In this case, the people have filed a complaint for superintending control seeking to have this Court reverse an order of Recorder’s Court Judge Samuel C. Gardner which granted Prentis Wesley Wilson a new trial on the ground that his waiver of a jury trial may have been a non-intelligent waiver.
The first issue we address is whether this Court has the jurisdiction to review the lower court’s order via a complaint for superintending control.
The procedural history is as follows: In a bench trial before Recorder’s Court Judge Clarence L. Laster, Jr., on June 15, 1982, Prentis Wesley Wilson was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, MCL 750.321; MSA 28.553, and felony-firearm, MCL 750.227b; MSA 28.424(2). Pursuant to Wilson’s appeal as of right, this Court granted Wilson’s request to remand the case to file a motion for new trial. On remand, Judge Gardner handled the case because of Judge Laster’s death. In the court’s opinion, "when new evidence was discovered during the trial, defendant’s earlier waiver should be construed as not being fully informed.” *553 Because of "the possibility of an unknown or non-intelligent waiver” the court was "constrained” to grant defendant’s motion for new trial.
The prosecutor filed with this Court an application for leave to appeal Judge Gardner’s order. This Court granted the prosecutor’s application, set aside the order granting a new trial on the basis that Wilson’s counsel had adequate time to prepare for the testimony of the added witnesses and affirmed Wilson’s conviction. Docket No. 70522, order of May 6, 1983. Wilson then filed a motion for rehearing, which was denied by this Court on June 10, 1983.
Thereafter, Wilson filed a delayed application for leave to appeal in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court held the application in abeyance pending its decision in
People v Cooke,
On January 30, 1985, the Supreme Court vacated the Court of Appeals’ May 6, 1983, order and remanded the case to Recorder’s Court, holding that the Court of Appeals "did not have jurisdiction of the prosecutor’s application for leave to appeal the grant of new trial.”
The prosecutor then filed this complaint for superintending control, contending that in granting Wilson’s motion for new trial the trial, court committed a clear error of law, thereby vesting this Court with the jurisdiction to issue an order of superintending control in the nature of certiorari. We agree.
Pursuant to MCL 600.310; MSA 27A.310 and GCR 1963, 711, now MCR 3.302, this Court is "vested with jurisdiction to issue, to inferior, tribunals, orders of superintending control that are in the nature of mandamus, prohibition and certiorari.”
Shaughnesy v Tax Tribunal,
Were we asked to review the trial court’s exercise of discretion in the case at bar, we would be inclined to dismiss the complaint for superintending control. See
People v Genessee Circuit Judge,
In granting Wilson’s motion for a new trial, the trial court relied on
People v Nicholas,
*555 The defendant in Nicholas gave up his right to a jury trial based upon his justifiable expectation that he would be allowed to plead guilty to a lesser charge. When that expectation was not fulfilled, this Court believed the defendant should have been allowed to withdraw his waiver. A similar situation is not present in the instant case.
The trial court’s sole basis for nullifying Wilson’s jury waiver was the mid-trial endorsement of two res gestae witnesses. This circumstance does not affect the voluntary, knowing and intelligent characteristics of Wilson’s jury waiver. While a defendant has a right to expect the prosecutor to fulfill his duty to produce and endorse res gestae witnesses with due diligence,
People v LeFlore (After Remand),
To automatically nullify a defendant’s waiver of jury trial and grant a new trial every time new evidence is discovered in mid-trial would be unduly burdensome. Contrary to the holding of the trial court, the late endorsement of res gestae witnesses does not as a matter of law void a waiver of the right to jury trial.
The trial court’s order granting a new trial is vacated and Wilson’s conviction is reinstated.
