Summary
In Morrison the Court held that as a matter of law the defendant's recitation of what he did did not amount to an admission of guilt to the crime charged, and negated his plea of guilty and under the circumstances it became the duty of the trial court to refuse to accept it.
Summary of this case from People v. WolffOpinion
Docket No. 92, Calendar No. 46,925.
Decided February 28, 1957.
Appeal from Sanilac; Bach (Arthur M.), J. Submitted January 17, 1957. (Docket No. 92, Calendar No. 46,925.) Decided February 28, 1957.
Roderick J. Morrison pleaded guilty to obtaining money under false pretenses. Motion for leave to file delayed motion for new trial denied. Defendant appeals. Reversed and remanded.
Thomas M. Kavanagh, Attorney General, Edmund E. Shepherd, Solicitor General, and Daniel J. O'Hara, Assistant Attorney General, for the people, confessing error.
Upon leave granted, defendant, Roderick J. Morrison, appeals from a judgment and sentence of the circuit court for the county of Sanilac and from an order denying his motion for leave to file a delayed motion for a new trial. The essential facts necessary to a decision of the issue involved are as follows: On August 30, 1954, the prosecuting attorney of Sanilac county filed an information against defendant charging him with fraudulently obtaining the sum of $1,300 from the State Bank of Croswell by representing that he was the owner of a certain Packard car which was free and clear of any mortgage, lien or claim from anyone else, it appearing that at the time the said loan was obtained, the Yale State Bank held a mortgage on said car. The prosecution in this case is brought by virtue of the authority contained in CL 1948, § 750.218 (Stat Ann § 28.415).
On September 23, 1954, defendant was arraigned and pleaded guilty to the charge laid in the information, however before sentence was passed, and upon invitation of the circuit judge, defendant made the following statement:
" Mr. Morrison: Quite a few things, a series of events. I was manager of a plant in Yale, Michigan, general manager. Conditions became such that the plant did practically nothing as far as employment was concerned. They couldn't afford the rate of money I was receiving, and they had to lay me off. I had debts and was buying a house, furniture and automobile and I came upon a small item which looked profitable for manufacturing and I asked information from the persons who had the patent rights on it to manufacture it and they did and I asked a number of stockholders and organized a corporation. We were promised items for delivery and manufacture on the first day of May. The promise fell through and I received letters from the person threatening to repossess my house and the car and the furniture and I had a nervous breakdown, sir. I was aware of what I did, but I did it and I was sick at the time, not mentally ill, but under much duress and all those things, that since have taken place that happened before. I did not avert them by what I did. I went to the Croswell Bank and notified them that the car was already mortgaged at the Yale State Bank and the promise that I was to pay off the money due on the automobile and I was granted the loan. I told the Yale State Bank that I was going to mortgage the car in the Croswell Bank and they talked back and forth and agreed it could be done but I didn't use the money to pay the other bank. I used the money to pay other bills."
On October 11, 1954, defendant was sentenced to the State prison of southern Michigan for a term of 2-1/2 to 10 years. On April 25, 1955, defendant filed an application for leave to file a delayed motion for a new trial in which he claimed that he did not actually plead guilty to the offense set forth in the information. Subsequently this motion was denied by the trial judge, and upon application to the Supreme Court leave to appeal was granted.
We note that neither the prosecuting attorney of Sanilac county nor defendant has filed briefs in this cause, but the attorney general has filed a brief in which the claim is made that defendant's statement of the facts negated his plea of guilty and it thereupon became the duty of the trial judge to vacate such plea.
In People v. Widmayer, 265 Mich. 547, 550, defendant was charged with obtaining money under false pretenses. We there said:
"The rule of law is well established that, to sustain a conviction, `The false pretenses must refer to some existing fact, and statements concerning what would occur in the future are not a sufficient basis for the charge.' People v. Segal (syllabus), 180 Mich. 316."
In the case at bar the information charged a false and fraudulent pretense that defendant's car tendered as security for the loan was free of any mortgage or lien. It also appears that when arraigned defendant informed the court that the Croswell bank knew that the car had already been mortgaged to the Yale bank. The statement made by defendant to the bank to the effect that as soon as he received the loan he would pay the Yale bank was a promise of something that he would do in the future. In our opinion such statement made to the trial court negated his plea of guilty and under such circumstances it became the duty of the trial court to refuse to accept a plea of guilty.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court of Sanilac county for further proceedings.
DETHMERS, C.J., and SMITH, EDWARDS, VOELKER, KELLY, CARR, and BLACK, JJ., concurred.