Rozankovich v. KALAMAZOO SPRING CORP.

205 N.W.2d 311 | Mich. Ct. App. | 1973

44 Mich. App. 426 (1973)
205 N.W.2d 311

ROZANKOVICH
v.
KALAMAZOO SPRING CORPORATION.

Docket No. 10884.

Michigan Court of Appeals.

Decided January 18, 1973.

Stephen I. Schlossberg, John A. Fillion, and Jordan Rossen, for plaintiff on rehearing.

Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Robert A. Derengoski, Solicitor General, and George M. Blaty, Assistant Attorney General, for defendant Michigan Employment Security Commission.

Before: LEVIN, P.J., and R.B. BURNS and J.H. GILLIS, JJ.

*427 ON REHEARING

LEVIN, P.J.

The plaintiff, Evelyn Rozankovich, moved for rehearing and the Attorney General, representing the Michigan Employment Security Commission, consented to a rehearing. Our order granting a rehearing provided that the rehearing would be limited to the constitutionality of the pregnancy provision of § 28(1)(c) of the Employment Security Act which provides that "a pregnant woman shall be ineligible to receive benefits for any week within the period beginning with the tenth calendar week before expected confinement, as determined by a physician, and extending through the sixth calendar week following the termination of pregnancy". MCLA 421.28(1)(c); MSA 17.530(1)(c). The employer, Kalamazoo Spring Corporation, did not file a brief either at the time of the original hearing or in connection with the rehearing.

In our previously filed opinion in this case we said:

"The Attorney General of Michigan has ruled that § 28(1)(c) of the Michigan Employment Security Act is unconstitutional, and we have been advised that the Employment Security Commission accepts his decision. Accordingly, we do not consider the constitutionality of that section of the act." Rozankovich v Kalamazoo Spring Corp, 41 Mich App 717, 722 (1972).

On rehearing the plaintiff explains the need for a decision by our Court thus:

"This court was correctly advised that the Commission accepts said decision of the Attorney General. However, the appeal board and various referees, in September, 1972, refused to accept the Attorney General's decision until a court so rules." (Emphasis by author.) *428 The Attorney General's answering brief for the Michigan Employment Security Commission joins with the plaintiff in urging us to hold the pregnancy provision of § 28(1)(c) of the act to be unconstitutional.

We surmise from the appeal board's refusal to follow the Attorney General's opinion that there are employers who contend that the pregnancy provision is valid. No one is now before us representing the interests of such employers.

We recognize that the issue is not moot and that it is likely to be a source of continuing controversy until resolved by an appellate court. However, there is no longer any dispute between the present litigants regarding the constitutionality of this section of the act and we, therefore, do not have before us briefs and arguments on both sides of the controversy.

Competitive briefs frequently sharpen the issues and are of great assistance in deciding the question at hand. Without adversaries we are deprived of the benefit of competitive presentations, and any opinion we might express would be entitled to little weight as precedent because in reality we would not be deciding a question but, rather, merely obliging the litigants before us. See 20 Am Jur 2d, Courts, § 193, p 529.

Courts ordinarily do not render advisory opinions (People v Gonzales, 349 Mich 572, 573 [1971]), nor do they enter decrees striking down acts of the Legislature on the strength of stipulations signed by agreeable litigants. As expressed in Johnson v Muskegon Heights, 330 Mich 631, 633 (1951), "Courts ordinarily will not decide a case or question in or on which there is no real controversy".

Accordingly, we conclude that our opinion previously filed in this case should remain unmodified.

All concurred.

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