People v. Strodder

229 N.W.2d 318, 394 Mich. 193, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 217
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1975
Docket54892, (Calendar No. 11)
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 N.W.2d 318 (People v. Strodder) 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. Strodder, 229 N.W.2d 318, 394 Mich. 193, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 217 (Mich. 1975).

Opinions

T. G. Kavanagh, C. J.

On September 28, 1970, an employee of a Flint baking company reported to the police that a van was illegally parked in the company’s parking lot. The police came to investigate and found the defendant’s wallet in the van as well as a palm print later shown to be that of the defendant. At the trial the baking company employee identified the defendant as the man he had observed in the van going through a lady’s purse subsequently identified as belonging to Sally Ann Wright.

Sally Ann Wright’s body was found in the Flint [197]*197River near a site described by defendant to his mother. This site was some distance from the place where the van had been parked. It was established that Sally Ann Wright had been driving the van on the day of her death.

Defendant’s mother testified that on the day of the crime her son came home and told her that he had raped and killed a woman and that he had thrown the body in the river and that he had left the van in the baking company’s parking lot. She testified that the defendant asked her to help find his wallet which he had lost. After riding past the lot where the van had been abandoned and finding the police already there, defendant asked his mother to drive to the site where the body had been thrown into the river in the hope that he could recover his wallet there. Defendant’s mother persuaded him to see their family attorney and then took him to a psychiatric clinic where defendant had been undergoing preliminary interviewing and testing.1

Through arrangements made by defendant’s mother, defendant was met and arrested by police at the psychiatric clinic.

At the beginning of the trial defendant and his appointed attorney, William J. Hayes, had some disagreement over the fact that defendant wanted to waive a jury and attorney Hayes did not. Defendant requested different counsel, additionally complaining that he had been in jail approximately 109 days and had not seen his attorney until just a few minutes prior to trial. Attorney Hayes explained that he had not visited defendant because he had prepared his insanity defense by [198]*198having weekly meetings with defendant’s mother. After a recess, the court convened again and the defendant executed a written waiver of jury trial and the court denied defense counsel’s request to withdraw since the event precipitating the dissatisfaction was no longer operative.

The next day defendant again expressed his displeasure with appointed counsel. The court abided by its earlier ruling denying defendant’s request that appointed counsel be withdrawn. However, as the trial progressed, defendant expressed his complete satisfaction with Mr. Hayes.

The trial proceeded without incident until the conclusion of the plaintiffs proofs. At that time the defense began to establish a new theory of defense. This theory, as it later developed, was that the victim’s husband, a probation officer, for a monetary consideration and a promise to effect a deal whereby defendant Strodder would receive no more than a four-year sentence for the rape charge for which he was awaiting trial and this crime, induced defendant Strodder to assume responsibility for this murder and leave sufficient identification about (print and wallet) whereby he would be apprehended.

Defense attorney Hayes dramatically called the victim’s husband to the stand and accused him of murdering his wife. Mr. Hayes then demanded:

"The procedures are unimportant. I am asking that the whole record in this case be impounded, that no further prosecutions go on in this county, that this court and the prosecutor of this county be immediately suspended from office, and that Mr. Mandric Strodder immediately be set free. He is completely, absolutely innocent of this charge.”

Mr. Hayes continued:

[199]*199"He’s willing to live in this society as a free man if the people of the State of Michigan are willing to pick up his expenses for the rest of his natural life. Is that right Mr. Strodder?
"The Defendant: Yes, sir.”

When the trial court refused to accede to these requests, defense attorney and defendant refused to have anything to do with the proceedings and the court adjourned. The next day, June 29, 1971, the court appointed Mr. Ivor Jones co-counsel for defendant Strodder, at the same time indicating that the court would entertain a motion for mistrial. Defendant said that he wanted Mr. Hayes to continue as his attorney and after the judge expressed his doubts about Mr. Hayes’s sanity stated that he did not think it necessary that Mr. Hayes submit to psychiatric examination. The court agreed to adjourn the trial for a week in order to give attorney Jones a chance to familiarize himself with the case.

The court arranged to have a psychiatrist observe defense counsel at trial. The psychiatrist testified that in his opinion defense counsel was able to perform his duty. The court later read into the record a letter from attorney Hayes’s personal physician indicating, "No unusual psychiatric manifestations were noted by me. He has attended my office regularly and continues to show steady improvement”. The last comment referred to a physical condition for which Mr. Hayes was being treated.

Throughout the balance of the trial, defense counsel was incredibly abusive to the trial judge, the prosecutor, and other public officials, but the trial judge said that he believed he could freely try the facts and issues without prejudice to either side. Defense counsel Hayes, at the conclusion of [200]*200the trial, apologized for his attacks on the judge and expressed his confidence that the judge would make an honest decision.

The trial judge, exhibiting unusual patience, repeatedly offered defendant the opportunity to move for mistrial, all of which were declined by defendant and his attorney, indicating a complete willingness to proceed to judgment with Judge Elliott.

The judge found the defendant guilty and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

We have carefully considered each of the matters urged on appeal.

They were all considered by the Court of Appeals, and without expressly approving that Court’s treatment of the various issues, we are not disposed to say their holdings were erroneous in any particular.

Nonetheless from our examination of the entire record we are left with the abiding conviction that the procedure followed here did not accord the defendant a fair trial.

For this reason, without impugning the ability, integrity or good will of the prosecutor, trial judge or Court of Appeals we reverse the conviction and order a new trial, pursuant to GCR 1963, 865.1(7).

Levin, J., concurred with T. G. Kavanagh, C. J.

Williams, J.

(to reverse). The issue in this first-degree murder case is whether defendant was deprived of a fair trial because of ineffective assistance of counsel. Counsel failed to see his client during the 109 days preceding trial, failed to interview or call probably important witnesses, failed to perfect an available insanity defense, concocted an [201]*201irrational defense, and conducted himself in a bizarre if not contemptuous manner.

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Bluebook (online)
229 N.W.2d 318, 394 Mich. 193, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-strodder-mich-1975.