Larry Solles appeals from an order denying his motion to reduce the sentence the trial court imposed after vacating his original sentence. The question is whether when resentencing a defendant, the trial court may take into account present circumstances concerning the defendant's good record and character. We hold to the contrary: the sentence must be based upon the circumstances as they existed when the original sentence was imposed. We therefore affirm.
In 1976, Solles was sentenced to terms totalling sixty years. The trial court imposed the maximum sentence for each conviction and directed that they be served consecutively: thirty years for armed robbery, twenty-five years for second-degree murder, and five years for concealing his identity. 1 In 1988, the court vacated the sentences and ordered that Solles be resen-tenced because a separate sentence for concealing identity under sec. 946.62, Stats. (1975), was improper, since *568 that penalty-enhancer statute does not create a substantive offense. 2
Solles was rеsentenced in 1990. At the resentencing hearing Solles presented evidence of his good conduct in the prison during the previous fourteen years and of his eduсational achievements, employment prospects and character references. The hearing was held before the same judge who had presided at his trial and had sentenced him in 1976. The court acknowledged that Solles was a changed person and expressed the belief that Sol-les will not again be involved in the criminal justice system. The court concluded that it could not consider Solles' postconviction conduct and his present, charactеr. The court sentenced Solles to a total of fifty-five years on consecutive terms of twenty-five years for the murder conviction and thirty years for the armеd robbery conviction.
To support his motion to modify the 1990 sentence, Solles argued that when resentencing him the trial court could have considered his present character and good conduct as demonstrated over the past fourteen years. The court was uncertain whether it had that discretion, but said thаt Solles' changed character is best evaluated by the parole authorities. The court said that when it resentenced him, it had relied upon the same рrimary reasons for imposing the maximum sentences in 1976: the serious nature of the crimes, Solles' past criminal record, and his need for rehabilitation. The court dеnied the motion to modify.
Whether when resentencing a defendant the court may take into account the defendant's present character
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and goоd conduct since the original sentence is a question of law. We decide questions of law without deferring to the trial court's view.
State v. Hegwood,
Our conclusion that when resentencing a defendant the trial court must consider only the circumstances existing when defendant was first sentenced is based on
State v. Martin,
In
Martin
and
Grobarchik
the problem was tо ensure that the resentencing judge did not penalize a defendant for exercising his postconviction rights. Compelling the trial court to "implement the original disрosi-tional scheme . . . will insure that resentencing will not be motivated by a desire to penalize the defendant" for that exercise.
Grobarchik,
Penalizing the defendant is not the problem here. Solles' postconviction history perhaps justifies confidence that he cаn be safely paroled. But parole boards are in a better position than the courts to decide whether a defendant's prison record and prеsent character warrant parole. The courts base their sentences on the circumstances before them at the time of sentencing. Future deсisions affecting release are reserved to the department of corrections.
Solles contends that because the courts base their sentences on the circumstances before them at the time of sentencing, the resentencing court not only may but must take into account his present character and his good prison record. He relies on
State v. Pierce,
The state contends that we erred in
Pierce.
Because the court of appeals believes itself bоund by its published precedents,
State v. Lee,
Moreover, two unsatisfactory consequences would result if trial courts may take into account a defendant's good prison record and present charaсter on a resentenc-ing after vacating the original sentence. Such a rule would benefit the small number of defendants whose sentences are vacated because of the fortuity of a sentencing error. It would not benefit the many defendants whose sentences are not vacated and whose postсonviction records and present records are just as good, since those factors are no basis for a sentence modification.
Kaster,
Other jurisdictions hаve adopted a different rule. Without discussing the aspects we have reviewed, the Supreme Court of Nebraska approved of the trial court's considering the exemplary conduct of a defendant during his incarceration before he was resentenced.
State v. Suggett,
Given the Wisconsin case law and the results of a different rule, we conclude that the resentencing court must take into account only the circumstances existing at the time of the original sentencing.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
Sections 943.32(l)(a) and (2), 940.02, and 946.62, Stats. (1975), respectively.
See Schroeder v. State,
Were
Pierce
before us as an original matter, we probably would not employ a "new factor" analysis. The new factor requirement in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
