People v. Allen
People v. Allen
Opinion of the Court
Defendant was convicted of a felony murder. Killing a person while perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate a robbery constitutes first-degree murder in this state.
Defendant’s first assigned error involves analysis of one of criminal law’s most fundamental principles :
“An unsupported confession should not be received as sufficient evidence of the corpus delicti.”
The prosecution was supplied with a number of “confessions” in the present case due to defendant’s tendency to inform his friends and jail inmates that he had shot the victim while attempting to rob him.
Evidence independent of the confessions clearly established the victim was shot by two men and that defendant was connected with the killing.
Defendant contends that it was necessary for the prosecution, aliunde the confession, to establish the independent felony, i.e., the attempted robbery.
The corpus delicti in a homicide case has traditionally been established by proof of the dead body and evidence of an unnatural cause of death. People v. Jackzo (1919), 206 Mich 183; People v. Jackson (1965), 1 Mich App 207.
There is little authority throughout the country as to whether or not, under the felony-murder rule, proof of the felony as well as the murder is part of the corpus delicti. The State of New York has held that proof of the independent felony is not part of the corpus delicti and has admitted confessions into evidence to determine the degree of the crime. People v. Lytton (1931), 257 NY 310 (178 NE 290, 291-292, 79 ALR 503, 506-507).
In Lytton, Chief Judge Cardozo stated (pp 313-315):
“The defendant insists that upon a trial for homicide perpetrated in the commission of another and independent felony (People v. Moran, 246 NY 100 [158 NE 35 (1927)]; Penal Law [Consol Laws, c 40], § 1044, subd 2), a confession is insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction, though there is corroborating evidence of the fact of the homicide, unless there is also corroborating evidence, i.e., evidence apart from
“The charge is in accordance with the settled doctrine of this court, which deserves to be stated in an opinion, since arguments before us both in this case and in others disclose uncertainty as to the governing principle in the minds of members of the bar.
“Code of Criminal Procedure, § 395, provides that a confession of a defendant ‘is not sufficient to warrant his conviction, without additional proof that the crime charged has been committed.’ The crime charged against this defendant is homicide, and the fact that a homicide has been committed is proved, without reference to a confession, by the testimony of eyewitnesses as well as by the discovery of the body, bearing tokens of a fatal wound. (People v Deacons, 109 NY 374 [16 NE 676 (1888)]; People v Brasch, 193 NY 46, 58 [85 NE 809 (1908)]). This being done, the requirement of the Criminal Code must be held to have been satisfied. The danger that a crime may be confessed when no such crime in any degree has been committed by any one is then sufficiently averted. (People v Deacons, supra). The considerations of public policy back of this section of the Code are near akin to those back of a section of the Penal Law to the effect that ‘no person can be convicted of murder or manslaughter unless the death of the person alleged to have been killed and the fact of killing by the defendant, as alleged, are each established as independent facts; the former by direct proof, and the latter beyond a reasonable doubt.’ (Penal Law [Consol Laws, c 40] § 1041; People v Palmer, 109 NY 110, 114 [16 NE 529, 4 Am St Rep 423 (1888)]). The corroborating evidence being sufficient to confirm the confession of a homicide, the Code does not require that it shall also confirm the confession of a homicide in any particular degree.
In People v Crandell (1935), 270 Mich 124, the defendant pled guilty to murder in the first degree; he killed while attempting to perpetrate a robbery. The Court stated (pp 127-128):
“There is no merit in the point that defendant’s confession could not be considered in determining the degree of the murder.
“In People v Lytton, supra, 313, it was said: [The Court then quoted from the Lytton case which we have quoted above, ending with]
“ ‘The corroborating evidence being sufficient to confirm the confession of a homicide, the code -does not require that it shall also confirm the confession of a homicide in any particular degree.’
“No claim is made by defendant, or any one in his behalf, that he was not guilty of the murder. His confession of guilt and details of the killing remain unquestioned.”
The trial court did not err by admitting the confessions into evidence.
Defendant next contends the trial court committed reversible error in failing to charge the jury as to manslaughter. Defendant’s failure to timely object to the jury instructions waives his right to object on appeal. People v Mallory (1966), 2 Mich App 359; People v Allar (1969), 19 Mich App 675; People v Mason (1970), 22 Mich App 595; GCE 1963, 516.2. The trial judge’s remark that “there are three
After the jury had retired to deliberate, the court informed counsel that some communication had been received from the jury relative to why the defendant had not taken the stand. It is defendant’s contention that the jury in arriving at a verdict was considering the fact that he had not taken the stand to testify. Defendant charges that the judge should have immediately dismissed the jury and declared a mistrial. We are aware of the jury’s duty to follow the instructions of the court (People v Howard [1914], 179 Mich 478; People v McIntosh [1967], 6 Mich App 62), but a mistrial is not an appropriate solution for every query regarding jury instructions. Unless it can be shown there was a manifest necessity to declare a mistrial, the time and effort invested in giving defendant a fair trial will not be lost. People v Parker (1906), 145 Mich 488; In re Earle (1946), 316 Mich 295; 2 Gillespie, Michigan Criminal Law & Procedure (2d ed), § 698, p 887. In this case the court instructed the jury a second time that “no presumption adverse to him is to arise from the mere fact that he [defendant] does not place himself upon the witness stand”.
Defendant next complains of the following remarks in the prosecutor’s closing argument:
“You recall that Detective Hay testified that he got this assignment as the officer in charge of this case of the killing of Dr. Harris the morning after he was killed on January 30, 1970, and through his perseverance and investigation, this case is in court and it was such a beautiful job of investigation that I think I would have to commend him for the job he has done.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The above emphasized complimentary remark should not have been made. It could have been construed by the jury as an expression of the prosecutor’s personal opinion of the defendant’s guilt. However, it was not so prejudicial as to require reversal. The remark could not have caused the jury to “suspend its own powers of judgment in reviewing the evidence before it”. People v Humphreys (1970), 24 Mich App 411, 419. The remark does not present a clear case of abuse. See People v Dawson (1971), 29 Mich App 488, 494.
Defendant next claims that the jury’s verdict, “We find the defendant guilty in the first degree”, was void, since there is no crime in Michigan known as “first degree”. “Murder” was not mentioned in the verdict.
The defendant was charged with first-degree murder and the jury instructions covered both first-
Defendant’s objection to the testimony of a ballistics expert will not be considered since it was not preserved for review by timely objection at trial. People v Lundberg (1961), 364 Mich 596.
In defendant’s last assigned error he alleges that the gun seized from him on the date of his arrest was done so illegally and thus should not have been permitted into evidence. When the gun was first offered into evidence, a separate record, out of the presence of the jury, was made to determine whether the gun had been legally seized. Testimony on this separate record indicates the following facts:
(1) The arresting officers were sent to an address to investigate a kidnapping complaint.
(2) After arriving at the address the arresting officers were told by a woman that in an apparent robbery attempt her boyfriend had been forced at gun point to return to his apartment.
(3) The arresting officers after being admitted into the apartment noticed that a woman in the apartment seemed hysterical and that one man kept making eye movements toward the defendant and another man.
(4) As one of the arresting officers walked toward the defendant to ask for identification he saw a partially hidden gun beneath a sofa cushion.
(5) After he noticed the partially.hidden gun the officer placed defendant against the wall.
(6) One of the arresting officers discovered a gun on defendant after the defendant had made a noise as if in pain, had bent over, and had attempted to grab at the inside of his own coat.
Affirmed.
MCLA 1971 Cum Supp § 750.316 (Stat Ann 1971 Cum Supp § 28-.548).
Abundant ease support for this principle may be found in 1 Gillespie, Michigan Criminal Law & Procedure (2d Ed), § 23, pp 42-43. A thorough discussion of corpus delicti in Michigan case law may be found in People v. Kirby (1923), 223 Mich 440. Requiring corpus delicti to be proven by more than the defendant’s naked extrajudicial confession is the prevailing American rule. 40 Am Jur 2d, Homicide, § 285, p 551; 7 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed), § 2071, p 395.
In addition to the murder weapon being found on his person the defendant was seen at the scene of the crime a few moments prior to its occurrence.
“All murder which shall be * * * committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, burglary, larceny of any kind, extortion or kidnapping, shall be murder of the first degree.” En 1, supra.
See 1 Gillespie, Michigan Criminal Law & Procedure (2d Ed), § 23, p 42. See, also, 40 Am Jur 2d, Homicide, § 4, p 297.
The jury 'then indicated their comprehension of the instruction.
The facts within the arresting officer’s knowledge were sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that the person arrested had committed or was committing an offense. See Beck v. Ohio (1964), 379 US 89 (85 S Ct 223, 13 L Ed 2d 142).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I am unable to agree that the corpus delicti of first-degree murder can be established without evidence independent of the accused person’s confession of the essential element that distinguishes the offense of second-degree murder from first-degree murder. I would, for reasons set out below, modify the judgment of conviction in this case to reduce the offense of which the defendant Allen stands convicted to murder of the second degree and remand for resentencing.
The corpus delicti may, of course, be established by circumstantial evidence and reasonable inferences.
There can, however, be a considerable difference between the wrong practiced and the injury suffered.
A store owner whose merchandise is stolen suffers the same injury whether the larceny is perpetrated by a shoplifter or a burglar, although in legal contemplation the wrongs accomplished are different.
Whatever may be the correct etymological definition of the term “corpus delicti” and, although there are quotations in Michigan cases from other authorities to the effect that the corpus delicti of an offense is established upon showing a specified injury and
The most recent pronouncement by the Michigan Supreme Court was in People v Barron, 381 Mich 421, 425 (1968). There the Court declared that in order to establish the corpus delicti of breaking and entering’ in the nighttime the people must show all the essential elements of that crime: first, that someone broke and entered the premises; second, that the culprit entered with a felonious intent; third, that the breaking and entering occurred in the nighttime.
Obviously, it made little difference to the victim of the breaking and entering — the owner of a dry-cleaning establishment — whether the larceny occurred in the daytime or in the nighttime, or whether the garments stolen were lifted off the racks without a breaking and entering. Nevertheless, said the
The concept that proof of injury or loss is not enough, that all the elements of the crime must be proven to establish the corpus delicti, has been recognized in Michigan cases where the offense charged was maintaining a house of ill fame,
In People v Kelsch, 16 Mich App 244, 245 (1969), we said:
“[T]he corpus delicti of a crime, or any essential element of it, cannot be established solely by the extrajudicial statements of the accused.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Only in People v Mondich, supra, and People v Best, 218 Mich 141, 146 (1922), did the Supreme Court affirm a conviction of first-degree murder even though the only evidence establishing the added element aggravating the offense from second-degree to first-degree murder was the confession of the defendant.
Bouvier’s Law Dictionary is the only authority cited in Mondich for the proposition that in cases of “felonious homicide” the corpus delicti is the victim’s death and a criminal agency. This is not to say that there is not ample authority for Bouvier’s and the Supreme Court’s statement.
People v Crandell, 270 Mich 124 (1935), cited in the majority opinion, is not in point. There the defendant pled guilty and, therefore, it was not necessary first to prove the corpus delicti — the rule that the corpus delicti must be proved independently of a confession is a safeguard against extrajudicial confessions.
People v Lytton, 257 NY 310; 178 NE 290, 291-292 (1931), relied on in the majority opinion, is a carefully considered opinion by an eminent jurist. It deals with an analogous question, but not the precise question before us. New York’s highest court there stated that, “[t]he crime charged against this
The policy sought to be served by statutes requiring corroboration is somewhat different than the policy underlying the common-law rule which makes inadmissible a defendant’s extrajudicial confession until the corpus delicti has been established.
Whatever may be the law of New York, in Michigan “homicide” is not a crime. In this state, it is “murder” and “manslaughter” that are crimes. Murder — in this state called “second-degree murder” —is a common-law crime.
Second-degree and first-degree murder are separate offenses. Offenders are subject to significantly different penalties: persons convicted of first-degree murder must be sentenced to life imprisonment and may not be paroled; persons convicted of second-degree murder may be sentenced to life imprisonment —parolable after ten years imprisonment — but, in the discretion of the sentencing judge, they may be sentenced to any term of years, and many are placed on probation. A definitional difference which makes for such a radical difference in the law’s view of an offender’s culpability and in the punishment to which he may be or must be subjected is clearly an essential element.
The rule requiring proof of the corpus delicti independently of the accused person’s confession was developed in England in murder cases.
It appears to have been overlooked in the assimilation into our jurisprudence of the English corpus delicti rule that the English law of murder and the American law of murder differ; that while both in England and in this country proof that one person has killed another discharges the people’s burden of establishing that the common-law crime of murder was committed,
Just as the people must establish with evidence the essential element distinguishing second-degree murder from first-degree murder in order to convict an accused person of the aggravated offense,
The salutary policy requiring independent proof that a crime has been committed is no longer limited to murder cases. In this state, in every criminal prosecution the people must independently prove the corpus delicti. That being the scope of the present rule, it is clear that the rule as now enforced seeks to guard against more than the embarrassment to .the state and the injustice to the accused person which occurs when a “victim” reappears after the accused person has been hanged — the apparent impetus for the original development of the corpus delicti rule.
If the rule requiring proof of the corpus delicti independently of the accused person’s confession serves only a formalistic purpose, it should be discarded. If it is retained, it should be retained because it furthers a judicial policy thought still to be sound, and that policy should be uniformly applied in keeping with the underlying rationale.
The corpus delicti rule reflects an uneasy feeling based on experience that persons who attribute statements to accused persons are often not trustworthy witnesses and that confessions are sometimes obtained under circumstances which make them unreliable. As previously mentioned, in some jurisdictions in certain kinds of cases the testimony of the people’s principal witness must be corroborated. In other jurisdictions, including Michigan, the law demands less. Rather than require, where
That policy should be applied on a consistent basis in all cases. The rule that the people may not discharge the burden of proving that someone, not necessarily the defendant, committed the charged offense on the strength of a statement attributed to the defendant should be enforced in this case.
The only evidence in this case that the statements attributed to the defendant were in fact made by him comes in the form of testimony of jail inmates and a brother and a girl friend of jail inmates.
I would modify the judgment of conviction to reduce the offense of which the defendant stands con
See Peterson v Oceana Circuit Judge, 243 Mich 215, 217 (1928).
A friend of the defendant testified that he had been driving in an automobile with the defendant and one other person as passengers. They stopped for gasoline across the street from the party store where the victim made a purchase shortly before he was killed. The witness said that the defendant and this other person crossed
A stock boy in the party store testified that he noticed two men standing in a suspicious manner outside the store just before the killing; he identified the defendant as one of those men.
A customer testified that as she was leaving the store she heard somebody say, “If you move I will shoot you.” As she turned around and looked in the direction of the voice she saw two men one of whom was pointing a gun at another man’s back. She then ran away. As she started to run she heard a gunshot.
The proprietor of the store testified that he heard gunshots and then saw the victim stumble back into the store exclaiming, “Quick, call the police. I’ve been shot.”
There was no testimony that the victim was asked to raise his hands or that he did so; there was no evidence that anything was taken from his person. Bor all that appears on this record he was shot for reasons unconnected with an attempted armed robbery. See People v Eding, 292 Mich 46 (1939), and People v Zwierkowski, 368 Mich 56, 60 (1962), concerning the quantum of proof required to establish the corpus delicti,
Breaking and entering a building, other than an unoccupied dwelling, is punishable by imprisonment for not more than ten years. MCLA 750.110; MSA 28.305. Larceny in a building is punishable by imprisonment for not more than four years or a fine of not more than $2,000, or both. MCLA 750.360, 750.503; MSA 28.592, 28.771.
See People v Ranney, 153 Mich 293, 296 (1908); People v Dowd, 252 Mich 404, 405 (1930).
In both of these eases, despite the language of the Court, all the essential elements of the charged offenses (obtaining money by false pretenses in Banney, and larceny in Dowd) were established independently of the accused person’s confession. Hence, the language of the Court in those eases was not necessary to decision; there does not appear to have been a conscious choice by the Court of the “injury or loss” approach in preference to the “all essential elements” approach.
The corpus delicti of the crime charged in Dowd can be proved without proving who committed it, while proof of the corpus delicti of the crime charged in Banney can, as a practical matter, ordinarily be made only through evidence connecting a particular person to the commission of the crime. It is, therefore, ironical that the concept that the corpus delicti is established upon proof of a specified injury was stated in Banney, and adopted in Dowd on the strength of Banney.
People v Lombardo, 301 Mich 451, 455 (1942).
People v Limon, 4 Mich App 440, 442, 444 (1966).
People v Kelsch, 16 Mich App 244 (1969).
Requiring that the proscribed intent be proved can, of course, be viewed as much the same thing as requiring proof that the source of the injury was someone’s criminality. However, reason dictates that if the law requires, in order to establish the corpus delicti, that a particular intent be established independently of an accused’s person’s confession, that proof of an essential element of the crime should not be dispensed with altogether.
See People v Best, 218 Mich 141, 146 (1922); People v Kirby, 223 Mich 440 (1923); People v Jackson, 1 Mich App 207, 211 (1965); People v Kozlow, 38 Mich App 517 (1972); cf. People v Coapman, 326 Mich 321, 330 (1949).
In J ackson and Kirby the defendant was convicted of manslaughter, not first-degree murder, and, therefore, it was less important to differentiate concerning the state of the defendant’s mind when he killed the victim; and in Kirby the Court concluded that the corpus delicti was not established and reversed the conviction.
In Coapman there was, and in Kozlow it appears that there may have been, testimony from which a trier of fact could reasonably infer the essential element distinguishing second-degree from first-degree murder.
See 40 Am Jur 2d, Homicide, § 284, p 549.
The Best Court said that “the confession and the other facts and circumstances were sufficient to establish the corpus delicti”. (p 146.) If anything is indisputable in this area of the law, it is that where the people seek to introduce an extrajudicial confession they must establish the corpus delicti independently of the confession (People v Kirby, 223 Mich 440, 452 [1923]) and, therefore, the confession cannot be considered in deciding whether there is sufficient evidence to establish the corpus delicti. Upon examination of the text accompanying the quoted statement and the authorities cited by the Best Court in support, it becomes clear that all the Court was saying was that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict finding the defendant guilty of first-degree murder. Upon examination of the briefs filed in the Supreme Court it appears that the corpus delicti issue was not argued.
See People v Mahler, 329 Mich 155 (1950); 2 Underhill’s Criminal Evidence (5th ed), §§ 402-403, pp 1035, 1038.
See 3 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (12th ed), § 958, p 402 (rape); § 956, p 397 (perjury); § 959, p 411 (seduction); 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (12th ed), § 444, p 221 (accomplices); NY Penal Law, § 130.15; NY Crim Proc Law, §§ 60.22, 60.50.
Although the defendant’s confession was inadmissible to establish that the murder was of the first degree, since there was evidence aliunde the confession that the victim’s death was caused criminally, the confession was admissible to show that the defendant murdered the victim and, hence, was guilty of second-degree murder.
The defendant cannot complain that the confession shows that he committed a greater oifense — first-degree murder — as long as it is not used, without evidence aliunde the confession, to convict him of that offense. To suppress the confession altogether because it shows an offense all the elements of which have not been established aliunde the confession, or to require the excision from the confession before it is introduced in evidence of so much of the confessional statement as shows the commission of another offense not already established by other evidence, is not required in order to enforce the policy that an accused person should not be convicted of a crime solely on the basis of his own confession, nor is it required, on the facts of this case, to avoid misleading the jury or unjustified prejudice of the defendant.
See Perkins on Criminal Law (2d ed), p 28; Clark and Marshall on Crimes (6th ed), § 10.00, p 532.
Judge Crane of that Court, in a separate opinion, spoke to the fundamentals of the matter when he said (257 NY 317; 178 NE 293) :
“Personally, I feel that when the charge is murder in the first degree, committed unintentionally while perpetrating another felony, the confession of the felony is not enough — there should be some other evidence that the felony was being committed.
“The important proof in a felony murder is the felony, because this makes the act of killing murder in the first degree, even though the defendant did not intend to kill. The form of the indictment cannot obscure the reality. There are no degrees of crime in a felony murder; the felony being proved, it is murder in the first degree, and nothing alse. The jury cannot convict of a lesser degree of the crime. The felony, be it larceny or burglary, must be proved beyond a reasonabledoubt — so the court must charge the jury. Yet under this present rule the felony, be it burglary or larceny, may be established by the defendant’s confession alone, whereas if he were being tried for the minor felony, such as burglary or larceny, he could not be convicted solely on his confession. Such inconsistency does not appeal to me. However, the other view has prevailed and is the law for this state.”
Murder is criminal homicide committed with malice aforethought. Manslaughter is criminal homicide committed without malice aforethought. Perkins on Criminal Law (2d ed), p 34; 1 Wharton’s Criminal Law & Procedure, § 242, pp 522, 527; Clark and Marshall on Crimes (6th ed), § 10.04, pp 561, 566; Moreland, Law of Homicide, p 16.
Perkins, The Corpus Delicti of Murder, 48 Va L Rev 173 (1962); Note, Proof of the Corpus Delicti Aliunde the Defendant’s Confession, 103 U of Pa L Rev 638 (1955); 7 Wigmore on Evidence (3d ed), § 2070, p 393.
See Needy, Bistory of the Pennsylvania Statute Creating Degrees of Murder, 97 IT of Pa L Rev 759 (1949); Perkins on Criminal Law (2d ed), p 88; Great Britain Royal Commission on Capital Punishment, Report 1949-1953, app 12, p 467 et seq.
“[Pjroof that the accused person killed the victim gave rise to a ‘presumption’ that the act was done with malice aforethought. Once it was established that the accused killed the victim, the burden was upon the accused to prove circumstances of justification, excuse or mitigation.” People v Morrin, 31 Mich App 301, 315 (1971).
The term “malice aforethought” and the term “premeditation and deliberation” are terms of art having different meanings:
“The eonnotative similarities between the words ‘aforethought’ and ‘premeditation’ have confused many courts; malice aforethought and premeditation are not, in legal terminology, synonymous. Malice aforethought is a term of art firmly rooted in the common law. Premeditation and deliberation are legislative offspring.” People v Morrin, supra, pp 324-325.
See People v Morrin, supra, p 328.
Note, Proof of the Corpus Delicti Aliunde the Defendant’s Confession, 103 U of Pa L Rev 638 (1955).
“[I]t is the settled rule that the corpus delicti cannot be established solely by the extrajudicial admission or confession of the accused”. People v Barron, 381 Mich 421, 424 (1968).
“If the fact admitted necessarily amounts to a confession of guilt, it is a confession.” People v Porter, 269 Mich 284, 290 (1934).
See People v Morrin, supra, p 337.
The defendant was not prejudiced in his defense of the charge that he murdered the victim by allowing the jury to learn that his confession of murder was of a murder committed in the course of an attempted armed robbery. See fn 14.
Reference
- Cited By
- 64 cases
- Status
- Published