We are presented with the question of what to do with an appeal when a defendant dies after we have granted his application for further appellate review of an order denying his motion for a new trial.
In May, 1987, the defendant waived his right to an initial jury trial and admitted to sufficient facts to support a charge of indecent assault and battery on a child. Based on his ad *248 mission, the judge found the defendant guilty of indecent assault and battery, and imposed sentence. The defendant served his sentence.
In November, 1990, represented by new counsel, the defendant moved for a new trial pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. P. 30,
The parties agree that we should not reach the merits of the appeal. They disagree, however, as to the appropriate disposition of the appeal. The defendant’s counsel argues that we should dismiss the complaint. 2 The Commonwealth urges that we dismiss the appeal or, alternatively, that we vacate the order granting further appellate review. We conclude that our order allowing further appellate review should be vacated.
When a defendant dies while his conviction is on direct review, it is our practice to vacate the judgment and remand the case with a direction to dismiss the complaint or indictment, thus abating the entire prosecution. See
Commonwealth
v.
Latour,
We have not previously confronted a case in which a criminal defendant has died pending a collateral appeal. Other States that have done so have generally dismissed or abated the appeal but have refused to abate the entire prosecution. See, e.g.,
Jackson
v.
State,
The question, then, is whether this appeal should be treated as if it were a direct appeal, and the judgment vacated and the case remanded with a direction to dismiss the complaint, or as a collateral appeal that should be dismissed. A motion for a new trial under Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 has been treated as collateral for the purposes of determining the retroactive application of a new rule of criminal law under the test in
Teague
v.
Lane,
We conclude that, in the special circumstances of this case, the defendant’s application for further appellate review should be dismissed. None of the policy reasons arguably supporting abatement of the entire proceeding applies here. One policy interest said to be served by the practice of abating the entire proceeding, when a defendant has died pending appeal, is forestalling the imposition of any impossible punishment. See
United States
v.
Asset, supra
at 211;
State
v.
Griffin, supra
at 539. That reason, which has doubtful com
*251
pelling force, is not implicated here. The defendant had already served his sentence when he moved for new trial. The other primary policy advanced by the rule has been said to be based on “the interests of justice,” which “ordinarily require that [a defendant] not stand convicted without resolution of the merits of his appeal, which is an ‘integral part of [our] system for finally adjudicating [his] guilt or innocence.’ ”
United States
v.
Moehlenkamp, supra
at 128, quoting
Griffin
v.
Illinois,
In granting further appellate review in this case, we were acting analogously to the United States Supreme Court when it grants a petition for certiorari. We think it appropriate to follow what that Court does when a defendant dies after a petition for certiorari has been granted and before decision in that Court.
The order allowing the defendant’s application for further appellate review is vacated and that application is dismissed.
So ordered.
Notes
An admission to sufficient facts in a District Court accompanied by a waiver of a jury trial “lends a finality to the resulting judgment of conviction identical to that which attends a conviction entered on a plea of guilty” and, thus, if there is no appeal for a trial de nova, is treated as a guilty plea and is subject to the same safeguards of voluntariness.
Commonwealth
v.
Mahadeo,
The Commonwealth raises no objection to defense counsel’s involvement in this matter in spite of the fact the defendant is dead.
