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William B. Murphy

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William B. Murphy
Image of William B. Murphy
Prior offices
Michigan 3rd District Court of Appeals

Education

Bachelor's

Michigan State University

Law

Wayne State University


William B. Murphy was a judge on the Third District Court of Appeals in Michigan from 1988 to 2019. Governor James Blanchard appointed Murphy in 1988. He left the court after his term expired on January 1, 2019. Murphy was unable to run for re-election because he passed the mandatory retirement age of 70 years.[1][2]

Murphy served as chief judge from November 2009 until January 2015 and as chief judge pro tempore from 1992 to 1996.[2][3]

Murphy ran for election to the Michigan Supreme Court in 2014 as a Democrat.[4]

Education

Murphy earned his bachelor's degree from Michigan State University and his J.D., cum laude, from Wayne State University.[2]

Career

Before he was appointed to the Third District Court of Appeals, Murphy served as a member of the East Grand Rapids City Commission, as a law clerk for the Michigan Court of Appeals, and worked as an attorney in private practice. When he served on the state court of appeals, Murphy was a lecturer for the Michigan Judicial Institute, various bar associations and continuing legal education programs, and had been an adjunct professor at Michigan State University College of Law.[2]

Awards and associations

  • Member, State Bar of Michigan
  • Trustee, Michigan State Bar Foundation
  • Past trustee, Grand Rapids Bar Association
  • Past commissioner/past chair, Judicial Tenure Commission
  • Member, Open Justice Commission
  • Member, Michigan Justice Project: Judicial Executive Committee and Strategic Planning Committees[5]

Political affiliation

Murphy ran for a seat on the Michigan Supreme Court on the Democratic ticket in 1996 and 2014.[6][7]

Elections

2014

See also: Michigan Supreme Court elections, 2014 and Michigan judicial elections, 2014

Murphy ran for election to the Michigan Supreme Court. He was defeated in the general election on November 4, 2014, after receiving 14.2 percent of the vote. He competed against Brian Zahra, Richard Bernstein, James Robert Redford, and Doug Dern for two open seats. Murphy was nominated as a candidate at the Democratic convention.[4] 

Endorsements

  • Michigan Association for Justice[8]
  • Michigan Education Association
  • Michigan Laborers District Council
  • SEIU Michigan State Council
  • United Automobile Workers[9]

2012

Murphy was re-elected to the Third District Court of Appeals after running unopposed in the general election on November 6, 2012.[10][11]

See also: Michigan judicial elections, 2012

Noteworthy cases

Canine sniff not a search under Fourth Amendment (2008)

In a two to one decision, the Michigan Court of Appeals overturned a district court ruling that suppressed evidence obtained by using dogs to sniff outside a house for drugs. Police used the drug dogs' signal to obtain a search warrant to enter the residence, where they found marijuana and a gun. According to the Toledo Blade, Judges E. Thomas Fitzgerald (Michigan) and William B. Murphy, citing U.S. Supreme Court precedent, said a canine sniff is not a search as defined under Fourth Amendment law. They said there is no reasonable expectation of privacy at the entrance to a property that is open to the public, including the front porch of a home. In dissent, Judge Stephen Borrello wrote, "A person's home is not some abstract place or location for which it is unclear whether the person has a reasonable expectation of privacy."[12]

Artist wins First Amendment case (2009)

In a two to one decision to reverse a decision from a lower court's misdemeanor conviction by a jury, Judges William B. Murphy and Michael Smolenski determined that "'[p]rohibiting lettering completely appears to be an excessive restriction compared to the interests sought to be advanced. Indeed, it does not appear the word 'Love' on the mural would distract motorists or impact the aesthetic value of the neighborhood. The judges say the variance "was an unconstitutional regulation of speech, infringing on defendant's First Amendment protections.'" Artist Edward Stross benefited from the ruling that overturns his 2005 conviction. He had been convicted for violating a zoning variance, according to The Macomb Daily. Judge Bill Schuette dissented, writing the mural is not protected by the right to free speech because he considers it to be an "advertisement" or "commercial speech... Although not selling anything directly, the mural gives credibility to Stross as an artist. The obvious economic motivation for the mural is to draw attention to defendant's talent in hope of attracting persons in need of an artist's service," Schuette wrote.[13]


Recent news

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See also

Michigan Judicial Selection More Courts
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Courts in Michigan
Michigan Court of Appeals
Michigan Supreme Court
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Judicial selection in Michigan
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External links

Footnotes