¶ 1 Michael Fusselman appeals from the order denying his petition filed under the Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), 42 Pa. *1110 C.S. §§ 9541-9546, entered against him in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County following a determination that he violated the terms of his probation regarding his seventh conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI). Fus-selman had been placed on three years’ intermediate punishment (IP) to run concurrently with a sentence he was serving in York County on unrelated charges. 1 After determining that Fusselman had violated the terms of his IP sentence, the trial court sentenced him to the statutory maximum of 2⅛ to 5 years’ incarceration. Fus-selman claims the sentence is improper as it exceeds the sentence originally imposed. After a careful review of the submissions of the parties, the official record and relevant law, we affirm.
¶ 2 Fusselman has a long history of motor vehicle violations, including seven convictions for DUI. There is indication in the record that Fusselman’s driver’s license has been suspended until the year 2030. In this instance, Fusselman rode a bicycle in front of a police car while intoxicated. Fusselman pled guilty to the DUI charge in exchange for a sentence of 3 years’ IP, which basically took the form of restrictive probation. The trial court accepted the terms of the plea only because Fusselman was on a bicycle at the time of the offense and thereby mainly represented a danger to himself as opposed to others. The trial court informed Fusselman at sentencing that it would be inclined to sentence him to the statutory maximum if he violated his probation.
¶ 3 Two days after his release from the York County prison, Fusselman met up with a friend, went to a bar, got drunk, drove a car, fled the police, crashed the car into a parked vehicle, fled that scene, and finally abandoned the car and fled the police once more on foot. This factual scenario presents any number of violations of Fusselman’s sentence and there is no dispute as to this fact.
¶4 True to its word, the trial court sentenced Fusselman to 2½ to 5 years’ incarceration after determining he had violated his probation. The sentence was based upon Fusselman’s long criminal history (not just his incredibly poor driving history) and the fact that Fusselman refused to learn from his mistakes, refused to take advantage of the opportunities to obtain help for his drinking problem, refused to acknowledge he had a drinking problem, and the clear danger Fusselman presented to the public at large should he be allowed to continue in his behavior. Basically, the trial court determined that enough was enough.
¶ 5 A brief jurisdictional review is necessary. Fusselman did not file a direct appeal. He did file a timely PCRA petition and counsel was duly appointed. PCRA counsel ultimately filed a Tumer/Finley
2
no merit letter and petitioned to withdraw as counsel. The PCRA court, after proper Rule 907 notice, dismissed Fusselman’s petition without a hearing and allowed counsel to withdraw. Fusselman then filed a timely appeal. Appellate counsel was appointed. Counsel then filed an
Anders
brief and motion to withdraw, apparently in the mistaken belief that an appeal from denial of a PCRA petition required that
*1111
filing.
3
Fusselman responded by filing a
pro se
brief claiming ineffective assistance of counsel throughout the process for failing to raise his sentencing issue. Specifically, Fusselman claims under
Commonwealth v. Anderson,
¶ 6 Anderson represents one of two divergent paths in the law that addresses the issue of what limits, if any, are placed upon a trial court when sentencing a defendant after probation violation. Anderson holds that where the original sentence was imposed as a result of a negotiated plea, the court may not exceed the terms of that plea when re-sentencing on a violation of probation. The other line of cases holds for the general proposition that under the express terms of relevant statute, the court is limited only to what the original punishment might have been, that is, the statutory maximum for the given crime.
¶ 7 To determine which line of cases is applicable we need to analyze the reasoning and history of Anderson.
¶ 8 Pamela Anderson pled guilty to burglary, theft and receiving stolen property. She received an 11½ to 23 month sentence to be followed two concurrent terms of 5 years probation for burglary and theft/ RSP. When Anderson violated the terms of her probation, the court sentenced her to two to five years’ incarceration for the burglary charges and two to four years’ incarceration on the theft/RSP to be served consecutively. Our court reversed the sentence based on two theories. Fust, a general proposition that the court is bound by the terms of a plea agreement; and second, any sentence imposed after probation revocation must not exceed the maximum sentence originally imposed.
¶ 9 We initially look at the second rationale. The notion that a sentence following probation revocation cannot exceed the original sentence is, in
Anderson,
derived from
Commonwealth v. Harrison,
It is well-settled that any sentence imposed as a result of this remand may not exceed the three year maximum imposed in the original sentence. Commonwealth v. Tomlin,232 Pa.Super. 147 ,336 A.2d 407 (1975); Commonwealth v. Cole,222 Pa.Super. 229 ,294 A.2d 824 (1972).
Harrison,
¶ 10
Tomlin
and
Cole
provide the next stop in our investigation. Both of these cases, like
Harrison,
involve a factual scenario where a sentence was suspended and probation imposed. This is important for two reasons. First, a suspended sen
*1112
tence represents a definite sentence. The defendant in that situation knows that a violation of probation will result in the imposition of the suspended aspect of the sentence. Thus, a defendant given a suspended sentence of one to five years’ incarceration for aggravated robbery, as in
Tomlin,
and then violates his probation, is aware that he faces one to five years in prison. That one to five year sentence is a definitive part of the sentence as a whole. This aspect is not present when the sentence is simply one of probation. Second, the definitive aspect of a suspended sentence brings up questions of double jeopardy if a longer sentence is imposed upon violation of probation. This double jeopardy aspect is at the heart of both
Tomlin
and
Cole.
Double jeopardy, however, is not implicated in a situation where only probation has been imposed.
See Commonwealth v. Pierce,
¶ 11 If we trace the roots of the implication of double jeopardy back even further, we arrive at
Commonwealth v. Silverman,
¶ 12 Reviewing the above, it becomes clear that the statement in Anderson that “any sentence imposed after probation revocation must not exceed the maximum sentence originally imposed” is currently unsupportable, and was, in fact, unsupportable in 1994. Thus, this leg of support for the notion that the terms of a negotiat ed plea must be upheld even after revocation of probation no longer exists.
¶ 13 We turn our attention to the other leg on which Anderson rests. Anderson stated:
By accepting the plea agreement, which included a negotiated sentence, the trial court, in effect, circumscribed its sentencing alternatives, the parameters of which were described in the plea agreement. We conclude that the trial court’s initial sentencing options were thereby limited to the imposition of the negotiated sentence.
¶ 14 Although Anderson does not directly address the point, this statement appears to be directed at 42 Pa.C.S. § 9771(b), which specifically states that on revocation of probation the “sentencing alternatives available to the court shall be the same as were available at the time of the initial sentencing.” However, the logic of Anderson ignores two points. First, the trial court in accepting the plea has not circumscribed the sentencing options that were available to it. The court, when presented with a proposed negotiated plea has the option to accept or decline the proposed plea. That the court chooses to accept the terms of the proposed plea does not alter the fact that it had another sentencing option available to it.
¶ 15 Anderson also ignores the fact that by accepting a negotiated plea for concurrent sentences of probation, the court has accepted two limitations on sentencing, not just one. The court agrees to sentence concurrently and has also agreed to sentence the defendant to probation. Thus, accepting Anderson’s logic, the court has circumscribed its sentencing alternatives, *1113 the parameters of which were described in the plea agreement, not only to concurrent sentences but to probation as well. If the court has limited itself in one term, then logically it must limit itself in the other. Yet no one can seriously argue that the court is not allowed to revoke probation and resentence the violator to a term of incarceration.
¶ 16 We would never consider limiting the court’s right to impose incarceration after the violation of a negotiated plea for probation (concurrent sentences or not) because the legislature has specifically stated that a court may do so. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9771(b). It is that same statute that allows the court to sentence to any alternative available to it at the time of original sentencing. The same right to revoke probation and sentence a defendant to incarceration is the same right to sentence up to the statutory maximum. Section 9771 does not discriminate between the negotiated plea and the open plea. The same alternatives for one exist for the other.
¶ 17 This view is supported by decisions subsequent to
Anderson
that have limited the application of the
Anderson
rule to concurrent sentencing.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Williams,
¶ 18 The logic of Anderson further ignores the nature of a negotiated plea. It is a bargain, a contract between the Commonwealth and a defendant upheld by the courts, just as any other bargain may be upheld. In a negotiated plea, the defendant agrees to forego certain behavior. In return, the Commonwealth agrees — in the situation presented before us — to not seek the incarceration of the person. The court upholds that agreement. However, when the defendant violates the terms of the agreement, like any other bargain, the contract is broken. The Commonwealth may then seek to incarcerate the defendant. Anderson, however, gives the defendant the benefit of the bargain in spite of the fact that it was the defendant who breached the contract. This represents a rather odd interpretation of contract law. Certainly if a person agrees to buy a home for $200,000 and delivers only $100,000, the court is not expected to require the seller to turn over the keys to the house, not even for half the time. Given the plain language of section 9771(b) that gives the court the right to sentence up to the statutory maximum when the defendant has violated the terms of probation, there is simply no reason to give a violator the continuing benefit of a negotiated plea for probation.
¶ 19 The other line of cases presents no limitations to the trial court in sentencing
*1114
post-revocation.
5
These cases read the statutory language as written and allow the sentencing court to act in a case by case basis. This line of cases is embodied, in chronological order, by:
Commonwealth v. Colding,
¶ 20 It becomes apparent by reading the progression of these cases that once the prohibition against extending sentences due to double jeopardy considerations was removed, the statutory language of 42 Pa. C.S. § 9771 6 became paramount. As noted earlier, the language of section 9771 does not discriminate between the negotiated plea, the open plea or a finding of guilt. The statute simply allows the court to sentence in accordance with any option available at the time of initial sentencing.
¶ 21 What we are left with in comparing the two lines of cases is a situation where, upon revocation
of
probation, the court is allowed to consider any option it has at the initial sentencing except when the trial court initially imposed concurrent sentences. In spite of our analysis demonstrating the current lack of foundation for
Anderson,
it has never been specifically overruled.
7
See Commonwealth v. Adebaike,
¶ 22 Given that the current factual scenario does not exactly fit the Anderson model, we believe the logical underpinnings of Anderson have failed, and logical reasoning and statutory language analyses of the Colding, et al. cases are consistent and persuasive, we believe the proper course here is to follow the statutory language. Therefore, we find no error in the sentence imposed.
¶23 Order affirmed. Motion to withdraw granted.
Notes
. For the purpose of this appeal, intermediate punishment is treated similarly to probation.
See Commonwealth
v.
Lehman,
.
Commonwealth v. Turner,
.
Anders v. California,
. The double jeopardy clause set forth in the Pennsylvania Constitution is coextensive with the federal constitutional standards.
Commonwealth v. Kunish,
. A sentencing court is always limited by abuse of discretion or manifest injustice.
. In the earlier cases, the relevant statute was 18 Pa.C.S. § 1371. This statute was transferred to the current statute in 1980. Both statutes allow the court, on revocation of probation, to use the same sentencing alternatives available at the time of initial sentencing.
. While we would welcome it if Anderson were overruled, we may still distinguish Anderson because it has been limited to concurrent sentences.
.
Adebaike
adds an additional rationale in limiting sentences upon revocation of probation.
Adebaike
recognizes that one of the reasons to impose total confinement after probation has been revoked is to vindicate the authority of the court. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 9771.
Adebaike
states: "In essence, the court vindicates its authority by revoking probation, which is essentially a somewhat conditional, yet not usually onerous, freedom, and imposing confinement. It is not necessary in order to vindicate the court's authority to impose a relatively harsh sentence.”
