State v. Collier

513 P.3d 477
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 2022
Docket124047
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 513 P.3d 477 (State v. Collier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Collier, 513 P.3d 477 (kan 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 124,047

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

JEFFREY SCOTT COLLIER, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

Under K.S.A. 1993 Supp. 21-4720(b), when a defendant is sentenced for both off- grid and on-grid crimes, the sentencing court only has authority to impose the supervision period associated with the off-grid crime.

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; KEVIN J. O'CONNOR, judge. Opinion filed July 15, 2022. Affirmed.

Kristen B. Patty, of Wichita, was on the brief for appellant.

Julie A. Koon, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BILES, J.: Jeffrey Scott Collier appeals from a district court's summary denial of his second pro se motion to correct an illegal sentence imposed for offenses committed in 1993. The sentencing court ordered a hard 15 life sentence with lifetime parole for a first- degree murder conviction and a consecutive 97-month prison term for an aggravated 1 robbery conviction. Collier claims the applicable law required 24 months of postrelease supervision because the aggravated robbery should have been designated as the primary crime for sentencing purposes. The State agrees with him. But we hold the district court correctly sentenced Collier and affirm the district court's denial of his motion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The details of Collier's crimes are not relevant to this postrelease supervision issue but can be found in State v. Collier, 259 Kan. 346, 348-49, 913 P.2d 597 (1996) (Collier I). Our focus here concerns his resentencing after a string of appeals and remands. See State v. Collier, 263 Kan. 629, 637, 952 P.2d 1326 (1998) (Collier II). He did not appeal that resentencing at the time.

But several years later, Collier filed what became his first pro se motion to correct an illegal sentence. He claimed the sentencing court should have classified his prior convictions as nonperson offenses when imposing his prison term for the aggravated robbery. The district court summarily denied that motion and this court affirmed. See State v. Collier, 306 Kan. 521, 394 P.3d 1164 (2017) (Collier III). In 2020, he filed his second pro se motion, which appears to seek correction of the supervision term, which he asserts is required for the aggravated robbery sentence. That is the basis for this appeal.

His second motion gave few specifics. But it did recite nine "Declarations" about his case's procedural history from which an outline for a legal claim emerges. Important here, the fourth and fifth declarations discussed the presumptive guideline sentence for aggravated robbery as "a prison term of 92 to 103 months and postrelease supervision of 24 months" and the fact the district court "did not establish a postrelease supervision duration" for that conviction. His ninth declaration stated: "The initial sentence imposed

2 for . . . Aggravated Robbery . . . is still 97 months prison term with no postrelease supervision imposed."

Admittedly, his statements are challenging to decipher with precision. But when the fourth, fifth, and ninth declarations are read together, it is reasonable to infer Collier attacks the lifetime parole ordered by claiming the statute requires postrelease supervision. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504(a), (c)(1) (permitting correction at any time when a sentence is "ambiguous with respect to the time and manner in which it is to be served"). The district court, however, focused only on the 97-month prison term assigned to the aggravated robbery conviction to summarily deny the motion as successive, so it did not squarely address Collier's likely concern about postrelease supervision.

We view Collier's appeal as arguing the applicable law designates his aggravated robbery conviction as the "primary crime" for sentencing purposes and required the district court to impose 24 months of postrelease supervision. And he suggests the lifetime parole ordered at his 1998 resentencing on the murder conviction is illegal because "the only action the trial court was permitted to take to comply with the [m]andate" was reducing the mandatory minimum prison time attached to the life sentence.

Jurisdiction is proper. See K.S.A. 60-2101(b) (Supreme Court jurisdiction over direct appeals governed by K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3601); K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22- 3601(b)(3)-(4) (life sentence and off-grid crime cases permitted to be directly taken to Supreme Court).

3 DISCUSSION

Under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504(a), a court may correct an illegal sentence at any time while that sentence is being served. A sentence is illegal when it is "[i]mposed by a court without jurisdiction; . . . does not conform to the applicable statutory provision, either in character or punishment; or . . . is ambiguous with respect to the time and manner in which it is to be served at the time it is pronounced." K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504(c)(1).

An appellate court reviews a district court's summary denial of a motion to correct an illegal sentence de novo because it has the same access to the motion, records, and files as the district court. A sentence's legality is a question of law subject to unlimited review. State v. Jackson, 314 Kan. 178, 179-80, 496 P.3d 533 (2021); see also State v. Ross, 295 Kan. 1126, Syl. ¶ 2, 289 P.3d 76 (2012) ("Interpretation of a statute raises a question of law over which an appellate court has unlimited review.").

As mentioned, Collier and the State agree the aggravated robbery sentence is illegal. They believe the applicable law required the district court to impose a postrelease supervision term by designating the aggravated robbery as the primary crime. They rely on K.S.A. 1993 Supp. 21-4720(b), which was in effect at the time of Collier's sentencing and addressed situations when a sentencing judge imposes multiple sentences consecutively. Subsection (b)(1) provided: "[T]he consecutive sentences shall consist of an imprisonment term and a supervision term. The postrelease supervision term will be based on the primary crime." And subsection (b)(2) stated, "An off-grid crime shall not be used as the primary crime in determining the base sentence when imposing multiple sentences." (Emphasis added.) And subsection (b)(7) provided: "If the sentence for the consecutive sentences is a prison term, the postrelease supervision term is a term of postrelease supervision as established for the primary crime." In their view, Collier's off-

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
513 P.3d 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collier-kan-2022.