This appeal is from the partial denial of a writ of habeas corpus by the Circuit Court of Mercer County. Appellant had been given a life sentence in 1970 under our habitual criminal statute, W.Va. Code, 61-11-18. This was based upon the 1970 conviction for burglary and two prior felonies, one for armed robbery and the other for the interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle. In 1976 the United States District Court voided the conviction for interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle. Thereafter, in August, 1976, appellant filed an original application for habeas corpus in this Court, which was granted returnable to the Circuit Court of Mercer County.
Prior to the hearing in the Circuit Court of Mercer County, the regular circuit judge voluntarily recused himself and this Court assigned another judge to hear the matter. At the hearing in October, 1976, it was conceded by the State that with the voiding of one of the *549 underlying convictions, the life sentence under the habitual criminal statute was invalid.
The judge temporarily assigned for the habeas corpus hearing entered an order voiding the life sentence. For reasons not apparent in the record, this judge did not proceed to resentence the appellant, but transferred the matter for resentencing back to the regular circuit judge. Over the objection of the appellant, the regular circuit judge sentenced the appellant to not less than one nor more than fifteen years on the original burglary conviction which had occurred in 1970, and also imposed an additional five year sentence for the prior felony conviction of armed robbery, which “said additional five year sentence to run consecutively with the sentence imposed herein.”
At the time of the resentencing the regular judge gave appellant credit for time spent serving the life sentence, but denied him credit for time spent in jail prior to and after the trial on the burglary charge. Appellant also sought at the resentencing hearing to introduce evidence that W.Va. Code, 61-11-18, as it applied to the additional five year sentence, was unconstitutional. Further, claim is made that court incorrectly imposed the additional five years by adding it as a separate sentence to run consecutive to the underlying one to fifteen year sentence.
The question of whether a defendant is constitutionally entitled to credit for time spent in jail prior to trial and after trial awaiting sentence is a matter of first impression in this court. 1 By W.Va. Code, 61-11-24, a sentencing court is empowered to give such credit for pretrial confinement, but is not required to do so. 2 The statute is silent as to post-trial jail time.
*550
Appellants argue that this credit must be made mandatory in light of principles stemming from
North Carolina v. Pearce,
Pearce’s
double jeopardy holding of multiple punishment for the same offense is not foreign to this Court, as it formed part of the basis of our holding in
Conner v. Griffith,
_W.Va. _,
Indeed, if the Equal Protection Clause blocks unequal treatment of criminal defendants based on indigency, as clearly settled in
Tate v. Short,
Certainly the modern trend is to constitutionally require credit for pre- and post-conviction jail time absent some extraordinary factors. Annot.,
The next assignment of error relates to the propriety of the resentencing of appellant to one to fifteen on the 1970 burglary conviction and an additional five years to run consecutively for the prior felony conviction under the habitual criminal statute.
4
This Court in three prior cases has dealt with this same issue. In
State ex rel.
*552
Holstein v. Boles,
In
Holstein
and
Curtis,
the underlying sentences were one to ten years and the Court made it plain that when the prior felony conviction carrying five additional years under the habitual criminal statute was imposed, the appropriate sentence would be one to fifteen years. In
Hill,
the underlying conviction was a one to five year and the enhanced five year term when added to it resulted in a one to ten year sentence.
See also State ex rel. Wright v. Boles,
In the present case two separate sentences were imposed, a one to fifteen on the principal charge and an additional five years under the habitual criminal statute to run consecutively. The result is contrary to our prior case law which requires a single sentence of one to twenty years.
The statutory language is clear where, as here, an indeterminate sentence is involved for the principal offense, “five years shall be added to the maximum term of imprisonment otherwise provided for under such sentence.” The correct sentence would be one to twenty years.
Here, the sentences would require that the original term of one to fifteen years be served before the second sentence of five years would start. This result is contrary to the statutory language and our prior case law and constitutes reversible error.
Appellant claims it was error for the sentencing court to refuse his proffer to show that the habitual criminal statute was applied in a selective and discriminatory manner as to him, and therefore in violation of the
*553
Equal Protection Clause. This precise issue was decided in
Oyler v. Boles,
“Moreover, the conscious exercise of some selectivity in enforcement is not in itself a federal constitutional violation. Even though the statistics in this case might imply a policy of selective enforcement, it was not stated that the selection was deliberately based upon an unjustifiable standard such as race, religion, or other arbitrary classification. Therefore grounds supporting a finding of a denial of equal protection were not alleged. Oregon v. Hicks, supra; cf. Snowden v. Hughes,321 US 1 (1944); Yick Wo v. Hopkins,118 US 356 (1886) (by implication).” [368 U.S. at 456 ]
The foregoing statement from
Oyler
has been followed by numberous federal cases, not only those which have used this principle to fend off attacks on selective selective enforcement of habitual criminal statutes.
Brown v. Parratt,
Despite adverse criticism of enhanced punishment through habitual criminal statutes such as ours
5
courts
*554
have rather uniformly sustained such statutes against a variety of constitutional assaults.
6
The status of the law is perhaps best summarized in
Spencer v. Texas,
385 U.S.554,
“Such statutes, though not in the precise procedural circumstances here involved, have been sustained in this Court on several occasions against contentions that they violate constitutional strictures dealing with double jeopardy, ex post facto laws, cruel and unusual punishment, due process, equal protection, and privileges and immunities.” [citations omitted] [385 U.S. at 560 ]
We recognize that in
Hart v. Coiner,
However, as the later case of
Griffith v. Warden,
In
Thomas v. Leverette,
_ W. Va. _,
The foregoing law clearly demonstrates that appellant’s sentence under our habitual criminal statute was not a violation of equal protection standards. Similarly, the sentence was not subject to attack on the basis of cruel and unusual punishment, even under the Hart v. Coiner theory. We, therefore, conclude that the lower court was justified in not hearing evidence on these issues.
Several other grounds of error are urged. First, it is claimed that once the regular circuit judge had recused himself, he should not have re-entered the case for the purposes of resentencing. It is now required that once a judge voluntarily recuses himself from a case, he should not participate in any further phase of it. We have discussed this problem at some length in
Stern Bros., Inc. v. McClure,
_W. Va_,
Here, the regular circuit judge had no discretion in regard to the sentence, since both the one to fifteen and the additional five were statutorily mandated. We therefore do not find error in the regular circuit judge acting as the sentencing judge under these circumstances.
Complaint is also made that the court erred in refusing the motion to have the prosecuting attorney removed from the case on the grounds that he was prejudiced against the appellant. An affidavit of prejudice was filed in connection with the motion to disqualify, which averred that the basis of the prejudice arose from the fact that the appellant had instituted a civil action against the prosecutor in the federal court for damages and that this action had been dismissed.
There may be occasions when a prosecutor is disqualified from proceeding in a case. Some aspects of this problem are discussed in
State v. Britton,
_ W. Va. --.,
A final ground is urged. In 1972 the appellant was resentenced to permit additional time for an appeal. Presiding at this resentencing was a special judge who had been elected and was under thirty years of age. It is claimed that this resentence is void, under our holding in
Smoot v. Dingess,
_ W. Va. _,
The latest sentences, as noted earlier, were improper, and the case is remanded for entry of a correct sentence under the guidelines herein set out, with appropriate credit for time previously served under the void sentence and credit for pre-trial and post-trial jail time.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
We are aware that in
Cohn v. Ketchum,
“Whenever any person is convicted of an offense in a court of this State having jurisdiction thereof, and sentenced to confinement in jail or the penitentiary of this State, or by a justice of the *550 peace having jurisdiction of the offense, such person may, in the discretion of the court or justice, be given credit on any sentence imposed by such court or justice for the term of confinement spent in jail awaiting such trial and conviction.”
Commentators generally view credit as constitutionally required. Stacy, Constitutional Bight to Sentence Credit for Pre-Trial Incarceration, 41 U. of Cincinnati L. Rev. 823 (1972); Schornhorst, Presentence Confinement and the Constituion: The Burial of Dead Time, 23 Hastings L.J. 1041 (1972); see Note, Sentence Crediting for State Criminal Defendants — A Constitutional Requirement, 34 Ohio State L.J. 586 (1973).
W.Va. Code, 61-11-18, reads:
“When any person is convicted of an offense and is subject to confinement in the penitentiary therefore 24, and it is determined, as provided in section nineteen [§ 61-11-19] of this article, that such person had been before convicted in the United States of a crime punishable by imprisonment in a penitentiary, the court shall, if the sentence to be imposed is for a definite term of years, add five years to the time for which the person is or would be otherwise sentenced. Whenever in such ease the court imposes an indeterminate sentence, five years shall be added to the maximum term of imprisonment otherwise provided for under each sentence.
“When it is determined, as provided in section nineteen hereof, that such person shall have been twice before convicted in the United States of a crime punishable by confinement in a penitentiary, the person shall be sentenced to be confined in the penitentiary for life.”
Katkin, Habitual Offender Laws: A Reconsideration, 21 Buffalo L. Rev. 99 (1971); Brown, West Virginia Habitual Criminal Law, 59 W.Va. L. Rev. 30 (1956); Comment, Criminal Procedure — Recidi vism — Constitutionality of the West Virginia Recidivist Statute, 77 W.Va. L. Rev. 343 (1975).
See
Annot.,
Hart involved a perjury conviction and two prior convictions involving forged checks. Griffith refused relief where the third conviction was grand larceny with a prior conviction for breaking and entering and a burglary.
