in Re Jocelyn Palmer ( 2019 )


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  •             If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    In re JP.
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                   FOR PUBLICATION
    September 24, 2019
    Petitioner-Appellee,                                9:00 a.m.
    v                                                                  No. 344812
    Gogebic Circuit Court
    JP,                                                                Family Division
    LC No. 2017-000048-DL
    Respondent-Appellant.
    Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and GLEICHER and M. J. KELLY, JJ.
    GLEICHER, J.
    Young teenagers sometimes make poor judgments born of impetuosity, immaturity, and
    an inability to foresee the painful consequences of their actions. Here, four teenaged girls
    decided they did not like a 13-year-old boy, and fantasized via group text messages about killing
    him, his dog, and even his goldfish. The texts are not pretty or clever. They also were not sent
    to the boy. He learned the content of the hateful messages from his mother, and never actually
    read them.
    The prosecutor charged one of the girls, respondent JP, with a violation of MCL
    750.540e(1), which subjects those who send text messages intended to “terrorize, frighten,
    intimidate, threaten, harass, molest or annoy” another person to criminal punishment. Despite
    that no evidence supported that respondent intended that the boy would ever see the text
    messages, a jury adjudicated her as responsible for the violation and the trial court entered a
    dispositional order. Because no evidence or reasonable inference suggests that the teenagers
    intended to terrorize, frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest or annoy the teenaged boy
    discussed in their texts, we vacate the orders of adjudication and disposition.
    -1-
    I
    The four involved girls formed a “Snapchat” group. Snapchat is an application for
    mobile phones used to share text messages, photographs, and other images among a defined
    group of “real friends.” See . One
    feature of the application vaporizes the messages after a few seconds unless a recipient
    deliberately saves them. Even then, the messages remain accessible for only 24 hours unless a
    participant captures a “screen shot.” In other words, the messages are usually temporary and
    ephemeral, by design. See State v Bariteau, 884 NW2d 169, 172 n 1; 
    2016 SD 57
    (2016)
    (“Snapchat is an image messaging mobile phone application in which a user can send a
    photograph or text message with a set time to expire. The receiving user can only view the text
    message or photograph for one to ten seconds before the image or text message expires and is
    automatically deleted from the mobile phone.”).
    Each of the girls in the Snapchat group used a personally selected moniker rather than
    their real names. Respondent was 7Up. The other girls were Lady Gaga, Dream Ruiner, and
    Me. All were in sixth or seventh grade. The boy involved, S, was a seventh grader. The girls
    assigned a name to their Snapchat: “R.I.P. [S] (& Goldfish);” R.I.P., of course, means “rest in
    peace.”
    The girls did not like S. He pushed the books off Lady Gaga’s desk and called her “fat
    and gay.” S also “shoved” the books off respondent’s desk. S denied the allegations. 1 Based on
    the perceptions of at least some of the girls that S had transgressed the norms of middle school
    decorum, the girls fantasized about killing S, his goldfish, and his dog (if he had one). Here is a
    sample of their creative work:
    7UP [respondent]: I WILL MARGARITA SQUARE UP LIKE [S]’S
    HEAD
    LADY GAGA: HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAGA [sic]
    7UP: LETS GOOOOO
    LADY GAGA: WE SHOULD STAB HIM
    1
    Outside the jury’s presence, the judge twice observed that he found S’s protestations of
    innocence unconvincing. After the verdict was rendered, the judge commented, “Oh, and the last
    thing I was going to say is, you know, even though I do believe he pushed your books, I do
    believe he was a bug on a lot of this stuff; I think he was doing it to get your attention.” At the
    dispositional hearing, the judge reiterated, “I said on the record I do believe he was annoying but
    I also feel that part of the reason he is annoying is because he is a challenged young man and he
    was trying to get your attention. He was trying to get you girls to like him in a completely, not a
    good strategy type of way.”
    -2-
    DREAM RUINER:
    7UP: YES
    * * *
    7UP: MURDER HIM
    LET’S DO IT
    LADY GAGA: AND HIS FAMILY
    AND HIS DOG
    7UP: YEEEESSS
    DREAM RUINER: MURDER HIM
    LADY GAGA: AND HIS GOLD FISH
    DREAM RUINER: XD[2]
    ME: What if he doesn’t have a dog!!
    7UP: WE WILL DRUG HIM THEN STAB HIM TO DEATH
    LADY GAGA: And rip his skin off
    And fee[d] it to his dog
    7UP: Yes
    LADY GAGA: [cartoon bitmoji of a woman captioned “wow, such amaze,
    very story, :O, many interest, so care”]
    7UP: YES TO ALL O IT
    * * *
    LADY GAGA:[3]
    2
    “XD” in electronic communications represents an “emoticon” for “laughing out loud.” The
    letter “X” represents “the eyes all scrunched up” and the letter “D” “represents a really big
    mouth that is laughing.”       See What Does “XD” Mean in Chatting?, available at
               (accessed
    September 17, 2019).
    -3-
    7UP: AWEEEEEE
    LADY GAGA: @[S]’s gold fish
    7UP: WHO ELSE HATES [S] IN HERE
    LADY GAGA: ME
    * * *
    7UP: PATRICIA WILL KIL [sic] HIM ONE DAY
    LADY GAGA: Yee
    * * *
    DREAM RUINER: His head will turn to a fucking rectangle
    LADY GAGA: A CIRCLE
    YES
    * * *
    ME: Or a triangle??!?!!?
    LADY GAGA: Yes then I’ll play volleyball with it
    ILLUMANATI CONFIRMED
    3
    Lady Gaga found a clean version of this photograph for the Snapchat thread. The image has
    since been licensed on the Internet and that version is included in this opinion.
    -4-
    DREAM RUINER:
    * * *
    7UP: [triangle graphics]
    @me shipping myself to china after killing [S]
    ME: HAHAHHAHAHAHA
    DREAM RUINER: I WILL PAY FOR SHIPPING
    * * *
    7UP: ILL BE THROWN AWAY IN THE TRASH ALONG WITH [S’]S
    REMAINS
    DREAM RUINER: You will be shipped on a luxury cruise ship
    XD
    XDD
    It is reasonable for a school to condemn and punish (by suspension, for example) the
    girls’ misuse of social media and the potential for cyberbullying it represents.4 Children should
    be strongly encouraged to use digital media responsibly, to consider all the potential
    consequences of their words, and to refrain from any aggressive, inflammatory, or hurtful
    commentary. But school rules are not criminal laws. The relevant facts in this criminal case
    include that none of the girls took any action intended to communicate the threats to S. S was
    not invited to the Snapchat, and according to his testimony, he never actually read the texts.5
    The messages came to light only after someone mentioned their existence to S, who asked Me
    about it. S’s mother informed the school principal of the existence of the Snapchat. The
    4
    The Michigan Legislature recently enacted a statute making cyberbullying a misdemeanor.
    MCL 750.411x, enacted by 
    2019 PA 47
    , effective March 27, 2019. Notably, the statute contains
    two intent requirements consistent with our analysis:
    “Cyberbully” includes posting a message or statement in a public media forum
    about any other person if both of the following apply:
    (i) The message or statement is intended to place a person in fear of bodily harm
    or death and expresses an intent to commit violence against the person.
    (ii) The message or statement is posted with the intent to communicate a threat or
    with knowledge that it will be viewed as a threat. [MCL 750.411x(6)(a).]
    5
    While using Snapchat, the participants can tell if someone is added to their assembled
    collection of chatters. They agreed that S was never added to the group.
    -5-
    principal brought the girls into his office, seized their phones, and contacted law enforcement.
    Respondent was charged with a violation of MCL 750.540e(1)(a):
    (1) A person is guilty of a misdemeanor who maliciously uses any service
    provided by a telecommunications service provider with intent to terrorize,
    frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, or annoy another person, or to
    disturb the peace and quiet of another person by any of the following:
    (a) Threatening physical harm or damage to any person or property in the course
    of a conversation or message through the use of a telecommunications service or
    device.
    We turn to a detailed review of the evidence relevant to respondent’s intent.
    Lady Gaga testified that she never told S about the Snapchat and was “surprised” that he
    found out about it. She explained, “[H]e like wasn’t added into the group chat and nobody else
    that was really friends with him or close to him was added into the group chat and so I really
    didn’t think he was going to know about it.” The texts were “just a way of kind of venting I
    guess, in some twisted way.” Lady Gaga testified that she deleted the screenshot texts regarding
    S from her phone. On cross-examination she agreed that she “never thought any of this would
    get back to S.”
    Me testified that S was her friend, and still is. S found out about the Snapchat from
    someone else, and asked her about it:
    Q. So from what you recall [S] had some kind of idea that this Snapchat
    existed and he asked you if it existed or not?
    A. Yes.
    Q. What’d you tell him?
    A. I told him it did and he asked me to show him and I showed him.
    Q. So, when you say he asked me to show him, you showed him these
    messages?
    A. Yes.
    Me conceded that “[i]t was never meant for it to be sent to [S].”
    Dream Ruiner, a sixth grader, testified that she did not “really” know S, but understood
    “that he’d given some of the other girls in the group a hard time.” She, too, believed that the
    Snapchat was “private” while the girls were engaged in it, although she saved the messages on
    her phone. Dream Ruiner suspected that Me had started the Snapchat group.
    During his testimony, S contradicted Me’s testimony regarding his view of the Snapchat.
    He recalled that Me exposed the name of the Snapchat, but not the messages themselves:
    -6-
    Q. How did you find out that the group existed?
    A. [Me] came to me and showed me it.
    Q. And when you say she showed it to you, what did she show you?
    A. She just showed me the group chat name.
    Q. The group chat name?
    A. Yeah.
    Q. And what was the group chat name?
    A. R.I.P. [S] and his goldfish.
    Q. At the time that she showed that to you, what did she show it to you
    with?
    A. She just showed me it out of the blue.
    Q. I mean, like, was it a piece of paper, was it a computer?
    A. No, it was on her phone.
    * * *
    Q. Did [Me] show you the messages in addition to the name of the
    Snapchat group?
    A. She didn’t show me the messages.
    Q. Okay, so just the name?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Have you ever personally read the messages?
    A. No.
    Q. Did you ever talk to [Me] about it after that first time when she
    showed you the name of the group?
    A. No.
    S’s mother informed him of the content of the texts, which “kind of made me feel worse,” S
    admitted. On cross-examination, S agreed that respondent had never said anything to him that he
    viewed as harassing or annoying, and had never communicated with him at all by using a phone,
    a computer, or a tablet.
    -7-
    Respondent was in the 8th grade at the time of the adjudication trial. She testified that
    she believed the Snapchat conversation was “just private.” “I had no clue people were saving it,”
    she explained, and never intended that the communications would be shown to S. And,
    consistent with S’s testimony, respondent agreed that she had never communicated with him in
    any fashion.
    Thus, no direct evidence supported that respondent intended that her threats would be
    communicated to S. The girls agreed that they did not intend for S to see their messages. S
    testified that he did not learn the content of the messages until his mother told him about them.
    No evidence was presented warranting even an inference that JP did, in fact, anticipate, expect,
    plan or desire that S would learn of the texts.
    From the onset of the case, respondent’s counsel insisted that respondent lacked an intent
    to threaten or harass S, and that such intent was fundamental to a finding of responsibility for
    having violated MCL 750.540e(1)(a). The prosecutor acknowledged that S had not been
    included in the Snapchat, but focused on the girls’ awareness that “[t]here’s no such thing as
    privacy on the internet.” The girls should have known, the prosecutor maintained, that S likely
    would find out about their “malicious” threats.
    Regarding the offense, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
    The juvenile is charged with a crime of malicious [use] of a telecommunications
    device. To prove this charge, the prosecutor must prove each of the following all
    beyond a reasonable doubt. First that the use of telephone line or any electronic
    medium of communication, the internet, a computer, a computer program, a
    computer system, a computer network, or any electronic medium of
    telecommunication [sic]. It does not matter whether the communication was
    actually sent or received. It was pretty much acknowledged that the medium here
    was a cell phone and a Snapchat. 2. Second, that the juvenile did this
    maliciously. This means the juvenile did the act with intent to terrorize, frighten,
    intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, annoy, or disturb the peace and quiet. It’s an
    either/or again as I pointed out to you; it does not have to be all of them. Third,
    the communication threatened physical harm or damage to any person or property
    through the use of the device. [Emphasis added.]
    The jury found respondent responsible. Her counsel brought a motion for a directed
    verdict or a new trial, arguing that there was no evidence that respondent (or the other girls)
    intended to threaten or disturb S in any manner. The prosecutor rested her response on the
    content of the girls’ statements, contending that they “could certainly be viewed as intending to
    terrorize, frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, annoy or disturb the peace and quiet of
    someone else[.]” The trial court concluded that because “in the end” S was intimidated and felt
    threatened, the jury’s verdict would stand.
    Respondent now appeals.
    -8-
    II
    Respondent contends that the jury’s verdict is against the great weight of the evidence.
    Because the girls did not intend that S would see their texts, respondent argues, she cannot be
    adjudicated responsible based on the threatening or offensive language they employed.
    Respondent is correct. The statute underlying the jury’s verdict requires proof of specific intent
    “to terrorize, frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, or annoy another person, or to disturb
    the peace and quiet of another person[.]” MCL 750.540e (emphasis added). No evidence
    supports that respondent specifically intended that S would ever read or learn of the text
    messages. Accordingly, the jury’s verdict contravened the great weight of the evidence, and the
    orders of adjudication and disposition must be vacated.
    A verdict is against the great weight of the evidence when “the evidence preponderates so
    heavily against the verdict that it would be a miscarriage of justice to allow the verdict to stand.”
    People v Lacalamita, 
    286 Mich. App. 467
    , 469; 780 NW2d 311 (2009). We review for an abuse
    of discretion a trial court’s denial of a motion for a new trial grounded in a great weight of the
    evidence claim. People v Unger, 
    278 Mich. App. 210
    , 232; 749 NW2d 272 (2008). A “court
    necessarily abuses its discretion when it makes an error of law.” People v Franklin, 
    500 Mich. 92
    , 100; 894 NW2d 561 (2017) (quotation marks and citation omitted). An abuse of discretion
    may also occur when a trial court “operates within an incorrect legal framework.” People v
    Hine, 
    467 Mich. 242
    , 250-251; 650 NW2d 659 (2002). We review de novo whether conduct falls
    within the scope of a criminal law. People v Cassadime, 
    258 Mich. App. 395
    , 398; 671 NW2d
    559 (2003).
    We begin our analysis by repeating the language of the statute at the center of this case:
    (1) A person is guilty of a misdemeanor who maliciously uses any service
    provided by a telecommunications service provider with intent to terrorize,
    frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, or annoy another person, or to
    disturb the peace and quiet of another person by any of the following:
    (a) Threatening physical harm or damage to any person or property in the course
    of a conversation or message through the use of a telecommunications service or
    device. [MCL 750.540e(1)(a).]
    In construing this statute, our goal is to ascertain and give effect to the Legislature’s intent.
    People v Morey, 
    461 Mich. 325
    , 330; 603 NW2d 250 (1999). The language of this statute is
    unambiguous, and so we presume that the Legislature intended the meaning conveyed. 
    Id. In People
    v Taravella, 
    133 Mich. App. 515
    , 523; 350 NW2d 780 (1984), this Court held
    that MCL 750.540e is a specific intent crime, and we reaffirm that holding.6 To be convicted
    under the statute, a defendant must specifically intend to annoy, terrorize, or disturb the peace of
    6
    Cases decided before November 1, 1990 can be considered persuasive authority, although they
    are not binding precedent. MCR 7.215(J)(1).
    -9-
    another person, and must use a telecommunications device to do so. 
    Id. The listener’s
    perception of the nature of the call does not determine a defendant’s liability, this Court
    emphasized in Taravella, as “[t]he statute clearly provides that the focus is on the caller; it is the
    malicious intent with which the transmission is made that establishes the criminality of the
    conduct.” 
    Id. at 521.
    In other words, the statute criminalizes the use of a telephonic device when
    the defendant harbors the specific intent to harass, terrorize, annoy, or otherwise interfere with
    the peace and quiet of another person.
    No evidence supports that respondent intended to harass, terrorize, annoy, or otherwise
    interfere with S’s peace and quiet. Rather, the great weight of the evidence demonstrates
    precisely the opposite: none of the Snapchat participants intended that S would ever read or see
    the texts, or would ever feel threatened by their existence. In Taravella, this Court highlighted
    that even if a recipient does receive a telephonic communication, the “listener’s subjective
    perceptions, without the necessary intent on the part of the caller” do not make out the crime. 
    Id. The focus
    remains on the intent of the sender.
    The prosecution asserts that respondent’s “[m]alice is apparent from the graphic nature of
    the threats and the attempt to build consensus on hating [S] with whoever else was in the group
    chat.” This argument disregards the language of the statute, which requires that the maker of a
    threat intend that the threat disturb or otherwise negatively affect “another person.” The nature
    of the language, standing alone, does not make out the crime, nor does the fact that violence was
    discussed.7 Rather, Taravella instructs that MCL 750.540e survives constitutional scrutiny
    precisely because it pairs speech with a speaker’s malicious intent that the content of the speech
    be communicated to a listener, and some form of follow-through on that intent.8
    7
    Although not raised as an issue on appeal, we note that the jury instruction regarding the
    offense inaccurately posited that “[i]t does not matter whether the communication was actually
    sent or received.” The failure to actually send a communication bears on a defendant’s intent to
    annoy or harass the recipient, and thus matters. Although the record is vague regarding the
    source of the jury instruction, the court appears to have obtained the “does not matter” language
    from M Crim JI 35.1, which relates to an entirely different crime (interfering with an electronic
    communication). Moreover, the instruction omitted a critical part of the statutory language—that
    the defendant intended “to terrorize, frighten, intimidate, threaten, harass, molest, or annoy
    another person.” The statute’s intent requirement mandates that speech be deliberately aimed at
    “another person.” By omitting those words, the court inaccurately conveyed the statute’s reach.
    Our holding does not rest on these grounds, however.
    8
    In this case, the prosecution alleged that respondent “threatened physical harm or damage” to a
    person, which is outlawed under subsection (1)(a). The statute also criminalizes six other acts,
    including “falsely and deliberately reporting by message . . . that a person has been injured, has
    suddenly taken ill, has suffered death, or has been the victim of a crime or an accident,” MCL
    750.540e(1)(b), and “[d]eliberately engaging or causing to engage the use of a
    telecommunications service or device of another person in a repetitive manner that causes
    -10-
    In Taravella, the defendant was charged under MCL 750.540e with having made obscene
    or harassing telephone calls. He brought a motion to quash, contending that the statute was
    unconstitutionally overbroad because it allowed for punishment of constitutionally protected
    speech. 
    Id. at 517-519.
    This Court acknowledged that the First Amendment limits “the extent to
    which states may punish or criminalize the use of words or language.” 
    Id. at 519.
    Therefore, a
    statute regulating speech “must be narrowly drawn so as not to infringe on constitutionally
    protected speech.” 
    Id. We upheld
    the statute’s constitutionality by construing it as requiring
    both a malicious intent to annoy or terrorize or disturb the peace and quiet of another, and
    evidence that the defendant “further does one of the activities listed” in the statute’s subsections.
    
    Id. at 523
    (emphasis in original). Under subsection (a), a defendant must “[t]hreaten physical
    harm or damage to any person in the course of a conversation or message[.]” MCL
    750.540e(1)(a) (emphasis added.)
    Respondent did not undertake any acts consistent with threatening S, and no evidence
    substantiates that she intended to do so. Under MCL 750.450e, respondent’s speech alone was
    not enough to establish criminal conduct. See also People v Relerford, 
    2017 IL 121094
    , ¶ 45;
    104 NE3d 341 (2017) (in which the Illinois Supreme Court found unconstitutional a statute
    criminalizing communications “to or about a person” without requiring “any relationship—
    integral or otherwise—to unlawful conduct”).
    The prosecution asserts that respondent should have anticipated that the chat would be
    leaked to S, and that her responsibility may be inferred by her failure to understand that the
    Internet is not a secure place. It is true that respondent’s texts were unwise in light of the risk
    that they would be seen by people outside the chat, but that does not suffice to prove the intent
    required by the statute, or to transform digital stupidity into criminal activity.
    Here, and in the trial court, the prosecution propounds an argument premised on
    respondent’s negligence rather than her specific intent to threaten S. Although it addresses an
    entirely different statute, we find analogous and helpful the United States Supreme Court’s
    opinion in Elonis v United States, ___ US ___; 
    135 S. Ct. 2001
    ; 
    192 L. Ed. 2d 1
    (2015). The
    federal statute at issue in Elonis made “it a crime to transmit in interstate commerce ‘any
    communication containing any threat . . . to injure the person of another.’ ” 
    Id. at 2004
    (citation
    omitted, alteration in original). Elonis posted “graphically violent language” on Facebook which
    included his wish to hurt his soon-to-be ex-wife and one of his coworkers. The subjects of the
    defendant’s Facebook postings read his words and became fearful. 
    Id. at 2005-2006.
    At trial,
    Elonis requested an instruction that “the government must prove that he intended to
    communicate a true threat.” 
    Id. at 2007
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). The district
    court denied this request and instead informed the jury that
    A statement is a true threat when a defendant intentionally makes a statement in a
    context or under such circumstances wherein a reasonable person would foresee
    that the statement would be interpreted by those to whom the maker
    interruption in telecommunications service or prevents the person from utilizing his or her
    telecommunications service or device.” MCL 750.540e(1)(g).
    -11-
    communicates the statement as a serious expression of an intention to inflict
    bodily injury or take the life of an individual. [Id. (quotation marks and citation
    omitted).]
    Pertinent here, the government contended that Elonis could be convicted “if he himself
    knew the contents and context of his posts, and a reasonable person would have recognized that
    the posts would be read as genuine threats.” 
    Id. at 2011.
    The Supreme Court soundly rejected
    the government’s argument, characterizing it as erecting “a negligence standard” inconsistent
    with the mental state required under the statute. 
    Id. “[W]rongdoing must
    be conscious to be
    criminal,” the Supreme Court reminded. 
    Id. at 2009,
    citing Morissette v United States, 
    342 U.S. 246
    , 252; 
    72 S. Ct. 240
    ; 
    96 L. Ed. 288
    (1952) (JACKSON, J.). “The ‘central thought’ ” expressed in
    Morissette, the Elonis Court highlighted, “is that a defendant must be ‘blameworthy in mind’
    before he can be found guilty, a concept courts have expressed over time through various terms
    such as mens rea, scienter, malice aforethought, guilty knowledge, and the like.” Elonis, 135 S
    Ct at 2009.
    Respondent may not be punished because she negligently overlooked the possibility that
    someone else would show S the Snapchat contents. MCL 750.540e(1)(a) applies to respondent
    only if she meant to communicate her threats to S and actually threatened him. No evidence of
    record supports that she intended or carried out a threat, and we are unable to infer intent or an
    act from any of the testimony. The evidence that respondent lacked an intent to threaten S
    preponderates so heavily against the verdict that it would be a miscarriage of justice to allow it to
    stand.
    We vacate the orders of adjudication and disposition.
    /s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher
    /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
    -12-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 344812

Filed Date: 9/24/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/25/2019