People v. Cage

301 N.W.2d 819, 410 Mich. 401, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 240
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1981
DocketDocket 63366
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 301 N.W.2d 819 (People v. Cage) 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
People v. Cage, 301 N.W.2d 819, 410 Mich. 401, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 240 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The issue presented is whether the crime of false pretenses, MCL 750.218; MSA 28.415, 1 may be predicated upon the misrepresentation of a present intent to do a future act. We conclude that it may not.

The defendant in the instant case pled guilty in Washtenaw Circuit Court to the charge of obtaining property having a value over $100 by false *403 pretenses. During his plea, he admitted that he went to a Lincoln-Mercury dealer in Ypsilanti and obtained possession of a used car by telling a salesman that he would buy the car if he liked it after test driving it and having it "checked out” at a local service station. The defendant admitted that he had no such intention and made the statements in order to get possession of the car so that he could convert it to his own use.

On appeal, the defendant challenged the factual sufficiency of his plea, one of the grounds being that his misrepresentations related solely to future events or facts and not, as required for conviction of false pretenses under Michigan law, to past or present facts or circumstances.

The Court of Appeals affirmed defendant’s conviction, holding in relevant part:

"While it might appear that defendant’s misrepresentations were of a future fact, in reality what he misrepresented was his present intention which was clearly fraudulent. While there does not appear to be' any Michigan case clearly on point we quote from a Texas court in Kinder v State, 477 SW2d 584, 586 (Tex Crim App, 1971), wherein the court stated:
" 'The rule is that false promises or representations as to future happenings by which a person is induced to part with his property may form the basis of the offense of theft by false pretense so long as the proof shows that such promises are false ab initio.
"We find the foregoing rule enunciated by the Texas court to be sound and hereby adopt it. Defendant’s contention is therefore without merit.” People v Cage, 90 Mich App 497, 499; 282 NW2d 368 (1979).

The defendant has applied for leave to appeal to this Court.

We hold that the adoption of a rule construing false pretenses to incorporate misrepresentation of *404 present mental state is at odds with Michigan law. The crime of false pretenses in Michigan, as in other jurisdictions, was created by statute. 2 It is universally held, except where the statute specifically provides otherwise, that the pretense relied on to establish the offense must be a misrepresentation as to a present or existing fact, or a past fact or event, and may not be as to some event to take place in the future. 3 Although it is quite possible to view a false statement of intention, such as a promise which the promisor intends not to keep, as a misrepresentation of existing mental state, the great weight of authority holds that a false promise will not suffice for false pretenses, however fraudulent it may be. 4

A minority of jurisdictions do recognize a false promise or intention as a false pretense and there does appear to be a modern trend in this direction. 5 Professor Perkins has made the following pertinent criticism:

"One writer has suggested that interpreting the statute to exclude false promises crept into the decisions by inadvertence, so to speak. This may be true or it may be that the statute, as interpreted, was as great a step as the social order was prepared to take two hundred years ago. After all, the change from the punishment of fraud perpetrated by the use of false tokens to the punishment of fraud perpetrated by naked deceit was considerable, even if the latter did not include a misrepresentation of one’s own state of mind. However that may be the original position has been restated time and again in recent years. The first clear switch from this to the position that a false promise is sufficient to support *405 a conviction of false pretenses (in recent times and without the aid of statute) seems to have been in California although there was a Massachusetts dictum pointing in the same direction. A start has been made toward amending the statute of false pretenses to include promissory fraud within its scope, which is entirely proper. Just as the social order of two hundred years ago had developed to the point where it was necessary to punish the swindler who operated without the aid of false tokens, so today it has developed to the further point where it is necessary to have adequate punishment for promissory fraud, but the change should be by legislative enactment. No court would permit such a statute to apply to a misdeed perpetrated before the act was passed, and for a court to convict a man by changing this interpretation which has been so firmly established for generations it is necessary to violate the principle upon which the ex post facto bar is grounded.” (Footnotes omitted.) Perkins, Criminal Law (2d ed), pp 304-305.

Our review of Michigan precedent leaves us convinced that this jurisdiction early aligned itself with the majority rule that false statements of promise or intention may not form the basis for a conviction of false pretenses. In People v Winslow, 39 Mich 505 (1878), it was held that the fact that the defendants in that case accomplished their fraud by a promise would not preclude their conviction of false pretenses because the promise was accompanied by other misrepresentations relating to existing facts. Similarly, in People v Segal, 180 Mich 316; 146 NW 644 (1914), it was held that although some of the defendant’s misrepresentations in that case related to what would occur in the future, and his promises in relation thereto, several other representations referring to existing or past facts provided the basis for the conviction of false pretenses.

In People v Widmayer, 265 Mich 547; 251 NW *406 540 (1933), it was explicitly held that statements made by the defendants as to events that would occur in the future and their promises as to what they would undertake to do in the future could not sustain convictions under the false pretenses statute. More recently, and more to the point, in People v Morrison, 348 Mich 88; 81 NW2d 667 (1957), a guilty plea was overturned because the defendant’s admissions established only that he made a promise relating to what he would do in the future.

The aforementioned decisions of this Court preclude a conviction of false pretenses where the misrepresentation relates only to future events or facts.

Although there may be valid arguments supporting an amendment of the false pretenses statute to incorporate misrepresentation of present mental state within the meaning of the crime of false pretenses, we are convinced that it should be done by legislative enactment.

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Bluebook (online)
301 N.W.2d 819, 410 Mich. 401, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cage-mich-1981.