People v. Johnson
Decision Date | 07 April 1975 |
Docket Number | No. 5,5 |
Citation | 393 Mich. 488,227 N.W.2d 523 |
Parties | PEOPLE of the State of Michigan, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Elwood JOHNSON, Defendant-Appellant. |
Court | Michigan Supreme Court |
Daniel R. Connell, Chief App. Atty., Saginaw, for plaintiff-appellee.
State App. Defender Office by Marc L. Goldman, Asst. Defender, Detroit, Martin Tieber, Researcher, for defendant-appellant.
Before the Entire Bench.
This opinion indicates that trial court discretion is abused in permitting prosecutorial cross-examination and argument tending to show (1) that a jury may consider defendant's poverty and unemployment in deciding whether or not he is guilty of carrying a concealed weapon (CCW) and (2) that defendant because of his poverty and unemployment was about to employ three loaded weapons in the car occupied by him to commit a crime of violence, when the only crime charged was CCW.
While defendant in the instant case raises a number of other allegations of error in this appeal, it is only these issues which spur our decision today. We express no opinion on other issues raised by the parties not necessary to our decision.
The Court of Appeals is reversed. This cause is remanded for new trial or other proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
On October 10, 1971, at dusk, Officer Logan Tisdale of the Michigan State Police, in the course of his patrol duties, observed a 1965 Pontiac with one inoperative taillight proceeding westbound on M--81 in Saginaw, Michigan. Trooper Tisdale turned his patrol car around, gave chase, and quickly stopped the offending vehicle. As the Trooper approached the car after the stop, he noticed a TV set resting on the back seat.
While in the process of checking the driver's license and car registration, the beam of the Trooper's flashlight fell upon a pistol partially hidden behind defendant Johnson's left foot. Johnson was sitting in the passenger seat of the Pontiac. Thereupon, defendant and the driver, Leroy Reed, were ordered out of the car at gunpoint, arrested, frisked, handcuffed to one another and placed in the rear of the patrol car. While accomplishing this task, Trooper Tisdale confiscated the weapon, a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson top-break, he had observed behind defendant's foot.
The Trooper then radioed for assistance and for a wrecker. When a second State Police car arrived, the arresting trooper returned to the stopped automobile to remove the television set. In accomplishing that endeavor, Trooper Tisdale discovered under the front seat of the Pontiac two additional weapons, a .32-caliber automatic and a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson side-break snubnosed revolver. Both of these pistols were eventually confiscated.
Defendant was charged with the crime of carrying a concealed weapon. M.C.L.A. § 750.227; M.S.A. § 28.424. A pre-trial motion to suppress the weapons was denied by the trial court (22a--25a).
At trial, only two witnesses were called to the witness stand: Trooper Tisdale and defendant Johnson. The prosecutor's cross-examination of defendant concentrated nearly exclusively 1 on defendant's background and alleged predisposition to criminal activity. The cross-examination included reference to:
His employment and education record (36a--38a):
'Q. Where were you working on the tenth of October?
'A. I wasn't working.
'Q. Where are you working today?
'A. I am not working.
'Q. How long has it been since you held a job?
'MR. WEBBER (Con't)
'Q. When is the last time you have worked, Mr. Johnson?
'A. I did some work with my cousin.
'Q. You did what?
'A. Odd jobs with my cousin.
'Q. When was that?
'A. That was a couple of months, about three months ago the last time.
'Q. Well, let me ask you this, how far did you go in school?
'A. I graduated.
'Q. Graduated from high school?
'A. Yes.
'Q. Did you get a job upon graduating or going into the military or what?
'A. I got a job before I graduated.
'Q. Where were you working?
'A. At the Chevrolet garage.
'Q. How long did you work there?
'A. Seven years.
'Q. I can't hear you, sir.
'A. Seven years.
'Q. And why did you terminate that employment?
'A. Because of my health.
'Q. What was wrong with your health?
'A. My lungs.
'Q. Were you fired from your job?
'A. No, not really.
'Q. Did you quit voluntarily?
'A. I was off sick, yes.
'Q. You failed to report for work?
'A. Yes, you can say that.
'Q. Did you hold any other jobs since then, Mr. Johnson?
His marital status, means for supporting his children, and financial history (38a):
'Q. . . . How do you support yourself?
'A. How do I support myself?
'Q. Are you married?
'A. Yes.
'Q. Are you living with your wife?
'A. No.
'Q. Are you paying any child support on your children?
'A. Yes.
'Q. How many?
'A. Two.
'Q. Tell us how you support yourself?
His past conviction for uttering and publishing and present probationary status (39a):
'Q. Now, back in July of '70 you were convicted of uttering and publishing, is that correct?
'A. Yes.
'Q. You're on probation today for that offense, are you not?
Defense counsel had earlier raised the matter of the uttering and publishing conviction of direct examination but had not touched upon defendant's current probationary status. 2
The prosecutor continued his focus on defendant in his closing argument, where he argued, Inter alia:
(Emphasis added.)
Defendant was jury convicted of carrying a concealed weapon and was sentenced to a term of 2 1/2 to 5 years in prison. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 48 Mich.App. 50, 209 N.W.2d 868 (1973). We granted leave to appeal on January 28,
AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN DETERMINING CCW
In the prosecutor's argument quoted above, the prosecutor said in effect:
'. . . (Y)ou can consider when you decide whether or not this Defendant committed this particular violation (CCW) . . . (that he is) a man with two cents in his pocket and he hasn't worked for a long time. . . .'
Obviously neither poverty nor unemployment is an element of the crime of carrying a concealed weapon. Either a poor man or a rich man may be either guilty or innocent of carrying a concealed weapon. Likewise whether a man is employed or unemployed is no proof or partial proof of carrying a concealed weapon. Neither does defendant's poverty or unemployment affect his testimonial credibility in this case. In short, these things neither in law nor in logic are evidence of defendant's guilt or innocence or his tendency to lie or tell the truth. To assert otherwise is to argue a Non sequitur.
Consequently this argument and advice to the jury by the prosecutor is erroneous and patently prejudicial. 3 And in this connection so is the cross-examination leading up to this argument and advice.
DEFENDANT WAS EN ROUTE TO COMMITTING VIOLENT CRIME
The prosecutor's argument quoted above and the bulk of his cross-examination attempted to create in the minds of the jury the belief that defendant because of his poverty and unemployment plus the possession of three loaded weapons was en route to committing a robbery armed or some such crime. That this is what the prosecutor was about is clear on the face of the record and is reinforced by the following reaction of the trial judge, who noted in the sentencing proceedings:
'It looked as if you were on the way to commit another crime.' (43a)
We will not condone the prosecutorial effort to 'prove' commission of an uncharged, unrelated 'Crime X' in order to gain defendant's conviction of 'Crime Y.' This is far from a novel proposition in Michigan. 4 Eighty-five years ago, this Court held unequivocally:
'Whatever latitude is proper in cross-examination to test veracity, it cannot properly introduce independent issues, against the person who is both witness and respondent.' People v. Pinkerton, 79 Mich. 110, 114, 44 N.W. 180 (1889).
Likewise, the prosecutor may not allude to such proscribed issues in closing argument.
The passage of eighty-five years has not disturbed the validity of this maxim of evidentiary trial practice in the slightest. As recently as last year, we re-affirmed this proposition even where the witness is Not a criminal defendant. People v. Whalen, 390 Mich. 672, 683--687, 213 N.W.2d 116 (1973). See also: People v. Wright, 294 Mich. 20, 27--30, 292 N.W. 539 (1940), and citations contained therein; and 1 Gillespie, Michigan Criminal Law & Procedure, § 442, p. 548.
After scrupulous review of the record in this case, we find it undeniable that defendant's analysis of the courtroom atmosphere created by the prosecutor is correct:
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