People v. Hartwick

842 N.W.2d 545, 303 Mich. App. 247
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 2013
DocketDocket No. 312308
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 842 N.W.2d 545 (People v. Hartwick) 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 v. Hartwick, 842 N.W.2d 545, 303 Mich. App. 247 (Mich. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SAAD, RJ.

Defendant appeals the trial court’s order that (1) held that he was not entitled to immunity under § 4 of the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMMA), MCL 333.26424, and (2) denied defendant’s requests for dismissal under § 8 of the MMMA, [251]*251MCL 333.26428, and to present a § 8 defense at trial. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. NATURE OF THE CASE

Defendant, who was arrested for illegally growing and possessing marijuana,1 holds a registry identification card under the MMMA, MCL 333.26421 et seq. He claims that mere possession of the card entitles him to (1) immunity from prosecution under § 4 of the MMMA and, in the alternative, (2) an affirmative defense under § 8 of the MMMA. The trial court rejected defendant’s theory and instead held that defendant was not entitled to immunity under § 4 and that he had not presented the requisite evidence to make an affirmative defense under § 8.

We uphold the trial court and fully explore defendant’s specific arguments that his possession of a registry identification card automatically immunizes him from prosecution under § 4 and grants him a complete defense under § 8. We reject these arguments because they ignore the primary purpose and plain language of the MMMA, which is to ensure that any marijuana production and use permitted by the statute is medical in nature and only for treating a patient’s debilitating medical condition. See People v Kolanek, 491 Mich 382, 394; 817 NW2d 528 (2012) (“the MMMA’s protections are limited to individuals suffering from serious or debilitating medical conditions or symptoms”). To adopt defendant’s argument would also put the MMMA at risk of abuse and undermine the act’s stated aim of helping a select group of people with serious medical conditions that may be alleviated if treated in compli[252]*252anee with the MMMA. We therefore reject defendant’s claim and hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it (1) ruled that defendant was not entitled to immunity from criminal prosecution under § 4 and (2) denied defendant’s request for dismissal under § 8 and held that he could not present the § 8 defense at trial.

II. PACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Detective Mark Ferguson, a member of the Oakland County Sheriffs Office, received a tip that someone was distributing marijuana at a single-family home in Pontiac. On September 27, 2011, Detective Ferguson visited the house in question and met defendant outside. Detective Ferguson asked defendant if there was marijuana in the house. Defendant replied that there was and that he was growing marijuana in compliance with the MMMA. Ferguson asked if he could see the marijuana, and defendant led him inside the house.

Defendant and Detective Ferguson went into a back bedroom that served as a grow room for the marijuana. The grow room door was unlocked and the room housed many marijuana plants. Detective Ferguson then asked if he could search the house; defendant agreed. Throughout the home, Detective Ferguson found additional marijuana plants, a shoebox of dried marijuana in the freezer, mason jars filled with marijuana in defendant’s bedroom, and amounts of the drug that were not in containers near an entertainment stand in the living room.

Detective Ferguson then asked defendant if he sold marijuana. Defendant replied that he did not. He told Detective Ferguson that he acted as a caregiver for patients who used marijuana.

[253]*253The prosecuting attorney subsequently charged defendant with manufacturing marijuana and possessing it with the intent to deliver it. After the prosecutor presented his proofs at the preliminary examination, defendant moved to dismiss the charges under the MMMA’s § 4 grant of immunity and the § 8 defense provision. In the alternative, defendant sought to assert a § 8 defense at trial.

THE EVIDENTIARY HEARING

Defendant was the only testifying witness at the evidentiary hearing. He claimed that (1) he was a medical marijuana patient and his own caregiver, and (2) he also served as a caregiver for five additional medical marijuana patients. Defendant possessed registry identification cards for himself and his five patients, and submitted the cards as evidence. The prosecution stipulated the validity of defendant’s own registry identification card. Further, the cards demonstrate that defendant served as caregiver for the five additional patients in September 2011, when the police recovered marijuana from his home.2 Yet defendant was unfamiliar with the health background of his patients and could not identify the maladies or “debilitating conditions” suffered by two of his patients. He was not aware of how much marijuana any of his patients were supposed to use to treat their respective conditions or for how long his patients were supposed to use “medical marijuana.” And he could not name each patient’s certifying physician.

Defendant also testified that he had 71 plants in small Styrofoam cups. On cross-examination, the pros[254]*254ecutor asked defendant about this number, because Detective Ferguson’s report had indicated that there were 77 plants. Defendant responded that the detective had included “six plants that I had just cut down and there was still the stalk there.” The prosecutor pressed this point in closing arguments, noting that defendant was not entitled to dismissal under § 4 because he had more plants than permitted by that section.3

But the prosecutor stressed that the number of plants was not the ultimate issue in the case. Instead, the prosecutor stated that he had rebutted defendant’s § 4(d) presumption of immunity by showing defendant’s failure to comply with the underlying purpose of the MMMA: the use and manufacture of marijuana for medical purposes. The prosecutor noted that “by [defendant’s] own testimony he could not have been [providing marijuana to people diagnosed with a debilitating medical condition because] he doesn’t know if anybody had a debilitating medical condition, what that is, what they require to use it. There’s no way that it’s possible for him to have been acting in accordance with the act.”

The trial court agreed with the prosecutor’s reasoning and held that defendant was not entitled to dismissal under § 4. It said it agreed with the prosecutor but provided no other reasoning on the record.

With respect to § 8, the prosecutor referred to the fact that defendant did not know the amount of marijuana necessary to treat his patients’ debilitating medical conditions—meaning that defendant could not meet the evidentiary requirements of the § 8 affirmative [255]*255defense. Defense counsel replied that defendant’s possession of patient and caregiver identification cards absolved defendant of this failure and that the cards were all defendant needed “to establish the fact that these people were authorized by the state of Michigan and approved.”

The trial court rejected defendant’s argument, relied on the plain language of the statute, and held that defendant failed to produce testimony to support the defense under § 8.

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Related

People of Michigan v. Richard Lee Hartwick
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017
People of Michigan v. Ray Edward Barry
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2015
People of Michigan v. Michael James Sherwood
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2015
People of Michigan v. Robert Tuttle
870 N.W.2d 37 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2015)
People of Michigan v. Richard Lee Hartwick
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People v. Tuttle
850 N.W.2d 484 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
842 N.W.2d 545, 303 Mich. App. 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hartwick-michctapp-2013.