State v. McCormick ( 2016 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 109,985
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    CHRISTIAN J. MCCORMICK,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    Evidence of the condition and appearance of a teenage girl who was not the victim
    of the charged rape was relevant and admissible in this prosecution for rape and unlawful
    hosting of minors consuming alcohol.
    2.
    The defendant's sentence must be vacated and his case remanded for resentencing,
    when the district judge explicitly stated that he relied on an aggravating factor in deciding
    whether to depart to the sentencing guidelines grid from a life sentence with a 25-year
    mandatory minimum under Jessica's Law.
    Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed October 10,
    2014. Appeal from Sumner District Court; WILLIAM R. MOTT, judge. Opinion filed September 9, 2016.
    Judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    Judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Convictions affirmed, sentence
    vacated, and case remanded for resentencing.
    1
    Christina M. Kerls, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the brief
    for appellant.
    Kerwin L. Spencer, county attorney, argued the cause, and Matthew B. Metcalf, deputy county
    attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were on the brief for appellee.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    BEIER, J.: Defendant Christian J. McCormick appeals from his jury convictions
    for rape and unlawful hosting of minors consuming alcohol.
    McCormick asserts three errors on petition for review from the Court of Appeals
    decision affirming the district court's judgment: (1) the district judge violated his right to
    a fair trial by admitting evidence concerning the condition and appearance of a teenage
    girl who was not the victim of the charged rape; (2) the district judge erred in considering
    an aggravating factor when deciding whether to depart from Jessica's Law; and (3) the
    district judge abused his discretion by denying McCormick's motion for downward
    dispositional and durational departure.
    We reject McCormick's first claim of error and affirm his convictions. We vacate
    his sentence and remand to the district court for resentencing because of the judge's
    statement that an aggravating factor "trumped" mitigators advanced by McCormick.
    Given our decision to remand, we do not reach McCormick's third claim of error.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This case arose out of a small January 2012 gathering in McCormick's basement.
    Nineteen-year-old McCormick was joined by 19-year-old Seth LeClair and two 13-year-
    2
    old girls, B.P. and K.C. B.P. and K.C. had given the boys money to purchase alcohol for
    them to drink at McCormick's house that evening.
    Everyone present drank multiple shots of vodka. B.P. would later testify that she
    remembered only that she then lay down on a chair and fell asleep. K.C. would testify
    that she remembered dancing after drinking. Neither girl remembered any sexual activity
    with McCormick or LeClair.
    While B.P. and K.C. were at McCormick's, K.C.'s father called a friend of K.C.,
    M. Z., looking for his daughter. M.Z. learned through another friend that K.C. had gone
    to McCormick's house, and M.Z. and her mother drove over. After overcoming initial
    resistance from McCormick, M.Z. made her way to the basement and saw both B.P. and
    K.C.
    B.P. woke up when M.Z. entered the room, but M.Z. could not rouse K.C. because
    of K.C.'s intoxication. With help from McCormick and LeClair, M.Z. carried K.C.
    upstairs, and K.C. was taken to the hospital.
    When B.P. awakened, she was not wearing her pants. She got dressed and went
    home. B.P.'s mother noticed B.P.'s intoxication and contacted police. A responding
    officer spoke with B.P. and recommended that she go to the hospital to undergo a rape
    examination. B.P. followed the officer's recommendation.
    The sexual assault nurse examiner who examined B.P. would later testify that she
    gathered biological evidence, including a swab of B.P.'s labia. A biologist at the Kansas
    Bureau of Investigation (KBI) would later testify about testing the biological material in
    this case, including a buccal swab from McCormick and the swab from B.P.'s labia.
    McCormick's DNA matched DNA found on B.P.'s labia.
    3
    Based on what the officer had learned from B.P., he went to McCormick's home.
    McCormick agreed to go to the police station with the officer. The officer read
    McCormick his Miranda rights, and McCormick agreed to talk to him. McCormick
    admitted that he had given the girls' money to LeClair's brother so that LeClair's brother
    could purchase alcohol. He also admitted that he had had sexual intercourse with B.P.
    The State charged McCormick with rape and unlawful hosting of minors
    consuming alcohol.
    At McCormick's trial, M.Z. testified about K.C.'s condition and appearance when
    she found her at McCormick's house:
    "Q: Can you describe how [K.C.] appeared?
    "A: She didn't have any pants on.
    "Q: Okay. When you say she didn’t have any pants on, can you tell us what you mean?
    "A: She was naked from the waist down.
    "Q: Okay. So she didn't have anything on at all?
    "A: Huh uh.
    "Q: Were you able to see her vagina?
    "A: If you stood in front of her, yes.
    "Q: Okay. Could you describe how she was positioned on the floor?
    4
    "A: She was sitting on her side up against the couch and her head just kind of slouched
    over.
    "Q: She was sitting on her side?
    "A: Um huh.
    "Q: Were you able to wake [K.C.]?
    "A: No."
    At this point, defense counsel objected to the relevance of evidence about K.C.'s
    condition and appearance because she was "not the alleged victim in this case." The
    district judge determined the evidence was relevant to the "general scene down in the
    basement" and overruled the objection.
    McCormick did not present any evidence, and the jury convicted him on both
    counts.
    Before sentencing, McCormick moved for a downward durational departure to the
    sentencing guidelines grid from life in prison with a mandatory 25-year minimum under
    Jessica's Law, K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627. He argued that mitigating circumstances
    established substantial and compelling reasons warranting the departure, specifically, (1)
    he had no criminal history; (2) B.P. had willingly participated in consuming alcohol and
    had provided money for the alcohol, which contributed to the offense; (3) he also had
    consumed a significant amount of alcohol, which affected his capacity to appreciate the
    criminality of his conduct; and (4) he was young at the time of the crime. McCormick
    also sought a further downward departure—from the midpoint of the grid sentence range
    to half that amount of prison time.
    5
    The State agreed that the district judge should depart from the Jessica's Law life
    sentence to the grid. It made no recommendation on the number of months of
    imprisonment.
    The district judge discussed the mitigating factors advanced by McCormick but
    emphasized, "The problem is there's an aggravating factor here," B.P.'s extreme
    intoxication during the sexual intercourse. The judge said that the intoxication had been
    proved by B.P.'s credible testimony about the amount of alcohol she consumed and her
    lack of memory of the sexual activity. While acknowledging that McCormick's
    sentencing presented a "close case" and remarking that such a case was "probably why
    you don't have to prove consent with 13 year olds," the judge ultimately concluded:
    "[E]ven though there are some substantial mitigating factors, I think it's just trumped by
    the . . . evidence that this particular [13-year-old] was severely inebriated to the point
    where she couldn't . . . give consent. So I haven't heard anything that makes me think I
    should go ahead and . . . find substantial and compelling reasons for departure . . . ."
    McCormick thus received a Jessica's Law life sentence for the rape and a
    concurrent one-year sentence in county jail for unlawful hosting of the gathering in his
    basement.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed. State v. McCormick, No. 109,985, 
    2014 WL 5312882
    (Kan. App. 2014) (unpublished opinion).
    DISCUSSION
    We take up the first two of McCormick's appellate issues in the order he raised
    them in his Court of Appeals brief and his petition for review.
    6
    Relevance of Evidence on K.C.'s Condition and Appearance
    McCormick argues on appeal that the district judge erred in allowing the jury to
    consider evidence that K.C. was found naked from the waist down with her vagina
    exposed. He contends that the evidence was both irrelevant and more prejudicial than
    probative.
    McCormick's first problem on this issue is that his trial objection questioned only
    relevance and not the prejudicial impact of this evidence. He argues that State v. Wells,
    
    289 Kan. 1219
    , 1227, 
    221 P.3d 561
    (2009), supports his view that this court should treat
    the district judge's act of weighing prejudice and probative value as inherent in the
    evaluation of relevance.
    Wells is not helpful to McCormick. It dealt with the steps a district judge must
    follow to evaluate the propriety of admitting evidence of a criminal defendant's prior bad
    acts, not the type of evidence we are considering here; and, if anything, it demonstrated
    that relevance and prejudice are separate 
    considerations. 289 Kan. at 1226-27
    . Thus we
    conclude that McCormick's appellate argument on prejudice is unpreserved by a proper,
    timely objection and we will not consider it. See K.S.A. 60-404; State v. Gaona, 
    293 Kan. 930
    , 954, 
    270 P.3d 1165
    (2012) (party must make specific contemporaneous
    objection to admission of testimony to preserve issue for appeal).
    Our standard of review on McCormick's relevance challenge is set out in State v.
    Coones, 
    301 Kan. 64
    , 77-78, 
    339 P.3d 375
    (2014):
    "Relevant evidence is that which has 'any tendency in reason to prove any material fact.'
    K.S.A. 60-401(b).
    7
    "Relevance has two elements: probative value and materiality. State v. Marks,
    
    297 Kan. 131
    , 142, 
    298 P.3d 1102
    (2013). Evidence is probative if it furnishes,
    establishes, or contributes toward proof. Probativity is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    Evidence is material if it tends to establish a fact that is at issue and is significant under
    the substantive law of the case. Materiality is reviewed de 
    novo. 297 Kan. at 142
    ."
    In State v. Flynn, 
    274 Kan. 473
    , 496, 
    55 P.3d 324
    (2002), this court discussed
    whether evidence is relevant and admissible:
    "Relevancy is more a matter of logic and experience than of law. Evidence is relevant if it
    renders the desired inference more probable than it would be without the evidence, or if it
    has any tendency in reason to prove any material fact. State v. Sexton, 
    256 Kan. 344
    , 349,
    
    886 P.2d 811
    (1994)."
    McCormick argues that the evidence about K.C.'s condition and appearance would
    not help the jury decide whether McCormick had sexual intercourse with B.P. We are
    highly skeptical of that argument, but, even if we assume its merit, it is vital to remember
    that the alleged rape of B.P. was not the only charge McCormick's jury was considering.
    The jury also would need to decide whether McCormick had unlawfully hosted minors
    consuming alcohol, and the district judge could have admitted the evidence as probative
    and material on that charge as well. M.Z.'s evidence that K.C. was found naked from the
    waist down with her vagina exposed was highly relevant to her intoxication. Logic and
    experience tell us that a sober female teenager would not ordinarily allow herself to be
    seen in such a state by anyone who happened to enter the basement. This evidence tended
    to establish a fact that was at issue and was significant under the substantive law of the
    case. 
    Coones, 301 Kan. at 78
    . It was therefore relevant, and the district judge did not err
    in admitting it.
    8
    Consideration of Aggravating Factor on Departure from Jessica's Law
    McCormick next argues that the district judge erred by considering an aggravating
    factor when he was determining whether to grant McCormick's motion for a downward
    departure.
    This issue requires us to interpret K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1). Statutory
    interpretation raises a question of law over which this court has unlimited review. State v.
    Holt, 
    298 Kan. 469
    , 474, 
    313 P.3d 826
    (2013).
    K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1) provides that "for a first time conviction of an
    offense listed in subsection (a)(1), the sentencing judge shall impose the mandatory
    minimum term of imprisonment provided by subsection (a), unless the judge finds
    substantial and compelling reasons, following a review of mitigating circumstances, to
    impose a departure." (Emphasis added.) McCormick suggests that the emphasized
    language means a district judge is forbidden from considering aggravating factors.
    This court's recent decision in State v. Jolly, 
    301 Kan. 313
    , 
    342 P.3d 935
    (2015), is
    dispositive of this issue. In Jolly, we considered K.S.A. 21-4643(d), the predecessor of
    K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1) (statute recodified). We said:
    "Indeed, the language of the statute is straightforward: '[T]he sentencing judge shall
    impose the mandatory minimum term of imprisonment . . . unless the judge finds
    substantial and compelling reasons, following a review of mitigating circumstances, to
    impose a departure.' (Emphasis added.) K.S.A. 21-4643(d). The statute makes no
    provision for the weighing of aggravating circumstances against the mitigating
    circumstances to determine if a departure should be imposed. In this way, the statute is
    unique[,] as other sentencing statutes consider both mitigating and aggravating factors.
    See K.S.A. 21-4716(c)(1) and (c)(2) (nonexclusive list of aggravating and mitigating
    9
    factors to consider when considering departure from presumptive sentence under Kansas
    Sentencing Guidelines Act [KSGA]); see also . . . K.S.A. 21-4624(c) [sentencing for
    capital crimes]; K.S.A. 21-4625 (listing aggravating circumstances); K.S.A. 21-4626
    (listing mitigating circumstances).
    "In State v. Spencer, 
    291 Kan. 796
    , 809, 
    248 P.3d 256
    (2011), we discussed the
    differences in these sentencing statutes when compared to K.S.A. 21-4643(d) and
    explained why a Jessica's Law departure does not involve a balancing of mitigating and
    aggravating factors:
    "'On structure, no balance between mitigators and aggravators
    such as that implied in K.S.A. 21-4716 or explicitly provided for in
    K.S.A. 21-4624(e) or K.S.A. 21-4635(b)-(d) is necessary when Jessica's
    Law is the starting point. The only way for Jessica's Law to operate is to
    intensify, if not lengthen, a sentence. It makes 25 years a mandatory
    minimum, unless certain mitigators justify a departure. Simply put, there
    is nowhere to go but to a less-intense place.'
    "We are aware that both before and after our decision in Spencer, our cases have
    discussed the weighing of aggravating factors in Jessica's Law cases. See, e.g., State v.
    Remmert, 
    298 Kan. 621
    , 630, 
    316 P.3d 154
    (2014) (court considers mitigating
    circumstances and then weighs against any aggravating circumstances); State v. Seward,
    
    289 Kan. 715
    , 722, 
    217 P.3d 443
    (2009) (district judge reviewed mitigating and
    aggravating factors advanced, engaging in appropriate weighing of competing
    considerations). However, we now clarify that the plain language of K.S.A. 21-4643(d),
    which makes no reference to 'aggravating circumstances' or aggravating factors, instructs
    the sentencing court to conduct a review of the mitigating circumstances without
    balancing them against the aggravating ones.
    "Accordingly, we disapprove of any language in our caselaw that would indicate
    aggravating circumstances can be weighed against mitigating circumstances when
    considering a departure in a Jessica's Law sentencing. See, e.g., 
    Remmert, 298 Kan. at 630
    (district court considers mitigating circumstances and then weighs against any
    10
    aggravating circumstances); State v. Florentin, 
    297 Kan. 594
    , 598, 
    303 P.3d 263
    (2013)
    (district court reviews mitigating circumstances and then weighs those circumstances
    against norm defined by legislature and any aggravating circumstances); State v. Salinas,
    
    294 Kan. 743
    , 749, 
    280 P.3d 221
    (2012) (even though there were mitigating factors to be
    weighed, there were significant offsetting aggravating factors); State v. Baptist, 
    294 Kan. 728
    , 734, 
    280 P.3d 210
    (2012) (district court does not simply add together total number
    of mitigating circumstances and then contrast them with total number of aggravating
    circumstances); State v. Roberts, 
    293 Kan. 1093
    , 1098, 
    272 P.3d 24
    (2012) (district court
    complied with its duty to review both mitigating and aggravating circumstances);
    
    Seward, 289 Kan. at 722
    (district judge orally reviewed mitigating and aggravating
    factors advanced, engaging in appropriate weighing of competing considerations).
    ....
    ". . . The sentencing judge is to consider information that reasonably might bear
    on the proper sentence for a particular defendant, given the crime committed, including
    the manner or way in which an offender carried out the crime. This includes those
    'circumstances inherent in the crime and the prescribed sentence.' See 
    Florentin, 297 Kan. at 598
    . Provided the sentence imposed is within the statutory limits, '"[i]t is the
    sentencing judge alone who determines the appropriate sentence to be imposed or other
    disposition of the case by exercising his or her best judgment, common sense, and
    judicial discretion after considering all of the reports, the defendant's background, the
    facts of the case, and the public safety."' (Emphasis added.) State v. Frecks, 
    294 Kan. 738
    , 742, 
    280 P.3d 217
    (2012) (quoting State v. Vanderveen, 
    259 Kan. 836
    , 842, 
    915 P.2d 57
    [1996])." 
    Jolly, 301 Kan. at 321-24
    .
    The State argues before us that Jolly permits us to affirm McCormick's sentence
    because it specifically noted that a district judge could consider the manner in which a
    crime is committed and the "'circumstances inherent in the 
    crime.'" 301 Kan. at 324
    .
    McCormick counters that the only aspects of a crime that may be considered under
    K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1) are the strict legal elements.
    11
    The State has the better half of this argument. The manner in which a crime is
    committed and the circumstances inherent in the crime are not inevitably limited to the
    strict legal elements of the offense. But where, as here, the district judge explicitly
    referred to the piece of evidence that persuaded him as an "aggravating factor," we cannot
    be wholly confident that the statutory command not to conduct weighing of aggravators
    and mitigators was followed. As we said in Jolly, the sentencing judge may consider the
    manner in which a crime is committed and the circumstances inherent in the crime, as
    well as whether mitigators that are substantial and compelling justify a departure from
    Jessica's Law. But the judge may not weigh aggravators and mitigators. That is exactly
    what the judge himself said he was doing in this case.
    Because the transcript of McCormick's sentencing compels us to conclude that the
    district judge applied the wrong legal standard, we vacate McCormick's sentence and
    remand for resentencing on both of his convictions.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons discussed above, we affirm defendant Christian J. McCormick's
    convictions. We vacate his sentence and remand to the district court for resentencing.
    ***
    STEGALL, J., dissenting: I cannot agree with the statutory gloss put on K.S.A.
    2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1) by this court in State v. Jolly, 
    301 Kan. 313
    , 
    342 P.3d 935
    (2015). Therefore, I dissent from the portion of today's decision that relies on that gloss to
    vacate Christian J. McCormick's sentence.
    12
    The Jessica's Law sentencing statute applicable here simply provides: "[T]he
    sentencing judge shall impose the mandatory minimum term of imprisonment . . . unless
    the judge finds substantial and compelling reasons, following a review of mitigating
    circumstances, to impose a departure." K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1). We
    acknowledged in State v. Spencer, 
    291 Kan. 796
    , 809, 
    248 P.3d 256
    (2011), that
    "no balance between mitigators and aggravators . . . is necessary when Jessica's Law is
    the starting point. The only way for Jessica's Law to operate is to intensify, if not
    lengthen, a sentence. It makes 25 years [imprisonment] a mandatory minimum, unless
    certain mitigators justify a departure. Simply put, there is nowhere to go but to a less-
    intense place."
    The Jolly court expanded on this plain language and common sense reading of the
    statutory language and interpreted it as an instruction to "the sentencing court to conduct
    a review of the mitigating circumstances without balancing them against the aggravating
    
    ones." 301 Kan. at 322
    . And in today's decision, this instruction-from-silence evolves
    further into a "statutory command not to conduct weighing of aggravators and
    mitigators." (Emphasis added.) Slip op. at 12.
    Our caselaw is replete with recitations of the rule of statutory interpretation that
    absent an ambiguity, the plain meaning of the words chosen by the legislature will
    control and courts will not add words to the law. See State v. Barlow, 
    303 Kan. 804
    , 813,
    
    368 P.3d 331
    (2016); State v. Jordan, 
    303 Kan. 1017
    , 1019, 
    370 P.3d 417
    (2016); State v.
    Keel, 
    302 Kan. 560
    , 572, 
    357 P.3d 251
    (2015); State v. Reese, 
    300 Kan. 650
    , 653, 
    333 P.3d 149
    (2014); State v. Brooks, 
    298 Kan. 672
    , 685, 
    317 P.3d 54
    (2014); State v. King,
    
    297 Kan. 955
    , 971-72, 
    305 P.3d 641
    (2013); State v. Brown, 
    295 Kan. 181
    , Syl. ¶ 5, 
    284 P.3d 977
    (2012); State v. Coman, 
    294 Kan. 84
    , 92, 
    273 P.3d 701
    (2012); State v.
    Fredrick, 
    292 Kan. 169
    , 174-75, 
    251 P.3d 48
    (2011); State v. Urban, 
    291 Kan. 214
    , 216,
    
    239 P.3d 837
    (2010); State v. Ortega-Cadelan, 
    287 Kan. 157
    , 164, 
    194 P.3d 1195
    (2008);
    13
    State v. Gumfory, 
    281 Kan. 1168
    , 1174, 
    135 P.3d 1191
    (2006); State v. Post, 
    279 Kan. 664
    , 666, 
    112 P.3d 116
    (2005); State v. Harper, 
    275 Kan. 888
    , 891, 
    69 P.3d 1105
    (2003);
    State v. Brown, 
    272 Kan. 843
    , 846-47, 
    35 P.3d 910
    (2001); State v. Proffitt, 
    261 Kan. 526
    , 532, 
    930 P.2d 1059
    (1997). Today's decision and Jolly's holding cannot be squared
    with this rule. The plain, unambiguous language of K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6627(d)(1)
    merely tells the district court judge to determine whether substantial and compelling
    reasons exist to grant a downward departure after reviewing the mitigating circumstances.
    It does not command a weighing of aggravating and mitigating factors—but neither does
    it prohibit such a weighing. This court has read that "command" into the law with no
    textual support in the statutory scheme.
    What could it mean for a district judge to determine whether substantial and
    compelling reasons exist to grant a departure if the judge is limited solely to a review of
    mitigating circumstances considered in a vacuum—with no contextual relationship to the
    specifics of the defendant or the crime? Such a review would be devoid of substantive
    content, and it would certainly not entail the "'"exercis[e] [of the district judge's] best
    judgment, common sense, and judicial discretion after considering all of the reports, the
    defendant's background, the facts of the case, and the public safety."'" 
    Jolly, 301 Kan. at 323-24
    (quoting State v. Frecks, 
    294 Kan. 738
    , 742, 
    280 P.3d 217
    [2012]).
    In fact, the majority clearly recognizes that the "command" not to consider
    aggravating circumstances ("considering" necessarily implies a "weighing" or
    "balancing") is in actuality just a command to the district court judge not to describe what
    he or she is doing—viz., considering all of the circumstances—as "weighing." As the
    majority makes clear, the statutory scheme permits the district court judge to "consider
    the manner in which a crime is committed and the circumstances inherent in the crime"
    when deciding whether substantial and compelling reasons exist to grant a downward
    departure. Slip op. at 12.
    14
    I am at a loss to explain how the majority—consistent with common sense and an
    ordinary understanding of language—can permit with one hand what it has prohibited
    with the other. Indeed, we are vacating a valid sentence simply because the district judge
    did what we and the statute have said should be done—he considered both the mitigating
    factors and the circumstances of the crime and found that substantial and compelling
    reasons for a downward departure did not exist. He simply used the "wrong" words to
    describe what he did.
    It is worth emphasizing a second time that the district court's description was not
    prohibited by the plain language of the statutory scheme, but only by our judicially added
    requirements. Thus, we have elevated form over substance in a manner inconsistent with
    a basic and foundational principle. "'"The law of this state is realistic. Substance prevails
    over form."'" Baska v. Scherzer, 
    283 Kan. 750
    , 755, 
    156 P.3d 617
    (2007) (quoting
    Murray v. Modoc State Bank, 
    181 Kan. 642
    , 647, 
    313 P.2d 304
    [1957]). This kind of
    empty formalism ought to be avoided because it has a tendency to undermine confidence
    in the rule of law by unnecessarily providing ready examples to those who decry the
    "technicalities" of the law.
    For these reasons, I dissent from the portion of today's decision vacating
    McCormick's sentence and remanding this matter for resentencing.
    LUCKERT and ROSEN, JJ., join in the foregoing dissenting opinion.
    15