The Case
The defendant, Edward L. Kennedy, was charged with having committed perjury in testimony before a grand jury in Oakland County. He was convicted and on November 29, 1966, sentenced to 1-1/2 years to 15 years in prison.
Defendant appealed his conviction and sentence to the Court of Appeals. The Court held 1 that the trial court had improperly denied a motion to quash the information prior to trial, there being no evidence of false swearing presented before the magistrate upon preliminary examination.
After the decision by the Court of Appeals, the people filed a motion in circuit court asking that the cause be remanded to the magistrate for further examination. This motion was granted by the trial judge. Defendant’s application for leave to appeal from the order of remand was granted in the Court of Appeals.
*342 The Court of Appeals in a per curiam, opinion 2 reversed the circuit court, stating that the circuit court was without jurisdiction because the earlier appellate decision 3 had not remanded the case to the trial court.
Plaintiff’s application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court was granted after application to the Court of Appeals for a rehearing had been denied.
First Issue
Whether jurisdiction, for any purpose, reattached in circuit court after the decision in
People
v.
Kennedy
(1968),
Discussion
As a general rule, appellate courts do not retain jurisdiction of causes after handing down opinions and entry of orders in pursuance thereof.
The rules governing both this Court and the Court of Appeals contemplate return of the original record to the court from which the appeal was taken. 4 This procedure obtains whether the appeal results in affirmance, reversal or remand for a specified purpose.
Under our former practice, this transmission of the original record to the lower court was called the
remittitur. Reynolds
v.
Newaygo Circuit Judge
(1896),
Our General Court Rules of 1963 use the terms “order” 5 and “final process”. 6
*343 Under whatever name, it is axiomatic that a court speaks through its orders. Appellate courts can, and often do, enter orders directly affecting the rights of the parties. They can and often do enter orders which completely dispose of the litigation, leaving nothing for the trial court to do upon retransmission of the record.
But every final order on appeal unless otherwise expressly provided sets in motion the clerical process of re-transmission to the lower court.
Upon return of the record, the lower court is again vested with jurisdiction over the cause.
Department of Conservation
v.
Connor
(1948),
When the mandate of an appellate court is filed in the lower court, that court reacquires the jurisdiction which it lost by the taking of the review proceedings. 5 Am Jur 2d, Appeal and Error, § 990, p 417.
“On remand, the trial court may consider and decide any matters left open by the appellate court and is free to make any order or direction in further progress of the case, not inconsistent with the decision of the appellate court, as to any question not presented or settled by such decision.” 5 Am Jur 2d, Appeal and Error, § 992, pp 419, 420.
Conclusion
After the decision in
People
v.
Kennedy
(1968),
Second Issue
Whether the circuit court could properly remand the case to the magistrate for further examination *344 where the appellate court had found the examination legally insufficient to support an information charging perjury.
Discussion
In the first
appeal
— People v.
Kennedy
(1968),
Upon receipt of the decision of the Court of Appeals quashing the information, Circuit Judge Ziem stood in exactly the same position as did then Circuit Judge Quinn in the case of
People
v.
Miklovich
(1965),
“In support of his contention that the circuit court had no jurisdiction to remand to the examining magistrate, defendant argues that since under CL 1948, § 766.13 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.931) the magistrate must discharge the defendant if he finds that no offense has been committed or that there is not probable cause for charging the defendant therewith, it therefore follows that the circuit court upon a similar finding, under a motion to quash the infor *345 mation, has no authority to order a further examination.
“Defendant’s argument is without merit. The discharge by an examining magistrate upon examination of a person accused of a crime is not a bar to his subsequent arrest, examination, and trial for the same offense because he has not been placed in jeopardy. Jurisdiction, having once vested in the circuit court, was not lost by virtue of the granting of the motion to quash the information. Therefore, the circuit court had authority, upon motion of the prosecutor, to remand to the examining magistrate for further examination.” People v. Miklovich, supra, pp 538, 539.
The decision of- the Court of Appeals vacating the order of the circuit court remanding the cause to the magistrate for further examination is reversed, and this cause is remanded to the circuit court for reinstatement of its order of remand and transmittal to the magistrate for further examination.
