People of Michigan v. John Antonya Moss ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                       Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Syllabus
    Chief Justice:                Justices:
    Bridget M. McCormack        Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been                 Reporter of Decisions:
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.                   Kathryn L. Loomis
    PEOPLE v MOSS
    Docket No. 162208. Argued on application for leave to appeal December 8, 2021. Decided
    June 10, 2022.
    John A. Moss was convicted of third-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-III), MCL
    750.520d(1)(d) (related by blood or affinity and sexual penetration occurs), after he pleaded no
    contest to the charge in the Berrien Circuit Court. The charge stemmed from allegations made by
    defendant’s adoptive sister. In exchange for his plea, the court, Donna B. Howard, J., dismissed
    the other charges that had been brought against defendant, including another count of CSC-III,
    MCL 750.520d(1)(b) (use of force or coercion), and a fourth-offense habitual-offender
    enhancement, MCL 769.12. Defendant and the complainant did not have a birth parent in
    common, but they were both adopted by the same woman. The court used the police report to
    establish the factual basis for the plea, finding that defendant and the complainant had engaged in
    sexual intercourse and that they were related as brother and sister by the adoption. After
    sentencing, defendant moved to withdraw his plea, arguing for the first time that he was not related
    to the complainant by either blood or affinity. The trial court denied the motion, determining that,
    although the adoptive siblings were not related by blood, they were related by affinity. Defendant
    sought leave to appeal in the Court of Appeals; the Court denied the application in an unpublished
    order entered August 21, 2017 (Docket No. 338877). Defendant sought leave to appeal in the
    Supreme Court, and after hearing oral argument on the application, the Supreme Court remanded
    the case to the Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted. 
    503 Mich 1009
     (2019).
    The Supreme Court directed the Court of Appeals to address whether a family relation that arises
    from a legal adoption is either effectively a blood relation, as that term is used in MCL 750.520b
    through MCL 750.520e, or a relation by affinity, as that term is used in MCL 750.520b through
    MCL 750.520e. On remand, the Court of Appeals, SHAPIRO, P.J., and SERVITTO and LETICA, JJ.,
    affirmed the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion, reasoning that defendant and the
    complainant were effectively related by blood. 
    333 Mich App 515
     (2020). Having found that they
    were related by blood, the Court considered it unnecessary to address whether defendant and the
    complainant were related by affinity, but it did so anyway because of the remand order and
    concluded that they were not related by affinity. Defendant again sought leave to appeal in the
    Supreme Court. The Supreme Court ordered and heard oral argument on whether to grant
    defendant’s application for leave to appeal or take other action, and it directed the parties to submit
    briefs addressing whether the Court of Appeals erred by concluding that defendant and the
    complainant were effectively related by blood for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d), such that
    there was an adequate factual basis for defendant’s no-contest plea. 
    507 Mich 939
     (2021).
    In a per curiam opinion signed by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices ZAHRA,
    VIVIANO, BERNSTEIN, CLEMENT, and CAVANAGH, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to
    appeal, held:
    Persons who are related by adoption but who otherwise do not share an ancestor in common
    are not related “by blood” for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d), which criminalizes sexual
    penetration with another person when the other person is related to the actor by blood or affinity
    to the third degree. Defendant and the complainant, who were adoptive siblings, were not related
    by blood for purposes of the statute, and the Court of Appeals erred by concluding otherwise.
    Because the order directing oral argument on the application only asked the parties to address
    whether defendant and the complainant were related by blood, the Court of Appeals’ conclusion
    that defendant and the complainant were not related by affinity was left undisturbed. Because an
    adequate factual basis for defendant’s plea did not exist in light of the Courts’ legal rulings, remand
    to the trial court for further proceedings was required.
    1. MCR 6.302(A) provides that a court may not accept a guilty plea unless the court is
    convinced that the plea is accurate. A trial court must establish a factual basis for a plea to ensure
    the plea’s accuracy. The factual basis for a plea is insufficient if it does not establish grounds for
    finding that the defendant committed the crime charged. MCL 750.520d(1)(d) provides that a
    person is guilty of CSC-III if the person engages in sexual penetration with another person and
    that other person is related to the actor by blood or affinity to the third degree and the sexual
    penetration occurs under circumstances not otherwise prohibited by Chapter LXXVI of the
    Michigan Penal Code, MCL 750.520 et seq. In People v Zajaczkoswski, 
    493 Mich 6
     (2012), the
    Supreme Court interpreted the phrase “relationship by blood” as used in the first-degree criminal
    sexual conduct statute, MCL 750.520b, to mean a relationship between persons arising by descent
    from a common ancestor or a relationship by birth rather than marriage. That interpretation also
    applies to the phrase “related to the actor by blood” in MCL 750.520d(1)(d). Because a
    relationship formed by adoption does not arise by descent from a common ancestor or by birth,
    persons who are related by adoption but who otherwise do not share an ancestor in common are
    not related “by blood” for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d).
    2. The Court of Appeals’ analysis of MCL 710.60 to resolve the issue of whether defendant
    was related to the complainant for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d) was flawed because (1)
    numerous sections in the Adoption Code distinguished and continue to distinguish between
    relationships by blood and relationships by adoption; (2) the Adoption Code can only change the
    law, not the genetic makeup of an adopted child or the child’s adoptive parents, and MCL 710.60
    focuses on the rights and duties of adoptive parents and adopted individuals, not on biological
    makeup; and (3) the Court of Appeals’ analysis would impermissibly enlarge the CSC-III statute
    by creating a constructive crime, allowing prosecution when the actor is only effectively related by
    blood to the complainant rather than actually related by blood. Defendant and the complainant
    were not related by blood because there was no DNA evidence establishing that they were related
    to the third degree, no evidence that they shared a common ancestor, and no evidence that they
    were related by birth.
    Court of Appeals judgment reversed in part, and case remanded to the trial court.
    Justice WELCH, concurring in part and dissenting in part, agreed with the Court’s holding
    that adoptive siblings are not related “by blood” for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d) but wrote
    separately because, under that statute, the Legislature considers adoptive siblings to be related by
    affinity. Justice WELCH would have addressed whether adoptive siblings are related by affinity to
    the third degree for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d) because it involved a controlling legal issue
    for which the Court could have provided a solution. The term “affinity” is defined as a relationship
    by marriage or by ties other than blood. In People v Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App 121
     (1995), the
    Court of Appeals applied that definition to conclude that stepsiblings were related by affinity under
    the criminal sexual conduct statutes. The Armstrong rationale dictates that adoptive relationships
    are included within the term “affinity” as used in MCL 750.520d(1)(d); the Court of Appeals erred
    in this case by applying the Armstrong reasoning to the “blood” prong in MCL 750.520d(1)(d),
    instead of to the “affinity” prong. It would be patently absurd to hold that the Legislature intended
    what is essentially an incest statute to cover relationships between stepsiblings and not adoptive
    siblings. Thus, for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d), “affinity” includes both step and adopted
    relationships. A review of the historical amendments of the criminal sexual conduct act supports
    that the drafters omitted the word “adoption” in the statutes concerning criminal sexual conduct
    with the understanding that those relationships would fall within the imprecise term “affinity.”
    Moreover, defendant failed to offer any plausible, rational basis for enacting a criminal sexual
    conduct statute that would extend to step relationships but not to adoptive relationships.
    Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    OPINION
    Chief Justice:                 Justices:
    Bridget M. McCormack          Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    FILED June 10, 2022
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                  No. 162208
    JOHN ANTONYA MOSS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    PER CURIAM.
    At issue in this case is whether adopted siblings who do not share a common
    ancestor are related “by blood” for purposes of the crime of third-degree criminal sexual
    conduct (CSC-III), MCL 750.520d(1)(d). We hold that such persons are not related “by
    blood” under the statute. As a result, there was not an adequate factual basis for defendant’s
    no-contest plea. 1 We reverse, in part, the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand to
    the circuit court.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Defendant, John Moss, was charged as a fourth-offense habitual offender with two
    counts of CSC-III, one for being related to the complainant by blood or affinity to the third
    degree, contrary to MCL 750.520d(1)(d), and one for using force or coercion, contrary to
    MCL 750.520d(1)(b). 2 At the time of the offense, defendant was 25 years old, and the
    complainant for the CSC-III charges, his adoptive sister, was 17 years old. Defendant and
    the complainant do not have a birth parent in common, but they were both adopted by the
    same woman. The complainant alleged that in November 2015 she and defendant engaged
    in sexual acts; the complainant reported that these act were not consensual, while defendant
    claimed that they were.
    In exchange for dismissing all other charges against him and the fourth-offense
    habitual-offender enhancement, defendant pleaded no contest to the CSC-III count under
    MCL 750.520d(1)(d). The parties agreed with the trial court’s suggestion to use the police
    report to establish a factual basis for the plea. Relying on that report, the court found that
    defendant and the complainant engaged in sexual intercourse and “that they are related to
    the third degree by adoption as brother and sister.”
    1
    We leave undisturbed the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that defendant and the
    complainant are not related by affinity. See People v Moss, 
    333 Mich App 515
    , 524-526;
    
    963 NW2d 390
     (2020).
    2
    He was also charged with resisting and obstructing a police officer and possession of
    marijuana, second offense.
    2
    After being sentenced, defendant moved to withdraw his plea, arguing that he was
    not related to the complainant by either blood or affinity merely because they were both
    adopted by the same person. The trial court denied the motion. It found that defendant
    and the complainant were not related “by blood.” With regard to relationship by “affinity,”
    the trial court relied on People v Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App 121
    , 128; 
    536 NW2d 789
    (1995), for the proposition that the term “affinity” described a relationship by either
    marriage or “ ‘ties other than those of blood.’ ” (Citation omitted.) Because defendant and
    the complainant were adopted by the same woman, the trial court held that they were
    related by affinity as adoptive brother and sister and that the factual basis for the plea was
    sufficient. Defendant applied for leave to appeal, and the Court of Appeals denied leave
    for lack of merit in the grounds presented. People v Moss, unpublished order of the Court
    of Appeals, entered August 21, 2017 (Docket No. 338877).
    Defendant sought leave to appeal that decision in this Court, and after hearing oral
    argument on the application, in lieu of granting leave, we remanded to the Court of Appeals
    for it to address:
    whether a family relation that arises from a legal adoption, see MCL
    710.60(2) (“After entry of the order of adoption, there is no distinction
    between the rights and duties of natural progeny and adopted persons”) (1)
    is effectively a “blood” relation, as that term is used in MCL 750.520b—
    MCL 750.520e; or (2) is a relation by “affinity,” as that term is used in MCL
    750.520b—MCL 750.520e, see Bliss v Caille Bros Co, 
    149 Mich 601
    , 608
    (1907); People v Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App 121
     (1995); People v Denmark,
    
    74 Mich App 402
     (1977). [People v Moss, 
    503 Mich 1009
     (2019).]
    On remand, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion,
    reasoning that defendant and the complainant were related by blood. People v Moss, 
    333 Mich App 515
    , 519-524; 
    963 NW2d 390
     (2020). In doing so, the Court of Appeals relied
    3
    on MCL 710.60. Id. at 520. After determining that defendant and the complainant were
    related by blood, the Court of Appeals explained that it did not need to decide whether they
    were related by affinity but did so anyway because of the remand order, concluding that
    they were not related by affinity. Id. at 524-526.
    Defendant again sought leave to appeal in this Court. We ordered oral argument on
    the application to consider “whether the Court of Appeals erred in concluding on remand
    that the defendant and the complainant are effectively related by blood for purposes of
    MCL 750.520d(1)(d), such that there was an adequate factual basis for the defendant’s no-
    contest plea.” People v Moss, 
    507 Mich 939
     (2021).
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND INTERPRETIVE PRINCIPLES
    “We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s ruling on a motion to withdraw
    a plea.” People v Brown, 
    492 Mich 684
    , 688; 
    822 NW2d 208
     (2012). “A trial court
    necessarily abuses its discretion when it makes an error of law.” People v Rajput, 
    505 Mich 7
    , 11; 
    949 NW2d 32
     (2020) (citation and quotation marks omitted). We review de
    novo questions of law, such as the interpretation and application of statutes. People v
    Kennedy, 
    502 Mich 206
    , 213; 
    917 NW2d 355
     (2018). “Our goal in interpreting a statute
    is to give effect to the intent of the Legislature as expressed in the statute’s language.”
    People v Garrison, 
    495 Mich 362
    , 367; 
    852 NW2d 45
     (2014). “Absent ambiguity, we
    assume that the Legislature intended for the words in the statute to be given their plain
    meaning, and we enforce the statute as written.” 
    Id.
    4
    III. ANALYSIS
    A court may not accept a guilty plea unless it is convinced that the plea is accurate.
    MCR 6.302(A). To ensure the accuracy of a plea, a trial court must establish a factual basis
    for the plea. People v Pointer-Bey, 
    321 Mich App 609
    , 616; 
    909 NW2d 523
     (2017), citing
    MCR 6.302(D). The factual basis is insufficient if it does “not establish grounds for finding
    that defendant committed the crime charged . . . .” People v Mitchell, 
    431 Mich 744
    , 748;
    
    432 NW2d 715
     (1988). In the present case, defendant pleaded no contest to CSC-III,
    contrary to MCL 750.520d(1)(d). The statute, which is part of the Michigan Penal Code,
    MCL 750.1 et seq., provides, in relevant part:
    (1) A person is guilty of criminal sexual conduct in the third degree if
    the person engages in sexual penetration with another person and if any of
    the following circumstances exist:
    * * *
    (d) That other person is related to the actor by blood or affinity to the
    third degree and the sexual penetration occurs under circumstances not
    otherwise prohibited by this chapter. [MCL 750.520d.]
    The statute does not define the word “blood” or the phrase “related to the actor by
    blood.” We have previously interpreted these terms in the statute criminalizing criminal
    sexual conduct in the first degree, MCL 750.520b. See People v Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich 6
    , 13; 
    825 NW2d 554
     (2012). 3 We noted, “A relationship by ‘blood’ is defined as ‘a
    relationship between persons arising by descent from a common ancestor’ or a relationship
    ‘by birth rather than by marriage.’ ” 
    Id.,
     quoting Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed), p 182,
    3
    Although some of the other elements differ between MCL 750.520b and MCL 750.520d,
    the relationship elements are sufficiently similar such that Zajaczkowski is relevant to
    determining the proper definition of the phrase in this case.
    5
    and Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2001), p 145. 4 The definitions cited in
    Zajaczkowski are applicable to this case. A relationship formed by adoption does not arise
    by descent from a common ancestor or by birth. Therefore, under the ordinary meaning of
    the statutory language, individuals related by adoption are not related by blood.
    Instead of first looking at the plain meaning of MCL 750.520d(1)(d), the Court of
    Appeals in this case looked at MCL 710.60, 5 which states, in relevant part:
    (1) After the entry of an order of adoption, if the adoptee’s name is
    changed, the adoptee shall be known and called by the new name. The person
    or persons adopting the adoptee then become the parent or parents of the
    adoptee under the law as though the adopted person had been born to the
    adopting parents and are liable for all the duties and entitled to all the rights
    of parents.
    (2) After entry of the order of adoption, there is no distinction between
    the rights and duties of natural progeny and adopted persons, and the adopted
    person becomes an heir at law of the adopting parent or parents and an heir
    at law of the lineal and collateral kindred of the adopting parent or parents.
    From the statute, the Court of Appeals concluded that “[t]he former biological ties of
    defendant and complainant were each severed by adoption, and a completely new
    relationship was substituted.” Moss, 333 Mich App at 521. For this reason, it determined
    “that a constructive biological relationship exists between” defendant and the complainant
    and that the two are “effectively related by blood” for purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d).
    Id.
    4
    Although different in their wording, the definitions have no practical difference because
    they both focus on a biological relationship. Therefore, it is unnecessary to determine
    whether “by blood” is a term of art, and it is proper to consult both lay and legal
    dictionaries. See Sanford v Michigan, 
    506 Mich 10
    , 21 n 23; 
    954 NW2d 82
     (2020).
    5
    We did highlight this statute in our remand order.
    6
    The Court of Appeals’ analysis is flawed in a number of respects. First, numerous
    sections in the Adoption Code distinguished and continue to distinguish between
    relationships by blood and relationships by adoption. 6 The Legislature has also continued
    this distinction in defining “related” and “relative” since MCL 710.60 was enacted. 7 “As
    a general rule, we must give effect to every word, phrase, and clause and avoid an
    interpretation that would render any part of the statute surplusage or nugatory.” People v
    Arnold, 
    508 Mich 1
    , 23; 
    973 NW2d 36
     (2021) (citations, quotation marks, and brackets
    omitted). The Legislature would have no need to use both by “blood” and “adoption” in
    defining “relative” or “related” if MCL 710.60 has the effect that the Court of Appeals
    concluded it does.
    Second, the Adoption Code can only change the law, not the genetic makeup of an
    adopted child or his adoptive parents. The Court of Appeals in this case relied on In re
    Toth, 
    227 Mich App 548
    , 553; 
    577 NW2d 111
     (1998), for the following proposition:
    6
    See, e.g., MCL 710.22(t) (defining “relative” as someone related “within the fifth degree
    by marriage, blood, or adoption”); MCL 710.26(2) (“This subsection also applies to . . . the
    adoption of a child related to the petitioner within the fifth degree by marriage, blood, or
    adoption.”); MCL 710.27(6) (stating that the subsection does not apply to the adoption of
    a child related “within the fifth degree by marriage, blood, or adoption”).
    7
    See, e.g., MCL 205.27a(12) (“[A] person is related to an individual if that person is a
    spouse, brother or sister, whether of the whole or half blood or by adoption, ancestor, lineal
    descendant of that individual or related person . . . .”); MCL 333.21311a(8)(b) (defining
    “related” as “any of the following personal relationships by marriage, blood, or adoption:
    spouse, child, parent, brother, sister, grandparent, grandchild, aunt, uncle, stepparent,
    stepbrother, stepsister, or cousin”); MCL 400.112g(6)(c) (defining “caretaker relative” as
    “any relation by blood, marriage, or adoption who is within the fifth degree of kinship to
    the recipient”); MCL 554.524(3) (defining “member of the minor’s family” as “the minor’s
    parent, stepparent, spouse, grandparent, brother, sister, uncle, or aunt, whether of the whole
    or half blood or by adoption”).
    7
    “[T]he effect of [MCL 710.60(1)] is to make the adopted child, as much as
    possible, a natural child of the adopting parents, and to make the adopting
    parents, as much as possible, the natural parents of the child. The Michigan
    adoption scheme expresses a policy of severing, at law, the prior, natural
    family relationship and creating a new and complete substitute relationship
    after adoption.” [Moss, 333 Mich App at 520 (second alteration in original),
    quoting In re Toth, 
    227 Mich App at 553
    .]
    The Court of Appeals focused on the second sentence, concluding that adoption
    substitutes a completely new relationship for the old biological relationship. Moss, 333
    Mich App at 521. In doing so, the Court ignored the first sentence, which recognizes that
    the effect of MCL 710.60(1) is not to actually make the adopted child a biological child of
    the adopted parents. 8 Rather, the statute focuses on the rights and duties and not the
    biological makeup. 9 An adoptee has the same rights and duties as the natural progeny of
    the adoptive parents. But nothing in MCL 710.60 states that an adopted individual will be
    8
    We certainly do not mean to discount the importance of adoptive relationships. Indeed,
    we are well aware of the numerous benefits of adoption—not only for the children and
    parents in adoptive relationships but also for their extended families and for society as a
    whole. See, e.g., Sharon S v San Diego Co Superior Court, 31 Cal 4th 417, 438; 73 P3d
    554 (2003) (recognizing that there are “nonlegal benefits of adoption for children, parents,
    and society as a whole”); In re Johnson, 
    480 BR 305
    , 312 (Bankr ND Ill, 2012) (discussing
    studies showing the social benefits of adoption).
    9
    It bears noting that MCL 710.60(3) refers specifically to orders for grandparenting time,
    which are governed by MCL 722.27b. MCL 722.27b(5) distinguishes between
    grandparents who are “the natural or adoptive parent” of the parent of the child in question,
    which indicates a difference between biological and adoptive relationships. Although
    MCL 722.27b(13) states that adoption of a child generally terminates the right of a
    grandparent to commence an action for grandparenting time, it goes on to state that, under
    certain circumstances, a grandparent may still commence such an action even after an
    adoption. That MCL 710.60 specifically refers to MCL 722.27b demonstrates that MCL
    710.60 also recognizes that there is a difference between biological and adoptive
    relationships.
    8
    subject to criminal prosecutions as if the individual were a blood relative of the individual’s
    adoptive parents.
    The analysis in Zajaczkowski confirms this point. There, the defendant and the
    victim were not biologically related, but the prosecution argued that they were related
    because the defendant had been born while his mother was married to the victim’s
    biological father. Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich at 9
    . The Court of Appeals had acknowledged
    the plain meaning of “by blood or affinity,” but it went on to apply the civil presumption
    of legitimacy—i.e., that the child was a product of the marriage—to conclude that the
    defendant and victim were related “by blood” for purposes of MCL 750.520b. 
    Id. at 14
    . 10
    We reversed, rejecting the use of the presumption to create a blood relationship by
    legal fiction. DNA evidence showed that the victim’s father was not the defendant’s
    biological father; the two did “not share a relationship arising by descent from a common
    ancestor, and they [were] not related by birth.” 
    Id.
     As a result, we concluded that the
    10
    Specifically, the Court of Appeals had relied on MCL 552.29 (stating with respect to
    divorce cases that “the legitimacy of all children begotten before the commencement of
    any action under this act shall be presumed until the contrary be shown”) and cases from
    this Court involving the Paternity Act and Child Custody Act, which stood “for the
    proposition that a putative biological father lacks standing to even bring an action to
    establish paternity unless there has been some prior court determination that the child was
    not the issue of the marriage.” Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich at 11
     (citation, quotation marks,
    and brackets omitted), citing Barnes v Jeudevine, 
    475 Mich 696
    ; 
    718 NW2d 311
     (2006),
    In re KH, 
    469 Mich 621
    ; 
    677 NW2d 800
     (2004), and Girard v Wagenmaker, 
    437 Mich 231
    ; 
    470 NW2d 372
     (1991). Relying on MCL 700.2114(1)(a) and MCL 700.2114(5),
    which “incorporate the presumption of legitimacy and the standing requirement into
    intestate-succession disputes,” the Court of Appeals concluded that the defendant lacked
    standing to challenge the presumption of legitimacy, which meant that he and the victim
    were related by blood as a matter of law. Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich at 11-12
    .
    9
    defendant was “not related to the victim by blood to the fourth degree.” 
    Id.
     Anticipating
    the present dilemma, we noted in a footnote:
    The prosecution has raised the argument that this interpretation [of
    MCL 750.520b(1)(b)(ii)] will result in unintended consequences regarding
    adopted children because if the blood relationship element can only be
    established through a biological relationship, then a sexual penetration
    committed by a member of an adoptive family against an adopted minor child
    may not be punishable under MCL 750.520b(1)(b)(ii). While we
    acknowledge that the prosecution raises valid policy concerns, such policy
    concerns are best left to the Legislature to address. It is this Court’s duty to
    enforce the clear statutory language that the Legislature has chosen.
    [Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich at
    14 n 18.]
    We rejected the reliance on the civil presumption of legitimacy and criticized the Court of
    Appeals for going “beyond the statute’s language and chang[ing] the ordinary meaning of
    the statute’s terms by adding language that the Legislature did not include.” 
    Id. at 14-15
    .
    Finally, we believe the interpretation of MCL 750.520d adopted by the Court of
    Appeals would create an impermissible constructive crime. A constructive crime is one
    that is “ ‘built up by courts with the aid of inference, implication, and strained
    interpretation . . . .’ ” People v Olson, 
    293 Mich 514
    , 515; 
    292 NW 860
     (1940), quoting
    Ex parte McNulty, 77 Cal 164, 167; 
    19 P 237
     (1888). 11 Michigan does not recognize
    constructive crimes, and we have previously characterized them as “ ‘repugnant to the
    spirit and letter of English and American criminal law.’ ” Olson, 
    293 Mich at 515
    , quoting
    Ex parte McNulty, 77 Cal at 168. In the present case, the Court of Appeals did not find
    that defendant and the complainant were actually related “by blood.” Rather, it determined
    11
    See also Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed), pp 466-467 (defining the term as “[a] crime
    that is built up or created when a court enlarges a statute by altering or straining the statute’s
    language, esp. to drawing unreasonable implications and inferences from it”).
    10
    that defendant “effectively” became the biological child of his adoptive mother and that a
    “constructive biological relationship” existed between defendant and the complainant.
    Moss, 333 Mich App at 522 (emphasis added). By doing so, the Court of Appeals enlarged
    the CSC-III statute and strained its interpretation, impermissibly creating a constructive
    crime as applied to this defendant and others similarly situated. 12
    Applying this analysis to the present case leads to the conclusion that defendant and
    the complainant are not related by blood. There is no DNA evidence establishing that
    defendant and the complainant are related to the third degree.          Defendant and the
    complainant do not share a common ancestor. And they are not related by birth. Just as it
    was improper to rely on the civil presumption of legitimacy to interpret MCL 750.520b, it
    was improper for the Court of Appeals to rely on MCL 710.60 in this case. By doing so,
    “the Court of Appeals went beyond the statute’s language and changed the ordinary
    meaning of the statute’s terms by adding language that the Legislature did not include.”
    Zajaczkowski, 
    493 Mich at 14-15
    . As we did in Zajaczkowski, we again acknowledge that
    there are valid policy concerns that this statute fails to provide adequate protection for
    adoptive siblings; however, we can only reiterate that those concerns are for the Legislature
    to address.
    12
    Other courts have rejected similar attempts to criminalize sexual conduct between
    persons related by adoption when the statute does not expressly prohibit such conduct
    between those related by adoption. See 41 Am Jur 2d, Incest, § 17, p 356, citing In re
    Adoption of Adult Anonymous, 
    435 NYS2d 527
     (Fam Ct, 1981), and State v Bale, 
    512 NW2d 164
     (SD, 1994).
    11
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, we hold that persons who are related by adoption but who
    otherwise do not share an ancestor in common are not related “by blood” for purposes of
    MCL 750.520d(1)(d). 13 As a result, there was not an adequate factual basis for defendant’s
    plea of no contest. We reverse, in part, the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand
    to the circuit court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    Bridget M. McCormack
    Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    13
    We decline to reach the issue addressed by the dissent—i.e., whether defendant and the
    complainant are related by affinity—because our order directing oral argument on the
    application only asked the parties to address whether defendant and the complainant are
    related by blood. Moss, 507 Mich at 939.
    12
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                            No. 162208
    JOHN ANTONYA MOSS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    WELCH, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    I concur in the Court’s holding that adoptive siblings are not related “by blood” for
    purposes of MCL 750.520d(1)(d).          I write separately because I conclude that the
    Legislature considered adoptive siblings to be related by “affinity.” 1
    MCL 750.520d(1) provides, in relevant part, that a person is guilty of criminal
    sexual conduct in the third degree if the person engages in sexual penetration with another
    person and “[t]hat other person is related to the actor by blood or affinity to the third degree
    and the sexual penetration occurs under circumstances not otherwise prohibited” by
    1
    The prosecutor did not file a separate application for leave to appeal the Court of Appeals’
    holding on the meaning of “affinity.” However, this Court has stated that when “a
    controlling legal issue is squarely before this Court, . . . the parties’ failure or refusal to
    offer correct solutions to the issue [does not] limit[] this Court’s ability to probe for and
    provide the correct solution.” Mack v Detroit, 
    467 Mich 186
    , 206-207; 
    649 NW2d 47
    (2002). In this case, the issue “squarely before this Court” is whether the relationship
    between adoptive siblings is sufficient to satisfy MCL 750.520d(1)(d).
    Chapter LXXVI 2 of the Michigan Penal Code. Because of its conclusion that adoptive
    siblings are related “by blood,” the Court of Appeals concluded that “it is not necessary
    that we decide whether a relationship by affinity also exists.” People v Moss, 
    333 Mich App 515
    , 524; 
    963 NW2d 390
     (2020). The Court of Appeals addressed the issue anyway
    because this Court had remanded for consideration of the definitions of affinity provided
    by Bliss v Caille Bros Co, 
    149 Mich 601
    , 608; 
    113 NW 317
     (1907) (“Affinity is the relation
    existing in consequence of marriage between each of the married persons and the blood
    relatives of the other . . . .”) and People v Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App 121
    , 128; 
    536 NW2d 789
     (1995) (“Random House College Dictionary (rev ed) defines the term ‘affinity’ as a
    ‘relationship by marriage or by ties other than those of blood.’ ”). 3 The Court of Appeals
    determined that, while Armstrong suggested that “affinity” might have a wider, context-
    dependent meaning than was recognized in Bliss, Armstrong “nonetheless concluded that
    stepsiblings were related by affinity ‘because they were family members related by
    marriage.’ ” Moss, 333 Mich App at 526, quoting Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App at 128
    .
    In determining that adoptive relationships are relationships “by blood,” the Court of
    Appeals quoted Armstrong at length:
    2
    Chapter LXXVI, MCL 750.520a through MCL 750.520o, is the chapter of the Michigan
    Penal Code that addresses criminal sexual conduct.
    3
    The Court of Appeals initially denied defendant’s delayed application for leave to appeal
    his plea-based conviction. People v Moss, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
    entered August 21, 2017 (Docket No. 338877). We heard oral argument on the application
    for leave to appeal, and in lieu of granting leave to appeal, we remanded the case to the
    Court of Appeals for consideration as on leave granted. People v Moss, 
    503 Mich 1009
    (2019).
    2
    [W]e think it is highly unlikely that the Legislature intended to treat adoptive
    siblings differently from biological siblings for purposes of the [criminal
    sexual conduct] statutes. We reached a similar conclusion in Armstrong . . . ,
    in which we were tasked with deciding whether stepsiblings were related by
    affinity under the [criminal sexual conduct] statutes. We reasoned in part:
    In looking to the object of the second-degree criminal sexual
    conduct statute and the harm it is designed to remedy, and in
    applying a reasonable construction that best accomplishes the
    purpose of that statute in this case, we are persuaded that the
    term “affinity” encompasses the relation between a stepbrother
    and a stepsister. If the term were not so construed, then the
    first- and second-degree criminal sexual conduct statutes
    would impose a penalty more severe where the perpetrator
    sexually assaulted a spouse’s brother or sister than where the
    perpetrator sexually assaulted a stepbrother or stepsister. In
    this time of divorce, remarriage, and extended families, we see
    no reason why the Legislature would give enhanced protection
    to a victim related to a perpetrator as an in-law but not to a
    victim related to a perpetrator as a stepbrother or stepsister.
    Thus, defining the term “affinity” to encompass the relation
    between a stepbrother and a stepsister avoids a construction of
    the second-degree criminal sexual conduct statute that would
    yield absurd results.
    [Moss, 333 Mich App at 523, quoting Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App at 128-129
    .]
    I would hold that Armstrong’s reasoning dictates that adoptive relationships are
    covered by MCL 750.520d(1)(d), but I would do so under the “affinity” prong that
    Armstrong actually addressed and not the “blood” prong to which the Court of Appeals
    applied Armstrong’s reasoning. Armstrong noted that “the term ‘affinity’ is not capable of
    a precise definition. Rather, at common law, whether someone was related to another by
    affinity depended upon the legal context presented.” Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App at 125
    (citation omitted). I see no reason to prefer, in the context of a criminal statute, the narrow
    definition of affinity stated in Bliss—a case interpreting a judicial disqualification statute—
    to the dictionary definition stated in Armstrong.        Expanding upon the reasoning of
    3
    Armstrong, it would be a patently absurd result to hold that the Legislature intended what
    is essentially an incest statute to cover relationships between stepsiblings and not adoptive
    siblings. I therefore conclude that the Legislature did not pass such a statute. Instead, it
    passed a statute that included a broader term—affinity—to allow for inclusion of both step
    and adopted relationships.
    In Johnson v Recca, 
    492 Mich 169
    , 193-194; 
    821 NW2d 520
     (2012), this Court
    criticized a dissenting Justice for applying the absurd-results doctrine too liberally:
    To properly invoke the “absurd results” doctrine, the burden rests on
    the dissent to show that it is quite impossible that the Legislature could have
    intended to exclude replacement services from MCL 500.3110(4), MCL
    500.3116(4), MCL 500.3135(3)(c), and MCL 500.3145(1). Rather than
    shoulder this burden—which might require a serious-minded analysis of the
    Legislature’s policy objectives in enacting the statutes, the political realities
    and disagreements within the Legislature that adopted the statutes, the
    necessity for compromise and negotiation leading to enactment of the
    statutes, and the public impetus behind the statutes—the dissent characterizes
    our interpretation as “absurd” because the dissent
    can see no logical basis to conclude that the Legislature
    intended this chaotic and arbitrary approach to the collection
    of no-fault benefits. . . . The far more reasonable interpretation
    recognizes that the Legislature intended MCL 500.3135(3)(c)
    to allow excess expenses for ordinary and necessary services
    to be recovered in a third-party tort action.
    The absurd-results principle has also been criticized by textualists as having “strong
    intentionalist foundations” inconsistent with “respect for the legislative process,” which is
    characterized by “accommodation, messiness, and compromise.” Manning, The Absurdity
    Doctrine, 116 Harv L Rev 2387, 2390-2391 (2003); see also Barnhart v Sigmon Coal Co,
    Inc, 
    534 US 438
    , 461; 
    122 S Ct 941
    ; 
    151 L Ed 2d 908
     (2002) (“The deals brokered during
    a Committee markup, on the floor of the two Houses, during a joint House and Senate
    4
    Conference, or in negotiations with the President, however, are not for us to judge or
    second-guess.”).
    In other words, the absurd-results doctrine should not be applied merely to question
    the reasonableness of the Legislature’s policy determinations when a plausible, rational
    basis for the result exists. I agree. But in the present case, it is implausible to suggest that
    there were any interest groups pressuring the Legislature for a right to engage in sexual
    conduct with adoptive family members. In 1996, the Legislature amended MCL 750.520d,
    adding Subdivision (d), to criminalize sexual penetration with another person when “[t]hat
    other person is related to the actor by blood or affinity to the third degree . . . .” See 
    1996 PA 155
    . However, the Legislature had already criminalized, in 1974, sexual penetration
    and sexual contact with another person when that other person was at least 13 years but
    less than 16 years of age and the actor was related to the victim by blood or affinity. See
    MCL 750.520b(1)(b) and MCL 750.520c(1)(b), as enacted by 
    1974 PA 266
    . Thus, such
    conduct was criminalized in 1974—the same year the Legislature adopted a new “effect
    of adoption” statute, MCL 710.60, that recognized adoption as a total and exclusive
    replacement of the child’s natural family relationships. 4 The reasonable inference from
    4
    Commentators at the time the criminal sexual conduct act, 
    1974 PA 266
    , was passed
    stated that “[u]nder increasing pressure from women’s rights groups and other reform
    organizations, the Michigan legislature has re-evaluated its centenarian rape statute, found
    it inadequate for the realities of the mid-twentieth century, and enacted a new sexual assault
    act.” Legislative Note, Michigan’s Criminal Sexual Assault Law, 8 U Mich J L Reform
    217 (1974) (citations omitted). That same year, the Legislature replaced the former effect-
    of-adoption statute—which provided that adoption did not affect a child’s right to inherit
    from “his natural parents”—with current MCL 710.60(2), which provides that “[a]fter
    entry of the order of adoption, the adopted person shall no longer be an heir at law of his
    or her natural parents[.]” In re Adolphson Estate, 
    403 Mich 590
    , 592-593; 
    271 NW2d 511
    (1978) (emphasis omitted), quoting 
    1974 PA 296
    . The criminal sexual conduct act and the
    5
    the “messiness” of the Legislative process is that the statute’s drafters omitted the word
    “adoption” in the statutes concerning criminal sexual conduct with the understanding that
    adoptive relationships would fall within the imprecise term “affinity,” the meaning of
    which “depend[s] upon the legal context presented.” Armstrong, 
    212 Mich App at 125
    .
    This is not a conclusion from my own policy preferences. Rather, it is a conclusion
    from defendant’s failure to offer even plausible speculation as to a rational basis for
    enacting a criminal sexual conduct statute that extends to step relationships but not to
    adoptive relationships. 5
    In Green v Bock Laundry Machine Co, 
    490 US 504
    , 505, 509; 
    109 S Ct 1981
    ; 
    104 L Ed 2d 557
     (1989), the Supreme Court addressed a prior version of FRE 609(a)(1), which,
    when interpreted literally, required prejudice-balancing before a prior conviction could be
    admitted to impeach a civil defendant, but the rule did not extend the same protection to a
    civil plaintiff. The majority, in a lengthy analysis of the history of the rule, determined that
    language extending the benefit of prejudice-weighing to the “defendant” was intended to
    new effect-of-adoption provision became effective on the same day, January 1, 1975. 
    1974 PA 266
    ; 
    1974 PA 296
    .
    5
    Compare Chapman v United States, 
    500 US 453
    , 454; 
    111 S Ct 1919
    ; 
    114 L Ed 2d 524
    (1991), in which the Supreme Court declined to apply the absurd-results doctrine to a
    statute that imposed a mandatory minimum sentence for distributing more than one gram
    of a “mixture or substance” containing LSD. The petitioner emphasized that a dose of LSD
    weighs almost nothing, leading to the absurd and allegedly unconstitutional result that
    whether a defendant was subject to a minimum sentence could depend on the arbitrary fact
    of the weight of the paper on which the illegal substance was placed. 
    Id. at 463-464
    . The
    Supreme Court held that the sentencing scheme was nonetheless rational because, “[b]y
    measuring the quantity of the drugs according to the ‘street weight’ of the drugs in the
    diluted form in which they are sold, rather than according to the net weight of the active
    component, the statute and the Sentencing Guidelines increase the penalty for persons who
    possess large quantities of drugs, regardless of their purity.” 
    Id. at 465
    .
    6
    mean “criminal defendant,” leaving neither side of a civil dispute protected by prejudice-
    weighing. 
    Id. at 513-527
    . Justice Scalia, finding “no reason to believe that any more than
    a handful of the Members of Congress who enacted Rule 609 were aware of its interesting
    evolution from the 1942 Model Code,” 
    id. at 528
     (Scalia, J., concurring), emphasized the
    petitioner’s failure to offer any plausible basis for the “absurd, and perhaps
    unconstitutional, result,” 
    id. at 504
    , of a literal interpretation:
    (1) The word “defendant” in Rule 609(a)(1) cannot rationally (or
    perhaps even constitutionally) mean to provide the benefit of prejudice-
    weighing to civil defendants and not civil plaintiffs. Since petitioner has not
    produced, and we have not ourselves discovered, even a snippet of support
    for this absurd result, we may confidently assume that the word was not used
    (as it normally would be) to refer to all defendants and only all defendants.
    [Id. at 528-529].
    Interpreting the word “defendant” as “criminal defendant” easily avoided the
    absurdity while doing the “least violence to the text.” 
    Id. at 529
    . Likewise, in the context
    of a criminal statute that prohibits sexual conduct between family members, the term
    “affinity” bears the meaning of familial relationships created by adoption just as easily as
    it bears the meaning of familial relationships created by marriage. Neither defendant nor
    this Court has offered even a snippet of a rational basis for a contrary interpretation.
    Therefore, we can confidently assume that the word “affinity” was not used as it normally
    would be to refer to relationships created by marriage and only relationships by marriage.
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    7