By a petition for a writ of error, the petitioner challenges the constitutionality of sentences which were imposed on him to be served from and after a prison term he is now serving. This matter comes to us on a reservation and report by a single justice of this court on the pleadings and a statement of agreed facts. He has also reported to us his decision overruling a demurrer to the petition.
The challenged sentences were imposed in the following circumstances. In August, 1962, the petitioner was charged in four indictments with assault with intent to rape and related offences arising from a single incident. Following intervening circumstances having to do with the petitioner’s mental condition, the petitioner pleaded guilty in November, 1964, to each of the four indictments and was sentenced to a three-year term of probation on certain conditions. In 1966 the petitioner was charged with assault with intent to rape and related charges arising from a new incident. The petitioner was tried, found guilty and sentenced to twenty-five to thirty years on one conviction and to a concurrent term of seven to ten years on another. Immediately after the imposition of sentences on the 1966 charges, the judge ordered that the petitioner be continued on probation on the 1962 charges. The petitioner, understandably, did not challenge that determination. He did, however, successfully appeal his convictions on the 1966 charges. See
Commonwealth
v.
McHoul,
The petitioner was then tried again on the 1966 charges before a different judge and a jury. He was again found guilty and again sentenced to a term of twenty-five to thirty years.
1
In July, 1967, the petitioner was again surrendered on the 1962 charges, as to which he had been continued on probation in 1966. The judge, who was the same judge who
The judge’s reasons for imposing the sentences to be served subsequent to the twenty-five to thirty year term on the 1966 charges appear from the colloquy between the judge and counsel then representing the petitioner. The judge noted that the petitioner had appealed his recent sentence to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court (see G. L. c. 278, §§ 28A-28D) and that his sentence on the 1966 charges might, therefore, be reduced. He declined to defer action on the probation surrender hearing until that appeal was disposed of. He believed that the 1962 offences were serious and that the 1966 offences were also serious. He believed that the 1962 offences deserved sentences which should not be concurrent with the sentences on the 1966 offences. He declined to be bound by what another judge had done concerning probation on the 1962 charges. In short, on what may be substantially the same salient facts, the second judge revoked probation and imposed sentences of significance to the petitioner, whereas the first judge had not. 3
The petitioner contends that because the circumstances before the second judge who considered the revocation of probation on the 1962 charges were no different from those before the first judge, the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment make invalid and void the sentence to be served from and after the twenty-five to thirty year sentence imposed on the 1966 charges. He further contends, relying on
North Caro
In addition to meeting these contentions of the petitioner, the Commonwealth argues that a writ of error is not a proper avenue by which to seek redress of the grievances articulated by the petitioner. This procedural argument was raised by the Commonwealth’s demurrer which was overruled by the single justice. It is to this procedural point that we first turn.
1. The Commonwealth’s demurrer, which stated that “[t]he petition fails to state a claim upon which the writ of error may issue,” was rightly overruled. A petition for a writ of error is appropriate to raise a constitutional challenge to the imposition of a criminal sentence.
Kuklis
v.
Commonwealth,
In its discretion, this court may deal with these issues on a writ of error. To the extent that the reservation and report by the single justice constitutes an exercise of his discretion to accept the petition for consideration on the merits, we would not reverse that decision as an abuse of discretion. In any event, in our discretion, we think the court should consider the constitutional challenges raised by this petition. Unlike the situation in
Earl
v.
Commonwealth,
2. There was no violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause by the imposition of a sentence of commitment on the 1962 charges. Without deciding the extent, if any, to which double jeopardy principles may apply in the revocation of
We recognize that a sentence of probation, even unaccompanied by a suspended sentence, has “finality” in the sense that an appeal may be taken from the imposition of probation.
Commonwealth
v.
Reed,
3. Due process of law principles are applicable to probation revocation proceedings. See
Gagnon
v.
Scarpelli,
The imposition of a longer sentence than originally imposed, following a successful appeal and conviction at a second trial, constitutes an improper penalty on a criminal defendant for pursuing his right of appeal, if that second sentence is the product of vindictiveness.
North Carolina
v.
Pearce, supra.
The
Pearce
case indicates that the right to appeal should not be chilled by a fear that in any subsequent sentencing the defendant will be penalized for pursuing that appeal. The
Pearce
case sets forth a “prophylactic procedure” under which a judge who, subsequent to successful appeal, sentences a defendant to a greater sentence than originally imposed must set forth findings and the reasons for his action. Compliance with that procedure was not, however, required here because the “prophylactic procedure” of the
Pearce
case is not applicable to resentencing procedures which antedated the
Pearce
decision.
Michigan
v.
Payne,
The reasons given by the second judge for revoking probation and imposing a sentence on the 1962 charges disclose no attempt to penalize the petitioner for appealing his conviction on the 1966 charges. Thus in the revocation of probation and in the imposition of prison sentences on the 1962 charges there was no vindictiveness caused by the petitioner’s appeal of his convictions on the 1966 charges.
Although the second judge did not consider the fact of the earlier appeal on the 1966 charges, he did consider the fact that the petitioner had challenged the length of his second sentence on the 1966 charges by appealing to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court. This was a sentence which the second judge had himself imposed. The judge gave some weight, how much we do not know, to the possibility that the petitioner’s twenty-five to thirty year sentence might be reduced. Thus to some degree the petitioner may have been penalized at least in the length of the terms to which he was sentenced because he had appealed the twenty-five to thirty year sentence imposed by the second judge.
5
We believe that a reasonable application of the due process principles of the
Pearce
case makes it improper to
From what we have said the sentences on the 1962 charges may have been based on an improper consideration. We believe that the 1962 cases should be remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings in light of this opinion. See
Giles
v.
Commonwealth,
Judgments of sentences on the 1962 indictments reversed.
Cases remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings.
Notes
The record does not disclose what disposition was made of the 1966 charge for which the petitioner received a shorter, concurrent sentence in 1966.
On one 1962 indictment the sentence was to a term of ten to fifteen years, and on two others the sentences were to terms of seven to ten years.
We recognize that the evidence at the second trial on the 1966 offences may have cast the petitioner’s conduct in a different and less favorable light from what appeared at the first trial. Moreoever, the record does not disclose what differences there may have been in information concerning the petitioner which was in each sentencing judge’s possession.
Before the decision in
North Carolina
v.
Pearce,
The review of such a sentence by the Appellate Division of the Superior Court resulting in a longer sentence would in and of itself involve no “retaliatory” sentencing.
Walsh v. Commonwealth,
