In July 1956 a jury found Frank Jimmy Snider, Jr. guilty of statutory rape and fixed his punishment at death, and he was sentenced accordingly. In this habeas corpus proceeding, the trial court held that under
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois,
Witherspoon does not dictate that Snider should be retried on the issue of guilt. Witherspoon v. Illinois, supra at 518. The question is whether Virginia law permits that he be now tried on the issue of punishment alone. We conclude that it does.
*14 The Virginia statutes do not forbid separate trials on the issues of guilt and punishment. They prescribe that in a court of record the accused shall be tried on a not guilty plea by a jury or, with the consent of the accused and the concurrence of the Commonwealth’s attorney and the court, by the judge. And they prescribe that punishment shall be fixed by the jury or the court sitting without a jury. Code §§ 19.1-192, -291 and -292.
In
Johnson
v.
Commonwealth,
If the Commonwealth elects to try Snider on the issue of punishment, so much of the transcript of the evidence adduced at Snider’s first trial may be read in open court as is reasonably necessary to show the nature of the offense charged and the circumstances under which it was committed. Relevant and admissible evidence may be adduced on the issue of punishment. Such trial shall be by jury or, with the consent and concurrence mentioned in the second preceding paragraph, by the court sitting without a jury.
Affirmed.
