Opinion
Docket No. 117790.
Decided February 5, 1990. Leave to appeal applied for.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Louis J. Caruso, Solicitor General, Robert E. Weiss, Prosecuting Attorney, Donald A. Kuebler, Chief, Appellate Division, and G.L. Christopher, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for the people.
Richard J. Drew, for defendant.
Defendant pled guilty to second-degree murder, MCL 750.317; MSA 28.549, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b; MSA 28.424(2), and habitual offender, second conviction, MCL 769.10; MSA 28.1082. The court sentenced defendant to fifty to eighty years, plus two years for felony-firearm. Defendant was thirty-nine years old at the time of his sentencing.
Defendant argues that he must be resentenced because his fifty-year minimum sentence effectively sentences him to life in prison without parole. We agree.
A sentence imposed for a term of years must be an indeterminate sentence less than life which is reasonably possible for the defendant to actually serve. People v Moore, 432 Mich. 311, 329; 439 N.W.2d 684 (1989). Thus the sentencing court must fashion a sentence that the defendant has a reasonable prospect of actually serving. Id.
Currently there is a dispute in this Court regarding the length of a minimum sentence which a defendant would have a reasonable prospect of actually serving. In People v Holland, 179 Mich. App. 184, 197; 445 N.W.2d 206 (1989), a panel upheld a sixty-year minimum sentence for a twenty-three-year-old defendant, reasoning that he could possibly live beyond the age of eighty-three. In People v Rushlow, 179 Mich. App. 172, 179-181; 445 N.W.2d 222 (1989), a panel upheld a seventy-five year minimum sentence for a twenty-six-year-old defendant on the grounds that he could possibly be paroled alive at age eighty-seven if one took into account all possible disciplinary credits. However, in People v Hopson, 178 Mich. App. 406, 413; 444 N.W.2d 167 (1989), the panel held that a fifty-year minimum sentence for a forty-seven-year-old defendant was prohibited under the Moore rule as it was obviously imposed with the intent of keeping the defendant in prison for life without parole.
We reject the approaches of Rushlow and Holland as unrealistic. Although it is possible for a man (or woman) to live well into the eighties and nineties, it is not likely that he will. A convicted defendant in his late thirties does not logically have a reasonable prospect of surviving a prison sentence into his late eighties or early nineties. Nor is it permissible to consider the effect of disciplinary credits when determining the proper length of a minimum sentence. People v Fleming, 428 Mich. 408, 425; 410 N.W.2d 266 (1987). Defendant, at thirty-nine years of age, did not have a reasonable prospect of actually serving his fifty- to eighty-year sentence. The effect of this sentence was to keep defendant in prison for life without parole. Resentencing is required under Moore.
"For man also knoweth not his time." Ecclesiastes 9:12.
See, e.g., MCL 500.834; MSA 24.1834.
Remanded for resentencing in accordance with People v Moore, supra.