Defendant was charged with the offense of statutory rape †before Genesee county circuit court. On January 14, 1959, the day set for trial, while represented by counsel he entered a plea of guilty. After full compliance with Court Rule No 35A (1945) and a careful examination in open court wherein defendant recited the facts pertaining to the offense in great detail and in substantial conformity to the charge as contained in the information, the circuit judge accepted the plea.
Subsequently, on February 18, 1959, defendant was brought to court for sentence and, after hearing the sentence administered to his older brother, sought to withdraw his own guilty plea, claiming that he had misunderstood his rights and that in fact he was innocent of the charge. After questioning of defendant in open court, wherein discrepancies in his new story appeared, and after *432 hearing argument on the'motion, the circuit judge denied it. •
Obviously convinced of defendant’s guilt, the court proceeded to sentence him. He said in this regard:
“It seems to the court that one seeking to withdraw a plea of guilty must at the time motion for leave to withdraw the plea is made state some reason why the judgment should not stand against him and that reason must amount to a fraud or an imposition on him or a misapprehension of his legal rights. He should at the very least allege and perhaps make some showing that he is not guilty of the charge to which he has pleaded.”
The court in this regard relied upon
People
v.
Furkas,
Generally, it is considered that there is no absolute right to withdrawal of a guilty plea.
People
v.
Case,
In People v. Banning, supra, p 7, this Court said:
“Defendant relied principally upon the line of cases in which we have held that a plea of guilty may be withdrawn at any time before sentence.
People
v.
Anderson,
“The rationale behind these cases is apparent. The right to trial by jury in criminal cases is a substantial constitutional right, as are the attendant *433 rights of confrontation, cross-examination, et cetera. While these rights may.be waived by the defendant, the law has erected many safeguards to protect him against his. .own ignorance,. or folly, and against the pressures that might he applied by others. In the case in which the defendant has pleaded guilty, and then desires to avail himself of his constitutional guaranties, the law will not punish him for his indiscretion.”
Where, as here, a defense of innocence is asserted at the time of a request to withdraw the plea, and the request is not obviously frivolous and is made before commencement of trial and before sentence, the plea should be granted. The right we deal with here is the right to a jury trial, and even what may prove a well-founded belief in defendant’s guilt on the part of the trial judge should not impede the exercise of that right.
Reversed and remanded for order allowing withdrawal of plea, and new trial.
