Court Opinion

ID: 4198223
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-08-23 14:08:58.410822+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:39:42.354343
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                           COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                   FOR PUBLICATION
                                                                   August 22, 2017
               Plaintiff-Appellant,                                9:15 a.m.

v                                                                  No. 332288
                                                                   Wayne Circuit Court
VIRGIL SMITH,                                                      LC No. 15-005228-01-FH

               Defendant-Appellee.

                                         ON REMAND

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and SERVITTO and M. J. KELLY, JJ.

SERVITTO, J.

       This case is before us, as on reconsideration granted (People v Smith, ___ Mich ___;
___NW2d ___ (2017), to determine whether the trial court’s order declaring a portion of
defendant’s plea agreement void was in error and whether the trial court’s subsequent order
denying the prosecution’s motion to vacate defendant’s plea constituted an abuse of discretion.
This Court previously dismissed the appeal as moot. People v Smith, unpublished opinion per
curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued April 18, 2017 (Docket No. 332288). We now affirm.

       We stated the relevant facts in our prior decision:

               In May 2015, defendant was involved in an altercation with his ex-wife.
       As a result, he was charged with domestic violence, MCL 750.81(2); malicious
       destruction of personal property, MCL 750.377a(1)(a)(i); felonious assault, MCL
       750.82; and felony firearm, MCL 750.227b. On February 11, 2016, the
       prosecution and defendant entered into a plea agreement whereby defendant
       would plead guilty to the charge of malicious destruction of property and agreed
       both to resign his Senate seat and to refrain from holding public office during his
       five-year probationary period (which included a ten-month jail term). The
       remaining charges against the defendant would be dismissed. At the sentencing
       hearing, the trial court ruled sua sponte that the provisions of the agreement
       related to defendant's Senate seat violated the constitutional principle of
       separation of powers and infringed on the people's right to choose their
       representatives. Accordingly, the trial court declared those portions of the plea
       agreement void because they “offend[ ] the Constitution of the State of Michigan,

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       [are] contrary to public policy and compromise[ ] the integrity of th[e] court.” In
       all other respects, the court sentenced defendant in accordance with the plea
       agreement.

                The prosecution subsequently moved to vacate defendant's plea. The
       prosecution argued that in failing to resign, defendant had not complied with the
       plea agreement and that the prosecution should be permitted to negotiate a new
       plea deal given the trial court's refusal to enforce the entirety of the original
       agreement. The trial court denied the prosecution's motion. The trial court
       acknowledged that while plea agreements are akin to contracts, they must serve
       the interests of justice. The trial court then held that where the parties had
       initially indicated that the agreement protected the public and provided for
       punishment and rehabilitation, enforcement of the agreement without the
       “offending portion” would serve the interests of justice. [Smith, at slip op 1].

The trial court added that vacating the plea would harm the interests of justice because:

               [v]acating the plea would violate the fundamental principle that it is the
       right of the people to elect whom they choose to elect for office by allowing the
       prosecutor to pressure a member of the legislative branch to resign or face
       prosecution and likely imprisonment. Vacating the plea would violate the
       separation of powers set forth in the Michigan Constitution, where only the
       Senate can discipline or remove one of its members convicted of this type of
       crime, by allowing the prosecutor to pressure a member of the legislative branch
       to resign or face prosecution and likely imprisonment. Vacating the plea would
       violate public policy by allowing the prosecutor to dominate the legislative branch
       of government with the threat of forced resignation.

               And granting the prosecution[’]s motion to vacate this plea would
       compromise the court’s integrity by involving it in an act that violates public
       policy and offends the constitution.

On remand, we consider the prosecution’s appeal of both the trial court’s original order voiding a
portion of defendant’s plea agreement and its order denying the prosecution’s motion to vacate
defendant’s plea.

       A trial court’s decision to set aside a guilty plea is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
People v Strong, 213 Mich. App. 107, 112; 539 NW2d 736 (1995). An abuse of discretion
“occurs when the trial court chooses an outcome that falls outside the range of principled
outcomes.” People v Lee, 314 Mich. App. 266, 272; 886 NW2d 185 (2016) (internal quotation
marks omitted). Issues of constitutional law are reviewed de novo. People v Benton, 294 Mich
App 191, 195; 817 NW2d 599 (2011).

        On appeal, the prosecution argues that the trial court erred in voiding the portion of the
plea agreement requiring defendant to resign his state Senate seat and refrain from seeking
elective or appointed public office during the five-year probationary period. The prosecution
further argues that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to allow the prosecution to

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withdraw the plea agreement and proceed to trial. The prosecution specifically contends that the
plea agreement did not, as the trial court found, violate the separation of powers and that both
defendant and the prosecution were entitled to receive the benefit of their end of the negotiated
plea agreement. 1

        The Michigan Constitution provides for the separation of powers, specifically stating,
“The powers of government are divided into three branches: legislative, executive and judicial.
No person exercising powers of one branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to another
branch except as expressly provided in this constitution.” Const 1963, art 3, § 2. “While the
Constitution provides for three separate branches of government, Const 1963, art 3, § 2, the
boundaries between these branches need not be ‘airtight[.]’ ” Makowski v Governor, 495 Mich.
465, 482; 852 NW2d 61 (2014) (internal citation omitted). Indeed, the Michigan Supreme Court
has held that this constitutional provision does not require “that [the separate branches of
government] must be kept wholly and entirely separate and distinct, and have no common link or
dependence, the one upon the other, in the slightest degree.” Kent Co Prosecutor v Kent Co
Sheriff (On Rehearing), 428 Mich. 314, 321-322; 409 NW2d 202 (1987), quoting Local 321,
State, Co, & Muni Workers of America v Dearborn, 311 Mich. 674, 677; 19 NW2d 140 (1945).
Instead, “[t]he true meaning [of the separation of powers clause] is that the whole power of one
of these departments should not be exercised by the same hands which possess the whole power
of either of the other departments; and that such exercise of the whole would subvert the
principles of a free Constitution.” Id. at 322.

        Relevant to the instant matter, the state Constitution contains a clause regarding the
qualifications of an individual to serve as part of the state Legislature, including the state Senate:

               Each senator and representative must be a citizen of the United States, at
       least 21 years of age, and an elector of the district he represents. The removal of
       his domicile from the district shall be deemed a vacation of the office. No person
       who has been convicted of subversion or who has within the preceding 20 years
       been convicted of a felony involving a breach of public trust shall be eligible for
       either house of the legislature. [Const 1963, art 4, § 7.]

1
  We note that despite the trial court’s rulings, defendant in fact voluntarily resigned from his
seat in the Michigan Senate effective April 12, 2016. Although defendant previously argued that
the trial court’s vacating the portion of the plea agreement requiring him to not seek elected
office during his five-year probationary period was not yet ripe for review, it has come to our
attention that defendant is currently running for a public office. Moreover, even if he were not,
an “actual, existing controversy” exists because the trial court’s act of striking certain terms from
the plea agreement as unconstitutional, while then approving the rest of the agreement, formed a
“real and immediate threat” to the prosecution’s interest. See, People v Conat, 238 Mich. App.
134, 145; 605 NW2d 49 (1999).

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The Michigan Constitution added additional disqualifying characteristics that would bar
someone from seeking public office at Const 1963, art 11, § 8:

               A person is ineligible for election or appointment to any state or local
       elective office of this state and ineligible to hold a position in public employment
       in this state that is policy-making or that has discretionary authority over public
       assets if, within the immediately preceding 20 years, the person was convicted of
       a felony involving dishonesty, deceit, fraud, or a breach of the public trust and the
       conviction was related to the person’s official capacity while the person was
       holding any elective office or position of employment in local, state, or federal
       government. This requirement is in addition to any other qualification required
       under this constitution or by law.

Additionally, the Michigan Constitution states how a member of the state Senate can be forcibly
removed from that position, providing, in relevant part as follows:

               Each house shall be the sole judge of the qualifications, elections and
       returns of its members, and may, with the concurrence of two-thirds of all the
       members elected thereto and serving therein, expel a member. The reasons for
       such expulsion shall be entered in the journal, with the votes and names of the
       members voting upon the question. No member shall be expelled a second time
       for the same cause. [Const 1963, art 4, § 16.]

Meanwhile, the Michigan Constitution also expressly bars the executive branch of government,
of which the prosecution is a member, People v Conat, 238 Mich. App. 134, 150; 605 NW2d 49
(1999), from expelling members from the other two branches of government, including the
legislative branch: “[The governor] may remove or suspend from office for gross neglect of duty
or for corrupt conduct in office, or for any other misfeasance or malfeasance therein, any elective
or appointive state officer, except legislative or judicial, and shall report the reasons for such
removal or suspension to the legislature.” Const 1963, art 5, § 10.

        Considering the language used in the state Constitution, it is clear that the Constitution
specifically described when an individual is no longer eligible to run for elective office,
including as a state Senator, and also reserved the right to the Legislature to determine when its
own members should be expelled. While the prosecution argues that the voluntary nature of
defendant’s decision to agree to the plea agreement rendered it constitutional, such a view would
serve to allow the prosecution, as a member of the executive branch, to do, indirectly, an act
which it is specifically prohibited from doing directly.

       There are no Michigan cases that have addressed this issue. However, at least one federal
court has considered a nearly identical issue. In United States v Richmond, 550 F Supp 605
(EDNY 1982), the defendant, a member of Congress, entered into a plea agreement which
contained as part of its provisions the requirements that he immediately resign from Congress
and withdraw as a candidate for re-election. Id. at 606. The United States District Court found
that the plea agreement provisions relating to his current membership in Congress and his
candidacy for re-election were void because they represented an unconstitutional interference by

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the executive with the legislative branch of government (separation of powers), interfered with
the rights of the defendant's constituents, and contravened public policy. Id.

        The imperative that the people are sovereign in a republican form of government “was
embodied in the Constitution by prescribing only a limited number of qualifications for
congressional office,” and by empowering “the houses of Congress to discipline their members
and in extreme cases to expel them by a two-thirds vote.” Id. at 607. “It was the people of the
Congressman's district who were to decide upon his moral and other qualifications, not
Congress. A fortiori this inhibition applies to other branches of government.” Id. As the
Richmond Court explained, “[j]ust as Congress and the states are prohibited from interfering with
the choice of the people for congressional office, federal prosecutors may not, directly or
indirectly, subvert the people's choice or deny them the opportunity to vote for any candidate.”
Id. at 608.

         Similarly, though admittedly not directly on point, the state of Maryland also held that
requiring an elected official to refrain from running for public office as a condition of his
criminal sentence violated the separation of powers. In Leopold v State, 216 Md App 586; 88
A3d 860 (2014), the defendant, who held the elected position of County Executive was convicted
by jury of several criminal charges. Id. at 590. As part of his sentence, specifically as a special
condition of probation, the trial court prohibited the defendant from “be[ing] a candidate for any
local, state, or federal elected office.” Id. On appeal, the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
struck the special condition of probation because “there exists a comprehensive statutory scheme
governing the eligibility and removal of public officials in Maryland” and “the separation of
powers precludes trial courts from interfering in areas where the Legislature left the question of
eligibility on who may seek elected office to the County Council and the General Assembly.” Id.
at 613, 611.

        While the prosecution points out that forcing one out of office is quite different from the
voluntary resignation that was to occur in this case, the Richmond Court found it of no matter
that the defendant had voluntarily consented to the plea agreement, stating that “[t]he
constitutional protections of legislators and candidates exist not for their personal benefit but to
safeguard the rights of the people. A member of Congress may not barter away constitutional
protections which belong not to him but to his constituents.” Id. 550 F Supp at 609 (internal
citations omitted).

       Further, public policy considerations are significant when plea negotiations are permitted
to include elected offices. “Even arms[-]length negotiated commercial contracts between
persons of equal power are void if they offend public policy.” Richmond, 550 F Supp at 609.
The Richmond Court further explained:

               The possibility of the executive utilizing the threat of prosecution to force
       the resignation of a congressional representative involves potentially dangerous
       political consequences. It represents an opportunity for an assault on the
       composition and integrity of a coordinate branch of government. Taken together,
       investigative techniques such as those used in the Abscam cases, see United
       States v Myers, 688 F 2d 817 (2d Cir 1982), the enormous spectrum of criminal
       laws that can be violated, the powerful investigative and prosecutorial machine

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       available to the executive, and forced resignations through plea bargaining would
       provide an intolerable threat to a free and independent Congress. [Richmond, 550
       F Supp at 608].

        We find the reasoning in Richmond persuasive, despite the dissent’s position that the case
was “wrongly” decided by the federal bench charged with making that decision. It is particularly
compelling in light of the substantial similarities between that case and the instant matter. In
both the instant case and Richmond, the constitution in question provided a singular manner in
which a sitting member can be removed from office. In both cases, the remedy was for two-
thirds of the members of the body in which the person was elected to vote for the member’s
expulsion. Richmond, 550 F Supp at 607. Indeed, the Michigan Constitution contains an
additional clause not considered by the Richmond court, which specifically bars the executive
branch from removing members of the legislative branch. Const 1963, art 5, § 10.

        Likewise, the Richmond case and the present case both consider constitutional provisions
that set out an exhaustive list of requirements and disqualifiers for a person seeking a position in
the legislature. In Richmond, there were age, residency, and citizenship requirements, as well as
criminal and similar disqualifiers. Similarly, in the present case, the Michigan Constitution
contains a list of requirements for a person seeking a state Senate seat, including that the person
“be a citizen of the United States, at least 21 years of age, and an elector of the district he
represents.” Const 1963, art 4, § 7. Additionally, the Michigan Constitution contains an
exhaustive list of crimes that disqualify someone from seeking a state Senate seat. Const 1963,
art 11, § 8; Const 1963, art 4, § 7. And, both in Richmond and in this case, both defendants
voluntarily entered into plea agreements with provisions concerning their elected seats.

        In requiring defendant to resign from his state Senate seat as part of the plea bargain, the
prosecution attempted to invade the role of punishing and expelling a member of the state Senate
which is reserved solely for the Legislature. Const 1963, art 4, § 16. Because that duty was
provided to the Legislature alone, the prosecution’s offering of that plea agreement term was an
unconstitutional attempt to violate the separation of powers. Const 1963, art 3, § 2. When the
prosecution included in the plea bargain the requirement that defendant not seek public office for
his five-year probationary period, the prosecution invaded the role of defendant’s constituents to
“decide upon his moral and other qualifications” when such were not specifically disqualifying
under Const 1963, art 11, § 8, and Const 1963, art 4, § 7. Richmond, 550 F Supp at 607. The
attempt to do so by the prosecution violated the Michigan Constitution, which specifically sets
out what crimes can disqualify an individual from seeking public office. Notably, that list does
not include the crime of which defendant was convicted. Const 1963, art 11, § 8; Const 1963, art
4, § 7. Likewise, if the judiciary were to enter such orders, even upon the agreement of the
parties, it would be providing tacit approval to the terms of the agreement, and as such would
violate the Michigan Constitution. See Richmond, 550 F Supp at 609.

       As the Richmond court held, allowing the prosecution to engage in such negotiations
permits the possibility of threatened prosecution to be used for nefarious purposes. Even tacit
permission for prosecutors to engage in such negotiation, even if done innocently at the time,
could open the door to the executive branch using its power of prosecution to (under threat of
prosecution and likely imprisonment) remove those from elected office that do not align with the

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executive’s political preferences. Indeed, in the present case, the dangers of this practice were
specifically observed in defendant’s response to the prosecution’s motion to vacate the plea.

        In response to the prosecution’s motion, defendant argued that while he believed the trial
court should not vacate the plea, if it intended to do so, he wanted the opportunity to fulfill the
terms of the plea agreement to avoid potential prosecution and imprisonment. As can be seen,
the mere possibility of prosecution and prison time resulted in defendant seeking to abandon his
state Senate seat to avoid those possibilities. That is just the issue upon which the trial court,
defendant, and the Richmond court expressed concern. “Availability of the technique and the
possibilities of its abuse cannot be tolerated.” Id. at 609. Further, “[t]he prosecutorial practice of
dealing in legislative office in negotiations with congressional defendants must be arrested
before its potential for abuse is realized.” Id. In affirming the trial court’s decision to strike
those terms from the plea agreement, this Court will ensure that future prosecutors are aware of
the illegal nature of such negotiations, and the possibility of abuse by prosecutors will be
diminished.2

        There is no question that public officials can, and do, voluntarily resign from office for a
variety of reasons. For the dissent to suggest that our decision and reasoning necessarily indicate
that public officials can never voluntarily resign is nonsensical. The voluntary resignation from
public office by one holding such office, by that individual’s own volition without any unrelated
criminal charges being associated with the resignation, is a drastically different situation than the
one before us today. When another branch of government, like the executive branch, uses
resignation from public office as a bargaining tool, the public office held sheds it cloak of public
service and becomes one of service personal to the officeholder and the prosecution. It
diminishes the nature and purpose of the public office and reduces it to a simple tool used solely
to better or worsen an officeholders’ criminal position. In addition, as the dissent points out, “an
elected officeholder should be treated no differently than any other citizen” as it relates to
criminal plea negotiations. If the resignation from public office is used as a potential plea
negotiation tool, that equality is gone and the executive branch is effectively recognizing a
second class of citizens – an elected class with an additional, uncommon benefit with which to
bargain.

        Moreover, in the present case, the fact that defendant was willing to voluntarily
relinquish his state Senate seat and refrain from seeking public office during probation is entirely
irrelevant to the issue presented here. Defendant did not have the constitutional right to use his

2
  The dissent lightly dismisses the potential of prosecutors misusing the office (i.e., referring to
“public policy doomsday hyperbole” and “imaginary specter of prosecutors running amok”).
However, we would be remiss if we did not point out that this Court was made aware that in
direct response to this case, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s office, at least temporarily, instituted
a policy of “no plea offers” to all defendants appearing before the trial court judge assigned to
the instant matter. This conduct not only raises constitutional implications, it firmly establishes
that the executive branch does, in fact, have the ability and potential to use its power in ways that
are contrary to public policy.

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elected office as a bargaining chip, because the constitutional rights associated with his office
were not for his individual benefit but for the benefit of the people who elected him. Allowing
the prosecution to engage in this type of negotiation (using prosecution and possible
imprisonment in exchange for a resignation or promise not to seek elected office) and then
calling the agreement “voluntary” falls well within the problem of coercion regarding which the
Richmond court expressed concern. We have the same concern. Therefore, the prosecution’s
argument in that vein is without merit.

       As such, the trial court properly determined that the terms of the plea agreement requiring
defendant to resign from his state Senate seat and not seek public officer for five years were
unconstitutional. The trial court properly struck those portions of the plea agreement before
entering the judgment of sentence. That being the case, we must next determine whether the trial
court abused its discretion when it denied the prosecution’s motion to vacate the plea agreement.

        Pursuant to MCR 6.310(E), “[o]n the prosecutor’s motion, the court may vacate a plea if
the defendant has failed to comply with the terms of a plea agreement.” This Court has held that
“the prosecutor has an equal right to withdraw from a plea agreement” because “the people, no
less than the defendant, should be able to receive the benefit of the agreed-upon bargain[.]”
People v Siebert, 201 Mich. App. 402, 413; 507 NW2d 211 (1993). “ ‘The authority of a
prosecutor to make bargains with defendants has long been recognized as an essential component
of the efficient administration of justice.’ ” People v Martinez, 307 Mich. App. 641, 651; 861
NW2d 905 (2014), quoting People v Jackson, 192 Mich. App. 10, 14-15; 480 NW2d 283 (1991).
“In light of the prosecutor’s expansive powers and the public interest in maintaining the integrity
of the judicial system, agreements between defendants and prosecutors affecting the disposition
of criminal charges must be reviewed within the context of their function to serve the
administration of criminal justice.” Jackson, 192 Mich. App. at 15. “[W]hile analogous to a
contract, plea bargains are not governed by the standards of commerce but must comport with
the interests of justice in the administration of criminal laws.” Martinez, 307 Mich. App. at 651.
“In other words, contractual theories will not be applied if to do so would subvert the ends of
justice.” People v Swirles (After Remand), 218 Mich. App. 133, 135; 553 NW2d 357 (1996).

        Pursuant to the above law, the question this Court must consider, then, is whether the trial
court abused its discretion when it determined that permitting the prosecution to withdraw the
plea would “subvert the ends of justice.” Swirles (After Remand), 218 Mich. App. at 135. We find
that voiding the portions of the plea agreement that were unconstitutional while accepting the
rest “serve[d] the administration of criminal justice.” Jackson, 192 Mich. App. at 15.

        As previously discussed, the action of the prosecution in offering to forego prosecution
on crimes that could ultimately result in imprisonment (of at least two years because of the
felony-firearm charge) in exchange for defendant, among other things, resigning his state Senate
seat and refraining from holding public office, was a dangerous proposition. Not only was the
offer unconstitutional, but it also carried with it the possibility of abuse by future prosecutors. It
is not hard to extend the prosecution’s actions in this case to reach a situation where a prosecutor
in the future might go on a fishing expedition against a political opponent, threaten to charge
them with serious felonies, and then provide a “voluntary” outlet from that possibility by giving
up their position in the legislature and agreeing to not run in the future. Allowing the
prosecution in the present case to make that offer, reach an agreement, and then simply have

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another chance at negotiations when the trial court strikes the unconstitutional parts of the
agreement sends the wrong message. If a prosecutor is aware in the future that using the threat
of criminal charges against a member of the legislative branch will only be punished by allowing
them to go back to the negotiating table after the courts discover their wrongdoing, there will be
little impetus to stop the practice. Losing the benefit of their bargain after making such an
agreement, however, would send the message that these actions, which contain the possibility of
unconstitutional coercion, are better to be avoided entirely. Given that analysis, it is logical that
the trial court’s order refusing to allow the prosecution to vacate the plea was done so in order to
“serve the administration of criminal justice.” Jackson, 192 Mich. App. at 15. Deciding
otherwise would have sent a permissive instruction to the prosecution that making such an
agreement only carries the risk of having to start negotiations over.

        Additionally, in the present case (and it is not hard to see similar circumstances in future
cases) defendant has been placed in a much worse bargaining position since the plea was
accepted by the trial court. The prosecution now knows that defendant is willing to make a plea,
defendant revealed the location of the weapon used during the crime as a condition of the plea,
and defendant has since voluntarily resigned his state Senate seat. Permitting the prosecution to
go back to the negotiating table with such advantages after it made an unconstitutional plea
agreement would undoubtedly “subvert the ends of justice.” Swirles (After Remand), 218 Mich
App at 135. Also of importance, defendant is not left entirely unpunished as a result of the trial
court’s decision. Defendant was still required to serve (and has now served) 10 months in the
Wayne County Jail without the possibility of early release and five years of probation, as well as
submit to alcohol and drug treatment with monthly documentation, submit to a mental health
evaluation and full compliance with treatment, and pay full restitution to be determined.

       This Court finds that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the
prosecution’s motion to vacate the plea.

       Affirmed.

                                                              /s/ Deborah A. Servitto
                                                              /s/ Michael J. Kelly

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