delivered the opinion of the court:
Dеfendant, Bruce L. Fish, was convicted of three counts of aggravated driving under the influence (625 ILCS 5/11 — 501 (West 2006)) (hereinafter DUI) and one count of driving while license revoked (625 ILCS 5/6 — 303 (West 2006)). At sentencing, the trial court merged the three counts of aggravated DUI into one count. Defendant was given an extended-term 10-year sentence on the aggravаted DUI due to a prior conviction for reckless homicide (730 ILCS 5/5 — 5—3.2(b)(1) (West 2006)). Defendant appeals his sentence, arguing the trial court improperly invoked the same prior conviction in sentencing defendant to an extended term that had already been used to elevate the DUI from a misdemeanor to a felony. We affirm defendant’s sentence.
FACTS
Defendant was charged, via amended information, with three counts of aggravated driving under the influence and one count of driving while license revoked stemming from a traffic stop that occurred on October 1, 2005. Count I alleged that defendant drove under the influence at a time when his driving privileges werе suspended or revoked for a statutory summary suspension, a Class 4 felony (625 ILCS 5/11 — 501(c—1)(1) (West 2006)). Count II alleged that defendant drove under the influence at a time when his driving privileges were revoked for reckless homicide and had also previously been convicted for two prior DUIs in the 1980s, a Class 3 felony (625 ILCS 5/11— 501(c — 1)(2) (West 2006)). Count III alleged that defendant drove under the influence while transporting people under the age of 16 while having previously been convicted for two DUIs in the 1980s, a Class 4 felony (625 ILCS 5/11 — 501(c—5)(5) (West 2006)). Count IV alleged that defendant drove upon a public road at a time when his driver’s license was suspended or revoked for statutory summary suspension, a Class A misdemeanor (625 ILCS 5/6 — 303(a) (Wеst 2006)).
Defendant proceeded to jury trial and was found guilty on all counts on February 23, 2006, with a sentencing hearing scheduled for April 10, 2006. At the sentencing hearing, the trial court merged the three convictions for aggravated DUI into one count, count II, the count with the most serious class of felony, a Class 3. In count II, the basis for the enhancemеnt from a misdemeanor to a felony was defendant’s prior convictions for reckless homicide from a 1998 crash. In that case, defendant was convicted of two counts of reckless homicide, stemming from a DUI accident where defendant crashed his car into another vehicle, killing two of the other vehicle’s occupants. People v. Fish,
“Bruce Fish received a sentence of two convictions of aggravated reckless homicide, Class Two felony, within ten years of this current offense that he faces today, so the defendant faces the possibility of extended term sentence on Count Two, of five to ten years of imprisonment.”
After argument by defendant (some of which went to the “double enhancement” argument regarding the reckless homicide convictions), the trial court issued its ruling on sentencing:
“Regards to the double enhancement I don’t think there’s any double enhancemеnt here, it’s going to be in Count One, aggravated driving a vehicle under the influence of alcohol, that’s a Class Four, and the Count Three is a Class Four, those are both going to be merged into Count Two which is the Class Three felony offense. In considering all the factors, considering the circumstances of the offense, your history, character, your character, the Court is of the opinion and it would be inconsistent with the ends of justice to place you on probation, I think imprisonment is necessary for the protection of the public.”
The trial court then sentenced defendant to 10 years in prison on the extended-term Class 3 aggravated DUI (count II) and 364 days on thе driving while license revoked, to be served concurrently. Defendant now appeals.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, defendant raises the sole contention that the trial court erred in finding his sentence on the aggravated DUI charge (count II) to be extended-term eligible. In support of this contention, defendant argues that since the basis for the upgrade on the DUI from misdemeanor to Class 3 felony was his prior convictions for reckless homicide, to use those same reckless homicide convictions, which arose from the same act, as a basis for an extended-term sentence would be an impermissible “double enhancement” and a violation of state law. The State counters that defendant was extended-term eligible because, since defendant had two convictions for reckless homicide, even though they resulted from the same act, one conviction could be used to upgrade the DUI from misdemeanor to felony and the other conviction could be used to make defendant eligible for extended-term sentencing. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
The double enhancement rule is a rule of statutory construction, and thus, when deciding whether a trial court’s sentence represented improper double enhancement, the standard of review is de novo. Peoрle v. Phelps,
The statute under which defendant was convicted of aggravated DUI states:
“A person who violates subsection (a) a third time, if the third violation occurs during a period in which his or her driving privileges are revoked or suspended where the revocation or suspension was for a violation of subsection (a), Sectiоn 11 — 501.1, paragraph (b) of Section 11 — 401, or for reckless homicide as defined in Section 9 — 3 of the Criminal Code of 1961, is guilty of a Class 3 felony.” 625 ILCS 5/11 — 501(c—1)(2) (West 2006).
The section of the statute under which defendant was given an extended-term sentence states:
“The following factors may be considered by the court as reasons to impose an extеnded term sentence under Section 5 — 8—2 upon any offender:
When a defendant is convicted of any felony, after having been previously convicted in Illinois or any other jurisdiction of the same or similar class felony or greater class felony, when such conviction has occurred within 10 years after the previous conviсtion, excluding time spent in custody, and such charges are separately brought and tried and arise out of different series of acts.” 730 ILCS 5/5 — 5—3.2(b)(1) (West 2006).
The issue of double enhancement has been addressed before by Illinois courts. In People v. Hobbs,
“An extended term would have been permissible here, if, for example, the value of the liquor taken in 1979 had exceeded $150 so as to make its taking a felony. But it did not, and its taking became a felony under section 16 — 1(e) solely by reason of the 1978 felony convictiоn. To again use that 1978 felony conviction to trigger the court’s authority to impose an extended term pursuant to section 5 — 5—3.2(b) is, in our judgment, incompatible with that section’s requirement that the charges must be ‘separately brought and tried and arise out of different series of acts.’ ” Hobbs,86 Ill. 2d at 245-46 ,427 N.E.2d at 559-60 .
In People v. Martin,
More recently, the issue of double enhancement was again addressed by our supreme court in People v. Hicks,
As a preliminary matter, defendant points in his brief to People v. Lavallier,
We now turn to defendant’s contention that improper double enhancement occurred. It is clear from the case law that, where a priоr felony is used to enhance a misdemeanor to a felony, and then that same prior felony is used to impose an extended-term sentence on the enhanced felony, the extended-term sentence is improper. See Hobbs,
Instructive to our analysis in the instant case is a review of the onе-act, one-crime principle. The Illinois Supreme Court once considered whether multiple convictions should result from a series of multiple acts under the “independent motivation” test articulated in People v. Stewart,
We believe that under the approach articulated in King and affirmed in Crespo, defendant’s two convictions for reckless homicide constitute two separate offenses and that one of the convictions can be used for the enhancement from misdemeanor to felony and the other conviction can be used to impose an еxtended term sentence. The offense of reckless homicide focuses on the death of the victim resulting from the defendant’s act. The reckless homicide conviction as to one victim was separate and apart from the reckless homicide conviction related to the other victim. See Mercado,
The imposition of the extended-term sentence by the triаl court was not in error. Defendant’s two convictions for reckless homicide, despite being the result of a single course of conduct by defendant, can be separated and one used to enhance the offense charged from a misdemeanor to a felony while the other is used to impose an extended-term sentence. For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
HOLDRIDGE and WRIGHT, JJ., concur.
Notes
Our court, in the above case, reversed and remanded defendant’s conviction for improper admonishments by the trial court regarding defendant’s stipulated bench trial. On remand defendant pled guilty to both counts of reckless homicide and was sentenced on March 21, 2001, by the trial court to concurrent sentences of 13 years in prison on both counts.
