Lead Opinion
*565Defendant was convicted of jury tampering, MCL 750.120a(1), a misdemeanor, for attempting to influence jurors when he stood in front of a courthouse and distributed pamphlets to those he knew to be potential jurors in a case set for trial that day. The circuit court affirmed his conviction, rejecting *566defendant's statutory and First Amendment arguments. We granted leave to appeal,
This matter arose out of defendant's interest in a criminal case involving Andrew Yoder, who had been charged with "a [Department of Environmental Quality] violation" for "illegally draining wetlands." After hearing of the case, defendant decided to attend the pretrial hearing on November 4, 2015, because despite not actually knowing Yoder, the case "piqu[ed] [his] interest." At the pretrial hearing, the court scheduled Yoder's trial for November 24, 2015.
Defendant returned to the courthouse on the day set for trial and stood outside the front entrance to pass out pamphlets entitled, "Your Jury Rights: True or False?" that he had obtained from the Fully Informed Jury Association (FIJA) website. The pamphlet explains that jurors may vote according to their conscience. It further advises readers to be aware "when it's your turn to serve" that "[y]ou may, and should, vote your conscience," that "[y]ou cannot be forced to obey a 'juror's oath,' " and that "[y]ou have the right to 'hang' the jury with your vote if you cannot agree with other jurors!"
Although defendant handed or attempted to hand the pamphlet to a number of people that day, his charge for jury tampering resulted from his distribution of the pamphlet to Jennifer Johnson and Theresa DeVries, two people summoned to the court for jury selection. Johnson testified that she arrived at the courthouse unsure of where to go and that she approached defendant, thinking he was out front to "direct traffic."
*567Although she could not remember who broached the subject, it was established between them that she was there for jury duty. Defendant proceeded to hand her a pamphlet "and sort of pointed at the door." DeVries, on the other hand, testified that as she approached the courthouse, defendant specifically asked if she was there for jury selection. When she confirmed that she was, he handed her a pamphlet and said, " 'Do you know what your rights are for being a jury [sic] on jury duty?' "
Defendant was ultimately arrested and charged with obstruction of justice, MCL 750.505, and jury tampering. Yoder's case, however, never went to trial because the parties reached a plea agreement.
Before trial in his own case, defendant moved the district court to dismiss both charges. The district court granted the motion with respect to obstruction of justice but declined to dismiss the jury-tampering charge. In so doing, the court rejected defendant's argument that the charge should be dismissed because the term "juror," as used in MCL 750.120a(1), does not encompass individuals like Thompson and DeVries who were summoned for jury duty, but who were never actually selected or sworn, and took defendant's First Amendment argument under advisement. The circuit court affirmed the district court's decision, and defendant was denied leave to appeal by this Court, People v. Wood , unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 2, 2016 (Docket No. 334410), as well as by the Michigan Supreme Court, People v. Wood ,
Defendant's two-day jury trial was held in district court. When asked why he had decided to distribute the pamphlets, defendant testified that he
learned a really interesting fact that 95 percent of all criminal cases in the United States, they are pled out before they go to trial. And so there was a-there was a *568very high likelihood that the Yoder case was not going to go to trial, but then I also believed that there were going to be a lot of people around the *274courthouse and it was going to give me a really good opportunity to educate as many people to hand out the pamphlets and get this information to their hands.
He further stated that he did not know "who was summoned as a potential juror" and that he just handed the pamphlet "[t]o anybody that would receive one."
After the prosecution rested, defendant renewed his motion to dismiss on First Amendment grounds, but the district court rejected the argument, reasoning that defendant "was targeting jurors that were coming in that day" and that there was "a compelling interest in making sure for both the Prosecutor and the defense that there is a fair and impartial jury being chosen and that it is also very clear to me that [defendant] was very interested in that case and knew that the case was set for trial that day." Further, the court found it to be irrelevant that a trial never occurred in Yoder's case.
At the close of trial, the district court provided the following instructions to the jury regarding the elements of jury tampering:
First, that Jennifer Johnson and/or Theresa DeVries was a juror/were jurors in the case of People v. Yoder .
Second, that the defendant willfully attempted to influence that juror by the use of argument or persuasion.
Third, that the defendant's conduct took place outside of proceedings in open court in the trial of the case.
A person acts willfully when he or she acts knowingly and purposefully.
The word "juror" includes a person who has been summoned to appear in court to decide the facts in a specific trial.
An "argument or persuasion" can be oral or written.
*569Defendant was ultimately convicted and then sentenced on July 21, 2017.
On appeal in the circuit court, defendant argued that: (1) "the State" violated his First Amendment rights when he was "arrested and charged because of the content his pamphlet contained," and such conduct would fail a strict-scrutiny analysis, (2) he was denied his right to due process because MCL 750.120a(1) is unconstitutionally vague, (3) the district court erred by defining the term "juror" to include persons summoned for jury duty, and (4) even if the district court's interpretation was correct, he should not have been convicted under MCL 750.120a(1) because Yoder's case never proceeded to trial.
The circuit court issued its opinion and order on February 2, 2018, affirming defendant's conviction. In so doing, the court first rejected defendant's First Amendment argument, reasoning that the content of the pamphlet was not at issue because "[t]he statute relates solely to when a person attempts to 'influence' a juror's decision, not to 'influence' them as to any topic whatsoever," and defendant willfully attempted to influence people he believed to be jurors. Secondly, the court concluded that because Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed.) defines "juror" to include those selected for jury duty, the juror-tampering statute applied. And lastly, the court ruled that no evidence existed to support defendant's argument that he was denied a fair trial.
II. DID DEFENDANT TAMPER WITH A "JUROR?"
Defendant first argues that both trial courts erroneously defined "juror," as used in MCL 750.120a(1), to include those summoned for jury duty. Specifically, he asserts that he could not have tampered with "a juror *570in any case" under MCL 750.120a(1), because the term "juror" only *275encompasses those selected and sworn for jury duty, and no jurors were ever selected in Yoder's case.
Statutory interpretation is a question of law reviewed de novo. PNC Nat'l Bank Ass'n v. Dep't of Treasury ,
MCL 750.120a(1) provides:
A person who willfully attempts to influence the decision of a juror in any case by argument or persuasion, other than as part of the proceedings in open court in the trial of the case, is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 1 year or a fine of not more than $1,000.00, or both.
The term "juror" is not defined in the statute itself or in the Michigan Penal Code, MCL 750.1 et seq . As a result, we may consult a lay dictionary to determine the plain and ordinary meaning of "juror" if the term lacks "a unique legal meaning,"
*571People v. Thompson ,
Defendant maintains that the rules of statutory construction require a court to consult dictionaries in publication at the time a statute was enacted-1955
In deciding defendant's pretrial motion to dismiss, the district court relied in part on Black's Law *572Dictionary (Revised 4th *276ed.), published in 1968, which defines "juror" as "[o]ne member of a jury," and includes a usage note which states, "The term is not inflexible, and besides a person who has been accepted and sworn to try a cause 'juror' may also mean a person selected for jury service." The same definition and usage note appears in Black's Law Dictionary (Deluxe 4th ed.), published in 1951 and cited by defendant in support of his argument. Moreover, the usage note is consistent with the definition of "juror" in a lay dictionary from 1955. Webster's New International Dictionary (1955), provides that a juror is
[o]ne of a number of men sworn to deliver a verdict as a body; specif., Law , a member of a jury, or one designated and summoned to serve on a jury.
"Juror " is uniformly used by the jurists most familiar with the subject as including persons designated or ordered to be summoned as jurors . For stronger reasons, it would include them after they are summoned and have appeared in court.
Similar definitions for "juror" also appear in more current legal and lay dictionaries. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed.) defines "juror" as both "a member of a jury" and "a person summoned to serve on a jury[.]" And in Random House Webster's College Dictionary (2001), "juror" is defined as "a member of a jury," "a member of the panel from which a jury is selected," or "a person who has taken an oath or sworn allegiance." Similarly, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed.) states that a "juror" is "[a] member of a jury; a person serving on a jury panel." The definition of "jury panel" directs the reader to "VENIRE," which is defined as "[a] panel of persons selected for jury duty and from among whom the jurors are to be chosen." Id . Consequently, given the dictionary definitions from 1955 and *573today, a "juror" under MCL 750.120a(1) includes a person summoned for jury duty.
Defendant's assertions that MCL 750.120, M. Crim. JI 1.1, and MCR 6.412(B) support his argument regarding the definition of "juror" also fail. MCL 750.120,
Any person summoned as a juror or chosen or appointed as an appraiser, receiver, trustee, administrator, executor, commissioner, auditor, arbitrator or referee who shall corruptly take anything to give his verdict, award, or report, or who shall corruptly receive any gift or gratuity whatever, from a party to any suit, cause, or proceeding, for the trial or decision of which such juror shall have been summoned, or for the hearing or determination of which such appraiser, receiver, trustee, administrator, executor, commissioner, auditor, arbitrator, or referee shall have been chosen or appointed, shall be guilty of a felony.
Defendant highlights the language "[a]ny person summoned as a juror" to assert that "[i]f the legislature truly intended for jury tampering to include every person who has been summoned, it would have used the same language from the immediately preceding statute." But "the specific rules of statutory construction are merely aids to interpretation." People v. Armstrong ,
We likewise reject defendant's position that MCR 6.412(B) and M. Crim. JI 1.1 support his argument because they each use the term "prospective jurors" with regard to preliminary instructions given before the jury-selection process. Neither the court rules nor jury instructions are created by the Legislature, so their use of the term "prospective jurors" has no bearing on what the Legislature meant when it used the term "juror" in a statute.
Additionally, neither People v. Cain ,
Defendant also argues that the district court misapplied the elements of jury tampering,
Further, the district court did not err by refusing to allow defendant to argue that there were no jurors in Yoder's *278case because no trial ever occurred. MCL 750.120a(1) only requires that someone attempt to influence "a juror in any case." A trial is not required,
III. DID DEFENDANT'S CONVICTION VIOLATE THE FIRST AMENDMENT?
A. AS-APPLIED CHALLENGE
Having concluded that Johnson and DeVries were "jurors" for purposes of the jury-tampering statute, we now must address defendant's alternative argument that MCL 750.120a(1), as applied to his circumstances, violated his First Amendment right to free speech.
We review constitutional questions de novo. People v. Pennington ,
*577The First Amendment of the United States Constitution provides, in pertinent part, that "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech," U.S. Const., Am I, and the amendment is applicable to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, McDonald v. Grand Traverse Co. Election Comm. ,
Defendant's as-applied challenge is based upon his assertion that his conduct involved pure speech, the restriction of which should be subject to strict scrutiny, and that the state has no compelling interest in preventing a person from distributing educational pamphlets to potential jurors in a public space. In addressing this as-applied challenge, our focus is exclusively on the specific facts at issue-namely, the jury's finding that defendant distributed pamphlets at the courthouse to influence the decision of people he knew to be potential jurors for a case in which he had *279taken an interest.
The foregoing is a more direct way of stating that when applying strict *280scrutiny to the government's actions as defendant urges us to do (and argues the trial courts erred by failing to do), his First Amendment challenge fails because the state has a compelling interest in protecting the sanctity of the jury.
Applying strict scrutiny, we hold that application of the statute to defendant's conduct was a narrowly tailored means of furthering the state's compelling interest in preserving the impartiality and integrity of jurors. Defendant concedes that the government has a compelling interest in preventing jury tampering but states that he "does not concede ... that the State has a compelling interest to criminalize [his] distribution of a juror rights pamphlet on a public sidewalk." Yet this argument is based on the premise, rejected outright by the jury, that defendant only intended to educate the general public with his pamphlet. The jury, in fact, determined the opposite, as it found that defendant had distributed the pamphlets in an attempt to willfully influence the decision of jurors in a particular case. We cannot overemphasize the importance of the jury's finding that defendant intended to influence two jurors summoned for Yoder's case. It is that specific level of intent that takes defendant's case out of the general pamphletting activities protected by the First Amendment.
*581Further, we reject defendant's argument that the government does not have a compelling interest in preventing tampering with "potential jurors ." First, as we have already concluded, Johnson and DeVries were "jurors" for purposes of MCL 750.120a(1), not "potential jurors." Second, there is no basis in the law that would allow us to recognize the government's interest in protecting the impartiality of jurors only after they have been selected and sworn, as juries are chosen from the pool of people summoned for jury duty. Jurors summoned for duty that are tampered with do not lose that taint if they end up on the jury. See State v. Tucker ,
Defendant's additional argument that "[e]ven if the government had a compelling interest in ensuring potential jurors are not informed of the powers they rightfully and lawfully possess ..., the government failed to use the least restrictive means available to accomplish that interest," fares no better. A content-based restriction on speech "must be the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling state interest." McCullen v. Coakley ,
*582We reject this argument for two reasons. First, the argument is based entirely on the rejected premise that defendant's distribution of the pamphlet was an attempt to educate the public rather than a willful attempt to influence the decision of jurors in Yoder's case. Second, although at the time defendant was arrested and charged it appears that certain government actors did not know of defendant's interest in the Yoder case and disapproved of the pamphlet's contents, the jury ultimately found defendant guilty of violating MCL 750.120a(1), which requires a specific intent to influence jurors. And the evidence presented at trial supported these findings. The law defendant was convicted under does not address the random distribution of pamphlets to the general public outside a courthouse. Instead, the Legislature was concerned with an individual's purposeful attempt to tamper with jurors, which is a compelling state interest. The statute also touches upon only a narrowly defined class of people and speech, i.e., those who purposefully communicate with specific jurors summoned to serve on a case with the intent to influence the decision of a juror. Defendant cannot rely on less restrictive means relating to an entirely hypothetical governmental interest not present in this case, and the government clearly has no obligation, through statute, regulation, or rule, to designate places and times during which an individual may engage in criminal behavior, speech-related or not.
*583B. OVERBROAD CHALLENGE
Defendant also argues that MCL 750.120a(1) is unconstitutionally overbroad because "[w]hen the lower courts redefined the word 'juror' to mean more than a person actually selected, empaneled, and sworn in a case, it vastly expanded the range and scope of the jury-tampering statute to reach a substantial amount of constitutionally protected speech." Although defendant characterizes his argument as an as-applied challenge, it is more appropriately considered a facial challenge to the statute itself, given that we have held that the lower courts accurately interpreted the term "juror" in MCL 750.120a(1).
"An overbroad statute prohibits protected conduct, primarily conduct protected by the First Amendment."
*282People v. Lueth ,
*584Defendant asserts that the statute is unconstitutionally overbroad because "a person could be criminally liable for merely speaking with, giving information to, or communicating in any way with a potential juror." For example, he contends, if he "had started handing out pamphlets to the summoned potential jurors after the Court released them on the day in question, under the lower courts' redefinition, he could still be charged with jury tampering because they were still summoned for that month." However, defendant's assertions ignore the requirement in MCL 750.120a(1) that to be convicted of jury tampering, a person must possess the willful intent to influence the decision of a juror in a particular case. That requirement serves as a constitutional safeguard. As the Ninth Circuit reasoned in Turney ,
In its amicus brief, the American Civil Liberties Union contends that "[t]he state's interpretation of the jury tampering statute criminalizes a great variety of First Amendment protected expression," and provides it the following hypotheticals:
Consider whether a citizen committed to decriminalizing possession of controlled substances, passing out material regarding the issue outside a courthouse, would be charged with jury tampering if a prospective juror received the material. Would a group advocating for tort reform be prevented from protesting outside the court on days when products liability cases were being tried? Can the court prevent a women's rights organization from holding a rally when sex discrimination cases are on the docket?
*585Similarly, in its amicus brief, the Cato Institute posed hypotheticals involving op-ed writers, radio personalities, protesters with signs urging conviction, and a wife reminding her husband who has been selected for jury duty that he should not assume government witnesses are more credible than other witnesses.
Despite these concerns, the simple fact is that the conduct prosecuted in this case has no relationship to the eye-grabbing hypotheticals posed, all of which ignore the intent element of MCL 750.120a(1). For instance, an op-ed writer or radio personality expressing an opinion about a particular case or types of cases would likely not possess the intent necessary to be convicted of jury tampering under MCL 750.120a(1). There is a significant *283distinction between an individual targeting jurors for a particular case and providing them with information calculated to influence how they conduct their duties as jurors, and an op-ed writer or protester who opines about the general propriety of a prosecution or civil matter, with no intent to influence a particular juror. Moreover, "[t]he overbreadth doctrine is not ... 'casually employed,' even in a case involving a First Amendment challenge." In re Chmura ,
With regard to the political-demonstration examples, the United States Supreme Court's decision in *586Cox , provides guidance. In that case, the defendant led a group of people outside a courthouse in protest against the arrest of students the day before, and the defendant was arrested and convicted of intending to influence a juror or to obstruct or impede the administration of justice. Cox ,
IV. DUE PROCESS
A. VAGUENESS
Defendant next argues that MCL 750.120a, as interpreted and applied by the trial courts, is void for vagueness because it: (1) fails to provide proper notice to citizens "that the distribution of a pamphlet of general information on a public sidewalk to a person who was merely summoned for potential jury duty is a criminal act," (2) is susceptible to arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement, and (3) as erroneously interpreted and applied, impinged on his First Amendment rights.
We review de novo "challenges to the constitutionality of a statute under the void-for-vagueness doctrine."
*587People v. Lawhorn ,
"To afford proper notice of the conduct proscribed, a statute must give a person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited." People v. Roberts ,
Defendant first asserts that if the trial courts' interpretation of MCL 750.120a(1) is correct, then the law is unconstitutionally vague because "[n]o statute, case, or any other Michigan authority exists which would [have] given notice to the citizenry that the *588word 'juror' included anyone who had simply received a summons in the mail." However, a person of ordinary intelligence does not have to speculate as to the word's meaning. Rather, the definition of "juror" is readily ascertainable to anyone with access to a dictionary. See Sands ,
Defendant also suggests that MCL 750.120a(1) is susceptible to arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement, asserting that his own arrest and prosecution were based on the government's "animus towards the content of his pamphlet." Even if the decision to arrest and charge defendant was primarily based on the content of the pamphlet, the pamphlet provided evidence of his intent to influence a juror and was relevant to his prosecution. Additionally, although a statute may be misapplied by officials, our primary focus is on whether the statute permits arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement, not whether an isolated official happens to arbitrarily enforce it. See Allison v. Southfield ,
*589B. FAIR TRIAL
Lastly, defendant argues that he was denied his right to a fair trial because the district court precluded him from arguing the elements of MCL 750.120a(1) and because he was not permitted to cross-examine 77th District Court Magistrate Thomas G. Lyons regarding purported bias against him.
We review de novo whether a defendant received a fair trial. People v. Stevens ,
With regard to Magistrate Lyons's purported bias, "[a] primary interest secured by the Confrontation Clause [ U.S. Const., Am. VI ] is the right of cross-examination." People v. Gaines ,
Defendant contends specifically that he wished to examine Magistrate Lyons regarding conduct at the arraignment, when Magistrate Lyons allegedly "set an unconstitutionally high bond of $150,000.00 (10%)" and "refused to appoint [him] an attorney," and that the district court erred by denying him the opportunity to do so. Defendant identifies caselaw suggesting that a defendant has a constitutional right to examine a witness's bias, see id . at 644,
[V]iolations of the right to adequate cross-examination are subject to a harmless-error analysis. Whether such an error is harmless in a particular case depends on a host of factors, including the importance of the witness' testimony, whether the testimony was cumulative, the presence or absence of evidence corroborating or contradicting the testimony of the witness, the extent of cross-examination otherwise permitted, and the overall strength of the prosecution's case. [ Kelly ,, 231 Mich. App. at 644-645.] 588 N.W.2d 480
Magistrate Lyons's testimony merely provided context for the events of the day. He testified about when he learned of the pamphlets, his interaction with defendant, and his subsequent conversation with 77th District Court Judge Peter M. Jaklevic. Further, he testified that Yoder's case was the only case scheduled for trial on the day in question. This testimony was cumulative to that of other witnesses, namely 77th District Court Judge Peter M. Jaklevic, and had little bearing on whether defendant actually violated *591MCL 750.120a(1). Moreover, we see nothing to suggest that the jury would have reached a different result had it concluded that Magistrate Lyons was biased against defendant and not credible. As a result, we cannot hold that defendant was denied a fair trial on this basis.
Affirmed.
Cameron, J., concurred with Murray, C.J.
Notes
People v. Wood , unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered February 22, 2018 (Docket No. 342424).
See 1955 P.A. 88.
MCL 750.120 was enacted in 1931. 1931 P.A. 328.
MCL 600.1334 and MCL 600.1344, which govern juror excusal from attendance in court and juror compensation, support our conclusion that the term "juror," as used in MCL 750.120a(1), includes those summoned for jury duty, but never selected to actually serve on a jury. Both use the term broadly. For instance, MCL 600.1334(1) states, in part, "The chief judge may postpone the service of a juror to a later term of court if the juror has not been called for voir dire examination in any action." And MCL 600.1344 provides that jurors must be compensated for each day of actual attendance at sessions of the court. Although "juror" is undefined, the statutes clearly apply to those persons summoned for jury duty but not necessarily selected and sworn.
"This Court reviews jury instructions as a whole to determine whether there is error requiring reversal." People v. Bartlett ,
Our dissenting colleague opines that MCL 750.120a(1) is only implicated "after the trial process has commenced." But the language referring to a trial is in the exception to the rule, allowing arguments and persuasion of jurors once trial has commenced. That language adds nothing to when a person becomes a juror under this statute.
Evidence at trial supported the jury's findings. Defendant testified that he took an interest in Yoder's case, and he attended the pretrial hearing when the trial date was announced. He then returned to the courthouse on the day set for trial and distributed the FIJA pamphlets to several people, including Johnson and DeVries, who both testified that defendant knew they were at the courthouse because they had been summoned for jury duty.
The Ninth Circuit rejected a First Amendment challenge to a similar jury-tampering statute in Turney v. Pugh ,
[T]he First Amendment, while generally quite protective of speech concerning judicial proceedings, does not shield the narrow but significant category of communications to jurors made outside of the auspices of the official proceeding and aimed at improperly influencing the outcome of a particular case. What Alaska's jury tampering statute covers in the main, then, is speech that is not protected by the First Amendment." [Turney,.] 400 F.3d at 1203
Defendant's attempt to distinguish Turney on the basis that the Alaska statute expressly defined "juror" to include those summoned for jury duty is misguided because the term "juror," as used in MCL 750.120a(1), also includes those summoned for jury duty.
Defendant does not argue that MCL 750.120a(1) is, on its face, a content-based regulation. Rather, he maintains that the government regulated his "speech in a content-based way" given that "[i]t is clear that the government actors in this case arrested and charged [him] because of the content of his pamphlet." We apply strict scrutiny here because although the statute is not a purely content-based restriction, to convict under the statute it must be proved that defendant intended to influence a juror, and that can only be done by reviewing the words communicated to the juror. For example, if defendant were passing out to jurors a newspaper circular with commercial advertisements, he would not have been prosecuted for or convicted of jury tampering.
Defendant appears to misunderstand the concept of time, place, and manner restrictions. Time, place, and manner restrictions may be used to regulate speech otherwise protected under the First Amendment , if such restrictions are content-neutral and narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest. Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence ,
Dissenting Opinion
I conclude that the jury-tampering statute, MCL 750.120a, is simply not implicated under the circumstances presented in this case. Therefore, I would reverse defendant's *286misdemeanor conviction. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
We review de novo issues of statutory construction. People v. Pinkney ,
MCL 750.120a(1) provides that "[a] person who willfully attempts to influence the decision of a juror in any case by argument or persuasion, other than as part of the proceedings in open court in the trial of the case, is guilty of a misdemeanor...." With respect to mens rea, under the plain language of the statute, a person's conduct in attempting to influence a juror's decision by *592way of argument or persuasion must be willful. Next, given that the statute punishes "attempts" to influence a juror, a person need not successfully influence a juror's decision in order to be held criminally responsible. Additionally, Subsection (1) of MCL 750.120a is limited to proscribing conduct and communications entailing "argument or persuasion."
In defining the meaning of the term "juror" so as to accurately decipher the Legislature's intent, I believe it is vital to take into consideration the surrounding language and the context in which the term is used in MCL 750.120a(1). Under MCL 750.120a(1), argument or persuasion cannot be employed in a willful attempt to influence "the decision of a juror in any case." In my view, the statutory phrase, "the decision of a juror in any case," tells us all that we need to know in resolving this appeal, making it unnecessary and improper to resort to dictionary definitions of the term "juror" or to engage in a constitutional analysis. I conclude that a person is not "a juror in a[ ] case," let alone a juror who has the capacity to make a "decision," at the point in time that he or she has merely been summoned for jury duty and arrives at the courthouse. Rather, at the very earliest, one who has been selected as a venireperson, as distinguished from the larger group of individuals summoned for jury duty, might perhaps be characterized as a juror in a case, given that a venireperson would be subjected to voir dire for purposes of a particular case. See People v. Bryant ,
*593This position is buttressed by the language in MCL 750.120a(1), which provides an exception for argument or persuasion that is "part of the proceedings in open court in the trial of the case ...." (Emphasis added.) This language presupposes that a trial was indeed commenced. Moreover, MCL 750.120a(3) provides that Subsection (1) does not "prohibit any deliberating juror from attempting to influence other members of the same jury by any proper means." (Emphasis added.) This language contemplates not only a trial, but a concluded trial, followed by jury deliberations.
*287Giving meaning to the words in MCL 750.120a(1), such that none of the words are treated as surplusage, and reading the words and phrases in the context of the whole statute, the Legislature plainly envisioned MCL 750.120a(1) being implicated only after the trial process has commenced. Jennifer Johnson and Theresa DeVries were simply not jurors in the case against Andrew Yoder when approached by defendant and given the juror-nullification literature.
In further support and contrary to the majority's view, I believe that the Legislature's reference to a person "summoned as a juror" in MCL 750.120, absent comparable language in MCL 750.120a(1), reveals that the MCL 750.120a(1) reference to "a juror" was solely meant to encompass seated jurors and perhaps venirepersons. MCL 750.120 was enacted in 1931 pursuant to
I would reverse defendant's conviction. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
