Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

David Viviano

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American judge (born 1971)
David Viviano
Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court
In office
February 27, 2013 – January 1, 2025
Appointed byRick Snyder
Preceded byDiane Hathaway
Succeeded byKimberly Thomas
Personal details
Born
David Francis Viviano

(1971年12月08日) December 8, 1971 (age 53)
Political partyRepublican
EducationHillsdale College (BA)
University of Michigan (JD)

David Francis Viviano[1] (born December 8, 1971) is a former justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, appointed by Governor Rick Snyder on February 27, 2013, to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Justice Diane Hathaway.[2] Prior to his appointment to the Michigan Supreme Court, Viviano was the Chief Judge of the Macomb County Circuit Court.

Viviano defeated Deborah Thomas and Kerry L. Morgan in the general election on November 4, 2014, receiving 62.1 percent of the vote.

Early life and education

[edit ]

Viviano earned a bachelor's degree from Hillsdale College and his Juris Doctor degree from the University of Michigan Law School.[3]

Notable decisions

[edit ]

In 2022, Viviano, joined by Justice Brian Zahra,[4] dissented from a decision of the Michigan Supreme Court ordering the Board of State Canvassers to allow a ballot proposition that would amend the Michigan Constitution to provide for a right to abortion before viability with limitations afterward. Viviano claimed that the proposed amendment did not comply with Michigan's "full text" requirement for ballot propositions because, while the full text may have been present, the text used different "spaces" than those found in the Michigan Constitution. Although 753,759 Michigan voters had signed the initiative,[4] Viviano wrote, "[t]he failure to include the spaces presents the amendment in a manner difficult to read and comprehend. Thus, it may have the right words in the right order—as the majority here suggests—but the lack of critical word spaces renders the remaining text much more difficult to read and comprehend, and therefore something less than the 'full text' required by the Constitution and statutes."[5] [6]

References

[edit ]
Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court
2013–2025
Succeeded by
Stub icon

This biography of a state judge in Michigan is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /