State v. Lopez-Palomares

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 2, 2026
Docket128933
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Lopez-Palomares (State v. Lopez-Palomares) 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. Lopez-Palomares, (kanctapp 2026).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 128,933

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

CHRISTIAN LOPEZ-PALOMARES, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; JEFFREY SYRIOS, judge. Submitted without oral argument. Opinion filed July 2, 2026. Sentence vacated in part and case remanded with directions.

Korey A. Kaul, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Julie A. Koon, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., ARNOLD-BURGER, J., and ANDREA PURVIS, District Judge, assigned.

PER CURIAM: Christian Lopez-Palomares appeals the district court's jail credit calculation. He claims the district court erred when it denied him jail credit for all the time he spent incarcerated in this case. Because we find that Lopez-Palomares' sentence is controlled by the law in effect at the time he committed his crime, we vacate the district court's ruling on jail credit and remand for application of jail credit consistent with this opinion.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 1, 2024, Christian Lopez-Palomares entered guilty pleas and was convicted of two amended counts of aggravated indecent solicitation of a child. Both crimes occurred on April 22, 2024. At sentencing on December 16, 2024, the district court ordered Lopez-Palomares to serve consecutive 34-month prison sentences for the two counts and that these sentences run "consecutive to any other cases." The district court, at the sentencing hearing, ordered credit for time served "that's allowed by statute or case law." Later the district court signed the journal entry of judgment, which denied him jail credit for 12 days he served in jail while this case was pending. The denial of credit is evidenced by the court's note on the journal entry that "[f]or dates above not awarded, defendant held on 22JV106." Lopez-Palomares directly appeals based solely on the district court's order denying him 12 days of jail credit in this case.

ANALYSIS

Lopez-Palomares challenges the denial of jail credit, but he does so for the first time on appeal. Generally, an issue must be raised in the district court to preserve it for appeal. State v. Green, 315 Kan. 178, 182, 505 P.3d 377 (2022). One exception to this rule is that the appellate court may review a new claim that raises only a question of law based on uncontested facts. State v. Rhoiney, 314 Kan. 497, 500, 501 P.3d 368 (2021). Lopez-Palomares invokes this exception. We agree to consider his claim.

On April 22, 2024, the date on which the offenses committed by Lopez-Palomares occurred, the statute controlling jail credit was K.S.A. 21-6615(a), which stated that when sentencing the defendant to confinement the judge will compute a sentencing date and that sentencing date "shall be established to reflect and shall be computed as an allowance for the time which the defendant has spent incarcerated pending the disposition of the defendant's case." The Kansas Supreme Court, first in State v. Hopkins, 317 Kan.

2 652, 652, 537 P.3d 845 (2023), and later in State v. Ervin, 320 Kan. 287, 311-12, 566 P.3d 481 (2025), interpreted K.S.A. 21-6615(a) to require a district court to award one day of credit for each day a defendant spends in jail pending disposition of the case regardless of whether some of that jail time was also granted in another case.

But between the time the offenses were committed and Lopez-Palomares' sentencing date in December 2024, the Kansas Legislature amended K.S.A. 21-6615 to make an exception to the original language of the statute making an allowance for the time which the defendant spent incarcerated pending the disposition of the defendant's case to exclude "[a]ny time awarded as credit in another case when consecutive sentences are imposed on a defendant." L. 2024, ch. 96, § 7; K.S.A. 2024 Supp. 21-6615(a)(2)(A). Although there is nothing in the record to suggest the district court judge was relying on retroactive application of the amended statute to deny jail credit, the State argues its application in its appellate brief.

"'[T]he fundamental rule for sentencing is that the person convicted of a crime is sentenced in accordance with the sentencing provisions in effect at the time the crime was committed.'" State v. McLinn, 307 Kan. 307, 337, 409 P.3d 1 (2018) (quoting State v. Overton, 279 Kan. 547, 561, 112 P.3d 244 [2005]). Moreover, "a statute operates prospectively unless its language clearly indicates that the legislature intended it to operate retroactively." State v. Ford, 262 Kan. 206, 208, 936 P.2d 255 (1997).

In this case, Lopez-Palomares' crimes occurred on April 22, 2024, so the sentencing statute that applies is K.S.A. 21-6615(a). Although the statute was later amended, there is no language in K.S.A. 2024 Supp. 21-6615 applying the amendments retroactively to pending cases and in the absence of such language a claim of retroactivity necessarily fails. See State v. Sutherland, 248 Kan. 96, 106, 804 P.2d 970 (1991) ("The fundamental rule is that a statute operates prospectively unless its language clearly indicates that the legislature intended it to operate retroactively."). Although we are under 3 no obligation to rule the same as other panels of this court, the same retroactivity argument raised by the State here has been rejected by several panels of this court. See State v. Mitchell, 66 Kan. App. 2d 196, 207, 579 P.3d 970 (2025) ("In short, K.S.A. 2024 Supp. 21-6615[a] includes no language indicating that the legislature intended to apply it retroactively to pending cases awaiting sentencing. In the absence of any such indication, the 2024 amendments apply only to sentences for crimes committed on or after May 23, 2024."), rev. granted 321 Kan. 793 (2026); see also State v. Owens, No. 128,059, 2026 WL 850143, at *2-3 (Kan. App. 2026) (unpublished opinion) (discussing the same and applying the holding in Mitchell), petition for rev. filed April 27, 2026. We find these cases persuasive and adopt their conclusion that K.S.A. 2024 Supp. 21-6615 does not apply retroactively. See State v. Fleming, 308 Kan. 689, 706, 423 P.3d 506 (2018) (noting that one panel of the Court of Appeals may disagree with a previous panel of the same court, although it may find the reasoning persuasive).

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Related

State v. Ford
936 P.2d 255 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1997)
State v. Sutherland
804 P.2d 970 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1991)
State v. Overton
112 P.3d 244 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2005)
State v. Fleming
423 P.3d 506 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2018)
State v. Rhoiney
501 P.3d 368 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2021)
State v. Patton
503 P.3d 1022 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2022)
State v. Hopkins
537 P.3d 845 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2023)
State v. Ervin
566 P.3d 481 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2025)

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State v. Lopez-Palomares, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lopez-palomares-kanctapp-2026.