The “felony-murder” rule in Michigan is found at CL 1948, § 750.316 (Stat Ann 1954 § 28.548). It reads as follows:
“All murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison, or lying in wait, or any other kind of wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery or burglary, shall be murder of the first degree, and shall be punished by solitary confinement at hard labor in the state prison for life.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The rule supports a conviction of first degree murder against an accomplice of the murderer, if the accomplice entered into the felony with the contemplation, actual or implied, that resistance from citizens or police officers could be expected. See
People
v.
Podolski
(1952),
*440
Defendant was convicted of first-degree murder by a patent application of the felony-murder rule to bim as an accomplice as the result of the fatal shooting of a police officer by his partner when the 2 men were attempting to escape from a bank in Benton Harbor where they had just committed a robbery. The murder took place inside the bank. However, defendant urges this Court to accept the claimed fact that the felons had discussed the matter of shooting while planning to rob the bank and that they had agreed not to injure anyone, thus negating any intent on the part of the defendant to participate in bloodshed. The theory advanced is that the act of the murderer was separate and independent of any action by the defendant. It is also alleged that the statute does not apply to defendant for the robbery was not being perpetrated, being fully “consummated” prior to any shooting. We are not concerned here with defendant’s plea of lack of intent to murder. If he intends to commit a robbery, and clearly contemplates a violent reaction by him to any resistance by a victim, then the rule will apply to him if a murder occurs at the hands of his accomplice. See
People
v.
Podolski, supra; People
v.
Utter
(1921),
*441 Defendant, by bis own admission, was guilty of the crime of robbery, and since the defendant and his partner were still in the bank it cannot be said that the entire contemplated robbery, which would include escape, was as yet carried through. ■
Affirmed.
Notes
The defendant bank robber was convicted of first-degree murder when a police officer accidentally was killed by the bullet of another officer, since the defendant, by engaging in a dangerous felony with a dangerous weapon, contemplated resistance. Also, see
People
v.
Austin
(1963;,
