People v. Younger

158 N.W.2d 493, 380 Mich. 678, 1968 Mich. LEXIS 172
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1968
DocketCalendar 18, Docket 50,611
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 158 N.W.2d 493 (People v. Younger) 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. Younger, 158 N.W.2d 493, 380 Mich. 678, 1968 Mich. LEXIS 172 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

Somas, J.

Defendant was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder for killing his wife. 2 The homicide occurred at about 3 o’clock one morning when defendant returned home unexpectedly and found his wife, a female neighbor and his wife’s male employer in defendant’s home having a drink. It was defendant’s claim at trial, and it is his claim on appeal, that the presence of the male in his home at that hour was the culminating act of provocation, preceded by many prior acts of infidelity by his wife and broken promises of reformation, that precipitated his killing his wife in an act of passion, thereby reducing the homicide from one of murder to manslaughter.

Defendant’s principal claims on appeal are that (1) he should have been accorded greater freedom than was allowed him in introducing evidence of his wife’s past misconduct in support of his claim that he was subjected to such provocation that an ordi *681 nary man would kill in the heat of passion and (2) that the jury should have been instructed to consider such evidence of his wife’s past misconduct in determining the sufficiency of the asserted provocation to constitute the homicide manslaughter rather than murder. This is not a case in which temporary insanity was pleaded as a defense. See People v. Garbutt (1868), 17 Mich 9 (97 Am Dec 162). Accordingly, we need not express an opinion whether the circuit judge’s challenged evidentiary rulings and jury instructions would have been adequate had such defense been in issue.

Murder and manslaughter have been distinguished frequently in our reports. Murder in the first degree requires proof of premeditation, deliberation and malice. Manslaughter, on the other hand, is a homicide which is not the result of premeditation, deliberation and malice but, rather, which is the result of such provocation that an ordinary man would kill in the heat of passion before a reasonable time had elapsed for the passions to subside and reason to resume its control. See People v. Scott (1859), 6 Mich 287; Maher v. People (1862), 10 Mich 212 (81 Am Dec 781); People v. Lilley (1880), 43 Mich 521; People v. Holmes (1896), 111 Mich 364; People v. Poole (1909), 159 Mich 350 (134 Am St Rep 722); and People v. Ryczek (1923), 224 Mich 106.

At the threshold of every manslaughter case, the killing, to be manslaughter and not murder, must have been the product of an act of passion; it must have been committed in a moment of frenzy or of temporary excitement. Manslaughter is homicide devoid of actions which require unimpassioned calculation for their accomplishment. If there be actions manifesting deliberation, it cannot be said, ‘legally, that the homicide was the product of provocation which unseated reason and allowed passion free *682 rein. Thus, the nature and quality of the act of homicide first must be examined to determine whether it is that of an ordinary man responding to the heat of passion or that of an ordinary man functioning with deliberation. Only if the defendant’s actions can be found to be acts of passion is it appropriate to inquire into the legal sufficiency of the asserted provocation. In this case of Younger, we conclude that defendant’s own conduct on the fatal night precludes a finding that he had been bereft of reason by passions run rampant. A description of his actions, much of which is conceded by defendant and the balance of which is uncontradicted on this record, establishes the point we make.

Defendant, who worked in Detroit and normally returned to his home in Flint only on weekends, arrived at his Flint home unexpectedly at about 3 o’clock one morning and found his wife and two others, one of whom was male, having a drink. He greeted his wife’s guests and, as he proceeded through the living room to an adjoining bedroom, his wife told him that one of his dogs had died. Without response, he entered the bedroom, kissed his sleeping child and began to cry. An unspecified time later he left the bedroom and went into the basement where he dug “furiously” into a carrying bag in which he had placed some of his hunting equipment and, after some difficulty, he found some shells for his .22-caliber rifle. He then removed the rifle from its cover, loaded the rifle and returned upstairs. As he did so, his wife’s male guest was departing, having finished his drink; but the female guest remained.

Defendant’s testimony of what transpired next was:

“And as I approached I says, ‘Nita — ’ I advised her, I says, ‘Anita, get on your knees and pray.’
*683 “She said, ‘Honey, what’s wrong? What’s wrong?’
“I says, ‘Yon promised me one thing, yon invariably do jnst the opposite. They [defendant’s children] do not have to live like this.’
“And from that point on she started saying a lot of things: ‘Please give me another chance. I will do better. Don’t do this. What’s wrong, Honey? I will do anything that yon say do. Yon jnst say it.’
“I said, ‘I know what yon are going to do, what yon have repeatedly done.’
“Pearl [the female gnest] tnrned aronnd and she made some remark. I do not know verbatim or exactly what Pearl said, bnt my wife remarked to her to do as I had said do. And at this particular point is when I cnrsed at her and she says ‘Dave, I will change. Jnst give me another chance. I will change. I will promise I will change.’ And at this precise moment is when I pulled the trigger.”

Pearlie Shook, the female gnest, testified that defendant kept his wife on her knees for about 4, 5, or 6 minutes. Her description of the homicide was:

“A. And he was standing behind the davenport. And he said to Mrs. Younger something like this: ‘Anita, thought I told yon that I would never give yon another penny of my money.’
“And she said, ‘What money?’ And she say, ‘I haven’t asked yon for any money. I don’t want any money.’
“He say, ‘Well, I have the papers here in my pocket to prove.’ You know, I guess the divorce or something, I don’t know. But then he says, ‘Yon are such of a great believer, get on your knees and pray to your Maker.’
“And she went, like, ‘Oh, Dave, honey,’ yon know, ‘what’s wrong?’ yon know.
“Q. Pardon me. Now Pm sorry, I missed that last part.
“A. ‘Oh, Dave, honey, what’s wrong?’
*684 “So be said, ‘G-et on your knees and I mean get on them now,’ or something like this. And when she got on her knees at the davenport like this and start praying and pleading with him. So he say—
“Q. Do yon know what she said exactly? Conld yon recall?

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.W.2d 493, 380 Mich. 678, 1968 Mich. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-younger-mich-1968.