People v. Guillett

69 N.W.2d 140, 342 Mich. 1
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1955
DocketDocket 63, Calendar 45,764
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 69 N.W.2d 140 (People v. Guillett) 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. Guillett, 69 N.W.2d 140, 342 Mich. 1 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

*3 Butzel, J.

Lawrence Guillett was informed against for assault with intent to commit rape. He' pleaded not guilty and was tried in circuit court where a jury found him guilty of the crime charged. Appellant in propria persona has appealed from his conviction on various grounds. The complainant had agreed to spend an evening with him. He, with 2 other friends, called for her and they visited a tavern where each of them consumed 3 glasses of beer. She and appellant then went to the home of the latter’s parents, and later purchased a bottle of wine out of which she took 1 glass which she only partially consumed while he apparently finished the bottle. They sat together on a davenport and he made indecent advances which she repulsed. After she arose he then struck her, knocked her down and continued his attempt to commit rape. During a struggle she grabbed a telephone receiver and struck him so many blows on the head that he required hospitalization. She then escaped, ran across the road and the police and an ambulance were summoned. Appellant’s mother testified that he had been drinking for several days and that he had come home drunk earlier that day, but she left him to go to work shortly after 3 p. m. His father said that he appeared “dozy.”

In view of the testimony the trial judge in his charge to the jury stated:

“Now, there has been injected here to a great extent, the question of intoxication. I will give you an instruction on that.
“It is a well-settled law in this State that voluntary drunkenness is not a defense to crime. A man who puts himself in a position to have no control over his actions must be held to intend the consequences. The safety of the community requires this rule. Intoxication is so easily counterfeited, and, when real, is so often resorted to as a means of nerv *4 ing a person up to the commission of some deliberate act, and withal is so inexcusable in itself, that the law has never recognized it as an excuse for crime.
“In the case of an offense such as the one charged, committed during a period of intoxication, the law presumes the defendant to have intended the obscuration and perversion of his faculties which followed his voluntary intoxication. He must be held to have purposely blinded his moral perception and set his will free from the control of reason—to have suppressed the guards and invited the mutiny; and should therefore be held responsible as well for the vicious excesses of the will thus set free as for the acts done by its prompting.”

Defendant has assigned error on the ground that the charge as given was incomplete and therefore misleading because it failed to state that intoxication may serve to negative the existence of the intent required for conviction of the crime charged. We are thus faced with 2 questions: (1) Was the charge erroneous; and (2), if so, did it constitute reversible error in view of the fact that no requests to charge were offered?

We must conclude that the charge was erroneous. In Roberts v. People, 19 Mich 401, 418, 420, the defendant was convicted of assault with intent to commit murder. On appeal, after considering the necessity for finding intent in fact, or specific intent, Justice Christiancy discussed the issue of whether drunkenness might negative the existence of that intent. He concluded:

“In determining the question whether the assault was committed with the intent charged, it was therefore material to inquire whether the defendant’s mental faculties were so far overcome by the effect of intoxication, as to render him incapable of entertaining the intent. And for this purpose, it was the right and the duty of the jury—as upon the question of intent of which this forms a part—to take into con *5 sideration the nature and the circumstances of the assault, the actions, conduct and demeanor of the defendant, and his declaration before, at the time, and after the assault; and especially to consider the nature of the intent, and what degree of mental capacity was necessary to enable him to entertain the simple intent to kill, under the circumstances of this case—or, which is the same thing, how far the mental faculties must be obscured by intoxication to render him incapable of entertaining that particular intent. * * *
“But the circuit court held, in effect, that no extent of intoxication could have the effect to disprove the intent; treating the intent as an inference of law for the court, rather than a question of fact for the jury. In this we think there was error.”

A consideration of later Michigan authority reveals that Roberts v. People, supra, remains as the most eloquent and correct statement of law on the subject. Thus in People v. Walker, 38 Mich 156, 158, Justice Cooley wrote an opinion reversing a conviction of larceny stating:

“While it is true that drunkenness cannot excuse crime, it is equally true that when a certain intent is a necessary element in a crime, the crime cannot have been committed when the intent did-not exist. In larceny the crime does not consist in the wrongful taking of the property, for that might be a mere trespass; but it consists in the wrongful taking with felonious intent; and if the defendant, for any reason whatever, indulged no such intent, the crime cannot have been committed. This was fully explained by Mr. Justice Christiancy in Roberts v. People, 19 Mich 401, and is familiar law.”

And in the following cases this rule has been recognized and applied. People v. Haley, 48 Mich 495; People v. Peterson, 166 Mich 10; People v. Eggleston, 186 Mich 510; cf., People v. Depew, 215 Mich 317; People v. Toner, 217 Mich 640 (23 ALR 433); *6 also, see People v. Murray, 72 Mich. 10. It is to be noted that we are here concerned with intoxication insofar as it might negative the requisite intent, as distinguished from insanity or delirium tremens brought on by intoxication, the latter, if present, being a complete excuse rather than a partial one, as here. For this distinction, see People v. Toner, supra; Roberts v. People, supra; Director of Public Prosecutions v. Beard [1920] AC 479 (12 ALR 846).

It is important in this decision to emphasize that intoxication may only negative the existence of specific intent. Examination of the cases reveals that where the rule was applied, it was done so in cases where the crime charged also involved a specific intent. Apparently the trial judge in the instant case did not realize this. For the most part his charge was in the exact words of Justice Cooley in People v. Garbutt, 17 Mich 9 (97 Am Dec 162). However, it should have been noted that the crime involved in that case was murder, not a specific-intent crime, or as was said in

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.W.2d 140, 342 Mich. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-guillett-mich-1955.