PEOPLE V BEWERSDORF
Docket Nos. 88095, 87729
Supreme Court of Michigan
Decided August 22, 1991
438 Mich 55
Arguеd January 8, 1991 (Calendar Nos. 2-3). Certiorari denied in Johnson by the Supreme Court of the United States on February 24, 1992, 502 US- (1992).
PEOPLE v JOHNSON
Kim R. Bewersdorf pleaded guilty in the Oakland Circuit Court, David F. Breck, J., of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, third offense, and of being an habitual offender, second offense. The Court of Appeals, MICHAEL J. KELLY, P.J., and CAVANAGH, J. (SAWYER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part), affirmed the OUIL-3 conviction, but vacated the habitual offender conviction, reasoning that the specific sentencing scheme applicable to OUIL offenses under the Motor Vehicle Code prevails to the exclusion of the general habitual offender statute (Docket No. 100065). The people appeal.
Valentine Johnson was charged in the St. Joseph Circuit Court with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, third offense, and as an habitual offender, second offense. The court, James Noecker, J., granted the defendant‘s motion to suppress evidence regarding two prior misdemeanor convictions and remanded the case to the district court. The Court of Appeals, SHEPHERD, P.J., and D. E. HOLBROOK, JR., and MCDONALD, JJ., reversed in an unpublished opinion per curiam, holding that the procedural defect claimed with respect to the felony conviction for unlawful blood alcohol level, third offense, could not be raised indirectly in a subsequent proceeding charging an enhanced OUIL offense, reinstated the charge, and remanded the case to the circuit court (Docket No. 107498). The defendant appeals.
In an opinion by Justice GRIFFIN, joined by Justices BRICKLEY, BOYLE, RILEY, and MALLETT, the Supreme Court held:
The sentencing schemes of the habitual offender act and the
- Under the Motor Vehicle Code it is a misdemeanоr for any person whose blood alcohol level is 0.10 percent or more or who is under the influence of intoxicating liquor or a controlled substance to operate a motor vehicle. A second conviction within a seven-year period, while still a misdemeanor, is subject to an escalated sentence. However, if convicted within ten years of two or more prior OUIL convictions, a person is guilty of a felony and is subject to increased punishment. While the code provides that the third, and each subsequent OUIL offense within a ten-year period, is a felony, it does not specifically provide for escalation of the maximum punishment for fourth and subsequent OUIL convictions.
- The habitual offender act provides that a person who has been convicted of a felony and commits a subsequent felony is to be punished in accordance with the statute‘s provisions. The permissive language of the statute fixes only the upper boundaries of the court‘s sentencing discretion, not obliging it to impose enhanced punishment. The goal of the habitual offender act is to harshly punish repeat offenders and to make it tougher for criminals to avoid apprehension, conviction, and adequate punishment. The Legislature did not intend to make a separate substantive crime of being an habitual offender; rather, for deterrent purposes, it intended to augment punishment for second or subsequent felonies by providing a procedure for the court, in imposing sentence, to consider the persistence of the defendant in pursuing a criminal course.
- An unambiguous statute must be given effect, although departure may be justified where a literal construction would produce an absurd and unjust result clearly inconsistent with its purposes and policies. If possible, statutes which appear to conflict are to be read together and reconciled; however, where two statutes actually conflict, both cannot stand. The language of the habitual offender act is clear and unambiguous, allowing no exception with respect to OUIL felony convictions. Read together with the Motor Vehicle Code so as to give effect to both, the sentence for an OUIL-3 felony, if it is a first felony conviction, is to be as provided in the Motor Vehicle Code;
however, any subsequent OUIL felony conviction is subject to the repeat offender provisions of the habitual offender act regardless of whether the underlying felony conviction is also an OUIL-3 offense. The plain meanings of the two statutes when read together are consistent with the legislative purpose of deterring repeated criminal acts by providing for escalated punishment. - The Double Jeopardy Clauses of the federal and state constitutions protect against successive prosecutions and multiple punishment for the same offense. It limits prosecutors and courts, but not the Legislature. A claimed violation of double jeopardy protections based on multiple-punishment grounds is appropriately resolved by ascertaining and enforcing the intent of the Legislature. The best source for determining legislative intent is the language of the statute. Nothing in the language of the OUIL statute indicates that a single misdemeanor OUIL conviction could be used only to enhance to felony status one subsequent OUIL offense. Instead, the statute provides that a person who commits an OUIL offense within ten years of two or more prior OUIL convictions is guilty of a felony. The words “or more” make clear that a third or subsequent offense is a felony if committed within a ten-year period. Thus, first and second OUIL misdemeanor convictions are to be counted in elevating a third OUIL offense to felony status. Thereafter, each of the three convictions are to be counted again if the violator commits a fourth OUIL offense within a ten-year period. Such a construction gives effect to the intent of the Legislature to authorize punishment on an escalating basis and to remove from the roads recidivist drunken drivers who pose a serious danger to the lives of many others.
People v Bewersdorf, affirmed in part and reversed in part.
People v Johnson, affirmed and remanded for further proceedings.
Chief Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Justice LEVIN, concurring in Bewersdorf, but dissenting in Johnson, stated that at this stage of the litigation it is clear that Johnson has no valid prior felony conviction. His conviction in 1978 is invalid, and, while the 1985 conviction remains valid as a prior misdemeanor, it should never have been elevated to felony status. Because the Court, at any time, may permit the reasons or grounds of an appeal to be amended or new grounds to be added, Johnson should be allowed to attack collaterally his prior conviction even though this issue was not within the limited scope of the grant of leave to appeal. His claim involves convoluted historical and procedural complexities, the nature and merits of which were not fully apparent when the limited grant order
Justice LEVIN, dissenting, stated that the habitual offender provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure should not be invoked to further enhance the penalty for driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor, third offense. This is a situation in which a departure from a literal construction of an act is justified to avoid producing an absurd and unjust result, and in which a literal construction would not be consistent with the purpose and policy of the drunk-driving provisions of the Motor Vehicle Code, i.e., to punish drunk drivers. Neither defendant, by reason of a prior record of conviction of felonies other than drunk driving, represented a greater menace to users of the highway than other persons convicted of OUIL-3 for the first time. Assisting prosecutors in plea bargaining and courts in moving their dockets are not purposes or policies of the drunk-driving provisions of the Motor Vehicle Code or of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
181 Mich App 430; 450 NW2d 271 (1989) affirmed in part and reversed in part.
1. AUTOMOBILES — DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF INTOXICATING LIQUOR — SENTENCE ENHANCEMENT — MOTOR VEHICLE CODE — HABITUAL OFFENDER ACT.
The sentencing schemes of the habitual offender act and the provisions of the Motor Vehicle Code specifically applicable to the felony of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor do not conflict (
2. AUTOMOBILES — DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF INTOXICATING LIQUOR — SENTENCE ENHANCEMENT — MOTOR VEHICLE CODE — HABITUAL OFFENDER ACT.
First and second misdemeanor convictions of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor under the Motor Vehicle Code are to be used to elevate third and subsequent OUIL convictions within a ten-year period to felony status; upon a fourth OUIL conviction within a ten-year period, each of the convictions may be used to raise the conviction to felony status and thereby permit the defendant to be charged as an habitual offender (
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Gay Secor Hardy, Solicitor General, Jeffrey C. Middleton, Prosecuting Attorney, and Douglas K. Fisher, Chief Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for the people in Johnson.
Elliot D. Margolis for defendant Bewersdorf.
Thomas J. Robertson for defendant Johnson.
GRIFFIN, J. The principal issue in these consolidated criminal appeals is whether the habitual offender act1 may be used to enhance a sentence otherwise applicable to a felony conviction under the Motor Vehicle Code2 for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (OUIL).3 It is argued by defendants that the two sentencing schemes stand in conflict, and that the provisions specifically applicable to a felony OUIL conviction under the Motor Vehicle Code should prevail as against the general habitual offender statute. We find that the statutes in question do not conflict; rather, they “dovetail harmoniously. . . .”4 We conclude that the Legislature intended, as indicated by the plain meaning of the habitual offender act, that it be applicable to third and subsequent OUIL convictions.
I
A. PEOPLE V BEWERSDORF
After entering guilty pleas, Kim Bewersdorf was convicted of the felony of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, third offense,
Prior to sentencing, the circuit judge advised defendant that he was subject to a maximum prison sentence of seven and one-half years. It was explained that, absent the felony conviction for breaking and entering, defendant would have been subject under the Motor Vehicle Code to a maximum prison sentence of five years for the current OUIL-3 felony. However, because this OUIL-3 offense is a second felony conviction, the maximum prison sentence was enhanced under the habitual offender act by one and one-half times, or seven and one-half years. After accepting defendant‘s pleas of guilty, the court sentenced him to one year in the county jail for the OUIL-3 offense, and then vacated that sentence and imposed an identical sentence for the habitual offender conviction.5
Thereafter, defendant moved to withdraw his guilty pleas, claiming that he had been inade-
the enhancement provisions of the Habitual Offender Act,
MCL 769.11 ; MSA 28.1083, [may] be combined with the enhancement provisions of§ 625(6) of the Motor Vehicle Code to generate a maximum possible punishment of 7 1/2 years imprisonment.8
Thereafter, a divided Court of Appeals panel affirmed defendant‘s felony OUIL-3 conviction, but vacated the habitual offender conviction. 181 Mich App 430; 450 NW2d 271 (1989). Relying on People v Tucker, 177 Mich App 174; 441 NW2d 59 (1989), the majority reasoned that the specific sentencing scheme applicable to OUIL offenses under the Motor Vehicle Code “prevails to the exclusion of the general habitual-offender statute.” 181 Mich App 433.
The prosecutor applied to this Court, and we granted leave to appeal. 435 Mich 867 (1990).
B. PEOPLE V JOHNSON
Valentine Johnson was charged with the felony offensе of OUIL-3,
In this case, defendant sought to avoid felony treatment of the current OUIL charge by moving to suppress evidence of all three prior convictions on the ground that the plea-taking in each case had been subject to procedural defects.11 The circuit court granted defendant‘s motion with respect to the 1978 conviction and the 1985 conviction, and remanded the case to the district court for trial of the current OUIL charge as a misdemeanor.
The prosecutor then sought an interlocutory appeal,12 challenging only the circuit court‘s suppression ruling with respect to the 1985 conviction.13 The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
Defendant then appealed to this Court.16 In granting leave to appeal, we let stand the Court of Appeals rulings regarding defendant‘s collateral attacks on his prior convictions, and limited our focus to the relationship and applicability of the habitual offender act to OUIL felony offenses.17 435 Mich 880 (1990).
II
It is a crime under the Motor Vehicle Code for any person (1) whose blood contains an unlawful (0.10 percent or more) blood alcohol level, or (2) who is under the influence of intoxicating liquor or a controlled substance, to operate a motor vehicle upon a highway.
Upon a first conviction, the crime is treated as a misdemeanor, and the violator may be imprisoned for not more than ninety days or fined up to $500, or both. Upon a second conviction within a seven-year period, also a misdemeanor, the maximum prison sentence escalates to one year and the fine to $1,000.19
However, one who is convicted of OUIL within ten years of two or more prior OUIL convictions, “is guilty of a felony,”20 punishable under the Motor Vehicle Code by imprisonment for not less than one or more than five years, or by a fine of not less than $500 or more than $5,000, or both.21
While the Motor Vehicle Code declares that the third, and each subsequent OUIL offense within a
Against that background, we turn to consider the relationship and applicability of the habitual offender act to OUIL felony offenses.
III
That part of the habitual offender act applicable to second felony offenders provides in pertinent part:
(1) If a person has been convicted of a felony, . . . and that person commits a subsequent felony within this state, the person shall be punished . . . as follows:
(a) If the subsequent felony is punishable upon a first conviction by imprisonment for a term less than life, then the court . . . may . . . sentence the person to imprisonment for a maximum term which is not more than 1 1/2 times the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense or for a lesser term.
* * *
(c) If the subsequent felony is a major controlled
It is noteworthy that while the habitual offender act provides that the court “shall” punish a second felony offender in accordance with the statute, the Legislature provided that the court “may” sentence such а second offender to a maximum term of up to one and one-half times the maximum term prescribed for a first conviction, “or for a lesser term.” Since the language is permissive, not mandatory, it fixes only the upper boundaries of the court‘s sentencing discretion. People v Coffee, 151 Mich App 364, 372; 390 NW2d 721 (1986), People v Voss, 133 Mich App 73; 348 NW2d 37 (1984). As Justice LEVIN observed in People v Hendrick, 398 Mich 410, 424; 247 NW2d 840 (1976), “the judge [is not] obliged, if the accused is convicted as an habitual offender, to impose enhanced punishment.”
We note also that these appeals do not challenge the validity of the statutes in question.23 The constitutionality of the habitual offender act has been upheld in a series of decisions, beginning with People v Palm, 245 Mich 396; 223 NW 67 (1929). See also In re Pardee, 327 Mich 13; 41 NW2d 466 (1950) (double jeopardy); People v Birmingham, 13 Mich App 402; 164 NW2d 561 (1968) (due process and equal protection); People v Potts, 55 Mich App 622; 223 NW2d 96 (1974) (cruel and unusual punishment).
As noted in Preuss, “[t]he commission‘s report reflects the goal of punishing repeat offenders harshly” and the overall purpose of making it “tougher for criminals to avoid apprehension, conviction, and adequate punishment . . . .” Id., p 724. Since the Legislature adopted the commission‘s proposals without change, the Preuss Court reasoned that the Legislature shared the views of the commission. Id., p 725.
Further, this Court has repeatedly stated that, by enacting the habitual offender act, “the legislature did not intend to make a separate substantive crime out of being an habitual criminal but rather, for deterrent purposes, intended to augment the punishment for second or subsequent felonies.” People v Shotwell, 352 Mich 42, 46; 88 NW2d 313 (1958), as quoted in People v Hendrick, supra at 416-417. We said in Palm, supra, p 401, that “‘in determining the amount or nature of the penalty to be inflicted, the legislature may require the courts to take into consideration the persistence of the defendant in his criminal course.‘” To that end, the habitual offender act “provides a procеdure after conviction for the determination of
While the habitual offender act, which is found in the Code of Criminal Procedure, establishes a procedure for enhancing a sentence, it is clear that the OUIL provisions of the Motor Vehicle Code establish crimes. Because OUIL-3 is a separate crime, the prosecutor must prove all elements of the offense, including the prior convictions. People v Raisanen, 114 Mich App 840, 846; 319 NW2d 693 (1982).
In determining whether the Legislature intended to allow sentence enhancement of OUIL felonies through application of the habitual offender statute, we are guided, of course, by the rules of statutory construction. It is fundamental that an unambiguous statute is to be given effect, although departure may be justified when a literal construction “‘would produce an absurd and unjust result and would be clearly inconsistent with the purposes and the policies of the act in question.‘” Gobler v Auto-Owners Ins Co, 428 Mich 51, 62; 404 NW2d 199 (1987), quoting Salas v Clements, 399 Mich 103, 109; 247 NW2d 889 (1976). Statutes which may appear to conflict are to be read together and reconciled, if possible. Detroit Police Officers Ass‘n v Detroit, 391 Mich 44, 65; 214 NW2d 803 (1974); People v Buckley, 302 Mich 12, 22; 4 NW2d 448 (1942). However, where two statutes actually conflict, both cannot stand as the law. Winter v Royal Oak City Manager, 317 Mich 259, 265; 26 NW2d 893 (1947); Bd of Ed v Blondell, 251 Mich 528, 531; 232 NW 375 (1930).
In the habitual offender act, the Legislature has directed that when an individual commits “a subsequent felony within this state, the person shall
In the Court of Appeals, the Bewersdorf majority, relying on People v Tucker, supra, ruled that the habitual offender act may not be used to enhance defendant‘s sentence for OUIL-3. Although the panel in Tucker conceded that an application of the plain meaning of the habitual offender act would mean that “enhancement is clearly available . . . since the habitual offender statute clearly applies to all felonies,” 177 Mich App 179, it nevertheless chose to analyze the OUIL statute and habitual offender act so as to place them in conflict. Finding that the two enactments “appear” to conflict, id., the panel ruled that the OUIL sentencing provisions controlled over the mоre general sentence enhancement provisions in the habitual offender act.
We reject the Tucker panel‘s forced construction that placed the two statutes in conflict. We prefer a course which, in the words of the dissenting Bewersdorf Court of Appeals judge, enables the two acts to “dovetail harmoniously.”25
We read the two statutes so as to give effect to
Our conclusion that the Legislature intended that the habitual offender act apply to OUIL felonies, even though the underlying felony is itself an OUIL offense, is supported by 1978 PA 77,27 which amended the habitual offender statute to exempt from its application certain major controlled substance offenses cоntrolled by other provisions of law.28 See People v Elmore, 94 Mich App 304, 306,
Obviously, the Legislature has demonstrated that when it intends to do so, it is capable of excluding a particular category of felonies from the sentence enhancement provisions of the habitual offender act. That the Legislature has not seen fit to write in a similar exception for OUIL convictions, although it has had numerous opportunities to do so, provides reinforcement, we believe, for our finding that the Legislature intended the habitual offender statute to apply to OUIL felonies.
IV
We turn now to consider defendant Johnson‘s argument that his 1981 misdemeanor OUIL conviction cannot be used to elevate to felony status both his 1985 UBAL conviction and the current OUIL-3 charge.29 Defendant claims that permitting his 1981 conviction to be used in such a manner amounts to “double enhancement” and places him in “multiple jeopardy.”
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution,30 as well as the similar provision in the Michigan Constitution,31 protect against successive prosecutions for the sаme offense, and against multiple punishment for the same offense. People v Sturgis, 427 Mich 392, 400; 397 NW2d 783 (1986). As explained in People v Wakeford, 418 Mich 95; 341 NW2d 68 (1983), the second protec-
The language of the statute is the best source for determining legislative intent. Kalamazoo Ed Ass‘n v Kalamazoo Schools, 406 Mich 579; 281 NW2d 454 (1979); Espinoza v Bowerman-Halifax Funeral Home, 121 Mich App 432; 328 NW2d 657 (1982); People v Dunn, 104 Mich App 419; 304 NW2d 856 (1981). We find nothing in the language of the OUIL statute to indicate that the Legislature intended that a single misdemeanor OUIL conviction could be used only to enhance to felony status one subsequent OUIL offense; instead, the statute provides that a person who commits an OUIL offense within ten years of two “or more” prior OUIL convictions “is guilty of a felony.”
In light of our earlier analysis, and after considering again the purpose and wording of both the OUIL provisions and the habitual offender act, we conclude that the “double enhancement” of which defendant complains was intended by the Legislature. Moreover, we are convinced that such a construction gives effect to the Legislature‘s purpose, i.e., to authorize punishment on an escalating basis and to remove from the roads recidivist drunken drivers who pose a serious danger to the lives of many others.
V
Accordingly, we affirm in part32 and reverse in part the decision of the Court of Appeals in People v Bewersdorf. In People v Johnson, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand the
BRICKLEY, BOYLE, RILEY, and MALLETT, JJ., concurred with GRIFFIN, J.
At the outset, I think it clear that Johnson‘s collateral challenge to the felony status of the 1985 conviction is perfectly cognizable under the principles of Baldasar v Illinois, 446 U.S. 222; 100 S Ct 1585; 64 L Ed 2d 169 (1980), and People v Crawford, 417 Mich 607; 339 NW2d 630 (1983).2 While the challenge might, in a certain sense, be described as “twice-removed,” since Johnson is indirectly challenging the validity of the 1978 conviction by way of its effect on the felony status of the 1985 conviction, I do not believe this has any bearing on the relevant controlling principles.3 The people have nоt contested the propriety of Johnson‘s collateral challenge to the 1978 conviction as such; indeed, his challenge succeeded on the merits in that regard, and the people have acquiesced in that result. Nor have the people contested the propriety (as opposed to the merits) of Johnson‘s challenges to the 1981 conviction as such and to the inherent procedural validity (even as a misdemeanor) of the 1985 conviction, although Johnson has not, of course, prevailed on the merits with regard to the latter two challenges.
Given all this, it would seem odd if Johnson were deemed legally incapable of challenging the improper effect of the invalid 1978 conviction on the felony status (as opposed to the inherent pro-
The Court does not address this issue; rather, it simply notes the limited scope of our grant of leave to appeal in this case, which did not encompass “[Johnson‘s] collateral attacks on his prior convictions.” Ante, p 63; see also 435 Mich 880 (1990) (order granting leave to appeal in Johnson).4 This is understandable, and I cannot fault the Court for its strict adherence to our grant order. I note, however, that we “may, at any time, in addition to [our] general powers: . . . permit the reasons or grounds of appeal to be amended or new grounds to be added. . . .” MCR 7.316(A)(3). I would exercise this power in this case, for at least two reasons. First, as the foregoing discussion illustrates, Johnson‘s claim involves rather convoluted historical and procedural complexities, and the nature and merits of the claim were not fully apparent to me when the limited grant order was entered. Second, and most important, it would be a grave injustice to this particular defendant to subject him to habitual felony offender liability when, in fact, he has nо valid prior felony. John-
For the foregoing reasons, I would reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals in People v Johnson insofar as it reinstates the habitual felony offender charge.5
LEVIN, J., concurred with CAVANAGH, C.J.
Before the 1958 amendment, the Motor Vehicle Code provided that “[o]n a second or subsequent conviction,” including, therefore, a third, fourth, or still another conviction, of driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor, the offender was guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than one year.2
The majority states, “it is reasonable to assume that when [in 1958] the Legislature drafted the
It appears that the first effort by a prosecutor to further escalate the penalty for OUIL-3 is reflected in People v Tucker, 177 Mich App 174; 441 NW2d 59 (1989). The Court of Appeals there held that the habitual offender provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure4 could not be invoked to further enhance the penalty for OUIL-3. I agree with that conclusion, and dissent from today‘s decision.
Tucker had pled guilty to OUIL-35 and to being an habitual offender, fourth offense.6 “The prior felonies were procurement of a controlled substance and two convictions for larceny in a building.”7
Before Tucker was decided, this Court had ruled that a person who had stolen a shirt, slacks, or pants from a department store valued at under $1008 could be charged with having committed either the felony of larceny in a building, or the misdemeanor of larceny under $100, as the prosecutor determined in the exercise of discretion.9 People v Ford, 417 Mich 66; 331 NW2d 878 (1982).
Those decisions, in combination with today‘s decision, mean that if a person has been thrice convicted of larcenies in buildings arising out of separate shoplifting offenses, then, upon conviction of OUIL-3, the court would be empowered to sentence him to life in prison as if he had been convicted of a capital offense.
The majority recognizes that a departure from the literal meaning of statutes may be justified when a literal construction “‘would produce an absurd and unjust result and would be clearly inconsistent with the purposes and the policies of the act in question.‘”10 This is a case where a departure from a literal construction is justified to avoid producing an absurd and unjust result, and where a literal construction would not be cоnsistent with the purpose and policy of the drunk-driving provision of the Motor Vehicle Code.
The purpose and policy of the drunk-driving provision is to punish drunk drivers. Neither Tucker nor Bewersdorf, by reason of their prior records of conviction for felonies other than drunk driving, represented greater menaces to users of the highway than other persons convicted of OUIL-3 for the first time. Johnson did, indeed, have three prior drunk-driving convictions and, there being no OUIL-4, could only be charged with OUIL-3. The majority argues that not to permit a prosecutor to charge as an habitual offender a person with four
It is debatable which result is more absurd, subjecting a person convicted of OUIL-3 to life imprisonment because he has been convicted three times of larceny in a building for separate incidents of shoplifting, or limiting the sentence that may be imposed on a second conviction of OUIL-3 to a maximum sentence of five years in prison rather than empowering the judge to impose a maximum sentence of 7 1/2 years, as may be done under today‘s decision if the offender is convicted of OUIL-3 charged as a second habitual offense,12 or ten years if charged and convicted as a third habitual offense,13 or life or a lesser term if charged and convicted as a fourth habitual offense.14
For over twenty-five years, prosecutors throughout the state, aware that the maximum penalty for a second or subsequent OUIL-3 offense was five years, apparently thought it was beyond the policy of the Motor Vehicle Code to seek to enhance the penalty for OUIL-3 under the habitual offender provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure.15
As the majority observes, a sentencing judge is
The sentence imposed on Bewersdorf may be typical in that the maximum sentence actually imposed for a first or possibly even a second OUIL-3 conviction will generally not be greater than might be imposed on a first conviction of OUIL-3 not charged as an habitual offense. The prosecutor, nevertheless, seeks the authority to charge OUIL-3 offenders as habitual offenders when they have a record of prior felony conviction, without regard to whether the prior felony is for OUIL-3 or is unrelated to drunk driving, and thereby to provide the judge with greater sentencing power. It is the threat of the exercise of such enlarged sentencing power that makes unjust the literal construction adopted by the majority.
A person charged with OUIL-3 as an habitual offense may, depending on the perceived sentencing climate in the court whеre he is charged, be constrained to plead guilty and thereby relieve the prosecutor of the burden and risk of proving the
Today‘s decision would be less troubling if this Court had empowered, or were to empower and encourage, the appellate judiciary to rectify abuse in the exercise of charging or sentencing discretion.
Notes
As originally enacted in 1949, the Motor Vehicle Code provided that unless a different penalty is expressly provided, a person convicted of a felony shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than 1 year nor more than 5 years, or by a fine of not less than $500 nor more than $5,000, or by both such fine and imprisonment. 1949 PA 300,
The 1978 amendment was enacted to prevent a bypassing of the mandatory minimum sentences for major controlled substances that might result, were a predicate major substance offense charged as an habitual offense, because imposition of a greater sentence is not mandatory under the habitual offender provisions.
The argument that the Legislature has not seen fit to enact a similar exception for an OUIL-3 conviction ignores that, until a year or so before People v Tucker was decided in 1989, it had not been suggested in any reported decision that the act might be read as the Court reads it today.
(1) whether a third or subsequent conviction for violating
Any person who is convicted of a violation of any of the provisions of this act declared to constitute a felony, unless a different penalty is expressly provided herein, shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than 1 year nor more than 5 years, or by a fine of not less than $500.00 nor more than $5,000.00, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
Unlike the felony-firearm statute . . . where application of both the enhancement provisions contained within [it] as well as the general habitual-offender statute would produce ever escalating and conflicting results, the general habitual-offender statute dovetails harmoniously with the retail-fraud statute. That is, the internal provisions of the retail-fraud statute can raise an offense from a misdemeanor to a felony, but do not enhanсe the sentence once a defendant is at the level of a felony offense. At this point, the general habitual-offender statute can be applied where the offender has prior felony convictions.
If the subsequent felony is a major controlled substance offense, the person shall be punished as provided by Act No. 196 of the Public Acts of 1971, as amended. [
MCL 769.11(1)(c) ; MSA 28.1083(1)(c).]
1971 PA 196 is the Controlled Substances Act,
Defendant also argued below that the trial court erred by imposing sentence without first requiring that defendant be screened and assessed to determine whether he would benefit from rehabilitative services. See
