Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of August 8, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down two opinions today. One is a direct criminal appeal addressing, among other things, an indecent technical difficulty during a witness examination via Zoom. The other is a decidedly less salacious civil case applying the MTCA’s presuit notice requirement.


Williams v. State, 2022-KA-01017-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of first-degree murder, holding that the conviction was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence and that the trial court did not err by denying motions for mistrial after an outburst from the victim’s mother or after an technological error caused an explicit video to be played in the courtroom during a voir dire qualification examination of an expert via Zoom where the trial court took corrective action after each incident.
(9-0)

Note – Zoom proceedings took a massive “L” in this one.


The City of Jackson v. Jones, 2023-IA-00394-SCT (Civil – Personal Injury)
Reversing the denial of the City’s motion for summary judgment in an MTCA claim, holding that the plaintiff did not comply with section 11-46-11(2) by failing to serve the city clerk with presuit notice.
(8-0)


Other Orders

  • In Re: Uniform Chancery Court Rules, 89-R-99006-SCT (dismissing Motion to Amend the Uniform Rules of Chancery Court Practice to Add a New Rule Requiring Attorneys Representing Out-of-State Petitioners in Adoption Proceedings to Certify Compliance With Statutes Enacted to Prevent Commercialization of Adoptions filed by the Mississippi Department of Child Protection Services)
  • Brandi’s Hope Community Services, LLC v. Walters, 2022-CT-00188-SCT (denying rehearing)
  • Moore v. State, 2022-CT-00327-SCT (denying cert)
  • Silver Dollar Sales, Inc. v. Battah, 2022-CT-00476-SCVT (denying cert)
  • Harris v. Ratcliff, 2022-CT-00596-SCT (denying cert)
  • Edwards v. State, 2022-CT-00719-SCT (denying extension request and dismissing cert petition as untimely)
  • Clark v. State, 2022-DR-00829-SCT (denying Motion for Leave to Interview Members of the Venire Who Did Not Serve on the Petit Jury)
  • Frazier v. State, 2022-CT-00896-SCT (dismissing cert petition as untimely)
  • EEECHO Inc. v. Mississippi Environmental Quality Permit Board, 2022-CT-01068-SCT (denying cert)
  • Harvey v. State, 2023-CT-00157-SCT (denying cert)
  • Clark v. State,  2024-M-00201-SCT (denying Petition for Permission to Appeal Circuit Court’s Order Denying Petitioner’s Motion for Discovery)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of August 1, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down one opinion today in a direct criminal appeal. There are several noteworthy orders including an order suspending a lawyer from practice and an order adopting the Mississippi Collaborative Law Rules.


Williams v. State, 2023-KA-00153-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming denial of defendant’s motion for new trial after he was convicted of sexual battery, holding that conflicting testimony did not prove that the verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
(9-0)


Other Orders

  • In Re: Rules for Collaborative Law, 89-R-99044-SCT (En banc order granting the Mississippi Bar’s Petition to Create Rules for Collaborative Law and adopting the Mississippi Collaborative Law Rules) (Note – I suppose these rules will join twenty-three other sets of rules under the MS Rules of Court.)
  • The Mississippi Bar v. Rogers, 2024-BD-00215-SCT (suspending respondent from the practice of law)
  • Smith v. Ford, 2022-CT-00255-SCT (denying cert)
  • Fluker v. State, 2022-CT-00692-SCT (granting cert)
  • Barefield v. Barefield, 2022-CT-00834-SCT (denying cert)
  • Quinn v. State, 2022-CT-00962-SCT (granting cert)
  • Hunter v. State, 2022-CT-01269-SCT (dismissing cert petition as untimely)
  • In Re: Administrative Orders of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, 2024-AD-00001-SCT (directing the disbursement of $176,989.51 in civil legal assistance funds among the MS Center for Legal Services, MS Volunteer Lawyers Project, and North MS Rural Legal Services)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of July 25, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down just one opinion today in a direct criminal appeal. Since I had a 1:30 p.m. hearing today, I welcome the reprieve from volume.


Sheely v. State, 2023-KA-00493-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of possession of more than 0.1 gram but less than 2 grams of meth, holding that the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the defendant’s proposed broken chain of custody instruction because the defendant did not overcome the presumption of regularity.
(9-0)


Other Orders

  • Hutto v. State, 2017-DR-01207-SCT (denying motion for leave to file successive petition for PCR)
  • Harper v. State, 2022-CT-00659-SCT (denying cert)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of June 20, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions on Thursday. The first is a divorce case that discusses property classification and alimony and partially overrules a prior decision. The second decision is a direct criminal appeal appealing the denial of an indigent defendant’s request for funding for defense experts. The third case involves a motion for protective order that was sought to exempt redacted information from a public records request disclosure.


Cassell v. Cassell, 2023-CA-00213-SCT (Civil – Domestic)

Affirming the chancellor’s rulings in a divorce matter, holding that the chancellor did not err in the classification of property or award of alimony, that the burden of proof to rebut the presumption of marital property is preponderance of the evidence, and that the party claiming property excluded from marital property has been commingled and transformed into marital property bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence, and “overrul[ing] Cheatham insofar as it has any bearing on a chancellor’s decision to award alimony and reaffirm the factors enumerated in Ferguson—awarding alimony during the division of the estate—and Armstrong—awarding alimony subsequent to the division of the estate—as the appropriate factors to be considered.”

(9-0)


Harris v. State, NO. 2023-KA-00038-SCT (Criminal – Felony)

Affirming conviction for aggravated DUI, holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion denying the indigent defendant’s request for funds to retain experts where the requests were insufficient to show a substantial need for state funding or defense experts.

(9-0)


UnitedHealthcare of Mississippi, Inc. v. Amerigroup Mississippi, Inc., 2022-SA-01216-SCT (Civil – Other)

Affirming the chancellor’s decision denying a motion for protective order that sought to exempt redacted information in a qualification United Healthcare had submitted to the Department of Medicaid from disclosure in response to a public records request, holding that United did not meet its burden of showing that the redacted information was either a trade secret or confidential commercial or financial information, and denying United’s request to supplement the record.

(9-0)


Other Orders

Simmons v. State, 2022-CT-01260-SCT (denying cert)

Brown v. State, 2024-M-00013 (granting application for leave to file a motion for post-conviction DNA testing)

Bonner v. The Mississippi Bar, 2024-BD-00142-SCT (granting leave under Mississippi Rule of Discipline 11(b) to resign in good standing from the practice of law in Mississippi)


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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of June 13, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down four opinions today. Three of the opinions are direct criminal appeals, and one of those involved a reverse Batson challenge. The fourth opinion was a dec/injunction action against MDCPS.


Morris v. State, 2023-KA-00546-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction for statutory rape, holding that the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction and that the verdict was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
(9-0)


Turner v. State, 2023-KA-00074-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of kidnapping after the defendant failed to return her daughter to the child’s lawful custodian, holding that there was sufficient evidence to support the conviction.
(9-0)


Smith v. State, 2021-CT-01003-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of first-degree murder having granted cert on the issue of whether the case should be remanded for another Batson hearing, holding that the trial court did not err in disallowing two of the defendant’s strikes after reverse Batson challenges.
(6-3: King dissented, joined by Kitchens and joined in part by Ishee)


Jones v. Miss. Dept. of Child Protective Services, 2022-SA-01234-SCT (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the chancellor’s decisions granting MDCPS a judgment on the pleadings in an injunctive and declaratory action against MDCPS’s policy not to investigate allegations of abuse at school, holding that Mississippi law (Mississippi Code Section 43-21-353 (Rev. 2023), specifically) does not require the MDCPS to investigate a report that a child has been abused at school.
(6-1-2: Randolph concurred in the result only without writing; Kitchens dissented, joined by King)


Other Orders

  • Rules for Court Reporters, 89-R-99021-SCT (appointing Leslie D. King, Candace O’Barr Jones, Kati Vogt, and Latanya Allen as members of the Board of Certified Court Reporters for two-year terms from July 1, 2024, through June 30, 2026)
  • Haverscome v. State, 2022-CT-00391-SCT (denying cert)
  • Brown v. State, 2022-CT-00446-SCT (denying cert)
  • Gilmer v. Biegel, 2022-CP-00528-SCT (one order denying cert; granting motion for fees)
  • Moore v. Miss. Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co., 2022-CT-00555-SCT (denying cert)
  • Gregory Meridian Acquisition, LLC v. McFarland, 2022-CT-00580-SCT (denying cert)
  • Wiggins v. Southern Securities Group, LLC, 2024-TS-00251 (accepting request for interlocutory appeal as notice of appeal)
  • Mi Pueblo Mexican Restaurant, LLC v. Breakfast Cove, LLC, 2024-CA-00271 (granting leave to proceed in the trial court with Miss. R. Civ. P. 60 motion but denying stay request)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of May 30, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down five opinions today. There is an MTCA case, a premises liability case, an unpaid wages case against MDOC, an insurance coverage case, and a workers’ comp/third-party case.


Yazoo City, Mississippi v. Hampton, 2022-IA-01284-SCT (Civil – Property Damage)
Reversing denial of summary judgment in a case seeking to hold the City liable for alleged ineffective firefighting and alleged resulting cardiac stress, holding that the City was immune under the MTCA from both property damage and personal injury liability where the evidence did not support a finding of reckless disregard by the fire department.
(9-0)


St. Dominic-Jackson Memorial Hospital v. Martin, 2023-CA-00285-SCT (Civil – Personal Injury)
Reversing judgment on a jury verdict in case stemming from a fall in an emergency room parking lot, holding that the evidence did not require judgment in the defendant’s favor but that the trial court erred by granting a negligence per se instruction and remanded for a new trial.
(9-0)


Mississippi Department of Corrections v. McClure, 2022-IA-01201-SCT (Civil – State Boards and Agencies)
Affirming the circuit court’s denial of a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction over a former probation officer’s claim for unpaid wages for work with the MDOC, holding that Mississippi courts have jurisdiction to hear state employees’ claims against their employers for breach of contract and that the exhaustion doctrine did not apply because there was not adequate administrative remedy.
(9-0)


VT Halter Marine, Inc. v. Certain Underwriters of Lloyd’s of London Subscribing to Policy Number B0507M17PH04660, 2023-CA-00019-SCT (Civil – Insurance)
Affirming summary judgment in favor of an insurer in a suit by an insured seeking coverage for costs incurred in repairing and replacing flange plates that failed due to faulty workmanship, holding the insurance policy unambiguously excluded the cost of replacing or repairing improper or defective materials.
(9-0)


Brent v. Mississippi Dept. of Human Services, 2022-CT-00529-SCT (Civil – Workers’ Compensation)
Reversing the decision of the Mississippi Court of Appeals that affirmed trial court’s decision allowing the intervening employer/carrier’s EME costs be included in the statutory lien, holding that the EME was not a “reasonable and necessary medical expense” and therefore not properly included in the lien amount.
(9-0)


Other Orders

  • DeJohnette v. State, 2022-CA-00249-SCT (denying cert)
  • Chambliss v. Chambliss, 2023-CT-00087-SCT (denying cert)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of May 23, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions today. There is one direct criminal appeal, one § 1983 case, and one case about huntin’ dogs.


Pittman v. State, 2023-KA-00367-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of burglary of a dwelling, passing on the issue of whether evidence of prior bad acts were improperly admitted and holding that if there was any error it would be harmless.
(9-0)


Clay v. Tunica County, Mississippi, 2022-CA-01106-SCT (Civil – Wrongful Death)
Affirming summary judgment in a § 1983 action on qualified immunity grounds, holding that the plaintiffs failed to establish deliberate indifference and that local governments cannot be held vicariously liable based on employer-employee relationships.
(9-0)


Allen v. Dickerson, 2023-CA-00067-SCT (Civil – Real Property)
Affirming the chancellor’s rulings in a case pitting the right to quite enjoyment of property against the right to hunt and harvest wildlife, holding that the trial court’s finding that repeated intrusion of deer hunting dogs onto neighboring property constituted private nuisance and warranted an injunction.
(5-1*-3: Maxwell specially concurred, joined by Coleman, Beam, Chamberlin and Griffis; Ishee dissented, joined by Randolph and Kitchens)

Practice Point – Maxwell’s special concurrence received four other votes, giving it precedential value. The special concurrence agreed with the majority’s ruling but emphasized that the decision is not a blanket and should not be read to besmirch lawful dog hunting.

Note – The dissent waded into the regulatory morass of what you can hunt when.

My Parting Thought – Mind your dogs.


Other Orders

  • Goldbolt v. State, 2020-DP-00440-SCT (denying rehearing)
  • Durr v. State, 2021-CT-01109-SCT (dismissing cert sua sponte)
  • Gilmer v. State, 2022-CT-00257-SCT (denying cert)
  • Premier Radiology, P.A. v. Davis, 2022-IA-00916-SCT (dismissing interlocutory appeal)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of May 9, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down four opinions today. There is an decision about whether a subdivision’s roads are public or private, a Miller PCR case, a decisions about the applicability of McArn exceptions to at-will employment, and a felony case analyzing three jury instructions.


Newton County, Mississippi v. Deerfield Estates Subdivision Property Owners Association, LLC, 2022-CA-01227-SCT
(Civil – Real Property)
Affirming the chancellor’s decision in a case about whether the main roads in a subdivision are private or public roads, holding that the chancery court did not err in finding that the roads were accepted by the county via express common law dedication where the boards accepted the roads in its minutes, the rights of way over the roads, no tax had been levied on the rights of way, and the public had unrestricted access to the roads.
(9-0)


McDowell v. State, 2021-CT-01381-SCT (Civil – PCR)
Reversing sentence of life without parole after a resentencing trial pursuant to Miller, holding that the trial court’s unopposed grant of a jury trial under Miss Code. Ann. § 99-19-101(3) (Rev. 2020) made that section applicable to the entirety of the proceedings and therefore the trial court erred by conducting a Miller analysis and sentencing the defendant to life without parole.
(5-2-2: Maxwell concurred in part and in the result, joined by Randolph and Chamberlin; Beam dissented, joined by Griffis, and joined in part by Randolph and Maxwell.)


Brandi’s Hope Community Services, LLC v. Walters, 2022-CT-00188-SCT (Civil – Torts/Other)
Affirming in part and reversing in part the Court of Appeals and circuit court’s decisions after a wrongful termination verdict in the plaintiff’s favor, holding that the public policy exceptions to at-will employment established in McArn v. Allied Bruce-Terminix Co., Inc., do not conflict with the reporting protections in section 43-47-37(5)(b) of the Vulnerable Persons Act and that the plaintiff was qualified to bring wrongful termination claims.
(9-0)


Saxton v. State, 2023-KA-00226-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of aggravated assault, holding that the trial court erred in granting an unopposed instruction that contained an “incomplete” statement of Mississippi’s self-defense law but that the error did not result in a miscarriage of justice in light of other instructions given, that the trial court did not in in granting a definitional instruction on “imminent danger,” and that the trial court did not err in denying the defendant’s self-defense instruction as repetitive.
(5-4: Maxwell specially concurred, joined by Kitchens, Coleman, and Chamberlin; Kitchens concurred in part and in the result, joined by King and Ishee, and joined in part by Coleman.)


Other Orders

  • Fortenberry v. State, 2017-M-01026 (granting application for leave to file PCR petition)
  • Walter v. State2021-M-01125 (denying an application for leave to proceed in the trial court, and finding the filing frivolous and warning that future frivolous filings could be met with sanctions)
  • Patel v. State, 2022-CT-00985-SCT (denying cert)
  • Harris v. State, 2022-KA-01195-SCT (denying rehearing)
  • Kelly v. State, 2023-M-00482 (denying application for leave to file PCR petition)
  • Deutchman v. The Mississippi Bar, 2024-BD-00009-SCT (granting leave to resign in good standing from the practicing of law in Mississippi)

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A couple of pictures from my trip to circuit court in Warren County yesterday:

Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of May 2, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down two opinions yesterday. One is a temporary custody case that the Court took up on interlocutory appeal and the other is the conclusion of a major school-funding case.


Hinds v. Caldwell, 2023-IA-00813-SCT consolidated with 2023-IA-00839-SCT (Civil – Custody)
Reversing the chancellor’s temporary order granting durable legal and physical custody of a foster child and dismissing CPS, holding that the chancellor erred by divesting CPS of custody and dismissing CPS without a hearing.
(9-0)


Midsouth Ass’n of Independent Schools v. Parents for Public Schools, 2022-SA-01129-SCT (Civil – Unconstitutional Statute)
Vacating the chancellor’s decision that two statutes creating and funding a grant program for schools, holding that the petitioner organization failed to demonstrate an adverse impact sufficient to grant associational standing or prove that it had taxpayer standing.
(7-2: King dissented, joined by Kitchens)


Other Orders

  • Washington v. State, 2021-CT-01384-SCT (denying cert)
  • Stratton v. McKey, 2023-CP-00451-SCT (denying rehearing)
  • Farr v. The Mississippi Bar, 2023-BD-01391-SCT (granting leave to resign in good standing from the practice of law)

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Mississippi Supreme Court Decisions of March 28, 2024

The Mississippi Supreme Court handed down three opinions today: one certificate of need matter and two direct criminal appeals. It was a big day, however, for “Other Orders” as the Supreme Court adopted revisions to the Uniform Chancery Rules, approved local rules for a circuit court district, and issued decisions in two bar disciplinary matters.


Wakefield v. State, 2021-CT-00187-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming convictions of accessory after the fact to car theft, kidnapping, and murder, holding that under the unit of prosecution test the State may charge multiple violations of section 97-1-5 for each felony committed.
(6-3: Kitchens concurred in part and dissented in part joined by King and Ishee)


Owen v. State, 2021-CT-00887-SCT (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of burglary of a business, holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for new trial based on the evidence presented.
(6-3: Griffis dissented, joined by Kitchens and King)


Encompass Health Rehabilitation Hospital of Flowood, LLC v. Mississippi Methodist Hospital and Rehabilitation Center, Inc., 2023-SA-00370-SCT (Civil – State Boards & Agencies)
Vacating the chancery court’s judgment that reversed MSDH’s decision in a certificate of need application matter approving two providers, holding that the chancery court erred in determining that MDHS failed to consider a contemporaneous CON application from another entity for the same category of services and that MDHS did not err in its decision that the contemporaneous CON application was not relevant or in denying to reopen the closed hearing on the contemporaneous CON application.
(7-2: Randolph concurred in part and dissented in part; Griffis dissented.)


Other Orders

In Re: Uniform Chancery Court Rules, 89-R-99006-SCT (adopting revisions to the Uniform Chancery Rules)

In Re: Local Rules, 89-R-99015-SCT (approving local rules for the Fifteenth Circuit Court District)

The Mississippi Bar v. Mayers, 2021-BD-00268-SCT (ordering a lawyer permanently disbarred)

Bennett v. The Mississippi Bar2023-BR-00410-SCT (denying motion for reinstatement to the practice of law)

Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation v. Holloway, 2023-IA-01256 (granting petition for interlocutory appeal and stay)


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