This appeal brought by the prose
*244
cutor concerns this Court’s decisions in
People v
Rogers,
I
The defendant was initially charged with first-degree murder, armed robbery, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. He was tried by a jury and convicted as charged in 1978. However, the Court of Appeals awarded him a new trial.
The defendant appealed his plea-based convictions to the Court of Appeals. In an unpublished per curiam opinion, the Court of Appeals set aside the defendant’s convictions of armed robbery and felony-firearm. The rationale for doing so was the fact that in conjunction with the plea of guilty to the charge of armed robbery the defendant had not been informed that he could not be placed on probation for that offense.
People v Rogers, 412
Mich 669;
II
In People v Rogers, the defendant, charged with first-degree murder and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, pled guilty pursuant to a plea bargain to charges of second-degree murder and felony-firearm. The judge advised the defendant that second-degree murder was punishable by life imprisonment, but did not tell him that he could not be placed on probation.
This Court’s opinion in Rogers does not indicate the sentence imposed on Rogers. Rogers was, however, sentenced in accordance with a sentence bargain. This Court nevertheless reversed Rogers’ conviction because of the failure to advise him that he could not be placed on probation.
Rogers was predicated on People v Jones, 1 where this Court held that it was reversible error to fail to advise of the maximum and minimum sentences even though there had been sentence bargaining in Jones and the companion Grant cases.
*246 We are now of the opinion that a failure to advise a defendant pleading guilty that an offense is not probationable or of the maximum and minimum sentences which could be imposed should not be regarded as reversible error per se where there is a sentence bargain and the defendant has been sentenced in accordance with the bargain.
In
Guilty Plea Cases,
"Noncompliance with a requirement of Rule 785.7 may but does not necessarily require reversal.
"Whether a particular departure from Rule 785.7 justifies or requires reversal or remand for additional proceedings will depend on the nature of the noncompliance. ” (Emphasis supplied.)
Where there is a sentence bargain, it is not within the spirit of Guilty Plea Cases, which makes the question of reversal "depend on the nature of the noncompliance”, to reverse — although the defendant knows what sentence, or the range of the sentence, he will receive and is sentenced in accordance with the sentence bargain— because he has not been informed by the judge concerning a higher maximum sentence, that an agreed-upon sentence was mandatorily required or that the offense was not probationable.
*247 Accordingly, pursuant to GCR 1963, 853.2(4), in lieu of granting leave to appeal, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the defendant’s convictions of armed robbery and felony-firearm.
Notes
In Jones, this Court reversed Jones’s conviction of armed robbery because he had not been informed of the maximum sentence and the Grants’ convictions because they had not been informed of the maximum sentence for armed robbery or of the mandatory two-year sentence for felony-firearm. In Jones, the judge advised the defendant that he would impose a maximum sentence not to exceed 10 to 15 years and might sentence to a lesser minimum. In the companion Grant cases, the judge told each of the Grants that the sentence would be 13 to 15 years on the underlying felony and an additional 2 years on the felony-firearm conviction.
This Court relied on
Guilty Plea Cases,
