Defendants were found guilty after jury trial of breaking and entering of a building with intent to commit larceny. MCLA 750.110; MSA 28.305. The alleged crime was the *46 breaking and entering of a building to steal snowmobiles. On May 11, 1972, defendant Ross was sentenced from three to ten years in prison and on May 12, 1972, defendant Carroll was sentenced from two to ten years in prison. Defendants now raise seven issues on appeal.
Defendants first claim that their arrest was made without probable cause and that, therefore, their convictions must be reversed. Defendants do not argue that any evidence obtained as a product of their alleged illegal arrest should have been suppressed at trial. Assuming
arguendo
that the arrests were illegal, there is no authority for the proposition that the necessary consequence of an illegal arrest is that a defendant’s subsequent conviction must be reversed. The rule, in fact, is that an unlawful arrest does not prevent the prosecution of a defendant.
People v Drummonds, 30
Mich App 275;
Defendants next claim that the trial court committed reversible error by conducting an inquiry into possible improper influences on the jury outside of the defendants’ presence. On three occasions the trial judge conducted in-chambers inquiries into possible grounds for the disqualification of certain jurors. The defendants’ lawyers were present at these inquiries but the defendants were not. The first inquiry occurred after the attorney for one of the defendants reported that he had observed a witness police officer in a conversation with a group of people including one prospective juror, with another prospective juror listening to the conversation. The defendants’ attorneys apparently accepted the officer’s explanation that the *47 juror had not joined the conversation and that the case had not been discussed because these jurors were not challenged either for cause or peremptorily. None of the attorneys asked that the prospective jurors be examined.
The second incident occurred shortly after opening statements when one of the jurors voluntarily indicated that he was acquainted with one of the witnesses. Again the trial judge conducted an inquiry in chambers with counsel present and again no challenge was made to the juror.
The third incident occurred during the testimony of a witness when one of the jurors realized she knew the witness’s parents and so informed the court. After another in-chambers discussion the trial court excluded the juror from the jury panel upon defense counsel’s request.
Defendants cite
People v Percy Harris,
In addition, defendants argue that the trial court erred in the first in-chambers inquiry in not sua sponte interviewing the jurors who allegedly overheard the conversation of the witness as described above.
People v Levey,
*49
The third claim made on appeal, raised by defendant Ross alone, is that his case was prejudiced because the jury saw him in a holding cell and overheard the bailiff making a phone call and telling someone to bring Ross over. Defendant cites
People v Duplissey,
The fourth claim made on appeal is that it was error to deny defendants’ motion for separate trials. Defendants argue that at trial a trailer license plate registered in the third defendant’s name, Robert Burns, some bolt cutters, bolts, and wires, all found in the 1958 Chevrolet abandoned at the scene of the crime by the three subjects suspected of breaking and entering, were improperly admitted into evidence since this evidence was allegedly not linked with the crime and not linked with them. Moreover, they contend that because Burns took the stand on his own behalf they were faced with the choice of testifying and disclosing prior breaking and entering convictions or being confronted with the possibility that the jury would *50 assume that since they did not testify they must have had something they were afraid to testify about. Furthermore, they assert that their counsel pointed out in their motion for separate trials that there were separate and inconsistent defenses among all three defendants.
Separation of trials of codefendants is, of course, a matter of judicial discretion. MCLA 768.5; MSA 28.1028;
People v Schram,
As to defendant Burns’s testimony prejudicing defendants Ross’s and Carroll’s case, nothing in his story in any way implicated them in the crime. Furthermore, had there been separate trials for the defendants Burns could still have been called as a witness. While we appreciate the possibility that the defendants may have been questioned about prior convictions had they taken the stand, nothing in Burns’s exculpatory attestations forced them to testify in their own behalf.
*51
The fifth claim made on appeal is that the trial court erred in failing to instruct on lesser included offenses. However, no request was ever made for such instructions. The opinion of two Justices in
People v Herbert Van Smith, Jr,
Defendants’ sixth claim on appeal is that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. An abbreviated version of the facts shows that at approximately 12:54 a.m. on November 4, 1971, Officer Quick of the Saginaw Township Police Department saw a vehicle in the driveway of the Kruger Machinery Company. Officer Quick turned into the driveway. The officer observed three men attempting to attach a trailer loaded with two snowmobiles to a car. The three men fled when they noticed the officer’s approach. Officer Quick did not pursue the men but rather radioed a report and asked for a tracking dog.
A bowling alley known as the Bowl-O-Mat is located between one-quarter and one-half mile from the scene of the crime. At about 1:05 a.m., the assistant manager of the Bowl-O-Mat saw two men, later identified as Ross and Carroll, enter the establishment. About five minutes later, defendant Burns entered the Bowl-O-Mat. After the first two men came in, one of them made a phone call. The assistant manager of the Bowl-O-Mat testified that Bums stated that he was having car trouble in the parking lot and had called Mike’s Wrecker. Burns *52 testified that he had said that he was waiting for a ride because his car was at Mike’s. The three men waited in the Bowl-O-Mat for a short time. A blue Maverick containing two women pulled up in front of the Bowl-O-Mat and the three men went out and got in the back seat. Shortly thereafter the car was stopped by the police and the two women and Burns, Ross, and Carroll were taken to the police station.
The car which the criminals abandoned at the scene of the crime was owned by Janice Ormes, who was Ross’s girlfriend. Inside this car the police found a trailer license plate that had been issued to defendant Burns. Janice Ormes was one of the two women in the blue Maverick. The other woman was Rosemary Martinus, who was Burns’s girlfriend.
The owner and employees of the Kruger Machinery Company gave testimony that indicated that all doors to the building were closed and secured when the last employee left the premises. In the morning the door was open. Two snowmobiles were found outside the building and at most one had been left outside by the Kruger Company. We believe, as did the trial judge, that the case could properly be submitted to the jury on the basis of these facts and that the verdicts of guilty were supported by sufficient evidence beyond a reasonable doubt.
Affirmed.
