PEOPLE v TAYLOR
Docket No. 11853
Michigan Court of Appeals
February 20, 1973
Rehearing denied April 9, 1973
44 Mich. App. 640
Leave to appeal applied for.
Claims of instructional error are considered by an appellate court in the context of the jury charge read as a whole.
2. CRIMINAL LAW-EVIDENCE-INSTRUCTIONS TO JURY.
Instructing the jury that defendant had not chosen to present any evidence when, in fact, defendant had testified in his own behalf, did not constitute reversible error where the charge, apart from that error, was fair and accurate, the jurors were experienced and heard the defendant‘s testimony on the same morning that the charge was given, and the judge later stated that defendant had chosen to testify and that there was testimony that defendant‘s accomplice had snatched complainant‘s purse.
3. ROBBERY-AIDING AND ABETTING-INSTRUCTIONS TO JURY.
Instructing the jury that it could convict defendant if it found that he had aided and abetted his codefendant in the theft of complainant‘s purse did not deprive defendant, who did not object, of notice of the charge against him which he was required to defend himself, since the aiding and abetting statute expressly abolishes the distinction between principal and accessory, and provides that an accessory to the commission of an offense may be prosecuted, indicted, tried and, on conviction, shall be punished as if he had directly committed the offense (
4. CRIMINAL LAW-LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSES-AFFIRMATIVE EXCLUSION-INSTRUCTIONS TO JURY.
Instructing the jury that there was no evidentiary dispute, as
5. CRIMINAL LAW-TRIAL-PROSECUTOR‘S ARGUMENTS.
A prosecutor is not vouching for a defendant‘s guilt where he seeks to persuade the jury that the conclusion that defendant is guilty flows from the evidence.
6. CRIMINAL LAW-DEFENDANT TESTIFYING-SILENCE-IMPEACHMENT.
Cross-examination of a defendant as to whether he had been interrogated or had made a statement, shortly after his arrest, inconsistent with the exculpatory statement he made some 11 hours later, was not an attempt by the prosecutor to impeach defendant by showing his silence at the time of his arrest where defendant‘s exculpatory statement was introduced into evidence to corroborate his own testimony, the prosecutor was attempting to elicit from defendant a prior statement inconsistent with his trial testimony, and upon defendant‘s denying making any other statement, the point was not belabored, and where there is nothing in the record to indicate, nor is it claimed, that the prosecutor knew that no such statement had been made.
7. CRIMINAL LAW-SENTENCING-JUVENILE RECORD.
A defendant is not entitled to be resentenced because of the use of his juvenile record in the presentence report.
Appeal from Recorder‘s Court of Detroit, Geraldine Bledsoe Ford, J. Submitted Division 1 October 10, 1972, at Detroit. (Docket No. 11853.) Decided February 20, 1973. Leave to appeal applied for.
Roy Taylor was convicted of unarmed robbery. Defendant appeals. Affirmed.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Robert A. Derengoski, Solicitor General, William L. Cahalan, Prosecuting Attorney, Dominick R. Carnovale, Chief, Appellate Department, and Luvenia D.
David A. Goldstein, Assistant State Appellate Defender, for defendant.
Before: V. J. BRENNAN, P. J., and LEVIN and O‘HARA,* JJ.
LEVIN, J. The defendant, Roy Taylor, was convicted by a jury of unarmed robbery. We affirm.
Irene Ryan‘s purse was stolen in the early morning hours as she stood at a Detroit street corner awaiting a taxi. Two men approached her. When she refused to give up the purse, she was dragged into a nearby alley and the purse was torn from her grasp.
It is undisputed that the two men were defendant Taylor and his nephew, Moses Washington. Each of the men placed the entire blame for stealing the purse on the other. Irene Ryan, though unable to identify Taylor or Washington, said that the shorter and older of the two men had taken her purse. Taylor was shorter and older than Washington.
Taylor raises several issues concerning the charge to the jury. The first is whether the judge committed reversible error when she stated that Taylor had not chosen to present any evidence. That statement was incorrect; Taylor had in fact testified in his own behalf, and there had been introduced into evidence an exculpatory statement Taylor had given the police after his arrest.
The portion of the judge‘s charge complained of
* Former Supreme Court Justice, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment pursuant to
The charge, apart from this error, was fair and accurate. The error could have been quickly and simply remedied if the defendant‘s lawyer had noted the error and brought it to the judge‘s attention. The jurors were experienced and had heard Taylor‘s testimony on the same morning that the charge was given. Under the circumstances we do not believe that the judge misled the jury.2
Taylor also argues that the judge deprived him of notice of the charge against which he was required to defend himself when she charged the jurors that they could convict him if they found he had aided and abetted Washington in the theft. The distinction between principal and accessory has, however, been abolished by statute; the statute expressly provides that one who aids or abets
Taylor next raises a Lemmons issue.4 In her charge, the judge stated:
“And as counsel on both sides have said to you, there is no dispute, there is no evidentiary dispute, about the fact that the offense of robbery unarmed was committed. The critical issue here is as to whether Mr. Taylor, the defendant, was a part of that transaction.”
Taylor argues that the judge, by her statement, “affirmatively excluded” the jury from considering lesser included offenses, and that, under Lemmons, his conviction must be reversed.
Both lawyers had argued that the issue before the jury was whether the defendant Taylor was the man who stole the purse. Taylor‘s lawyer did not question the people‘s evidence establishing the commission by someone of an unarmed robbery. Further, Taylor might not have been entitled to an instruction on a lesser offense if such an instruction had been requested.5
While the practical effect of the judge‘s statement in this case may be no different than the practical effect of the Lemmons statement, we have declined to extend the Lemmons rule beyond the case where the judge says there are no in-
Taylor next urges that his conviction should be reversed because the prosecutor, in his argument to the jury, offered his opinion of Taylor‘s guilt. We have reviewed the argument, and are persuaded that the prosecutor was not himself vouching for Taylor‘s guilt, but rather he was seeking to persuade the jurors that the conclusion that Taylor was guilty flowed from the evidence.7
Taylor contends that it was reversible error for the prosecutor to seek to impeach Taylor by showing his silence at the time of his arrest. Taylor was arrested at about 1 a.m. He gave police an exculpatory statement some 11 hours later. The judge allowed Taylor to introduce this statement in evidence on the theory that it corroborated Taylor‘s testimony at trial.
The questioning of which Taylor complains was directed to the interval between the arrest and the giving of the statement. The prosecutor on cross-examination and again on re-cross-examination
We do not perceive the prosecutor‘s questions as attempts to use Taylor‘s silence as evidence of his guilt. We view them rather as attempts to elicit from Taylor a prior statement inconsistent with his testimony at trial. Cf. People v Graham, 386 Mich 452, 458 (1971). The point was not belabored. There is nothing on this record to indicate-nor indeed is it claimed-that the prosecutor knew that no such statement had been made.
Finally, Taylor contends that he should be resentenced because the presentence report which the judge had before her contained a reference to Taylor‘s juvenile record. This Court has divided on the propriety of the sentencing judge considering a defendant‘s juvenile record.9 It would serve no
Affirmed.
All concurred.
Rehearing denied April 9, 1973
ON APPLICATION FOR REHEARING
Defendant Taylor applies for a rehearing reiterating his claim that the prosecutor, in cross-examining Taylor at trial, sought improperly to bring out that Taylor had declined to make any statement to police immediately after he was arrested. In our original opinion above we said:
“We do not perceive the prosecutor‘s questions as attempts to use Taylor‘s silence as evidence of his guilt. We view them rather as attempts to elicit from Taylor a prior statement inconsistent with his testimony at trial. Cf. People v Graham, 386 Mich 452, 458 (1971). The point was not belabored. There is nothing on this record to indicate-nor indeed is it claimed-that the prosecutor knew that no such statement had been made.”
Taylor, on application for rehearing, for the first time raises the contention that the prosecutor was aware that no such inconsistent statement had been given before he questioned Taylor, and we are now directed to testimony of a police officer which supports this contention.
We have again reviewed the testimony in question. We remain unconvinced that the prosecutor sought by his questions to raise Taylor‘s silence in the face of his accusers as evidence against him. The prosecutor did not persist in his questions
When it affirmatively appears that a prosecutor has consciously and deliberately sought to introduce improper and prejudicial evidence against a defendant, reversal may indeed be required. See People v Robinson, 386 Mich 551, 563 (1972). Where the record does not clearly support such a conclusion, however, but is ambiguous, as is the record here, the defendant must establish his claim by, for example, a motion for new trial supplementing and clarifying the record. Cf. People v Jelks, 33 Mich App 425, 431 (1971). This Taylor has not sought to do. Instead he asks us to conclude from some fleeting questions and responses in an otherwise manifestly fair record that the prosecutor so overstepped the bounds of his office that we should order a new trial. We are of the opinion that these passing questions and responses, which could not reasonably have affected the jury‘s deliberations, do not justify a new trial.
Application for rehearing denied.
