(concurring in affirmance). Without having vouchsafed the altogether visible fact thereof, Justice Adams’ current opinion quietly — very quietly — vacates the misguided “no jurisdiction” ruling made by People v. Holbrook, 373 Mich 94, 98, 99 and restores the sound common sense of People v. Griswold, 64 Mich 722. I regret that Justice Adams has seen fit to mince around these inexorable conclusions. Like that TV-touted cough medicine his said opinion “contains silentium”; the silencer of due candor.
If loftily seated judges may yet learn lessons, there is one for the Supreme Court of Michigan in this interregnal lapse between 1964 Holbrook and 1967 Carter. It is that “freehanded rewriting of much of the body of the law” by appellate judges amounts to no less than dictatorship, the inevitable result of which makes today’s opinions “as useless in the law libraries of tomorrow as last year’s sports page.”
The quotations are taken from an address delivered at St. Paul by Michigan’s eminent Federal Judge, the Honorable Clifford O’Sullivan, judge of the court of appeals for the sixth circuit.1 Judge O’Sullivan proceeded:
“It has been our proud boast that ours is a government of laws and not of men. Exercising my right to free speech, I express a fear that in some of today’s courts the rule of law is not obeyed. A *32discerning observer will be aware that, in many areas, our State and Federal appellate courts are engaged in a freehanded rewriting of much of the body of the law. That they are seeking only to lead us closer to the ideal of perfect justice does not forbid testing the validity and wisdom of their directions. * * *
“Upon us, as lawyers and judges, will be the chief burden of making sure that in our time we retain here a government of laws. To do this, it will not be enough that our courts be adequately manned and physically equipped to dispatch the business assigned to them. It will not be enough that we reform and streamline our procedural methods from time to time. We will do little to preserve the rule of law unless the judges who direct our procedures themselves. recognize that they are bound and restrained by the rule of law. Law means nothing unless it is, or can be, known by those who are expected to obey it. And even if a rule of law is known, it will mean little unless with knowledge of it goes-the assurance that he who conforms his conduct to the law will have such conduct protected by our courts. If each generation of judges rewrites the law, the so-called rule of law is without meaning. * * *
“If, in our time, stare decisis is lightly passed off as an outmoded legal principle, and our courts too frequently become impatient of, or unwilling to await legislative action to make innovations in the law, then, indeed, we will no longer be a, government of laws. Judicial dictatorship will be the inevitable substitute. If we feel at’liberty to completely cast off the shackles of stare decisis, our successors of tomorrow will feel at liberty to follow our example. Our opinions, however profound and right we may think they are, will be useless in the law libraries of tomorrow as last year’s sports page.”
What the Court does today is well, no matter by what divisive words we may dub the product of *33People v. Carter. By its order denying this prisoner’s posteonviction motion the Court of Appeals has forced us finally, to “do something” about Holbrook’s ever inexplicable overrulement of the Griswold Case (64 Mich 722). The Holbrook-predicted (p 101) flood of petitions, motions and appeals, submitted by those long since brought to justice by proceedings as in Griswold, has hit our trial courts and appellate divisions hard enough to bring a reluctant Supreme Court to its precedential senses. All hitherto convicted and sentenced persons, misled by Holbrook as our own waxing records show, should of due honor be told the naked truth. Those whose magisterial examinations, trials and sentences have been conducted and done on strength of proceedings affirmed jurisdictionally by Griswold may — in postconviction appeals and proceedings— no longer faithfully assign Holbrook’s “no jurisdiction” pronouncement. Whether today’s majority is willing or unwilling to admit openly where the Court now stands, the rule our trial courts will follow henceforth appears in long standing and now provably durable Griswold (supra at 723, 724) :2
“While'an omission to secure an order from the prosecuting attorney before issuing.process in criminal cases might subject the magistrate to censure, and possibly, in some cases, .to pecuniary ' injury and official embarrassment, it was never intended to deprive the court of jurisdiction in any case; and whether the complaining party has given to the people security for costs in the case is a subject in which the respondent is not especially interested, and, if the people are satisfied to prosecute without such security, there is no reason why he *34should complain. The prosecuting attorney appeared and prosecuted the respondent before the police court, which is certainly sufficient approval by him.”
For reasons given by the three dissenters from Holbrook’s majority opinion (they were Justices Dethmers, Kelly and Black), I vote to affirm.
Supplement: The foregoing stand for affirmance was delivered to the other Justices January 4, 1967.
By a January 25th redraft of his previously submitted opinion, accompanied by written advices that the redraft “consists primarily of deletion of material in the earlier opinion” and that “Most of the final paragraph is new,” Justice Adams tells us that he and his remaining votaries are not retracing the path back to the Griswold Case, even part way. A question of fact arises immediately; it being prima facie difficult to persuade anyone that this 20-to-30-year sentenced wife-slayer should not obtain the same “no jurisdiction” relief as did that 60-day sentenced deer-slayer named Holbrook.
Considering what it would do to the rest of the Holbrook-dependent movers and petitioners standing now in line, a jurisdictional straddle such as Justice Adams proposes for term-sentenced Shirley Wilfred Carter is bound to offend the Civil Liberties Union. That esteemed group is not apt to rapturize over any doctrine which would permit the nunc pro tunc injection of criminal jurisdiction3 upon the ever doubtful strength of some recollection of the prosecutor that he “prepared” the complaint; the complaint which that same record shows *35was never authorized by an “order” bearing the prosecutor’s signature.
With respect to this currently alleged difference between Holbrook and Carter, the continuously sole explanation is that “The statute does not specify the form of ‘order in writing’ which the prosecuting attorney is to file for issuance of warrants.” That is true. It is also true that “the statute does not specify the form” of signature the prosecutor must affix to that “order in writing,” and that it does not “specify” — per Holbrook — that failure of the prosecutor to sign and file an “order” means “no jurisdiction.” The statute nevertheless does “specify” that there must be filed “with such justice” an “order in writing,” and it does “specify” that the prosecutor must sign it. This isn’t interpretation of a statute; it is fact.
Is all this unclear?4 Well, one may strive in vain to find any semblance of discussion by Justice Adams (either in his original draft or in this current draft) of the requirement of the statute that, in addition to the filing of that “order in writing-allowing the same,” such “order” must be “signed by the prosecuting- attorney” (CL 1948, § 764.1 [Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.860]); hence to him the statute just doesn’t include any words which require that the “order” (whatever its “form”) be thus signed. Of course and until now some of us — lawyers all— have been led to believe that a statutorily required “order,” an order which by statute must be “signed” *36by a designated officer, is no order at all unless it is signed by him.
We are dealing today with a presented question of jurisdiction; first of a magistrate and then of a circuit judge to proceed at all, in 1959,5 pursuant to a 72-year tried and applied rule of criminal procedure as that rule then stood undisturbed.6 We know that Holbrook was ordered freed by a 5-3 vote; whereas it is moved now by some of the dischargers of Holbrook that Carter not be freed even though both (Holbrook and Carter) were brought to justice and sentence in the outright absence of the filing at any time of “an order in writing,” “signed by the prosecuting attorney.” Yes, this is supposed to be “Equal Justice Under Law.”
Trial counsel with some little experience know well the superiority of unimpeachable demonstrative evidence over the uncertainties and equivocations that are inherent in the adversarily testified or written word. So let us visually examine what the Hoi&roo/c-faithful Brethren say was a statutory “order” for issuance of this warrant for murder. Here it is, in entirety:
*37“Complaint, Justice Court
(Piled October 2, 1959)
“State oe Michigan 1
County oe Newaygo j
SS
“The complaint and examination on oath , and writing of Robert W. Dougan taken and' made before me, Wells L. Branch a justice of the peace of the city of White Cloud in said county, upon the 30th day of September, 1959, who being duly sworn, says that .heretofore, to-wit: on the 30th-day of September, 1959, at the township of Merrill and in the county aforesaid,
“Shirley Wilered Carter murdered Rosa Lee Easter Carter
contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people of the State of Michigan; whereof the said Robert W. Dougan prays that said Shirley Wilfred Carter may be apprehended ’ and held to answer this complaint and further dealt with in relation to the same as law and justice may require.
/s/ Robert W. Dougan
“Taken, Subscribed and Sworn to, before me, the day and year first above written.
/s/ Wells L. Branch
Justice of the Peace.”
A thoroughly oriented trial bench and trial pro-' fession cannot be cozened into belief that this was a statutorily required “order.” It was and still is a statutory complaint, signed by an authorized complainer, and the oath thereof is attested by a warrant-issuing magistrate. The jurisdictional facts are exactly the same as in Griswold and Holbrook. Hence, if Holbrook’s “no jurisdiction” ukase is to remain above ground, is not this oppressed long-term prisoner standing at our bar entitled to the same “no jurisdiction” edict as was that 60-day sentenced game law violator, Charles P. Holbrook?
*38Let us look at Holbrook again, now that 31 months have elapsed since the gratuitous blow thereof struck retroactively at the enforcement of Michigan’s criminal code. If that decision is permitted to endure it is fairly estimable that thousands of accused persons, many now dead and many still incarcerated, will stand adjudicated as having been arraigned, examined, tried, convicted, and fined or sentenced to prison by puppet courts; the jurisdiction of which to thus proceed was outright nil. This is infinitely worse than a denial of due process resulting in imprisonment at the hands of a jurisdictionally acting judicial officer. And it raises at once a question of civil liability of judicial officers who, by unlawful acts outside the limits of their jurisdiction, have deprived victims like Holbrook and Carter of liberty and property.
"When any judge having no jurisdiction so to do takes from another his liberty or property or both, that judge is actionably responsible to the latter. See discussion of this question, 30A Am Jur Judges, §§ 76, 77, 78, pp 45-50, always bearing in mind Justice Adams’ final proclamation (Holbrook at 99) that “The justice of the peace had no jurisdiction.” To which one must add that the circuit court “had no jurisdiction,” when Holbrook on appeal was jury-convicted there, if — contrary to Griswold — the justice had none. That Holbrook-declared want of jurisdiction automatically made Circuit Judge Fen-Ion of the 33d circuit, along with the jurisdiction-naked justice of the peace, civilly liable to Mr. Holbrook.
If that Holbrook quintet of Justices was right June 1, 1964, neither the justice of the peace nor Judge Fenlon were acting judicially. They were outlaws only; usurpers of judicial jurisdiction.
The practical result of this Holbrook-Carter quiblet is that our trial judges will feel compelled either *39(a) to wait for another decision with all eight of us participating, or (b) to seek out and then depend upon oral testimony for the purpose of determining the presence or absence of that long since duly invoked — per Griswold — jurisdiction. For as all trial judges surely will foresee, more cases inevitably are due to confront the appellate courts of Michigan (upon impetus of Holbrook and Carter), such as the instance where both the prosecutor and his secretary are not around to testify about who “prepared” the complaint or, say, the instance where the secretary but not the prosecutor is available to testify and says truthfully (as we may almost judicially notice) that all pre-Holbrook complaints were prepared by her from supplied forms and that the prosecutor knew naught of the initial stages of the proceeding at hand until, per duty, he or his statutory assistant went about the preparation, signature and filing of the official information (CLS 1961, § 767.40 [Stat Ann 1965 Cum Supp § 28.980]).
The pure aberration of Holbrook, and all the unnecessary work that 5-3 decision has cast during the past two years upon already overburdened prosecuting officers, trial judges, and intermediate appellate judges, has grievously wronged the public right to due enforcement of those prescribed rules of human conduct which make up the foundations of government by law. Worse, it has wronged appallingly the courts of our State from top to bottom. The unholy situation created by Holbrook, compounded now by our critically immediate divisiveness, will simply fan the Michigan coals of that already developing “slow burn” national columnist James J. Kilpatrick wrote about recently from New York (Detroit Free Press, January 27, 1967):
“The New Yorkers one talks with are developing a slow burn against the coddling of criminals and *40lunatics. Their feeling, one surmises, is shared widely across the nation. It is a feeling the Supreme Court of the United States cannot wisely ignore. In the fruits of Miranda lie the seeds of a terrible loss of confidence in our courts.”
Yes, the same must be said of us; in the fruits of a recent series of divisively voted overrulements lie the seeds of a terrible loss of public confidence in the Supreme Court of Michigan. Necessarily dragged into this morass are the dissenters against Holbrook and all duplicates thereof such as Mosier v. Carney, 376 Mich 532. Give us one more Holbrook, or even five votes to immunize Holbrook from reexamination, and some members of the Court will be compelled in future criminal matters to start each opinion with allegations of innocence like those of Professor Kamisar; referring here to the professor’s 1965 debate with Professor Inbau before the Judicial Conference (39 FRD 375, 441, 450). The Professor, even though not accused, protested much that he was not “for crime.” Let us hear some of his beginning remarks:
“I keep getting the feeling that I am supposed to be for crime and against law enforcement.” (p 450).
“I admit that it is awfully difficult to be ‘for crime,’ which seems to be the role some of the panelists have assigned me. It is especially hard because of the current ‘crime wave,’ the current ‘crisis,’ this ‘emergency’ about which we have heard so much.” (p 452.)
(These words were uttered 18 months ago. Now that 1967 is here, it is fair to wonder aloud whether the professor would continue now to play down “the *41current ‘crime wave,’ the current ‘crisis,’ this ‘emergency’ about which we have heard so much.”)
To Conclude:
1. Judicial jurisdiction to hear and determine is exactly like pregnancy and leprosy. It is present, or it isn’t. If not present in Holbrook, it was not present in Carter. There was a want of filing of an “order,” “signed” by the prosecuting attorney — in both cases. Thus this particular question of jurisdiction leaves no grey area for judicial refuge. Until we speak up on this, openly by the vote of five or more Justices, there will be a constant broadening of that which today cannot be denied; a g'ap' of confidence between us and the people by whose' grace we are seated here.
2. Holbrook is that “one decision construing ah act [which] does not approach the dignity of a well settled interpretation.” (Smith v. Lawrence Baking Co., 370 Mich 169, 177; citing and following White v. Winchester Country Club, 315 US 32, 40 [62 S Ct 425, 86 L ed 619] and United States v. Raynor, 302 US 540, 552 [58 S Ct 353, 82 L ed 413]). Like divisive Wagner v. LaSalle Foundry Co., 345 Mich 185 (overruled by the Lawrence Baking Case), Holbrook from the beginning has exposed its jurisdictional fallacy to re-examination. It is opposed not only by Holbrook’s dissenters but also by 3 unanimous decisions handed down over the years; People v. Griswold, 64 Mich 722; Board of Supervisors of Missaukee County v. Van Liew, 148 Mich 520, 522; People v. O’Hara, 278 Mich 281, 293. Now that the one vote which made up Holbrook’s majority has disappeared, Holbrook should be overruled — summarily—and the 3 unanimous decisions above should be restored.8
*423. The submission here and below of motions and applications for leave to bring in specific records of convictions and guilty pleas, for more Holbrook-style “no jurisdiction” absolution, suggests imperatively that the present case should now be treated as resubmitted, just as we have ordered with respect to another correspondingly divisive matter,9 so that Justice Brennan may participate in what. then doubtless would be a less infirm precedent than Holbrook.
As noted above Holbrook was decided by the margin of a single vote; a vote no longer here. The Court that is now and will be foreseeably, not the Court that was, should settle this recurrently disputatious question of criminal jurisdiction. If all of the courts which hitherto have proceeded on strength of Griswold were never possessed of jurisdiction so to do, why should not today’s Court say so, thus ending further oppression of all victims of Griswold? Many must yet be in prison. Many more will want the records cleared of wholly void convictions obtained by counterfeit court proceedings. Many more will want investigations made in their behalf, at public expense of course, to ascertain whether as to them the record shows that an “order” was filed; also to ascertain the unavailability of the prosecutor or other witness who might by oral testimony fill the jurisdictional void made by Holbrook.
My vote to affirm is cast again on strength of the precedent as well as the visibly sensible reasoning of People v. Griswold.
Address delivered July 28, 1966, at West Publishing Company’s annual dinner meeting. Published thus far by pamphlet issued and distributed by West to lawyers and judges in the Federal system. The complete address deserves contemplative reading by all who may be concerned with preservation of what in May each year this profession of ours expounds as “The Rule of Law,” Its title is “Free Speech — a Constitutional Duty.”
Until five Justices roamed in Holbrook, note how this ease of Griswold was consistently followed for more than three-quarters of a century: Board of Supervisors of Missaukee County v. Van Liew, 148 Mich 520, 522; People v. O’Hara, 278 Mich 281, 293; 1 Gillespie, Michigan Criminal Law and Procedure (2d ed), § 196, p 221.
Ripe for exploration and exuberant posteonvietion action must lie a veritable host of records of criminal proceedings made between 1887 and 1964, all depending on 1887 Griswold for jurisdiction and all disclosing a want of jurisdiction per 1964 Holbrook. Professional and judicial mortality tables considered, a goodly share of these records are beyond all aid of this Carter-type orally-supplied now-for-then infusion of jurisdiction.
Perhaps, though, there is a distinguishing difference between Carter and Holbrook. Holbrook denied all the way through that he was guilty of “shining” deer; whereas Carter voluntarily told the sentencing judge, the occasion being change of plea with court-appointed counsel present (p 4 of transcript) :
“The Respondent. Well it is kind of strange. Some time between G in the morning and — between 6 and 8 in the morning on September 30 — my wife awakened me about 6 in the morning.
“Some time between that time, we got into an argument, silly argument at first, and a fight and I shot her.”
Except perhaps as actors staging mock arraignments and wholly tinselled criminal proceedings.
This homicide occurred September 30, 1959. From and including circuit eourt arraignment October 2, 1959, through remand on defense motion for examination, filing of the justice’s return with transcript of proceedings upon examination, reappearance of defendant in circuit for record of desire to ehange plea, all proceedings in .circuit leading up to new plea and judicial acceptance thereof, and subsequent appearance of the defendant for sentence on December 2, 1959, court-appointed counsel stood at his side.
No question of jurisdiction was raised of course. All counsel, and most eertainly the circuit judge, assumed that venerably known Griswold settled that question. No one then could have dreamed that, more than four years later, a bare majority of the Supremo Court of Michigan would, by overruling Griswold, pass an ex post facto law like Holbrook. Fortunately for the criminal jurisprudence of Michigan, that majority is no longer here.
“A f our-to-three decision of the Supreme Court of but 2-1/2 years’ standing is too recent and too close a margin to carry great weight under the doctrine of stare decisis." (Syllabus 3, Sommers v. City of Flint, 355 Mich 655; opinion of the Court by Edwards, J.).
The reference here is to the Governor’s request for advisory opinion (October 1966 term, No. 15; now January 1967 term No. 10). Our minutes of January 4-5, 1967 disclose:
“Motion was made by Justice Adams, supported by Justice Souris, that the Governor’s Bequest for an Advisory Opinion on Act 261, PA 1966, be considered as resubmitted as of January 4, 1967, so that Justice Brennan can participate. Motion carried. Voting for the motion: Justices Adams, Souris, O’Hara, Black, Brennan and Kavanagh; dissenting; Justices Kelly and Dethmers.” (Order (entered January 16, 1967; 26 Supreme Court Journal, 264),