People v. Wallace

434 N.W.2d 422, 173 Mich. App. 420
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1988
DocketDocket 101348
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 434 N.W.2d 422 (People v. Wallace) 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. Wallace, 434 N.W.2d 422, 173 Mich. App. 420 (Mich. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Gillis, J.

Defendant was originally charged with two counts of larceny from a person, MCL 750.357; MSA 28.589, and two counts of assault and battery, MCL 750.81; MSA 28.276. The defendant and the victim were married on September 6, 1986. At the preliminary examination, the victim testified that she was staying with her mother although she had not moved out of the couple’s apartment. On February 4, 1987, defendant came to the victim’s place of employment and told her that he wanted "his money.” Apparently, the couple had received insurance proceeds to cover the cost of some items which had been stolen from their apartment. Although the victim admitted that both she and defendant worked, she claimed that she paid the bills.

After defendant demanded "his money,” he and the victim argued. Defendant then "snatched” a gold chain off the victim’s neck. The victim had received the chain as a gift from a male friend during her marriage to defendant. Defendant then dragged the victim through the hall. As the victim stood in the hall, defendant ran to where she kept her purse and took it. Defendant then called the victim names and left.

Thereafter, the victim moved back in with defendant. Defendant returned the purse and the chain at the victim’s request. However, the couple’s marital bliss was short-lived and the victim moved out of the apartment before February 12, *422 1987, taking the furniture, which she claimed she had paid for, with her.

On February 12, 1987, the defendant again entered the victim’s place of employment and took her purse. Defendant then "snatched” the gold chain off her neck. Defendant also slapped the victim before leaving.

The district court dismissed the larceny from a person charges against defendant, holding that the so-called married women’s property acts, Const 1963, art 10, §1 and MCL 557.21(1); MSA 26.165(1)(1), were not intended to abrogate the common-law rule that there were no crimes of property between spouses. The district court relied on Snyder v People, 26 Mich 105 (1872), to support its decision.

The issue in Snyder was whether a husband could be convicted of arson for burning a house in his wife’s name even though they lived there together. At that time, the arson statute required the burning of " 'the dwelling house of another.’ ” Id. at 106 (quoting Comp L § 5745). Noting that arson was "an offense against the habitation, and regards the possession rather than the property,” the Court stated that, under common law, a husband, living with his wife, had rightful joint possession of a house which she owned and, therefore, could not be guilty of arson. Id. at 106-107. The Court then turned to the issue of whether the married women’s property acts affected this outcome. The Court held:

The statutes upon which the question arises, are those for the protection of the rights of married women. But it is to be observed, that those do not in terms go beyond the ensuring to the wife such property as she may own at the marriage, and acquire afterwards, and the giving to her the *423 power to protect, control and dispose of the same in her own name, and free from the interposition of the husband. None of them purports to operate upon the family relations; none of them takes from the husband his marital rights, except as they pertain to property, and none of them relieves him from responsibilities, except as they relate to the wife’s contracts and debts. ... As regards her individual property, the law has done little more than to give legal rights and remedies to the wife, where before, by settlement or contract, she might have established corresponding equitable rights and remedies, and the unity of man and woman in the marriage relation, is no more broken up by giving her a statutory ownership and control of property, than it would have been before the statute, by such family settlement as should give her the like ownership and control. At the common law, the power of independent action and judgment was in the husband alone; now it is in her also for many purposes; but the authority in her, to own and convey property, and to sue and be sued, is no more inconsistent with the marital unity, than the corresponding authority in him. She is still presumptively his agent to provide for the household, and he is not deprived of the rights, or relieved of the obligations of head of the household, except as by their dealings an intent to that eifect is indicated.
So far from an intent having been manifested on the part of the legislature to regard the family as simply a voluntary association of two persons, legally independent of each other, with their progeny, several of the changes have been in the direction of a unification of interests. Thus, the husband is deprived of all authority to sell, mortgage or otherwise charge the homestead without the wife’s consent, though his title thereto may be complete and absolute. He is also precluded from selling or encumbering such personal chattels as are exempt by law from execution, unless with her assent; and if he shall attempt to do so, she may bring action to recover the same in her own name. *424 These powers and privileges in respect to the husband’s property are not conferred on the wife for her own benefit exclusively, or in order to give her interests independent of the husband; but they are given her for the benefit of the whole family, in order that they may not be deprived of the reasonable means of support which the law has endeavored to save to them, and to the end that they may be kept together as a family, if such shall be their desire. And after the death of the husband and father, the family unity is still regarded in the protection which is given to the homestead.
We have said that the "wife is entitled to support at the husband’s domicil, and, as we have seen, she may prevent his disposing of it. The statute has not given him a corresponding right to impede or preclude conveyances or encumbrances by the wife, but nevertheless, so long as they occupy together, he is not to be considered as being upon the premises by sufferance merely. He is there by right, as one of the legal unity known to the law as a family; as having important duties to perform, and responsibilities to bear in that relation, which can only be properly and with amplitude performed and borne while the legal unity represents an actuality; as having rights in consort and offspring which can only be valuable reciprocally while the one spot, however owned, shall be the home of all; and in many ways he still represents the family in important relations of society and government. Some of the legislation on the subject is exceedingly crude; some of it has injudiciously given powers to the wife in the disposition of property which it has prudently denied to the husband; but none of it makes the husband a stranger in law in the wife’s domicil. The property is hers alone, but the residence is equally his; the estate is in her, but the dwelling-house, the domus, is that of both.
The house, in legal contemplation, as regards *425 the offense under consideration, is the dwelling-house of the husband himself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
434 N.W.2d 422, 173 Mich. App. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wallace-michctapp-1988.