Title: People v. Alvine

State: illinois

Issuer: Illinois Supreme Court

Document:

Docket No. 86204-Agenda 5-May 2000.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. 
 								RONALD R. ALVINE, Appellant.
Opinion filed August 10, 2000.
	JUSTICE RATHJE delivered the opinion of the court:
	Defendant, Ronald R. Alvine, struck and killed a police
officer while attempting to steal a car. A jury convicted of him of
both knowing murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(2) (West 1998)) and
felony murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(3) (West 1998)). Defendant
waived a jury for sentencing, and the trial court sentenced him to
death for knowing murder. Defendant was not sentenced on the
felony-murder count. On appeal, this court reversed defendant's
knowing murder conviction, vacated defendant's death sentence,
and remanded the cause to the trial court. People v. Alvine, 173 Ill. 2d 273 (1996) (Alvine I). This court also held that defendant "may
be sentenced on the felony murder count." Alvine I, 173 Ill. 2d  at
298.
	On remand, the State declined to retry defendant for knowing
murder and instead moved to impose the death penalty on the
felony-murder count. Over defendant's objection, the trial court
summarily sentenced defendant to death for felony murder without
holding a sentencing hearing.
	Defendant appeals, arguing that (1) he was entitled to a new
sentencing hearing on remand; (2) the trial court did not make a
sufficient mental state finding to support death penalty eligibility;
(3) the State failed to establish defendant's fitness for sentencing;
(4) the trial court erroneously excluded evidence from the
sentencing hearing; (5) the State elicited improper evidence at
sentencing; (6) the trial court failed to consider all evidence in
mitigation; and (7) the Illinois death penalty statute is
unconstitutional.
	We need only address whether defendant was entitled to a
new sentencing hearing on remand. We hold that he was. In Alvine
I, this court vacated defendant's death sentence and instructed the
trial court that, on remand, defendant could be sentenced on the
felony-murder conviction for which he had not yet received a
sentence. Alvine I, 173 Ill. 2d  at 298. Admittedly, this court's
holding could have stated more explicitly that a new sentencing
hearing was a mandatory prerequisite to the imposition of a
sentence. Nevertheless, when this court remanded the cause and
said that the trial court "may sentence defendant on the felony
murder count," it clearly contemplated that defendant would
receive the sentencing hearing to which he was entitled under
section 9-1(d) of the Criminal Code of 1961 (720 ILCS 5/9-1(d)
(West 1998)) before receiving a sentence on the felony-murder
count for the first time. What this court clearly did not contemplate
when it vacated defendant's death sentence and remanded the
cause was that the trial court would interpret that holding as
allowing it to summarily impose the death penalty on defendant on
a count for which he had never been sentenced. The trial court's
sentencing of defendant without a hearing therefore was contrary
to this court's mandate in Alvine I.
	Accordingly, we vacate defendant's death sentence and
remand this cause to the trial court for a new sentencing hearing,
at which the State may seek the imposition of the death penalty.
Vacated and remanded.
	JUSTICE MILLER, dissenting:
	Unlike the majority, I do not believe that the trial judge was
required to conduct a new sentencing hearing after this court
reversed one of the defendant's convictions for first degree murder
and the State decided not to retry the defendant on that count.
Accordingly, I dissent.
	In the defendant's prior appeal, this court determined that the
defendant's conviction on count I, for first degree murder, required
reversal because of error in the jury instructions used at trial. We
remanded the cause to the circuit court, providing the State with
the options of either retrying the defendant on count I or seeking
imposition of a sentence on the remaining first degree murder
count, count II. Our opinion did not specify whether or not a new
sentencing hearing would be required if the State did not seek a
new trial on the reversed conviction.
	I believe that the trial judge acted properly in sentencing the
defendant on count II without holding a new sentencing hearing,
after the State decided not to retry the defendant on count I. The
defendant had previously waived a jury for capital sentencing
purposes, and the same judge had presided at the defendant's
sentencing hearing. On remand, the judge concluded that the death
sentence should again be imposed, notwithstanding the reversal of
the defendant's other conviction for first degree murder. In his
brief, the defendant allows that this court, if it believed that the
death sentence was not affected by the reversal of the conviction
on count I, could have simply amended the mittimus to reflect that
the death sentence was being imposed on count II. Nothing in our
earlier decision, remanding the cause to the circuit court,
precluded the trial judge from also determining that a new hearing
was unnecessary in the circumstances shown here. For these
reasons, I do not believe that the trial judge was required to hold
a new sentencing hearing in this case, and I would therefore
address the remaining issues raised by the defendant in the present
appeal.
	JUSTICE HEIPLE joins in this dissent.