State v. Smith

CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 24, 2026
Docket129160
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Smith (State v. Smith) 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. Smith, (kan 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 129,160

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

ROBERT EDWARD SMITH, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

The decision to review an unpreserved claim under an exception is a prudential one. Even if an exception would support a decision to review a new claim, an appellate court has no obligation to do so.

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; JEFFREY SYRIOS, judge. Submitted without oral argument April 9, 2026. Opinion filed April 24, 2026. Affirmed.

Sam Schirer, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, was on the brief for appellant.

Kristi D. Allen, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, were on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

STANDRIDGE, J.: On February 14, 2025, this court affirmed Robert Smith's convictions arising from the 2016 home invasion and murder of Donna O'Neal but vacated his sentence after concluding that the district court improperly included his 2003 criminal-threat conviction in his criminal history score.

1 On remand, the district court recalculated Smith's criminal history score without considering the 2003 criminal-threat conviction, reducing Smith's criminal history score from A to B. Based on the corrected criminal history score, the court resentenced Smith to life without parole eligibility for 618 months on the felony-murder count, along with a consecutive 231-month determinate sentence on the remaining counts under the Kansas Sentencing Guidelines Act (KSGA).

Smith appeals from that resentencing, arguing for the first time on appeal that the KSGA violates his federal and state constitutional right to a jury trial because a judge, rather than a jury, determines prior convictions used to enhance punishment. We do not address the merits of these unpreserved constitutional claims because the governing law is already well settled and forecloses relief. Smith also argues the journal entry from his resentencing should be corrected to include 627 more days of jail credit accrued between sentencing and resentencing. A recent addition to the record by the State, however, reflects the district court filed a nunc pro tunc journal entry on January 26, 2026, correcting the jail time award by adding the 627 days between sentencing and resentencing. This nunc pro tunc order renders Smith's second issue moot.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Underlying convictions and first appeal

A jury convicted Smith of first-degree felony murder, aggravated burglary, attempted aggravated robbery, two counts of aggravated assault, and criminal possession of a weapon arising from the October 2016 home invasion and killing of Donna O'Neal. The first jury trial ended in a mistrial, but a second trial resulted in convictions on all counts. At the original sentencing, the district court overruled Smith's objection to the use of a 2003 criminal-threat conviction to calculate his criminal history score, found his criminal history to be A, and imposed a life sentence without parole eligibility for 653

2 months on the off-grid felony-murder count, together with a consecutive determinate sentence of 241 months on the five remaining grid counts. Smith appealed.

On direct appeal, this court affirmed Smith's convictions but held that his 2003 criminal-threat conviction could not be used to calculate his criminal history score. We relied on K.S.A. 21-6810(d)(9), which provides that prior convictions under a statute later found unconstitutional by an appellate court may not be used for criminal history scoring purposes. We adopted a "literal reading" of that provision, meaning reckless criminal- threat convictions cannot be included because this court previously held that portion of the statute unconstitutional in State v. Boettger, 310 Kan. 800, 822, 450 P.3d 805 (2019). Because Smith challenged the use of this prior conviction in calculating his criminal history score and the State failed to prove that his 2003 conviction arose under a constitutional portion of the statute after Boettger, we held the district court erred in including it in Smith's criminal history score. We vacated the sentence and remanded the matter "with directions not to include Smith's 2003 criminal threat conviction in Smith's criminal history score." State v. Smith, 320 Kan. 62, 91, 563 P.3d 697 (2025).

Proceedings on remand

The mandate issued March 18, 2025, and resentencing occurred on May 2, 2025. The district court began by summarizing the remand and noting the original presentence investigation report assigned Smith a criminal history score of A based on three person felonies, one of which was the criminal-threat conviction the Supreme Court had now excluded. The district court concluded that without that conviction, Smith's criminal- history score was B. Both parties agreed B was the correct score under the mandate.

The State argued resentencing was essentially "an arithmetic question" and asked the court to keep the same sentencing choices—aggravated terms within the grid box and consecutive structure—while recalculating only those numbers affected by the A-to-B

3 change. Defense counsel responded that because the Supreme Court had vacated all sentences, "the entire subject matter of sentencing" was again before the court. For this reason, the defense renewed its motion for departure filed at the original sentencing and argued broad equitable considerations in support, including that the first trial ended in a hung jury and retrial had involved contested identification and evidentiary issues. The State objected, claiming counsel's arguments fell outside the scope of remand. The district court allowed the argument, at least effectively as a proffer, but ultimately denied Smith's renewed departure motion, stating that "nothing has changed" and that no substantial and compelling basis justified departure. Relevant here, Smith did not argue at resentencing that Kansas' general use of criminal history is unconstitutional.

The district court then resentenced Smith and recalculated the sentencing ranges for the two counts affected by the change in criminal history from A to B. On count 1, first-degree murder, the court imposed life imprisonment with parole eligibility after 618 months, explaining that the aggravated number had decreased from 653 months because Smith's criminal history was now B. On count 2, aggravated burglary, the court imposed the aggravated term of 162 months rather than the previously imposed 172 months. The court reimposed the remaining grid sentences, ordered them to run consecutive to the off- grid sentence, and announced a controlling sentence of 849 months.

Smith appeals from the sentences imposed on remand.

ANALYSIS

Smith raises two issues on appeal from resentencing. First, he argues the district court violated his federal and state constitutional jury-trial rights by increasing his punishment based on judicial findings about his prior convictions. Second, he argues the journal entry should be corrected to include 627 more days of jail credit accrued between sentencing and resentencing.

4 I. Constitutional right to a jury trial

The scope of Smith's appeal on this issue is narrow and should be clarified at the outset. Notably, he does not challenge the district court's compliance with the Supreme Court's limited remand or argue that resentencing should have been an open-ended proceeding.

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State v. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-kan-2026.