PEOPLE v ANWAY (AFTER REMAND)
Docket No. 122765
Court of Appeals of Michigan
June 17, 1991
Addendum on rehearing September 5, 1991
189 Mich App 706
Submitted April 17, 1991, at Lansing. Decided June 17, 1991, at 9:15 a.m. Leave to appeal sought.
After remand, the Court of Appeals held:
1.
2. A prior misdemeanor conviction of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or driving while impaired cannot be considered as a prior misdemeanor conviction of a drug-related offense for purposes of determining a sentence under the sentencing guidelines. The defendant in this case is entitled to resentencing and a rescoring under the sentencing guidelines.
3. The claim regarding the prior misdemeanor convictions obtained while the defendant was not represented by counsel was rendered moot by the trial court‘s ruling on remand.
Remanded for resentencing.
NEFF, J., dissenting in part, stated that drunken-driving convictions can properly be considered as drug-related convictions and that remanding the case for resentencing is unnecessary.
SENTENCES — SENTENCING GUIDELINES — PRIOR MISDEMEANOR CONVICTIONS — OPERATING A VEHICLE WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF INTOXICATING LIQUOR.
A prior misdemeanor conviction of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or driving while impaired cannot be considered as a prior misdemeanor conviction of a drug-related offense for purposes of determining a defendant‘s sentence under the sentencing guidelines.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Gay Secor Hardy, Solicitor General, Robert E. Weiss, Prosecuting Attorney, Donald A. Kuebler, Chief, Appellate Division, and G. L. Christopherson, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for the people.
State Appellate Defender (by Sheila N. Robertson), for the defendant on appeal.
AFTER REMAND
Before: SAWYER, P.J., and MARILYN KELLY and NEFF, JJ.
SAWYER, P.J. Defendant pled guilty of delivering less than fifty grams of cocaine.
Defendant first argues that he is entitled to resentencing because of joint representation by a single attorney of defendant and his brother on an identical charge. At the time of defendant‘s sentencing,
Defendant next argues that he is entitled to resentencing because the trial court misscored Prior Record Variable 5 and, therefore, the guidelines sentencing range was incorrect. We agree.
Defendant was originally scored ten points for PRV 5 for having four or more prior misdemeanor convictions. However, at sentencing, the trial court agreed to strike a number of those prior convictions because they were obtained when defendant was not represented by counsel. Accordingly, three prior misdemeanor convictions remain, namely, two convictions of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor and one conviction of driving while impaired. On appeal, defendant contends that those three remaining prior misdemeanor convictions should not be considered in scoring the guidelines and, therefore,
The instructions for the scoring of PRV 5 provide as follows:
Score a misdemeanor only if it is related to one of the following crime groups: Assault, Burglary, Criminal Sexual Conduct, Drug, Fraud, Larceny, Property Destruction, Robbery, or Weapons Possession.
The prosecutor contends, and the trial court agreed, that drunken-driving misdemeanor convictions are scorable under PRV 5 as misdemeanors related to the drug-crime group. Defendant contends that drunken-driving offenses are not properly categorized as belonging to the drug-crime group. We agree.
This issue is the subject of a conflict between panels of this Court. In People v Jerovsek, 172 Mich App 489; 432 NW2d 350 (1988), this Court concluded that, because alcohol is a drug, drunken-driving convictions relate to the drug-crime group. We reached an opposite conclusion in People v Reyna, 184 Mich App 626; 459 NW2d 75 (1990), concluding that a drunken-driving offense cannot be scored as a misdemeanor under the guidelines. We explained our reasoning as follows:
The Jerovsek Court‘s analysis does have some merit in that OUIL is related to the abuse of alcohol and alcohol is a drug. However, we are not convinced that the guidelines envisioned such a broad reading of the term “drug” when it listed the crime groups to be considered in scoring prior misdemeanors on a sentencing information report.
First, the sentencing guidelines advisory committee did prepare a list of misdemeanors which could be used in assessing points under PRV 6, and OUIL is not on the list under either the drug group or any other crime group. Furthermore, the drug offenses are collected under the Public Health Code with specific sections criminalizing the possession, delivery, or use of various controlled substances. MCL 333.7401 et seq. ;MSA 14.15(7401) et seq. OUIL, on the other hand, is a violation of the Michigan Vehicle Code underMCL 257.625 ;MSA 9.2325 . Accordingly, we disagree with our colleagues in Jerovsek and conclude that OUIL is not a “misdemeanor” which may be scored under the guidelines. [184 Mich App 630.]
We agree with defendant that Reyna represents the better-reasoned view of this issue.1
Because, as the prosecutor points out in his brief, there are some differences between the first edition of the sentencing guidelines and the second edition, a brief consideration of the instructions in the second edition is in order to confirm that the view expressed in Reyna is still valid. As stated above, the instructions to PRV 5 require a scoring for a prior misdemeanor conviction if it is related to one of the enumerated crime groups. Thus, the prior drunken-driving convictions are scorable only if they constitute a “misdemeanor” as defined by the Sentencing Guidelines Manual and fall within one of the applicable crime groups, which the prosecutor contends they do, namely, the drug-crime group.
A “misdemeanor” is an offense punishable by one year or less of incarceration and falling into one of the following crime groups — Assault, Burglary, Criminal Sexual Conduct, Drug, Fraud, Larceny, Property Destruction, Robbery, and Weapons Possession. [Emphasis in original.]
Thus, to be a misdemeanor within the meaning of the guidelines, the offense must fall within one of the crime groups. The same section, p 8, defines “crime group” as follows:
The offenses covered by the Michigan Sentencing Guidelines have been divided into separate crime groups. The groups, listed alphabetically, are as follows: Assault, Burglary, Criminal Sexual Conduct, Drug, Fraud, Homicide, Larceny, Property Destruction, Robbery, and Weapons Possession. To determine whether an offense falls into a particular crime group, please consult the Crime List section of the manual. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, to determine whether an offense falls within a crime group, it must be listed in the “crime list” section of the manual. Therefore, for a drunken-driving offense to constitute a misdemeanor in the drug-crime group under the sentencing guidelines, it must be included on the drug-crime list.
A review of the drug-crime list fails to reveal the presence of any drunken-driving related offense. In fact, the only crimes included on the drug-crime list are those contained in the Public Health Code,
For the above reasons, we conclude that the instructions to the second edition of the Sentencing Guidelines Manual confirm the correctness of our decision in Reyna and the conclusion that drunken-driving convictions are not scorable misdemeanors under PRV 5. Therefore, the trial court erred in scoring those convictions in the case at bar. Accordingly, defendant is entitled to a resentencing and a rescoring of the sentencing guidelines. His prior drunken-driving convictions are not to be considered when scoring PRV 5.
Defendant‘s final argument is that he is entitled to a correction in his presentence report in which the references to his prior unconstitutional convictions are deleted. This issue, however, was resolved in defendant‘s favor on our prior remand to the trial court and, therefore, is moot.
The matter is remanded to the trial court for resentencing consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
MARILYN KELLY, J., concurred.
NEFF, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part). I dissent from that part of the majority opinion which resolves the conflict created by People v Jerovsek, 172 Mich App 489, 491; 432 NW2d 350 (1988), and People v Reyna, 184 Mich App 626, 628; 459 NW2d 75 (1990). I find Jerovsek more persuasive and would hold that no remand is necessary.
In all other respects, I concur in the majority opinion.
ADDENDUM (ON REHEARING)
SAWYER P.J. Following the release of this opinion to the parties, plaintiff moved for rehearing, seeking a clarification of our original opinion. Although our holding is unaffected, we agree that certain language in the opinion can be read to produce in other cases a result that we did not intend.
Specifically, in the opinion, ante at 711, we state “for a drunken-driving offense to constitute a misdemeanor in the drug-crime group under the sentencing guidelines, it must be included on the drug-crime list.” Later, we state that “[b]ecause drunken driving is not on the drug-crime list, or any other crime list for that matter, it is not scorable as a prior misdemeanor conviction.” Read literally, this would mean that virtually no misdemeanors would be scorable because the crime list only contains crimes for which an SIR is to be prepared upon conviction, which are almost all felonies.1 As defendant points out in his answer to plaintiff‘s motion for rehearing, this was not our
Rather, the first of the above-quoted sentences should have read “for a drunken-driving offense to constitute a misdemeanor in the drug-crime group under the sentencing guidelines, it must be related to a crime included on the drug-crime list” and the second sentence should have read “[b]ecause drunken driving is not related to a crime on the drug-crime list, or any other crime list for that matter, it is not scorable as a prior misdemeanor conviction.” We regret any confusion our inartful drafting in the original opinion may have caused.
The point to be made is that, to be scorable, a misdemeanor must bear a relationship to the crimes on one of the crime lists. For example, simple assault,
Drunken driving bears no relationship to the drug offenses. They are punishable under separate statutes, and the former relates to traffic safety while the latter relates to public health. They simply are not of the same type or character. Indeed, felony drunken driving is not on the drug-crime list, or any other crime list.3
