On this аppeal we are asked to review the propriety of imposing a twenty-year indeterminate sentence in place of a fixed sentence of eight years after it was determined that the “fixed” nature of the eight-year sentence was not legal. We uphold the imposition of the twenty-year sentence.
Monte Hoisington was found guilty, by a jury, of rape. A judgment of conviction was entered and he was sentenced to a fixed term of eight years. The conviction was upheld on appeal.
See State v. Hoisington,
The district court agreed. However, nоtwithstanding Hoisington’s request that the eight-year fixed sentence simply be changed to an indeterminate eight-year sentence, the district court “corrected” Hoisington’s sentence by imposing an indeterminate term of twenty years, with credit for time served to the date of the corrected sentence. The district court rationalized that society should be protected from the defendant for eight years less reduction for “good time” at the rate of two months each year. Because the defendant would be eligible for parole consideration at one-third *661 of a twenty-year sentence for rape, 1 the court concluded that the twenty-year indeterminate sentence would accomplish the goal of protecting society for substantially the same period of time as a fixed eight-year sentence.
Relying on
North Carolina v. Pearce,
In
Pearce
the United States Supreme Court reviewed the propriety of imposing sentences of more severe punishment following conviction for the same offense upon retrial after prior cоnvictions had been set aside and new trials ordered at the defendants’ behest. The Court held that due process requires that vindictiveness against a defеndant must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial; and because the fear of such vindictiveness may unconstitutionally detеr a defendant’s exercise of the right to appeal from or to collaterally attack his first conviction, due process also requires that a defendant be freed from apprehension of such a retaliatory motivation on the part of the sentencing judge. In order to assure the аbsence of such retaliatory motivation upon reconviction, the Court held that whenever a judge imposes a more severe sentence upon a defendant after a new trial, the reasons for the sentence must affirmatively appear and must be based upon objective informаtion concerning identifiable conduct on the defendant’s part occurring after the original sentencing. Additionally, the factual data upon which the increased sentence is based must be made a part of the record, so the constitutional legitimacy of the increased sentence mаy be fully reviewed on appeal.
Pearce
did not preclude the imposition of a more severe sentence on reconviction; rather it establishеd guidelines which must be followed if a greater sentence is imposed following a new trial.
See United States v. DiFrancesco,
Hoisington also directs our attention to decisions from other jurisdictions which disapprove of the imposition of a harsher term upon vacation of a previous sentence.
See Sonnier v. State,
The recent Idaho case of
State v. Lindquist,
[W]e again set aside the sentence imposed by the trial court and remand the cause to the trial court fоr resentencing to any punishment permitted for the offense of second degree murder under the provisions of statutes in effect at the time of the сommission of the crime in question here.
Here, at the time of the commission of the crime in question, I.C. § 18-6104 prоvided for punishment for rape of not less than one year “and the imprisonment may be extended to life.” Any sentence so imposed was subject to thе indeterminate sentencing law in Idaho, I.C. § 19-2513, which allows the commission of pardons and parole to determine the actual period of confinеment in any given case.
State v. Evans,
We hold that there was no deprivation of due process in Hoisington’s resentencing. The sentence is affirmed.
Notes
. See former I.C. § 20-223, repealed in 1980. 1980 Idaho Sess.Laws, ch. 297, § 5, p. 770.
