Alfonso DE LA COSA, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*453 Clayton R. Kaeiser, Miami, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and Fredericka Sands, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Before COPE, SHEVIN and RAMIREZ, JJ.
SHEVIN, Judge.
Alfonso De La Cosa appeals sentences imposed on remand from this court's opinion in De La Cosa v. State,
In 1993, De La Cosa was charged with one count of first degree grand theft and multiple counts of second and third degree grand theft. De La Cosa was found guilty as charged. The trial court sentenced De La Cosa to life as a habitual violent felony offender on the first degree grand theft count, and to five years on each remaining count, to run concurrent. The court elected not to sentence De La Cosa as a habitual violent offender on those counts. On appeal, De La Cosa successfully attacked the first degree grand theft conviction.[1] In De La Cosa, this court reversed the first degree grand theft conviction and remanded the cause to the trial court. The remaining convictions and sentences were unaffected.
At the resentencing hearing, De La Cosa argued that he should be discharged because he had already completed the five year concurrent sentences on the remaining counts or, alternatively, that his sentences should remain unchanged as unaffected by De La Cosa on remand. Based on some confusion regarding what sentences De La Cosa had fulfilled, the court *454 declined to discharge De La Cosa. The court sentenced De La Cosa as a habitual violent offender to thirty years on the second degree grand theft counts, and to ten years on the third degree grand theft counts. De La Cosa appeals these sentences.
In Herring v. State,
Because the trial court was addressing sentences that were not disturbed on appeal, it was error to impose sentences in excess of De La Cosa's original sentences. In Fasenmyer, the Florida Supreme Court addressed the issue of "whether, when an appellate court reduces the severity of a criminal conviction because of lack of evidence and orders resentencing accordingly, the trial court may change the sentences previously imposed on other convictions not affected by the appellate court judgment." Id., at 1362. Fasenmyer answered that issue in the negative. This court's De La Cosa decision does not affect any conviction other than the judgment and sentence in count one. Moreover, the trial court could not circumvent this proscription by sentencing De La Cosa as an habitual offender. This court's decision in Martinez v. State,
The cases cited by the state in support of its contention that on remand the trial court was free to impose any sentence it wished are not dispositive here. Herring does not support such an outcome here. Fasenmyer specifically distinguished United States v. Busic,
Harris v. State,
In addition, the record, as supplemented on appeal, clearly demonstrates that De La Cosa had completed serving his sentences, imposed on these counts, by the time the resentencing hearing took place and has nonetheless remained incarcerated. The Fasenmyer court admonished courts not to resentence defendants under these circumstances. "[O]nce a defendant has been sentenced, double jeopardy attaches and a court may not thereafter on its own motion increase the severity of a sentence. Such prohibition, clearly, should apply even more strongly when the offender has fully satisfied the sentence." Fasenmyer,
Based on the foregoing, we vacate the sentences under review, and we order that De La Cosa be discharged from custody forthwith.
Sentences vacated; appellant discharged.
NOTES
Notes
[1] De La Cosa also attacked the life sentence imposed on the grand theft conviction and asserted error in a special state-requested jury instruction, and the failure to grant a motion for judgment of acquittal on count 5 of the information.
[2] The Fasenmyer court commented on the evils of permitting such a change and stated: "By subjecting the defendant to the contingency of having a non-challenged sentence escalated to the statutory maximum, we would truly be inviting the defendant to play `Russian Roulette.'" Id., at 1366 (quoting Chandler v. United States,
[3] We note, in passing, that this problem would have been obviated if De La Cosa had been sentenced as an habitual offender on all counts.
