T. M. Burns, J.
Defendant was found guilty of kidnapping by a jury in Wayne county circuit court and sentenced to serve 25 to 35 years under MCLA § 750.349 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.581) by the Honorable John M. Wise. Defendant was jointly tried under MCLA § 768.5 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1028) with Robert Rolston, who was also convicted and sentenced to serve 30 to 40 years.
The pertinent facts are that defendant and his co-defendant were in the Great Lakes Hotel and Bar in River Rouge on January 23, 1967. Defendant testified that Rolston wrote out a hold-up note instructing the barmaid to give defendant the money and that Rolston gave the note to her. Defendant then went into the back room and the barmaid followed. She gave him the money. Defendant then took her out to Rolston’s car where she waited while he called Rolston out of the bar. They all proceeded to defendant’s parents’ cottage at Half Moon Lake where defendant had sexual intercourse with the victim. The defendant testified that his co-defendant went into the bedroom with the victim, but that he did not know if his co-defendant had sexual intercourse with her.
Defendant testified that after Rolston came out of the bedroom, Rolston told him that he (Markham)
would have to kill, the barmaid since she knew him. The. three of them then left the cottage again' in Eolston’s car which became bogged down because the road was muddy.
Defendant testified that when the three of them got out of the car, Eolston gave him a pistol and told him to kill the barmaid, Mrs. Biddell. He then testified that, with Eolston leading' the way, they went up, a hill to kill Mrs. Biddell.
Defendant testified that he had told her to play dead, and that when he fired his gun near her she fell down in a faint. He then testified that he told his co-defendant, “I killed her. Let’s gobut that Eolston went over to her and, when he had determined that she was still alive, shot her twice in the head.
At trial there were several witnesses who testified as to the events which immediately preceded the kidnapping, but no witnesses testified, except the co-defendants, to the subsequent events leading up to the murder.
Defendant relied on a defense of temporary insanity at trial while his co-defendant claimed he acted under duress by defendant.
Before trial, defendant’s counsel, in response to co-defendant Eolston’s attorney’s request to interview defendant’s psychiatric witnesses before trial, moved to enjoin Eolston’s counsel from introducing evidence or cross-examining witnesses for the purpose of impeaching defendant’s defense of temporary insanity, or, in the alternative, to grant separate trials.
The trial judge denied the co-defendant’s request to interview the psychiatric witnesses before trial. At trial the thrust of the testimony by the defend
ant’s psychiatric witnesses was that defendant was a passive schizophrenic who acted at the direction of his older friend, who, although his name was not mentioned, was obviously the co-defendant Rolston.
Since this amounted to testimony against co-defendant Rolston and tended directly to refute his defense of duress, the trial judge decided to allow co-defendant’s counsel to cross-examine in order to protect his client’s right of confrontation.*
See
Pointer
v.
Texas
(1965), 380 US 400 (85 S Ct 1065, 13 L Ed 2d 923). He emphasized, however, that the burden of refuting the defense of temporary insanity remained on the prosecution.
Defendant’s counsel renewed Ms objection to sucli cross-examination at that time and further asked that one of the jurors be disqualified for alleged prejudice against one of defendant’s witnesses.
The trial judge decided that although he did not doubt defendant’s attorney’s statement as to what was said by the juror, such a statement was not grounds for a mistrial nor sufficient grounds to disqualify the juror.
At the conclusion of the proofs, defendant submitted along with his other requested charges several which related to defendant’s defense of temporary insanity. He requested that in addition to the “right-wrong” and “irresistible impulse” tests the court charge the jury under what he called the “more modern rules” enunciated in
Durham
v.
United States
(1954), 94 App DC 228 (214 F2d 862, 45 ALR2d 1430) and
United States
v.
Currens
(CA3, 1961), 290 F2d 751. The trial judge refused.
We note that the trial judge here gave careful and detailed instructions to the jury as to both defendants’ theories of the case and in all other aspects of the case. The jury after some deliberation asked to see defendant’s hospital record. The trial judge at the time reiterated his instructions as to participants in a crime. He went on to say:
“You are to consider the case of the defendants separately. However, in order to convict either defendant of the charge made against him in this information, there must be evidence against such defendant which convinces you beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of that particular defendant. While these defendants were tried together and were charged with a joint offense, it is necessary that the
evidence shall be given against each one of them and it is within the power of the .jury and it is also the duty of the jury to consider the case of each defendant separately as though he were on trial here alone. If the evidence is not sufficient to convict him, no matter whether it is sufficient to convict the other defendant or not, then you should consider the case of each one just the same as if he were on trial alone and you can render a verdict with regard to one which may be one way and with regard to the other which may be the other way.”
The jury then retired to deliberate and returned guilty verdicts against both defendants within an hour.
On appeal, defendant raises three questions for our consideration which are considered and disposed of separately.
Did the Trial Judge Err in Denying Defendant’s Motion to Disqualify a Juror on the Grounds of That Juror’s Alleged Bias Towards One of Defendant’s Witnesses?
The defendant claims on appeal that the juror’s alleged remark as presented in footnote 3 imposed a legal duty upon the trial judge to interrogate the juror.
Certainly, as the appellant notes citing
People
v.
Schram
(1965), 1 Mich App 279, 284:
“The rule is well stated in
People
v.
Levey
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T. M. Burns, J.
Defendant was found guilty of kidnapping by a jury in Wayne county circuit court and sentenced to serve 25 to 35 years under MCLA § 750.349 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.581) by the Honorable John M. Wise. Defendant was jointly tried under MCLA § 768.5 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1028) with Robert Rolston, who was also convicted and sentenced to serve 30 to 40 years.
The pertinent facts are that defendant and his co-defendant were in the Great Lakes Hotel and Bar in River Rouge on January 23, 1967. Defendant testified that Rolston wrote out a hold-up note instructing the barmaid to give defendant the money and that Rolston gave the note to her. Defendant then went into the back room and the barmaid followed. She gave him the money. Defendant then took her out to Rolston’s car where she waited while he called Rolston out of the bar. They all proceeded to defendant’s parents’ cottage at Half Moon Lake where defendant had sexual intercourse with the victim. The defendant testified that his co-defendant went into the bedroom with the victim, but that he did not know if his co-defendant had sexual intercourse with her.
Defendant testified that after Rolston came out of the bedroom, Rolston told him that he (Markham)
would have to kill, the barmaid since she knew him. The. three of them then left the cottage again' in Eolston’s car which became bogged down because the road was muddy.
Defendant testified that when the three of them got out of the car, Eolston gave him a pistol and told him to kill the barmaid, Mrs. Biddell. He then testified that, with Eolston leading' the way, they went up, a hill to kill Mrs. Biddell.
Defendant testified that he had told her to play dead, and that when he fired his gun near her she fell down in a faint. He then testified that he told his co-defendant, “I killed her. Let’s gobut that Eolston went over to her and, when he had determined that she was still alive, shot her twice in the head.
At trial there were several witnesses who testified as to the events which immediately preceded the kidnapping, but no witnesses testified, except the co-defendants, to the subsequent events leading up to the murder.
Defendant relied on a defense of temporary insanity at trial while his co-defendant claimed he acted under duress by defendant.
Before trial, defendant’s counsel, in response to co-defendant Eolston’s attorney’s request to interview defendant’s psychiatric witnesses before trial, moved to enjoin Eolston’s counsel from introducing evidence or cross-examining witnesses for the purpose of impeaching defendant’s defense of temporary insanity, or, in the alternative, to grant separate trials.
The trial judge denied the co-defendant’s request to interview the psychiatric witnesses before trial. At trial the thrust of the testimony by the defend
ant’s psychiatric witnesses was that defendant was a passive schizophrenic who acted at the direction of his older friend, who, although his name was not mentioned, was obviously the co-defendant Rolston.
Since this amounted to testimony against co-defendant Rolston and tended directly to refute his defense of duress, the trial judge decided to allow co-defendant’s counsel to cross-examine in order to protect his client’s right of confrontation.*
See
Pointer
v.
Texas
(1965), 380 US 400 (85 S Ct 1065, 13 L Ed 2d 923). He emphasized, however, that the burden of refuting the defense of temporary insanity remained on the prosecution.
Defendant’s counsel renewed Ms objection to sucli cross-examination at that time and further asked that one of the jurors be disqualified for alleged prejudice against one of defendant’s witnesses.
The trial judge decided that although he did not doubt defendant’s attorney’s statement as to what was said by the juror, such a statement was not grounds for a mistrial nor sufficient grounds to disqualify the juror.
At the conclusion of the proofs, defendant submitted along with his other requested charges several which related to defendant’s defense of temporary insanity. He requested that in addition to the “right-wrong” and “irresistible impulse” tests the court charge the jury under what he called the “more modern rules” enunciated in
Durham
v.
United States
(1954), 94 App DC 228 (214 F2d 862, 45 ALR2d 1430) and
United States
v.
Currens
(CA3, 1961), 290 F2d 751. The trial judge refused.
We note that the trial judge here gave careful and detailed instructions to the jury as to both defendants’ theories of the case and in all other aspects of the case. The jury after some deliberation asked to see defendant’s hospital record. The trial judge at the time reiterated his instructions as to participants in a crime. He went on to say:
“You are to consider the case of the defendants separately. However, in order to convict either defendant of the charge made against him in this information, there must be evidence against such defendant which convinces you beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of that particular defendant. While these defendants were tried together and were charged with a joint offense, it is necessary that the
evidence shall be given against each one of them and it is within the power of the .jury and it is also the duty of the jury to consider the case of each defendant separately as though he were on trial here alone. If the evidence is not sufficient to convict him, no matter whether it is sufficient to convict the other defendant or not, then you should consider the case of each one just the same as if he were on trial alone and you can render a verdict with regard to one which may be one way and with regard to the other which may be the other way.”
The jury then retired to deliberate and returned guilty verdicts against both defendants within an hour.
On appeal, defendant raises three questions for our consideration which are considered and disposed of separately.
Did the Trial Judge Err in Denying Defendant’s Motion to Disqualify a Juror on the Grounds of That Juror’s Alleged Bias Towards One of Defendant’s Witnesses?
The defendant claims on appeal that the juror’s alleged remark as presented in footnote 3 imposed a legal duty upon the trial judge to interrogate the juror.
Certainly, as the appellant notes citing
People
v.
Schram
(1965), 1 Mich App 279, 284:
“The rule is well stated in
People
v.
Levey
(1919), 206 Mich 129, at pages 130 and 131: ‘Both the people and defendant were entitled to a trial by a fair, impartial, and unprejudiced jury.’ ”
See generally
People
v.
Freeman
(1969), 16 Mich App 63, 70. We note that neither this Court nor the Supreme Court of this state which affirmed
People
v.
Schram, supra,
in (1966), 378 Mich 145, found reversible error in the trial court’s denial of a mistrial. See also
People
v.
McDonald
(1969), 17 Mich App 88.
The rule of the
Schram
case as followed by this court in
People
v.
Qualls
(1968), 9 Mich App 689, 693:
“[I]s that not every improper contact with a jury presents grounds for a mistrial, and the appellate court will reverse only when prejudice is affirmatively shown or facts clearly establish the inference that it occurred from what was said or done.”
In the
Schram
case, the prosecuting attorney had conversed with two of the jurors; and in
Qualls,
a manslaughter case, the victim’s brother had strongly criticized the defendant’s counsel in the presence of some of the jurors.
Unlike the cases upon which appellant relies,
6 here we have no such colorably improper contact or outside prejudicial influence. The alleged comment of the juror viewed in conjunction with purported facial expressions is not an unequivocal statement of prejudice like that found in
People
v.
Sharp
(1910), 163 Mich 79, 80. Nor are we persuaded that the trial court abused its discretion under
People
v.
Bartlett
(1945), 312 Mich 648. Although we do not share the trial judge’s view that it would have been reversible error to have interrogated the juror as to possible prejudice, we do not find that he clearly abused his discretion in refusing to do so. See
People
v.
Bergin
(1969), 16 Mich App 443, 448. The Supreme Court in
People
v.
Schram, supra,
p 159, compared the
situation before it to
People
v.
Nick
(1960), 360 Mich 219, and derived its rule therefrom. Consequently, we turn to the
Nick
case and rely on it as the touchstone for deciding cases of this type. The Court in
Nick, supra,
p 224 said:
“The judge presiding throughout the trial and observing the occurrences in the courtroom and elsewhere was in a better position to determine the probability of any conduct on the part of jurors or others prejudicial to the rights of the defendant than is this Court.”
The trial judge throughout the trial advised the jury against discussing the case amongst themselves or with anyone else, and against expressing any opinions. We find that “a juror is entitled to react within the confines of proper decorum to the testimony presented.”
People, ex rel Adams,
v.
Moran
(1962), 35 Misc. 2d 1078 (232 NYS2d 201, 203). Noting that in the
Nick
case there was no interrogation of jurors, we find that although an interrogation of the juror in question here would have been proper, the trial judge’s refusal to interrogate the juror under the circumstances of this case was not a clear abuse of his discretion. See also
De Corte
v.
New York Central R. Co.
(1966), 377 Mich 317, 351 (Justice Black’s separate opinion). Since there is no clear abuse of discretion, we will not reverse.
Bid the Trial Court Err When it Refused to Give Befendant’s Requested Charges Concerning the Legal Tests of Insanity Enunciated in
Durham
v.
United States, supra,
and
United States
v.
Currens, supra,
in Addition to the “Right-Wrong” and “Irresistible Impulse” Tests¶
Whatever may be the law elsewhere, including the federal courts, the law in Michigan is clear. This court said in
People
v.
Cole
(1967), 8 Mich App 250, 256, 257:
“Defense counsel requested the trial court to charge the jurors on the defense of insanity in accord with the
Durham
rule, whereby an accused is not criminally responsible if his unlawful act is the product of a mental disease or defect. Whatever may be the appeal of the
Durham
test of legal insanity, we feel constrained to uphold the longsettled Michigan tests. The charge given the jury was in accord with that approved in
People
v.
Durfee
(1886) 62 Mich 487, 493: ‘If, by reason of disease, the defendant was not capable of knowing he was doing wrong in the particular act, or if he had not the power to resist the impulse to do the act by reason of disease or insanity, that would be an unsound mind;’ thus, a mind not criminally responsible. We may speculate that the Supreme Court may some day adopt the
Durham
rule or return to the ‘incapability of criminal intent’ test set out in
People
v.
Garbutt
(1868) 17 Mich 9. See
People
v.
Krugman
(1966) 377 Mich 559. However, we are not free to act on this speculation and alter the long approved
Durfee
test.”
See also
People
v.
Morris
(1968), 10 Mich App 526.
We find that the so-called
Currens
test and the Model Penal Code test (Model Penal Code § 4.01) also advocated by the defendant, on appeal, can be disposed of in a like manner, along with the
Durham
test.
We find that the trial court did not err in its instructions as to the legal tests of insanity under present Michigan law.
Did the Trial Jurge Err in Denying Defendant’s Motion to Restrain Rolston’s Attorney from, Attempting to Impeach Defendant’s Defense of Temporary Insanity, or in the
Alternative,
Grant Him a Separate Trial?
As noted, the defendant’s motion before trial was in response to his co-defendant’s request to examine defendant’s proposed witnesses on the insanity defense. The trial judge refused to allow these witnesses to be interviewed (thus giving the defendant the substance of his request); but refused to decide before trial whether co-defendant’s counsel would be completely barred from cross-examining them. Although thus forewarned that cross-examination by co-defendant’s counsel of defendant’s psychiatric witnesses might be allowed at the trial, the defendant’s counsel did not seek before trial a separate trial independently of his alternative motion which was granted in substance.
As the testimony of Dr. Altshuler, one of defendant’s psychiatric witnesses, developed in direct examination, it became clear that it had a direct effect
on co-defendant’s defense of duress and tended to inculpate the co-defendant while exculpating the defendant.
We find that the trial court was correct when it allowed the co-defendant to cross-examine this witness once the defendant had so “opened the door.” The co-defendant’s right of confrontation could not have been protected otherwise. Compare
Bruton v. United States
(1968), 391 US 123 (88 S Ct 1620, 20 L Ed 2d 476);
Pointer
v.
Texas, supra; People
v.
Patton
(1968), 15 Mich App 198: See also
Harrington
v.
California
(1969) 395 US 250 (89 S Ct 1726, 23 L Ed 2d 284);
People
v.
Havey
(1968), 11 Mich App 69,
77; People
v.
Lewis
(1967), 6 Mich App 447.
In
Lipscomb
v.
State
(1968), 5 Md 500 (248 A2d 491), the Maryland court was faced with a situation similar to ours in that one of the defendants attempted to exculpate himself at the other’s expense. The court said, p 504:
“Lipscomb testified on his own behalf that he had first seen Miss Williams on a Friday, about five days prior to the date of the alleged crimes, at the Grey
hound Bus Terminal with her girlfriend, Linda Smith; that he was invited by the girls to Miss Williams’ apartment where he kissed the prosecutrix; that he returned to her apartment on July 16 and had consensual sexual relations with her, stealing her watch at the conclusion of the intercourse; and that while he never again saw Linda Smith, he did receive a Christmas card from her, which contained five dollars and her photograph. These items were admitted into evidence.
Eric Dabney then testified and his testimony closely corresponded to that of the victim. He attested to Lipscomb’s sexual acts upon Miss Williams and the theft of her watch and ring. On cross-examination, he testified that Miss Williams struggled throughout the incident, and that he was compelled to hold her leg at one point so that Lipscomb would not become angered and kill her.
Appellant contends that the testimony of Dabney, his jointly-indicted co-defendant, was instrumental in the finding of his guilt and thereby prejudiced him. He asserts that consideration of Dabney’s testimony at the joint trial vitiated his opportunity for a fair determination on the question of guilt or innocence because of the strong inclination of a co-defendant to give testimony incriminating his co-defendant and exonerating himself. In support of this contention, appellant relies upon
Bruton
v.
United States
(1968), 391 US 123 (88 S Ct 1620, 20 L Ed 2d 476).”
The court went on to say, p 506:
“We think it clear *
* *
that the constitutional predicate underlying
Bruton
is the Sixth Amendment right of the accused to confront and cross-examine the witnesses against him. The present case is unlike
Bruton,
however, since here the confessing co-defendant, Dabney, did testify at the trial, and was cross-examined by the appellant, so that
his Sixth Amendment right to confront and cross-examine Dabney was not violated.”
So also in onr case, the defendant’s as well as the co-defendant’s right of confrontation was protected.
Much interest has been generated in this area of joint trials in recent years, especially since
Bruton
v.
United States, supra.
And, as was said in
Spencer
v.
Texas
(1967), 385 US 554 (87 S Ct 648, 17 L Ed 2d 606), “all joint trials * * * furnish inherent opportunities for unfairness.” However, under our present statute, defendants jointly charged may be tried separately or jointly in the discretion of the trial court. MCLA § 768.5 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1028).
Before the repeal of CL 1915, § 15829 in 1927, and the substitution of the present statute, a defendant charged with a felony had a right on request to be tried separately. The Supreme Court said in
People
v.
Foster
(1933), 261 Mich 247, 255, that “the right to separate trial, given by the former statute, was valuable to the accused.
People
v.
Dimitru
(1923), 224 Mich 670. But it was a statutory procedural right which the legislature could abrogate.” The Supreme Court recently in
People
v.
Schram, supra,
pp 154, 155 reaffirmed the position it took in
Foster, supra.
The defendant claims that the cross-examination of his psychiatric witness went far beyond the “permissible area of cross-examination” consequently prejudicing his defense of temporary insanity.
We agree with defendant that the value, if any, of the testimony of Dr. Altshuler, his psychiatric
witness, was substantially undercut by tbe co-de~ fendant’s counsel’s extremely able cross-examination. After a careful review of the record, we do not consider that co-defendant’s counsel went beyond tbe permissible area of cross-examination as set by the trial judge.
We find that since “the jury is the ultimate judge of defendant’s sanity at tbe time of the crime, and in this case, since it bad before it evidence of defendant’s behavior and state of mind upon the basis of which it could have found defendant sane at that time, it was not bound by the expert testimony of tbe doctor”
(People
v.
Krugman
[1966], 377 Mich 559, 563), even in tbe absence of any cross-examination.
Further, we find that even if the trial court erred in the scope of cross-examination allowed co-defendant’s counsel, such error would be harmless error in view of the weight of other evidence, particularly defendant’s own testimony under direct examination. See
People
v.
Liggett
(1967), 378 Mich 706;
People
v.
Wichman
(1968), 15 Mich App 110, 116. See also
Harrington
v.
California, supra,
and
Chapman
v.
California
(1967), 386 US 18 (87 S Ct 824, 17 L Ed 2d 705).
Under the facts of this case, the denial of defendant’s motion for separate trials was not a clear abuse of the trial court’s discretion. See
People
v.
Duplissey
(1968), 380 Mich 100, in light of
People
v.
Schram, supra; People
v.
Krugman, supra; People
v.
Kynerd
(1946), 314 Mich 107, and
People
v.
McIntosh
(1967), 6 Mich App 62.
Since tbe co-defendant’s defenses were inconsistent, and in fact antagonistic, bad tbe trial court been fully advised, and bad the defendant asserted
this inconsistency before trial, it might have been an abuse of discretion not to grant separate trials. See generally
People
v.
Kynerd, supra,
p 112.
Although co-defendant alleged that defendant’s defense of temporary insanity was antagonistic, defendant before trial asserted that his defense did not affect his co-defendant. (See footnote 1.)
Had defendant made a good faith disclosure of the full scope of the antagonism between his and his co-defendant’s defenses before trial, and had he affirmatively (not defensively and alternatively) moved for separate trial, we would be faced with an entirely different matter if the trial judge had under those circumstances denied severance.
"We will not allow the defendant to have the benefit of error, if there was such, caused in our view at least in substantial part by his own conduct. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the defendant’s conviction.
Affirmed.
All concurred.