State v. Ritz ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 112,069
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    KEITH A. RITZ,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    In reviewing a district court judge's decision to deny a motion to sever charges, an
    appellate court follows three steps. Each requires application of a different standard of
    review. The court first considers whether the governing statute permits joinder. On this
    issue, the appellate court reviews the judge's factual findings for substantial competent
    evidence and the judge's legal conclusion on whether one of the statutory conditions has
    been met de novo. Second, the court determines whether the district court judge properly
    exercised his or her discretion on joinder or severance; there is no error on this step
    unless the appellate court discerns an abuse of discretion. Third and finally, if there was
    an error on the first or second step or both, the appellate court must determine whether
    the error affected a party's substantial rights. On the record in this case, there was no error
    in the district court's denial of the defendant's motion to sever two sets of charges against
    him.
    2.
    There is no federal constitutional requirement to instruct juries on offenses that are
    not lesser included crimes of the charged crime under state law. And the inviolate right of
    1
    jury trial in Section 5 of the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights is limited to fact issues in
    criminal cases; it does not demand that a jury be permitted to determine a legal question
    such as the choice of instructions on lesser degrees of a charged crime.
    3.
    A judge's use of criminal history that has not been included in a charging
    document and proved beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury as a basis for a criminal
    sentence or its enhancement is not prohibited by Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    ,
    
    120 S. Ct. 2348
    , 
    147 L. Ed. 2d 435
    (2000).
    Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; DAVID J. KAUFMAN, judge. Opinion filed March 3, 2017.
    Affirmed.
    Heather R. Cessna, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the brief
    for appellant.
    Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, argued the cause, and Marc Bennett, district attorney,
    and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were with him on the brief for appellee.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    BEIER, J.: Defendant Keith A. Ritz appeals his convictions for multiple counts of
    fleeing or attempting to elude, two counts of theft, and a single count of first-degree
    felony murder. Ritz raises three issues in his appeal, alleging error in the district court
    judge's denial of a defense motion to sever charges, error in the district court judge's
    failure to instruct the jury on lesser degrees of felony murder, and error in the district
    court judge's reliance on his criminal history for sentencing.
    2
    As detailed below, we reject each of Ritz' arguments and affirm his convictions
    and sentence.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On the evening of December 26, 2012, Officer Bradley Carver of the Wichita
    Police Department was on patrol when he saw a Corvette that appeared to be speeding.
    Carver did not get a radar reading of the Corvette's speed because of a Honda that was
    following the Corvette. Carver followed the Corvette until it turned onto a side street and
    stopped in front of a house. The Honda stopped behind the Corvette. A passenger got out
    of the Corvette, ran up to the front door, appeared to unscrew a floodlight on the front of
    the house, and then ran back to the street and got into the Honda. Carver started to get out
    of his car. As soon as he did, the "Corvette . . . squealed tires and took off." Carver got
    back into his car, turned on his siren, and began pursuit. The chase that followed was
    captured on the dashboard camera in Carver's patrol car, and the video would later be
    admitted at Ritz' trial.
    Carver pursued the Corvette through a residential area at "probably 60 to 65 miles
    [per] hour." At one point in the chase, the Corvette failed to negotiate a T intersection and
    jumped a curb into a church parking lot. The Corvette continued out of the parking lot,
    and Carver followed. At another point, it appeared to Carver that the chase was over
    because the Corvette had failed to make a right-hand turn and had overcorrected, spun,
    and went up onto a curb. But the driver of the Corvette backed out and continued.
    Eventually Carver "noticed the left rear tire of [the Corvette] leave the vehicle . . . and
    [the driver] lost control . . . spun a complete 180 and struck a light pole" on the corner of
    an intersection.
    3
    When the Corvette was stopped, Carver exited his car, drew his weapon, and
    approached the Corvette. Carver ordered the driver to show his or her hands and
    acknowledge Carver's presence. Carver got no response. As Carver approached the
    Corvette, he noticed that it was so damaged that the "driver's seat was not really visible
    from the driver's side." When Carver went around the front of the car, he found the only
    occupant "laid across the front seat with his feet still underneath the steering wheel of the
    vehicle and his head partially out of the sunroof of the Corvette."
    The Corvette driver would later be identified as Ritz.
    Ritz was charged with two alternative counts of fleeing or attempting to elude an
    officer, theft, and driving while a habitual violator in connection with the events of
    December 26.
    On the morning of March 5, 2013, Officer Jason Emery of the Wichita Police
    Department responded to a dispatch to check on a vehicle near the Arkansas River. A
    second officer, Alex Recio, also responded. When Emery arrived in the area, he spotted a
    parked full-size GMC pickup matching the description he had been given.
    Emery and Recio each pulled behind the pickup. The pickup started rolling
    forward and traveled a very short distance before pulling into the private drive of a
    residence. Emery and Recio pulled in behind the pickup and stopped. Recio got out of his
    car and started to walk toward the pickup. Emery started to do the same but decided to
    stay in his car. As Recio approached, the pickup was backed out of the drive into the
    street. It then started to roll forward and accelerated away. Emery activated his lights and
    sirens and gave chase.
    4
    Initially, the pickup was driving approximately 40 miles per hour through a 30-
    miles-per-hour residential area. It continued gaining speed and drove through several stop
    signs and stoplights, making it difficult for Emery to keep up. Emery nevertheless
    continued his pursuit. When he reached Harry Street he saw "debris, like a big smoke
    cloud and debris flying in the air" and realized there had been a collision of the pickup he
    had been chasing and another car.
    Emery would later testify at Ritz' trial that the entire chase "[c]ouldn't have been
    more than probably a minute, minute and a half." At no time during the chase had Emery
    turned off his lights and siren. Data from recorders in both vehicles involved in the
    collision would later be admitted into evidence. It showed that the pickup reached a
    maximum speed of 77 miles per hour approximately 2 seconds before the collision. At
    about the same time, the pickup's throttle dropped to 0 percent and the pickup brake
    lights came on, which indicated the driver had depressed the brake pedal. The last
    recorded speed was 70 miles per hour, approximately 1 second before the collision.
    The driver of the pickup would later be identified as Ritz.
    When Emery stopped, he could see that the driver of a second vehicle involved in
    the crash was slumped over and not moving. When Recio, who had also pursued the
    pickup, arrived at the scene, he focused on the other driver while Emery focused on Ritz.
    The other driver, Venancio Perez-Najera, was unconscious; and a third officer could not
    find his pulse. Perez-Najera was ultimately pronounced dead at the scene.
    Ritz was charged with first-degree felony murder predicated on fleeing or
    attempting to elude an officer, two alternative counts of fleeing or attempting to elude an
    officer, theft, and driving while a habitual violator in connection with the events of March
    5.
    5
    All of Ritz' charges were filed in a single information, and Ritz moved before trial
    to sever the crimes by date. After briefing and oral argument by both sides, the district
    judge ruled from the bench that the two sets of crimes were of the same or similar
    character under K.S.A. 22-3202, making their joinder appropriate.
    The district judge began his analysis of the motion by noting the similarity of the
    charges. In both cases, Ritz had been charged with reckless fleeing or eluding, driving
    while a habitual violator, and felony theft. The judge acknowledged that the second case
    also resulted in a felony-murder charge absent from the first incident and that the thefts
    were factually distinct. In one set of charges, the State alleged that Ritz had stolen the
    vehicle in which he fled, whereas in the other the State alleged that Ritz obtained the
    vehicle from a third party, knowing it to be stolen.
    The district judge next focused on whether the charged crimes were of the same
    general character requiring the same mode of trial, the same kind of evidence, and the
    same kind of punishment. He noted that the mode of trial for each set of charges was jury
    trial and that the potential punishment for each charge was incarceration. The judge also
    noted that the same type of evidence would be needed because both sets of charges would
    require the testimony of the officers who had participated in the chase.
    The district judge also discussed the factual similarities of the two cases. The
    crimes were fewer than 75 days apart. In both cases, Ritz' flight from police took place in
    residential neighborhoods within the city limits and ended with an accident involving the
    car Ritz was driving. The judge acknowledged that the two chases happened at different
    times of day and that only the second accident resulted in a death. The district judge also
    compared Ritz' statements to police after his two arrests. After the first chase, Ritz told
    investigators, "I'm a fucking idiot. I just fucked up my life. I'm such an idiot. I can't
    6
    believe I did this. I'm sorry." The judge summarized Ritz' statements: He "admitted to
    stealing the car, admit[ted to] taking off when the police got right behind him." The judge
    also summarized Ritz' statements after the second chase: Ritz told investigators that "two
    cops pulled up on him, he freaked out, punched the gas, . . . was going fast and he should
    have stopped."
    Finally, the judge noted that the State's argument was that Ritz' motive for fleeing
    or attempting to elude in each instance was his knowledge that he was driving a stolen
    vehicle.
    All of the charges—with the exception of the two misdemeanors for driving while
    a habitual violator, which were the subject of a plea agreement—were tried to a jury.
    At trial, Detective Michael Amy testified about his interview of Ritz after the
    March 5 chase. Ritz had told Amy that when police pulled behind him "that he had
    freaked out and backed out of the driveway and punched the gas." According to Amy,
    Ritz stated that "he knew he was supposed to stop." Ritz told Amy that he tried to stop,
    but "things were flying around in the truck or fell off." He "kept saying it was either—he
    thought it was a—a pop bottle or a water bottle or something of that nature" that ended up
    underneath the brake pedal and prevented Ritz from using the brakes. Amy testified that
    the only bottle found in the pickup by investigators was an ibuprofen bottle. Based on
    testing conducted by investigators, it was not possible for that bottle to jam under the
    brake pedal. Ritz also admitted to Amy that he had stolen the Corvette he was driving on
    December 26. Ritz acknowledged that the GMC pickup he was driving on March 5 may
    have been stolen, because the friend who had "asked [Ritz] to move [the GMC] truck . . .
    [and] go and park it by the river . . . was into stealing cars."
    7
    At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found Ritz guilty on all of the charges. For
    the December 26 crimes, Ritz was convicted of two alternative counts of fleeing or
    attempting to elude a police officer and theft. For the March 5 crimes, Ritz was convicted
    of first-degree felony murder, two alternative counts of fleeing or attempting to elude a
    police officer, and theft.
    Ritz received a life sentence for the felony-murder conviction; his sentences for
    the other convictions—the longest of which was 7 months—were ordered to run
    concurrently with each other and with the life sentence.
    SEVERANCE OF CHARGES
    Ritz' first issue on appeal is whether the district judge erred when he denied the
    motion to sever. When reviewing such decisions, we follow three steps. Each requires us
    to apply a different standard of review.
    "First, we consider whether K.S.A. 22-3203 permitted joinder. Under that statute,
    multiple complaints against a defendant can be tried together if the State could have
    brought the charges in a single complaint. K.S.A. 22-3202(1) spells out the three
    conditions permitting the joining of multiple crimes in a single complaint. Whether one
    of the conditions is satisfied is a fact-specific inquiry, and we review the district court's
    factual findings for substantial competent evidence and the legal conclusion that one of
    the conditions is met de novo. See State v. Gaither, 
    283 Kan. 671
    , 684-85, 
    156 P.3d 602
           (2007).
    "Second, because K.S.A. 22-3202(1) provides that charges 'may' be joined, a
    district court retains discretion to deny a joinder request even if a statutory condition is
    met. We review this decision for an abuse of discretion. See 
    Gaither, 283 Kan. at 685
    .
    8
    "Finally, if an error occurred in the preceding steps, we determine whether the
    error resulted in prejudice, i.e., whether the error affected a party's substantial rights.
    K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 60-261." State v. Hurd, 
    298 Kan. 555
    , 561, 
    316 P.3d 696
    (2013).
    K.S.A. 22-3202(1) allows two or more crimes to be charged in the same complaint
    if: (1) the charges are of "the same or similar character"; (2) the charges are part of the
    "same act or transaction"; or (3) the charges result from "two or more acts or transactions
    connected together or constituting parts of a common scheme or plan."
    In this case, as mentioned, the district judge relied on the two sets of crimes being
    "the same or similar character." In his brief, Ritz does not appear to challenge the
    sufficiency of the evidence supporting any of the factual findings the district judge made;
    rather, he argues that those facts did not support the judge's legal conclusion.
    We have previously articulated a general test for determining when joinder is
    appropriate:
    "When all of the offenses are of the same general character, require the same
    mode of trial and the same kind of evidence, and occur in the same jurisdiction, the
    defendant may be tried upon several counts of one information or if separate informations
    have been filed they may be consolidated for trial at one and the same trial." State v.
    Crawford, 
    255 Kan. 47
    , 53, 
    872 P.2d 293
    (1994) (citing State v. Ralls, 
    213 Kan. 249
    ,
    256-57, 
    515 P.2d 1205
    [1973]).
    Later, in State v. Barksdale, 
    266 Kan. 498
    , 
    973 P.2d 165
    (1999), this court recited
    this test:
    "'So far as the joinder of separate offenses in the same information is concerned, the test
    is: Are the charges of the same general nature and will the joinder deprive the defendant
    9
    of an advantage in the trial, or are they incongruous and repugnant in character and will
    they operate to deprive the defendant of some legal 
    advantage?'" 266 Kan. at 507
    .
    The Barksdale court also warned "against relying solely on generalities when considering
    the propriety of 
    joinder." 266 Kan. at 508
    .
    "'That offenses must be of the same general character is not always a sound test
    of joinder. In this instance the two crimes charged were of the same general character, in
    that they both involved force and violence to the person. That, however, would not
    necessarily be sufficient. To illustrate: As the culmination of a long-standing quarrel
    about a line fence, a farmer kills his neighbor. He goes to town, and the same afternoon,
    while in an excited frame of mind, he becomes involved in an altercation about a business
    matter, and makes an assault with some kind of a deadly weapon with intent to kill.
    While the offenses are of the same general character, there should be separate
    informations and separate trials. The only reason this is so is, there would inevitably be
    some jumbling of the two cases at the trial, which would tend to prevent that concentrated
    consideration of each case which is indispensable in matters of such 
    gravity.'" 266 Kan. at 508
    (quoting State v. Thompson, 
    139 Kan. 59
    , 61-62, 
    29 P.2d 1101
    [1934]).
    More recently, in State v. Smith-Parker, 
    301 Kan. 132
    , 
    340 P.3d 485
    (2014), we
    addressed consolidation of two cases for a single trial and summarized our caselaw
    analyzing the "same or similar character" condition for permitting joinder.
    "On the first statutory condition, crimes of the same or similar character, we note
    that earlier Kansas cases that have held consolidation or joinder to be appropriate have
    generally had multiple commonalities, not merely the same classification of one of the
    crimes charged. See State v. Carr, 
    300 Kan. 1
    , 101-04, 
    331 P.3d 544
    (2014) (victims
    identified defendants; aspects of modus operandi consistent between crimes); State v.
    Cruz, 
    297 Kan. 1048
    , 1055, 
    307 P.3d 199
    (2013) (both victims leaving nightclub at
    closing time; both accosted before reaching vehicle; both had little warning before shot
    repeatedly; same gun used; defendant identified in both cases; both cases charged first-
    degree murder, criminal possession of firearm); State v. Gaither, 
    283 Kan. 671
    , 687, 156
    
    10 P.3d 602
    (2007) (both victims drug dealers; defendant on quest for drugs during both;
    both victims shot with 9 mm handgun; both occurred in private dwellings; 5-day time
    span); State v. Barksdale, 
    266 Kan. 498
    , 506-10, 
    973 P.2d 165
    (1999) (both crimes
    murder; victims killed in similar manner; robbery common motive); State v. Crawford,
    
    255 Kan. 47
    , 48, 53-54, 
    872 P.2d 293
    (1994) (both crimes robbery; victims identified
    defendant; similar modus operandi)." 
    Smith-Parker, 301 Kan. at 157-58
    .
    In Smith-Parker, we concluded that the "same or similar character" condition was not
    satisfied.
    "Here, although each case involved a single homicide, the homicides lacked
    many other similarities. The murder of Mack was tied to a burglary, apparently targeted
    at a large amount of marijuana in his possession. Mack was apparently shot suddenly
    from across the room while he was seated or in the process of standing up to face at least
    one of the burglars. In contrast, Letourneau and Smith-Parker, as the district judge found,
    were so close that they considered themselves brothers, and had spent much of several
    days in one another's company. Letourneau's death followed an argument between him
    and Smith-Parker over Letourneau's treatment of Letourneau's girlfriend. Whether that
    argument provided a motivation for the fatal shooting or the shooting was accidental or a
    suicide was disputed. On this slim record, we cannot say as a matter of law that the first
    statutory condition for consolidation or joinder was 
    met." 301 Kan. at 158
    .
    Despite rejecting the "same or similar character" condition, joinder was appropriate in
    Smith-Parker because the factual findings of the district judge supported the third
    condition precedent listed in the statute—"two or more acts or transactions connected
    together or constituting parts of a common scheme or plan." 
    See 301 Kan. at 158-60
    .
    That condition precedent, of course, is not before us in this case.
    Here, based on the district judge's undisputed factual findings and thorough
    analysis, it is easy for us to conclude that Ritz' two sets of crimes were "of the same or
    similar character," making joinder permissible under K.S.A. 22-3202. As an initial
    11
    consideration, the charges stemming from each incident overlap greatly: Both resulted in
    charges of fleeing or attempting to elude an officer, theft, and driving while a habitual
    violator. But, as we held in Smith-Parker, overlap in the crimes charged is not enough to
    establish that crimes are of the same or similar character. 
    See 301 Kan. at 158
    . There
    must be other factual similarities between the two sets of crimes. Unlike in Smith-Parker,
    those factual similarities are present here.
    The district judge found that in both cases Ritz' flight began when police pulled in
    behind him while he was driving a stolen car. The judge noted that after the first incident
    Ritz admitted to "taking off when the police got right behind him." After the second
    incident Ritz admitted to investigators that "two cops pulled up on him, he freaked out,
    [and] punched the gas." In both cases, the flight took place in residential neighborhoods
    within the city limits. And in both cases, the flight ended when Ritz wrecked the vehicle
    he was driving.
    In addition to the factual similarities between the two sets of crimes, the district
    judge correctly noted that both sets of crimes required the same mode of trial—trial by
    jury—and could result in the same type of punishment—incarceration.
    Taking all of these aspects of the judge's decision into consideration, the two sets
    of crimes are of the same or similar character, establishing a prerequisite for joinder
    under K.S.A. 22-3202(1). This satisfies the first step of our analysis. See State v. Gaither,
    
    283 Kan. 671
    , 684-85, 
    156 P.3d 602
    (2007).
    The second step requires us to determine whether the district judge abused his
    discretion. See 
    Hurd, 298 Kan. at 561
    . Ritz does not advance any particularized argument
    on this step, and we see no basis for one. We thus hold that the judge did not abuse his
    12
    discretion. Indeed, the district judge's ruling from the bench was complete and
    comprehensive, demonstrating a careful exercise of discretion.
    Because the statutory legal threshold was met in the first step and the judge did not
    abuse his discretion in the second step, there was no error in the ruling on the motion to
    sever. We do not need to reach the third step of our analysis, examination for
    harmlessness or reversibility. See 
    Hurd, 298 Kan. at 561
    .
    LESSER INCLUDED CRIME INSTRUCTIONS
    Ritz also argues on appeal that "the purported statutory elimination of his right to
    instructions on lesser included offenses" in K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5109(b)(1) and K.S.A.
    2016 Supp. 21-5402(d) violates federal and state constitutional protections of his right to
    jury trial.
    Identical claims were decided adversely to defendants in two new cases from this
    court. See State v. Love, 305 Kan. __, __ P.3d __, 
    2017 WL 244772
    , at *9-13 (No.
    112,611, filed January 20, 2017); State v. Brown, 305 Kan. __, __ P.3d __, 
    2017 WL 252449
    , at *9-10 (No. 111,166, filed January 20, 2017). We see no reason to depart from
    those holdings here.
    Highly summarized, the new cases state that there is no federal constitutional
    requirement to instruct juries on offenses that are not lesser included crimes of the
    charged crime under state law. See Hopkins v. Reeves, 
    524 U.S. 88
    , 90-91, 
    118 S. Ct. 1895
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 76
    (1998). And the inviolate right of jury trial in Section 5 of the
    Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights is limited to fact issues in criminal cases; it does not
    demand that a jury be permitted to determine a legal question such as the choice of
    instructions on lesser degrees of a charged crime. See Love, 
    2017 WL 244772
    , at *12-13.
    13
    APPRENDI
    Ritz' final appellate issue challenges the district judge's use of prior convictions as
    a basis for Ritz' criminal history score to enhance his sentence without requiring the
    criminal history to be included in the charging document and proved to a jury beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Ritz relies on Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 2348
    ,
    
    147 L. Ed. 2d 435
    (2000).
    Ritz acknowledges that we have previously rejected this argument. See State v.
    Ivory, 
    273 Kan. 44
    , 46-48, 
    41 P.3d 781
    (2002). He does not present a new or persuasive
    argument compelling us to overturn that precedent. See State v. Williams, 
    299 Kan. 911
    ,
    941, 
    329 P.3d 400
    (2014). We therefore reject his claim.
    CONCLUSION
    Defendant Keith A. Ritz was not entitled to have his two sets of charges severed or
    to have his jury instructed on lesser degrees of felony murder. Further, the district judge
    was entitled to rely on Ritz' criminal history for sentencing. We affirm the judgment of
    the district court.
    14