People v. Hill

Holbrook, J.

Defendant was charged with first-degree murder in violation of MCLA 750.316; MSA 28.548. On recommendation by the prosecuting attorney the defendant was permitted to plead guilty to second-degree murder, a violation of MCLA 750.317; MSA 28.549.

In this homicide the victim was a lady who was stabbed to death July 24,1972. At the time defendant pled guilty to second-degree murder he was 18 years old.

The only issue raised in this appeal is whether it is reversible error for the trial judge to consider the juvenile record of the defendant at the time of sentencing.

Our Court does not have a unanimous view on this issué. The foundation case, People v Coleman, 19 Mich App 250 (1969), is authority for the rule that the trial court may review a defendant’s juvenile record in determining the sentence to be imposed; that the trial court in considering the juvenile record of a defendant in determining a proper sentence is not in violation of MCLA 712A.23; MSA 27.3178(598.23).

We reiterate what this Court stated in that case on pages 255-256:

*736"Defendant relies on § 23 of that portion of the probate code which pertains to juveniles:
'"A disposition of any child under this chapter, or any evidence given in such case, shall not in any civil, criminal or any other cause or proceeding whatever in any court, be lawful or proper evidence against such child for any purpose whatever, except in subsequent cases against the same child under this chapter.’
"Prior to imposition of sentence in a felony case, a probation officer must inquire into the defendant’s antecedents, character and circumstances and furnish a report thereon to the sentencing judge. CL 1948, § 771.14 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1144) requires:
" 'Before sentencing any person charged with a felony, and, if directed by the court, in any other case where any person is charged with a misdemeanor within the jurisdiction of the court, the probation officer shall inquire into the antecedents, character and circumstances of such person or persons, and shall report thereon in writing to such court or magistrate.’
Webster defines 'antecedents’ and 'character’ thus:
antecedents: the significant events, conditions, principles, traits, or activities of one’s earlier life. character: the complex of accustomed mental and moral characteristics and habitual ethical traits marking a person.
"To be true and completé, the required inquiry must include whatever reasonably obtainable juvenile record an accused may have. Only by examination of a complete report, containing any such record, can the court properly perform its duties: to determine whether 'defendant is not likely again to engage in an offensive or criminal course of conduct’ and whether 'the public good does not require that the defendant shall suffer the penalty imposed by law’; and, if probation be granted, 'to fix and determine the period and conditions’ thereof.
"Nor does § 23 preclude examination of juvenile records for the purpose of sentencing. The express terms of the statutory prohibition bar only the use of prior juvenile dispositions as 'evidence’. Read in the light of its generally accepted meaning, 'evidence’ connotes tes*737timony and matters actually presented at trial. The post-conviction examination of juvenile records in order to impose a fair and just sentence is not a use of such records as 'evidence*. Cf. Commonwealth v Myers (1958), 393 Pa 224 (144 A2d 367); State v Jones (1966), 91 NJ Super 67 (219 A2d 193).”

Through April of 1972 various panels of this Court without exception followed Coleman as controlling precedent.

Thereafter in People v McFarlin, 41 Mich App 116 (1972), a panel of this Court consisting of Chief Judge Lesinski, with Judges Bronson and Targonski concurring, declined to follow Coleman and its progeny, ruling that it constituted reversible error for a judge to consider a defendant’s juvenile record in determining sentence.

Then in People v Pence, 42 Mich App 215, 216-217 (1972), another panel of this Court, of which this writer was a member, declined to follow Mc-Farlin and adhered to the holding in People v Coleman, supra, for two reasons which we reiterate as follows:

"First, we think McFarlin misinterprets the involved statute. The record of juvenile proceedings is not 'evidence against such child’. The adversary proceeding is over at the time of imposition of sentence and 'myopically’, 'penumbrally’ or otherwise, that record is simply not 'evidence’ and, more importantly, it is not necessarily to be used 'against such child’.
"This brings us to our second reason. The regrettable logical error in McFarlin is the totally unsupported assumption that the juvenile record will necessarily be used by the sentencing judge against the defendant. We can conceive of many instances in which it might be his saving grace, and used to his benefit.
"It is, in our view, wrong to deny the sentencing judge a dependable record of the past doings of a defendant about to be sentenced. Much better this than *738an investigation by a probation officer, the conclusions therefrom which are incontestably available to the judge. I would much rather leave to the sound discretion of the judge who has presided over the trial what significance, if any, to ascribe to the juvenile record.
"Trial judges, trained and experienced, are admirably suited to distinguish between childish prank-like offenses and other minor infractions, and a record of serious violations of a socially dangerous character.
"To us, the legislature, in passing the statute, intended to protect the juvenile from prejudicial evidence against him during trial. It did not intend to insulate the sentencing judge from information which would better enable him to impose a just sentence.”

We believe that People v Coleman, supra, and People v Pence, supra, correctly state the law on this issue.

Affirmed.

Adams, J., concurred.