PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v RANDALL LEE DOWDY, Defendant-Appellee.
SC: 138351; COA: 287689; Ingham CC: 08-000249-FH
Michigan Supreme Court
August 6, 2009
Marilyn Kelly, Chief Justice; Michael F. Cavanagh, Elizabeth A. Weaver, Maura D. Corrigan, Robert P. Young, Jr., Stephen J. Markman, Diane M. Hathaway, Justices
Order
On order of the Court, the application for leave to appeal the February 12, 2009 order of the Court of Appeals is considered and, pursuant to MCR 7.302(H)(1), in lieu of granting leave to appeal, we REMAND this case to the Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted.
KELLY, C.J. (concurring).
I concur in this Court‘s order remanding the case to the Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted because there is no published caselaw governing the unusual factual circumstances presented. Justice Young generously puts forth a blueprint showing how the Court of Appeals could decide the matter. But, I question whether the pertinent section of the Sex Offenders Registration Act1 (SORA) сan be applied to defendant given that he was unable to register a residence. A person cannot be criminally liable for failing to do an act that he or she is incapable of performing.2 Therefore, it appears that the circuit court may have properly dismissed the charges against defendant.
Defendant was convicted of crimes that required him to register and report under SORA. Upon his release from prison, he resided at the Volunteers of America (VOA) shelter in Lansing. He properly registered the VOA shelter address through the
Because defendant registered no other address, he was charged with four counts of violating SORA: (1) one count of failing to register (a felony),4 (2) two counts of failing to comply with reporting duties (a misdemeanor),5 and (3) one count of refusing or failing to pay a registration fee (a misdemeanor).6 The district court bound him over for trial as charged. The circuit court determined that it was impossible for defendant to comply with the SORA requirements and dismissed the charges. Because all four charges against defendant have a willfulness requirement, he cannot be guilty of any of them unless he acted willfully.
An individuаl required to be registered under this act shall notify the local law enforcement agency or sheriff‘s department having jurisdiction where his or her new residence or domicile is located or the department post of the individual‘s new residence or domicile within 10 days after the individual changes or vacates his or her residence, domicile, or place of work or education, including any change required to be reported under [
MCL 28.724(a) (emphasis added).]
The felony charge against defendant is premised on the fact that he failed to register a new residence. SORA defines residence as “that place at which a person habitually sleeps, keeps his or her personal effects, and has a regular place of lodging.”7 It does not appear that the defendant had a new residence to register once the VOA required him to leave the shelter. Underpasses and рark benches may be the places where defendant “habitually sleeps” but they hardly qualify as a “regular place of lodging” under the statute.
It seems unreasonable to interpret the statute to require that a homeless person register wherever his or her cardboard box happens to be set up for the night.8 City street corners fail to meet the statutory definition of residence. First, a defendant must habitually sleep somewhere for it to be a residence.9 For something to be habitual, it must be more than a random occurrence or event.10 Second, a place must be a regular place of lodging to qualify as a residence. Again, defendant does not have a regular place of lodging if he is nomadically moving around the city depending on the weather, availability of food, shelter, and other resources.
Moreover, SORA prohibits a defendant from registering an address that is not his or her true residence.11 A defendant cannot register a place as his or her residence unless that place qualifies as a residence under the act. Defendant in this case would have
A defendant should not be excused from SORA requirements for willfully avoiding the registration requirement by failing to establish a residence. However, a defendant cannot be held to violate the act where he cannot comply. Even if defendant in this case had registered “Greater Lansing Area” with the police, this would not satisfy the residency requirements of SORA. He simply had no residence to register. And nothing indicates that he failed to establish a residence, shuffling from park bench to highway to underpass to cardboard box, in an attempt to avoid the registration requirements of SORA.
Therefore, I believe that the circuit court may have correctly dismissed the charges against defendant because it was impossible for him to comply with SORA.
YOUNG, J. (concurring).
I concur in this Court‘s order remanding this case to the Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted. I write separately to express my belief that the circuit court erred in dismissing the various charges brought against defendant. Contrary to the expostulations of Chief Justice Kelly and Justice Hathaway, defendant was not charged with violating the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA)12 because he is homeless or lacks a permanent residence. Rather, the criminal charges lodged against defendant arе premised upon the fact that he made absolutely no effort to comply with the quarterly reporting requirements of the SORA for three years.
Defendant is a convicted sex offender who has been homeless since his release from prison in 2002. When defendant initially registered under SORA, he falsely provided the address of the soup kitchen where he ate meals but did not reside. Defendant last reported this address in 2003, and has not reported or updated his аddress since.13
Defendant was charged with one felony count and three misdemeanor counts relating to his failure to report in person to a local law enforcement agency on a quarterly basis, to update his residence information, and his failure to pay a reporting fee in violation of SORA. The district court bound defendant over for trial as charged. The circuit court dismissed the charges because it could not “see how a homeless person” “with no place to go” could “comply with the terms of the act.” The prosecution appealed to the Court of Appeals, which denied leave to appeal.
I believe that the circuit court erred in dismissing the charges against defendant.
Certainly, there was nothing preventing defendant from complying with the reporting requirements of
SORA requires a sex offender to provide proof of his residence or domicile, but does not identify any exclusive method of providing such proof. While defendant‘s homelessness may have provided unusual problems in proving his residence, the statute expressly contemplates atypical living arrangements, permitting the State Police to specify other satisfactory means of proving proof of domicile or residence.
An individual required to be registеred under this act shall maintain either a valid operator‘s or chauffeur‘s license issued under the Michigan
vehicle code . . . or an official state personal identification card . . . with the individual‘s current address. The license or card may be used as proof of domicile or residence under this section. In addition, the officer or authorized employee may require the individual to produce another document bearing his or her name and address, including, but not limited to, voter registration or a utility or other bill. The department may specify other satisfactory proof of domicile or residence. [Emphasis added.]
In the event that a sex offender reported to the local law enforcement agency and was truly unable to provide any of the statutorily enumerated documents to prove his residence or domicile, the duty would fall to the state police to devise some alternate verification method. Contrary to Justice Kelly‘s assertion, my interpretation of the statute does not “create[] a Catch-22 situation.” A defendant is required to report in person to the local police and notify the police of his residence or domicile, wherever that may be. The burden then shifts to the law enforcement agency and the state police to decide how to verify the defendant‘s whereаbouts for purposes of SORA.19 I see nothing in SORA that authorizes the state to penalize a defendant merely for being homeless; rather, the statute penalizes the defendant‘s failure to report his residence or domicile with law enforcement. Accordingly, I concur in this Court‘s order remanding this case to the Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted.
CORRIGAN, J. and MARKMAN, J., join the statement of YOUNG, J.
HATHAWAY, J. (dissenting).
I would deny leave to appeal because I believe that the prosecutor failed to present sufficient evidence to bind defendant over for trial on the charges. The prosecutor claims on appeal that the trial court erred in dismissing the charges against defendant. Specifically, defendant was charged with the following four counts related to his alleged failure to comply with the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA),
In order to sustain any of the counts, the prosecution must demonstrate that, during the period alleged in the information, defendant had a residence or domicile as defined by the statute. See
The entirety of the prosecutor‘s proofs consisted of allegations that defendant, a homeless person, registerеd his address as the Volunteers of America shelter upon being discharged from prison, then left the shelter in 2006 without registering or reporting a new address. It is not clear whether the prosecutor is alleging that defendant actually resided at the shelter during the relevant period or merely received services, such as food, at the shelter. Assuming that the prosecutor is alleging that defendant merely received services at the shelter and did not аctually “reside” there as defined by the statute, the prosecutor has failed to establish that defendant had a residence or domicile during the relevant period. If the prosecutor cannot demonstrate the existence of a residence or domicile, all four charges against defendant must be dismissed because each is premised on having a residence or domicile.21
Assuming that the prosecution is alleging that defendant resided at the shelter during the relevant period, and thus was required to register and periodically report that address, it presents insufficient evidence on the matter. The manager of the shelter testified at the preliminary examination that defendant received services at the shelter until November 2006, when he was asked to leave. For his part, defendant maintains that, since his release from prison, he has been homeless and wanders from place to place—such as abandoned buildings, parks, and shelters—every day or two. Although it might well be stated that defendant “stayed” at the shelter in question for a period, such a bare assertion does not establish a domicile or residence under the statute. The
In closing, I note that the purpose of SORA is wise. Consequently, I would urge the Legislature to follow the lead of many other states in formulating a provision with which a homeless person who does not have a domicile or residence could readily comply.
I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
August 6, 2009
Corbin R. Davis
Clerk
Notes
(3) . . . [A]n individual registered under this act who is not incarcerated shall report in person to the local law enforcement agency or sheriff‘s department having jurisdiction where he or she is domiciled or resides or to the department post in or nearest to the county where he or she is domiciled or resides. The individual shall present proof of domicile or residence and update any information that changed since registration, including information that is required to be reported under [
MCL 28.724a ]. An individual registered under this act who is incarcerated . . . shall report under this subsection not less than 10 days after he or she is released.(4) . . . [F]ollowing initial verification under subsection (3), . . . an individual required to be registered under this act who is not incarcerated shall report in person to the local law enforcement agency or sheriff‘s department having jurisdiction where he or she is domiciled or resides or to the department post in or nearest to the county where he or she is domiciled or resides for verification of domicile or residence as follows: [various regular reporting dates for sex offenders convicted of certain crimes.]
