State v. Hilton

311 P.3d 1161, 49 Kan. App. 2d 586
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 8, 2013
DocketNos. 102,256, 102,257
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 311 P.3d 1161 (State v. Hilton) 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. Hilton, 311 P.3d 1161, 49 Kan. App. 2d 586 (kanctapp 2013).

Opinions

Leben, J.:

Heather Hilton was put on probation in two separate felony cases, and the district court followed the parties’ agreement by making the two probations—each lasting 12 months—consecutive to one another. A month later, Hilton violated one of the conditions of her probation.

The State asked that probation be revoked in both cases and that Hilton be required to serve the prison sentences for both crimes. Hilton argued that since the probation terms were made consecutive to one another she was only serving the first probation at the time of the violation. As a result, she argued, the court could only revoke the probation for the first offense; meaning that she would only have to serve’ one of the two prison terms. The district court revoked probation in both cases and ordered her to serve both prison terms.

In this appeal, we have a single question to decide: If a district • court has ordered two consecutive probation periods and the defendant violates tire terms of probation during the first probation period, can the judge revoke both probations and order the defendant to serve both prison sentences? We conclude that the [587]*587judge can revoke both probations in this case, and we therefore affirm the district court.

Factual and Procedural Background

This case has an unusual procedural background, and we need to go through some of that to properly set tire stage to decide the legal issue presented to us. The first of Hilton’s two felony convictions at issue here came in 2006 in case No. 05CR264; she was convicted of criminal damage to property for sinldng someone else’s motorboat. She was placed on probation for 12 months with an underlying 10-month prison sentence that would be served if she didn’t successfully complete probation. A key condition of probation was that she make restitution to the boat owner. When the 12 months of probation was about to end, the court extended it for another 24 months because she still owed $15,484 in restitution. A probation can be extended when the defendant has not paid the full amount of restitution ordered by the court. See K.S.A. 21-4611(c)(7).

While still serving that probation, Hilton committed a new felony—attempted reckless aggravated batteiy—for an incident involving the spanking of a child. In the new case, No. 07CR312, Hilton was granted a 12-month probation with an underlying prison sentence of 8 months that would be served if she didn’t successfully complete the probation.

Hilton and tire State reached a written plea agreement on the new charge, but the written agreement didn’t say what would happen to the probation in the property-damage case. A joint hearing was held to determine the sentence to be imposed in the attempted-reckless-aggravated-batteiy case (the court had the option of either probation or prison) and whether to revoke her probation and send her to prison in the damage-to-property case. By law, since the new felony was committed while Hilton was on a felony probation, the district court was required to make the prison sentences in tire two cases consecutive to one another under K.S.A. 21-4608(c). Concurrent sentences share the same clock, so only the longest sentence is served; the shorter ones tick away alongside the longest sentence. Consecutive sentences run separately and [588]*588result in longer time in prison. See Wilkinson v. State, 40 Kan. App. 2d 741, 741, 195 P.3d 278 (2008). In Hilton’s situation, though, she might not have to serve the consecutive sentences if she received probation on the new felony, reinstatement of probation for the older felony, and successfully completed the probation terms.

The district court noted that Hilton, then 31 years old, had 22 prior offenses, 11 of them felonies. The court nonetheless determined that Hilton would get another chance at probation in both cases. The court recognized that the prison sentences must be consecutive to one another but initially indicated that the probation terms would be concurrent, with only the prison sentences run consecutively. But the defense attorney told the court that the parties had agreed for the probation terms to be consecutive, and the court accepted that:

The Court: “And Ms. Page, you stipulate that you violated, by this conviction, your prior probation, and you agree under your agreement with [the prosecutor] that your probation in that [earlier] case would be revoked and reinstated and the probation would run concurrently but the sentencing would run consecutive; is that correct, [prosecutor]?”
Prosecutor: “I believe Your Honor can run everything consecutive. It’s your choice. She still owes a considerable sum of money and restitution in the old case as well as this new conviction.”
Defense Attorney: “Our agreement was consecutive, Your Honor.”
The Court: “All right. The court will order that.”

The district court entered written orders in both cases, which were signed by the judge, the prosecutor, and the defense attorney. In the order on the 2005 felony, the court noted that its probation term would run consecutive to the probation on the new felony: “Probation 05CR264 consecutive to probation in 07CR312 (12 + 12 = 24 mos).” In the order on the new felony, the court made a similar note: “Probation of 12 mos consecutive to the Probation of 12 mos in 05CR264, revoked and reinstated. Total of 24 mos probation to begin today. Probation through 1/12/11 total both cases.”

The next month, Hilton admitted to her probation officer that she had been drinking in a bar, which violated the terms of her probation. After a hearing, the district court revoked her probation [589]*589in both cases and ordered that she serve the underlying, consecutive prison sentences. The district court rejected her argument that it had authority only to revoke die first of the two consecutive probation terms.

Hilton appealed to this court, but there were substantial delays in getting transcripts of court hearings prepared and in the attorneys for each side getting their briefs on file. By the time the case was ready to be heard in our court, Hilton had already served her prison sentence, so our court dismissed the case as moot. But the Kansas Supreme Court reversed that decision, concluding that there was an issue of public importance presented in this case that is capable of repetition, and it remanded the case to us for our consideration. State v. Hilton, 295 Kan. 845, 851-52, 286 P.3d 871 (2012).

Analysis

Hilton contends that the district court could not revoke the probation in both cases because—given the consecutive nature of the probation terms—one of the probation periods had not yet begun. According to Hilton, there is no statutory authority to revoke a probation that has not yet commenced, so the district court could not revoke probation in one of the cases (the one in which the probation was to be served second in time).

The State contends that when probation terms are ordered to run consecutively, they actually are both served together initially.

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Related

State v. Hilton
349 P.3d 475 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
311 P.3d 1161, 49 Kan. App. 2d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hilton-kanctapp-2013.