After defendant plead guilty to first degree rape, íe trial court sentenced him to a prison term not to xceed 15 years, with a 7-1/2-year minimum sentence, efendant appealed. This court reversed and remand-i for resentencing bаsed upon our prior holding that íe statute authorizing trial courts to impose mini-íum sentences, ORS 144.110, was not applicable to offenses committed before its effective date.
State v. Stockman,
At resentencing, the trial court stated that had it nown that a minimum sentence was not permissible, would have originally sentenced defendant to the Laximum possible prison term, which is 20 years. The •ial court then sentenced defendant to a prison term at to exceed 20 years. Defendant agаin appeals, con-aiding the trial court had no authority to impose a Lore severe sentence than it had originally.
The state suggests, although not very strenuously, íat defendant did not really receive a more severe rntence, contrasting the original 7-1/2-year minimum ith the claim that under the Parole Board’s matrix astern defendant might now be eligible for parole in B months or less. 1 However, under the worst possible ircumstances — loss of good time and denial of irole — defendant originally faced the possibility of 5 years’ incarceration, and now faces the possibility ' 20 years’ incarceration. We conclude that the trial mrt’s second sentence was more severe.
*238 The question thus becomеs: When a defendant successfully appeals, challenging his sentence as distinguished from his conviction, on resentencing can the trial court impose a more severe sentence?
It is not clear whether the Oregon apрellate courts have ever directly confronted or resolved this issue. Were the question one of first impression, there is a substantial argument in favor of an affirmative answer. Sentencing is based upon a gestalt evaluation of an offender and his offense. Sentencing courts often attempt to construct a unified package of various sentencing alternatives, such as incarceration plus recommendation for treatment as a sexually dangerous person, or probation plus restitution, etc. When such unified sentence is undone by an appellate determination that one component of it is erroneous, it can reasonably be contended that the sentenсing court should be able to start anew, perhaps in the process constructing a new sentencing package that is more "severe” in some aspect.
The American Bar Association disagrees, but with all respect their disagreement appears to be based on a faulty premise. ABA Standards, Sentencing Alternatives and Procedures, § 3.8, p 198 (App Draft 1968) provides:
"Where a conviction or sentence has been set aside on direct or collateral attack, the legislature should prohibit a new sentence for the same offense or a different offense based on the same conduct which is more severe than the prior sentence less time already served.” 2
The commentary to this section states: "The only argument whiсh can justify an increase following a retrial is that the original sentence was too light, either because the first judge was too lenient or because new *239 acts have been presented.” ABA Standards, supra, at 98-99 (emphasis supplied). However, the case before s illustrates that there is another possible situation, ot that the first sentence was "toо light,” but that it antained one legally erroneous component; not that ae trial court was originally "too lenient,” but that it ailed to legally effectuate the extent of punishment it itended; and not that the court was using resentenc-ag tо increase the punishment per se, but instead was íerely trying to legally effectuate the extent of pun-shment it had always regarded as appropriate. It ould appear that the draftsmen of the ABA standard id not recognize оr consider this kind of situation; ius, they present no persuasive reason for applying ae ABA standard in this context.
Despite our attraction to the argument that would srmit what the trial court did in this case, and despite nr doubt that the issue as presеntly stated has previously been resolved, the stronger indications in the upreme Court’s cases are that the trial court erred. In
State v. Turner,
There is, however, a contrary implication in
Turner.
he court’s actual statement of its holding included a iveat: "After an appeal or post-conviction proceeding is resulted in the ordering of a retrial for errors
other lan an erroneous sentence
* * * no harsher sentence
*240
can be given than that initially imposed.”
It appears more likely, in context, that the intended meaning was to adhere to
State v. Froembling,
The facts involved in the Froembling cases are in one way similar and in one way dissimilar to this case. The similarity is: there the trial court said that had it known it could not initially impose a life sentence, it would have sentenced differently; here the trial court said that had it known it could not initially impose a minimum sentence, it would have sentenced differently. The dissimilarity is: there the effect of resentencing was a reduction in punishment (from life imprisonment to 25 years); here the effect of resentenc-ing is an increase in punishment (from 15 to 20 years).
Language in State v. Froembling, supra, suggests that distinction should not produce a different result:
"Here the error in the original proceeding consisted of imposing the wrong sentence for the crime charged. When that is the case the trial judge must change the sentence to correct the error and he must exercise his discretion anew in arriving at what he considers an appropriate sentence. He is entitled to fix the new sentence within the maximum allowable *241 under the applicable statute so that it will most appropriately fit the circumstances of the case as he sees them. The test is whether the trial judge could have imposed the new sentence in the original proceeding * *237 Or at 619 .
7e
find it impossible, at least on the facts of this case, > reconcile this language with the rationale of
Turner:
L) "the possibility of a more severe sentence in the /ent of a successful appeal * * * wоiild 'chill’ a sfendant’s desire to” appeal,
State v. Turner, supra,
The Froembling rule — "The test is whether the trial idge could have imposed the new sentence in the ■iginal proceeding” — must be limited by Turner to tuations where the trial court originally imposed an ■roneously excessive sentence. In all other situations here the original sentence is erroneous for some her reason, as in this case, the "chilling effect” itionale of Turner suggests that no harsher sentence m be imposed at resentencing. 3
Subsequent Supreme Court dispositions lend some ipport to this interpretation of
Froembling
and
Turn
er. In
State v. Stalheim,
The implication in
Stalheim
became an express holding in
State v.
Martin,
This is an area of law where some of the guideposts seem to point in opposite directions. Seen 3, supra. But the thrust of Turner coupled with the actual dispositions in cases like Stalheim and Martin lead us to the conclusion that the Oregon Supreme Court has determined that, аfter a successful appellate challenge to a sentence, on grounds other than excessiveness as in Froembling, on resentencing the trial court can impose no greater punishment than it did initially. 4 It follows *243 i this case that the trial court сannot sentence jfendant to more than 15 years’ imprisonment.
Reversed and remanded for resentencing.
Notes
There are several problems with the state’s comparison. Even if fendant’s original 7-1/2-year minimum sentence had been valid, he could ve been paroled soonеr "upon affirmative vote of at least four members the [parole] board.” ORS 144.110(2)(a).
Also, we note that at about the same time defendant was convicted of /eral different rapes in three different counties. The statement that hе aid be eligible for parole in 48 months or less comes from presentence x>rts prepared in two individual cases. We doubt that this statement mains true in light of all of the convictions ultimately entered against Cendant.
ABA Standards, Appellate Review of Sentences, § 3.4(b), p 56 (App Draft 1968), is even more emphatic:
"On a remand for the purpose of re-sentencing an offender, no sentencing court should be empowered to impose a sentence which results in an increase over the sentence originally imposed.”
State v. Nelson,
246
Or
321,
Very recently, in
State v. Holmes,
