dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The complaint filed by the prosecutor alleged the defendant, “in violation of Section 565.001, RSMo, committed the class A felony of capital murder, punishable upon conviction under Section 565.008.1, RSMo, in that the defendants willfully, knowingly, with premeditation, deliberately and unlawfully killed
A preliminary hearing was held on this complaint pursuant to the governing statutes (§§ 544.250, 544.410, 544.420, and 544.-470, RSMo 1978,) and the rules which generally follow the statutes (Rules 23.02, 23.08, and 23.10, Mo.Rules of Court 1979).
The complaint did not, of course, allege the defendant committed “a” felony or simply a homicide. Rule 23.08, Mo.Rules of Court 1979. Rather it alleged a specific crime — capital murder.
At the conclusion of the preliminary hearing the associate circuit judge made a number of findings as set forth in the principal opinion. The sum total of the findings is that the court did not find there was probable cause to believe a capital murder was committed or that the defendant committed capital murder. On that basis, if the rule or statute required that the defendant be discharged unless probable cause be found as to the complaint, the defendant would have to have been ordered discharged. This is because probable cause was not found that the “felony complained of” was committed and that defendant committed it. In order that the associate circuit judge would not be required to discharge a defendant in those circumstances, even though the judge found probable cause to believe a felony had been committed which was within the scope of the complaint, the statute prior to our rule and our rule permit the associate circuit judge to bind a defendant over for trial upon the finding of probable cause as to a felony less than the one alleged in the complaint. § 544.420, RSMo 1978; Rule 23.08, Mo.Rules of Court 1979.
The court rule as to preliminary examination at the time this case was tried was Rule 23 and had been in effect since at least 1959. (See RSMo 1959, Vol. 4, p. 4912). After having published a change in that rule, as set forth in the principal opinion 1 and identified as Rule 22.07(c), the Court modified the published rule and returned to the language of Rule 23 and the statute — § 544.420, RSMo 1978. (The present rule is 22.07, Mo.Rules of Court 1980.) In short, the statute and rule at the *539time of this preliminary examination were essentially the same as they had been for many years. When one considers the obvious effect of the proposed rule, the reason the Court abandoned the proposed rule becomes clear. However, that does not resolve the issue in this case. Had the proposal been in effect, then the associate circuit judge in this case would have been required to discharge the defendant because he found no probable cause as to “the felony complained of”. The prosecutor would then have to file another complaint charging second-degree murder and proceed to another preliminary hearing with all of the attending risks of a defendant absconding, inconvenience of witnesses, lawyers, and others, as well as delay. All of this is unnecessary if the associate circuit judge can do as he did here — find no probable cause as to capital murder — “the felony complained of” — but probable cause as to a lesser offense of murder second degree. In this way the right of a citizen to not be brought to trial on a felony charge for which there was no probable cause (capital murder) would be protected, and the efficient administration of justice would still be served by allowing the information to be filed charging a crime for which a judicial determination of probable cause had been made in accordance with the law. Therefore, it is clear that the reason the phrase “a felony” was re-adopted was to afford the defendant his full right not to be charged without probable cause and, at the same time, to prevent delay in the proceedings.
The preliminary examination statutes and rules at the time this preliminary hearing was held were essentially the same statutes and rules which were in effect when State v. Thompson, 392 S.W.2d 617 (Mo.1965), was decided. Thompson was brought before a magistrate on a complaint alleging attempted robbery (§§ 560.120 and .135, RSMo 1959 — robbery; § 556.150, RSMo 1959 — punishment for attempts). He waived preliminary examination and was then charged by information with the crime alleged in the complaint — attempted robbery. The information alleged “that defendant did ‘ * * * wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, make an assault in and upon one Murreldean May Archer, and did then and there attempt to rob and take from her person valuable property in the presence of and against the will of the said Murreldean May Archer, by putting her in fear of some immediate injury to her person, and did then and there fail in the perpetration thereof, * * *.’ ” Id. at 618.
Thompson then moved to remand the case to magistrate court for preliminary hearing and it was so remanded. A preliminary hearing was held and defendant was bound over to circuit court and the original information (attempted robbery) was refiled. Later an amended information was filed charging defendant with assault with malice aforethought with a dangerous and deadly weapon which stated in part, “ ‘ * * * did then and there in and upon one Murreldean May Archer, feloniously, on purpose and of his malice aforethought, make an assault and did then and there, on purpose and of his malice aforethought, fe-loniously assault, beat, wound and stab, the said Murreldean May Archer, with a knife, which was then and there a dangerous and deadly weapon likely to produce death and great bodily harm, which knife he, the said Robert Louis Thompson, then and there had and held in his hand, with intent then and there, the said Robert Louis Thompson, on purpose and of his malice aforethought, fe-loniously to rob the said Murreldean May Archer, * * Id. at 618.
The quotations are given in order to make clear that the acts alleged against Thompson in the original complaint, information, and the amended information concern the same event, victim, and assault. However, the complaint and information upon which the preliminary examination was held charged attempted robbery — not an assault with intent to rob.
Just prior to trial Thompson moved for dismissal, arguing that he had not been afforded a preliminary examination on the charge contained in the information. The Thompson opinion describes this as follows:
*540“A colloquy then ensued between the court and counsel, defense counsel stating that a new and distinct charge had been filed which was not a ‘lesser charge,’ while the prosecutor insisted that the facts ‘surrounding each of these charges’ would be the same and, in essence, that there could have been no difference in the preliminary hearing, that an assault was involved in each charge and that the new charge carried a ‘lighter sentence.’ The court stated that the amended information did not ‘show a great deal of difference from the original information,’ except by going into somewhat greater detail, in showing the means of the assault and adding the element of malice, and that the defense was not substantially changed. It concluded that there was not sufficient variance to justify a dismissal. The motion to dismiss was overruled.” Id. at 619.
The defendant Thompson was convicted of “assault with malice with intent to rob” (id. at 619) and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment. This Court reversed, holding, in essence, that the prosecution could not proceed to trial on the “assault with malice with intent to rob” when the complaint at the preliminary hearing was for attempted robbery. As to whether the charges were for different offenses, the court said, “. . .we hardly see how a defendant could fail to have been prejudiced when, as here, he was put to trial in such a confused situation and where he was tried on a new charge for which he could have received a life sentence as contrasted with a maximum term of ten years on the original charge.” Id. at 621. See Payne v. State, 28 Okl.Cr. 218, 235 P. 558 (1925).
In the instant case the prosecutor seeks to put the defendant on trial for “capital murder”, which carries a sentence of death or life imprisonment without parole for fifty years. The procedure for trial of a capital murder charge is significantly different from other charges. Also, there has been a judicial determination of no probable cause as to the crime of capital murder in this case. I do not suggest the associate circuit judge’s determination of no probable cause as to the crime charged in the complaint is res judicata or forecloses the prosecutor from seeking a probable cause finding on a refiling of the capital murder complaint. He may do so. See State ex rel. Brown v. Duggins, 601 S.W.2d 11 (Mo. banc 1980) [ # 61826], and State ex rel. Riggs v. Whipple, 601 S.W.2d 13 (Mo. banc 1980) [62136], [both decided 7/15/80]. But I certainly do believe and would hold that the prosecutor is forbidden by § 544.250, RSMo 1969, and § 544.420 to try a defendant upon a charge of a felony for which there has been a preliminary examination determination of no probable cause. To hold otherwise would do violence to the very purpose of preliminary hearings — to prevent the abuse of power by the prosecution. State v. Clark, 546 S.W.2d 455, 462 (Mo.App.1977).
The very provisions of § 544.420, RSMo 1968, underscores the requirement of an affirmative finding of probable cause for a specific crime to be made prior to charging the defendant therewith. It provides in part, “If it appears that a felony has been committed, and that there is probable cause to believe the prisoner guilty thereof, the magistrate shall bind . . . .” (Emphasis added.) How can it appear to a judge that a felony has been committed without saying what the felony is? How can a judge find probable cause to believe the prisoner guilty “thereof" without stating the felony of which he finds the prisoner probably guilty? In my opinion, upon finding probable cause that a felony has been committed and that defendant committed it or is guilty thereof, it is axiomatic that the associate circuit judge would have to say what the defendant is probably guilty of, either by reference to the complaint or by designation of the crime. This belief is buttressed by § 544.250, RSMo 1978, where the following language appears: “. And if upon such [preliminary] hearing the magistrate shall determine that the alleged offense is one on which the accused may be released, the magistrate may release him . .” (Emphasis added.) Again, the language presupposes that the finding of probable cause will be with reference to a *541stated offense. But surely if the associate circuit judge affirmatively finds there to be no probable cause to believe a specific crime (capital murder) has been committed or that the prisoner committed it, there can be no doubt that there has been no finding of probable cause with respect to that felony. That, I believe, precludes a prosecution thereon unless and until probable cause is found upon a subsequent complaint and preliminary hearing or an indictment is returned charging that crime.
In State ex rel. Buresh v. Adams, 468 S.W.2d 18 (Mo. banc 1971), it was held that a prosecuting attorney could not proceed upon an information charging a crime or crimes which had been the subject of a preliminary hearing where no probable cause was found by the magistrate as to count II of the complaint but was found as to count I. The information charged a continuous series of acts of embezzlement of money and stealing of electricity of which some were the subject of the complaint and some were not. The Court there said, 468 S.W.2d at 22:
“Respondent’s contention that relator was fully advised of the nature of the charges contained in the information by reason of the several complaints that were filed against him misses the point with respect to the primary purpose of a preliminary hearing. In State ex rel. McCutchan v. Cooley, supra, 1. c. 468, this Court said: ‘We also ruled that a purpose of a preliminary examination is “to safeguard them (the accused) from groundless and vindictive prosecutions.” State v. Tunnell (Mo.) 296 S.W. 423, loe. cit. 426; State v. Sassaman, 214 Mo. 695, loc. cit. 723,114 S.W. 590.’ Respondent’s contention also ignores the requirements of Sup.Ct. Rules 23.02, 23.08 and Sections 544.250 and 544.410, which require, as a prerequisite to the filing of an information that the magistrate, on preliminary hearing, find that a felony has been committed and that probable cause exists to believe the accused to be guilty thereof. The point is ruled against respondent.”
In order to arrive at the foregoing holding, it was necessary to consider the specific offenses alleged in the complaint and the magistrate’s orders thereon in order to determine whether the defendant had been afforded a preliminary hearing and been bound over on a charge. It was not sufficient to merely conclude the magistrate found probable cause that a (unidentified) felony had been committed.
In Coleman v. Alabama, 399 U.S. 1, 90 S.Ct. 1999, 26 L.Ed.2d 387 (1970), the U. S. Supreme Court held the preliminary examination under Alabama law and procedure was a critical stage of the state’s criminal process and required the accused be afforded a lawyer. Id. at 10, 90 S.Ct. at 2003. This must be considered in light of the fact that in Alabama the preliminary hearing is for the sole purpose of determining whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant presenting the case to the grand jury, and the ease can be presented to the grand jury without a preliminary hearing. Id. at 8-9, 90 S.Ct. 2002-2003. In Missouri the preliminary hearing is essential to the charging process if the charge is to be by information and is certainly more “critical” than in Alabama. In State ex rel. Vaughn v. Morgett, 526 S.W.2d 434 (Mo.App.1975), the court stated at 436:
“By virtue of the profoundly important nature of the determination to be made by the magistrate at the preliminary hearing stage (Rules 23.02, 23.08, supra) and the procedural safeguards surrounding an accused with respect thereto (Rule 23.03, supra), the preliminary hearing in a felony prosecution to be initiated by information is a ‘critical stage’ of the criminal process and an accused’s right to counsel thereat reaches constitutional proportions. Coleman v. Alabama, 399 U.S. 1, 90 S.Ct. 1999, 26 L.Ed.2d 387 (1970). See also Rule 23.03, supra, as amended December 7, 1970, effective July 1, 1971, and the ‘Official Note’ thereto.”
Surely, if the preliminary examination is as important as set forth in Coleman and Morgett, and is a right of the accused, then meaning must be attributed to the associate *542circuit judge’s determination of no probable cause for a specific felony.
The following two cases, State v. Gladies, 456 S.W.2d 23 (Mo.1970), and State v. Couch, 523 S.W.2d 612 (Mo.App.1975), bear significantly on the issue in the instant case and will be so understood if it is borne in mind that the original information referred to in these cases was filed after a preliminary hearing on a complaint or upon waiver of that hearing. It must also be recognized that the “amended informations” referred to would be proper if probable cause had been found at the preliminary hearing as to the offenses charged in the amended information.
In Gladies the defendant was charged by information with assault with intent to rape. The prosecutor amended the information by adding the words “with malice aforethought”. This changed the charge from assault under § 559.190 to assault with malice under § 559.180, RSMo 1959. The latter section proscribes a more serious crime and prescribes a graver range of punishment. 456 S.W.2d at 24. The Court held at 456 S.W.2d at 25:
“The purported amendment and subsequent proceedings were a nullity. In the first place, the State attempted by way of amendment of an information to charge an offense distinct and different from that charged in the original information. The two offenses proscribed by §§ 559.180 and 559.190 are distinct and different, both in degree and in severity and range of punishment. An amendment operating to charge an offense different from that charged in the original information is not permissible, § 545.300; Criminal Rule 24.02; State v. Thompson, Mo., 392 S.W.2d 617, and cases cited 1. c. 620[1, 2].”
Thus it is seen that, although the amended information charged what may be considered a higher degree of the crime, it was viewed by the Court as “an offense distinct and different” from that charged in the original information and only the words “with malice aforethought” were added. If this is so, then the difference between second-degree murder and capital murder makes them equally — if not more so — distinct and different from each other and precludes an information on capital murder where the only crime upon which probable cause was found was second-degree murder.
In State v. Couch, supra, the state was allowed by the trial court to amend an information which changed the charge from assault with intent to rape without malice to a charge of assault with intent to rape with malice. Defendant was convicted and the court of appeals reversed and remanded. The court reiterated that Rule 24.02 prohibits amendments if the effect is to charge an offense different from that charged in the original information. The court then held at 523 S.W.2d 614-15:
“This amended information is identical to the original information except for the name of the charging officer and the addition of the words italicized ‘and of his malice aforethought’. The amendment was intended by the state to charge an offense under Section 559.180 and thus attempted to charge a greater offense, distinct and different from the charge originally lodged under Section 559.190. The state, counsel for defendant, and the court proceeded through the trial, verdict, judgment, allocution and sentencing (for five times the maximum penalty provided in Section 559.190) upon this assumption. It is clear, however, that such alteration of the charge by amendment fell squarely within the proscription of Rule 24.02 and the cases cited supra, and the proceedings were therefore a nullity.”
The court of appeals noted however that the proscription of Rule 24.02 does not apply where the amended information charges a lesser included offense. Id. at 615, fn. 1.
Again, the point is that different degrees of a felony which are punishable with differing severity are “different and distinct offenses”. And again, these cases have meaning only if one understand that, if the complaint and preliminary hearing were sufficient to justify the amended information, then a defendant would have no valid complaint of variance and the judgment *543would have been affirmed. This means that to find probable cause of an offense is not sufficient to authorize the prosecuting attorney to file an information charging a higher offense.
State v. Ancell, 62 S.W.2d 443 (Mo.1933), is, as noted in the principal opinion, the case upon which respondent primarily relies. I am not certain Ancell can be distinguished. If not, then I am convinced Ancell is wrong and should be overruled if it is read to allow the prosecutor to charge an accused by information with an offense that, on preliminary hearing, the judge found no probable cause to believe had been committed or that the accused was probably guilty thereof, which is the case here.
In Ancell, the defendant was convicted of manslaughter in a trial wherein he was charged with murder in the first degree. A preliminary hearing had been held on a complaint alleging first-degree murder. The proceedings in the justice of the peace court on the complaint are quite confusing, but the opinion does say the complaint was for first-degree murder and probable cause was found only for murder in the second degree.
The appellant Ancell had no attorney on appeal nor was there a brief filed in his behalf. The Court reviewed the case on the errors claimed in the motion for new trial. The principal opinion sets forth a lengthy quotation from Ancell which need not be repeated. However, I view Ancell as a case in which this Court found no prejudice to Ancell because, although tried on first-degree murder, the conviction was for manslaughter which was within the probable cause finding of murder in the second degree. I take this view because the Court in its opinion also stated at 62 S.W.2d at 446:
“Moreover, the information charging murder in the first degree included the charge of murder in the second degree, on which defendant had been bound over, and that of manslaughter, of which he was convicted. Had the information charged murder in the second degree it would have included manslaughter just the same, the difference between a charge of murder in the first degree and one of murder in the second degree being that in the former but not in the latter the element of deliberation must be alleged. Under either the accused may be convicted of manslaughter if the evidence so warrants. So that in any event defendant had a preliminary examination and was bound over to answer the charge on which he was convicted.”
In the instant case the defendant has not yet been tried and therefore he will be prejudiced if tried for capital murder, a crime for which he was not held by the magistrate.
State v. Ancell, supra, was cited recently in State v. Clark, 546 S.W.2d 455 (Mo.App.1977), in which a conviction of manslaughter upon an information charging second-degree murder was affirmed. A complaint charging Clark with first-degree murder was filed, and the magistrate found a felony had been committed and there was probable cause to believe Clark committed it. An information charging first-degree murder was then filed in circuit court. It was later amended to charge second-degree murder and the defendant was eventually convicted of manslaughter. In overruling Clark’s point of error that the information alleged a different method of killing the deceased than that shown on preliminary hearing, the court of appeals considered our case of State ex rel. Buresh v. Adams, supra, and stated at 546 S.W.2d 463:
“In order to bring the present case within the principle of Buresh the defendant must show that the addition of the skull fracture as a cause of death constitutes a substantial departure from the complaint. Buresh follows the general rule expressed in 21 Am.Jur.2d, Criminal Law, § 451 [also, 42 C.J.S. Indictments and Informations § 73]:
‘An information filed after a preliminary examination has been held does not have to correspond with the complaint filed with the magistrate. The prosecuting attorney is authorized to file an information charging the offense for which the accused was held, *544or substantially the same offense. He may not add a new offense. And he may not file an information charging an offense completely different from that shown on the preliminary examination.’ ” (Emphasis added.)
In the instant case the defendant was not held by the associate circuit judge for the offense of capital murder. He was held for second-degree murder. Clark cites Ancell for the proposition that an information may charge an offense included in the complaint. However, in Clark the defendant was held on a charge of first-degree murder and the subsequent charge of second-degree murder and the conviction of manslaughter were within the complaint and within the charge — first-degree murder — upon which Clark was held by the magistrate.
I regard it as important that accused persons be afforded preliminary hearings as required by law. I am convinced the law prohibits a prosecutor from charging a person with a felony where the associate circuit judge has found no probable cause to believe that a felony was committed and therefore did not hold the defendant for that offense.
It is true, of course, that the statutory requirement of a finding of probable cause operates as a curb on the prosecutor’s otherwise broad discretion, just as a grand jury does when that method of charging is selected. But that is precisely what the legislature intended by requiring a preliminary hearing and a determination of probable cause by a judge. It is expected that a judge, not being an advocate for either side, would exercise fair and unbiased judgment as to whether the evidence at the preliminary hearing establishes probable cause for some specific crime. In fact, the preliminary hearing requirement of probable cause is the only protection a citizen has against groundless prosecution or substantial overcharging; both of which constitute the charging of a person with a crime without probable cause to believe him guilty. This ought not to be encouraged. The legislature chose to discourage it by requiring a judge to make a finding of probable cause based on evidence in open court as to the crime for which a person is to be held. The associate circuit judge in this case performed his duties in a manner the public has a right to expect of a judge and in accordance with statutory requirements.
The prosecutor in Missouri still has complete discretion over the charge in the complaint. Additionally, if he is not satisfied with the outcome of a preliminary hearing, he may refile a complaint before another judge and obtain another preliminary hearing or proceed by indictment. The safeguard a citizen has is the preliminary hearing before a judicial officer. Its purpose is to protect the citizen from being charged with a felony unless there is probable cause to believe a felony has been committed and the person charged committed it. A prosecutor is not free to charge a person with a crime for which there has been no finding of probable cause as to its occurrence nor as to the accused having committed it. And certainly, where the judge specifically finds a lack of probable cause as to a particular offense, the prosecutor is prohibited from charging a person by information with its commission unless and until there is a subsequent finding of probable cause.
Here the associate circuit judge heard the evidence and found no probable cause to believe capital murder had been committed or that the accused committed it. Therefore, under the statutes noted supra, the prosecuting attorney cannot try the accused on the information charging capital murder so long as there is no finding of probable cause in accordance with the law.
I would make the writ absolute and therefore I dissent.
. “A new Rule 22.07, adopted by this Court June 13, 1979, effective January 1, 1980, relating to preliminary examination, included the following in subparagraph (c): ‘If from the evidence it appears to the judge that there is probable cause to believe that the felony complained of has been committed and that the defendant has committed it, the judge shall order him to appear in the court having jurisdiction of the offense; * * 580-581 S.W.2d (Mo. Cases) XXXIII (1979). However, before this rule became effective, it was ' * * * modified to conform to the legislation implementing the new judicial article * * [to] read as follows (in part):
‘If from the evidence it appears to the judge that a felony has been committed and that the defendant has committed it, the judge shall order him to appear in the court having jurisdiction of the offense; * * 588-589 S.W.2d (Mo.Cases) XXXV (1979).” Principal Opinion at 537.