People of Michigan v. Jerome Romey Sueing

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 2017
Docket329961
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Jerome Romey Sueing, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 16, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 329961 Kent Circuit Court JEROME ROMEY SUEING, LC Nos. 15-000819-FH; 15-000820-FH Defendant-Appellant.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and SHAPIRO and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In lower court no. 15-000819-FH, defendant was charged with aggravated indecent exposure, MCL 750.335a(2)(b), and indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person, MCL 750.335a(2)(c) in connection with an incident in which defendant exposed his penis and began masturbating while sitting at a table near a woman at the Grand Rapids Downtown Market on January 9, 2015. In lower court no. 15-000820-FH, defendant was charged with aggravated indecent exposure and indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person in connection with an incident in which defendant exposed and then began “stroking” his penis while sitting next to a woman in a lobby at Kendall College of Art and Design in Grand Rapids on January 12, 2015. The trial court consolidated the two cases for a single trial. The judgments of sentence reflect that, in each case, defendant was convicted by a jury of aggravated indecent exposure and indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person, MCL 750.335a(2)(b) and (c). The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to concurrent sentences of 24 months to 15 years’ imprisonment for the aggravated indecent exposure convictions and 20 to 40 years’ imprisonment for the indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person convictions. Defendant appeals as of right. We vacate defendant’s convictions and sentences for aggravated indecent exposure, affirm his convictions for indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person, but vacate his sentences associated with these two convictions and remand so the trial court can resentence defendant consistent with MCL 750.335a(2)(c) to one day to life in prison.

I. JOINDER

On appeal, defendant first argues that the trial court erred by joining the two cases for trial. Questions of joinder present mixed questions of fact and law. People v Gaines, 306 Mich App 289, 304; 856 NW2d 222 (2014). “To determine whether joinder is permissible, a trial court must first find the relevant facts and then must decide whether those facts constitute

-1- ‘related’ offenses for which joinder is appropriate.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). We review a trial court’s factual findings for clear error and review questions of law de novo. Id. The ultimate decision of whether to permissively join related charges, however, lies firmly within the discretion of the trial court. Id. A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision falls outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes. People v Duenaz, 306 Mich App 85, 90; 854 NW2d 531 (2014).

Two or more informations against a single defendant may be consolidated for a single trial. MCR 6.120(A). MCR 6.120(B) provides in pertinent part the following:

On its own initiative, the motion of a party, or the stipulation of all parties, except as provided in subrule (C), the court may join offenses charged in two or more informations or indictments against a single defendant . . . when appropriate to promote fairness to the parties and a fair determination of the defendant’s guilt or innocence of each offense.

(1) Joinder is appropriate if the offenses are related. For purposes of this rule, offenses are related if they are based on

(a) the same conduct or transaction, or

(b) a series of connected acts, or

(c) a series of acts constituting parts of a single scheme or plan.

(2) Other relevant factors include the timeliness of the motion, the drain on the parties’ resources, the potential for confusion or prejudice stemming from either the number of charges or the complexity or nature of the evidence, the potential for harassment, the convenience of witnesses, and the parties’ readiness for trial.

On a defendant’s motion, a trial court must sever offenses that are unrelated for separate trials. MCR 6.120(C).

Defendant argues that offenses are not “related” simply because they are of the same or similar character, People v Williams, 483 Mich 226, 235, 234 n 6; 769 NW2d 605 (2009), and his two offenses were not “related” under MCR 6.120(B)(1). We disagree. For each offense, defendant went to a gathering area in a public place. He then sat down near a young woman, pulled his penis out of his pants, and rubbed it. While the offenses were of the same character, they were also acts constituting parts of a single scheme or plan. See MCR 6.120(B)(1)(c). The offenses were acts in defendant’s scheme of using unsuspecting young women, who were in a gathering area of a public place, to obtain sexual gratification. Accordingly, the charged offenses were “related” under MCR 6.120(B)(1).

Further, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by ultimately deciding to consolidate the two cases for trial. The facts of the two offenses were not complex and presented minimal potential for confusion. Also, evidence of each offense would have been admissible under MRE 404(b) in a trial on the other offense to prove defendant’s identity and that he had a common

-2- scheme, plan, or system of doing the acts. See People v Sabin (After Remand), 463 Mich 43, 63; 614 NW2d 888 (2000); People v Ho, 231 Mich App 178, 186; 585 NW2d 357 (1988). Consolidating the cases reduced the drain on resources and offered convenience for the witnesses. Under these facts, the trial court’s decision to consolidate the two cases for trial did not fall outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes.

Defendant also argues that the trial court erred by denying his request for a separate jury on the charges of indecent exposure by a sexually delinquent person. We disagree. In People v Breidenbach, 489 Mich 1, 3-4, 8; 798 NW2d 738 (2011), the Michigan Supreme Court reversed its decision in People v Helzer, 404 Mich 410; 273 NW2d 44 (1978), and held that, under MCL 767.61a, a defendant is not entitled to have separate juries decide the issue of sexual delinquency apart from a primary offense. According to the Supreme Court, MCR 6.120(B) provides the proper framework for courts to determine whether a separate jury should be empaneled to decide a sexual delinquency charge. Breidenbach, 489 Mich at 14. The Court explained as follows:

[I]f a fair determination of a defendant’s guilt or innocence of each offense would require separate juries, trial courts may order separate juries . . . . In accordance with the rationale supporting the Helzer Court’s original holding, the potential for confusion or prejudice in particular may provide a sufficient basis for a trial court’s exercise of its discretion to order separate juries when a charge of sexual delinquency is involved. When that potential does not exist, however, separate juries need not be empaneled in order to consider separately the charges against a defendant. [Id. at 14-15 (quotation marks omitted).]

As already discussed, the two cases were properly joined for trial. Further, as will be discussed in Section II of this opinion, evidence of defendant’s earlier acts of sexual impropriety, occurring at a Biggby Coffee in January 2014 and a Common Ground coffee shop in October 2004, was admissible under MRE 404(b) at trial on the charged offenses. Defendant does not argue that a jury deciding his sexual delinquency charges could not have heard this evidence. If separate juries had been used, there would have been a complete overlap in evidence. Because the evidence overlapped, the jury did not have to limit its use of any of the evidence presented at trial to separately determine if the charged offenses occurred or if defendant was a sexually delinquent person.

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