This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of rape in the first degree. Defendant-appellant died the day before oral argument on the merits was scheduled in this court. The State has moved that the appeal be dismissed, allowing appellant’s conviction below to stand. The Public Defender, counsel for appellant, is not opposed to dismissal of the appealper se, but argues that such dismissal should be in conjunction with an order vacating the judgment of conviction and the indictment.
No procedure is provided by rule or statute for the substitution of another party to prosecute this appeal. Moreover, should the appeal be sustained it would not result in appellant’s vindication and would result only in a new trial, which appellant’s death makes impossible. The State has no further interest in the enforcement of the judgment, which appellant’s death also makes impossible. Yet the interests of others, including the appellant’s family, are or may be affected by allowing the judgment of conviction to stand as an adjudication of appellant’s guilt without inquiry into the alleged error.
These interests and considerations have led other courts to conclude that, upon the death of a criminal defendant pending appeal from a judgment of conviction, the judgment of conviction will be vacated and the criminal prosecution will be abated,
ab initio.
We agree with the analysis and conclu
*272
sion of the Maine court in
State v. Carter,
The appeal is dismissed, the judgment of conviction is vacated, and the indictment is dismissed.
Notes
The federal courts of appeal have consistently held that death during direct appeal abates all criminal proceedings
ab initio.
The federal rule may be different with respect to unperfected, discretionary appeals, such as petitions for writ of certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court.
See
Dove v. United States, U.S. ,
