People v. Stoudemire

414 N.W.2d 693, 429 Mich. 262
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1987
Docket75907, (Calendar No. 3)
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 414 N.W.2d 693 (People v. Stoudemire) 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. Stoudemire, 414 N.W.2d 693, 429 Mich. 262 (Mich. 1987).

Opinions

Levin, J.

The habitual offender statute provides escalating penalties for persons repeatedly convicted of felonies.1 A life sentence may be imposed on a fourth-felony offender where the fourth felony is punishable by a term of five years or more. The question presented is whether Stoudemire was properly charged as an habitual offender with three prior convictions where the three convictions arose out of a single transaction. We hold that he could only be charged as a second offender, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals, and remand for trial on the principal charge and a supplemental information charging that he was convicted but one previous time.

Stoudemire was originally charged with assaulting a prison guard2 and as a fourth offender under the habitual offender statute.3 The three prior convictions set forth in the supplemental information were for breaking and entering, unarmed robbery, and criminal sexual conduct, and arose out of a single transaction, and a single trial and sentencing.

Stoudemire moved to dismiss the supplemental information, arguing that because the three prior [265]*265felony convictions arose out of a single transaction, they should count as only one "conviction” under the habitual offender statute. Therefore, Stoudemire argued, any supplemental information should have charged him as only a second offender.4 The trial court denied Stoudemire’s motion, and Stoudemire thereafter pled guilty to the principal charge in exchange for dismissal of the habitual offender charge. Stoudemire subsequently appealed his plea-based conviction to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed.

i

Legislative purpose is the lodestar of statutory construction.5 This Court has said:

A court’s responsibility when it construes a statute is to implement the purpose and intent of those who enact it. A failure to consider whether the Legislature understood the meaning , of a term quite differently when a statute was enacted than it is understood today would allow a statute to be construed in a manner which extends its intended scope. [People v Gilbert, 414 Mich 191, 200; 324 NW2d 834 (1982).]
"The particular inquiry is not what is the abstract force of the words or what they may comprehend, but in what sense were they intended to be understood or what understanding they convey when used in the particular act.” [People v Lynch, 410 Mich 343, 354; 301 NW2d 796 (1981).][6]

In Wymer v Holmes, 429 Mich 66, 76; 412 NW2d [266]*266213 (1987), this Court, discussing "plain meaning,” said that "in construing a statute, this Court must read the language of the statute in light of the general purpose to be accomplished. . . . Our first task, therefore, is to ascertain the question of legislative purpose.”

Once legislative intent is discerned, it must be given effect, even if doing so might appear to conflict with the letter of the statute. " '[A] thing which is within the spirit of a statute is within the statute, although not within the letter; and a thing within the letter is not within the statute, unless within the intention.’ ” Metropolitan Council #23 v Oakland Co Prosecutor, 409 Mich 299, 319; 294 NW2d 578 (1980).7

In this case, the legislative history of the statute indicates that the Legislature, by using the phrase "after having been three times convicted,” intended that the fourth-offender penalties reach only incorrigible criminals who had failed three separate times to reform — who had been convicted three separate times where the last two convictions were for crimes committed after the prior conviction. The Legislature used the phrase "after having been three times convicted” as shorthand.

When the Legislature uses a shorthand expression, legislative intent controls over an arguably literal reading of the statute inconsistent with that intent. As this Court stated in Elba Twp v Gratiot Co, 287 Mich 372, 394; 283 NW 615 (1939), where it encountered a similar question of statutory construction:_

[267]*267In ascertaining the true intent and meaning of a statute often allowance must be made for attempted brevity of expression.
"Where the language of a statute, in its ordinary meaning and grammatical construction, leads to a manifest contradiction of the apparent purpose of the enactment, or to some inconvenience or absurdity, hardship or injustice, presumably not intended, a construction may be put upon it which modifies the meaning of the words, and even the structure of the sentence.”[8]

II

The habitual offender provisions were first enacted as part of the Code of Criminal Procedure in 1927,9 and adopted in toto the language of New York’s habitual offender statute.10

The author of the New York statute, State [268]*268Senator Caleb Baumes,11 aimed the act’s escalating penalties — and in particular the mandatory life sentence imposed in the original enactment on fourth offenders — at the professional criminal, the hard-core recidivist who had been repeatedly tried, convicted, and sentenced, and who committed yet another crime. Senator Baumes said:

The theory of the Fourth Offender Act[12] is not punishment at all, but it is protection to the public. The man who has been convicted once, twice, three times, sentenced and served his time and come [sic] out and resumed operations again has proven to you and to me that he cannot learn his lesson. He is incurable. He is non-reformable. And either he cannot or he will not adjust himself to the fixed and settled rules and regulations of society and civilization. ... He is a [sic] habitual criminal, a menace to society, and as such should be segregated from society for the good of society and perhaps for his own good as well. [Baumes, The Baumes laws and legislative program in New York, 52 ABA Rep 511, 521 (1927). Emphasis added.]_

[269]*269New York courts have construed the Baumes Act in accordance with Senator Baumes’ intent. In People v Spellman, 136 Misc 25; 242 NYS 68 (1930), the court declared that multiple convictions on the same day constitute only one "conviction” for purposes of the habitual offender statute. Spell-man was convicted of burglary in 1922. Subsequently, on January 19, 1924, he pled guilty to seven indictments for burglary and grand larceny. After his release from prison, he was again convicted of burglary, and the state charged him as a fourth offender under the habitual offender statute. The court held that the seven same-day convictions constituted only one habitual offender "conviction,” and that therefore Spellman could be charged only as a third offender. Before his most recent arrest, Spellman had had only two, not three, opportunities to reform:

The courts have, however, humanely and justly required a mandatory life sentence[13] only after three or more fully completed, legal, prior judgments of conviction, separated sufficiently to offer opportunity for the felon to reform. (People v Bergman,

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Bluebook (online)
414 N.W.2d 693, 429 Mich. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stoudemire-mich-1987.