Defendant was tried before a jury in Recorder’s Court on a charge of robbery armed and convicted.
At trial the complaining witness identified defendant as one of two men who robbed him at gunpoint. The arresting police officers testified that at the time of his arrest defendant had in his possession a loaded .32 caliber pistol, a number of checks identified as those stolen in the robbery, and a driver’s license belonging to the complaining witness. The defense was to the effect that defendant was not present when the robbery was committed.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence of 5 to 25 years. On leave granted defendant appeals here, raising many claims of error. Chief among the assignments of error is that the court did not charge the jury as to included offenses of “unarmed robbery”, “attempted robbery”, and “assault and battery”.
Defendant made no request at trial that the lesser included offenses be included in the charge.
The court instructed the jury that:
“There are only two possible verdicts as to each defendant. You may find the defendant, naming them individually, guilty of robbery armed or not guilty. There are no included offenses.”
In
People
v.
Jones
(1935),
“However, the rule does not excuse improper instructions. Here the court did more than fail to charge upon the included offenses. It affirmatively excluded them from the consideration of the jury. This was error because, under 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 17325, the jury was authorized to find the defendant guilty of a lesser offense * * * .” (The statutory section now is CL 1948, § 768.32 [Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1055]).
The court’s instruction in the instant case that the jury might find defendant either guilty of robbery armed or not guilty but that there were no included offenses comes directly within the interdiction of Jones and requires reversal with new trial.
