Defendant pled guilty to breaking and entering an occupied dwelling with intent to commit larceny, MCL 750.110; MSA 28.305. He was sentenced to lVi to 15 years imprisonment, to be served concurrently with sentences previously imposed in four other cases. The people appeal this sentence.
i
The threshold issue in this case is whether MCL 770.12; MSA 28.1109, as amended by
In
People v Cooke,
Prosecutors and others assert that Cooke and Coles combined put the people, whom the prosecutor represents in a criminal case, at a disadvantage. They note that Cooke placed new limits on the ability of the prosecutor to appeal, and Coles granted defendants the right to appeal sentencing decisions. Many believe that in order to make for a more impartial and evenhanded administration of justice, prosecutors should be able to appeal sentencing decisions and other matters when it is believed the court has made an error.
(1) The people of this state may take an appeal of right in a criminal case, if the protection against double jeopardy under section 15 of article I of the state constitution of 1963 and amendment V of the constitution of the United States would not bar further proceedings against the defendant, from either of the following:
(a) A final judgment or final order of the circuit court or recorder’s court, except a judgment or order of the circuit court or recorder’s court on appeal from any other court.
*188 (b) A final judgment or order of a court or tribunal from which appeal of right has been established by law.
A sentence imposed in a criminal case is part of the final judgment of the trial court.
People v Coles, supra,
p 535. A prosecutor’s appeal of a sentence does not subject the defendant to a second trial, but only a correction of the judgment, and thus does not present double jeopardy implications. See
People v Rehkopf,
ii
The people contend that the trial court, in sentencing defendant, committed an error of law in denying the prosecutor’s request that defendant’s sentence run consecutively to his previously imposed sentences. We agree.
MCL 768.7b(1); MSA 28.1030(2)(1), as amended by
(1) Beginning April 1, 1988, and through Decern *189 ber 31, 1991, if a person who has been charged with a felony, pending the disposition of the charge, commits a subsequent offense that is a felony, upon conviction of the subsequent offense or acceptance of a plea of guilty, guilty but mentally ill, or nolo contendere to the subsequent offense, the sentences imposed for the prior charged offense and the subsequent offense shall run consecutively.
A review of the record in this case reveals that defendant was arraigned in Recorder’s Court on May 27, 1988, in another felony matter, Recorder’s Court Docket No. 88-07186. The instant offense, also a felony, was committed two days later. Recorder’s Court Docket No. 88-07186 was resolved when defendant pled guilty in that case on June 20, 1988, and was sentenced on July 22, 1988.
Applying the clear language of MCL 768.7b(l); MSA 28.1030(2)(1), as amended by
The trial court in this case refused to impose a consecutive sentence because of an agreement in docket no. 88-07186, that the sentence in that case would run concurrently with defendant’s sentences in three other cases. The terms of the agreement in docket no. 88-07186 could not include this case, however, since this case was not yet in existence; sentencing in docket no. 88-07186 took place three weeks before the complaint and warrant instituting this case were issued. The court’s concern in *190 this case that the prosecution was trying to renege on the agreement in docket no. 88-07186 was thus unfounded. The mandatory provisions of MCL 768.7b(1); MSA 28.1030(2)(1) control.
Vacated and remanded for entry of an amended judgment of sentence. We do not retain jurisdiction.
