State v. Warren

412 P.3d 993, 307 Kan. 609
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 2018
Docket115972
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 412 P.3d 993 (State v. Warren) 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. Warren, 412 P.3d 993, 307 Kan. 609 (kan 2018).

Opinion

The decision of the court was delivered by Nuss, C.J.:

**609 Cedric Warren challenges his resentencing after the original hard 50 life sentence for his premeditated first-degree murder conviction was held unconstitutional and vacated on appeal. On remand the district court imposed a hard 25 life sentence (lifetime sentence without the possibility of parole for 25 years) for that conviction and ran it consecutive to his sentences for his two on-grid crimes. For those crimes, the court also changed his two nonvacated sentences in length and sequence.

Warren asserts that our holding in State v. Guder , 293 Kan. 763 , 267 P.3d 751 (2012) -together with the Kansas Sentencing Guidelines Act, K.S.A. 21-4701 et seq. (KSGA)-bars the district court from resentencing on any nonvacated counts. The State primarily responds that Guder should be overruled.

**610 We affirm Guder . We also disagree with the State's contention that even if the nonvacated sentences must be reinstated under Guder , the vacated sentence for the premeditated first-degree murder conviction can be changed from running concurrent with the sentences to the other crimes to running consecutive to them.

So we again vacate and remand for resentencing. In short, Warren's original sentences for second-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder shall be reinstated and they shall run concurrent with his new hard 25 sentence for premeditated first-degree murder.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

For acts that occurred on February 13, 2009, Cedric Warren was convicted of: (1) premeditated first-degree murder, an off-grid felony; (2) second-degree murder, an on-grid severity level one person felony; and (3) attempted first-degree murder, another on-grid severity level one person felony. Warren's original sentences included a hard 50 life sentence for his premeditated first-degree murder conviction and 155 months for each of his other two convictions, both of which were ordered to be served concurrently with the hard 50 sentence.

*995 In State v. Soto , 299 Kan. 102 , 322 P.3d 334 (2014), this court later determined that Kansas' hard 50 sentencing statute was unconstitutional pursuant to the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Alleyne v. United States , 570 U.S. 99 , 111-17, 133 S.Ct. 2151 , 186 L.Ed. 2d 314 (2013). Alleyne held that a person's right to a jury trial under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires that any fact increasing a mandatory minimum sentence for a crime must be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Given that our hard 50 procedure allowed a judge to find the existence of one or more aggravating factors instead of requiring a jury to find those factors beyond a reasonable doubt, that procedure violated the Sixth Amendment. 299 Kan. at 124 , 322 P.3d 334 .

This unconstitutional sentencing procedure had been used in Warren's case where-before barred by Alleyne and Soto -the sentencing judge rather than the jury made the necessary factual findings that resulted in the increased sentence. As such, his three **611 convictions were affirmed but the hard 50 life sentence was vacated and the case was remanded for resentencing. State v. Warren , 302 Kan. 601 , 624, 356 P.3d 396 (2015).

On remand, the State had two options. First, it could seek reimposition of the hard 50 sentence for Warren's premeditated first-degree murder conviction. This option would require impaneling a jury and presenting it with facts to support the requested sentence. Or second, the State could seek a lesser sentence for that conviction, i.e., one which the judge could constitutionally impose without a jury. The State chose the latter path.

In effect, at Warren's resentencing the district court treated the remand order as having vacated all three of Warren's sentences. It imposed a hard 25 for the premeditated first-degree murder conviction and 150 months for each of the other two convictions. It also orally ordered the entire sequence changed-"that the sentences run consecutively," not concurrent as originally imposed. See Love v. State , 280 Kan. 553 , 560, 124 P.3d 32 (2005) (criminal sentence is effective when pronounced from the bench).

The later journal entry memorializes that count 2 (murder in the second degree, intentional) is to run consecutive to count 1 (murder in the first degree). It further provides that count 3 (attempted murder in the first degree) is to run consecutive to counts 1 and 2. It recaps the "Total Prison Term" as "Life (hard 25) + 300 mos," i.e., consecutive sentences.

This court's jurisdiction is provided by K.S.A. 22-3601(b)(3) (life sentence imposed).

ANALYSIS

Issue: The district court erred in resentencing Warren's two nonvacated on-grid sentences and ordering all three counts to run consecutive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
412 P.3d 993, 307 Kan. 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warren-kan-2018.