Zahra named to fill vacant Supreme Court seat

By John Minnis
Legal News

Gov. Rick Snyder has named Appeals Court Judge Brian Zahra to the Michigan Supreme Court, filling the seat vacated by Maura Corrigan, who is leaving to take over as director of Michigan Department of Human Services.

Zahra, 51, was appointed to the appellate court in 1999 by Republican Gov. John Engler and was elected to the court in 2000 and re-elected in 2006.

Prior to serving on the Court of Appeals, Zahra was a Wayne County Circuit judge from 1994-98 and an attorney and partner at the Dickinson Wright law firm from 1989-94.

A conservative, Republican who shares the philosophy of Corrigan and the majority on the Michigan Supreme Court, Zahra fulfills Snyder’s vow to appoint a rule-of-law justice.

The appointment maintains a 4-3 Republican majority on the court, but not the gender balance.

Zahra will be the fifth male on the court, along with two female justices, Mary Beth Kelly, a freshman Republican, and Marilyn Kelly, a Democrat who just ended her term as chief justice.

Robert P. Young Jr., recently elected by the court to serve as chief justice, was pleased with Zahra’s appointment.

“This is an excellent choice, and I am delighted to add my personal welcome and congratulations to Justice Zahra,” he said.

Young said he has known Zahra almost since he began practicing law and cited Zahra’s remarkable career as a lawyer and as a judge. He said Zahra is widely recognized as one of the
state’s top jurists and believed that the state high court has adopted more of Zahra’s decisions than those of any other sitting lower court judge.

“Justice Zahra will bring not only his considerable intellect but also his experience as a judge at all levels of our system,” Young said. “As a jurist committed to following the rule of law, he is a worthy successor to my dear friend Justice Corrigan, who is departing to take on the challenge of protecting Michigan's abused and neglected children.”

Zahra earned a bachelor's degree in general studies at Wayne State University in 1984 and his J.D. at the University of Detroit School of Law in 1987. He was a law clerk to U.S. District Judge Lawrence P. Zatkoff, Eastern District of Michigan, from 1987-89, and he served as adjunct law professor at U-D Mercy from 1994-2001.

He is married to Suzanne Casey. They live in Northville Township and have two children.

While Zahra was on the short list of possible Snyder picks to replace Corrigan, some court watchers thought the governor may seek to keep the gender balance on the court with the appointment of someone like Kirsten Frank Kelly, also a Republican Court of Appeals judge from Wayne County.

Grand Rapids appellate Judge Jane Markey, who unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination Michigan Supreme Court last summer, also vied for Snyder’s appointment.

She, too, bills herself as a rule-of-law advocate.

Nevertheless, she said she not only considers Zahra a colleague on the Court of Appeals, but also her friend. She said he will make a fine Supreme Court justice.

Markey points out that currently all the state’s highest court justices hail from either the greater Detroit or Lansing areas, unlike the 28 judges of Court of Appeals that are elected from four districts.

“It really is incongruous that the highest court lacks that same balance and diversity,” she said. “It makes a difference, and it’s healthy for the courts and the administration of justice.”

Zahra will have to run for election in 2012 to keep the appointment and again in 2014, when Corrigan’s term expires.

As the fate of Alton T. Davis makes clear, an appointee’s “incumbent” designation on the ballot does not necessarily mean getting elected.

Davis, a Democrat, was appointed last summer by Gov. Jennifer Granholm to replace Republican Justice Elizabeth Weaver who resigned. He lost in November’s election to Republican
challenger Mary Beth Kelly.

In addition to heading the DHS, Corrigan will serve as group executive for the “People” group, which includes the departments of Human Services, Community Health, Civil Rights and
Education.

Her appointment, announced by Snyder late last week, takes effect Jan. 14.

The Department of Human Services serves as Michigan’s public assistance, child and family welfare agency.  It directs the operations of public assistance and service programs through
a statewide network of over 100 county departments of human service offices.  

The state’s child welfare system currently operates under a federal court consent decree overseen by a court appointed monitor.

Corrigan served on the Michigan Supreme Court since 1999, including four years from 2001 to 2005 as chief justice.  

She graduated with honors from Marygrove College and the University of Detroit-Mercy School of Law.

She served as a law clerk on the Michigan Court of Appeals, a Wayne County assistant prosecutor U.S. United States Attorney, ultimately becoming chief assistant U.S. attorney.  

Corrigan became a partner at the Detroit law firm of Plunkett & Cooney in 1989.  She was appointed to the Michigan Court of Appeals in 1992, and became chief judge of that 28-judge
court in 1997.  She was first elected to the Supreme Court in 1998.
 

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