delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant, Ethel Lewis, was charged by indictment with unlawful delivery of a controlled substance (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 561/2, par. 1401(c)). She was alleged to have delivered on November 3, 1988, less than one gram of a substance containing cocaine to an undercover officer. In September of 1990 a jury found her guilty as charged. Following the denial of her pro se motion for a new trial, in which she asserted the incompetence of trial counsel, she was sentenced on December 12, 1990, to probation for a term of 30 months conditioned upon, inter alia, the performance of 100 hours of public service during each year of probation and the serving of a period of home detention for 360 days. Defendant filed a notice of appeal in the appellate court on January 4, 1991, having filed no post-sentencing motion' of any kind.
On appeal she presented issues related only to sentencing, contending that certain terms appearing in the written sentencing order altered or were absent from oral pronouncements of the court made upon sentencing. Following People v. Macke (1992),
Section 5 — 8—1(c) provides as follows:
"A motion to reduce a sentence may be made, or the court may reduce a sentence without motion, within 30 days after the sentence is imposed. However, the court may not increase a sentence once it is imposed.
If a motion to reduce a sentence is timely filed within 30 days after the sentence is imposed, the proponent of the motion shall exercise due diligence in seeking a determination on the motion and the court shall thereafter decide such motion within a reasonable time.
If a motion to reduce a sentence is timely filed within 30 days after the sentence is imposed, then for purposes of perfecting an appeal, a final judgment shall not be considered to have been entered until the motion to reduce a sentence has been decided by order entered by the trial court.
A motion to reduce a sentence shall not be considered to have been timely filed unless it is filed with the circuit court clerk within 30 days after the sentence is imposed together with a notice of motion, which notice of motion shall set the motion on the court’s calendar on a date certain within a reasonable time after the date of filing.” (Emphasis added.) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, par. 1005— 8 — 1(c).)
In Macke one of the districts of the appellate court held that section 5 — 8—1(c) requires a defendant to file a motion to reduce his sentence with the trial court within 30 days after the sentence is imposed before he may bring an appeal related solely to matters of sentencing. (Macke,
The question before us is one of statutory construction. A primary rule of statutory construction is that the intention of the legislature be ascertained and given effect. (People v. Robinson (1982),
Section 5 — 8—1(c) states initially that "[a] motion to reduce sentence may be made, or the court may reduce a sentence without motion, within 30 days after the sentence is imposed.” (Emphasis added.) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, par. 1005 — 8—1(c).) Here no unusual circumstances affecting the public interest are present. In this provision the legislature has granted defendants permission to move for a reduction in sentence within 30 days after its imposition. Such legislative authorization appears on its face to be no more mandatory than is the legislature’s authorization of the court, in the same sentence of section 5 — 8—1(c), to reduce a sentence without motion in the same 30-day period. Nor does any other language of section 5 — 8—1(c) suggest that the legislature intended to require a defendant to move for reduction of sentence within 30 days after sentence has been imposed as a prerequisite to the appeal of matters related to sentencing.
Although the court in Macke likened such a requirement to both the requirement of a post-trial motion to preserve issues on appeal (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, par. 116 — 1(b)) and the requirement of a motion to withdraw a guilty plea prior to bringing an appeal (134 Ill. 2d R. 604(d)) (Macke,
The court in Macke found the requirement of a motion to reduce sentence to be a means of promoting both judicial economy and finality of judgments. (Macke,
Therefore, the appellate court erred in dismissing defendant’s appeal. Accordingly, we vacate that dismissal and remand the cause to the appellate court for consideration of the issues raised by defendant for review.
Appellate court’s dismissal vacated;
cause remanded.
