In this appeal the defendant, William L. Greer, challenges the post-appeal transfer of a habitual offender enhancement from a vacated conviction to the remaining conviction.
In 1988, the defendant was convicted of Attempted Murder and Class A Robbery, found to be a habitual offender, sentenced to fifty years for the Robbery conviction and, with the habitual offender enhancement included, eighty years for Attempted Murder. In 1994, in his first direct appeal, this Court reversed the conviction for Attempted Murder, finding that the jury was not properly instructed regarding the element of intent.
Greer v. State,
[T]he enhancement of the habitual be moved ... from the Attempted Murder count ... and then attach that to the *527 Robbery as the A Felony.... [T]he court is able to do that because the attachment of the habitual to a count is kind of random ... I suspect the [original] court may have enhanced the Attempted Murder simply because it was Count I....
Record at 30-31. The trial court then resen-tenced the defendant to eighty years for Class A Robbery.
The defendant contends that, by reattaching the habitual offender enhancement to his robbery conviction following remand, the trial court erroneously resentenced the defendant upon a conviction undisturbed by his successful appeal.
Citing
Coble v. State,
In contrast, this Court in
McCormick v. State,
A habitual offender finding does not constitute a separate crime nor result in a separate sentence, but rather results in a sentence enhancement imposed upon the conviction of a subsequent felony.
Pinkston v. State,
Thus, although the penal consequence of a habitual offender finding has no independent status as a separate crime or punishment and exists only as an integral part of a sentence imposed for a specific independent felony, the process for charging and determining a habitual offender status following a trial resulting in multiple felony convictions is independent of each particular felony conviction and applies equally to all such convictions. We decline to interpret Coble (II) to prevent the repositioning of the habitual offender enhancement when a defendant appeals from a judgment imposing multiple felony convictions and obtains a reversal of the conviction enhanced by a habitual offender finding. The trial court on remand was not prohibited from revising the sentence for the *528 surviving felony conviction to reflect the habitual offender enhancement.
The sentence and judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
