Court Opinion

ID: 9663834
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-23 23:52:49.44214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:44:29.977336
License: Public Domain

. Burns, P. J.
A jury found defendant guilty of second-degree murder.1 On appeal he claims that error was committed in the preliminary examination proceedings and that therefore the conviction should be set aside and the case remanded to the municipal court where the preliminary examination occurred. No assignments of error are raised in relation to defendant’s jury trial. The facts as they relate to the alleged error are as follows.
■ The eighth witness called by the prosecution at the preliminary examination was Solomon Goliday. He testified that he had witnessed a confrontation between the accused and Charles L. Henry shortly before the latter was killed. Upon cross-examination Goliday stated that he had talked to a police officer regarding the incident. Based upon the well-grounded belief that said officer was John Jurkas of the city of Muskegon police department, counsel for the defendant demanded that he be permitted to examine Jurkas in order to compare Goliday’s tes*465timony with Jurkas’ account. The prosecutor advised counsel that he (the prosecutor) did not want to call Officer Jurkas. Defendant’s attorney stated that he intended to wait until it was his turn to call witnesses but that in order to expedite matters he would examine the officer out of order, that is, before the prosecutor had completed his proofs.
Upon examination Jurkas indicated that he had interrogated the defendant and 3 other witnesses to the alleged crime and that he had prepared notes or reports which he delivered to the prosecuting attorney. Thereupon counsel for the defendant asked the prosecutor for permission to inspect those documents. The prosecutor refused the request on the ground that, by previous agreement,2 defendant was to be given access only to statements for the purpose of cross-examination, and that since the officer was called by the defendant, he could not subject his own witness to cross-examination. Counsel for the defendant contended, and contends on appeal, that Officer Jurkas was an agent of an adverse party and therefore could be cross-examined. See GrCR 1963, 507.4 and CLS 1961, § 600.2161 (Stat Ann 1962 Rev § 27A.2161). The examining magistrate upheld the position of the prosecutor.
Defendant was bound over to circuit court on the charge of first-degree murder.3 In circuit court defendant moved to remand to municipal, court for *466the purpose of continuing defendant’s cross-examination of Jurkas and to order the production of the requested statements, reports, or notes; the circuit court denied this motion and ordered trial to commence on November 23, 1965.
On appeal defendant argues that “Jessie Johnson was denied due process of law4 and substantial justice when his counsel was denied effective cross-examination.” Defendant’s position that he was entitled to call and cross-examine Officer Jurkas is well taken. The difficulty encountered in deciding whether to apply the adverse agent rule of evidence involves the very nature of the preliminary examination itself. The right of the accused to produce witnesses and to cross-examine witnesses is guaranteed by OL 1948, § 766.12 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.930), and in this respect the preliminary examination is ah adversary proceeding. CL 1948, § 768.22 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1045) provides:
“The rules of evidence in civil actions, in so far as the same are applicable, shall govern in all criminal and quasi criminal proceedings except as otherwise provided by law.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Since we have not found any compelling reasons why the adverse agent rule is not applicable in a preliminay examination, we hold that defendant’s counsel had the right to call and cross-examine Officer Jurkas the same as if he had been called by the prosecution. See People v. Saccoia (1934), 268 Mich 132, 142, where, in a criminal proceeding, the ad-, verse agent rule was recognized a fortiori but unsuccessfully invoked because the judge held that the witness was not in fact an adverse agent.
This right of cross-examination, however, can be no more extensive than in any other civil or criminal *467proceeding and cannot be converted into a right of discovery as was attempted in this case.
Defendant directs onr attention to People v. Dellabonda (1933), 265 Mich 486, wherein on pages 499 and 500 the Court said:
“One of the elementary principles of cross-examination is that the party having the right to cross-examine has a right to draw out from the witness and lay before the jury [or examining magistrate] anything tending or which may tend to contradict, weaken, modify, or explain the testimony of the witness on direct examination or which tends or may tend to elucidate the testimony or affect the credibility of the witness.
“Here the witness had made a prior report to a superior officer relating to the occurrences involved on the night of the shooting. Defendants had a right on cross-examination to call out the fact that such statement had been made, to lay the same before the jury, for the purpose of modifying, explaining or contradicting the testimony of the witness.”
If defense counsel in our case would have evinced some intention to inspect the reports or notes for possible impeachment or at least elucidation purposes, his “cross-examination” would have been extricated from the fishing expedition quagmire.
It is apparent, that defendant’s counsel intended to frame questions for cross-examination from the notes or reports; he did not attempt to conduct proper cross-examination by first framing an issue or eliciting some fact and then using the reports or notes to illuminate previous testimony related to that issue or fact.
The examining magistrate was under no obligation to permit the discovery of Officer Jurkas’ notes *468hr reports under the guise of cross-examination. Defendant was not denied due process of law.
Affirmed.
B. M. Byan, J., concurred with Burns, P. J.

 CL 1948, § 750.317 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.549).

 Earlier in the preliminary examination a similar problem arose when defense counsel was cross-examining another poliee' officer who had also prepared notes and reports. At that time the examining magistrate ruled that said documents eould be examined by the defendant. The prosecutor requested and was given permission to seek review of that holding. The circuit court heard the prosecutor’s “complaint seeking superintending control over Muskegon municipal court” and the defendant’s motion to dismiss, but before a decision was rendered, the prosecutor withdrew his objections and agreed to allow defense counsel to review the officer’s notes and reports.

 CL 1948, § 750.310 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.548).

 US Const, Am li; Const 1963, art 1, §17.