355 N.W.2d 98
Docket Nos. 62831, 62832.Supreme Court of Michigan.Originally argued June 3, 1980 (Calendar Nos. 5, 6).
Decided September 18, 1984.
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OPINION OF THE COURT
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Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Louis J. Caruso, Solicitor General, Artis M. Noel, Prosecuting Attorney, an Mary C. Smith, Assistant Attorney General, for the people.
Drunk Driving Defense, P.C. (by Henry L. Greenwood), for the defendants.
ON REHEARING
KAVANAGH, J.
The judgments of the Court of Appeals in these consolidated cases were affirmed by an equal division of this Court. People v Pomeroy,
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415 Mich. 328; 329 N.W.2d 697 (1982). The cases were submitted for rehearing, which we granted. 417 Mich. 1113.
These cases present the question whether an intoxicated person who is asleep in the driver’s seat of a motionless vehicle is “operat[ing] a vehicle”, within the meaning of MCL 257.625b; MSA 9.2325(2).
We hold that under any reasonable interpretation of the phrase “operate a vehicle”, a person sleeping in a motionless car cannot be held to be presently operating a vehicle while sleeping.
In each case, the defendant was arrested while asleep in his stationary car. The evidence at Pomeroy’s trial disclosed that two deputy sheriffs discovered him asleep and slumped over the steering wheel of a car. The car was legally parked in front of the Cornerstone Bar on Bay Street in Unionville. Pomeroy’s head was resting against the horn, which was blowing. The car’s standard transmission was in neutral and the motor and heater were on, but the lights were off.
One of the deputies attempted to awaken Pomeroy by tapping on the window. Unsuccessful, he opened the door, shut off the engine, and removed a beer can from between Pomeroy’s legs. Pomeroy then woke up, pressed the clutch, and moved the gearshift down through the gears and back to neutral. He reached for the key to restart the motor, but the deputy prevented him from doing so.
The deputies testified that Pomeroy did not actually move the car. Pomeroy testified that he had been drinking that day at the Cornerstone Bar. When he started to fall asleep, the bartender told him he could not sleep in the bar. Pomeroy
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had then asked a friend for the keys to his car so he could “go to sleep”. He had turned on the car’s motor and heater because it was cold. He denied any intention to actually drive the car; the friend had said he would wake Pomeroy when he came out of the bar.
The trial judge instructed the jury that “a person operates a motor vehicle when he is in actual, physical control of a motor vehicle”. The jury found Pomeroy guilty of driving while impaired in violation of the state law.
Both the circuit court and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
A Vassar city police officer found Fulcher’s car with the rear end in a ditch and the front end on the roadway. The car’s automatic transmission was in “drive” and the engine was idling. Fulcher was slumped over the wheel, but his foot was off the accelerator. The police officer had to shake Fulcher several times and shout at him before Fulcher finally woke up. Tire tracks were furrowed in the ground, following the path of the car into the ditch.
Fulcher was tried without a jury. The trial judge who found him guilty of driving while impaired said in part:
“[W]hen I look at the definition of a driver which says that it’s a person who is [in] control of a motor vehicle [by] that I mean that I’m deciding that when a person is in control of a motor vehicle and has access to all of the gears and levers to put that thing in motion and he’s on a public highway and he’s under the influence, he is driving. I am not deciding this case on the basis that because he was in a car and there were tracks leading off the highway in the ditch, back on the highway that he was driving it earlier. My ruling is he was operating that vehicle when the officer came there and looked in the window, because I think that any
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person who is in a car on a public highway, intoxicated, in control of a vehicle, motor running, ignition on, in gear must be such a threat to the people of this state as anybody who is actually on the road.”
The circuit court and Court of Appeals affirmed.
In both cases, criminal liability is predicated on operating a motor vehicle. Pomeroy was convicted under § 625b, while Fulcher was convicted under § 5.15b of the Uniform Traffic Code for municipalities, MCL 257.951; MSA 9.2651, the wording of which parallels § 625b. Section 625b(1) then provided:
“A person shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway or any other place open to the general public, including an area designated for the parking of motor vehicles, within this state when, due to consumption of intoxicating liquor, or a controlled substance, or a combination thereof, the person has visibly impaired his ability to operate the vehicle”.
The Legislature has defined an operator as one who is in “actual physical control” of a motor vehicle.
“`Operator’ means every person, other than a chauffeur, who is in actual physical control of a motor vehicle upon a highway.” MCL 257.36; MSA 9.1836.
Here the car was motionless and the driver was asleep at the time of his arrest in each case. We do not read this statute as addressing this circumstance.
If the car had been in motion, the person in the driver’s seat might have been found to be “operating” it even though he asserted that he was asleep.
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If the person in the driver’s seat had been awake, he might have been found to have been in such physical control of the car as to support a conclusion that he was operating it even if the car was motionless.
A sleeping person is seldom operating anything. Certainly these sleeping persons were not operating their motionless cars at the time of their arrests.
In each case, the defendant was arrested while asleep at the wheel of a stationary car. The question before the trier of fact was whether the defendant was guilty of operating a vehicle while visibly impaired at the time of his arrest. At Pomeroy’s trial, no evidence was offered that he had earlier driven while visibly impaired. At Fulcher’s trial, there was circumstantial evidence that he had driven earlier while visibly impaired. While in another case such evidence might have been sufficient, the trial judge, sitting as trier of fact, expressly predicated his finding of guilt upon the circumstances obtaining at the time of Fulcher’s arrest.
The evidence on the element of operating a vehicle was, accordingly, insufficient to sustain a conviction in each case. The convictions are reversed. Retrial is barred upon the principles stated in People v Hampton, 407 Mich. 354; 285 N.W.2d 284 (1979), and Jackson v Virginia, 443 U.S. 307; 99 S Ct 2781; 61 L Ed 2d 560 (1979).
Reversed.
RYAN, BRICKLEY, and CAVANAGH, JJ., concurred with KAVANAGH, J.
LEVIN, J.
The question presented in these cases,
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consolidated on appeal,[1] is whether an intoxicated person, sitting in the driver’s seat of a stationary vehicle with the motor running, is driving while visibly impaired within the meaning of § 625b of the Michigan Vehicle Code.[2] We hold that the prohibition of the statute extends to a visibly impaired driver who is “in actual physical control”[3] of a stationary vehicle.
In Pomeroy there was not sufficient evidence that the defendant was “in actual physical control of a vehicle”. I Fulcher there was sufficient evidence.
I
In Pomeroy, two deputy sheriffs discovered James Michael Pomeroy asleep and slumped over the steering wheel of an automobile. The automobile was legally parked in front of the Cornerstone Bar on Bay Street in Unionville. Pomeroy’s head was resting against the horn, which was blowing. The automobile’s standard transmission was in neutral and the motor and heater were on, but the lights were off. One of the deputies testified that he attempted to awaken Pomeroy by tapping on the window. Unsuccessful, he opened the door, shut off the engine, and removed a beer can from
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between Pomeroy’s legs. Pomeroy then woke up, depressed the clutch pedal, and moved the gearshift down through the gears and back to neutral. He reached for the key to restart the motor, but the deputy prevented him from so doing. The deputies also testified that Pomeroy did not actually move the automobile.
Pomeroy testified that he had been drinking at the Cornerstone Bar. When he started to fall asleep, the bartender told him he could not sleep in the bar. Pomeroy had then asked a friend for the keys to his automobile so that he could “go to sleep”; the friend had said he would wake Pomeroy when he came out of the bar. Pomeroy said that he turned on the motor and heater because it was cold. He denied that he had started the automobile with the purpose of actually driving it.
At the close of the evidence, the trial judge instructed the jury that it could convict Pomeroy of violating § 625b of the Michigan Vehicle Code if it found that “his ability to operate a motor vehicle was visibly impaired due to consumption of intoxicating liquor” and that while impaired he had operated a motor vehicle. The judge further instructed that the people might prove the element of operation by showing that Pomeroy had been in “actual physical control of the motor vehicle”. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. Pomeroy was fined $100 and placed on one year’s probation. Both the circuit court and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
In Fulcher, a Vassar city police officer found Jessie Ben Fulcher’s automobile with the rear end in a ditch and the front end on the roadway. The vehicle’s automatic transmission was in “drive” and the engine was idling. Fulcher was slumped over the wheel, but his foot was off the accelerator.
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The police officer shook Fulcher several times and shouted at him before Fulcher woke up. Tire tracks were furrowed in the ground, marking the path of the automobile into the ditch.
Fulcher was tried without a jury. The judge found him guilty of driving while impaired.[4] Both the circuit court and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
II
Section 625b of the Michigan Vehicle Code provides that “[a] person shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway or any other place open to the general public, including an area designated for the parking of vehicles * * * when, due to the consumption of an intoxicating liquor * * * the person has visibly impaired his * * * ability to operate the vehicle”.[5] (Emphasis supplied.) The term “operate” is not defined, but § 36 of the Michigan Vehicle Code states that “`Operator’ means every person, other than a chauffeur, who is in actual physical control of a motor vehicle upon a highway”.[6]
The first question is whether to be in “actual
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physical control of a motor vehicle” a person must put the vehicle in motion, or whether the Legislature intended to cover a broader range of activities. The defendants contend that because the word “drive”, in its normal and ordinary usage, refers to moving vehicles, and because the Michigan Vehicle Code uses the words “drive” and “operate” interchangeably, § 625b should not extend to stationary vehicles. Their contention, however, is at odds with the definition of the word “driver”, with the case law in other states interpreting the phrases “operate” and “actual physical control” in similar statutes, and with the history of the Michigan Vehicle Code.
A
Section 13 of the Michigan Vehicle Code defines “driver” as “every person who drives or is in actual physical control of a vehicle”.[7] (Emphasis supplied.) The use of the word “or” indicates that “actual physical control” has a different meaning from the word “drives”. Even if the word “drives” is confined exclusively to moving vehicles, the phrase “actual physical control” appears to encompass a wider range of activities.
B
A review of the decisions in other states indicates that the term “operating”, as used in statutes prohibiting the operation of a vehicle while intoxicated, has generally been regarded as having a meaning broader than the term “driving”.[8]
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Courts have generally recognized that a person may operate a vehicle without driving it.[9]
A number of states have statutes that, like Michigan’s, prohibit “being in actual physical control” of a motor vehicle while intoxicated.[10] Courts in those states have construed the term “actual physical control”, like the term “operating”, as not requiring movement.[11]
C
The legislative history of the Michigan Vehicle Code similarly indicates that the prohibition extends to stationary vehicles.
Section 625 proscribes driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor. The elements of § 625 and § 625b overlap to a considerable degree. The only difference is that § 625 requires a higher level of intoxication and provides for more severe penalties than its counterpart. Given that these code
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sections apply to the same class of activity and share the same purpose, we are persuaded that their scope is coextensive.[12]
Section 625, as revised in 1927, made it unlawful for any person “who is under the influence of intoxicating liquor or narcotic drugs to drive any vehicle upon any highway within this state”.[13] (Emphasis added.) In 1939, the Legislature added the phrase “or be in actual physical control” after the word “drive”.[14]
The addition of the phrase “in actual physical control” reflects a corresponding change made in the 1938 revision of § 49 of the Uniform Vehicle Code, upon which § 625 was modeled.[15]
It appears that the addition of “in actual physical control” to § 49 was designed to extend its reach to persons
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preparing to drive stationary vehicles. The later enactment of this revision by the Legislature implies an adoption of the construction intended by the revisers of the Uniform Vehicle Code.[16]
The 1938 revision of the Uniform Vehicle Code occurred in three stages. First, an informal survey of the members of the National Conference on Street and Highway Safety’s Committee on Uniform Laws was conducted and a list of proposed revisions was compiled. Second, the list with accompanying explanatory comments was circulated to the committee’s members, who were asked to criticize the proposed revisions. Finally, the committee met in Washington, D.C., on July 11, 12, and 14, 1938, to debate the proposed revisions and to vote on their adoption.
The first reference to this change is found in the list of proposed revisions. It was proposed that § 49 “[m]ake clear that a driver, under the influence, in the driver’s seat and preparing to operate, but with the vehicle standing still, is violating this section”.[17] This suggestion evoked almost no criticism in the comments that followed; at least one respondent thought that the proposal restated rather than departed from prior law.[18] Subsequently, at the Washington, D.C., meeting, the committee agreed to this revision and chose the phrase “be in actual physical control” to effectuate its intent. In a report issued shortly after its deliberations concluded, the committee once again
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stated that “the section is to be broadened so that a person under the influence of intoxicating liquor does not need actually to be driving, provided he is `in actual control’ of a vehicle. The idea which involved a difficult drafting task is intended to cover a `drunk’ leaving a roadhouse and insisting on driving, and to enable police to prevent his doing so.”
The legislative history of the Michigan Vehicle Code, the statutory definitions of the words “driver” and “operator”, and the case law in other states construing similar statutes persuade us that § 625b extends to stationary vehicles. That determination, however, does not answer the difficult questions of what “actual physical control” means and whether the defendants in the instant cases were in “actual physical control of a vehicle”.[19]
III
Pomeroy and Fulcher were in the drivers’ seats of their automobiles, behind the steering wheels, and had turned on the motors. Pomeroy did not put the automobile in gear, and did not attempt to
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drive. He was not using the automobile as a motor vehicle, but as a shelter.
Fulcher had placed the automobile in gear. The automobile was not moving forward because it had come to rest in a ditch. Fulcher’s inability to stay awake at the wheel or to keep his foot on the accelerator does not require a finding that he was not in “actual physical control”.
We are of the opinion that the formulation of the plurality opinion on the earlier consideration of these cases will best effectuate the legislative purpose. If the defendant “is using a motor vehicle only as a shelter against the elements, and not as a motor vehicle”,[20] he is not in “actual physical control” of the vehicle as a motor vehicle. We also agree with the plurality opinion that the focus of the trial and of the instruction should be on what the defendant did rather than on what he intended.[21]
The prohibition of the statute is aimed at the use of the vehicle as a motor vehicle. Actual physical control includes use short of driving, including preparing to use the vehicle as a motor vehicle. If there is evidence that the defendant was preparing to use the vehicle as a motor vehicle, the jury should be instructed that it may find that the defendant was in “actual physical control”.
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But where, as in Pomeroy, the theory of defense supported by evidence is that the defendant may only have been using the vehicle as a shelter and not as a motor vehicle, the jury should be instructed that if the defendant was using the vehicle only as a shelter and not as a motor vehicle he was not in actual physical control and he should be acquitted.
In Pomeroy the only reasonable inference from the evidence is that Pomeroy was using and had used the vehicle only as a shelter.
In Fulcher the judge could have inferred from the evidence that Fulcher had driven or used the vehicle as a motor vehicle.
WILLIAMS, C.J., and BOYLE, J., concurred with LEVIN, J.
“[W]hen I look at the definition of a driver which says that it’s a person who is [in] control of a motor vehicle [by] that I mean that I’m deciding that when a person is in control of a motor vehicle and has access to all of the gears and levers to put that thing in motion and he’s on a public highway and he’s under the influence, he is driving. I am not deciding this case on the basis that because he was in a car and there were tracks leading off the highway in the ditch, back on the highway that he was driving it earlier. My ruling is he was operating that vehicle when the officer came there and looked in the window, because I think that any person who is in a car on a public highway, intoxicated, in control of a vehicle, motor running, ignition on, in gear must be such a threat to the people of this state as anybody who is actually on the road.”
The 1949 deletion of the “actual physical control” phrase from § 625 does not indicate that the Legislature intended to limit the scope of the offense to vehicles in motion. The simultaneous placement of the word “driver”, defined as “every person who drives or is in actual physical control of a vehicle” (see text accompanying fn 7), in the definitional chapter of the Vehicle Code evinced a legislative intent to give an expansive meaning to the word driver and its variants in every section of the code.
The Uniform Vehicle Code was first enacted by Michigan in 1927. See fn 13.
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