Defendant was convicted following a bench trial of using a vehicle without authority but without intent to steal, MCL 750.414; MSA 28.646. He was sentenced to two years probation and appeals as of right.
Defendant was originally charged with taking possession of and driving away a motor vehicle, MCL 750.413; MSA 28.645, a felony offense. The trial court issued an opinion finding defendant not guilty of the principal charge, concluding that defendant’s intoxicated state negated the requisite specific intent. Defendant was, however, found guilty of using a vehicle without authority.
Defendant moved for a new trial, contending that the trial court’s findings on the issue of *455 intoxication should have defeated the intent required to support the misdemeanor, MCL 750.414; MSA 28.646. The court subsequently issued an opinion denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. It held that while both the felony and misdemeanor were specific intent crimes, defendant’s level of intoxication sufficed to negate only the intent element of the felony charge.
We affirm defendant’s conviction for the reason that using a vehicle without authority is a general intent crime, and voluntary intoxication is thus not available as a defense.
Although uncertainty clouds the relationship between intoxication and criminal culpability, it is well established in Michigan that voluntary intoxication constitutes a defense to specific intent crimes.
People v Guillet,
MCL 750.414; MSA 28.646 provides in relevant part:
"Any person who takes or uses without authority any motor vehicle without intent to steal the same, or who shall be a party to 'such unauthorized taking or using, shall upon conviction thereof be guilty of a misdemeanor.”
To be convicted of this offense, a defendant must have intended to take or use the vehicle, knowing that he had no authority to do so.
People v Crosby,
*456
Defendant relies in part upon
People v Lerma,
We hold that using a vehicle without authority, MCL 750.414; MSA 28.646, is not a specific intent crime. The suggestion in CJI 24:2:01 that a specific intent instruction must be given is not to be followed.
Affirmed._
Notes
The use of the word "knowledge”, or a form thereof, in a criminal statute will in some cases denote a specific intent,
People v American Medical Centers of Michigan, Ltd,
