On May 21, 1992, a DeKalb County jury convicted Donald C. Bankhead of felony murder, 1 aggravated assault, kidnapping, and burglary. Pertinently, he was sentenced to ten years to serve on the kidnapping count. Thereafter, the superior court granted his motion for new trial, as amended, for the failure to conduct an evidentiary hearing under Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.3 (B) prior to the introduction of similar transactions evidence at trial. In August 1993, under the terms of his negotiated plea agreement, the defendant entered a guilty plea to voluntary manslaughter (reduced from felony murder), 2 aggravated assault, kidnapping, and burglary. He was then sentenced concurrently to 20 years to serve on each count. The defendant appeals from the superior court’s order denying his pro se motion to vacate void judgment and motion for resentencing, as amended, variously contending that his sentence to twenty years confinement on the kidnapping count was illegal in that the superior court’s sentencing authority thereon was limited to ten years confinement as originally imposed in the first trial. In a related claim of error, the defendant challenges the effectiveness of counsel upon the *215 entry of his guilty plea, arguing (a) that counsel wrongly advised him that the maximum permissible punishment for kidnapping was twenty years confinement despite the ten-year sentence imposed thereon in his first trial, and (b) that counsel “induced” his plea by promising to represent him before the parole board and to have him released from prison within fifty-two months. Finding these claims of error to be without merit, we affirm.
1. Although it did so erroneously, characterizing defendant’s motion as a motion to modify sentence, the superior court did not err in denying the defendant’s motion to vacate void judgment and motion for resentencing, as amended. See, e.g.,
Frederick v. State,
The grant of a new trial eliminates everything which is pending in the old trial. When a new trial is granted, the effect is to set aside all proceedings in the old trial. See U. S. Fidelity &c. Co. v. Clarke,187 Ga. 774 , 782 (2 SE2d 608 ) [(1939)]. “Where a new trial has been granted, the case stands ready for trial as if there had been no trial. The effect of the grant of a new trial by [an appellate] court is to require the case to be heard de novo unless specific direction be given in regard thereto. [OCGA § 5-5-48]; Anderson v. Clark,70 Ga. 362 (2) [(1883)].” Leventhal v. Baumgartner,209 Ga. 404 (73 SE2d 194 ) [(1952)].
Reagan v. Reagan,
In light of the foregoing, the defendant’s sentence to ten years confinement on the kidnapping count in the first trial was rendered a nullity when the superior court granted him a new trial. It follows that such sentence was wholly ineffective as a limitation on the superior court’s sentencing authority on the kidnapping count when the defendant later entered his plea of guilty thereon. As a sentence authorized by law, OCGA § 16-5-40 (b) (kidnapping punishable by ten to twenty years imprisonment), the complained-of sentence to twenty years confinement may not be deemed void for illegality. A sentence is void where the court has imposed punishment which the law does not allow.
Hill v. State,
2. There also is no merit in the defendant’s claim that his motion to vacate void judgment should have been granted on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel. Initially, we note that defendant’s claims of ineffectiveness are properly before this court in that the defendant, pro se, is for the first time appearing in this case on appeal.
Threlkeld v. State,
“To prove ineffectiveness of trial counsel, the defendant must show that his [or her] trial counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced him [or her].”
Powell v. State,
3. In light of our disposition of Divisions 1 and 2, we need not address the defendant’s remaining claims of error.
Judgment affirmed.
