After a jury trial, defendant was convicted of concealing or misrepresenting the identity of a motor vehicle with intent to mislead by altering the manufacturer’s serial number, MCL 750.415(2); MSA 28.647(2), and was sentenced to pay a fine of $300 and costs of $500 within 20 days or to be confined in the county jail for 120 days. Defendant appeals by right.
I
Defendant argues that the venue for the trial was erroneous. The prosecution must prove venue beyond a reasonable doubt.
People v Plautz,
28
*756
Mich App 621;
"Whenever a felony consists or is the culmination of two or more acts done in the perpetration thereof, said felony may be prosecuted in any county in which any one of said acts was committed.”
Defendant was tried in Ottawa County. Defendant points to testimony that the number was changed at defendant’s direction in Wheeler, Michigan, which is apparently located in Gratiot County. However, testimony also indicated that the car with the altered number was consigned by defendant for sale at Grand Rapids Auto Auction. Misled by the auction’s name, defendant argues that the auction was located in Kent County; however, testimony unambiguously indicated that the auction was located in Ottawa County.
In
People v Brooks,
"To interpret the statute as requiring that the police must witness both the altering and the misrepresentation would for all practical purposes make the statute unenforceable. Persons engaged in the illicit business of *757 stealing and disposing of cars for cash do not ply their trade in public. VIN numbers are not likely to be altered in broad daylight and in plain view. They are doctored in the secrecy of garages and 'chop shops’ throughout the state. Therefore, the physical act of alteration is rarely observed. Furthermore, stolen automobiles are extremely mobile and fungible. Within hours they can be driven to another state or country or they can be dissected into their component parts, irrevocably beyond identification or recovery.
"We believe the Legislature was aware of these facts when it made possession of a motor vehicle with an 'altered’ VIN 'prima facie’ evidence of commission of this crime. When, as here, a police officer observes the accomplished fact of physical alteration together with an act of misrepresentation, it would make little sense to send the possessor freely on his or her way. By the time a warrant could be obtained, the culprit and the car would be long gone.” (Footnote omitted.)405 Mich 240 -241.
Possession of a vehicle with an altered number is prima facie evidence of the felony at issue here as well as of the misdemeanor at issue in Brooks. MCL 750.415(3); MSA 28.647(3). Reading Brooks together with MCL 762.8; MSA 28.851, we conclude that a violation of MCL 750.415(2); MSA 28.647(2) may properly be prosecuted in a county where the alteration took place, in a county where defendant was in possession of a vehicle with an altered number, or in a county where an act of misrepresentation took place. An act of misrepresentation in Ottawa County took place when defendant consigned the vehicle with the altered number for sale at Grand Rapids Auto Auction.
Venue is a question of fact to be determined by the jury.
People v Watson,
"The indictment or information shall contain:
"3. That the offense was committed in the county or within the jurisdiction of the court. But no verdict shall be set aside or a new trial granted by reason of failure to prove that the offense was so committed unless the accused have raised such question before the case is submitted to the jury.”
See also
People v Carey,
II
Defendant argues that the trial court erred by admitting testimony concerning a statement defendant made to Detective Sergeant Lloyd Stearns., the state police officer who investigated the case. The statement was held to have been voluntary after a hearing pursuant to
People v Walker (On Rehearing),
The only testimony concerning the circumstances under which the statement was made was that of Detective Sergeant Stearns. He testified that on August 1, 1979, he was at the Grand Rapids Auto Auction in connection with another investigation. At the request of an employee of the auction, he examined the car at issue here. The car was at the auction to be sold on behalf of Jerry’s Auto Sales of Wheeler, Michigan. Defendant later testified that he did business under that name. Detective Sergeant Stearns examined the car and determined that the vehicle identification number appeared to have been altered. At his request, the auction impounded the car.
Several days later, according to the detective sergeant, defendant called his office and left an urgent message for him to call defendant. When the detective sergeant returned the call, defendant explained that he wanted to get his car released for sale and requested a meeting. Defendant volunteered to bring his records connected with the car. The meeting was held as defendant requested and in the course of the meeting defendant made the statement at issue here. Defendant was not given the warnings required by
Miranda v Arizona,
Defendant, relying on
People v Wallach,
"By custodial interrogation, we mean questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way. 4
The
Wallach
panel relied upon references to the "focus test” in
People v Reed,
The
Wallach
panel acknowledged
Beckwith, Mathiason,
and
Hass,
but held that
Reed, Ridley,
and
Brannan
imposed the "focus test” as a matter of state constitutional law. However, as another panel pointed out in
People v Martin,
Because the evidence shows that defendant’s meeting with Detective Sergeant Stearns took place at defendant’s request, and because nothing in the record indicates that defendant’s freedom of action at the time of the meeting had been restrained in any significant way, we cannot say that defendant’s statement was the product of custodial interrogation. The trial court did not err by admitting testimony concerning the statement.
Ill
Defendant argues that the statute under which he was convicted was not in effect at the time he committed the crime. Defendant points to testimony that one element of the crime, alteration of the serial number, took place in early March, 1979. Conduct which took place before the effective
*762
date of a statute will not support a conviction under that statute.
People v Ulysee Gibson,
"Section 2. This amendatory act shall not take effect unless House Bill No. 5371 (request no. 3562 '77) of the 1977 regular session of the legislature is enacted into law.
"This act is ordered to take immediate effect.”
House Bill No. 5371 became
"Section 3. This amendatory act shall not take effect until July 1, 1979.”
Because it is presumed that the Legislature did not intend to do a useless thing, it is a rule of statutory construction that, if possible, every part of a statute must be given some effect.
United Ins Co v Attorney General,
"No act shall take effect until the expiration of 90 days from the end of the session at which it was passed, but the legislature may give immediate effect to acts by a two-thirds vote of the members elected to and serving in each house.”
The 1978 regular session of the Legislature ended on December 29, 1978. Thus, acts to which the Legislature gave no effective date and which the Legislature did not order to take immediate effect took effect on March 30, 1979. If the Legislature intended
IV
Defendant argues that the trial court erred by declining to instruct the jury on the misdemeanor
*764
of concealing or misrepresenting the identity of a motor vehicle without intent to mislead by altering the manufacturer’s serial number, MCL 750.415(1); MSA 28.647(1). The elements of the felony of which defendant was convicted differ from those of the misdemeanor only in that an intent to mislead is an element of the felony. The trial court correctly declined to instruct the jury on the misdemeanor in view of
People v Chamblis,
"We are establishing a rule today, as a matter of policy, limiting the extent of compromise allowable to a jury in deciding whether to convict of a lesser included offense. In any case wherein the charged offense is punishable by incarceration for more than two years, the court, whether or not requested, may not instruct on lesser included offenses for which the maximum allowable incarceration period is one year or less.”
Defendant points out that, in
People v Miller,
Affirmed.
Notes
"4 This is what we meant in
Escobedo v Illinois,
