The People in this original proceeding seek relief in the nature of mandamus in connection with the respondent court’s refusal to impose a life sentence on the defendant, James Alvey Drake, for habitual criminality pursuant to section 16-13-101(2), of the Habitual Criminal Act, §§ 16-13-101 to -103, 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.). Because the jury returned a not guilty verdiсt to the principal charge of murder in the first degree but a guilty verdict to the lesser nonincluded felony of accessory to murder in the first degree, the respondent court concluded that section 16-13-103(1), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), prohibited it from adjudicating and sentencing the defendant as a habitual criminal even though the jury, in the habitual criminаl phase of the trial, returned verdicts finding that the defendant had previously been convicted of three felonies. We issued a rule directing the respondent court to show cause why it should not be required to sentence the defendant to life imprisonment as a habitual criminal, and we now make the rule absolute.
I.
On December 16, 1983, a young woman, the wife of the defendant’s brother, Richard Drake, was found stabbed to death in her apartment in Grand Junction, Colorado. The investigation led to the arrest of Richard Drake and the defendant. On the morning of the crime the Grand Junction police received an anonymous phone call
The defendant wаs charged by information in the Mesa County District Court with murder in the first degree, § 18-3-102(l)(a), 8 C.R.S. (1978), and habitual criminality based on three prior felony convictions. Venue was changed from the Mesa County District Court to the Denver District Court where trial to a jury commenced on October 9, 1984. The defendant testified at trial that it was his brother Richard who had аctually killed the victim and that he (the defendant) had only assisted Richard in hiding some bloody items and making the phone call to establish an alibi. At the conclusion of the evidence on the murder charge, the respondent court submitted the charge of murder in the first degree to the jury and also granted the defendant’s request to givе an instruction on the lesser nonincluded offense of accessory to murder in the first degree, § 18-8-105, 8 C.R.S. (1978), a class 4 felony, and to submit a verdict form on that lesser nonincluded offense to the jury. The jury returned a not guilty verdict to the charge of murder in the first degree and a guilty verdict to the lesser nonincluded felony of accessory tо murder.
At the second phase of the trial, the respondent court, although not convinced that the Habitual Criminal Act was applicable to a lesser nonincluded felony, permitted the prosecution to submit evidence before the jury establishing that the defendant had previously been convicted of three fеlonies as alleged in the information.
1
The jury returned a verdict finding the defendant had previously been convicted of three felonies as charged. The respondent court, however, ruled that it was prohibited from adjudicating and sentencing the defendant as a habitual criminal. In the court’s view, section 16-13-103(1), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), permitted such adjudication and sentence only when the jury returns a guilty verdict on the substantive felony alleged in the information and not when, as here, the jury finds the defendant guilty of a lesser nonincluded felony. The respondent court, therefore, refused to impose a life sentence as provided by section 16-13-101 (2), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), and instead sentenced the defendant to seven years and eight months, plus one year of parole, on his conviction for accessory to first degree murder. We conclude that when, as here, a guilty verdict to a lesser nonincluded felony is followed by a verdict finding that the defendant has previously been convicted of three prior felonies which were charged against him in separate counts of the criminal information, section 16-13-101(2), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), of the Habit
II.
Before addressing the legality of the respondent court’s sentence, we must first consider whether a remаnd for resen-tencing of the defendant would be barred by the constitutional prohibition against twice placing an accused in jeopardy for the samé offense. U.S. Const, amends. VI and XIV; Colo. Const, art. II, § 18. We are satisfied that resentencing the defendant will not violate the double jeopardy provisions of either the United Stаtes or Colorado Constitution.
We addressed a similar issue in
People v. District Court of the City and County of Denver,
The message of our decision in
People v. District Court of the City and County of Denver,
is clear: an appellate court may correct an illegal sentence and remand the case for resentencing without violating the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. Remanding the case for resentencing under such circumstances only results in setting aside what the sentencing court lacked the authority to do in the first instance and in substituting therefor that which the law requires.
See United States v. Di Francesco,
We turn now to the question of whethеr the respondent court’s sentence of seven years and eight months for the class 4 felony of accessory to murder in the first degree was an illegal sentence in light of the fact that the jury returned verdicts expressly finding that the defendant had been convicted of the three prior felonies charged against him in the hаbitual criminal counts. The answer to that question depends, in turn, on whether Colorado’s Habitual Criminal Act mandates the enhanced statutory penalties for habitual criminality when the substantive offense supporting the habitual criminal proceeding is a lesser nonincluded felony submitted to the jury at the defendant’s request. An analysis оf the Habitual Criminal Act leads us to conclude that the sentence of seven years and eight months was contrary to law.
Section 16-13-101(2), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), states in pertinent part as follows:
Every person convicted in this state of any felony, who has been three times previously convicted, upon charges separately brоught and tried, and arising out of separate and distinct criminal episodes, either in this state or elsewhere, of a felony ... shall be adjudged an habitual criminal and shall be punished by imprisonment in a correctional facility for the term of his or her natural life.
In refusing to impose the life sentence mandated by this statute, the resрondent court focused on subsection (1) of section 16-13-103, 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), which contains the procedures for a bifurcated trial in cases involving habitual criminal counts and which states in pertinent part as follows:
If the allegation of previous convictions of other felony offenses is included in an indictment or information аnd if a verdict of guilty of the substantive offense with which the defendant is charged is returned, the court shall conduct a separate sentencing hearing to determine whether or not the defendant has suffered such previous felony convictions,
(emphasis added). The respondent court construed the emphasized languаge of section 16-13-103(1), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), to mean that the bifurcated trial on habitual criminal counts can take place only when the defendant is actually convicted of the substantive offense charged, or a lesser included offense, but not when he is convicted of a lesser nonincluded offense. The respondent court’s interpretation of the statute is erroneous.
Because legislative intent is the polestar of statutory construction, a statute should be given that construction which will permit, if at all feasible, the accomplishment of the statutory objective.
Schubert v. People,
We are not unmindful of the rule of lenity which requires a narrow construction of ambiguous criminаl statutes in favor of the accused.
E.g. People v. Lowe,
The rule to show cause is made absolute and the respondent court is ordered to re-sentence the defendant in accordance with the provisions of section 16-13-101(2), 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.).
Notes
. The procedures for the trial оf habitual criminal counts are set out in section 16-13-103, 8 C.R.S. (1985 Supp.), and include the following: the inclusion of the previous convictions in the indictment or information; the arraignment of the accused on the habitual criminal counts; an initial trial on the substantive charges; a second hearing before the same jury on the habitual criminаl counts, if the accused has denied the counts on arraignment and the jury has returned a guilty verdict on the substantive felony; and the requirement that the prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt the prior convictions in the second phase of the trial by evidence independent of any admissions by the accused to his prior convictions during the first phase of the trial.
. Drake argues that the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy prohibits any re-sentencing in this case because the respondent court entered a dismissal order with respect to the habitual criminal counts before submitting to the jury the substantive crimes of murder in the first degree and accessory to murder in the first degree. Drake’s argument, however, is unsupported by the record. At a conference directed toward settling instructions on the substantive crimes, the respondent court indicated that it was "leaning" toward the position that the Habitual Criminal Act would not aрply to a guilty verdict on the lesser included offense but that it nevertheless was going to permit the prosecution to establish the prior felony convictions in the second phase of the trial in the event the jury returned a guilty verdict to the lesser nonincluded offense. Rather than dismiss the habitual criminal counts, the respondеnt court submitted these counts to the jury, along with an appropriate verdict form, at the second phase of the trial. Only after the jury returned its verdict finding that Drake had been previously convicted as charged did the respondent court, after expressly stating that it had previously reserved ruling on the issue, state that it would not sentence Drake as a habitual criminal. The record thus makes abundantly clear that the habitual criminal counts were not dismissed at any time before the completion of
. Our construction of the habitual criminal statute must be undertaken with an eye toward "avoiding the adverse consequences on the administration of justice that might otherwise flow from a construction not contemplated by the legislature.”
Schubert
v.
People,
