State v. Gibson

457 P.3d 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 20, 2019
Docket120657
StatusPublished

This text of 457 P.3d 207 (State v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Gibson, 457 P.3d 207 (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

No. 120,657

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

ARDLANDERS GIBSON, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Kansas uses sentencing guidelines to help make the sentences given throughout the state consistent. The sentencing court must impose the presumptive sentence unless the judge finds substantial and compelling reasons to impose a departure sentence.

2. A statute, K.S.A. 2018 Supp. 21-6815, provides lists of mitigating and aggravating circumstances the sentencing court may consider in deciding whether to depart. Mitigating factors support downward departures; aggravating factors support upward departures. Although each list is nonexclusive, if something is listed as a factor on one of the two lists, the absence of that factor on the counterpart list means that it may not be the basis for a departure in that departure direction.

3. Because less-than-typical harm is in the list of mitigating factors but greater-than- typical harm is not included in the list of aggravating factors, greater-than-typical harm may not be the basis for an upward-departure sentence. Appeal from Geary District Court; MARITZA SEGARRA, judge. Opinion filed December 20, 2019. Sentences vacated and case remanded with directions.

James M. Latta, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Tony Cruz, assistant county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD BURGER, C.J., LEBEN and SCHROEDER, JJ.

LEBEN, J.: Ardlanders Gibson's presumptive sentence under Kansas guidelines was probation, but the district court sentenced him to prison based on the court's finding that the harm from his crimes was greater than usual. That's because Gibson's criminal use of his brother's identity led to the brother's arrest.

But the Legislature has set out lists of aggravating and mitigating factors for sentencing courts to consider. And under what it calls the statutory-counterpart rule, the Kansas Supreme Court has held that when a specific factor is set out in one of the statutory lists but not the other, the opposite factor isn't available as a reason for a departure sentence.

The Legislature included as a mitigating factor that the harm from a crime was atypical on the low side but did not include as an aggravating factor that the harm was atypical on the high side. That makes the district court's reliance on greater-than-usual harm an improper basis for a departure sentence, so we vacate Gibson's sentences and remand the case for resentencing.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Most people wouldn't know their brother's Social Security number, but Ardlanders Gibson did. So when he was arrested on drug charges, he gave his brother's name, date of birth, and Social Security number. When the man who had been arrested didn't show up for a hearing, the State issued a warrant—for the brother. And the brother was arrested.

Officers soon found that the fingerprints of the person arrested didn't match those on file. They released the brother and tracked down Gibson. And he faced two new charges—identity theft (for claiming to be his brother) and perjury (for signing a form at the jail with his brother's identity information).

Eventually, Gibson and the State entered into plea agreements in two separate criminal cases—one with the drug charges and one charging identity theft and perjury. Our state's sentencing guidelines provide a presumptive sentence for most offenses based on a sentencing grid. That grid depends on two factors—the severity level of the offense and the defendant's criminal-history score.

Under the guidelines, Gibson had a presumptive prison sentence in the drug case but a presumptive probation sentence for identity theft and perjury. The court gave Gibson a 62-month prison sentence in the drug case; that sentence is not at issue in this appeal, which is only from the case with identity theft and perjury convictions.

On the identity theft and perjury convictions, the State filed a motion for a dispositional-departure sentence of prison rather than probation. The State cited several reasons in the motion, but the main one was the arrest of Gibson's brother. And that was what the district court relied on when it granted the motion:

3 "As to the identity theft, although I can't use the elements [of the crime] to consider a departure, I certainly consider the effects of what he did on another person, and how those would be much more serious and aggravating than . . . that which would usually happen. . . . There are bench warrants that are issued for his arrest and his brother ends up getting arrested in Las Vegas. He was detained by law enforcement for a period of time until they could verify, through fingerprints, . . . that his brother was not the defendant in this matter. His actions—the Court finds substantial and compelling for this Court to—to grant a dispositional departure in this matter and remand him to prison. And the Court is going to do so."

The court sentenced Gibson to 21 months in prison for perjury (the more serious of the two felony offenses) and 8 months for identity theft. Those sentences were concurrent with each other but consecutive to the 62-month prison sentence entered in the drug case.

Gibson has appealed the sentences, arguing that the court should have given him the presumptive probation sentences.

ANALYSIS

Kansas uses sentencing guidelines to help make the sentences given throughout the state consistent. The sentencing court must impose the presumptive sentence unless the judge finds substantial and compelling reasons to impose a departure sentence. State v. Bird, 298 Kan. 393, Syl. ¶ 1, 312 P.3d 1265 (2013). That departure could either be a durational departure, meaning a sentence longer or shorter than the guidelines call for, or a dispositional departure, meaning that the defendant goes to prison instead of getting probation (or vice versa). See 298 Kan. at 397-98; State v. Ballard, 289 Kan. 1000, 1008- 09, 218 P.3d 432 (2009).

Here, the sentencing court made a dispositional departure, sending Gibson to prison even though the guidelines called for probation. The court gave a single

4 explanation for its departure: that "the effects of what he did on another person . . . [were] more serious and aggravating than . . . that which would usually happen."

Gibson argues that this reason for the departure—that the harm caused was greater than normal—cannot, as a matter of law, justify a departure sentence. That presents a legal question that we must consider independently, with no required deference to the district court. State v. Spencer, 291 Kan. 796, 807, 248 P.3d 256 (2011).

As we will explain in a moment, two Kansas Supreme Court cases control the result on that question. Before we get to them, we note that neither party discusses them in their appellate briefs. Although Gibson's general argument is that the district court's basis for the departure can never be a valid basis for a departure, he makes two specific arguments in his brief unrelated to the cases we will discuss. First, he argues that the possibility that someone might be arrested when another person uses their identity is foreseeable, so the Legislature must have factored that into account when it placed identity-theft penalties into the guidelines.

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457 P.3d 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gibson-kanctapp-2019.