Ronald Smith appeals from an order, entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, revoking his parole and probation and imposing a term of total confinement. We affirm.
On January 9, 1992, defendant Ronald Smith entered a negotiated guilty plea to two counts of robbery. The negotiated sentence imposed imprisonment of four to twenty-three months, on each bill, to be served concurrently. Additionally, the court ordered the defendant to serve consecutive one year probation terms on each bill.
*504 On November 16,1993, Smith was arrested, charged, and convicted of numerous other felonies. 1 At a subsequent probation hearing, Smith’s 1992 probation was revoked 2 and he was sentenced to two concurrent terms of imprisonment of two to five years on the original 1992 bills, to run consecutively to the sentence he was serving for the 1993 convictions. After Smith’s petition for modification of sentence was denied, he appealed to this court. He raises the following issue for our review:
Whether appellant’s sentence of two to five years following probation revocation is illegal as it exceeded the maximum period of probation originally imposed?
The scope of review following revocation of probation is limited to the validity of the proceedings and the legality of the sentence.
Commonwealth v. Gilmore,
Smith claims that it was procedurally incorrect for the trial court to impose a sentence upon him which directly contravenes binding case law precedent. Specifically, appellant as
*505
serts that this court’s decision in
Commonwealth v. Anderson,
In
Commonwealth v. Anderson,
On appeal, the defendant claimed that the sentencing court erred by imposing the consecutive sentences at her revocation of probation hearing. Determining that the trial court’s judgment of sentence should be vacated and the case remanded for resentencing, this court’s holding particularly stressed the binding nature of a negotiated plea. This court found that because the trial court sentenced the defendant to serve her sentences concurrently, pursuant to a negotiated plea bargain, the sentencing court’s subsequent imposition of a consecutive sentence on the defendant was invalid.
The holding in Anderson, however, is not relevant to the case at hand. Although the trial court did enter into a negotiated plea bargain with Smith at his original sentencing proceeding, the negotiated agreement was never changed by the trial court when it resentenced Smith for violating his probation. In fact, the sentence following Smith’s revocation of probation was consistent with that of his plea for the first *506 robbery convictions. At Smith’s original hearing, the court and Smith agreed that his sentences would run concurrently. After his probation revocation, the court entered a sentence which also ran concurrently on the original robbery convictions. 3
There, exists an additional reason why the instant case is not governed by the dictates of
Anderson.
Specifically,
Anderson
uses the following language, found in
Commonwealth v. Harrison, 264
Pa.Super. 62,
[A]ny sentence imposed after probation revocation must not exceed the maximum sentence originally imposed.
Id.
at 66 n. 2,
In
Raynes,
the court stated that when a sentence is suspended, pending a period of probation, the court is, in effect, choosing to defer sentencing, and is giving the defendant a chance to prove himself on probation. Because a court voluntarily chooses to be more lenient when it suspends a defendant’s sentence, when the same defendant violates probation and must be resentenced, the court cannot sentence the defendant more strictly than the sentence originally imposed.
Id.; see also Commonwealth v. Cole,
The imposition of sentence following revocation of probation is vested within the sound discretion of the trial court, which, absent an abuse of that discretion, will not be disturbed on appeal.
Commonwealth v. Bell,
The sentencing judge noted that Smith’s original conviction carried a maximum of twenty years imprisonment and a $50,000.00 fine. Accordingly, the court had the authority to sentence Smith to a maximum of twenty years based on the two original robbery convictions in 1992.
Pierce,
Additionally, the total time of confinement, after Smith was resentenced at his probation revocation hearing, was well below the statutory maximum.
See Commonwealth v. Fleeger,
Accordingly, because we find that Smith’s sentence was neither an abuse of the trial court’s discretion, Bell, supra, nor illegal, we affirm the trial court’s order. Pierce, supra.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Smith was subsequently sentenced, on these convictions, to a term of four to fifteen years imprisonment.
. Because the commission of a new crime violates an implied condition of probation and suggests that the defendant is a poor probation risk,
Commonwealth v. Miller,
. The Commonwealth relies on the holding of the consolidated appeals of
Commonwealth v. Byrd,
In the case at hand, Smith did enter his plea pursuant to a negotiated agreement with the court. Additionally, neither Byrd nor Bender addresses the'legality of the revocation of probation sentence in relation to the original sentence imposed on Smith — the real issue which should be decided in this appeal, as opposed to Smith’s issue as framed and stated on p. 2.
. Although this court notes that the Anderson court failed to state the limited application of this quoted language from Harrison, we agree with the decision ultimately reached in Commonwealth v. Anderson— namely, that the defendant’s sentence after revocation of his probation was illegal. The.concurrent sentence imposed pursuant to the negotiated plea bargain was improperly contravened when the sentencing court, following defendant’s violation of probation, imposed a consecutive sentence.
