Opinion
Defendant appeals from a judgment (order granting probation) which followed a juiy verdict finding him guilty of first degree robbery.
The only issue raised on the appeal is the propriety of the
Allen
charge given to the juiy. The instruction given in this case included the erroneous admonition to minority jurors which in
People
v.
Gainer
(1977)
The People urge that the italicized part of this statement was not necessary to the
Gainer
decision, is dictum and need not be followed,
*986
that
Gainer
merely announced a rule of judicial procedure, not a constitutional principle, that quasi-retroactivity of
Gainer
is wrong under accepted principles
(People
v.
Kaanehe
(1977)
The traditional way, of course, is to announce a new rule of law in one case and then to keep the bench and bar on edge, waiting for another decision in which the retroactivity of the rule is announced. Thus it took four years before we knew the full impact of
Mapp
v.
Ohio
(1961)
One rationale for characterizing a statement not necessary to a decision as dictum is the fact that the court did not have to confront the effect of such a statement. This is manifestly not the case here. 1 Whether *987 the Supreme Court’s obvious awareness of the consequences of its statement elevates the dictum to a holding or whether it is a dictum that we must follow, does not make much difference. We follow.
The judgment is reversed.
Ashby, J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
The People’s petition for rehearing in Gainer made many of the same arguments they advance before us. Specifically they drew the Supreme Court’s attention to the 20-odd *987 pending appeals to which Gainer applies if the “dictum” should become law. The petition was denied.
