The State has appealed from an order entered in a criminal case vacating a life sentence and quashing the information.
In 1941, an information was filed against appellee attempting to charge conviction of four felonies. Two convictions were alleged dated August 28, 1930. A third conviction was alleged in 1937 and a fourth in 1941. A plea of *Page 876 guilty was entered and life sentence imposed. In 1947, appellee filed a motion before the court which imposed the life sentence to vacate the conviction and sentence. The trial court granted the motion and also quashed the information. The State has appealed and asserts error was committed by quashing the information because while the information was insufficient to charge a fourth conviction it was sufficient to charge a second offense.
No one questions that the information was insufficient to charge a fourth offense under our holding in Joyner v. State,
Addressing the main question, we are convinced that the information was sufficient to charge a second offense. Appellee contends the contrary because the information did not allege positively and directly that after appellee was first convicted he thereafter committed another felony. He relies upon our opinion in State v. Smith,
It was error to discharge appellee and quash the information. He should have been sentenced as a second offender. Mowery v. Mayo,
The State also questions the authority of the trial court to entertain the motion in appellee's absence. This contention rests upon Sections 775.09, 775.10 and 775.11, Fla. Stat., 1941, F.S.A. We fail to find harmful error in this contention. The Statute at most is directory and for defendant's benefit. In this case, too, it was stipulated that appellee was in the State Prison and obviously he could not be present without an order *Page 877 of court. The absence of appellee was not jurisdictional and this contention of the State is not well founded.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for imposition of a proper sentence.
Reversed.
THOMAS, C. J., CHAPMAN and HOBSON, JJ., concur.