STATE ex rel Tommy PORTER
v.
Robert H. BUTLER, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary.
STATE ex rel Vernell NELSON
v.
Robert H. BUTLER, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*1107 John Wilson Reed, for Tommy Porter plaintiff-applicant and Vernell Nelson plaintiff-relator.
Harry F. Connick, Dist. Atty., Jack Peebles, David Arena, Asst. Dist. Attys., for Robert H. Butler defendant-respondent.
HALL, Justice.
On November 15, 1979, Tommy Porter was convicted of three counts of armed robbery arising out of a single criminal episode in which, armed with a gun, he robbed three occupants of an apartment. On March 13, 1979, Vernell Nelson was convicted of two counts of armed robbery arising out of a single criminal episode in which, armed with a gun, he robbed two motorists stopped at an intersection. In еach instance, habitual offender bills were filed alleging prior felony convictions, two in the case of Porter and one in the case of Nelson. Porter was adjudicated a third felony offender and was sentenced to serve 49½ years at hard labor on each of his three convictions to run concurrently. Nelson was adjudicated a second felony offеnder and was sentenced to serve 50 years at hard labor on each count to run concurrently. Porter did not appeal. Nelson's conviction and sentence were affirmеd on appeal by this court. State v. Nelson,
By pro se post-conviction relief applications, relators contended that it was error to sentence them as habitual offenders under LSA-R.S. 15:529.1 on each conviction obtained on the same day arising from a single criminal incident and charged in a single bill of information, relying on State v. Sherer,
*1108 In Sherer, this court applied the principle enunciated in State ex rel Jackson v. Henderson,
The Sherer holding has been questioned. In a concurring opinion in State v. Lennon,
"Furthermore, the court should take this opportunity to overrule State v. Sherer,411 So.2d 1050 (La.1982), which misinterpreted La.R.S. 15:529.1 by prohibiting the trial judge from sentencing Sherer, who had been convicted of two felonies on the same day, from being sentenced as a habitual offender on еach of the two convictions.2
"2 Sherer was convicted of two counts of negligent homicide. He had previously suffered two felony convictions. This court erroneously held that he сould be sentenced as a habitual offender on only one of the two counts.
"I believe that La.R.S. 15:529.1 reflects a legislative intent to expose a person, who has been prеviously convicted of a felony, to imposition of habitual offender penalties for any felony committed after the date of the prior felony convictions. For examplе, if a person is convicted of simple burglary and after such conviction (but within the five-year `cleansing period') commits four more burglaries before being apprehended and prоsecuted, I believe that person can be sentenced (if convicted) as a second offender for each of the four subsequently committed crimes, whether or not the four subsеquent convictions occur on the same day. To the extent that Sherer dictates a different result, the decision should be overruled."
Chief Justice Calogero has called the Sherer decision "wrong" and suggested that it should be overruled. State ex rel Thibodeaux v. Waltzer,
In Alpine, supra, Justice Lemmon suggested that "the decision in Sherer should be restricted to cases in which the multiple conviсtions occurred in [a] single consecutive course of conduct."
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal has limited the application of Sherer and declined to apply it in cases of multiple convictions obtained on the same date for separate offenses committed on separate dates. State v. Algere,
Judge Ciaccio expressed disagreement with the Sherer decision in his concurrence in State v. Lennon,
"If a previously once-convicted felon commits and is convicted of committing two new felonies, his multiple offender status as to the two new crimes is not dependent upon whether the two new convictions are entered on the sаme date. If convictions on the two new crimes are had on the same date, defendant is a second offender as to each. He is not a third offender. Nor is he a second offender as to only one and a first offender as to the other."
The "one day, one conviction" rule of State ex rel Jackson v. Henderson, supra,[2] relied on in Sherer, provides little support for and certainly does not compel the extension of the rule made in Sherer. In Jackson, the court, as a matter of statutory interpretation, held that multiple prior convictions obtained on the same date could not serve as multiple predicates for a fourth felony adjudicаtion because the predicate felonies were not committed successively after prior convictions as required by LSA-R.S. 15:529.1(B), as amended in *1109 1956.[3] Thus, it was not the fact that the predicаte convictions occurred the same day, per se, that precluded the use of more than one conviction as a predicate in a subsequent prosecution, it was the fact that none of the offenses were committed after a prior conviction so as to legally classify the offender a second or third offender as required by the statute. See State v. Simmons,
Thus, there is no statutory bar to applying the habitual offender law in sentencing for more than one conviction obtained on the same day. Where an offender with a prior felony conviction subsequently commits multiple separate felonies and is thereafter convicted of the subsequent felonies, he is subject to being adjudicated a habitual offender as to each conviсtion. It matters not that the convictions occur on the same date. Sherer, which involved convictions arising out of a single criminal act, should not be applied to limit enhancement of more than one conviction obtained on the same day arising out of separate criminal offenses committed at separate times.
However, policy consideratiоns support the continued viability of the rule precluding habitual offender enhancement of more than one conviction obtained the same date arising out of a single criminal аct or episode. Severe penalty enhancement statutes must be strictly construed. State ex rel Jackson v. Henderson, supra; State v. Duncan,
Accordingly, relator Porter is entitled to the relief he seeks. Having been convicted on the same day of three counts of armed robbery arising out of оne criminal episode, it was error to adjudicate him as a habitual offender and sentence him as such on all three convictions.
In No. 88-KH-2685, the adjudications and sentences of Tоmmy Porter under the habitual offender statute are set aside, and the case is remanded to the district court for resentencing on all three convictions, with adjudication and sentenсing as a habitual offender on only one of the convictions.
In No. 88-KH-0123, the writ previously granted is recalled, and the application of Vernell Nelson is dismissed as moot.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Nelson's apрlication is now moot. Subsequent to filing of his application in this court, the district court, acting upon another application filed by Nelson alleging a Boykin deficiency in his predicatе conviction, vacated the multiple offender adjudications and sentences and reinstated Nelson's original concurrent 25-year sentences.
[2] Jackson has been followed and applied in State v. Schamburge,
[3] By Act 688 of 1982, LSA-R.S. 15:529.1(B) was amended to delеte the language added to the statute by Act 312 of 1956 which was interpreted in the Jackson case as repudiating the earlier decision in State v. Williams,
