Two issues are raised in this review:
1. Was the ultimate guilty plea voluntary ?
2. Did thе action of the circuit court expose defendant to double jeopardy?
Voluntariness of guilty plea.
Our initial inquiry must be directed to the question of whether the plea of guilty entered during the second
Recognizing this attack on one of the principal phases of plea bargaining, this court said in Rahhal v. State: 2
“. . . Threatening a defendant or intimating a greater sentence will be meted out if defendant goes to trial and is found guilty than if he pleads guilty has been condemned as bеing coercive. [Citations omitted.]
“However, a plea otherwise valid is not involuntary because induced or motivated by the defendant’s desire to gеt the lesser penalty. A voluntary and intelligent choice always involves two or more alternatives, each having some compelling power оf acceptance. The fact that a defendant must make a choice between two reasonable alternatives and take the consequences is not coercive of the choice finally made. The distinction between a motivation which induces and a force which compels the human mind to act must always be kept in focus. When the defendant is not given a fair or reasonable alternative to choose from, the choice is legally coerced.”
The essential determination in judging this aspect of plea bargaining must be as to the reasonableness of the alternative presented to the defendant.
Art. I, sec. 8, of the Wisconsin Constitution reads in part: “[N]o person for the same offense shall he put twice in jeopardy of punishment . . . .” Defendant argues thаt the action of the circuit court in directing the original complaint reinstated violated this constitutional provision.
We think there is no question but that the defendant knowingly, intelligently, and expressly, waived any objection he had on the assertion of double jeopardy. The following questioning of the defendant was held:
“Mr. Spindler: Mr. Salters, you realize that in this case, there is a legal issue yet unresolved and that by entering a plea of guilty hereto, you have waived your right to press forward with that issue, is that correct, the issue of double jeopardy?
“Defendant Salters: Yes, I do.
“Mr. Spindler: And you realize that by pleading guilty now you are waiving that legal issue, in other words, you can no longer raise that issue?
“Defendant Salters: Yes, I do.
“Mr. Spindler: And you fully understand that and it is your desire to do that?
“Defendant Salters: Yes, it is.”
Even if there was no waiver by defendant, it is clear that there was no violation here of defendant’s constitutiоnal rights against double jeopardy. In State v. Schmear 6 this court said:
“[T]here is but one continuing jeopardy until the defendant has had a valid trial free from reversible error for the offense charged. The defendant is entitled to be legally convicted or acquitted and until that stage is reached continuity of the jeopardy exists.”
In the present case jeopardy attached when the first plea was entered,
7
and that same jeopardy continued to
In the present case the original guilty plea was accepted prior to the reception of evidence supporting its voluntariness and factual accuracy. This is contrary to this court’s directive in Eskra, v. State 8 that the рlea should be accepted after informing the defendant of the range of punishment and ascertaining that the defendant understands the nature of thе crime to which he is pleading guilty. The proper procedure should be that the plea should be accepted or rejected after the court ascertains the voluntariness of the plea and the factual basis for the plea as required by Ernst. In cases in which the prosecutor has mоved to reduce the charge in the complaint it is also proper, although not mandatory, for the court to ascertain why the charge was rеduced. After ascertaining this information and assuring itself of the voluntariness of the plea, the factual basis for the charge, and the propriety of any proposed reduction of the charge, the court should then determine whether or not to accept the plea.
In the present case although the plea was first accepted prior to ascertaining the basis therefor, the de
By the Court. — Order and judgment affirmed.
Notes
(1967),
Ante, p. 144, 151, 152,
(1970),
See North Carolina v. Alford
(1970),
Ernst v. State
(1969),
~~^lX965)7^WÍZ2n26^lM^5K/w72d8^.
Hawkins v. State
(1966),
(1965),
