Court Opinion

ID: 9722056
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 09:15:58.174588+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:24:30.325195
License: Public Domain

Connor, J.
(concurring). I concur in the result reached by the majority, albeit for different reasons.
The punishment for second-degree murder in Michigan is imprisonment for life, or any term of years. MCL 750.317; MSA 28.549. In People v Moore, 432 Mich 311, 329; 439 NW2d 684 (1989), our Supreme Court held that a term-of-years sentence must be reasonably possible for a defendant to actually serve. People v Rushlow, 437 Mich 149, 154-156; 468 NW2d 487 (1991), decided that it is proper to take into account regular disciplinary credits when reviewing a sentence under Moore.1
*50The briefs reflect some confusion about how to take regular disciplinary credits into account. For Proposal B offenses and for crimes committed on or after April 1, 1986, prisoners are eligible for five days of regular disciplinary credits for every month actually served. MCL 800.33(3), (5); MSA 28.1403(3), (5). Taking into account leap years, the average year is 365.25 days long. With the sixty days of regular disciplinary credits a prisoner can receive, a prisoner can move an average of 425.25 days closer to being eligible for parole each year. Therefore, multiplying the minimum sentence by the ratio of actual days served to total days credited (365.25 -r-425.25 or 0.8589) produces an estimate of what portion of a minimum sentence a prisoner will have to serve before being eligible for parole, taking into account regular disciplinary credits.
The Moore Court rejected a one hundred-year minimum sentence imposed on a defendant almost thirty-five years old. Taking into account regular disciplinary credits, Moore would have had to serve eighty-five years and eleven months of his sentence before he would have been eligible for parole. Thus, we know from this decision that *51prisoners in Michigan do not have a reasonable possibility of living to be 120 years old.2
The Rushlow Court affirmed a seventy-five-year minimum sentence imposed on a defendant twenty-six years old. Taking into account regular disciplinary credits, Rushlow will have to serve sixty-four years and five months of his sentence before being eligible for parole. Thus, we know from this decision that our Supreme Court believes that prisoners in Michigan have a reasonable possibility of living to be at least ninety years old.3 The eighty-seven-year figure that is frequently mentioned in discussions of Rushlow is not correct, because that figure takes into account "all possible disciplinary credits” including special disciplinary credits that the Supreme Court decided could not be considered. Rushlow, supra at 154.
In People v Weaver (After Remand), 192 Mich App 231; 480 NW2d 607 (1991), this Court affirmed a seventy-five-year minimum sentence imposed on a defendant who was about thirty years old. Weaver will have to serve sixty-four years of his minimum sentence. Taking into account credit for time served before conviction, Weaver will be at least ninety-three before being eligible for parole. Under Administrative Order No. 1990-6, we are bound by Weaver to find that prisoners in Michigan have a reasonable possibility of living to be at least ninety-three years old.4_
*52Taking regular disciplinary credits into account, defendant will be eligible for parole after serving less than thirty-four years and five months of his forty-year minimum sentence. Because he first had to serve two years for the felony-firearm conviction, defendant did not actually begin serving time for his murder conviction until he was fifty-five or fifty-six. This means that he will likely be eligible for parole before his ninety-second birthday. Consequently, following Weaver as I must, I find no violation of Moore, supra.5
Defendant also challenges the trial court’s scoring of the sentencing guidelines’ Homicide Offense Variable (ov) 3. The trial court scored the variable at fifty points, signifying a premeditated intent to kill. The scoring instructions state:
The sentencing judge must score this variable consistent with a jury verdict unless the judge has information that was not presented to the jury. [Michigan Sentencing Guidelines (2d ed), p 77.]
In this case, the trial court had no information regarding defendant’s intent that was not presented to the jury. The jury rejected the charge of first-degree premeditated murder and convicted defendant of the lesser-included offense of second-degree murder. Therefore, the trial court erred in not following the guidelines’ instructions and scoring ov 3 at 25 points. Contrary to the trial court’s assertion, the instructions do not make it impossible for someone convicted of second-degree murder to receive fifty points. Such a score is possible for convictions based on a guilty plea, a bench trial verdict, or even a jury verdict when the trial court *53is privy to information that the jury did not have before it.
In People v Milbourn, 435 Mich 630; 461 NW2d 1 (1990), our Supreme Court decided that sentences are to be reviewed for their proportionality, and that the sentencing guidelines are the best barometer available to assess proportionality. Properly scored, the highest minimum sentence the guidelines contemplate in this case is twenty-five years, considering the nature of the offense and defendant’s background. I find nothing remarkable about this defendant or his crime that would justify the trial court treating him more harshly than the courts of this state treat other similarly situated second-degree murderers. Consequently, I find the sentence disproportionate, and agree that defendant must be resentenced.
Defendant has asked to be resentenced by a different judge. The trial judge has twice sentenced defendant to prison for forty to eighty years, and this Court has twice ordered defendant to be re-sentenced. Under the circumstances, I agree that it is appropriate to grant defendant’s request and order defendant to be resentenced by a different judge.

 I believe our Supreme Court should reconsider its decision in Moore. See People v Mitchell, 428 Mich 364, 370; 408 NW2d 798 (1987). The principle of proportionality announced in People v Milbourn, 435 Mich 630; 461 NW2d 1 (1990), and the use of the sentencing guidelines in assessing proportionality adequately protect defendants from arbitrary and unfairly harsh sentences. Other artificial limitations placed on sentencing discretion should be disposed of. If our statutes give a sentencing court tools with which to fashion a sentence that is, in effect, a life sentence with no possibility of parole, *50and if, considering the nature of the offense and the background of the offender, it would be appropriate to impose such a sentence, a trial court should be allowed to do so.
Moreover, as a result of Rushlow, trial courts routinely consult "good time charts” that carefully calculate the amount of regular disciplinary credits defendants can accumulate and factor the reduction into their sentence to ensure that a defendant they perceive to be particularly dangerous or who has committed an exceptionally offensive crime will not be eligible for parole until he has at least survived his ninetieth birthday. Review on appeal for a violation of Moore now consists of a mathematical exercise in futility to ascertain whether the trial court failed to add or subtract correctly.
Finally, as is noted in footnote 4, infra, a minimum sentence a defendant has a one-in-twelve chance of serving does not violate Moore. Thus, the decision in Moore expends scarce judicial resources on a question that it is quite unlikely will make any difference to anyone.

 This is not surprising. With apologies to Methuselah, only once in human history has it been verified that a person lived to celebrate his 120th birthday. Guinness Book of Records (New York: Bantam Books, 1993), pp 154-158.

 According to my calculations based on the United States population mortality table found in the Tables volume of MCLA (1993 Supp), pp 71-72, a person twenty-six years old has about a one-in-seven chance of living to his ninetieth birthday.

 According to my calculations based on the United States population mortality table found in the Tables volume of MCLA (1993 Supp), pp 71-72, a person thirty years old has about a one-in-twelve chance of living to his ninety-third birthday.

 According to my calculations based on the United States population mortality table found in the Tables volume of MCLA (1993 Supp), pp 71-72, a person fifty-six years old has about a one-in-nine chance of living to his ninety-second birthday.