Plaintiff appeals as of right the order dismissing the charge against defendant on the basis of improper venue. We affirm.
Defendant was charged in Grand Traverse County with one сount of larceny of $1,000 or more, but less than $20,000, by false pretenses, MCL 750.218(4)(a). 1 According to the felony complaint, in February 2000 defendant, falsely identifying himself as James Hardy, appliеd for and received a loan in the amount of $5,200 from Beneficial Consumer Finance (Household Bank) in Wayne County. James Hardy is a resident of Grand Traverse County. The complaint identified Grand Traverse County as the location where the offense occurred.
Defendant moved to dismiss the charge on the ground that venue was improper in Grаnd Traverse County because all the acts in perpetration of the offense occurred in Wayne County. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss, finding no evidence that any act done in perpetration of the offense occurred in Grand Traverse County. The trial court reasoned that defendant applied for the loan and received the money in Wayne County and that the only possible connection of the offense to Grand Traverse County was the possibility that defendant received thе information to *533 carry out the offense from an application that James Hardy submitted to a lender in Grand Traverse County. However, it is undisputed that no evidence was рresented to establish the means by which defendant received James Hardy’s personal identity information and the prosecutor conceded that he did not “have рroof of the Defendant committing some act that has some direct nexus to Grand Traverse County.”
“A trial court’s determination regarding the existence of venue in a criminal prosecution is reviewed de novo.”
People v Fisher,
“Venue rules traditionally have served to ensure that proceedings are held in the most convenient forum.”
Gross v Gen Motors Corp,
Whenever a felony consists or is the culmination of two or more acts done in the perpetration thereof, the felony may be prosecuted in any county in which any one of the acts was committed. MCL 762.8. Plaintiff argues that under MCL 762.8, venue is proper in Grand *534 Traverse County because this statute permits venue in the county where there are “effects” of the acts committed in perpetration of the felony. Plaintiff contends that James Hardy suffered the effeсts of having his personal identity information stolen in Grand Traverse County.
“Where .. . venue is established by statute, this Court’s primary objective is to effectuate legislative intent without harming thе plain wording of the act.”
Keuhn v Michigan State Police,
Fisher
and
People v Flaherty,
In Flaherty, the defendant was charged with the offense of larceny by false pretenses. The defendant’s insurance agency was located in Macomb County, and he was tried in St. Clair County. The defendant had allegedly defrauded a general insurance agency, having accepted money from it for an insurance policy that was never issued. Flaherty, supra at 118-119. This Court noted that evidence was presented that the larceny was accomplished through mail and telephone communications that moved across county boundaries, and that some of these acts had their effects in St. Clair County, including the general agency’s authorization оf an *536 invoice and placing of payment to the defendant in the mail. This Court stated, “The effective false representation occurred in St. Clair County.” Id. at 119.
The reasoning in Fisher and Flaherty does not comport with the plain language of MCL 762.8. Nonetheless, those cases are factually distinguishable. In Fisher, the obstruction charge required proof that defendant intended to hinder the due course of justice in the case pending in Wayne County and the defendant’s act of inciting perjury was intended to have an effect on the proceedings in Wayne County. In Flaherty, the larceny offense was accomplished through mail and telephone communications that moved across county boundaries. Although the defendant was рhysically present in Ma-comb County, the false representation occurred in St. Clair County. In both cases, the defendants’ acts had effects elsewhere that were еssential to the offenses charged. In contrast, defendant’s use of Hardy’s personal identity information is not an act that had effects essential to the offense of larceny by false pretenses. 2 Even accepting as true plaintiffs allegation that James Hardy suffered tangential effects in Grand Traverse County as a result of defendаnt’s use of Hardy’s personal identity information, 3 those alleged effects are not essential to the charged offense.
Affirmed.
Notes
“The crime of larceny by false pretensеs requires (1) a false representation as to an existing fact, (2) knowledge by the defendant of the falsity of the representation, (3) use of the false representatiоn with an intent to deceive, and (4) detrimental rebanee by the victim on the false representation.”
People v Flaherty,
Importantly, this case does not involve the offense of obtaining аnother person’s identity information with intent to unlawfully use the information. MCL 750.285. That statute did not become effective until April 1, 2001.
There is no actual evidence that any particular effects of defendant’s conduct were felt by Hardy in Grand Traverse County.
