Opinion
—This сase is before us a second time because of alleged errors in the court’s resentencing of defendant. We affirm.
Facts
In the first appeal, in an unpublished opinion, this court affirmed the defendant’s conviction for commercial burglary but reversed his conviction for assault on a police officer because of ineffective assistance of counsel.
On January 18, 1991, the People dismissed the assault charge and defendant was sentenced on the commercial burglary. The trial court imposed an *1551 aggravated term of three years for this count along with a one-year enhancement pursuant to Penal Code 1 section 667.5, subdivision (b) for a total term of four years. At the original sentencing in 1989, the court had set the assault as the principal term and imposed a middle term of four years on that count, a one-year enhancement under section 667.5 and a consecutive one-third thе middle term of two years on the burglary for a total sentence of five years and eight months.
Contentions
Defendant in essence contends he was penalized for his successful appeal by the court’s imposition of a greater sentence on remand. He also contends the court failed to state adequate reasons for imposing an aggravated term and erred in failing to obtain a current probation report prior to resentencing.
Wе raised the issue of the trial court’s jurisdiction to resentence the defendant on the commercial burglary and asked the parties to submit additional briefs on this issue.
Trial Court Jurisdiction to Resentence
Under the prior Indeterminate Sentence Law, the cases held that once execution of the sentence has begun, the trial court has no jurisdiction to resentence or consider a renewed application for probation.
(In re Black
(1967)
While DSL is, without a doubt, “a legislative monstrosity, which is bewildering in its complexity,”
(People
v.
Sutton
(1980)
Because of this interlocking aspect of DSL, it has been recognized that when a sentencing error is made with respect to one part of the judgment, a remand for resentencing on all of the convictions is often proper.
(People
v.
Savala
(1983)
Thus, as one court has expressly held, section 1170.1, subdivision (a) “represents a statutory exception to the general rule” that a sentence lawfully imposed cannot be modified once a defendant is committed and execution of his sentence has begun.
(People
v.
Bozeman
(1984)
Although the trial court’s jurisdictiоn to resentence on consecutive subordinate terms which are final because of a reversal of the principal term would seem beyond question in light of the interlocking nature of DSL, one case has suggested that, at least in the context of two proceedings, the trial court has no such jurisdiction.
(People
v.
Bond
(1981)
The appellate court held that the judgment rendered in the second action became final when no appeal was taken and therefore the trial court did not have jurisdiction to resentence on what had been a subordinate term. The court explained that in sentencing defendant to a consecutive one-third the middle term, the trial court in the second action had stayed the remaining two-thirds of the middle term. When the principal term was reversed, the stay was removed and the full middlе term became the sentence. In reaching this result, the court relied on
People
v.
Niles
(1964)
The holding in Bond suggests that in any case where the principal term is reversed, the trial court cannot resentence on the conviction for which the *1554 subordinate term had been imposed if that conviction and judgment is final. 4 The “Niles rule” of staying execution is entirely appropriate to avoid violations of section 654. Use of a stay may as well be an acceptable alternative to effect compliancе with section 1170.1, subdivision (a). However, we believe the trial court has jurisdiction to resentence on all convictions when the principal term is modified or reversed even in the absence of a stay.
As the court in
People
v.
Bozeman
expressly held and the court in
People
v.
Bustamante
implicitly recognized, section 1170.1, subdivision (a) creates an exception to the general rule that jurisdiction ceases when execution of the sentence begins. The interlocking nature of DSL compels this conclusion. In imposing a subordinate tеrm which is to run consecutive to a principal term, the sentencing court is in reality without discretion. The term is fixed at one-third the middle term and it matters not whether the trial court imposes a term of one-third the middle term or imposes some other term and “stays” the portion of the term which exceeds one-third.
(People
v.
Riolo
(1983)
Current Probation Report
Having concluded the trial court had jurisdiction to resentence on the commercial burglary, we now address whether the court was required to *1555 obtain a current probation report. At the original sentencing hearing the defendant was statutorily ineligible for probation becausе of the assault conviction. With the removal of that conviction, defendant was, at the time of resentencing, no longer ineligible and the trial court was required to refer the matter to the probation officer. (§ 1203, subd. (b).)
The People contend that defendant has waived the issue by failing to request a current probation report and/or failing to object to the court’s resentencing in the absence of such report. They rely on
People
v.
Brady
(1984)
In
People
v.
Magee
(1963)
In
People
v.
Tempelis
(1964)
A waiver of the right to have the matter referred to the probation officer prior to sentencing was also found in
People
v.
Jones
(1966)
*1556
Finally in
People
v.
Preyer
(1985)
Here there was no express waiver by either defendant or his attorney as in Preyer and Jones. However, like in Magee and Tempelis, counsel voiced no objection to proceeding with resentencing without a supplemental probation report and specifically stated there was no legal cause why judgment could not be pronounced. Counsel also waived formal arraignment for pronouncement of judgment and advised the court she was ready to proceed. During the hearing, counsel relied on the prior probation report and argued not for probation but rather for imposition of the middle term. From this conduct we infer that defendant waived his right to a supplemental probation report. 7
Aggravated Term
Defendant next contends that he was penalized for taking a successful appeal because upon resentencing on the commercial burglary conviction the trial court imposed the upper term of imprisonment. The People correctly point to
People
v.
Savala, supra,
In
Hood,
the Supreme Court reversed both convictions and indicated that if, upon retrial, defendant was convicted of either or both of the counts, his new sentence could not exceed the 14 years originally imposed.
(People
v.
Hood, supra,
Defendant contends that the cases cited by the People are distinguishable because “in all the cases relied upon by respondent the trial courts imposed improper sentences based upon proper convictions” and that because defendant did not challenge an illegal sentence but rather the underlying conviction, the rule is, or should be, different. Not so.
It is true that if the original sentence is unauthorized or illegal, it may be set aside and a proper judgment imposed
“even though it is more severe than the original unauthorized
pronouncement.”
(People
v.
Serrato
(1973)
Savаla's holding, as discussed above, was based instead on the interlocking nature of DSL. “[D]efendant’s aggregate prison term cannot be viewed as a series of separate independent terms, but rather must be viewed as one prison term made up of interdependent components. The invalidity of some of those components necessarily infects the entire sentence. To hold otherwise would be to hold that a trial court may not declinе to aggravate the sentence for an otherwise aggravated crime due to the overall length of the sentence to be imposed. We decline to so circumscribe a trial court’s sentencing discretion.”
(People
v.
Savala, supra,
This reasoning is no less compelling when the resentencing occurs as a result of a reversal of the conviction as opposed to an error in sentencing.
*1558
When the conviction for which the principal term is reversed, “it then becomes necessary for the trial court to select the next most serious conviction to compute a new principal term” and in doing so the trial court can modify the sentence.
(People
v.
Bustamante, supra
Here the trial court at the original sentencing hearing chose not to impose the aggravated term on the assault as had been recommended by the probation officer. Instead the court chose to impose a middle term on that count and to run the subordinate term of one-third the middle term on the commercial burglary consecutive to the principal term. When the conviction for which the principal term had been selected and imposed, was reversed and subsequently dismissed, the trial court was within its discretion in imposing an upper term on the one remaining conviction.
Nor are we persuaded that the trial court’s comments at the original sentencing hearing indicate vindictivenеss. At the original sentencing hearing the court said, “[F]or the edification of the Court of Appeal, if they feel it’s a 664 [szc], I would suggest to them not to return to me. Because if that’s the case, I’ll give him the aggravated on 245 (B), the same results. Plus be [sz'c] more than five years, eight months. Six years.”
Contrary to defendant’s assertion, we do not view the court’s comments at that time as a warning to the defendant not to appeal but rather as further explanation as to how the court arrived at its sentencing decision. The comments might even be characterized as a dare directed to this court. In either event, although we agree the comments were inappropriate, they do not convince us the court was acting vindictively in imposing an upper term. As there were facts in aggravation and no facts in mitigation, the imposing of an upper term was proper.
Statement of Reasons
Finally defendant contends the court failed tо state adequate reasons for imposing an upper term of imprisonment. The court originally cited premeditation, the fact the defendant was on parole, and the fact that his previous record contained numerous convictions. When defense counsel challenged the reference to defendant’s prior convictions the court again noted that defendant was on parole at the time the offense was committеd and that in the court’s view the crime involved premeditation. Being on parole and premeditation are both proper factors for imposing an upper term. (Cal. *1559 Rules of Court, rules 421(a)(8) and (b)(4).) 8 The upper term was adequately supported by the reasons given.
Disposition
Judgment affirmed.
Timlin, J., and McKinster, J., concurred.
Notes
All code references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
Justice Gardner also aptly noted: “As a sentencing judge wends his way through the labyrinthine procedures of section 1170 of the Penal Code, he must wonder, as he utters some
*1552
of its more esoteric incantations, if, perchance, the Legislature had not exhumed some long, departed Byzantine scholar to create its seemingly endless and convoluted complexities. Indeed, in some ways it resembles the best offerings of those who author bureaucratic memoranda, income tax forms, insurance policies or instructions for the assembly of packaged toys.”
(Community Release BcL
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
Seсtion 1170, subdivision (d) has also been recognized as an exception to the general rule as well.
(Dix
v.
Superior Court
(1991)
If Bond’s holding is limited to situations where the principal term was imposed in one case and the subordinate term in a second case, it may raise serious equal protection issues. Whether the sentences are imposed in the same proceeding or different proceedings, section 1170.1, subdivision (a) requires the same sentencing procedure. The rеversal of the principal term should have the same result regardless of whether it was imposed in the same or a different proceeding than the subordinate term.
California Rules of Court, rule 449 requiring the court to compute the base term for each count independently of any other convictions was repealed in response to People v. Riolo.
Webb is also distinguishable because in that case the defendant was ineligible for probation.
We also agree with the People’s contention that defendant has not established that the failure to obtain the report was prejudicial. Obtaining a supplemental or current probation report allows the court to consider, among other factors, the defendant’s conduct during an appeal.
(People
v.
Foley, supra,
defendant apparently contends that the trial court’s reference to defendant being on parole was intended as an explanation of why the court felt the crime involved premeditation. Our reading of the record leads us to believe that the reference to the defendant being on parole was a separate reason for the upper term.
