This is an appeal from a judgment denying, without a hearing, appellant’s RCr 11.42 motion to vacate a judgment of conviction. The issue presented is one of law.
In 1966 appellant was tried and convicted of the offense of rape under KRS 435.090. His sentence was fixed at 12 years’ confinement in the penitentiary. On appeal the judgment was reversed on the ground that certain evidence introduced against him was obtained as the result of an illegal search. Bruce v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
Upon being retried in 1968 on the same charge, he was found guilty and the jury fixed his punishment at life imprisonment without privilege of parole. This judgment was affirmed on appeal in Bruce v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
Subsequently the United States Supreme Court decided North Carolina v. Pearce,
Appellant, in urging the double jeopardy question, apparently misconceives the reasoning of the Pearce opinion. That opinion specifically states (395 U.S. page 723, 89 S.Ct. page 2079):
“ * * * that neither the double jeopardy provision nor the Equal Protection Clause imposes an absolute bar to a more severe sentence upon reconviction.”
The rationale of the decision was that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution could be violated if (1) a judge imposed both sentences, and (2) the more severe sentence after a retrial indicated a punitive and vindictive policy which had a deterrent effect upon the defendant’s exercise of his right to appeal. The Pearce decision was quite limited in scope. Before the threat of violating the defendant’s due process right of appeal arises,
there must be a correlating control of both sentences by the same agency. In Brooks v. Commonwealth, Ky.,447 S.W.2d 614 (1969), we emphasized the distinction between the judge and jury sentence.
Clearly under Kentucky practice, when different juries, not the trial judge, determine the sentences, the correlating control and the threat are both absent. As a basic proposition, and as observed in the Pearce opinion, when a defendant has been successful on appeal in having his conviction set aside, it has “been wholly nullified and the slate wiped clean”. The sentence goes out the window with the verdict of guilt.
The reversal of a judgment of conviction extinguishes in toto the jury verdict
With respect to the threat of discouraging appeals, we can find no basis for it when a new jury is called upon to make an independent determination of guilt and appropriate punishment. It can be assumed such jury would have no knowledge of the prior conviction or the appeal, and we cannot discern how the penalty fixed by a second jury could realistically promote a punitive policy of discouraging appeals by criminal defendants. The second verdict simply does not fit into a policy picture.
Our attention has been called to Pinkard v. Neil, D.C.Tenn.,
We conclude that the principle of Pearce does not apply in this case. We note that the courts of Missouri and Texas have taken the same view under their jury procedure. Spidle v State, Mo.,
We have assumed that Pearce has a retroactive effect, although the United States Supreme Court has not, as far as we know, passed upon that question. See Moon v. Maryland,
The judgment is affirmed.
