State v. Thomas ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 115,990
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    ROBBIE A. THOMAS,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    To convict the defendant of aggravated battery under K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-
    5413(b)(1)(A), the State must prove that a defendant acted while knowing that some type
    of great bodily harm or disfigurement of another person was a reasonably certain result.
    2.
    A prosecutor has wide latitude in crafting arguments and drawing reasonable
    inferences from the evidence but may not comment on facts outside the evidence. Any
    argument must accurately reflect the evidence, accurately state the law, and cannot be
    intended to inflame the passions or prejudices of the jury or to divert the jury from its
    duty to decide the case based on the evidence and the controlling law.
    3.
    In a cumulative error analysis, if any of the errors implicate a constitutional right,
    the constitutional harmless error standard of Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    ,
    1
    
    87 S. Ct. 824
    , 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
     (1967), applies. The court can affirm only after
    examining the entire record and being convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that there is
    no reasonable possibility the error affected the verdict.
    4.
    The Virginia crime of assault and battery, as defined by Virginia common law, is
    not identical to or narrower than the Kansas crime of battery as defined by K.S.A. 2015
    Supp. 21-5413. Thus, under State v. Wetrich, 
    307 Kan. 552
    , 
    412 P.3d 984
     (2018), a court
    cannot score a Virginia assault and battery conviction as a person crime in a defendant's
    criminal history per K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-6811(e).
    Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed February 9,
    2018. Appeal from Chautauqua District Court; JEFFREY D. GOSSARD, judge. Opinion filed July 24, 2020.
    Judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and
    vacated in part. Judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and vacated in part, and
    the case is remanded with directions.
    Michelle A. Davis, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the brief
    for appellant.
    Kristafer R. Ailslieger, deputy solicitor general, argued the cause, and Amanda G. Voth, assistant
    solicitor general, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were on the brief for appellee.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    LUCKERT, C.J.: Robbie A. Thomas appeals his convictions and sentences for
    aggravated battery, abuse of a child, and aggravated endangering of a child. He alleges
    2
    two trial errors. First, Thomas argues—and the State concedes—that the district court
    erred by giving jury instructions that allowed the jury to convict him of aggravated
    battery if it found that he intended the conduct but not the harm. Second, he argues—and
    we hold—the prosecutor committed error during closing statements by repeatedly telling
    jurors to acquit only if the jurors thought it was acceptable to inflict injuries on "your
    child." The statements distracted the jury from the facts and law and, instead of asking
    them to hold the State to its burden of proving the elements of the charged crimes,
    focused the jurors on their personal and emotional reactions.
    We also hold the cumulative effect of these errors requires us to reverse Thomas'
    aggravated battery conviction. But we affirm his convictions for abuse of a child and
    aggravated endangering of a child. Finally, we hold the district court erred by scoring a
    2001 out-of-state conviction from Virginia for domestic assault and battery as a person
    crime because the elements of the Virginia crime were broader than the Kansas crime of
    battery.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Thomas was watching his children and his girlfriend's children, when his
    girlfriend's two-year-old son soiled himself. Thomas struck the child several times on the
    abdomen and buttocks and took him into the bathroom for cleaning. Thomas sprayed the
    child's buttocks with scalding hot water from a shower wand and inflicted first- and
    second-degree burns on the child's torso, lower back, buttocks, and groin area.
    Thomas' 12-year-old daughter at first told police that Thomas had taken the boy
    into the bathroom after the child had soiled himself. The daughter said she heard the boy
    3
    screaming "like he was being killed" while Thomas repeatedly said, "Have you had
    enough?" The daughter also told police that she saw Thomas spank the boy five or six
    times before going into the bathroom, and she continued to hear Thomas spanking the
    boy after the door was closed.
    At trial, however, the daughter said she had lied to police because she was scared.
    She testified that her father was not abusive and that the two-year-old's injuries occurred
    when the child's mother spilled hot ramen soup on him.
    Thomas testified on his own behalf and said that the hot water did not work at the
    residence. Thomas testified that he had taken the two-year-old into the bathroom and
    began filling the tub but left the bathroom briefly because the other children were
    fighting. When he left the room, the two-year-old crawled into the tub on his own.
    A physician assistant at the Sedan City Hospital who first saw the two-year-old
    testified that he observed first-degree burns on the child's nipple area and torso, and
    second-degree burns on the child's buttocks. The child complained of pain in the
    abdomen, and the mother reported that Thomas had hit the child in the abdomen several
    times. The physician assistant testified the burn marks were not consistent with injuries
    caused by placing a child in a bathtub of scalding water because there were no burn
    marks on the feet, hands, or knees. He testified the injuries were consistent with having a
    shower wand of hot water held in one area.
    A pediatric specialist at Saint Francis Via Christi hospital in Wichita, where the
    child was transferred for treatment, testified the child had second-degree burns on his
    perineum, anal area, and gluteal crease. She said the injuries were not consistent with
    4
    having hot ramen soup spilled on the child, nor were they consistent with a child crawling
    into a bathtub. The doctor confirmed the injuries were consistent with having a shower
    wand of hot water held in one area.
    The jury returned guilty verdicts on all three charges: aggravated battery for the
    burn injuries, abuse of a child for the bruising caused by hitting the child, and aggravated
    endangering of a child. At sentencing, Thomas objected to the criminal history score as
    calculated in the presentence report because it included a Virginia domestic assault and
    battery conviction as a person felony. The district court ruled the Virginia conviction was
    comparable to Kansas battery and counted as a person felony. The court sentenced
    Thomas to 109 months in prison.
    Thomas appealed to the Court of Appeals. The panel affirmed Thomas'
    convictions and sentence after holding the district court committed one error in defining
    the mental state element of aggravated battery, but the error was harmless. State v.
    Thomas, No. 115,990, 
    2018 WL 793826
    , at *2-3, 7-9 (Kan. App. 2018) (unpublished
    opinion).
    Thomas timely petitioned for review. We granted review and have
    jurisdiction under K.S.A. 20-3018(b) (petition for review of Court of Appeals
    decision).
    AGGRAVATED BATTERY JURY INSTRUCTIONS
    Thomas first argues the jury instructions allowed the jury to convict him of
    aggravated battery under K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(A) without finding he acted
    5
    while knowing that great bodily harm or disfigurement was reasonably certain to occur.
    The State concedes our decision in State v. Hobbs, 
    301 Kan. 203
    , 
    340 P.3d 1179
     (2015),
    controls this issue and that under the decision the aggravated battery instructions were
    erroneous.
    In Hobbs, we held "knowingly," as used in the context of the elements of
    aggravated battery, means more than just proving that the defendant intended to engage
    in the underlying conduct. The State must prove the defendant acted when he or she was
    aware the conduct was reasonably certain to cause the result. 301 Kan. at 211.
    But, here, the district court erroneously instructed the jury that aggravated battery
    required "merely the intent to engage in the underlying conduct which results in great
    bodily harm. The State is not required to prove that the defendant intended the precise
    harm or result that occurred." The court compounded the error by giving another
    instruction that defined "knowingly" with three alternative definitions, only one of which
    required the jury to find that Thomas was aware his conduct was reasonably certain to
    cause the harm to the child. The other alternatives allowed the jury to convict Thomas if
    it found he was aware of the nature of his conduct or the circumstances in which he was
    acting.
    Although the State concedes error, it argues the error does not require us to reverse
    Thomas' conviction. The Court of Appeals panel agreed. The panel noted that Thomas
    had not objected to the instruction and the clear error standard found in K.S.A. 2015
    Supp. 22-3414(3) applies. Under this standard, an erroneous jury instruction requires
    reversal only if the appellate court is firmly convinced the jury would have reached a
    different verdict had the error not occurred. State v. McLinn, 
    307 Kan. 307
    , 318, 
    409 P.3d 6
    1 (2018). The panel concluded the trial outcome would not have differed even if "the jury
    [had] been properly instructed on the knowledge element of aggravated battery." Thomas,
    
    2018 WL 793826
    , at *3.
    Before us, Thomas notes the Court of Appeals did not discuss his testimony that
    the house did not consistently have hot water. Given that no evidence contradicted his
    testimony, he argues the jury could have believed he did not know his conduct of
    spraying the child with water would harm the child. Given this uncontroverted evidence,
    he argues a properly instructed jury would have convicted him of a lesser included
    offense of child abuse. He suggests this outcome would have been consistent with the
    child abuse statute, K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-5602, because it requires only an intent to do
    the act. Unlike with aggravated battery charges, the State did not have to prove an intent
    to cause the injury to obtain the child abuse conviction. Cf. State v. Alderete, 
    285 Kan. 359
    , 362-65, 
    172 P.3d 27
     (2007) (previous version of aggravated battery requires intent
    to cause harm, but child abuse only requires an act which causes harm).
    We defer for the moment our discussion of whether this error necessitates reversal
    because Thomas also argues the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the prosecutor did
    not commit error and in not accumulating the harm of the instruction error with the
    prosecutorial error.
    PROSECUTORIAL ERROR
    Thomas bases his prosecutorial error argument on two statements made during the
    State's closing argument. Before each of the two statements, the prosecutor showed the
    jurors photos of the child's injuries and then told them to acquit Thomas if they thought it
    7
    was okay to do that to a child. Thomas asserts those remarks were improper because they
    inflamed the passions and prejudices of the jurors and distracted them from their duty to
    make decisions based on the evidence and law. We agree.
    When analyzing claims of prosecutorial error, we use a two-step process. First, to
    determine error has occurred, we must decide whether "the act complained of falls
    outside the wide latitude afforded to prosecutors to conduct the State's case in a way that
    does not offend the defendant's constitutional right to a fair trial." State v. Chandler, 
    307 Kan. 657
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    414 P.3d 713
     (2018). If error is found, we must then determine
    whether the error prejudiced the defendant's due process rights to a fair trial. 
    307 Kan. 657
    , Syl. ¶ 6. In evaluating this potential prejudice, we use the traditional harmlessness
    inquiry in Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 
    87 S. Ct. 824
    , 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
     (1967).
    State v. Sherman, 
    305 Kan. 88
    , 109, 
    378 P.3d 1060
     (2016). Under this inquiry,
    prosecutorial error is harmless "if the State can demonstrate 'beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the error complained of will not or did not affect the outcome of the trial in light of
    the entire record, i.e., where there is no reasonable possibility that the error contributed to
    the verdict.'" 305 Kan. at 109 (quoting State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    256 P.3d 801
     [2011]).
    Generally speaking,
    "A prosecutor has wide latitude in crafting arguments and drawing 'reasonable
    inferences from the evidence but may not comment on facts outside the evidence.' Any
    argument 'must accurately reflect the evidence, accurately state the law, and cannot be
    "intended to inflame the passions or prejudices of the jury or to divert the jury from its
    duty to decide the case based on the evidence and the controlling law."' [Citations
    omitted.]" State v. Longoria, 
    301 Kan. 489
    , 524, 
    343 P.3d 1128
     (2015).
    8
    The prosecutor is constrained from inviting the jury to rely on considerations
    outside the record because the jury's fundamental task is to decide a case based on a calm
    and dispassionate consideration of the evidence and controlling law. State v. Holt,
    
    300 Kan. 985
    , 998, 
    336 P.3d 312
     (2014); State v. Hall, 
    292 Kan. 841
    , 853, 
    257 P.3d 272
    (2011); State v. Ruff, 
    252 Kan. 625
    , 633, 
    847 P.2d 1258
     (1993); Gershman, Prosecutorial
    Misconduct § 11:4 (2d ed. 2019). Thus, a prosecutor's comments are improper if they
    encourage jurors to consider emotions, passions, or prejudices as a basis for their verdict,
    because emotions, passions, and prejudices are not facts. Holt, 300 Kan. at 998 (improper
    to encourage jurors to rely on emotions to convict); Hall, 
    292 Kan. at 853
     (prosecutors are
    not allowed to inflame passions or prejudices of jurors and distract from duty to make
    decisions based on evidence). Nor may a prosecutor make a "golden rule" argument that
    encourages the jurors to place themselves in the position of a victim or a victim's family
    member. State v. Lowery, 
    308 Kan. 1183
    , 1208-09, 
    427 P.3d 865
     (2018).
    This court has emphasized that claims of prosecutorial error are fact specific and
    outcomes will depend on the particulars of each case. Sherman, 305 Kan. at 110-11; see
    also United States v. Hasting, 
    461 U.S. 499
    , 508-09, 
    103 S. Ct. 1974
    , 
    76 L. Ed. 2d 96
    (1983) (observing that Chapman affirmatively rejected a per se rule).
    Here, Thomas first cites to the prosecutor showing the jury a picture of bruising on
    the child's body and asking, "Do you think that's okay to do to your child? Then you
    better acquit him, but if it's not okay, you better find him guilty." The prosecutor made
    these statements during the portion of the State's closing argument in which the
    prosecutor discussed the child abuse charge, which the prosecutor explained was based
    on the bruising Thomas caused.
    9
    To fully understand the comment and the Court of Appeals' analysis it is helpful to
    more fully consider the context of the statements. The prosecutor repeated the court's
    instruction defining the elements of the charge and told the jury it had to find that
    Thomas "knowingly inflicted cruel and inhuman punishment on" the child. The
    prosecutor next displayed a photograph to the jury and said:
    "This is a photograph of [the child's] back. Where do the bruises come in? From the waist
    up to the middle of his back.
    "Where did [Thomas' 12-year-old daughter] say this happened? In their home on
    July second when Mr. Thomas was disciplining him in the potty training. It's simple. Do
    you think that's okay? Do you think that's okay to do to your child? Then you better
    acquit him, but if it's not okay, you better find him guilty."
    The Court of Appeals panel held this statement did not encourage the jurors to
    consider factors outside the evidence and the law. The panel offered several reasons for
    its conclusion. First, it indicated the prosecutor was merely asking the jury to consider
    whether the bruising constituted cruel and inhuman punishment. Despite this conclusion,
    the panel also recognized the statement could be read to distract the jury from the State's
    burden of proof:
    "Viewed in isolation, one might take this to mean that a juror should vote to convict
    solely based on a finding that the injury shown in [the photograph] was the product of
    cruel and inhuman[] physical punishment, thereby relieving the State of its obligation to
    prove the other essential elements of the crime." Thomas, 
    2018 WL 793826
    , at *5.
    10
    We agree that read in isolation the prosecutor's arguments clearly encouraged the
    jury to convict based on an assessment of whether the jury thought Thomas' actions were
    okay, not on whether the State had met its burden of proving the elements. But we
    disagree with the panel's conclusion that the meaning changed when read in context of
    other statements. The prosecutor made no attempt to relate the statement to the cruel and
    inhuman punishment element or any other element. And the prosecutor shifted the jurors'
    attention away from the case to how they felt about whether "that's okay to do to your
    child." (Emphasis added.) The last two words invited jurors to consider the crime in the
    context of families or community, either of which is error. See Lowery, 308 Kan. at
    1208-09 (error to place jurors in shoes of victim); State v. Ruff, 
    252 Kan. 625
    , 631-33,
    
    847 P.2d 1258
     (1993) (prosecutor errs by encouraging jury to consider the effects of
    lawlessness in the community). We thus reject the first reason given for the panel's
    conclusion the prosecutor did not err.
    The panel gave two other reasons for determining no error occurred:
     "The jurors were each provided individual copies of the jury instructions
    which they could follow as the judge read them and as the attorneys
    referred to them in their closing arguments"; and
     The district court judge had told the jury to "disregard any statement
    concerning the law that was not contained in these instructions." 
    2018 WL 793826
    , at *5.
    While these are valid considerations, they apply to the harmless error analysis, not to the
    analysis of whether the comments were error. We thus conclude the prosecutor erred.
    11
    We agree with the panel's holding that the statements about the child abuse charge
    were harmless, however. As the Court of Appeals noted, although not directly tied to
    elements, the statements came as the prosecutor was listing facts that supported what the
    State had to prove: when the crime happened, where it occurred, and whether it was
    cruel and inhuman punishment. And the prosecutor had just reminded the jury of these
    elements, as had the judge. Given this context, we conclude the comments do not
    constitute clear error requiring us to reverse the child abuse count.
    The prosecutor made the second if-you-think-this-is-okay-acquit statement while
    addressing the aggravated battery charge during the State's closing argument. The
    prosecutor discussed the need for the jury to find that Thomas had caused great bodily
    harm. The prosecutor pointed to a photograph that showed scarring from the burns and
    said, "[I]f that's not great bodily harm or disfigurement, find him not guilty. If you think
    it's okay to do that, find him not guilty. If it's not okay to do that, you must find him
    guilty."
    The panel held the prosecutor did not err, reasoning: "[W]e do not think any
    reasonable juror would harbor the notion that in discussing [the photographs] in relation
    to the aggravated battery charge the prosecutor was urging the jurors to disregard the
    other elements of the crime and convict Thomas solely upon the harm shown in these
    photo exhibits." Again, the panel seems to have conflated the analysis of error with the
    question of whether any error is harmless. Because other factors offset the statements'
    effect does not mean they were not error.
    The panel also seemed to excuse the statements because they were "inartfully
    expressed." 
    2018 WL 793826
    , at *5. But the fact the statements were repeated almost
    12
    word for word in the discussion of two different charges indicates a deliberately phrased
    argument. Applying a constitutional standard of harmlessness, we are swayed—as we
    think a jury would have been—by the fact the prosecutor repeated the argument, inviting
    the jury to make its own emotional assessment about what was okay. More impactful on
    our consideration of the harm, the prosecutorial error was not the only error impacting the
    aggravated battery charge. Consequently, we move to Thomas' argument that the harm
    from the instruction error and the prosecutorial error had a combined impact that requires
    reversal of his aggravated battery conviction.
    CUMULATIVE ERROR
    Multiple errors may require reversal if the combined prejudicial effect deprives the
    defendant of a fair trial. State v. Tully, 
    293 Kan. 176
    , 205, 
    262 P.3d 314
     (2011). Such is
    the case here.
    The test for cumulative error is whether the errors substantially prejudiced the
    defendant and denied the defendant a fair trial given the totality of the circumstances. In
    making the assessment, an appellate court examines the errors in context, considers how
    the district court judge addressed the errors, reviews the nature and number of errors and
    whether they are connected, and weighs the strength of the evidence. Holt, 300 Kan. at
    1007-08. If any of the errors being aggregated are constitutional, the constitutional
    harmless error test of Chapman applies, and the party benefitting from the errors must
    establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the cumulative effect of the errors did not affect
    the outcome. Tully, 293 Kan. at 205; State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , 569-70, 
    256 P.3d 801
    (2011). Where, as here, the State benefitted from the errors, it has the burden of
    establishing the errors were harmless. See State v. Akins, 
    298 Kan. 592
    , 600, 
    315 P.3d 13
    868 (2014) ("The State bears a higher burden to demonstrate harmlessness when the error
    is of constitutional magnitude.").
    Here, because the prosecutor's statements implicated Thomas' constitutional right
    to a fair trial, the Chapman constitutional harmless error standard applies. Under this
    standard, we cannot say the errors are harmless unless we are convinced beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the errors did not affect the outcome of the trial. Ward, 
    292 Kan. at 569-70
    . We hold the two errors when considered together were not harmless.
    The statutory language of the aggravated battery statute, K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-
    5413(b), required the jury to find that Thomas acted with an awareness that his conduct
    was reasonably certain to cause harm, although not necessarily the specific harm that
    resulted. Hobbs, 301 Kan. at 210-11. But the instruction given here allowed the jury to
    find Thomas guilty if it determined he intended to engage in the conduct. Thus, we
    cannot be sure the jury based its verdict on the requisite level of culpability. We
    recognize serious credibility issues surround Thomas' defense that the house did not
    consistently have hot water, and those credibility issues might have prevented us from
    determining clear error occurred. But given that no direct evidence disputed Thomas'
    testimony about the lack of hot water, applying the constitutional harmless error standard,
    we cannot say beyond a reasonable doubt that the verdict was not affected. The jurors
    could have based the verdict on a lower level of culpability than one requiring they find
    that Thomas knew it was reasonably likely great bodily injury or disfigurement would
    occur.
    The prosecutor's erroneous statement increases this uncertainty because it
    encouraged the jury to convict if it concluded Thomas' actions, even if merely negligent,
    14
    were not "okay." This statement invited consideration of emotion rather than a reasoned
    and dispassionate consideration of the facts and the law as applied to those facts—in
    particular, as to whether Thomas had knowingly caused the harm.
    We find State v. Santos-Vega, 
    299 Kan. 11
    , 
    321 P.3d 1
     (2014), analogous. Like
    this case, Santos-Vega involved a jury instruction error (in that case, instructions that did
    not ensure a unanimous jury) and comments during a trial (in that case, comments that
    implicated the defendant's constitutional rights to remain silent). Applying the Chapman
    constitutional harmlessness test, we held the aggregate impact of the errors denied the
    defendant a fair trial, and the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    errors did not affect the verdict. 299 Kan. at 28. See also State v. Cosby, 
    285 Kan. 230
    ,
    246-47, 248, 251-52, 
    169 P.3d 1128
     (2007) (prosecutor's improper reference to
    defendant's post-Miranda silence coupled with prosecutor's incorrect definition of
    premeditation during closing arguments was cumulative error; reversed and remanded).
    We reach the same conclusion here regarding the aggravated battery conviction.
    The erroneous jury instruction allowed the jury to find guilt for aggravated battery based
    on a less culpable intent than required by the statute. And the State's repeated comments
    urged the jury to convict based on emotional considerations, rather than a reasoned and
    deliberate consideration of the facts and the law applied to those facts. The State has done
    little to convince us beyond a reasonable doubt that there is no reasonable probability that
    the errors affected the verdict.
    For these reasons, the conviction for count 1, aggravated battery, is reversed and
    the case is remanded for a new trial on this count.
    15
    CRIMINAL HISTORY
    Finally, Thomas argues the district court improperly scored a prior out-of-state
    conviction as a person crime when calculating his criminal history score. Thomas argues
    the district court should not have scored a 2001 Virginia conviction for assault and
    battery against a family or household member, 
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-57.2
     (1999), as a
    person crime. Consequently, his criminal history score was greater than it should have
    been. This issue regarding the proper classification of prior convictions for criminal
    history score calculations is a matter of statutory interpretation and is a question of law
    subject to unlimited review. State v. Wetrich, 
    307 Kan. 552
    , 555, 
    412 P.3d 984
     (2018).
    Thomas bases his argument on the decision in Wetrich. There, we considered the
    meaning of the word "comparable" as used in K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 21-6811(e), which
    directs courts to classify out-of-state convictions as person or nonperson crimes based on
    the comparable Kansas law in effect when the defendant committed the current crime.
    307 Kan. at 559. We held that the legislative intent behind the Kansas Sentencing
    Guidelines Act is to ensure "even-handed, predictable, and consistent application of the
    law." This legislative intent is furthered by requiring that the elements of the out-of-state
    crime be identical or narrower than the applicable Kansas crime, because this
    requirement prevents the problem of sentencing courts using "an imprecise, ad hoc
    comparison of out-of-state crimes to Kansas offenses." 307 Kan. at 561-62.
    This court announced its decision in Wetrich after the district court sentenced
    Thomas but while Thomas' direct appeal was pending. At the time of his sentencing,
    caselaw defined "comparable offense" as the "closest approximation." State v.
    Vandervort, 
    276 Kan. 164
    , 179, 
    72 P.3d 925
     (2003); see State v. Sartin, 
    310 Kan. 367
    ,
    16
    370-71, 
    446 P.3d 1068
     (2019). Even if we assume the district court correctly applied this
    definition, Thomas may still obtain the benefit of the change in the law that occurred
    while his direct appeal was pending. State v. Ewing, 
    310 Kan. 348
    , 352, 
    446 P.3d 463
    (2019); State v. Obregon, 
    309 Kan. 1267
    , 1270-71, 
    444 P.3d 331
     (2019); State v.
    Murdock, 
    309 Kan. 585
    , 591-92, 
    439 P.3d 307
     (2019) (Murdock II).
    Thus, under Wetrich, the elements of the Virginia domestic assault and battery
    conviction must be identical or narrower than the applicable Kansas battery statutes in
    effect at the time of the current crime in 2015. Virginia statutes do not define assault and
    battery, instead relying on common-law definitions of that crime. See 
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-57.2
     (1999) (assault and battery against a family member); 
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-57
    (2000) (assault and battery). Virginia defines assault and battery as follows:
    "An assault and battery is the unlawful touching of another. See Gnadt v.
    Commonwealth, 
    27 Va. App. 148
    , 151, 
    497 S.E.2d 887
    , 888 (1998). Assault and battery
    is 'the least touching of another, willfully or in anger.' Roger D. Groot, Criminal Offenses
    and Defenses in Virginia 29 (4th ed. 1998). The defendant does not have to intend to do
    harm; a battery may also be 'done in a spirit of rudeness or insult.' 
    Id.
     (footnote omitted).
    The touching need not result in injury. See Gnadt, 
    27 Va. App. at 151
    , 
    497 S.E.2d at 888
    .
    A touching is not unlawful if the person consents or if the touching is justified or
    excused." Perkins v. Commonwealth, 
    31 Va. App. 326
    , 330, 
    523 S.E.2d 512
     (2000).
    The Kansas battery statute in effect in 2015 defined battery as:
    "(a) Battery is:
    (1) Knowingly or recklessly causing bodily harm to another person; or
    (2) knowingly causing physical contact with another person when done in a rude,
    insulting or angry manner." K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-5413.
    17
    Battery is a person crime. K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-5413(g).
    Thomas' counsel persuasively argued the Virginia definition might criminalize any
    touching of another person, while in Kansas the touching must be done knowingly.
    Counsel argued the Virginia conviction is thus based on a broader definition than used in
    Kansas. The State conceded this point based on Wetrich's identical-or-narrower definition
    of "comparable."
    We hold that assault and battery, as defined by Virginia common law, is broader
    than Kansas battery and could encompass behavior that is not a crime in Kansas. Thus,
    the district court incorrectly calculated Thomas' criminal history score and should have
    scored his 2001 Virginia conviction as a nonperson crime when calculating Thomas'
    criminal history. We remand for resentencing based on the appropriate criminal history
    score.
    CONCLUSION
    The conviction for aggravated battery is reversed, and the case is remanded for a
    new trial on that charge. The sentence is vacated and the case is remanded for
    resentencing in accordance with this decision.
    Judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the district court is affirmed in part,
    reversed in part, and vacated in part. Judgment of the district court is affirmed in part,
    reversed in part, and vacated in part, and the case is remanded with directions.
    18
    HENRY W. GREEN, JR., J., assigned.1
    STEVE LEBEN, J., assigned.2
    ________________________
    1
    REPORTER'S NOTE: Judge Green, of the Kansas Court of Appeals, was appointed
    to hear case No. 115,990 under the authority vested in the Supreme Court by K.S.A. 2019
    Supp. 20-3002(c) to fill the vacancy on the court by the retirement of Justice Lee A.
    Johnson.
    2
    REPORTER'S NOTE: Judge Leben, of the Kansas Court of Appeals, was appointed
    to hear case No. 115,990 under the authority vested in the Supreme Court by K.S.A. 2019
    Supp. 20-3002(c) to fill the vacancy on the court by the retirement of Chief Justice
    Lawton R. Nuss.
    19