Defendant Means was convicted by a plea of guilty of robbery unarmed, contrary to MCLA 750.530; MSA 28.798, and received a sentence of 10 to 15 years. On appeal he claims all manner of error in connection with the way his sentence was determined and announced.
This defendant was one of the three participants in the crime who pled guilty to the same charge and were sentenced at the same time. His sentence was 10 to 15 years. The other two received minimum sentences of 6 and 12 years. One other participant in the crime was convicted by jury trial of robbery armed and received a sentence of 18 to 25 years.
His trial counsel did not ask to see a copy of the presentence report. Several months after being sentenced his appellate counsel moved the trial court to grant access to the report. This motion was denied. It is unnecessary for us to determine if his appellate counsel had a right to examine the report. If it was asserted that such a right existed and further, that access to the report was necessary to properly prepare an appeal, the appropriate remedy would have been to seek it by filing an appropriate motion in the Court of Appeals, just as would have been done, for example, if the trial court denied appellate counsel access to the circuit *572 court file. It is our determination that denial of a postsentence motion to produce the presentence report for examination does not entitle the defendant to have his sentence vacated, which is the relief sought by reason of the alleged error.
The defendant’s claim that a 10- to 15-year sentence for robbery unarmed constitutes cruel and unusual punishment is equally without merit. See,
People v Gunn,
The last sentence of the indeterminate sentence statute, MCLA 769.8; MSA 28.1080, which is quoted in full in
People v Moore,
The defendant claims that the court abused its discretion, denied him equal protection of the law, and denied him due process by making an undis *573 closed factual determination with respect to the degree of the defendant’s participation and that this error was aggravated because the sources of information taken into consideration by the court were undisclosed. Without doubt a principal source of information available to the court was the presentence report. As already stated, timely requests for it were not made to either the trial court or to this Court. The court was probably influenced by testimony heard at the above-mentioned jury trial. The defendant had two opportunities to tell his version to the court, once when he pled guilty and again when he was sentenced. He unquestionably had the opportunity to communicate information to the court through the probation officer. In any event the court’s factual determination with respect to details of the crime and his discretion in determining the minimum prison sentence to be imposed are not subject to appellate review.
The conviction and sentence are affirmed.
