People v. Crandell

258 N.W. 224, 270 Mich. 124, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 662
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketDocket No. 126, Calendar No. 37,942.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 224 (People v. Crandell) 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. Crandell, 258 N.W. 224, 270 Mich. 124, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 662 (Mich. 1935).

Opinions

Wiest, J.

Defendant, a boy between 15 and 16 years of age, was convicted of murder of the first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment.

The day he‘was arrested, and without counsel or knowledge of his father, the juvenile division of the probate court waived its jurisdiction, he was arraigned in the police court, waived examination, was • arraigned in the superior court and pleaded guilty to an information charging him with the crime of murder. After sentence the court was petitioned to set the sentence and conviction aside and accord defendant a trial with the assistance of counsel. The court refused to do so and, upon application, we allowed an appeal. The murder was clearly established by evidence, and the degree thereof was confessed by defendant and verified by other evidence as a killing in an attempt to perpetrate a robbery. This constituted murder of the first degree. Act No. 328, § 316, Pub. Acts 1931.

*126 Defendant loaded Ms father’s revolver, placed a mask over Ms face, went into the house of a neighbor, demanded money from Ima Brewer and, when she called him by his given name and started to get a broom stick he shot and killed her. Defendant then went home, burned the mask, replaced his father’s revolver and, the next day, attended school and was there arrested.

The fact that in the confession defendant stated an unintentional firing of the revolver did not reduce the degree of murder. People v. Roberts, 211 Mich. 187 (13 A. L. R. 1253).

As stated in People v. Lytton, 257 N. Y. 310, 316 (178 N. E. 290, 79 A. L. R. 503):

“The court did not err in charging the jury in effect that the discharg’e of a pistol by a defendant who is holding it in his hand in furtherance of an attempt to rob, will lay the basis for a verdict of murder in the first degree, though the discharge was not intended, an accident induced by the terror or nervousness or excitement of the robber.”

See, also, Commonwealth v. Lessner, 274 Pa. 108 (118 Atl. 24).

Before arraignment defendant made a written confession and, after plea, was examined by the judge and again confessed his crime and detailed the circumstances. Upon his plea the court examined witnesses; the written confession was placed in evidence and the court could do no less than sentence him to imprisonment for life for murder of the first degree. Act No. 328, § 316, Pub. Acts 1931.

No claim is made by defendant of coercion in obtaining the confession; neither does he now claim that the confession was not true.

The procedure employed in the instance at bar was expeditious and might well, considering the age *127 of the boy, have been less speedy and an opportunity afforded the father to be present but, if in accord with lawful action, we cannot set the same aside. The law affords an accused the benefit of counsel if he so desires; of his own selection if employed by him, and by the court if he is without means and so requests. No request was made and the court did not exercise the humane power of providing the boy with counsel.

The prosecuting attorney, by petition, informed the juvenile division of the probate court that defendant was under arrest for a felony and asked that court to waive jurisdiction and permit prosecution in a criminal proceeding. The probate judg’e recited in an order that, upon investigation, such a prosecution should be permitted and waived jurisdiction.

Under the circumstances here involved, considering the age of the boy, the felony alleged was wholly without the jurisdiction of the juvenile division of the probate court, People v. Ross, 235 Mich. 433, and the waiver required was but pro forma.

The record fully supports the waiver and the statute, Act No. 309, chap. 4, § 27, Pub. Acts 1931 (amending 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 17161), relative thereto, was complied with. 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 defendant insists that upon a trial for homicide perpetrated in the commission of another and independent felony (People v. Moran, 246 N. Y. 100 [158 N. E. 35]; Penal Law, § 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 corroborat *128 ing- evidence, i. e., evidence apart from the confession, of the independent felony, and that the trial judge erred in charging* to the contrary. * * *

“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 1ST. Y. 374 [16 ÜST. E. 676]; People v. Brasch, 193 N. Y. 46, 58 [85 N. E. 809]). 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. * * * 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.

We quote the following* from the opinion of the trial judge:

“Complaint is made that the respondent was not represented by an attorney when arraigned in this court.

“It is the duty of a court to see that all the rights of one charged with an offense are properly safeguarded. In the present case after the respondent’s plea of guilty was entered, testimony was taken. The court also interrogated the respondent, all of *129 which was for the purpose of ascertaining if the plea should he accepted, and had it appeared to this court from these proceedings that the respondent’s plea was not proper it would have been set aside and a plea of not guilty entered upon the court’s own motion. This court also talked with the father and two sisters of the respondent before passing sentence. The following day an attorney of this city, Mr. Dean Pace, requested the court to detain respondent until he could conduct a personal investigation. The request was granted. The respondent had been sentenced Wednesday afternoon. The following day was Thanksgiving Day. On the succeeding Friday and Saturday, Mr. Pace conducted his investigation.

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 224, 270 Mich. 124, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crandell-mich-1935.