delivered the opinion of the court:
Dеfendant pleaded guilty to home invasion (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, par. 12 — 11) and was sentenced to eight yeаrs’ imprisonment.
The State concedes the rule wаs violated since the report of proceedings from the guilty plea was not prepared until several months after the hearing on the motion to withdraw the plea. Nevertheless, the State contends a new hearing is not required. Initially, the State argues that because defendant’s рost-sentencing attorney was also trial counsel, the failure to review a transcript of the guilty plea hearing was de minimis. This identical argument was rejected in People v. Steinmetz (1982),
For this same reason, we also reject the State’s alternative contention that the issue is waived because defense counsel stated that, although he had no recollection of the plea hearing, production of a transcript wаs within the court’s prerogative and dependent only upon the court’s memory of the events which transpired at the earlier hearing. This argument fails for two distinct reasons. In the first instance, the rule еxists for the benefit of defendant, not the court. The court is under an affirmative duty to require production of a transcript upon the filing of a motion to withdraw the plea. Second, defense сounsel is explicitly required to examine the transcript to make an adequate determinаtion of whether any defects exist sufficient to warrant inclusion in a motion to withdraw the plea. Wе judge that neither trial counsel nor the court complied with the respective duties imposеd independently upon them by the rule and, accordingly, the issue has not been waived by defendant.
The State finally argues that the error was harmless. In his motion, defendant raised four issues: two concеrning the sufficiency of the admonitions he received prior to acceptance of the negotiated plea and two concerning the sentence the trial court subsequently imposed. The transcript from the plea hearing, which is a part of the record on appeal, reveals that none of these issues have any merit and defendant does not contend otherwise. Since the record on appeal does not reveal any error at thе hearing on the plea which would have supported defendant’s motion to withdraw the pleа, and because defendant does not now argue that defense counsel did not raise an issuе which could have been raised, the State concludes the issue is moot.
Defendant counters that the supreme court’s decision in People v. Wilk (1988),
As we acknowledged in People v. Ledbetter (1988),
For the reasons heretofore stated, the judgment of the circuit court of McLean County is vacated and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Vacated and remanded.
LUND, P.J., and KNECHT, J., concur.
