00728-SCT (denying cert)
Johnson v. State, 2022-CT-01308-SCT (dismissing cert sua sponte)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Court of Appeals Decisions of September 20, 2022

The Mississippi Court of Appeals handed down nine opinions today and only one was PCR! There are three criminal cases (one of which reversed a conviction as to one count on a jury instruction issue). There are two MTCA cases (one reversing summary judgment in a med mal case and one reversing a bench trial judgment finding police-protection immunity), two divorce cases, and an involuntary commitment case.


Johnson v. State, 2021-KA-00571-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming and part and reversing in part a conviction for burglary and automobile theft, holding that the conviction of burglary was supported by sufficient evidence and was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence but reversing the conviction for auto theft because the jury was not properly instructed as to the value of the stolen vehicle. The case was remanded for retrial on the auto theft count.
(10-0)


Brock v. State, 2021-KA-00739-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of possession of methamphetamine, holding that even if the defendant could prove that her counsel was ineffective she had not proven that but for such professional errors the result would have been different.
(10-0)


Guinn v. Claiborne, 2021-CP-00997-COA (Civil – Domestic Relations)
Affirming the chancellor’s decision denying husband’s amended complaint for divorce, holding that the chancellor did not commit clear error in determining that the husband had failed to prove the elements for a divorce based on adultery or irreconcilable differences.
(10-0)


W.C. v. J.C., 2021-CA-00237-COA (Civil – Other)
Affirming chancellor’s decision setting aside an agreed order of involuntary commitment and dismissing the action after treatment was completed, holding (1) the agreed order was properly dismissed because the motion to set aside was not untimely, (2) the chancery court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the terms of the order had been substantively complied with, (3) evidence from an professional organization monitoring the treatment for professional licensure was admissible, (4) the chancellor did not err in ruling that the petitioner had no standing to object to the motion to set aside the agreed order, and (5) there was no ground for the chancellor to convene a hearing to “protect the interests of the minor children.”
(9-1-0: Judge Wilson concurred in result only without separate written opinion.)


Smith v. State, 2021-CP-00915-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming the circuit court’s dismissal of a PCR motion, holding that the plaintiff did not prove an exception to the statute of limitations, that the sentence was not illegal, and that the indictment was not defective.
(8-2: Judge McCarty and Judge Emfinger concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion.)


German v. State, 2021-KA-00933-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of aggravated assault, holding that the circuit court’s finding that the defendant was sane when the crime was committed was supported by substantial evidence and the jury’s finding was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and that the defendant waived issues related to the reliability of a medical expert’s testimony by failing to object at trial.
(9-0: Judge Westbrooks did not participate.)


Moss v. Moss, 2021-CA-00452-COA (Civil – Domestic Relations)
Affirming the chancellor’s decision granting the wife divorce on the ground of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment, holding that there was substantial evidence to support that finding (read the facts for yourself if you have doubts), that the subject matter of wife’s expert’s opinions was adequately disclosed and was not even a basis for the chancellor’s decision, and the husband’s claim for separate maintenance was moot since the divorce was affirmed.
(10-0)


St. Andrie v. Singing River Health System, 2021-CA-00042-COA (Civil – Medical Malpractice/MTCA)
Reversing the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s independent negligence claim against the hospital on statute of limitations grounds, holding that the plaintiff’s claim that the hospital failed to protect the plaintiff from the doctor’s negligence arose out of the same conduct, transaction, or occurrence as the doctor’s negligence and therefore the independent negligence claims against the hospital related back to the date of the original complaint that asserted an independent negligence claim against the doctor and a vicarious liability claim against the hospital.
(7-2-0: Judge Greenlee concurred in result only, joined by Judge Emfinger and joined in part by Judge McDonald and Judge McCarty; Judge Lawrence did not participate.)


Phillips v. City of Oxford, 2021-CA-00639-COA (Civil – Personal Injury/MTCA)
Reversing the circuit court’s finding after a bench trial that the City was protected by police-protection immunity after an officer’s vehicle crossed an intersection against a red light and struck the plaintiff’s vehicle while the officer was responding to an emergency, holding that the facts of this case met the “exceptional circumstances” requirement for finding reckless disregard and that the officer acted with conscious indifference to the safety of the public and the certain parts of the police chief’s testimony were not credible.
( 5-4: Judge Lawrence dissented, joined by Judge Wilson, Judge Smith, and Judge Emfinger; Judge Greenlee did not participate.)

NOTE– The Court of Appeals declined the appellant’s invitation to adopt a “reckless disregard per se” rule and maintained the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis.


Other Orders

Ellis v. State, 2020-CP-00770-COA (denying rehearing)
Camphor v. State, 2021-CP-00048-COA (denying rehearing)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of September 15, 2022

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions from very different areas of law without a single dissent today. The first is a criminal case challenging the sufficiency and weight of the evidence. The second deals with the circuit court’s subject matter jurisdiction over a election contest. The third is a divorce appeal dashed on the rocks of 54(b).


Burden v. State, 2021-KA-00782-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of aggravated assault and denial of the defendant’s motion for new trial, holding that the evidence including testimony, medical records, and photographs was sufficient to show that the victim suffered serious bodily injury and that the defendant attempted to cause serious bodily injury and the verdict was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
(9-0)


Holliday v. Devaull, 2021-EC-00486-SCT (Election Contest)
Reversing the circuit court’s decision ordering a special election, holding that the circuit court lack subject matter jurisdiction because the plaintiff failed to file a sworn copy of his complaint to the Aberdeen Municipal Democratic Executive Committee within the 10-day statutory period and that the second amended petition did not relate back to the original petition.
(9-0)


Williams v. Williams, 2021-CA-00875-SCT (Civil – Domestic Relations)
Dismissing the appeal, holding that an order granting husband’s motion to enforce the divorce agreement and entering what was called a “final judgment” incorporating the divorce agreement was not a final, appealable judgment because the court had not resolved the wife’s complaint for divorce and the grounds for divorce.
(8-1-0)

Practice Point – Our remorseless foe Rule 54(b) strike again. If anything is left to be decided, be sure the judgment you want to appeal contains the magic language of a Rule 54(b) final judgment.


Other Orders

Miles v. State, 2019-CT-00895-SCT (rehearing denied)
Mingo v. McComb School District, 2020-CT-00022-SCT (denying cert)
Simmons v. Town of Goodman, Mississippi, 2021-EC-00563-SCT (denying rehearing)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Court of Appeals Decisions of September 13, 2022

The Mississippi Court of Appeals handed down five opinions today. These cases include two criminal convictions, medical malpractice, legal malpractice, and civil asset forfeiture.


Rowell v. State, 2021-KA-00793-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of felony eluding after a high-speed chase, holding that the trial court did not err by refusing to instruct the jury on a lesser-included offense of failure to stop because no rational juror could have found the defendant not guilty of felony eluding but guilty of the lesser-included offense, that that the conviction was supported by sufficient evidence was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and that the argument that testimony from revocation hearing should not have been admitted was procedurally barred.
(9-1-0: Judge Westbrooks concurred in result only without separate written opinion)

NOTE – I love it when an opinion comes right out with a roadmap like this one:

Having that lens through which to read the rest of the opinion saves the reader from spending a few pages feeling like he or she is trying to solve a mystery. I think this applies to brief writing as well and I do not always do this well.


Gardner v. Jackson, 2020-CA-01313-COA (Civil – Medical Malpractice)
Affirming a directed verdict in favor of a doctor in a medical malpractice case, holding that the circuit court did not err in granting the directed verdict based on the plaintiff’s failure to properly establish the national standard of care through expert testimony.
(9-0: Judge Emfinger did not participate)



Sims v. State, 2021-KA-00682-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of capital murder, holding that the conviction was supported by sufficient evidence and the verdict was not against the overwhelming evidence and holding that the circuit court did not err in admitting an autopsy photo because there was probative value in showing the cause of death.
(10-0)


McGilberry v. Ross, 2021-CP-01076-COA (Civil – Legal Malpractice)
Affirming summary judgment dismissing a legal malpractice suit, holding that the plaintiff failed to produce any proof that the defendant breached the standard of care or her duty of loyalty and holding that the pro se appellant failed to cite authority or credible evidence to support her remaining claims.
(9-1-0: Judge Wilson concurred in result only without separate written opinion)


$153,340.00 v. State, 2020-CA-01409-COA (Civil – Other)
Affirming judgement of civil asset forfeiture, holding that the evidence supported forfeiture because the respondent provided no evidence that the money belonged to him other than his own testimony which lacked credibility, that the forfeiture was not an “excessive fine,” and that the evidence that the respondent met a drug-courier profile was sufficient to support the forfeiture.
(5-2-2: Judge McCarty concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion; Judge Wilson concurred in the result only without separate written opinion; Judge McDonald dissented without separate written opinion; Judge Westbrooks dissented, joined by Judge McDonald and joined in part by Judge McCarty; Judge Emfinger did not participate.)


Other Orders

Prowell v. Nationstar Mortgage LLC, 2021-CA-00055-COA (denying rehearing)

Hand Down List

Mississippi Appellate Decisions of September 6 and September 8, 2022

I was out of the office for an extracurricular conference on Tuesday. (I will issue a full refund for my failure to timely deliver those summaries.) All we got from the Mississippi Supreme Court this week is a rehearing denial and a denial of an application for post-conviction collateral relief. I have written even-shorter-than-normal snapshots of the Court of Appeals decisions below, which turned out to be almost entirely PCR and state boards and agencies decisions.


Supreme Court Orders of September 8, 2022

Chatman v. State, 2016-M-00424 (denying application for post-conviction collateral relief and warning that future filings deemed frivolous may result in sanctions and restrictions on filing in forma pauperis)

Russell v. State, 2019-CT-01670-SCT (denying rehearing)

Supreme Court Hand Down List


Court of Appeals Decisions of September 6, 2022

Burns v. State, 2021-KA-00310-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of possession of meth and sentencing, holding that the verdict was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence that the trial court did not err in refusing the defendant’s instruction on possession, and denying the pro se argument that he received ineffective assistance without prejudice.
(10-0)


Caston v. State, 2021-CA-00397-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming denial of PCR motion, holding that the plaintiff waived the right to challenge proportionality by pleading guilty and, in any event, failed to prove gross disproportionality.
(10-0)


Nguyen v. Bui, 2021-CP-00538-COA (Civil – Real Property)
Affirming the chancery court’s judgment mandating specific performance of a real estate contract, holding that the appellant’s argument did not raise issues of reversible error, lacked citation to authority, and were beyond the scope of appellate review.
(10-0)


Beasley v. State, 2021-CA-00653-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming denial of the plaintiff’s PCR motion, holding that the plaintiff failed to meet the two-prong Strickland test required to establish ineffective assistance of counsel.
(9-0: Judge Emfinger did not participate)


Norwood v. State, 2021-CA-00802-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming denial of the plaintiff’s PRC motion, holding that the plaintiff did not prove that his due process rights were violated or that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.
(10-0)


Roberts v. State, 2021-CA-00998-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming the circuit court’s denial of the plaintiff’s motion for PCR, holding that the plaintiff’s claim as to the voluntariness of his guilty plea was procedurally barred and meritless and that his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was meritless.
(10-0)


Wilson v. City of Greenville, 2021-CA-00316-COA (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the circuit court’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s untimely appeal of the Greenville City Council’s decision to accept and enforce his resignation as police chief and in granting the City’s replevin action for city equipment in the plaintiff’s possession and denying the plaintiff’s counterclaim and motions to dismiss/stay, holding that the City’s decision was supported by substantial, credible evidence and that the circuit court committed no error.
(8-1-0: Judge Wilson concurred in result only without separate written opinion; Judge Westbrooks did not participate)


Thomas v. PERS, 2021-SA-00375-COA (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the circuit court’s judgment affirming the PERS Board, holding that the Board’s decision that the plaintiff failed to prove she could no longer perform her duties as a bus aid as a result of her workplace accident was supported by substantial evidence and was not arbitrary or capricious.
(10-0)


Laurel School District v. Lanier, 2021-CA-00384-COA (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the chancery court’s decision dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint against the school district stemming from the school district’s failure to conduct a nonrenewal hearing, holding that the chancery court had jurisdiction to consider the complaint seeking relief for due process violations and to dismiss the claim so the plaintiff could obtain the hearing he had been denied.
(7-3: Judge Westbrooks dissented, joined by Chief Judge Barnes and Judge McDonald)

Other Court of Appeals Orders

Brewer v. Kemp, 2020-CA-00214-COA (denying rehearing)

Court of Appeals Hand Down List

Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of September 1, 2022

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions today. Two are criminal cases (one affirmed and one reversed/remanded over a speedy trial issue and resentencing). The other is a breach of contract case with a tough result for a law firm stuck with the tab after dealings with the State Auditor’s office (while under previous management).


Haymon v. State, 2021-KA-00240-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming Pernell and Haymon’s convictions of armed robbery, kidnapping, and aggravated assault, holding that the circuit court did not err in denying Pernell’s motion for directed verdict and/or motion for new trial because the evidence was sufficient and the verdict was not against the overwhelming evidence or in denying her request for a lesser included offense jury instruction for simple assault, and that the circuit court did not err in denying Haymon’s motion to suppress a photo identification lineup over the defendant’s arguments that an officer tainted the procedure by providing the witness with the defendant’s name and that the features of the individuals used in the lineup were suggestive.
(9-0)

NOTE – On the issue of whether it was error to the lesser included instruction on simple assault, the Supreme Court explained that aggravated assault occurs when there is assault with a deadly weapon and that severity of the injury is irrelevant:


White v. Jernigan Copeland Attorneys, PLLC, 2020-IA-01404-SCT (Civil – Contract)
Reversing the circuit court’s denial of the Office of the State Auditor’s motion for summary judgment in a suit filed by a law firm seeking damages for a judgment it had to pay a public-relations firm that the law firm contracted with at the direction of then Auditor Pickering, holding that the retention agreement between the OSA and the law firm was void for lack of statutory compliance and that the law firm’s equitable claims against the OSA were barred by the MTCA’s statute of limitations, sticking the law firm with the (substantial) tab from the PR firm it contracted with at Pickering’s direction in anticipation of filing a suit that Pickering decided not to file.
(8-1-0: Chief Justice Randolph concurred in the result only without separate written opinion)

NOTE – This result is brutal. Pickering provided an affidavit to support the law firm’s quest to have the OSA pay the damages but the outcome of the case was controlled by statutes.


Ward v. State, 2021-KA-00664-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Reversing the circuit court and remanding for a speedy trial-analysis and (assuming no violation is found) re-sentencing, holding that the circuit court did not conduct a proper analysis of the Barker factors when it denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial and erred in sentencing the defendant as a habitual offender because the proper evidence of the prior convictions was not admitted into evidence.
(7-2: Justice Maxwell concurred in part and dissented in part on the resentencing issue, joined by Justice Griffis)

COVID ADDENDUM – The COVID pandemic accounted for part of the delay in bringing this case to trial, but the Supreme Court explained that blaming COVID does not cure all delay:


Other Orders

In Re: Rules of Discipline for the Mississippi Bar, 89-R-99010-SCT (reappointing Hon. Johnnie McDaniels, Mack A. Reeves, Amy K. Taylor, Hon. Jennifer T. Schloegel, Renee M. Porter, Henry B. Zuber III, Hon. H. Craig Treadway, Jason D. Herring, and Rachel Pierce Waide to three-year terms as members of the Complaint Tribunals)

Shannon v. Shannon, 2020-CT-00847-SCT (granting cert) (COA opinion summary and link here)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Court of Appeals Decisions of August 30, 2022

The Mississippi Court of Appeals handed down eight opinions today. These decisions cover the MTCA, tax assessments, waiver of arbitration, a couple of criminal convictions, and a couple of PCR cases.


Belmer v. State, 2021-CP-00398-COA (Civil – Other)
Dismissing the plaintiff’s appeal from a decision of MDOC’s Administrative Remedy Program as moot because the plaintiff was released on parole during the pendency of the appeal and was not longer incarcerated.
(10-0)


Belmer v. State, 2021-CP-00410-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming the circuit court’s denial of the plaintiff’s PCR motion, holding that it was procedurally barred and without merit.
(10-0)

NOTE– Yes, the first two opinions dealt with the same plaintiff. No typo this time.


Simpson County School District v. Wigley, 2021-CA-00009-COA (Civil – Personal Injury)
Reversing the circuit court’s judgment in an MTCA case against a school district alleging that the district failed to provide adequate supervision when children played tag while awaiting bus repairs, holding (1) that the plaintiff failed to provide sufficient evidence that the district proximately caused the injury that occurred during the course of what seems to have been a garden-variety game of tag and (2) that the plaintiff failed to prove that a failure to render aid caused the plaintiff’s damages
(6-3*: Judge Westbrooks concurred in part and dissented in part without separate written opinion; Judge Lawrence concurred in part and dissented in part, joined by Judge Westbrooks; Judge McCarty dissented, joined by Judge Carlton and in party by Judge Westbrooks and Judge Lawrence)

NOTE – The plaintiff argued that the district was liable for negligent supervision by failing to render timely and appropriate aid to the injured child, but the Court of Appeals noted the plaintiff presented no legal authority for such a duty and declined to rule on the issue of whether a duty existed since the causation element was lacking:


Wilson v. Lexington Manor Senior Care, LLC, 2021-CA-00072-COA (Civil – Contract)
Reversing the circuit court’s order compelling arbitration of a medical malpractice claim against a nursing home, holding that the nursing home waived arbitration by substantial invocation of litigation that included filing an answer with 38 defenses that did not include arbitration as a defense and filing a motion to dismiss and pursuing that motion to a ruling, all before filing a motion to compel arbitration.

NOTE – The nursing home argued that it did not find the arbitration agreement until after the motion to dismiss had been briefed and heard. But the Court of Appeals was not persuaded by this argument since the arbitration agreement had been in the nursing home’s possession the entire time.
(8-2-0: Judge Carlton and Judge Emfinger concurred in the result only)


McNair v. State, 2021-KA-01121-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of aggravated domestic violence, holding that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict and that the verdict was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
(10-0)


Perkins v. State, 2021-KA-00129-COA (Civil – Felony)
Affirming conviction of sexual battery and sentence as a non-violent habitual offender after the defendant’s counsel filed a Lindsey brief, holding that the one-page pro se brief denying the crime and making argument after declining to testify at trial did not reveal any basis for reversal.
(9-0: Judge Emfinger did not participate)


BBM Ventures, LLC v. Frierson, 2021-CA-00248-COA (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the chancery court’s judgment affirming MDOR assessments for sales tax liability and for income tax liabilities, holding that the chancellor (1) did not err in ruling that the taxpayers had adequate notice and failed to appeal the sales tax assessment, (2) did not err in evaluating sales tax assessment that arguably did not account for personal use and donation of some inventory, (3) did not err in finding that the taxpayers failed to produce source documentation for the majority of their business expenses or affirming individual income-tax assessment, and (4) did not err in affirming the fraud penalty assessed in conjunction with one of the income-tax assessments.
(8-0: Judge Carlton and Judge McCarty did not participate)


Luckett v. State, 2021-CP-01248-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming the circuit court’s denial of a pro se PCR motion, holding that the plaintiff’s ineffective assistance of counsel and cumulative error claims lacked merit.
(9-0: Judge Emfinger did not participate)


Parker v. Ross, 2020-CA-01055-COA (denying motions for rehearing filed by five parties)

Finley v. PERS, 2021-SA-00089-COA (denying rehearing)

Smith v. Adams County Youth Court, 2021-CP-00196-COA (denying rehearing)

Pickle v. State, 2021-CP-00972-COA (denying rehearing)


Other Orders

Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of August 25, 2022

After a full day of lawyering on the road, here are my summaries of today’s decisions from the Mississippi Supreme Court. There is a decision in a dispute between a report and the Secretary of State over use and development of tidelands, a decision in a reimbursement dispute between the Division of Medicaid and a nursing home, and a decision in a workers’ comp bad faith case analyzing whether a compromise settlement of a comp claim on a denied basis constituted an exhaustion of administrative remedies.


State v. Long Beach Harbor Resort, LLC, 2021-CA-00430-SCT (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the chancery court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the resort, holding that the Secretary of State’s lease with the city related to development and use of tidelands had ratified a prior lease between the city and the resort and therefore the State had no right to require the resort to enter into a separate tidelands lease.
(9-0)


Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Yalobusha County, 2021-SA-00030-SCT (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Reversing the chancery court’s ruling in a dispute between the DOM and a nursing home over costs the facility submitted for reimbursement on its Medicaid cost report, holding that the DOM correctly interpreted statutes and its decisions denying the costs at issue were supported by substantial evidence.
(7-2: Justice Griffis dissented, joined by Justice Maxwell)


Thornhill v. Walker-Hill Environmental, 2020-CT-01181-SCT (Civil – Torts/Bad Faith)
Affirming the Court of Appeals’ decision reversing the circuit court’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s workers’ comp bad faith suit, holding that the plaintiff’s 9(I) settlement of his workers’ comp claim without a finding of compensability constituted an exhaustion of his administrative remedies and the circuit court therefore had jurisdiction to hear the bad faith claim.
(9-0)

ADDENDUM – A point of contention in Thornhill was the Supreme Court’s prior holding in Miss. Power & Light Co. v. Cook, 832 So. 2d 474 (Miss. 2002). In Cook, the Supreme Court held that a 13(j) indemnity-only settlement under Miss. Code Ann. § 71-3-37(10) constituted exhaustion of administrative remedies. The Employer/Carrier in Thornhill argued that Cook did not apply in this case because the plaintiff in Thornhill had settled on a compromise basis and compensability was never admitted or determined by the Commission. But the Court of Appeals dug into the record in Cook and determined that the Supreme Court in Cook mislabeled the settlement in that case. The Cook settlement was actually a 9(i) settlement under § 71-3-29 (i.e. full and final settlement), but the Supreme Court mistakenly labeled it as a 13(j) indemnity settlement. The Supreme Court in Thornhill agreed that it erred when it labeled the settlement in Cook a 13(j) settlement under Miss. Code Ann. § 71-3-37(10) but found that this mislabeling did not disturb the findings in Cook or affect the outcome in this case. Ultimately, the Supreme Court in Thornhill held that a 9(i) compromise settlement constituted an exhaustion of administrative remedies because the parties “had no further business with the Commission.”


Hutto v. State, 2017-DR-01207-SCT (dismissing motion for appointment of counsel for representation for successive petition for PCR)

Lambes v. Lambes, 2020-CT-00095-SCT (denying cert)

Denham v. Denham, 2020-CT-00675-SCT (granting cert)

Tallant v. State, 2020-CT-01077-SCT (denying cert)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Court of Appeals Decisions of August 23, 2022


The Mississippi Court of Appeals handed down five opinions today. There is an arbitration enforcement decision, a legal malpractice settlement enforcement decision, an appeal of a second-degree murder conviction, a wrongful termination decision, and a PCR decision.


Chandler v. State, 2020-CP-01060-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming the circuit court’s denial of the plaintiff’s PCR motion, holding that most of the claims were procedurally barred and all of them were without merit.
(10-0)


Young v. Freese & Goss PLLC, 2020-CA-01280-COA (Civil – Contract)
Affirming the court court’s order granting in part a motion to compel arbitration, holding (1) that the circuit court did not err in granting arbitration to those plaintiffs whose attorney contracts had an arbitration provision, holding that the defendants did not waive arbitration under the peculiar facts of this case even though the motion to compel arbitration was not heard for more than five years, (2) that the plaintiffs had not specifically and clearly alleged fraudulent inducement, (3) that it was not error to compel arbitration over the plaintiffs’ argument that the attorneys breached their fiduciary duty and that the arbitration provision was procedurally and substantively unconscionable, and (4) that it was not error to apply the arbitration provision to conduct that occurred before it was executed.
(8-1-0: Judge Wilson concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion; Judge McCarty did not participate.)


Turner & Associates P.L.L.C. v. Estate of Watkins, 2021-CA-00258-COA (Civil – Legal Malpractice)
Affirming the circuit court’s order enforcing a settlement release signed by a former client agreeing to release malpractice claims against a law firm for $300,000 and ordering the law firm to pay the $288,000 balance, holding that the settlement release was not barred by the statute of frauds, that the amount bargained was not unreasonable, that facts deemed admitted to requests for admissions that were not answered were conclusively established, that the law firm waived its defenses to the legal malpractice claim by negotiating a release, and that there was no requirement to file a suggestion of death.
(8-1-1: Judge Emfinger concurred in part and in result without separate written opinion; Judge McDonald dissented without separate written opinion.)

NOTE – These facts are wild and the opinion is worth you time. A non-lawyer employee lied to the plaintiff about filing suit and a trial date and the plaintiff only found out eight years later. The plaintiff negotiated with the same non-lawyer employee and received $18,000 and later a promise for $288,000 more, but the law firm did not sent a release. Litigation ensued over the agreement. Sadly, the plaintiff died of cancer during the litigation and did not get to see things made right.


Moffett v. State, 2021-KA-00622-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of second-degree murder, holding that (1) the defendant did not prove ineffective assistance of counsel related to the failure to request a culpable-negligence instruction, failure to request an accident or misfortune instruction, or for admitting that there was no evidentiary basis for a heat-of-passion manslaughter jury instruction; (2) the trial court did not err in denying the defendant’s motion to suppress her statement on coercion grounds; and (3) the verdict was supported by sufficient evidence and was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
(8-1-1: Judge Westbrooks concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion; Judge McDonald concurred in part and dissented in part without separate written opinion.)


Avery v. The University of Mississippi, 2021-CA-00471-COA (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the circuit court’s decision affirming the University Personnel Action Review Board’s (PARB) decision upholding the plaintiff’s termination, holding that (1) the circuit court had jurisdiction; (2) the plaintiff was afforded due process despite her arguments that she was not given proper notice, not provided with adequate reasons for her termination prior to her hearing, not given the PARB’s findings of fact, and the investigation was inadequate; (3) the termination did not violate the First Amendment; and (4) the termination was supported by substantial evidence including evidence of disrespectful and confrontational behavior towards coworkers.
(8-2-0: Judge Wilson concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion; Judge McDonald concurred in result only without separate written opinion.)


Other Orders

Murray v. State, 2021-KA-00264-COA (denying rehearing)

Keys v. Military Department Gulfport, 2021-WC-00352-COA (denying rehearing)

Pipkin v. State, 2021-CA-00517-COA (denying rehearing)

Unifund CCR Partners v. Estate of Jordan, 2021-CA-00761-COA (denying rehearing)

Siggers v. State, 2021-CP-00985-COA (recalling mandate so appellant’s pro se motion for rehearing can proceed on the merits)


Hand Down List

Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of August 18, 2022

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down one opinion today along with a passel of orders denying various post-conviction petitions as frivolous. The opinion is noteworthy because the Supreme Court granted cert and then reversed the Court of Appeals and the chancery court on issues that do not appear to have been argued at any point in the appeal briefing and were not addressed by the Court of Appeals.


Randle v. Randle, 2020-CT-00433-SCT (Civil – Wills, Trusts, and Estates)
Reversing the Court of Appeals and the chancellor on cert, holding that the lower courts incorrectly considered settlement proceeds from a wrongful-death claim as an asset of the estate and incorrectly adjudicated the decedent’s heirs-at-law instead of making a determination of wrongful-death beneficiaries.
(9-0)

ADDENDUM – The Supreme Court’s decision hinged on issues that were not addressed by the parties’ briefs, the Court of Appeals’ opinion, or the cert petition. The parties were focused on issues related to the use of DNA evidence to determine heirs and the chancellor’s order requiring a supersedeas bond which are the issues the Court of Appeals decided. But the Supreme Court addressed a more fundamental issue of whether the wrongful-death proceeds were part of the decedent’s estate. Since it held they were not, the Supreme Court then held that the chancellor should have determined wrongful-death beneficiaries rather than heirs-at-law. This case was remanded back to the chancery court for a determination of wrongful-death beneficiaries.

Here is the Supreme Court emphatically explaining that wrongful-death proceeds are not part of the decedent’s estate:


Other Orders

Pinkston v. State, 2012-M-00306 (denying application for leave to proceed in the trial court, finding the claims in the successive petitions are frivolous, and warning that future frivolous filings could result in sanctions)

Daniels v. State, 2017-M-00423 (denying petition for PCR, finding that it was frivolous, and restricting the petitioner from filing further applications in forma pauperis)

Brunson v. State, 2018-M-01113 (denying petition for PCR, finding that it was frivolous, and restricting the petitioner from filing further applications in forma pauperis)

Hill v. State, 2019-M-01221 (denying denying pro se petition for en banc habeas corpus, finding the claims in the successive petitions are frivolous, and warning that future frivolous filings could result in sanctions)

Wright v. State, 2019-M-01883 (denying petition for PCR, finding that it was frivolous, and restricting the petitioner from filing further applications in forma pauperis)

Brown v. State, 2020-M-00630 (denying motion to proceed with habeas corpus petition, finding that the application was frivolous, and restricting the petitioner from filing applications in forma pauperis)


Hand Down List