Appeal is taken to our Court from Judgment of Sentence 1 imposed on August 26, 1975, following revocation of probation hearing. Appellant on July 1, 1974, had been sentenced to three years’ probation following non-jury trial finding of guilt as to criminal trespass, an offense held by the lower court to be a lesser included offense of burglary, one of the crimes charged. 2 Post-trial motions had been made and denied. We are concerned only with these procedural facts, as well as the silence of the record as to any appeal filed following denial of post-trial motions.
Appellant first raises a
Commonwealth v. Carter,
At the probation revocation hearing, 4 the following transpired:
THE COURT: Mr. Sylvanus, your probation is hereby revoked. I hereby impose sentence on the burglary charge of three to ten years, and on the criminal trespass, one to five years, both sentences are to be consecutive to each other and to be consecutive to any other sentence that you are presently serving.
THE CLERK: Excúseme, Your Honor.
(Discussion held off the record.)
*97 THE COURT: My attention has been directed to the fact that on the burglary charge you were found not guilty. Therefore, I cannot sentence you on the criminal trespass charge. Therefore I will withdraw that sentence which I rendered and substitute another.
The only charge that you are here for in violation is the criminal trespass, and my records had indicated a guilty, but evidently my records are in error. The official court records indicate that you were not guilty on the burglary charge. Do you understand that? And you’re only here on criminal trespass charge.
THE COURT:
Based on what has been brought to my attention, there is no sentencing on the burglary charge. That was originally not guilty. The only thing I can sentence you on is the criminal trespassing. Probation has been revoked on that, and the sentence there is three to ten years to be served consecutively, consecutively with any other sentence that you may be serving.
Appellant now claims that the lower court sentenced him first to one to five years’ imprisonment on the criminal trespass conviction, then to the greater sentence of three to ten years for the crime. The above colloquy will show that appellant is making an argument by taking an occurrence out of its total context. The trial judge had been misinformed as to appellant’s conviction. When he was immediately made aware of the correct state of the record, he pronounced his sentence for the one offense of criminal trespass. In light of the misinformation, the immediate correction, and the proper sentencing, the sentencing procedure is not an occasion wherein appellant was sentenced to a greater term than that to which he had first been sentenced. The judge made it quite clear that he intended to impose a sentence of at least not less than 3 nor more than 10 years and appellant could not *98 have failed to understand this. The sentence actually imposed was 3 to 10 years. The appellant was not placed in double jeopardy.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Not less than three nor more than ten years’ imprisonment, with credit for time served, consecutive to any other sentence.
. The other two crimes charged were theft by unlawful taking and theft by receiving stolen goods, to both of which charges adjudications of not guilty were made.
. As his second argument, similar in theory to his first claim, appellant makes the specious argument that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction; this is patently without merit.
. A “Gagnon II” hearing. A “Gagnon I” hearing being his June 24, 1975, conviction and sentence before Judge Richette.
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
