Court Opinion

ID: 9659286
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-23 21:37:58.414037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:14:05.806709
License: Public Domain

Corrigan, J.
I respectfully dissent. First, I would decline to address this case because it is moot. Plaintiff was paroled on March 23, 1999. “A case is moot when it presents ‘nothing but abstract questions of law which do not rest upon existing facts or rights.’ ” East Grand Rapids School Dist v Kent Co Tax Allocation Bd, 415 Mich 381, 390; 330 NW2d 7 (1982), quoting Gildemeister v Lindsay, 212 Mich 299, 302; 180 NW 633 (1920). Now that plaintiff has been paroled, his claim challenging the procedures of the parole board presents only an abstract question of law. As a general rule, this Court will not entertain moot issues or decide moot cases.1 East Grand Rapids School *350Dist, supra at 390, citing LaBello v Victory Pattern Shop, Inc, 351 Mich 598; 88 NW2d 288 (1958).
Because the majority has chosen to “clarify” the Court of Appeals opinion in the absence of a live controversy, I offer my substantive objections. The majority reasons that MCL 791.235(6); MSA 28.2305(6) permits a lawyer to attend and participate in a parole interview “in the same manner that a non-lawyer could,” while barring a lawyer from acting as a “legal representative” of a prisoner during such an interview. This construction does not comport with the plain language of the statute, which provides that a “prisoner may be represented [at a parole interview] by an individual of his or her choice,” and that “[t]he representative shall not be another prisoner or an attorney.” The Legislature’s intent could not be clearer: the person representing a prisoner at a parole interview shall not be an attorney.
The statute does not address a person’s ability to attend and participate in a parole interview in some capacity other than as a “representative” of a prisoner. Likewise, the Court of Appeals did not address any other forms of attendance at or participation in parole interviews. To say that a lawyer acting as a “representative” of a prisoner at a parole interview can do so in some capacity other than as a “legal representative” defies practicality. An attorney “representing” another person in a formal interview with a public official, necessarily must be said to be acting as a “legal representative.” Therefore, the majority’s *351attempt at clarification is both strained and unnecessary.2
Further, the Court of Appeals correctly concluded that the statute, when understood according to its plain meaning, has a rational basis. At a parole interview, the manner in which the prisoner speaks to the interviewer is of primary concern. It is rational to conclude that an attorney, like no other person, might hinder the free flow of information between the prisoner and his interviewer. A parole interview is not an adversarial proceeding. Generally, attorneys operate in an adversarial fashion to guard and monitor the statements of the persons they represent. Accordingly, I would simply deny plaintiffs application for leave to appeal. I see no need to clarify the Court of Appeals holding.
Weaver, C.J., concurred with Corrigan, J.
Young, J., took no part in the decision of this case.

 I disagree with the majority’s view that this issue is one capable of repetition while evading review. In my view, a claim challenging the parole board’s procedures is no more likely to evade review than a claim challenging the procedures of a lower court. Because parole is not routinely granted, the issue could come before us again in a live controversy. Further, the publication of the Court of Appeals opinion has no bearing on the question whether the case is now moot. Finally, although we have *350plaintiffs application for leave to appeal and defendant’s response, our decision has been rendered without the benefit of full briefing pursuant to MCR 7.302(F)(1).

 Although defendant has now “conceded” that an attorney may appear at a parole interview “in his [or her] role as a private citizen as a representative of a prisoner,” defendant’s concession is not consistent with the plain language of the statute. A litigant’s concession cannot bind this Court to a misinterpretation of a statute.