People of Michigan v. Michael Clifford Byers ( 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
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                  UNPUBLISHED
    March 14, 2019
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                 No. 343806
    Eaton Circuit Court
    MICHAEL CLIFFORD BYERS,                                           LC No. 2016-020238-FH
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: SAWYER, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Defendant, Michael Clifford Byers, pleaded guilty as charged to operating while
    intoxicated (OWI), third offense, MCL 257.625(1)(a), operating a vehicle without insurance,
    MCL 500.3102, and operating a vehicle while license suspended, MCL 257.904(1). On
    December 15, 2016, he was sentenced to two years’ probation and accepted into sobriety court,
    and was ordered to serve 70 days in jail with credit for 16 days already served. On November
    17, 2017, after he was arrested for another OWI, he was sentenced to a term of 40 to 60 months’
    imprisonment for the (OWI) third conviction. Defendant received credit for 131 days served.
    He appeals by leave granted.1 We affirm.
    I. FACTS
    In May 2016, defendant was arrested for driving while under the influence of Xanax,
    which had been prescribed for his anxiety. Defendant had been previously convicted of two
    OWI offenses in 1997 and 2002. At the sentencing hearing following his plea, it was established
    that he had a bond violation for tampering with a SCRAM tether that monitors alcohol; he
    apparently put something between the tether and his skin but there was no indication of alcohol
    consumption. The court sentenced defendant to two years’ probation and accepted him into
    1
    See People v Byers, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 20, 2018 (Docket
    No. 343806).
    sobriety court, added 10 days to the jail term that had been agreed to as part of the plea for the
    bond violation such that defendant was to serve 70 days, and provided a preemptive warning that
    defendant would be drug-tested and monitored for alcohol, and that if he violated the terms of his
    probation and used drugs or alcohol, the court could detain him and revisit the matter.
    In March 2017, the court indicated that it had gained a new understanding of the
    prescribed drugs that defendant was taking for anxiety and that as a result, it was not going to
    grant a restricted license if defendant continued to take prescribed Xanax. Further, the court
    indicated that unless defendant would agree to be weaned off Xanax he would be moved to
    regular probation instead of sobriety court and would not be allowed to drive since there was no
    interlock device that would preclude him from driving if he had taken the drug.
    In April 2017, defendant pleaded guilty to probation violations for missing tests with his
    “Smart Start” device, and for a positive alcohol read on the “Smart Start” device; defendant
    explained that he had taken a “wild lettuce” tincture not realizing it would have such a result. He
    also pleaded to a probation violation resulting from testing positive for THC; defendant
    explained that this was also from the “wild lettuce” tincture and that he did not realize it would
    have such a result. The court noted that defendant’s problem was anxiety but that he would
    have to address the anxiety to be successful, kept defendant in the sobriety court program,
    sentenced him to 12 days in jail, and affirmed that defendant would get one-on-one substance
    abuse counseling. At some point after the April 2017 hearing, defendant’s involvement in the
    sobriety court ended and he was put on regular probation.
    In September 2017, while on regular probation, defendant was arrested again for OWI.
    Defendant and Gerald Reed were found standing by a truck in a ditch. Reed was the registered
    owner. When interviewed, defendant stated “that the driver had ran across the field, [and] had
    fled.” Reed “shook his head.” There was no investigation of a third person because the officer
    on site “looked out into the field and it didn’t look like anyone had broken down the crops.”
    When interviewed, Reed stated that he and defendant had been drinking and that he let defendant
    drive his truck. Defendant, who appeared intoxicated, then admitted to drinking but denied that
    he had been driving; however, he would not say that Reed had been driving. Defendant said that
    after the truck went in the ditch, he attempted to drive it out of the ditch. Defendant’s blood
    alcohol content was 0.157.
    The trial court found defendant guilty of violating his probation by failing to report police
    contact, and for drinking alcohol and driving under the influence of alcohol. The court revoked
    defendant’s probation and sentenced him to a term of 40 to 60 months’ imprisonment. The court
    noted that when defendant was in sobriety court, it was for drugs he was taking for anxiety, and
    that defendant had repeatedly challenged the need for alcohol monitoring, claiming that he was
    not a drinker. Defendant now appeals.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. UPDATED PSIR
    Defendant argues that because the court did not utilize an updated presentence
    investigation report (PSIR) when sentencing him for the probation violation, he is entitled to
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    resentencing. It is undisputed that the court had the benefit of an updated probation violation
    report. Moreover, defendant fails to identify inaccuracies in the 2016 PSIR or information that
    should have been included in an updated PSIR. Under these circumstances, we see no reason to
    remand for resentencing.
    Before a person convicted of a felony is sentenced, the probation officer must prepare a
    PSIR. MCL 771.14(1); MCR 6.425(A)(1). “A sentencing judge must use a presentence report.”
    People v Hemphill, 
    439 Mich. 576
    , 579; 487 NW2d 152 (1992). The purpose of the PSIR is to
    give the sentencing court as much information as possible so that the sentence can be tailored to
    both the offense and the offender. People v Miles, 
    454 Mich. 90
    , 97; 559 NW2d 299 (1997). The
    presentence report must be “reasonably updated.” 
    Hemphill, 439 Mich. at 578-579
    , citing People
    v Triplett, 
    407 Mich. 510
    , 515; 287 NW2d 165 (1980). This rule also applies to a sentencing
    after revocation of probation. People v Crook, 
    123 Mich. App. 500
    ; 503; 333 NW2d 317 (1983).
    However,
    a defendant or the prosecutor may waive the right to a reasonably updated
    presentence report at resentencing where each believes the previously prepared
    report is accurate.
    Of course, a different case would be presented where the previously
    prepared presentence report contained information that was manifestly stale. To
    base a sentence on such information would obviously jeopardize the public
    interest. Unless the prior report is manifestly outdated, however, a defendant at
    resentencing may waive preparation of an updated report. 
    [Hemphill, 439 Mich. at 582
    .]
    Defendant suggests that the court erred in sentencing him without an updated PSIR, and
    that in doing so, it violated MCR 6.445(G). MCR 6.445(G) provides:
    Sentencing. If the court finds that the probationer has violated a condition of
    probation, or if the probationer pleads guilty to a violation, the court may continue
    probation, modify the conditions of probation, extend the probation period, or
    revoke probation and impose a sentence of incarceration. The court may not
    sentence the probationer to prison without having considered a current
    presentence report and may not sentence the probationer to prison or jail
    (including for failing to pay fines, costs, restitution, and other financial
    obligations imposed by the court) without having complied with the provisions set
    forth in MCR 6.425(B) and (E).
    Before sentencing, the court was provided with a probation violation report prepared
    approximately three weeks before the sentencing hearing. The report detailed the facts
    surrounding defendant’s most recent OWI, a calculation of defendant’s recommended sentencing
    guidelines, a description of his employment history, treatments he previously received, his past
    participation in court-mandated programming, a Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC)
    opinion that defendant failed to take responsibility for his actions and that he was deceitful with
    police and an MDOC agent, defendant’s past failed attempts to be rehabilitated through
    substance abuse therapy and court programing, an MDOC recommendation that defendant’s
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    probation be revoked, an MDOC recommendation that due to defendant’s rehabilitative failures
    in the past, defendant was better suited for punishment, and a recommendation that he be
    sentenced to jail for one year. Although defendant claims that reviewing an updated probation
    violation report does not excuse the court from having to review an updated PSIR, it appears that
    most of the information that would be included in an updated PSIR was covered in the probation
    violation report. It appears that finding error requiring reversal based on reliance on the
    probation violation report instead of an updated PSIR would be an adherence to form over
    substance.
    A court need not sentence a defendant with a “completely new” PSIR. People v
    Martinez, 
    210 Mich. App. 199
    , 202; 532 NW2d 863 (1995), overruled on other grounds by People
    v Cervantes, 
    448 Mich. 620
    , 625-626; 532 NW2d 831 (1995). At the time of defendant’s
    probation violation sentencing hearing in November 2017, the PSIR was approximately a year
    old. In Hemphill, the Court held that a court did not err in sentencing a defendant with a
    “reasonably updated” PSIR prepared approximately nine months before the defendant was
    resentenced where he had waived an updated report. 
    Hemphill, 439 Mich. at 579
    . The PSIR
    reviewed by the court was not demonstrably older than the report at issue in Hemphill and it was
    supplemented with an updated report about defendant’s new crime that had occurred within that
    year. Moreover, it is clear from the record that for much of the intervening year, defendant was
    in sobriety court and the court was aware of his progress and his struggles. Defendant has not
    alleged that the “old” PSIR was prepared in connection with unrelated offenses, and indeed, the
    report was prepared in connection to the underlying crime that was the basis for his probation.
    Defendant alleges that there was a significant intervening change of circumstances that
    warranted the preparation of a new PSIR, but he does not specify what those circumstances are.
    It is not this Court’s task to search for support for defendants’ position. Great Lakes Div of Nat’l
    Steel Corp v City of Ecorse, 
    227 Mich. App. 379
    , 424; 576 NW2d 667 (1998). Moreover, in the
    absence of any other specified changes in circumstances, it seems that the only circumstances
    that changed between 2016 and 2017 were defendant’s new crime, the violations of his
    probation, and his inability to maintain sobriety or refrain from criminal behavior, all of which
    were included in the probation violation report. Accordingly, while the court was not provided
    with an updated PSIR, it was provided with pertinent updated information. Defendant fails to
    logically connect how any unidentified inaccurate information, or missing information, affected
    or would have affected the sentencing court’s decision. Accordingly, we find no reason to order
    resentencing.
    B. DEPARTURE SENTENCE
    Defendant next argues that in departing from the sentencing guidelines range, the court
    rendered an unreasonable sentence. Defendant further argues that the court failed to adequately
    justify its departure, and that the court failed to render an individualized sentence. We review
    departure sentences for reasonableness, People v 
    Lockridge, 498 Mich. at 358
    , 391-392; 870
    NW2d 502 (2015), and the trial court’s determination of reasonableness for an abuse of
    discretion, People v Steanhouse, 
    500 Mich. 453
    , 459-460; 902 NW2d 327 (2017) (often referred
    to as Steanhouse II). A departure sentence is reasonable if it is “proportionate to the seriousness
    of the circumstances surrounding the offense and the offender.” 
    Steanhouse, 500 Mich. at 460
    .
    -4-
    While trial courts are no longer obligated to find a substantial and compelling reason to
    depart from the minimum guidelines range, trial courts are still required to score and consider the
    guidelines when imposing a sentence. 
    Lockridge, 498 Mich. at 391-392
    . Defendant states that
    the court did not score or consider the guidelines in sentencing him. Indeed, there was no
    reference to the guidelines or the scoring of variables. However, the guideline range was 0 to 11
    months.      The probation agent recommended that defendant receive a year.                    The
    recommendations were similar and there is nothing to suggest that the decision to depart would
    have been different if the guidelines had been expressly referenced.
    Defendant argues that his sentence was not proportional to his crime and him as an
    offender. Recently, in People v Dixon-Bey, 
    321 Mich. App. 490
    , 524-525; 909 NW2d 458 (2017),
    lv gtd 
    501 Mich. 1066
    (2018), this Court provided guidance for determining whether a departure
    sentence satisfies the principle of proportionality, stating:
    Because the guidelines embody the principle of proportionality and trial
    courts must consult them when sentencing, it follows that they continue to serve
    as a “useful tool” or “guideposts” for effectively combating disparity in
    sentencing. Therefore, relevant factors for determining whether a departure
    sentence is more proportionate than a sentence within the guidelines range
    continue to include (1) whether the guidelines accurately reflect the seriousness of
    the crime, (2) factors not considered by the guidelines, and (3) factors considered
    by the guidelines but given inadequate weight. When making this determination
    and sentencing a defendant, a trial court must “ ‘justify the sentence imposed in
    order to facilitate appellate review,’ ” which “includes an explanation of why the
    sentence imposed is more proportionate to the offense and the offender than a
    different sentence would have been.” [Citations omitted.]
    In this case, the court offered justification for its departure sentence and why it was more
    proportionate than a different sentence would have been, stating:
    In reviewing the probation violation report . . . the report states that
    [defendant] stated:
    “I’m not going to put my buddy” – meaning Mr. Reed– “behind the wheel
    because he wasn’t driving.”
    He continued:
    “And I’m not certainly going to admit to driving the vehicle other than
    getting behind the wheel and trying to get it unstuck from the ditch and spinning
    the wheels as he was going—as he was doing so when he couldn’t get the truck
    free.”
    And then the officer asked:
    “So, you admit to driving at that time?”
    [Defendant] states:
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    “That’s the only driving I will admit to.”
    [A witness] testified that when the [defendant and Reed] left her residence
    [Reed] was driving the vehicle, but there were only two people in the vehicle. I
    don’t know who this mysterious third person could be. There was no testimony
    from either side indicating that there was a mysterious third person driving the
    vehicle.
    And then, [defendant] previously was in our Sobriety Court program. And
    we had numerous discussions with [defendant] (sic) – I had some at the bench
    here – in that he suffered from anxiety, and that he indicated to me, numerous
    times, that he didn’t understand why he’d had to be on alcohol monitoring
    because he wasn’t a drinker.
    And yet, here we are today that he admitted to drinking, that Ms. [sic]
    Reed (sic) admitted that he was intoxicated. Wasn’t driving, but he was
    intoxicated. And he admitted to the officer that – he admitted to driving to get the
    truck unstuck, but I’m not going to put my buddy, meaning Reed, behind the
    wheel because he wasn’t driving. So, who is the Court to assume was the driver
    of this vehicle? And the Court [previously] found, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, that [defendant] was driving.
    [The prosecutor] is correct that, when you’re on probation and you commit
    – the worst offense that you can commit is another crime, and the worst of the
    worst would be drinking and driving.
    And I like the idea, [defendant], that you’re part of the community;
    however, this is the same community that you put at risk for driving almost twice
    the legal limit when you knew you shouldn’t have been driving because [a
    witness] was carting you around earlier to get money to go to the casino.
    Since rehabilitation hasn’t worked, since following the rules hasn’t
    worked, I have to look at for protection of society. And I’m going to protect
    society for every day I legally can.
    The prosecution then stated that since defendant’s minimum guidelines range was
    calculated at a term of 0 to 11 months’ imprisonment, a sentence of 40 months would be a
    departure sentence. The prosecution argued that a probation violation had been deemed an
    adequate basis for a departure previously by Michigan appellate courts, and that the departure in
    defendant’s case was “a proportional and reasonable sentence given [defendant’s] conduct and
    the nature of the violation, as well as the nature of what [defendant] is on probation for.” The
    court then stated,
    I stated on the record why I thought, and I think that’s more than sufficient
    to show that [a departure was reasonable.] [Defendant] was on probation for
    drinking and driving, and one of the rules was he was not to drink and the other
    one was he wasn’t supposed to drive. He did both, and the vehicle crashed. I
    -6-
    think that’s clear and convincing. I – I know it’s preponderance was the meaning,
    but I – I think he’s a danger to society, and that’s why I did what I did.
    Defendant argues that the sentence was not proportional because in sentencing him, the
    court characterized him as a recidivist criminal who deserved a greater punishment. The court
    did highlight defendant’s previous criminality, but it did not do so improperly as defendant
    contends. In sentencing defendant, the court’s reliance on defendant’s prior two OWI
    convictions and inability to maintain compliance with the terms of his probation was not
    improper. The convictions are factually and legally related to defendant’s probation violation,
    and are reflective of the quantum of defendant’s inability to recognize that his substance abuse
    issue leads to criminality.
    Defendant’s evasive and deceptive attitude taken with police and the MDOC in
    connection with his most recent OWI, and in attempting to skirt responsibility for drinking and
    driving, was a proper justification for departing from the guidelines, because defendant’s
    behavior was not considered by the guidelines, and a reasonable jurist could determine that the
    guidelines did not reflect the seriousness of defendant’s inability to recognize the danger of his
    actions and wrongdoing. 
    Dixon-Bey, 321 Mich. App. at 524-525
    . Defendant’s attempts to skirt
    arrest for OWI by denying driving, and his attempts to minimize his criminal behavior with his
    probation agent by continuing to adhere to his story that a mysterious third person drove into the
    ditch and then fled, shows a particular lack of respect for the well-being of the public, the
    seriousness of drinking and driving, and a respect for adherence to the law.
    Defendant implies that the court improperly relied on the fact that he had a substance
    abuse issue in departing from the minimum guidelines range. The court did refer to defendant’s
    continued abuse of substances as a reason for its departure sentence. In referencing defendant’s
    unaddressed substance abuse issues, the court was likely postulating that because defendant was
    on probation for an OWI at the time he incurred his most recent OWI, and was unsuccessfully
    enrolled in an alternative substance abuse court and substance abuse treatment, was under court
    order to remain sober, was monitored by the MDOC, and did not have a license to drive when he
    was arrested, he was not a likely candidate for rehabilitation, and that instead of rehabilitation,
    protection of society and deterrence should be the motivating factors in sentencing defendant and
    departing from the sentencing guidelines. A defendant’s potential for rehabilitation or
    propensity for recidivism and misconduct while in custody are factors not recognized by the
    guidelines, and can be considered by a trial court when imposing a departure sentence. People v
    Steanhouse, 
    313 Mich. App. 1
    , 46; 880 NW2d 297 (2015) (often referred to as “Steanhouse I”),
    overruled on other grounds, Steanhouse, 
    500 Mich. 453
    (2017).
    Although the propriety of rationalizing departures from the guidelines on a defendant’s
    substance abuse issues may be problematic if unrelated to the crime for which the defendant was
    being sentenced, such is not the case here. Defendant was on probation for drinking and driving,
    was not permitted to drink alcohol as a term of his probation, and was legally intoxicated and had
    been driving when he was arrested for his most recent OWI.
    The court’s utilization of defendant’s unaddressed substance issues in crafting a departure
    sentence does not entitle him to resentencing. The court’s aforementioned colloquy indeed
    highlighted its opinion that defendant had not taken appropriate measures to mitigate the possible
    -7-
    antecedents of his crime. A reasonable jurist could infer that defendant’s demonstrated failures
    or unwillingness to address his substance abuse contributed to his multiple convictions for OWI.
    The fact that defendant was not benefiting from the substance abuse programming, which was
    meant to address the personal antecedents that contributed to his crime, could be considered an
    “other factor” not addressed by the sentencing guidelines, 
    Dixon-Bey, 321 Mich. App. at 524-525
    ,
    that could be utilized to justify a departure from them. The court’s opinion that defendant would
    not likely be rehabilitated, and that deterrence should be the goal of its sentence, was a justifiable
    conclusion given the facts presented to the court.
    In considering the aforementioned justifications for departure, the court properly
    articulated why the sentence imposed was more proportionate to the offense and the offender
    than a different sentence would have been. 
    Dixon-Bey, 321 Mich. App. at 524-525
    . The court
    was concerned with the deceptive attitude defendant took after he committed his OWI, his
    unmitigated substance abuse issues, which likely contributed to his probation violation, and its
    belief that defendant could not be easily rehabilitated, and needed to be punished and deterred
    from further crime. Given the sheer number of defendant’s OWI convictions, the leniency the
    court showed by originally placing defendant in an alternative court system tailored for those
    who have substance abuse issues, defendant’s inability to benefit from or abide by the program’s
    rules, and the proximity in time between his third and most recent OWI (approximately a year), it
    cannot be said that the court abused its discretion in deciding that another attempt at
    rehabilitation was futile and that its departure sentence was reasonable.
    Defendant also argues that in sentencing him, the court did not craft an individualized
    sentence as is required. He argues that the court’s adherence to a local sentencing policy
    warrants a remand for a new sentencing. “A sentence is invalid if the court conforms the
    sentence to a local sentencing policy rather than imposing an individualized sentence.” People v
    Catanzarite, 
    211 Mich. App. 573
    , 583; 536 NW2d 570 (1995), citing People v Chapa, 
    407 Mich. 309
    , 309; 284 NW2d 340 (1979).
    Defendant argues that the court’s following statements constitute a local rule:
    Since rehabilitation hasn’t worked, since following the rules hasn’t worked, I
    have to look at for protection of society. And I’m going to protect society for every day I
    legally can.
    In Chapa, the trial court sentenced the defendant to a minimum of eight years
    imprisonment for delivery of and conspiracy to deliver heroin. 
    Chapa, 407 Mich. at 310
    . The
    Supreme Court held that a localized court policy concerning heroin “remove[d] much of the
    discretion that the [trial] court might otherwise have relative to sentences” when it determined
    that it had an “obligation” to sentence defendant to prison. 
    Id. The Court
    held that “[t]he
    sentencing judge erred here in limiting his discretion in accordance with the stated local policy.”
    
    Id. at 311.
    The Court remanded the case for resentencing on that basis. 
    Id. In People
    v Pennington, 
    323 Mich. App. 452
    , 469; 917 NW2d 720 (2018), this Court
    chided a judge for adhering to a local policy of sentencing defendants who exercised their right
    to a jury trial at the high-end or maximum of the guidelines range. It vacated the defendant’s
    sentence and ordered resentencing.
    -8-
    When compared with the trial court’s adherence to a local sentencing policy in
    Pennington, the court’s statement in this case is dissimilar and does not have the same legal
    implications. In Pennington, the trial court explicitly stated and intimated that it was adhering to
    a local policy of penalizing defendants who were offered plea deals, went to trial and were found
    guilty. The court was sentencing defendants more harshly for exercising their constitutional
    right to a trial. US Const, Am XI.
    In this case, the court’s statement did not explicitly or inexplicitly state or suggest that it
    was adhering to a local sentencing policy. If any inference were to be reasonably drawn from the
    court’s statements, it would be that the court found defendant’s failure to make progress with his
    substance abuse and criminal behavior, despite its previous provision of rehabilitative
    approaches rather than punitive ones, had been uncurbed, and demonstrated that defendant
    needed now to be punished. When read in context, the comments evidence that defendant
    personally needed to be deterred from his criminal behavior, and being deceitful about it, and
    that those in the community deserved protection. The court’s closing comment that defendant’s
    sentence needed to be the longest it could conceive to protect those in the community from one
    who repeatedly wished to drive drunk does not mean that the court failed to craft defendant an
    individualized sentence. The court was intimating that due to defendant’s repeated failures on
    probation, i.e., his failure to benefit from substance abuse rehabilitation and the restrictive and
    monitored environment of probation, a departure sentence was warranted. The court’s comments
    do not evidence the existence of a local sentencing policy, nor do they constitute an adherence to
    a local policy.
    Affirmed.
    /s/ David H. Sawyer
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    /s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 343806

Filed Date: 3/14/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/15/2019