Opinion
WRIGHT, C. J.
Petitioner has been charged by information with the kidnaping, rape, drugging, sexual molestation, and attempted murder of a 10-year-old girl. He is also charged with furnishing drugs to four of his stepdaughters, all minors, and of sexually molesting one of these stepdaughters. Petitioner was held to answer after a lengthy preliminary examination, and following a further hearing pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, respondent superior court denied petitioner’s motion to suppress evidence. The superior court thereupon issued a discovery order at the request of the People directing petitioner to give the People at least three days’ notice in advance of calling any alibi witness at trial. The order further requires that petitioner disclose the names, addresses and telephone numbers of such witnesses. The People were in turn directed to provide petitioner with evidence they might have or uncover which is impeaching of petitioner’s proffered alibi witnesses. The superior court’s discovery order further provides for the exclusion at trial of the testimony of any witness or other evidence covered by the order which is not in compliance with the order.
Mindful of the expected two- to three-month length of the trial of petitioner, and of a direct conflict in published opinions of the Courts of
Appeal regarding the validity of notice-of-alibi discovery orders,
we stayed petitioner’s trial and granted his petition for a hearing in this court, issuing our alternative writ of prohibition. We have determined that the superior court erred in issuing its notice-of-alibi order, and herewith issue oür peremptory writ of prohibition restraining the enforcement of that order.
We are of the opinion, in accord with the decision of the Court of Appeal in
Rodriguez
v.
Superior Court
(1970) 9 Cal.App.3d 493 [88 Cal.Rptr. 154], that such a procedural innovation as requiring defendants in criminal cases to give advance notice of alibis should be introduced, if at all, only upon the considered judgment of the Legislature. We do not question the validity of our holding in
Jones
v.
Superior Court
(1962) 58 Cal.2d 56, 59-60 [22 Cal.Rptr. 879, 372 P.2d 919], that even in the absence of constitutional mandate or enabling legislation this court has inherent power to provide for the orderly administration of justice through judicially declared rules of criminal discovery. However, complex and closely balanced questions of state and federal constitutional law are presented by a notice-of-alibi order. The gravity of these questions counsels against the exercise of our rule-making power so as to promulgate a notice-of-alibi procedure.
We wish to emphasize that we in no way pass herein on the abstract question of the constitutional validity of a court order, whether or not authorized by the Legislature, which compels an accused to give pretrial notice of an alibi defense. Nevertheless, our decision that it would be inappropriate for us to declare judicially a notice-of-alibi rule does arise from our sensitivity to the constitutional constraints on the power of the courts or the Legislature to require a defendant in a criminal case to reveal to the prosecution in advance of the normal course of trial tangible or intangible trial-related evidence or other material. We accordingly undertake to review the constitutional parameters governing compulsory discovery from a defendant in a criminal case.
In
Jones
v.
Superior Court, supra,
this court gave its sanction to the principle that discovery, even in a criminal case, “should not be a one-way street.”
{Id.
at p. 60.) Reviewing the line of decisions beginning with
People
v.
Riser
(1956) 47 Cal.2d 566 [305 P.2d 1] (overruled on other grounds,
People
v.
Morse
(1964) 60 Cal.2d 631, 649 [36 Cal.Rptr. 201,
388 P.2d 33]), which permit criminal defendants extensive discovery against the prosecution,
Justice Traynor concluded for the majority in
Jones
that these decisions had gone beyond mere effectuation of criminal defendants’ constitutional right to a fair trial. In judicially creating rules of criminal discovery, the court “was not acting under constitutional compulsion but to promote the orderly ascertainment of the truth.” (58 Cal.2d at p. 60.)
The court in
Jones
accordingly announced its willingness to require discovery of defendants as well as the prosecution in criminal cases where such discovery does not conflict with the constitutional rights of the accused. In
Jones
the accused was charged with rape, and on the day set for trial had successfully moved for a continuance on the ground that he would present a defense of impotence and wished to marshal supporting medical evidence. The trial court granted the prosecution’s motion for the discovery of the names and addresses of all medical witnesses who would testify for the defendant and of all doctors who had treated the defendant prior to trial, the reports of these doctors bearing on his claim of impotence, and X-rays of the injuries alleged to have caused his impotency. The Fifth Amendment not yet having been made applicable to the states by
Malloy
v.
Hogan
(1964) 378 U.S. 1 [12 L.Ed.2d 653, 84 S.Ct. 1489], the defendant’s constitutional attack on the trial court’s discovery order was based on the privilege against self-incrimination set forth in article I, section 13, of the California Constitution. The majority in
Jones
upheld the discovery order against this claim of privilege to the extent that the defendant was ordered to identify and produce in advance of trial those witnesses and the evidence which he intended to produce in any event at the trial itself.
In so holding — over the vigorous dissent of Justice Peters — the majority relied on decisions in other states rejecting self-incrimination attacks on notice-of-alibi statutes, quoting with approval a commentator’s analysis of such statutes as not infringing on the privilege against self-incrimination: “ ‘Rather, they set up a wholly reasonable rule of pleading which in no manner compels a defendant to give any evidence other than that which he will voluntarily and without compulsion give at trial.’ ” (58 Cal.2d at p. 61.)
The “intent to disclose at trial” rationale by which the majority in
Jones
found a defendant’s interest in avoiding self-incrimination to be less significant than the courts’ intérest in orderly procedures for the ascertainment of truth, later led the court seemingly to approve a pretrial discovery order which was unrelated to any particular “affirmative” defense such as impotence or alibi and which required revelation of the identities and expected testimony of
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Opinion
WRIGHT, C. J.
Petitioner has been charged by information with the kidnaping, rape, drugging, sexual molestation, and attempted murder of a 10-year-old girl. He is also charged with furnishing drugs to four of his stepdaughters, all minors, and of sexually molesting one of these stepdaughters. Petitioner was held to answer after a lengthy preliminary examination, and following a further hearing pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5, respondent superior court denied petitioner’s motion to suppress evidence. The superior court thereupon issued a discovery order at the request of the People directing petitioner to give the People at least three days’ notice in advance of calling any alibi witness at trial. The order further requires that petitioner disclose the names, addresses and telephone numbers of such witnesses. The People were in turn directed to provide petitioner with evidence they might have or uncover which is impeaching of petitioner’s proffered alibi witnesses. The superior court’s discovery order further provides for the exclusion at trial of the testimony of any witness or other evidence covered by the order which is not in compliance with the order.
Mindful of the expected two- to three-month length of the trial of petitioner, and of a direct conflict in published opinions of the Courts of
Appeal regarding the validity of notice-of-alibi discovery orders,
we stayed petitioner’s trial and granted his petition for a hearing in this court, issuing our alternative writ of prohibition. We have determined that the superior court erred in issuing its notice-of-alibi order, and herewith issue oür peremptory writ of prohibition restraining the enforcement of that order.
We are of the opinion, in accord with the decision of the Court of Appeal in
Rodriguez
v.
Superior Court
(1970) 9 Cal.App.3d 493 [88 Cal.Rptr. 154], that such a procedural innovation as requiring defendants in criminal cases to give advance notice of alibis should be introduced, if at all, only upon the considered judgment of the Legislature. We do not question the validity of our holding in
Jones
v.
Superior Court
(1962) 58 Cal.2d 56, 59-60 [22 Cal.Rptr. 879, 372 P.2d 919], that even in the absence of constitutional mandate or enabling legislation this court has inherent power to provide for the orderly administration of justice through judicially declared rules of criminal discovery. However, complex and closely balanced questions of state and federal constitutional law are presented by a notice-of-alibi order. The gravity of these questions counsels against the exercise of our rule-making power so as to promulgate a notice-of-alibi procedure.
We wish to emphasize that we in no way pass herein on the abstract question of the constitutional validity of a court order, whether or not authorized by the Legislature, which compels an accused to give pretrial notice of an alibi defense. Nevertheless, our decision that it would be inappropriate for us to declare judicially a notice-of-alibi rule does arise from our sensitivity to the constitutional constraints on the power of the courts or the Legislature to require a defendant in a criminal case to reveal to the prosecution in advance of the normal course of trial tangible or intangible trial-related evidence or other material. We accordingly undertake to review the constitutional parameters governing compulsory discovery from a defendant in a criminal case.
In
Jones
v.
Superior Court, supra,
this court gave its sanction to the principle that discovery, even in a criminal case, “should not be a one-way street.”
{Id.
at p. 60.) Reviewing the line of decisions beginning with
People
v.
Riser
(1956) 47 Cal.2d 566 [305 P.2d 1] (overruled on other grounds,
People
v.
Morse
(1964) 60 Cal.2d 631, 649 [36 Cal.Rptr. 201,
388 P.2d 33]), which permit criminal defendants extensive discovery against the prosecution,
Justice Traynor concluded for the majority in
Jones
that these decisions had gone beyond mere effectuation of criminal defendants’ constitutional right to a fair trial. In judicially creating rules of criminal discovery, the court “was not acting under constitutional compulsion but to promote the orderly ascertainment of the truth.” (58 Cal.2d at p. 60.)
The court in
Jones
accordingly announced its willingness to require discovery of defendants as well as the prosecution in criminal cases where such discovery does not conflict with the constitutional rights of the accused. In
Jones
the accused was charged with rape, and on the day set for trial had successfully moved for a continuance on the ground that he would present a defense of impotence and wished to marshal supporting medical evidence. The trial court granted the prosecution’s motion for the discovery of the names and addresses of all medical witnesses who would testify for the defendant and of all doctors who had treated the defendant prior to trial, the reports of these doctors bearing on his claim of impotence, and X-rays of the injuries alleged to have caused his impotency. The Fifth Amendment not yet having been made applicable to the states by
Malloy
v.
Hogan
(1964) 378 U.S. 1 [12 L.Ed.2d 653, 84 S.Ct. 1489], the defendant’s constitutional attack on the trial court’s discovery order was based on the privilege against self-incrimination set forth in article I, section 13, of the California Constitution. The majority in
Jones
upheld the discovery order against this claim of privilege to the extent that the defendant was ordered to identify and produce in advance of trial those witnesses and the evidence which he intended to produce in any event at the trial itself.
In so holding — over the vigorous dissent of Justice Peters — the majority relied on decisions in other states rejecting self-incrimination attacks on notice-of-alibi statutes, quoting with approval a commentator’s analysis of such statutes as not infringing on the privilege against self-incrimination: “ ‘Rather, they set up a wholly reasonable rule of pleading which in no manner compels a defendant to give any evidence other than that which he will voluntarily and without compulsion give at trial.’ ” (58 Cal.2d at p. 61.)
The “intent to disclose at trial” rationale by which the majority in
Jones
found a defendant’s interest in avoiding self-incrimination to be less significant than the courts’ intérest in orderly procedures for the ascertainment of truth, later led the court seemingly to approve a pretrial discovery order which was unrelated to any particular “affirmative” defense such as impotence or alibi and which required revelation of the identities and expected testimony of
all
defense witnesses.
(People
v.
Pike
(1969) 71 Cal. 2d 595, 605 [78 Cal.Rptr. 672, 455 P.2d 776].) In
Prudhomme
v.
Superior Court
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 320 [85 Cal.Rptr. 129, 466 P.2d 673], the court dealt directly with just such a general pretrial discovery order, overruling
Pike
in that respect (2 Cal.3d at p. 327, fn. 11), and limiting
Jones
“virtually to its facts.” (Louisell & Wally, Modern Cal. Discovery (2d ed. 1972) p. 895.) Drawing upon cases of the United States Supreme Court —now directly applicable in the wake of
Malloy
v.
Hogan, supra
— and of California courts, the
Prudhomme
court declared that the privilege against self-incrimination “forbids compelled disclosures which could serve as a ‘link in a chain’ of evidence tending to establish guilt of a criminal offense; in ruling upon a claim of privilege, the trial court must find that it clearly appears from a consideration of all the circumstances in the case that an answer to the challenged [request] cannot possibly have a tendency to incriminate the witness.” (2 Cal.3d at p. 326.) Accordingly, the “principal element” in determining the validity of a discovery order against the defendant in a criminal case “is not simply whether the information sought pertains to an ‘affirmative defense,’ [footnote omitted] or whether [the] defendant intends to introduce or rely upon the evidence at trial, but whether disclosure thereof conceivably might lighten the prosecution’s burden of proving its case in chief.”
{Id.}
The
Prudhomme
court went, on to point out that “It requires no great effort or imagination to conceive of a variety of situations wherein the disclosure of the expected testimony of defense witnesses,
or even their names and addresses,
could easily provide an essential link in a chain of evidence underlying the prosecution’s case in chief.” (Italics added.)
(Id.)
In contrast to the evident concern in
Prudhomme
over the self-incrimination ramifications of prosecutorial discovery in a criminal case, the United States Supreme Court -was little troubled by self-incrimination problems when just three months after
Prudhomme
it upheld Florida’s notice-of-alibi rule in
Williams
v.
Florida
(1970) 399 U.S. 78 [26 L.Ed.2d 446, 90 S.Ct. 1893]. Noting the then unbroken line of decisions upholding notice-of-alibi procedures
(id.
at p. 83 [26 L.Ed.2d at p. 451]),
and stressing the
petitioner’s concession that there would be no constitutional bar to the prosecution’s being granted a continuance following the unanticipated presentation of alibi evidence, which continuance would allow the prosecution to seek out evidence in rebuttal to the alibi evidence presented
(id.
at pp. 85-86 [26 L.Ed.2d at p. 452]),
the Supreme Court concluded that the state could constitutionally avoid the need for such disruption by requiring pretrial disclosure of an alibi defense and the identities- of alibi witnesses.
The Florida notice-of-alibi rule was also found free of due process problems by the
Williams
court. The court noted Florida’s liberal rules of criminal discovery on behalf of the defendant, and emphasized that the notice-of-alibi rule there in question, which required the state to give pretrial notice of the identities of the witnesses it would present in rebuttal to the defendant’s announced alibi, “is itself carefully hedged with reciprocal duties requiring state disclosure to the defendant.” (399 U.S. at p. 81 [26 L.Ed.2d at p. 450].) The court also adverted to the ease with which an alibi may be fabricated and thq state’s consequently “obvious and legitimate” interest in protecting itself against such a defense.
{Id.)
Pointing to the existence of notice-of-qlibi statutes since at least 1927, the court concluded: “The adversary system of trial is hardly an end in itself; it is not yet a poker game in which players enjoy an absolute right always to conceal their cards until played. [Footnote omitted.] We find ample room in that system, at least as far as ‘due process’ is concerned, for the instant Florida rule, which is designed to enhance the search for truth in the criminal trial by insuring both the defendant and the State ample opportunity to investigate certain facts crucial to the determination of guilt or innocence.”
{Id.
at p. 82 [26 L.Ed.2d at p. 450].)
In
Wardius
v.
Oregon
(1973) 412 U.S. 470 [37 L.Ed.2d 82, 93 S.Ct. 2208], the Supreme Court indicated that notice-of-alibi rules are more vulnerable to constitutional attack on due process grounds than on self-incrimination grounds. The court invalidated Oregon’s notice-of-alibi stat
ute because neither that statute nor other Oregon law provided the defendant with sufficient reciprocal rights of discovery to make criminal discovery the “two-way street” required by the due process clause’s mandate of a “balance of forces between the accused and his accuser.”
(Id.
at pp. 474, 475 [37 L.Ed.2d at pp. 87, 88].)
The court further stated: “The
Williams
Court was . . . careful to note that ‘Florida law provides for liberal discovery by the defendant against the State, and the notice-of-alibi rule is itself carefully hedged with reciprocal duties requiring state disclosure to the defendant.’ . . . The same cannot be said of Oregon law. . . . Oregon grants no discovery rights to criminal defendants and, indeed, does not even provide defendants with bills of particulars. More significantly, Oregon, unlike Florida, has no provision which requires the State to reveal the names and addresses of witnesses it plans to use to refute an alibi defense. ... [¶] ... It is fundamentally unfair to require a defendant to divulge the details of his own case while at the same time subjecting him to the hazard of surprise concerning refutation of the very pieces of evidence which he disclosed to the State.”
(Id.
at pp. 474-476 [37 L.Ed.2d at pp. 87, 88] [footnotes omitted].)
The
Wardius
court emphasized that the reciprocal rights of discovery necessary to validate a notice-of-alibi statute may not be inchoate. Oregon argued to the court that despite the lack of reciprocity on the face of its notice-of-alibi statute, Oregon courts might well have read the requisite reciprocity into the statute, had the defendant therein complied with the notice-of-alibi order and then sought reciprocal discovery. The Supreme Court acknowledged that it could not predict what the Oregon courts would have done in such a situation, but concluded that “this very lack of predictability” about the extent of discovery available to the defendant was sufficient to invalidate the notice-of-alibi rule. (412 U.S. at p. 477 [37 L.Ed.2d at p. 89].) “[T]he State cannot constitutionally force compliance with its scheme on the basis of a totally unsubstantiated possibility that the statute might be read in a manner contrary to its plain language. Thus, in the absence of fair notice that he would have an opportunity to discover the State’s rebuttal witnesses, petitioner cannot be compelled to reveal his alibi defense.”
(Id.
at pp. 478-479 [37 L.Ed.2d at pp. 89, 90].)
When the discovery order here in issue is viewed in the light of the foregoing authorities it is manifest that the order presents delicate and difficult questions of constitutional law, both state and federal. While
Williams
may have laid to rest the contention that notice-of-alibi procedures are inconsistent with the federally guaranteed privilege against self-incrimination, this privilege is also secured to the people of California by our state Constitution, whose construction is left to this court, informed but untrammelled by the United States Supreme Court’s reading of parallel federal provisions.
(See
Mental Hygiene Dept.
v.
Kirchner
(1965) 380
U.S. 194, 198 [13 L.Ed.2d 753, 756, 85 S.Ct. 871];
California
v.
Krivda
(1972) 409 U.S. 33 [34 L.Ed.2d 45, 95 S.Ct. 32], on remand
sub nom. People
v.
Krivda
(1973) 8 Cal.3d 623 [105 Cal.Rptr. 521, 504 P.2d 457];
Curry
v.
Superior Court
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 707, 716-717 [87 Cal.Rptr. 361, 470 P.2d 345];
Cardenas
v.
Superior Court
(1961) 56 Cal.2d 273 , 275-276 [14 Cal.Rptr. 657, 363 P.2d 889].) The Supreme Court did not hesitate in
Williams
to send defendants with alibi defenses down the “two-way street” mapped out in
Jones
for a defendant making the partially analogous claim of impotence in a rape case; but this court in
Prudhomme
has itself cast doubt on the analogical utility of
Jones.
Of course,
Prudhomme’s
concern for the possible, collaterally incriminatory consequences to an accused of revealing in advance of trial the names of defense witnesses — who if alibi witnesses are especially likely to know the accused personally and hence to assist, unintentionally or not, in the state’s investigation of the accused — was in part based on this court’s reading of pre
Williams
federal law. Nevertheless, it cannot be gainsaid that
Prudhomme
put this court on record as being considerably more solicitous of the privilege against self-incrimination, than federal law currently requires. Thus, there is no foregone answer to the question we would necessarily face were we to pass on the merits of the superior court’s order: whether notice-of-alibi discovery procedures in general are permissible under the California Constitution.
Consideration of the merits of the superior court’s order would require us to decide not only this far-reaching issue of state law, but also whether the order is sufficiently reciprocal in scope to pass federal constitutional muster under the
Wardius
test of fundamental fairness. As with the issue of the extent of our state Constitution’s guarantee against self-incrimination, adjudication of this federal issue would have repercussions far beyond this case and the particular discovery order now before the court. The text of the order of the superior court,
even as orally amplified by that
court,
fails on its face to meet two of the criteria of fundamental fairness set forth in
Williams
and
Wardius.
First, the order does not require the prosecution to furnish petitioner with the names and addresses of the witnesses the People will put on in rebuttal to petitioner’s alibi defense.
Second, the order does not require the prosecution to name with all possible specificity the time and place of the alleged crimes as to which petitioner might offer alibis.
Although the court below orally indicated its willingness to comply with
Wardius,
see footnote 12,
supra,
the Supreme Court indicated in
Wardius
that a high degree of “predictability” is required if judicially ordered discovery beyond the text of the order in question is to be relied upon to validate that order. (412 U.S. at pp. 477, 479 [37 L.Ed.2d at pp. 89, 90].)
Thus even if the order of the superior court were to be upheld by us as consistent with the California Constitution, we would still have to restrain enforcement of the order absent compliance with our instructions setting forth in detail the reciprocal discovery to be required of the prosecution. In effect, we would have to create judicially a comprehensive notice-of-alibi procedure for California courts.
We see little to recommend our attempting at once to consider the desirability of creating a notice-of-alibi procedure and to pass objectively on the constitutionality of any such procedure \bjrich might result. It is
one thing for a court to prescribe judicial procedures
necessary
to protect some fundamental constitutional principle or to effectuate some specific constitutional guarantee of individual liberty. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Rhodes
(1974) 12 Cal.3d 180 [115 Cal.Rptr. 235, 524 P.2d 363];
People
v.
Vickers
(1972) 8 Cal.3d 451, 461-462 [105 Cal.Rptr. 305, 503 P.2d 1313];
Bryan
v.
Superior Court
(1972) 7 Cal.3d 575, 586-589 [102 Cal. Rptr. 831, 498 P.2d 1079];
People
v.
Riser
(1956) 47 Cal.2d 566 [305 P.2d 1];
People
v.
Cahan
(1955) 44 Cal.2d 434 [282 P.2d 905].) It is quite another thing for a court to design judicial procedures which are in no way required by higher law but which may seem to some socially desirable and perhaps may be
permitted
— at least to some extent — by our state and federal Constitutions. In the former instance, constitutional principles guide the court’s hand; in the latter instance constitutional principles may well have to stay the court’s hand. Given the difficulty of the constitutional questions posed by notice-of-alibi procedures, it is far better for this court to pass judgment, if and when necessary, on an integrated legislative document than on our own conditional decree by which we might seek to smooth the constitutionally rough edges of the order of the court below.
It should also be noted, in the context of the dichotomy between judicial rule-making inspired or required by constitutional limitations on the power of government, and judicial rule-making which would merely grant to the government rights which it might legislatively claim for itself, that the Legislature has not lacked the opportunity to enact a notice-of-alibi statute. Notice-of-alibi legislation has been the subject of serious debate in California legal circles for nearly half a century.
In the last fifteen years alone, five notice-of-alibi bills have been placed before four sessions of the Legislature.
While we draw no inference of the Legislature’s affirmative disapproval of notice-of-alibi procedures from the fact that such legislation has repeatedly failed of passage, we also are unable to view the Legislature’s treatment of notice-of-alibi procedures as impliedly delegating to this court the responsibility for development of the law relating to prosecutorial discovery of alibis. It may be that relative to fields traditionally left at common law to judicial development, such as the law of torts and contracts governing the civil rights and obligations of private persons inter se, the Legislature’s codification of California law and the consequent abolition of the common law entailed no legislative supersession of the historical role of courts in the evolution of legal rules. Where this is the case, legislative apathy or antipathy towards proposals to alter the codified common law may well be seen as confirmatory of the Legislature’s desire to leave undisturbed the traditional responsibility of courts under Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence to take account of modem trends in the civil law.
We do not think that like considerations obtain when at issue are the procedures by which one may be convicted of crime, rather than the remedies by which one may recover for a civilly actionable wrong. The former topic is much more closely entwined with constitutional restraints on the state than is the latter. Thus the former topic is more likely to present this court with a conflict between its role as common law rule-maker and its role as constitutional umpire, at least — as already discussed (see page 846,
supra)
— when the court’s common law powers are sought to be invoked not so as to effectuate the protections constitutionally guar
anteed to an otherwise helpless accused, but to give the state the full benefit of the legislative leeway constitutionally accorded it.
It is of interest in this regard that it appears that no jurisdiction has ever adopted a notice-of-alibi procedure by the common law mechanism of judicial decision.
In the four states in which a notice-of-alibi procedure has been adopted by judicial rule rather than by statute, the supreme court of each state has been yested by its state’s constitution with quasi-legislative power over judicial procedure,
and in each of these states the notice-of-alibi procedure was formally promulgated not decisionally but pursuant to the promulgating court’s special constitutional power over judicial procedure.
This has also been the approach of the
United States Supreme Court, which has been explicitly vested by statute with the power to promulgate rules of procedure, subject to congressional disapproval. (18 U.S.C. § 3771.) The Supreme Court has not invoked its inherent supervisory powers over the federal courts to introduce a notice-of-alibi rule (cf.
McNabb
v.
United States
(1943) 318 U.S. 332, 340-341 [87 L.Ed. 819, 823-825, 63 S.Ct. 608];
Thiel
v.
Southern Pacific Co.
(1946) 328 U.S. 217, 225 [90 L.Ed. 1181, 1187, 66 S.Ct. 984, 166 A.L.R. 1412]), but rather has incorporated such a rule in its proposed amendments to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
This court has not been vested with formal, quasi-legislative, rule-making power, either by the California Constitution or the Legislature.
We accordingly conclude that due regard for this court’s function as constitutional adjudicator, and solicitude for this state’s governmental scheme of shared legislative and judicial responsibility for the sound administra
tion of justice, render it inappropriate for us to create by judicial decision a notice-of-alibi procedure for California courts.
Let the peremptory writ of prohibition issue as prayed.
McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Sullivan, J., Clark, J., and Burke, J.,
concurred.
The petition of the real party in interest for a rehearing was denied December 26, 1974, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.