State v. Crossett , 50 Kan. App. 2d 788 ( 2014 )


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  •                                         No. 109,503
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    DANIEL A. CROSSETT,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    We review a claim that the trial court should be reversed because it failed to give a
    unanimity instruction in three steps. First, as a threshold matter, the appellate court
    reviews the entire record to determine whether the case involved multiple acts or a
    unified course of conduct. If this court finds the defendant's alleged conduct was unitary,
    then the analysis ends and the trial court is affirmed. If, however, the defendant's actions
    could have given rise to multiple counts of the charged crime, then it is a multiple acts
    case and this court proceeds to the next step of the unanimity error analysis.
    2.
    In the second step of the analysis, the court looks to see whether an error occurred.
    If the State did not inform the jury as to which act it should rely upon during
    deliberations and the trial court did not instruct the jury that it must unanimously decide
    which specific act supported the conviction, error exists.
    3.
    In the final step, the appellate court looks to see whether the error requires a
    reversal of the trial court's decision. In doing so, the court applies the "clearly erroneous"
    provision of K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 22-3414(3) and undertakes a results-based analysis. If the
    1
    court is convinced that the jury would have reached a different verdict had the instruction
    error not occurred, then the error is reversible.
    4.
    There is no single test for determining whether a multiple acts case exists. Rather,
    the court must look to the facts and the theory of the crime as argued to determine
    whether a jury verdict implicates unanimity issues.
    5.
    Four factors assist in making this determination: (1) whether the acts occurred at
    or near the same time; (2) whether the acts occurred at the same location; (3) whether
    there is a causal relationship between the acts, in particular whether there was an
    intervening event; and (4) whether there is a fresh impulse motivating some of the
    conduct.
    6.
    No party may challenge a trial court's giving or failure to give an instruction unless
    that party objects before the jury retires for deliberations, stating distinctly the matter to
    which the party objects and the grounds for the objection. In the absence of an objection,
    the claimed error is reversible only if the instruction or the trial court's failure to give the
    instruction was clearly erroneous. K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 22-3414(3).
    7.
    To establish that the giving or failure to give an instruction was clearly erroneous,
    the reviewing court must determine whether there was any error at all. This requires
    demonstrating that giving the proposed instruction would have been both legally and
    factually appropriate, employing an unlimited review of the entire record. And if error is
    found on that basis, then the court moves to a reversibility inquiry in which it assesses
    whether it is firmly convinced the jury would have reached a different verdict had the
    2
    instruction been given. The defendant maintains the burden to establish the degree of
    prejudice necessary for reversal.
    8.
    A defendant who introduces evidence of prior bad acts during his or her own
    direct examination waives the right to a limiting instruction.
    Appeal from Jefferson District Court; GARY L. NAFZIGER, judge. Opinion filed August 22, 2014.
    Affirmed.
    Lydia Krebs, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Bethany J. Graves, assistant county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.
    Before STANDRIDGE, P.J., PIERRON, J., and JOHNSON, S.J.
    PIERRON, J.: Daniel A. Crossett appeals his convictions for six counts of
    aggravated assault, two counts of endangering a child, and one count each of criminal
    damage to property, reckless driving, and failure to inform after a property accident.
    Crossett argues it was clear error for the trial court not to give a unanimity instruction for
    the counts of endangering a child. He also contends it was clear error for the trial court
    not to give a limiting instruction concerning prior crimes evidence under K.S.A. 2013
    Supp. 60-455. Last, Crossett raises an Apprendi issue for purposes of preserving federal
    review. We affirm.
    On Monday morning, June 19, 2012, Joseph Evans was heading to work at Accent
    Pet Grooming in Lawrence. Evans was riding in Scott Dennett's truck. Evans' great niece
    (A.M.) and great nephew (J.D.M.) were asleep in the back seat. Dennett needed to pick
    up Haillie Courter at Lakeside Village to give her a ride to work as well. On the way,
    3
    Evans got a call from Courter asking if they could give Kimberly Gardner a ride to work.
    Gardner also worked at Accent.
    Evans said that when they drove into Lakeside Village, Gardner was sitting in the
    middle of the street. She was upset and crying, and she said that Crossett was going to
    kill her. She repeated this in the truck. Soon thereafter, Courter also got in the backseat of
    the truck with A.M., J.D.M., and Gardner. As the truck headed down Ferguson Road
    toward Perry, Evans saw Crossett's red van approaching at a high rate of speed.
    Evans testified Crossett was swerving all over the road. Crossett pulled up next to
    Dennett's truck and with his body half out the window, he yelled at them to pull over.
    Evans said at one point Dennett drove into the ditch to avoid a collision. Dennett
    eventually stopped the truck and Crossett began banging on the window and screaming,
    "I want Kim. I want Kim. I don't want nobody else." Evans thought the window was
    going to break. Evans yelled at Dennett to take off. Crossett quickly jumped back in his
    van and chased them. Evans was on the phone with 911 during the incident.
    Crossett approached the truck again. This time, Dennett stepped on the brakes and
    Crossett went around them, lost control of his van, and hit a gas station pump. However,
    Crossett backed up and gave chase again. Crossett repeatedly tried to force the truck off
    the road. Ultimately Dennett stopped the truck and Crossett angled his van so the truck
    could not leave. Crossett came to Evans' window again. Evans told Crossett he was on
    the phone with 911 and they told him not to let Crossett in the truck or to let anyone leave
    the truck until the police arrived. Evans thought Crossett had tried to run them off the
    road at least 20 times and if Dennett had not stopped the truck, Crossett would have hit it.
    Dennett tried to leave one more time, but Crossett quickly moved his van to block
    their path. Dennett struck the driver's side door of Crossett's van. The police arrived and
    Evans gave a written statement consistent with his testimony. During the trial, the State
    4
    played the 911 call tapes for the jury. They heard Gardner say she wanted out of the
    truck. Evans said Gardner was upset and he concluded she wanted out of the truck so
    Crossett would not cause any more trouble. Evans knew of the troubled past between
    Gardner and Crossett and also about their drug use.
    Crossett claimed this case was not about a jealous and abusive husband who
    chased down a truck with his wife as a passenger and then tried to run the truck off the
    road in order to get it to stop. Instead, Crossett testified he and Gardner had been heavily
    abusing drugs before the incident and she was depressed and suicidal. Crossett testified
    Gardner had a history of psychiatric problems and drug overdoses that have caused her to
    be hospitalized. Crossett said he pursued the truck to plead with Gardner to go to the
    hospital again. Crossett said he never tried to run the truck off the road. Instead, he
    testified the truck actually hit his van twice, once when it bumped him from the back and
    sent him into the gas pump; and again when they were stopped the final time and Dennett
    hit the driver's side door of the van. Crossett claimed he did not know A.M. and J.D.M.
    were in the back seat until the final stop when Courter was yelling at him, "Quit trying to
    run us off the road. We have kids in here."
    Gardner testified she and Crossett were married by common law for 12 years. She
    said Crossett was a jealous man. Gardner had snuck out of the house that morning when
    she thought Crossett was asleep. Gardner had told Crossett they were finished and she
    was not coming back. The two had argued the night before and Gardner feared for her
    safety so she did not want Crossett to know she was leaving. Gardner told everyone in
    Dennett's truck, "Go, go, go. He's going to kill me if he catches you . . . . We need to go
    now." Gardner confirmed that Dennett had to repeatedly avoid Crossett's van or they
    would have been hit. Gardner said she wanted out of the truck because she was putting
    everybody's life in danger, it was scaring the children, and Crossett would then leave the
    truck alone. Gardner testified they yelled at Crossett that kids were in the truck. Gardner
    5
    told officers she had used methamphetamines with Crossett the night before and she was
    probably coming down off the drugs.
    The State charged Crossett with six individual counts of aggravated assault with a
    deadly weapon involving Gardner, Dennett, Evans, Courter, A.M., and J.D.M, severity
    level 7 person felonies; two counts of aggravated endangering a child (A.M. and J.D.M.),
    severity level 9 person felonies; and one count each of criminal damage to property, a
    severity level 9 nonperson felony, reckless driving, an unclassified misdemeanor, and
    failure to inform interested persons of a vehicle accident involving unattended property, a
    class C misdemeanor.
    The jury convicted Crossett of the six counts of aggravated assault with a deadly
    weapon, criminal damage to property, reckless driving, and failing to provide certain
    information after an accident. The jury did not convict Crossett of aggravated
    endangering a child, but convicted him of two counts of the lesser crime of endangering a
    child. Based on Crossett's extensive criminal history, the trial court sentenced him to 29
    months' imprisonment for the first count of aggravated assault and then a consecutive
    sentence of 12 months' imprisonment on the second count of aggravated assault. For the
    remaining counts of aggravated assault, the trial court entered concurrent sentences of 12
    months. The court also ordered concurrent sentences of jail time of 12 months for
    endangering a child, 6 months for criminal damage to property, 30 days for reckless
    driving, and 30 days for failure to inform after a property accident.
    Crossett appeals.
    Crossett first argues on appeal that it was clear error for the trial court not to give a
    unanimity instruction for the two counts of aggravated child endangerment. He argues the
    jury could have relied on two separate acts in convicting him of child endangerment: (1)
    attempting to run the truck off the road, or (2) causing a collision by moving his van to
    6
    block the truck after the vehicles had come to a stop. Crossett claims that without a
    unanimity instruction it is unclear which act the jury relied on and the jury would likely
    have been unable to reach a unanimous verdict if the instruction had been given.
    Whether the elements of a crime could have been established by one of many acts
    or whether the crime involved a single continuous act is a question of law over which this
    court has unlimited review. State v. Voyles, 
    284 Kan. 239
    , 244, 
    160 P.3d 794
     (2007).
    Under Kansas law, a defendant is entitled to a unanimous jury verdict. K.S.A. 22-3421;
    State v. Stevens, 
    285 Kan. 307
    , 313, 
    172 P.3d 570
     (2007). This means that in a case
    where multiple, several, and distinct acts are alleged and any one of the acts could
    constitute the charged crime, either the State must instruct the jury on which act it is
    relying for the charge or the court must give an instruction to the jury that they must all
    unanimously agree on the specific act constituting the charged crime. State v. Colston,
    
    290 Kan. 952
    , 968, 
    235 P.3d 1234
     (2010). This instruction protects the unanimity of a
    verdict because without such an election or instruction, jurors could convict a defendant
    without unanimous agreement on which act constituted the charged crime.
    We review a claim that the trial court should be reversed because it failed to give a
    unanimity instruction in three steps. See State v. King, 
    297 Kan. 955
    , 978-84, 
    305 P.3d 641
     (2013). First, as a threshold matter, the appellate court reviews the entire record to
    determine whether the case involved multiple acts or a unified course of conduct. Voyles,
    284 Kan. at 244. If this court finds the defendant's alleged conduct was unitary, then the
    analysis ends and the trial court is affirmed. 284 Kan. at 244. If, however, the defendant's
    actions could have given rise to multiple counts of the charged crime, then it is a multiple
    acts case and this court proceeds to the next step of the unanimity error analysis. 284
    Kan. at 244.
    In the second step of the analysis, we look to see whether an error occurred. 284
    Kan. at 244-45; accord Colston, 290 Kan. at 968. If the State did not inform the jury as to
    7
    which act it should rely upon during deliberations and the trial court did not instruct the
    jury that it must unanimously decide which specific act supported the conviction, error
    exists. King, 297 Kan. at 979.
    In the final step, this court looks to see whether the error requires a reversal of the
    trial court's decision. 297 Kan. at 979. In doing so, this court applies the "clearly
    erroneous" provision of K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 22-3414(3) and undertakes a results-based
    analysis. Voyles, 284 Kan. at 245-47; see State v. Trujillo, 
    296 Kan. 625
    , 631, 
    294 P.3d 281
     (2013). If this court is convinced that the jury would have reached a different verdict
    had the instruction error not occurred, then the error is reversible. King, 297 Kan. at 980
    (citing Trujillo, 296 Kan. at 631).
    For the threshold determination, we must decide whether Crossett's conduct was
    part of a single course of conduct or if it was composed of separate and distinct acts.
    King, 297 Kan. at 980-81. There is no single test for determining whether a multiple acts
    case exists. State v. Castleberry, 
    48 Kan. App. 2d 469
    , 484, 
    293 P.3d 757
    , rev. granted
    298 Kan. ___ (2013). "[R]ather the court must look to the facts and the theory of the
    crime as argued to determine whether a jury verdict implicates unanimity issues." 48
    Kan. App. 2d at 484 (citing State v. Allen, 
    290 Kan. 540
    , Syl. ¶ 2, 
    232 P.3d 861
     [2010]).
    Four factors assist in making this determination: "'(1) whether the acts occur at or near
    the same time; (2) whether the acts occur at the same location; (3) whether there is a
    causal relationship between the acts, in particular whether there was an intervening event;
    and (4) whether there is a fresh impulse motivating some of the conduct.'" King, 297 Kan.
    at 981 (quoting State v. Schoonover, 
    281 Kan. 453
    , 503, 507, 
    133 P.3d 48
     [2006]).
    Under the first Schoonover factor, we must consider Crossett's actions and
    determine whether they occurred at or near the same time. The time frame of his event
    was approximately 15 minutes from the time Dennett left Lakeside Village until police
    arrived at the scene. Evans testified they were stopped for "the longest five minutes of my
    8
    life" before the police arrived. Here, the actual chase took approximately 10 minutes and
    this relatively short time frame points to Crossett's actions being a single continuous
    course of conduct.
    Under the second Schoonover factor, we next consider whether Crossett's actions
    occurred at the same location. The chase in this case covered approximately 7 miles on
    Ferguson Road. The fact that the alleged acts took place at multiple locations points to
    Crossett's actions being a multiple acst situation.
    Under the third Schoonover factor, we consider whether Crossett's actions all had
    a causal relationship or whether there was an intervening event. In this case, there was no
    intervening act to separate Crossett's actions. From the time Crossett began the chase
    down Ferguson Road, he was continually engaged with Dennett's truck in his attempt to
    get Dennett to pull over. Although Crossett was temporary sidetracked by hitting the gas
    pump, and there was an intermediate stop, Crossett's actions still constituted a continual
    course of conduct with no intervening events.
    Under the fourth Schoonover factor, we consider whether some of Crossett's
    actions were motivated by a "fresh impulse." Crossett claims he had a fresh impulse
    when he realized there were children in the back seat of the truck. Crossett's testimony is
    the only evidence of this defense. Certainly, Crossett can make this claim, but there is no
    supporting evidence. See State v. Anderson, 
    287 Kan. 325
    , 331, 
    197 P.3d 409
     (2008) (A
    defendant is entitled to an instruction on his or her theory of the case even though the
    evidence thereon is slight and supported only by the defendant's own testimony.).
    Although Crossett's actions can be broken down into natural breaks—first stop, gas
    station pump accident, final stop—Crossett's impulse remained the same. That impulse
    was his testimony that he was concerned for the safety of his wife because of her drug
    overdose and she needed to go to a hospital. There is no evidence he ever expressed
    9
    concern for anyone but his wife. From the time he engaged the truck until the time the
    police arrived, this was a single continuous action, and there was no fresh impulse.
    In the myriad of multiple acts cases in Kansas jurisprudence, several of them are
    relevant for application of the Schoonover factors to the present case. In State v.
    Kesselring, 
    279 Kan. 671
    , 
    112 P.3d 175
     (2005), the Kansas Supreme Court addressed
    whether a unanimity jury instruction was required for an aggravated kidnapping charge.
    In that case, the defendant had ordered the victim out of his house at gunpoint and into
    the car the defendant was driving; the victim had briefly escaped from the car at a yield
    sign but was ordered back at gunpoint. The defendant then ordered the victim out of the
    car before shooting and killing him. Kesselring held that the kidnapping incident "was
    not susceptible to dissection into further components that would constitute multiple acts;
    rather, it was a continuous incident that cannot be factually separated. Therefore, we find
    this was not a multiple acts case and no multiple acts instruction was necessary to ensure
    that the jury's verdict was unanimous." 
    279 Kan. at 683
    .
    Likewise, in State v. Staggs, 
    27 Kan. App. 2d 865
    , 
    9 P.3d 601
     (2000), a defendant
    convicted of aggravated battery argued on appeal that the battery charge could have been
    established when he kicked the victim or when he punched the victim with his fist. In
    rejecting his multiple acts argument on appeal, this court noted that "[o]nce defendant
    initiated the altercation, no break in the action of any length occurred, and the
    confrontation continued until defendant broke the victim's cheekbone. Simply put, the
    evidence established a continuous incident that simply cannot be factually separated." 
    27 Kan. App. 2d at 868
    .
    In State v. Hilson, 
    28 Kan. App. 2d 740
    , 
    20 P.3d 94
     (2001), within a 30-minute
    time frame, the defendant committed two acts: he threatened to have T.L. (his friend)
    shoot the victim and threatened to have T.L. hit her. The court held both actions had the
    same objective—to coerce the victim to go with the defendant to Wichita. Despite this
    10
    extended time period, the Court of Appeals concluded: "The conduct in question does not
    constitute multiple acts." 
    28 Kan. App. 2d at 743
    .
    A road-rage case that seems particularly apropos is State v. Bischoff, 
    281 Kan. 195
    , 
    131 P.3d 531
     (2006). Mary Frayser was driving her Honda Accord in a construction
    zone on Interstate 35 in Salina. Bischoff came up quickly on Frayser in his semi-trailer
    and traveled closely behind her. He flashed his headlights and honked his horn. Bischoff
    continually slowed down and then sped up to the rear of her car during the 8 miles that
    she traveled south in the construction zone. Frayser stated she was traveling
    approximately 60 miles per hour, the posted speed limit in the construction zone.
    Bischoff followed Frayser when she exited and then drove around her car, nearly
    hitting it. Then Bischoff forced Frayser to slam on her brakes to avoid hitting the semi.
    Bischoff approached Frayser's car and yelled: "You know what a F'n truck like that can
    do to a F'n car like this?"; "Can't you go the F'n speed limit?"; and "Get out of the F'n car,
    I'm going to kill you." Frayser began honking her horn for help. As he drove away,
    Bischoff made an obscene hand gesture and yelled at Frayser. A jury convicted Bischoff
    of aggravated assault and criminal threat.
    In the State's closing argument, the prosecutor argued that Bischoff was guilty of
    aggravated assault because his intentional actions placed Frayser in reasonable
    apprehension of immediate bodily harm not only while on the interstate, but also through
    his cutting off her car on the exit ramp. In State v. Bischoff, No. 91179, 
    2005 WL 1089035
    , *12-13 (Kan. App. 2005) (unpublished opinion), the Court of Appeals affirmed
    the criminal threat conviction, but it reversed and remanded the aggravated assault
    conviction. It held that Bischoff's act of following Frayser on to the exit ramp was a
    separate and distinct act from his actions while on the interstate. Accordingly, the court
    held that the trial court erred in refusing to give a unanimity instruction.
    11
    The Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals. The Bischoff court relied on
    Kesselring, Staggs, and Hilson in concluding that Bischoff had a design or objective. He
    acted on that objective to express his extreme displeasure with Frayser's driving and it
    soon escalated into road rage lasting approximately 8 minutes. 
    281 Kan. at 203
    . The
    Bischoff court noted defense counsel's comment at oral argument that "if the prosecutor
    had charged two counts of aggravated assault, i.e., one for Bischoff's conduct on the
    interstate and the other after he followed Frayser onto the exit ramp, she would have
    argued multiplicity." 
    281 Kan. at 203-04
    . The Bischoff court concluded this was not a
    multiple acts case and no unanimity instruction was necessary. 
    281 Kan. at 204
    .
    After considering Crossett's actions within the context of the four factors set out in
    Schoonover, and the factual scenarios of Bischoff, Kesselring, Staggs, and Hilson,
    Crossett's actions were not multiple acts but constituted one single continuous course of
    conduct. Crossett's testimony failed to establish any meaningful break in the action that
    would establish separate acts. Although the events transpired over several miles, there
    were no breaks in the sequence of events sufficient to establish separate criminal acts.
    Similar to Bischoff, if the State had charged Crossett with separate counts of aggravated
    child endangerment based on events before and after the final stop, defense counsel
    would undoubtedly be raising a claim of multiplicity. The incident here was not
    susceptible to dissection into further components that would constitute multiple acts;
    rather, it was a continuous incident that cannot be factually separated. As a result, it was
    not clearly erroneous for the trial court to not give a unanimity instruction because
    Crossett's case did not involve multiple acts.
    Next, Crossett argues it was clear error for the trial court not to give a limiting
    instruction for evidence of his past abusive behavior towards Gardner.
    No party may challenge a trial court's giving or failure to give an instruction unless
    that party objects before the jury retires for deliberations, stating distinctly the matter to
    12
    which the party objects and the grounds for the objection. In the absence of an objection,
    the claimed error is reversible only if the instruction or the trial court's failure to give the
    instruction was clearly erroneous. K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 22-3414(3); State v. Smyser, 
    297 Kan. 199
    , 204, 
    299 P.3d 309
     (2013).
    Our Supreme Court has further stated:
    "To establish that the giving or failure to give an instruction was clearly
    erroneous, the reviewing court must determine whether there was any error at all. This
    requires demonstrating that giving the proposed instruction would have been both legally
    and factually appropriate, employing an unlimited review of the entire record. [Citation
    omitted.] And if error is found on that basis, then the court moves to a reversibility
    inquiry in which it assesses whether it is firmly convinced the jury would have reached a
    different verdict had the instruction been given. The defendant maintains the burden to
    establish the degree of prejudice necessary for reversal. [Citation omitted.]" State v.
    Littlejohn, 
    298 Kan. 632
    , 646, 
    316 P.3d 136
     (2014).
    The relevant provisions of K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 60-455 state:
    "(a) Subject to K.S.A. 60-447, and amendments thereto, evidence that a person
    committed a crime or civil wrong on a specified occasion, is inadmissible to prove such
    person's disposition to commit crime or civil wrong as the basis for an inference that the
    person committed another crime or civil wrong on another specified occasion.
    "(b) Subject to K.S.A. 60-445 and 60-448, and amendments thereto, such
    evidence is admissible when relevant to prove some other material fact including motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity or absence of mistake or
    accident."
    During the state's case-in-chief, testimony was presented by Evans in the form of
    general statements about the abusive relationship between Crossett and Gardner. Evans
    had seen bruises on Gardner's arms, and he had told Gardner she needed to get out of the
    13
    relationship. Crossett states this evidence may have been admissible to prove a material
    fact, i.e., the victims' reasonable apprehension of immediate bodily harm due to their
    knowledge of the abuse. However, Crossett argues the evidence was not admissible to
    prove propensity, i.e., that he was likely to act violently during the incident in question,
    and the trial court should have given the jury a limiting instruction that the evidence of
    abuse was not admissible to prove propensity. Crossett argues this evidence prejudiced
    the jury and the trial court should have given the limiting instruction.
    In State v. Breeden, 
    297 Kan. 567
    , 
    304 P.3d 660
     (2013), the court held that a
    contemporaneous objection to other crimes evidence was not required to preserve a jury
    instruction issue on appeal. See 297 Kan. at 579-80. The Breeden court found the
    defendant did more than assert an evidentiary argument as an instructional issue as in
    State v. Rojas–Marceleno, 
    295 Kan. 525
    , 
    285 P.3d 361
     (2012). Breeden, 297 Kan. at 580.
    In Breeden, the defendant argued the trial court "'should have instructed the jury that
    evidence has been admitted tending to prove that the defendant committed crimes other
    than the crime charged, and that the jury was not to consider that evidence of Mr.
    Breeden's propensity to commit a criminal act.'" 297 Kan. at 580. The Breeden court then
    applied the clearly erroneous standard to find that the failure to give a limiting instruction
    was error, but it was not reversible error. 297 Kan. at 581.
    The State is correct that defense counsel was the party that elicited several specific
    prior bad acts to the jury. During Evans' cross examination, defense counsel elicited a
    quote from Evans that Gardner said, "He's kept me hostage for the last day," and that had
    also happened to her before. Also, during Gardner's cross-examination, defense counsel
    elicited testimony from Gardner that Crossett would not threaten her in public but that
    "the night before he had me sitting in a chair. He had a fire log like this thick (indicating).
    He told me if I moved, he would bash my head in. So I knew he was angry at me from
    the time he woke up." Last, during the defense's case-in-chief, defense counsel asked
    Crossett if he had ever hurt Gardner. Crossett testified, "Yes." Defense counsel asked in
    14
    what way, and Crossett responded, "Well, Kim and I fought a lot." A defendant who
    introduces evidence of prior bad acts during his or her own direct examination waives the
    right to a limiting instruction. State v. Gunby, 
    282 Kan. 39
    , 57-58, 
    144 P.3d 647
     (2006);
    State v. Chatmon, 
    234 Kan. 197
    , 203, 
    671 P.2d 531
     (1983).
    Even if the trial court erred by failing to give the limiting instruction, we are not
    firmly convinced that the jury would have reached a different verdict had the instruction
    been given. Thus, the trial court's failure to give the instruction was not clearly erroneous.
    See Littlejohn, 298 Kan. at 646. We add that even if we were not applying the clearly
    erroneous standard of review, we would still conclude that the trial court's failure to give
    the limiting instruction was harmless error under the facts of this case. There is no
    reasonable probability the error affected the outcome of the trial in light of the entire
    record and the evidence of Crossett's attempts to run Dennett off the road, the fear of the
    occupants in Dennett's truck, and the collision with the gas pump. See State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    256 P.3d 801
     (2011), cert. denied 
    132 S. Ct. 1594
     (2012). The trial
    court's failure to give the limiting instruction did not affect Crossett's substantial rights,
    and he is not entitled to a new trial based on this claimed error.
    Last, Crossett contends the trial court violated his rights under Apprendi v. New
    Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 2348
    , 
    147 L. Ed. 2d 435
     (2000). In particular, he argues
    the trial court could not consider his criminal history unless it was proven to a jury
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Nevertheless, Crossett concedes the Kansas Supreme Court
    has previously decided this issue and states he simply wishes to preserve the claim for
    federal review. See State v. Ivory, 
    273 Kan. 44
    , 46, 
    41 P.3d 781
     (2002).
    We are bound to follow precedent from the Kansas Supreme Court unless there is
    an indication that it is departing from its position. State v. Ottinger, 
    46 Kan. App. 2d 647
    ,
    655, 
    264 P.3d 1027
     (2011), rev. denied 
    294 Kan. 946
     (2012). Recently, our Supreme
    Court declined to depart from its holding in Ivory. See State v. Frierson, 
    298 Kan. 1005
    ,
    15
    1022, 
    319 P.3d 515
     (2014). Thus, we conclude the trial court appropriately considered
    Crossett's criminal history in determining his sentence.
    Affirmed.
    16