ON CERTIORARI TO THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
After a jury trial, Corey Lynn Brooks was convicted of aggravated robbery, a first degree felony, in violation of section 76-6-302 of the Utah Code, and aggravated burglary, a first degree felony, in violation of section 76-6-203 of the Utah Code. Brooks appealed his convictions, and we poured the appeal to the court of appeals. There, Brooks asserted that the trial court erred in not re *858 moving certain jurors for cause and that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective. Brooks also argued that because the convictions for robbery and burglary arose out of the same operative facts, one was the lesser included crime of the other and to convict and sentence him for both amounted to punishing him twice for the same crime. He asked that his “illegal sentence” be set aside.
The court of appeals affirmed the convictions on the merits, addressing Brooks’ first two arguments but refusing to address his argument that he was being punished twice for the same crime.
State v. Brooks,
Responding to an advertisement offering a diamond ring for sale, Brooks went to the home of Stephanie and Martha Vert. Brooks said he wanted to purchase the ring and would come back the next morning. When Brooks arrived, Stephanie, who was home alone, let him in. Brooks came in, picked up the diamond ring, pointed a pistol at Stephanie, and forced her into the bathroom, where he ordered her to handcuff herself to the pipes under the sink. Brooks then rummaged through the house, took several thousand dollars worth of jewelry, including the diamond ring, and fled the scene. He was eventually apprehended when friends to whom he had boasted about the robbery turned him in.
Brooks’ first trial resulted in a hung jury. After a second trial, a jury convicted him of aggravated robbery and aggravated burglary. The trial court sentenced Brooks on both convictions but ordered that the sentences be served concurrently and also ordered him to pay fines and restitution. 1
Brooks appealed the convictions on the three grounds mentioned above, all of which were raised for the first time on appeal. The court of appeals addressed only Brooks’ first two arguments, both of which it found merit-less.
Brooks,
Brooks’ third contention before the court of appeals was that “his convictions for robbery and burglary illegally punish[ed] him twice for the same crime.”
Id.
at 821. He argued that burglary and robbery were in a lesser included relationship because on the facts, he could not have committed one without necessarily committing the other. Under our statutes and case law, one cannot be convicted of both a stated crime and a lesser crime that is necessarily included in the proof of the greater. Utah Code Ann. § 76-1A102(3);
see, e.g., State v. Bradley,
The court of appeals refused to address this issue because it concluded that rule 22(e) does not allow an appellate court to address an illegal sentence for the first time on appeal.
Brooks,
We first state the applicable standard of review. The standard of review for a
*859
simple legal interpretation of a rule or statute is correctness. “Legal determinations ... are defined as those which are not of fact but are essentially of rules or principles uniformly applied to persons of similar qualities and status in similar circumstances.”
State v. Pena,
We conclude that the court of appeals erred in holding that it lacked the authority under rule 22(e) to address a claim of an illegal sentence for the first time on appeal. However, we also conclude that an appellate court may not review the legality of a sentence under rule 22(e) when the substance of the appeal is, as it is here, a challenge, not to the sentence itself, but to the underlying conviction. Accordingly, we conclude that the court of appeals did not err in refusing to decide whether Brooks was illegally sentenced.
In holding that it lacked the authority to address for the first time on appeal the claim of an illegal sentence, the court of appeals relied on its earlier decision in
Gallegos,
which, in turn, interpreted our decision in
State v. Babbel,
We conclude that in
Gallegos,
the court of appeals correctly applied
Babbel II.
We did state there that a trial court can always correct an illegal sentence. The confusion arose when the court of appeals panel in the instant case read
Gallegos
to have interpreted
Babbel II
as implicitly denying that an appellate court could also address an illegal sentence claim raised for the first time on appeal.
See Brooks,
The court of appeals’ misinterpretation of
Gallegos
and
Babbel II
rested on our statement in
Babbel II
that “[rule 22(e) ] specifically provides that because an illegal sentence is void, a
trial
court may correct an illegal sentence at any time.”
Babbel appealed again after his resentenc-ing, claiming that the more severe sentences imposed under the new guidelines violated statutory law and the double jeopardy clauses of the state and federal constitutions.
Babbel II,
Contrary to the apparent assumption of the court of appeals in this case,
Babbel II
does not stand for the proposition that under rule 22(e), an appellate court is precluded from reviewing a claim that a sentence is illegal if the issue is raised for the first time on appeal. In fact, taken together,
Babbel I
and
Babbel II,
like the sweeping language of rule 22(e), suggest just the opposite. When a sentence is patently illegal, an appellate court can vacate the illegal sentence without first remanding the case to the trial court, even if the matter was never raised before. This makes theoretical sense because an illegal sentence is void and, like issues of jurisdiction, should be raisable at any time. This view of the matter is also supported by considerations of judicial economy. When the pertinent facts are undisputed and a purely legal question with respect to which the trial court has no discretion remains to be decided, nothing is to be gained by remanding the case to the trial court.
See Pena,
Nonetheless, we conclude that the court of appeals did not err in refusing to consider Brooks’ request to correct his sentence under rule 22(e) because rule 22(e) does not allow an appellate court to review the legality of a sentence when the substance of the appeal is not a challenge to the sentence itself, but to the underlying conviction. A request to correct an illegal sentence under rule 22(e) presupposes a valid conviction.
See United States v. Morgan,
To elaborate, Brooks’ argument before the court of appeals was that under the facts of this case, burglary and robbery occupied a lesser included relationship to each other and, therefore, that “his convictions for robbery and burglary illegally punish[ed] him twice for the same crime.”
Brooks,
Brooks also asked the court of appeals to review his claim of an illegal sentence under either a plain error analysis or an ineffective assistance of counsel analysis. The court of appeals refused to do so because it concluded that Brooks still had a remedy in the trial court under rule 22(e).
Brooks,
We first address Brooks’ contention that his conviction for both aggravated burglary and aggravated robbery is reviewable as plain error. A finding of plain error requires that (i) an error occurred; (ii) the error was obvious; and (in) the error was harmful.
State v. Menzies,
Here, we can dispose of Brooks’ challenge under the first element. Brooks argues that when the State proved facts sufficient to convict him of aggravated burglary, it necessarily also proved all of the elements of aggravated robbery. Since proof of the greater crime necessarily proved the lesser, Brooks claims, to sentence him for both crimes violated section 76-1-402(3) of the Utah Code, as well as the double jeopardy prohibitions in both article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution and the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution. We conclude that Brooks was validly convicted of both offenses.
As suggested earlier, section 76-1-402(3) bars the conviction of a defendant for two offenses arising out of a single criminal episode when one is a lesser included offense of the other.
2
Such an offense is lesser included when proof of one crime necessarily proves all of the elements of the second crime.
State v. McCovey,
Determining when one crime is a lesser included offense of another can occasionally be difficult. We have adopted a two-step analysis for resolving this issue. As we explained in
Hill,
However, some criminal statutes describe the elements of a crime by a listing of variations in the elements. Under some of these variations, two crimes would be separate under one set of circumstances but lesser included offenses under another.
Hill,
With this background, we address Brooks’ claim. The first step of the Hill analysis asks whether we can categorically say that aggravated burglary and aggravated *862 robbery will never have a lesser included relationship. Only if this test does not resolve the question need we proceed to the second analytical step. We first address aggravated burglary. A person commits burglary if the actor “enters or remains unlawfully in a building ... with intent to commit a felony.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-202. A person commits aggravated burglary if “in attempting, committing, or fleeing from a burglary the actor ... causes bodily injury to any person who is not a participant in the crime; uses or threatens the immediate use of a dangerous weapon ...; or possesses or attempts to use any explosive or dangerous weapon.” Id. § 76-6-203. We next address the second charge, aggravated robbery. “Robbery is the unlawful and intentional taking of personal property in the possession of another from [their] person, or immediate presence, against [their] will, accomplished by means of force or fear.” Id. § 76-6-301. “A person commits aggravated robbery if in the course of committing robbery, [the actor] uses or threatens to use a dangerous weapon ...; causes serious bodily injury upon another; or takes an operable motor vehicle.” Id. § 76-6-302.
Having described the elements of these two offenses, we ask whether proof of the elements of aggravated burglary ever prove all the elements of aggravated robbery. The answer is no. While there are elements common to both crimes, such as use of a deadly weapon, each has a unique element. Aggravated burglary always requires proof that the defendant entered or remained in a building; aggravated robbery always requires proof that the defendant took another’s property. Because the unique element of each crime will always require proof beyond that needed for proof of the bare elements of the other crime, Hill ⅛ first test is sufficient to demonstrate that no lesser included relationship can exist between these crimes.
Brooks argues that
Bradley
supports his contention that aggravated robbery is a lesser included offense of aggravated burglary,
Bradley
is clearly distinguishable because it involved charges of aggravated burglary, on the one hand, and aggravated assault (not aggravated robbery), on the other.
Bradley,
Because we find no error in Brooks’ conviction of both aggravated burglary and aggravated robbery, we need not address whether Brooks’ lesser included argument is reviewable under an ineffective assistance of counsel analysis.
Affirmed.
Notes
. For a more complete recitation of the facts, see
State v. Brooks,
. Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-402(3) states in pertinent part:
A defendant may be convicted of an offense included in the offense charged but may not be convicted of both the offense charged and the included offense. An offense is so included when:
(a) It is established by proof of the same or less than all the facts required to. establish the commission of the offense charged....
