Plaintiff, the Wayne County prosecutor, appeals as of right from an order dismissing his complaint for superintending control. We affirm.
Plaintiff brought this action to obtain an order requiring defendants, the Department of Corrections and the Parole Board, to allow plaintiff to intervene as a party in parole revocation proceedings in cases where the Parole Board is considering revocation based on a parolee’s alleged commission of a felony. It is plaintiff’s contention that, in instances where there are several years remaining in
i
Superintending control is an extraordinary remedy, and extraordinary circumstances must be presented to convince a court that the remedy is warranted. 4 Martin, Dean & Webster, Michigan Court Rules Practice (2d ed), p 331. For an order of superintending control to issue, the plaintiff must show that a clear legal duty has not been performed by the defendant.
Beer v Fraser Civil Service Comm,
n
The Parole Board is part of the Department of Corrections. MCL 791.231a; MSA 28.2301(1). MCL 791.234; MSA 28.2304 and MCL 791.235; MSA 28.2305 govern the procedures surrounding parole interviews and the decision to grant or deny parole. Although the statutes no longer expressly so provide, the length of the parole period is generally discretionary with the Parole Board. See
Lane v Dep’t of Corrections,
A prisoner on parole is still in the “legal custody and control” of the Department of Corrections. MCL 791.238(1); MSA 28.2308(1). If a parolee commits a new crime while on parole and the prosecutor opts not to prosecute the parolee for the new crime, the department issues a warrant for the return of the parolee. MCL 791.238(1); MSA 28.2308(1). A parolee is entitled to a preliminary probable cause hearing within ten days after arrest for parole violation, MCL 791.239a(l); MSA 28.2309(1)(1), and is entitled to a fact-finding hearing before a member of the Parole Board or a hearing officer within forty-five days of return to prison. MCL 791.240a(l); MSA 28.2310(1)(1). The parolee is entitled to be represented by counsel at the parole revocation hearing. MCL 791.240a(2); MSA 28.2310(1)(2). Additionally, the parolee is entitled to hear the evidence against the parolee, to testify and present evidence, and to cross-examine witnesses. Id. A parole violation must be established by a preponderance of the evidence, MCL 791.240a(5), (6); MSA 28.2310(1)(5), (6).
After the hearing, the hearing officer prepares a report and recommendation for disposition by the Parole Board. MCL 791.240a(5); MSA 28.2310(1)(5). The board then enters an order either rescinding parole or reinstating it. MCL 791.41; MSA 28.2311. A rescinding order also sets the length of time before
the offender will again be eligible for parole. See
Wayne Co Prosecutor v Dep’t of Corrections,
m
The statutory framework outlined above includes participation by the prosecutor
IV
Plaintiff argues that, even if the statutes governing parole revocation proceedings do not include a provision contemplating a prosecutor’s participation in the proceedings, a right to intervene exists by way of the apa. As explained in LeDuc, Michigan Administrative Law, § 6:16, pp 27-28:
Michigan's Administrative Procedures Act has no provisions regarding intervention. In the absence of a statute providing some guidance as to who is entitled to participate or intervene in a contested case proceeding, intervention has remained largely the province of individual agency policy and the discretion of administrative hearing judges and officers. These policies may be embodied in rule, but they are more likely revealed by the customs and practices of the agency in conducting contested cases.
Except for the circumstances of clear statutory direction or agency rules about intervention, one seeking to intervene is left with the arguments that can be based on the definition of contested case and parties in the apa and the nature of the interests which may be affected in a particular contested case setting. Basically, the argument that must be made is that the contested case will determine the legal rights, duties, or privileges of the person seeking intervention, and that the person seeking to intervene is properly seeking and entitled of right to be admitted as a party.
Thus, where, as here, there is no statutory or administrative rule governing intervention, an administrative agency’s decision whether to allow a person to intervene in a contested case is discretionary; again, there is no particular clear legal duty to allow intervention. The one exception is if the person wishing to intervene can show entitlement to “party” status under the apa. The apa defines a “party” as “a person or agency named, admitted, or properly seeking and entitled of right to be admitted as a party in a contested case.” MCL 24.205(4); MSA 3.560(105)(4). With regard to who is a party for purposes of contested cases, Professor LeDuc states:
[0]ne may turn to four sources to find out who a party in a contested case can be. As usual, the first source is the underlying statute, which either may identity specifically, at least by class or general description, those who are entitled to a contested case hearing, or may identify the interests which are protected, giving the possessors of those interests a status which entitles them to be admitted as a party. The second source is due process, under which property and liberty interests are protected and subject to the APA contested case provisions to protect their possessors. The third source is the apa itself, which identifies legal rights, interests, and privileges as protected, if they are to be determined in the contested case proceeding. The fourth source is the agency rules, which may, like a statute, identify those who are entitled to receive a contested case hearing. [Michigan Administrative Law, § 6:15, pp 26-27.]
Under the parole revocation statutes, due process, the apa, and the department’s administrative rules, the only persons with a protected interest who are entitled to a parole revocation hearing are the parolee, whose protected interest involves the loss of conditional liberty, and the department, which has “legal custody and control” of the parolee. See
Penn, supra,
pp 537-538; MCL 791.238(1); MSA 28.2308(1). Plaintiff contends that a county
v
Plaintiff raises additional reasons why he should be allowed to intervene in parole revocation proceedings. He maintains that he is an interested party under MCL 49.153; MSA 5.751, which provides:
The prosecuting attorneys shall, in their respective counties, appear for the state or county, and prosecute or defend in all the courts of the county, all prosecutions, suits, applications and motions whether civil or criminal, in which the state or county may be a party or interested.
This statute authorizes the prosecutor to appear in courts. Parole revocation proceedings are not prosecutions, and the Department of Corrections is not a court or a part of the judiciary.
People v Raihala,
Plaintiff also claims that he should be allowed to intervene in parole revocation proceedings because they are analogous to probation revocation hearings, where prosecutors routinely participate. However,
parole and probation occupy different places in the law. Probation is an alternative to confining an offender and is granted at the discretion of the trial court in lieu of incarceration.
People v Greenlee,
VI
We appreciate plaintiff’s attempt to take advantage of a reoffending parolee’s unserved maximum sentence in lieu of instituting yet another felony prosecution against the parolee. Plaintiff’s approach is expedient and would benefit taxpayers as well as ease court dockets. A policy that reoffending parolees could face long-term parole ineligibility might also serve as a disincentive to violate parole and thus reduce recidivism. As the circuit court noted, however, plaintiff’s arguments involve lawmaking and therefore must be directed to the Legislature rather than the courts. See
People v Kirby,
Affirmed.
