Drennan v. People

10 Mich. 169
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 10 Mich. 169 (Drennan v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drennan v. People, 10 Mich. 169 (Mich. 1862).

Opinion

Christiancy J.:

Is larceny to the amount of one dollar and fifty cents (in resisting the arrest for which the assault was made) an offense for which the constable might arrest the offender Under the circumstances of this case, without having the warrant in his possession? This is the main question in the case. It is admitted that, if the larceny charged was a felony, the constable under the circumstances had a right t'o make the arrest, and that, had the assault made by the prisoner in resisting the arrest, resulted in killing the constable, such killing would have been murder, unless the conduct of the officer in making the arrest was such as in some measure to excuse the defendant.

But it is insisted by the counsel for the prisoner that larceny to an amount less than twenty-five dollars, though a felony at common law, ,is not such under our statutes, because not punishable with death or by imprisonment in the State prison.

The statute relied upon is section 18 chapter 161 Revised [173]*173Statutes of 1846 (Comp. L. §5954): “The term felony when used in this title, or in any other statute, shall be construed to mean an offense for which the offender, on conviction, shall be liable by law to be punished with death, or by imprisonment in the. State prison.”

This provision is but a legislative definition 'of the term felony as used in certain provisions of the statute; and ' its effect can only be known by reference to those provisions where the term is used. Of itself, without such reference,it has no effect upon any offense whatever. Nor can it be "reasonably supposed it was intended to extend to those provisions of the statutes (of which there are two cases at least in the same Revision;— Ch. 154 §§35 and 36; Comp. Laws, §§5779 and 5780) — which in defining the offense have expressly designated it as a felony, and made it punishable in the State prison; for in such case no such general definition was required. Nor is there any more reason to infer that, where a particular provision of the same act (for the whole Revision was passed as one act) has expressly designated a particular statute offense as a misdemeanor, this definition was intended to convert it into a felony, though the provision defining the offense has made it punishable by imprisonment in the State prison. See a case of this kind, R. S. Ch. 19 §5 (Comp. L. §5917).

We must therefore understand this provision as intended to apply only to those provisions where neither the particular offense nor its grade is otherwise indicated than by the use of the term felony, and where, therefore, the definition became necessary, as it was not intended to be used merely in the common law sense.

This definition became necessary to fix the meaning of the term in the following provisions, contained in the Revision; sections 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of Chapter 161 (Comp. L. §§5937 to 5941) in reference to aiders and abetters, accessories, &e., and the mode -of their prosecution; section 28 chapter 153 of R. S. (Comp. L. §5738) in reference to [174]*174assaults with intent to commit a “felony”; sections 10, 12, IS and 14, chapter 154 of R. S. (Comp. L. §§ 5754, 5756, 5 IS 1 and 5'IS 8) in reference to breaking and entering houses and other buildings with intent to commit a “felony”; section 19 chapter 164 of R. S. {Comp. I. § 6028) in reference to inspection of indictments for “felony”;, section 14 chapter 165 of R. S. {Comp. JL. § 6081) giving the right of separate, trials where two or more are jointly indicted “ for felony; ” and section 9 of the same chapter {Comp. L. § 6076) requiring the personal presence on trial of a party indicted for “felony.”

It was for the purpose of fixing the meaning of the term in these and similar cases that this definition was given; for a clear apprehension of the full force and effect of the definition, we have only to substitute the definition itself for the term defined, as the two must of necessity be identical in effect; we shall then read, instead of the word felony wherever it occurs in these provisions, the words, “ an offense for which the offender on conviction shall be liable by law to be punished with death or by imprisonment in the State prison.”

It will thus be readily perceived that this statute definition does not neeessarily make all offenses which are punishable with death or by imprisonment in the State prison felonies, to all intents and purposes, as would have been the effect of a direct general enactment, that all offenses thus punishable should be felonies; because, in the latter case, all the consequences and incidents of felony at common law must attach, except so far as the same might have been cut off or modified by the statute, or required by manifest public policy to be rejected. But this definition, operating merely by reference, can have the effect only to make them-felonies within this statute definition, and to the extent, and with the incidents and consequences, indicated by the respective sections or provisions of the statute referred to where the term felony is thus used — .though there may[175]*175be strong reasons, for the sake of uniformity and by analogy to common law felonies, to consider them as drawing after them the usual incidents of the latter. But while this definition, by reference, includes for the purposes mentioned, not only statute offenses, but all offenses at common law which by our statutes are made punishable in the manner indicated, whether felonies or misdemeanors at common law; it is clear, I think, that even as to those common law felonies thus punishable, it can have no other effect than to render them subject to the particular provisions of the statute, where the word felony is thus used, neither- adding to nor taking from them any of the common law incidents of felony, except so far as these particular provisions may have that effect.

And as to those common law felonies not thus punishable by our statutes, they are in no way affected, either by the definition or by the provisions to which that definition refers; for the plain. reason that they do not come within either, but remain felonies at common law, in the same manner as if this statute definition had never been adopted. And the liability to arrest without warrant, incident to common law felonies, still remains untouched, by this or any other statute of this State.

The conclusions at -which I have arrived as to the effect of this statute definition, are exactly in accordance with the construction given by the courts of New York to the same provision in their statute (1 N. Y. Rev. Stat. part. 4, title 7, ch. 1 §30), from which our statute definition was copied. The question under their statute was substantially the same as under ours, though the particular provisions to which the definition had reference, differed slightly in the detail.

In Ward v. People, 3 Hill, 395, it was held that petit larceny (which by their statute was defined to be larceny to the amount of twenty-five dollars or under — Rev. Stat. § 1, ch. 1, part 4, title 6 — which in this respect differed [176]

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mich. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drennan-v-people-mich-1862.