People v. Lynn

586 N.W.2d 534, 459 Mich. 53
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1998
DocketDocket 112014
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 586 N.W.2d 534 (People v. Lynn) 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. Lynn, 586 N.W.2d 534, 459 Mich. 53 (Mich. 1998).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Following a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of carrying a dangerous weapon in a motor vehicle, 1 possession of marijuana, 2 and operating a motor vehicle without security. 3 On appeal, however, the Court of Appeals set aside the weapons conviction on the ground that the jury instructions failed to require the jury to consider and decide whether the knives in question were dangerous weapons. We conclude that the instructions were not erroneous, and reverse.

i

The arresting police officer testified that she stopped the defendant’s vehicle because of a loud exhaust, and that when she asked him for his license, registration, and proof of insurance, he acknowledged that his license was suspended. She placed him under arrest and conducted an inventory search, finding two fourteen-inch knives in the vehicle, as well as a bag of marijuana.

The two knives were double-edged and in sheathes, one with a leg strap. The officer testified that a person could be stabbed with the knives, and that she thought they were stabbing instruments because they were large. She said that she did not know anything about throwing knives.

*55 Defendant testified that he had owned the two knives for six or seven months and used them as “throwing” knives. He said that although he could stab somebody with them, he did not consider them “stabbing instruments.” He acknowledged that the knives did not fold and were double-sided.

The defense also called a witness who was qualified as an expert in knife-making. He testified about the characteristics of throwing knives. After examining defendant’s knives, the witness stated that they were throwing knives because they were heavily weighted in the front, so that they would travel point first. The handle was made of a composite material and riveted into the blade. The blade runs through the handle and protrudes from the handle to protect the handle if it strikes the target butt first. These knives were unlike a dirk or stiletto because those instruments have cross guards. The witness testified that throwing knives are not built or made for stabbing. However, the witness admitted that a throwing knife, like any knife, could be used as a weapon and could be used to stab someone.

n

The statute under which the defendant was charged provides:

A person shall not carry a dagger, dirk, stiletto, a double-edged nonfolding stabbing instrument of any length, or any other dangerous weapon, except a hunting knife adapted and carried as such, concealed on or about his or her person, or whether concealed or otherwise in any vehicle operated or occupied by the person, except in his or her dwelling house, place of business or on other land pos *56 sessed by the person. [MCL 750.227(1); MSA 28.424(1) (emphasis supplied).]

The prosecutor argued that the knives were double-edged, nonfolding stabbing instruments, which the defendant admitted he knew were in the car. Defense counsel responded that the issue was not whether the knives could be used as stabbing instruments, but rather they were stabbing instruments. He claimed that because they were throwing knives, they were not stabbing instruments under the statute.

The trial court instructed the jury as follows on the elements of the CCW offense:

The defendant is charged with the crime of carrying a concealed weapon.
To prove this charge, the prosecutor must prove each of the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
First, that there was a double-edged, nonfolding stabbing instrument which was in a vehicle that the defendant was in.
I’ll read that again. First, that there was a double-edged, nonfolding stabbing instrument which was in a vehicle the defendant was in.
Second, that the defendant knew the weapon was there.
Third, the defendant took part in carrying or keeping the weapon in the vehicle.

The defense did not object to this instruction.

The jury found the defendant guilty as charged. 4 The circuit judge sentenced him to three years probation, with the first 180 days to be served in the county jail and other conditions.

*57 The defendant appealed, raising several issues. The Court of Appeals rejected defendant’s constitutional challenge to the statute and his contention that the trial court impermissibly limited defendant’s voir dire. However, the Court ruled that the instructions unfairly prejudiced defendant by preventing the jury from considering his theory that the knives were designed for a peaceful purpose. The Court ordered the defendant a new trial, at which the trial court was directed to use instructions that specifically required the jury to consider and decide as a separate element whether the knives in question were designed to be dangerous weapons per se within the meaning of the statute because they are double-edged nonfolding stabbing instruments. 5

The Court of Appeals explained its conclusion that the instructions were defective as follows:

The trial court instructed the juiy in part that it had to find defendant guilty of the ccw charge if it found that “there was a double-edged nonfolding stabbing instrument which was in a vehicle that the defendant was in.” See CJI2d 11.2(4). On the facts of this case, this instruction was ambiguous because it did not specifically require the jury to consider and decide whether the knives in question were dangerous instruments as “double-edged nonfolding stabbing instruments.” Rather, the instruction impliedly assumed an element of the charge against defendant, i.e., that the knives in question were “double-edged nonfolding stabbing instruments.” Therefore, the instruction unfairly prejudiced defendant by preventing the jury from considering his theory of the case that the knives were designed for a peaceful purpose.
. . . Here, determining whether defendant’s knives were “double-edged nonfolding stabbing instruments” was critical *58 because it constituted the threshold element of the ccw-charge against defendant. Therefore, the instructional error was not harmless, and consequently, defendant is entitled to a new trial with appropriate instructions so that a jury may fairly and intelligently determine whether the prosecution proved that defendant carried a dangerous weapon.
... At retrial, the instructions to the jury in this case must specifically require the jury to consider and decide as a separate element whether the knives in question are designed to be dangerous weapons within the meaning of the statute because they are double-edged rionfolding stabbing instruments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 N.W.2d 534, 459 Mich. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lynn-mich-1998.