State v. McMillan ( 2023 )


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  •                            NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 124,726
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    PETTIX MCMILLAN,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; KEVIN J. O'CONNOR, judge. Opinion filed January 13,
    2023. Sentence vacated and case remanded with directions.
    Ryan J. Eddinger, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Matt J. Maloney, assistant district attorney, Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt,
    attorney general, for appellee.
    Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GARDNER and CLINE, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: Pettix McMillan was convicted by a jury of three counts of
    attempted murder and sentenced to 1,068 months in prison. In sentencing McMillan, the
    district court denied his request for a downward durational departure. McMillan
    appealed, challenging his convictions and criminal history score. Following his direct
    appeal, his case was remanded to the district court for a limited evidentiary hearing on
    whether his statutory speedy trial rights were denied at trial. Following this hearing and
    the district court's denial of his speedy trial rights claim, McMillan appealed again. As
    part of this second direct appeal, McMillan raised a new claim that his sentence was
    1
    illegal. This court agreed and remanded his case for resentencing. At resentencing,
    McMillan again moved for a durational departure. The district court refused to consider
    this motion, concluding that it lacked jurisdiction to consider a departure sentence, and
    sentenced McMillan to 1,029 months in prison. McMillan now appeals a third time,
    arguing that the district court erred in concluding it lacked jurisdiction to consider his
    departure motion and in modifying his sentence on count two.
    Because the district court erred in resentencing McMillan, both in concluding it
    lacked jurisdiction to consider his departure motion and in modifying his sentence on
    count two, we vacate his sentences and remand for resentencing.
    FACTS
    McMillan was convicted by a jury of three counts of attempted first-degree
    murder, a severity level 1 person felony, in connection with the shootings of his then-wife
    and two sons. The State sought to present aggravating factors to the jury to support an
    upward departure on the two counts corresponding with the attempted murder of his sons.
    The jury was instructed on these proposed factors and found their existence. McMillan,
    for his part, moved for a downward departure sentence.
    The district court denied McMillan's motion for a downward departure and
    imposed an upward departure sentence based on the aggravating factors found by the
    jury, sentencing McMillan to 1,068 months in prison.
    McMillan filed a direct appeal, raising two claims about his statutory right to a
    speedy trial and a challenge to the criminal history category the district court used to
    determine his sentence. Another panel of this court affirmed McMillan's convictions and
    sentence. State v. McMillan, No. 115,229, 
    2017 WL 3447000
    , at *7 (Kan. App. 2017)
    (unpublished opinion) (McMillan I). Our Supreme Court, however, subsequently
    2
    remanded the case to this court for reconsideration of one of his speedy trial right claims.
    This court, in turn, remanded the case to the district court for an evidentiary hearing on
    McMillan's claim.
    After conducting the evidentiary hearing, the district court denied McMillan's
    claim. McMillan appealed once again from this decision, challenging the district court's
    ruling. He also alleged, for the first time, that his sentence was illegal. Another panel of
    this court affirmed the district court's denial of McMillan's speedy trial claim but agreed
    McMillan's sentence was illegal, as the maximum prison sentence the district court could
    have imposed under the sentencing guidelines was 1,029 months. The panel therefore
    vacated McMillan's sentences and remanded with directions to resentence McMillan.
    State v. McMillan, No. 115,229, 
    2021 WL 642297
    , at *8 (Kan. App. 2021) (unpublished
    opinion), rev. denied 
    313 Kan. 1044
     (2021) (McMillan II).
    On remand for resentencing, McMillan moved again for a downward durational
    departure, filing an Addendum to Departure Motion adopting the arguments made in his
    original departure motion and offering additional mitigating factors based on his
    productive behavior and good disciplinary record while incarcerated.
    The district court refused to consider McMillan's departure motion, concluding the
    opinion in McMillan II limited it to sentencing McMillan as the original sentencing judge
    intended—that is, to impose the longest term of imprisonment permitted under the
    guidelines. As the district court explained, it did not have "jurisdiction under this remand
    to reconsider arguments regarding sentencing" and was confined to merely correcting an
    arithmetic error.
    The district court then sentenced McMillan to 1,029 months in prison. In doing so,
    it resentenced McMillan on all three counts, designating count two as the primary
    offense, imposing an upward departure sentence on counts two and three based on the
    3
    aggravating factors found by the jury, and running the three counts consecutive to one
    another.
    McMillan timely appealed.
    ANALYSIS
    Did the district court err in concluding it lacked jurisdiction to consider McMillan's
    durational departure motion on remand for resentencing?
    On appeal, McMillan argues the district court erred in concluding it lacked
    jurisdiction to consider his departure motion. The State argues the mandate rule
    precluded the district court from considering McMillan's requested departure.
    The interpretation of sentencing statutes is a question of law over which this court
    exercises unlimited review. Whether a district court has complied with the mandate of an
    appellate court is also a question of law. State v. Guder, 
    293 Kan. 763
    , 765, 
    267 P.3d 751
    (2012). Jurisdiction is likewise a question of law and thus subject to the same standard of
    review. See State v. Harris, 
    262 Kan. 778
    , 780, 
    942 P.2d 31
     (1997).
    On appeal, McMillan claims the district court erred in concluding it lacked
    jurisdiction to consider his motion for a durational departure. He argues the mandate in
    McMillan II only reflected the maximum possible sentence he could receive and did not
    preclude the district court from considering his departure motion in resentencing him.
    The State argues the district court did not err, as the language of the remand order
    dictated that the district court did not have jurisdiction to reconsider McMillan's
    departure motion on remand. The State claims the panel in McMillan II limited the
    district court, under the mandate rule, to sentencing McMillan "'consistent with [that]
    opinion,'" i.e., to a sentence of 1,029 months in prison. The State argues the mandate rule
    4
    also precluded the district court from considering McMillan's departure motion due to his
    intentional choice to not appeal the district court's denial of his first departure motion.
    Whether the district court had jurisdiction to consider McMillan's departure
    motion
    In support of the contention that the district court had jurisdiction to consider his
    departure motion, McMillan first notes the Kansas Supreme Court has held that where a
    motion to modify a sentence was denied by a district court but never appealed, the district
    court retained jurisdiction to consider the motion. See Harris, 
    262 Kan. at 780-81
    . He
    argues that departure motions should be treated similarly. And since he did not appeal the
    district court's denial of his original departure motion, he claims the district court was not
    barred from considering his departure motion at resentencing.
    While the State does not specifically respond to McMillan's arguments on Harris,
    an analysis of that opinion shows McMillan's reliance on it is unfounded. As stated,
    Harris involved a motion for sentence modification, not a motion for a sentencing
    departure. The question on appeal was whether the district court had jurisdiction to
    decide the defendant's post-appeal motion to modify sentence—not whether the district
    court retained jurisdiction to address sentencing issues not challenged as part of a
    defendant's direct appeal on remand for resentencing. And the resolution of this issue
    turned on the court's interpretation of the statutory language authorizing motions to
    modify.
    McMillan next argues that, if a motion for modification and a motion for
    durational departure are distinguishable, State v. Blackmon, 
    285 Kan. 719
    , 720-21, 
    176 P.3d 160
     (2008), provides more direct support for his position. He notes that in that case,
    the court held the district court could reconsider a departure motion on remand for
    5
    resentencing. Once again, a review of that case reveals it is also not on all fours with
    McMillan's situation.
    In Blackmon, the district court granted the defendant a downward durational
    departure at sentencing based on its belief that the facts of the case did not rise to the
    level of manifest indifference to the value of human life to justify the defendant's
    conviction for second-degree murder. On appeal, another panel of this court reversed,
    finding that a sentencing judge's disagreement with the jury verdict is not a substantial
    and compelling reason that can justify a departure. Our Supreme Court affirmed this
    ruling, as the purpose of the departure procedure is not to substitute the district court's
    judgment for the jury's verdict. 
    285 Kan. at 728
    . And because a sentencing court must
    state the reasons for departure on the record and the district court referenced no other
    basis for departure, the court declined Blackmon's invitation to glean other departure
    factors from the evidence or the sentencing court's statements in granting the departure.
    
    285 Kan. at 729-30
    .
    Given these conclusions, the court then turned to whether upon remand it was
    appropriate for the district court to clarify the reasons for departure or whether the initial
    failure doomed Blackmon's departure motion. The court noted that Kansas courts had
    previously allowed remand for clarification of departure reasons on upward departures
    and that it could discern no reason why the same policy should not apply to downward
    departures. Since the limited record available on appeal suggested the sentencing court
    may have had other reasons for departure it did not state, the appropriate remedy was to
    vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing where the district court could impose a
    departure sentence, if it determined there were reasons justifying a departure. 
    285 Kan. at 731-32
    .
    The State argues that Blackmon is distinguishable from this case. It claims that,
    unlike Blackmon, this is not a case in which the district court granted a departure but
    6
    failed to articulate valid reasons for doing so. Rather, the State argues, the district court
    imposed a sentence that was illegal because it "did not conform to the sentencing
    guidelines."
    Although there are important distinguishing features between the facts here and
    Blackmon, the State's description is not completely accurate. While the statement that
    McMillan's sentence was illegal because it did not conform to the sentencing guidelines
    is technically correct, it fails to identify the exact reason his sentence was illegal.
    In its opinion vacating McMillan's sentence and remanding his case for
    resentencing, the McMillan II panel did not specifically identify the error in McMillan's
    sentence. Yet a review of the record shows that, like Blackmon, the district court here
    erred by imposing a departure that was not supported by valid factual findings.
    In originally sentencing McMillan, the district court imposed an upward departure
    sentence on all three counts. But the State had only requested findings on, and the jury
    only found, the existence of aggravating factors supporting an upward departure on
    counts two and three—the attempted murders of his two sons. While it did not
    specifically identify this as the error in pronouncing his sentence illegal, this court
    confirmed that McMillan could only receive upward departure sentences on two of his
    three convictions—those counts on which the jury found aggravating circumstances.
    Given this fact, the maximum possible sentence McMillan could have been given was
    1,029 months, rather than the 1,068 months the district court sentenced him to.
    As Blackmon suggests, Kansas courts have typically allowed district courts to
    reconsider whether to impose a departure sentence on remand for resentencing following
    reversal of a previously imposed departure sentence on appeal.
    7
    But the facts of this case are still somewhat distinguishable from those in
    Blackmon and the other cases cited by the court there. In each of those cases, the record
    reflected that the district court may have had reasons supporting a departure but did not
    state them on the record. Here, in contrast, the record does not show the district court
    believed that reasons existed to support the departure on count one but failed to state
    them. Rather, the district court appears to have simply erred in applying the aggravating
    factors the jury found on the other counts. The question here is not whether the district
    court could reconsider on remand the departure it erroneously granted on remand, but
    whether the district court could consider a departure in the other direction.
    Given these differences, it does not appear that Blackmon controls the question
    presented by this case. That said, the differences between Blackmon and this case need
    not lead to the conclusion that the district court did not have jurisdiction to consider a
    downward departure on remand for resentencing. It does not appear from the court's
    discussion of the issues in Blackmon that the possible existence of factors supporting the
    departure was the reason jurisdiction existed in that case for the district court to
    reconsider the departure on remand. If anything, the fact that district courts typically have
    jurisdiction to reconsider whether to impose a departure sentence on remand seems to
    support McMillan's position. After all, the statute which authorizes departure sentences
    and provides the procedure district courts must follow in imposing departures does not
    differentiate between upward and downward departures. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6815.
    If a district court has jurisdiction to consider whether to impose an upward
    departure, it seemingly would also have jurisdiction to consider whether to consider a
    downward departure, since the revised Kansas Sentencing Guidelines Act (KSGA) does
    not lay out a separate process for considering the two. Rather, in determining whether to
    impose a departure sentence, a sentencing judge is merely instructed to consider whether
    substantial and compelling reasons exist justifying a departure and given a nonexclusive
    list of mitigating and aggravating factors to consider. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6815. As
    8
    a result, the KSGA contemplates that both mitigating and aggravating factors should be
    considered whenever a district court decides whether to impose a departure sentence. See
    State v. Jolly, 
    301 Kan. 313
    , 321, 
    342 P.3d 935
     (2015).
    Turning to other cases for insight, the source of a district court's jurisdiction to
    resentence a defendant on remand comes from the KSGA. As a result of the KSGA's
    passage, the Kansas Supreme Court has held that "a district court has no authority to
    modify a sentence unless plain statutory language provides such authority." Guder, 
    293 Kan. at 766
    . In Guder, the court analyzed the KSGA and determined the 1992
    amendments deprived district courts of the jurisdiction to modify sentences on remand
    for resentencing "except to correct arithmetic or clerical errors, to consider or reconsider
    departures from presumptive sentences, or to modify sentences by reinstating previously
    revoked probations." 
    293 Kan. at 766
    . The court also determined the Legislature
    explicitly addressed remands following reversal in K.S.A. 21-4720(b)(5). That statute,
    now codified at K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6819(b)(5), states that if a conviction of the
    primary crime is reversed on appeal, the sentencing court is to follow all the KSGA
    provisions concerning sentencing in multiple conviction cases. 
    293 Kan. at 766
    .
    In resentencing a defendant after a remand, a district court must correct the
    sentence so that it becomes compliant with the KSGA. State v. Jamerson, 
    309 Kan. 211
    ,
    216, 
    433 P.3d 698
     (2019). This means the district court necessarily must apply the KSGA
    provisions governing the terms of grid sentences to determine the sentence's length. "In
    doing so, the court has to exercise its independent judgment—within the limitations
    imposed by the KSGA—to determine the appropriate sentence." Jamerson, 
    309 Kan. at 218
    . The KSGA also permits a district court resentencing a defendant's nonbase
    sentences on remand to determine anew whether the terms of imprisonment for those
    convictions should run consecutive to a defendant's other sentences. 
    309 Kan. at 218
    .
    Finally, a district court is also statutorily required to allow defense counsel to address the
    court and to provide the defendant the opportunity to make a statement on his own behalf
    9
    and to present any evidence in mitigation of punishment. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3424(e);
    see also State v. Salary, 
    309 Kan. 479
    , 487-88, 
    437 P.3d 953
     (2019) (statutory right to
    allocution applies on remand for resentencing).
    Applying these principles to the question at hand, we find the KSGA authorized
    the district court here to consider whether a departure was justified as part of its
    resentencing of McMillan. As Jamerson instructs, the district court on remand should
    resentence a defendant in compliance with the KSGA. This means it must apply K.S.A.
    2021 Supp. 21-6815 as its starting point in resentencing McMillan. And under that
    statute, the requirement that a district court impose the presumptive sentence in a case is
    intertwined with its authority to grant a departure. A district court must impose the
    presumptive sentence unless substantial and compelling reasons justify a departure
    sentence. Because the requirement to consider if substantial and compelling reasons
    supporting a departure exist is in the same provision as the requirement to impose the
    presumptive sentence under the guidelines, we find a district court can consider a
    departure whenever it is sentencing a defendant—including on remand for resentencing.
    Furthermore, Jamerson and Salary reveal that when a district court resentences a
    defendant on remand, it necessarily must decide whether aggravating or mitigating
    factors are present. Not only does a defendant have a statutory right to allocution, but a
    district court must decide whether to apply the mitigated, middle, or aggravated sentence
    in the applicable sentencing grid box. And if resentencing on a defendant's nonbase
    sentence in a multiple convictions case, it must decide whether to run the sentence
    consecutive to the defendant's other sentences. There does not appear to be any reason
    why a district court would be restricted from determining that the mitigating factors are
    substantial and compelling enough to justify a downward departure from the presumptive
    sentence, in accordance with K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6815.
    10
    Thus, we find the district court had jurisdiction to consider McMillan's motion for
    a downward departure.
    The mandate rule
    The State claims the mandate rule controls the outcome here. The State argues the
    language of the panel's opinion did not authorize the district court to do anything but
    sentence McMillan to a term of 1,029 months in prison. The State further argues that
    McMillan's failure to challenge the denial of his original departure motion on appeal
    operates as another basis for finding the mandate rule precluded the district court from
    considering his departure motion.
    Under the mandate rule, a district court is duty-bound to follow an appellate
    court's mandate on remand. See K.S.A. 60-2106(c); K.S.A. 20-108.
    "'The [mandate] rule applies to prevent district court action on remand only when
    an issue has already been finally settled by earlier proceedings in a case, including
    issuance of the appellate mandate. If a final settlement of an issue has occurred, the
    district judge is not free to expand upon or revise that history. The mandate rule does not,
    however, prevent a district judge from doing whatever else is necessary to dispose of a
    case. This means the district judge must not only do as the mandate directs; he or she
    must also do what is needed to settle other outstanding issues that must be decided to
    complete district court work on the case.'" State v. Smith, 
    312 Kan. 876
    , 884, 
    482 P.3d 586
     (2021) (quoting State v. Soto, 
    310 Kan. 242
    , 256, 
    445 P.3d 1161
     [2019]).
    In other words, under the mandate rule, a district court may address those issues
    necessary to the resolution of the case left open by the appellate court's mandate. Smith,
    312 Kan. at 885.
    11
    The State's arguments about the mandate rule seem largely duplicative of its
    arguments about jurisdiction—in both cases, the State essentially argues that because the
    district court was mandated to resentence McMillan "'consistent with [that] opinion'" it
    had no discretion to do anything but sentence McMillan to a term of 1,029 months. While
    the panel did use that phrase in its opinion, it did not remand with directions, including
    any direction as to a specific sentence. In discussing a possible sentence length of 1,029
    months, the panel was merely commenting that this would be "the maximum permissible
    term" to which McMillan could be sentenced—not directing the district court to sentence
    him as such. McMillan II, 
    2021 WL 642297
    , at *7. The context for this comment was the
    panel's discussion of the district court's intention at sentencing, which it found was "to
    impose the longest term of imprisonment permitted under the guidelines." McMillan II,
    
    2021 WL 642297
    , at *8. We do not read the opinion to constrain the district court's
    discretion by ordering a specific sentence.
    Even so, as explained above, the district court's task in resentencing McMillan was
    to exercise its independent judgment—within the limitations imposed by the KSGA—to
    determine the appropriate sentence under the guidelines. This included considering
    aggravating and mitigating factors to establish whether a departure sentence was
    warranted or, if a departure was not warranted, what sentence within the applicable
    sentencing grid box to apply. Thus, to put it in terms of the mandate rule, consideration of
    a departure sentence was within those issues necessary to the resolution of the case left
    open by the appellate court's mandate.
    As explained, the district court was required, at the very least, to give McMillan a
    chance for allocution and consider any mitigating factors he offered in determining
    whether to apply the low, middle, or high number in the applicable sentencing grid box.
    And McMillan's motion for a durational departure included new mitigating factors, along
    with incorporating those in his original motion. See State v. West, 
    46 Kan. App. 2d 732
    ,
    738-39, 
    281 P.3d 529
     (2011) (Atcheson, J., concurring) (failure to allow allocution on
    12
    remand for resentencing potentially prejudiced defendant by preventing sentencing judge
    from learning of any information on defendant's conduct in intervening period that could
    influence sentencing decision). Accordingly, we find the district court should have
    allowed McMillan to present his arguments in support of his departure motion upon
    remand.
    Did the district court impermissibly modify McMillan's sentence in resentencing him?
    Along with considering the issues raised by the parties in their initial briefs, this
    panel ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefing "on the question of whether the
    district court had authority to modify McMillan's sentence on count two in resentencing
    him."
    In response to the court's order, McMillan argues the district court only had
    authority on remand to modify the illegal portions of his original sentence and that his
    original sentence was only illegal as to count one. He thus claims the district court lacked
    the authority to modify his sentence on count two in resentencing him.
    The State counters by first arguing it is unclear that the district court modified
    McMillan's sentence on count two in resentencing him. It claims the journal entry of
    McMillan's original sentencing hearing does not accurately reflect the district court's oral
    pronouncement of the sentence and notes that here, the oral pronouncement controls. And
    it argues the oral pronouncement of McMillan's sentence could be interpreted as
    imposing the same sentence on count two as the district court imposed in resentencing
    him—in which case, no modification occurred.
    Alternatively, the State argues that if the district court did modify count two on
    resentencing, it could do so, as the sentence the district court originally pronounced on
    count two was ambiguous as to the time and manner in which it was to be served.
    13
    While McMillan did not raise this issue before the district court, courts have a
    statutory duty to correct an illegal sentence at any time. As a result, an illegal sentence
    issue may be considered for the first time on appeal. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504; State v.
    Juiliano, 
    315 Kan. 76
    , 79, 
    504 P.3d 399
     (2022). And an illegal sentence can be addressed
    by an appellate court, sua sponte. See State v. Johnson, 
    309 Kan. 992
    , 995, 
    441 P.3d 1036
    (2019).
    A court's authority to impose a sentence is statutory. Thus, arguments attacking a
    court's authority to impose sentence involves the interpretation of statutes—a question of
    law over which this court has unlimited review. State v. Kessler, 
    276 Kan. 202
    , 215, 
    73 P.3d 761
     (2003).
    Similarly, whether a sentence is illegal under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504 is a
    question of law over which an appellate court's review is unlimited. State v. Gracey, 
    288 Kan. 252
    , 261, 
    200 P.3d 1275
     (2009).
    Supplemental facts
    To analyze the parties' arguments, a more in-depth description of McMillan's
    sentencing is first required.
    At McMillan's original sentencing hearing, the State requested that McMillan
    receive the high number in the appropriate sentencing guideline grid box for each
    count—267 months as to count one and 165 months as to counts two and three—with the
    three counts running consecutive. The State explained that although this would bring his
    total sentence to 597 months' imprisonment, the district court would normally be limited
    to imposing a maximum sentence of 534 months—twice the aggravated number on the
    primary sentence. But because the jury found aggravating factors supporting a durational
    14
    departure existed, the State requested the district court sentence McMillan "to twice the
    possible maximum sentence in this case which would be 1,068 months."
    After the State made its arguments in opposition to McMillan's requested
    downward departure, the district court asked the State for some clarification about the
    law. The district court asked, "Generally speaking, when there are multiple counts the
    most someone can be sentenced to is double the high number in the first primary
    count[?]" The State responded yes.
    The following exchange then occurred:
    "THE COURT: Okay. You're wanting to use the aggravating factors that the jury
    decided . . . as the basis for doubling that figure of 534 to 1,068, is that—
    "[THE STATE]: Yes, sir. We gave notice to the defendant pursuant to [K.S.A.]
    21-6815 at the time of charging of the specific factors that we sent back to the jury. We
    utilized the procedure outlined in [K.S.A.] 21-6817(a)(7) and the jury came to their
    unanimous finding. The Court's authorized through [K.S.A.] 21-6818(b)(2) to double that
    maximum number and that's what we're asking you to do."
    And after denying McMillan's motion for a downward departure, the district court
    asked the State how it should allocate the 1,068 months between the three counts.
    "[THE STATE]: The way that you would do it is an upward departure on the
    maximum number on the aggravated; that's how you would do it. So you are doubling
    that Count 1 and then you are permitted, under [K.S.A. 21-]6818, to then double that
    number. You would give a sentence of the aggravated number on each count and then
    pronounce the doubling after you find—
    "THE COURT: Okay. And that will be the Order of the Court for a total
    sentence of 1,068 months."
    15
    The district court made no further oral pronouncement as to McMillan's sentence,
    other than clarifying that it was relying on the departure factors found by the jury, finding
    that the felonies were committed with a deadly weapon, and informing McMillan of his
    postrelease registration requirements.
    The journal entry of McMillan's original sentencing hearing states the district
    court designated count one as the primary offense and sentenced McMillan to the
    aggravated number in the applicable grid box for each count. The district court then
    imposed an upward durational departure to double the presumptive sentence on all three
    counts, with the sentences running consecutively. This resulted in a sentence of 534
    months on count one, 330 months on count two, and 330 months on count three. The
    district court then applied K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 21-6819(c)(3) to cap the total term of
    imprisonment at 1,068 months—twice the aggravated departure sentence granted on
    count one.
    At resentencing, the district court designated count two as the primary count and
    imposed an upward durational departure on counts two and three, sentencing McMillan
    to 534 months on count two, 330 months on count three, and 165 months on count one. It
    ran these sentences consecutively for a controlling term of 1,029 months imprisonment.
    Analysis
    Historically, Kansas courts had broad common-law discretion to modify sentences
    on remand. Sentences were seen as a singular entity that could not be subdivided into
    correct and incorrect counts. So remand for resentencing on one count allowed all counts
    to be resentenced as the district court saw fit. But this common-law principle was
    nullified upon passage of the KSGA. State v. Warren, 
    307 Kan. 609
    , 612, 
    412 P.3d 993
    (2018).
    16
    Because of the KSGA, a district court now lacks the authority to modify a
    sentence unless plain statutory language provides such authority. Guder, 
    293 Kan. at 766
    .
    And the Kansas Supreme Court has held the KSGA does not provide a district court
    jurisdiction to resentence all of a defendant's counts when only the sentence on some
    counts is illegal. Warren, 
    307 Kan. at 613
    ; Guder, 
    293 Kan. at 766-67
    . Rather, as the
    court has held in cases directing resentencing of an illegal sentence on remand, courts
    may vacate and resentence only the counts on which the defendant received an illegal
    sentence in a multiconviction case. Jamerson, 
    309 Kan. at 216
    . A limited exception to
    this rule applies when vacating one sentence renders another sentence unlawful. See State
    v. Morningstar, 
    299 Kan. 1236
    , 1244-45, 
    329 P.3d 1093
     (2014).
    McMillan argues his original sentence was illegal only on count one, and not on
    counts two and three. McMillan points to the journal entry of sentencing in claiming the
    district court, in reaching a sentence of 1,068 months, imposed an upward durational
    departure on all three counts. And he notes that departure factors supporting an upward
    durational departure only existed as to counts two and three. Thus, he claims that while
    the upward departure sentences he received on counts two and three were legal, the
    upward departure sentence he received on count one was not. He contends that, under
    Guder, Warren, and Jamerson, the district court therefore only had authority on remand
    to modify his illegal sentence on count one and could not modify his sentence on count
    two.
    McMillan also cites to State v. Hayden, 
    449 P.3d 445
    , 446 (Kan. App. 2019)
    (unpublished opinion) (Hayden II), which he claims is directly on point.
    In Hayden II, the defendant pleaded guilty to five counts and stipulated to the
    existence of an aggravating factor justifying an upward departure sentence on the first
    three counts. She did not stipulate to the existence of this aggravating factor on the fourth
    or fifth counts, however. Because counts three and four—the two most severe crimes—
    17
    were both severity level 5 nonperson felonies, the district court had discretion to
    designate either one of those counts as the primary offense, but it could only impose an
    upward departure on count three. At sentencing, the State mistakenly requested an
    upward durational departure on count four, and none of the other counts. The district
    court designated count four as the primary offense, granted an upward durational
    departure on count four, and imposed consecutive presumptive sentences on the other
    counts.
    Hayden appealed, arguing the district court erred in sentencing her. A panel of this
    court agreed and found the district court likely intended to grant a departure on count
    three instead of four. Without discussing Guder, the panel then vacated Hayden's
    sentences on all five counts and remanded to the district court for resentencing as the
    district court saw fit. On remand the district court imposed an upward durational
    departure on count three and imposed consecutive presumptive sentences on the
    remaining four counts. State v. Hayden, 
    52 Kan. App. 2d 202
    , 211-12, 
    364 P.3d 962
    (2015) (Hayden I).
    Hayden once again appealed, arguing the panel in her first appeal lacked
    jurisdiction to vacate her sentences on all five counts and could only vacate her sentence
    on count four, since it was the sole illegally imposed sentence. She also argued the
    district court similarly only had jurisdiction to resentence her on count four.
    The second panel to review her case agreed and reversed the decision of the first
    panel, as it had seemingly ignored the rule laid out in Guder in vacating her entire
    sentence. In explaining its decision, the panel noted that when Hayden appealed to the
    Hayden I panel, only one of her sentences was illegal. This was her sentence for count
    four, since no factual basis supported the upward durational departure. Under Guder, the
    panel in Hayden I thus only had jurisdiction to vacate Hayden's sentence on count four.
    Hayden II, 449 P.3d at 449. Because the district court entered presumptive sentences for
    18
    the other four counts when it originally sentenced Hayden, the Hayden I panel lacked
    jurisdiction to vacate those legal presumptive sentences. And since the Hayden I panel
    lacked jurisdiction to vacate Hayden's sentence on count three, the district court lacked
    jurisdiction to modify Hayden's sentence on count three at resentencing. It therefore
    vacated Hayden's sentence and remanded with instructions for the district court to
    resentence Hayden to her original sentences on all counts except for count four, which it
    was to resentence in accordance with the KSGA. This meant that at resentencing, the
    district court needed to keep with its original designation of count four as the primary
    offense. Hayden II, 449 P.3d at 450.
    McMillan is correct that Hayden II is instructive here. Given that all three of
    McMillan's convictions were for severity level 1 felonies, the district court could
    designate count one as the primary offense. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6819(b)(2). And
    the district court properly applied the KSGA in imposing departure sentences of 330
    months on counts two and three. This figure represents twice the aggravated presumptive
    sentence for a severity level 1 felony with no criminal history applied, as required for
    nonbase sentences in a multiconviction case. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6804; K.S.A.
    2021 Supp. 21-6819(b)(5). Thus, the sentences McMillan originally received on counts
    two and three were legal.
    In sentencing McMillan to a controlling term of 1,029 months, the district court
    modified his sentence on count two, increasing it from 330 months to 534 months. This
    was an impermissible modification of a legal sentence under Guder, Warren, and
    Jamerson.
    The State concedes that McMillan accurately describes the journal entry of his
    original sentence. The State notes, however, that a criminal sentence is effective upon
    pronouncement from the bench and that where the journal entry conflicts with a district
    court's oral pronouncement of a sentence, the oral pronouncement controls.
    19
    Looking to the district court's oral pronouncement of McMillan's sentence, the
    State claims the district court never expressly designated any offense as the primary
    crime, nor did it pronounce individual sentences for the three courts. Instead, the district
    court simply declared that the total sentence was 1,068 months. The State argues it is thus
    not clear that the district court modified McMillan's sentence on count two on remand, as
    it is possible the sentencing court originally intended to impose a 534-month sentence on
    count two.
    The State is correct that a defendant's sentence becomes final and appealable when
    the district court pronounces it from the bench, and where the sentence announced from
    the bench differs from what is later described in the journal entry, the orally pronounced
    sentence controls. Abasolo v. State, 
    284 Kan. 299
    , 304, 
    160 P.3d 471
     (2007).
    This is not to say, however, that a journal entry is completely irrelevant in
    determining the meaning of a district court's pronouncement of a sentence. While a
    district court may not modify the sentence pronounced from the bench by use of a journal
    entry, a journal entry can be used to clarify an unartfully worded pronouncement.
    "Clarification is not the same as modification, and a district court retains jurisdiction to
    file a journal entry of sentencing that clarifies an ambiguous or poorly articulated
    sentence pronounced from the bench." State v. Jackson, 
    291 Kan. 34
    , 36, 
    238 P.3d 246
    (2010) (citing State v. Crawford, 
    253 Kan. 629
    , 649-50, 
    861 P.2d 791
     [1993]), abrogated
    on other grounds by State v. Marinelli, 
    307 Kan. 768
    , 
    415 P.3d 405
     (2018); see State v.
    Garcia, 
    288 Kan. 761
    , 765-67, 
    207 P.3d 251
     (2009).
    In Garcia, the issue was whether the district court, in originally sentencing Garcia,
    made a finding that his felony murder conviction was sexually motivated, as was
    necessary to impose sex offender registration requirements. Garcia argued that while the
    journal entry suggested the district court had made such a finding, the district court failed
    to do so in its oral pronouncement of his sentence.
    20
    In assessing this claim, the court acknowledged that a journal entry is merely a
    record of the sentence imposed and a district court has no jurisdiction to change a
    sentence after pronouncement. And the court noted the district court's statements at the
    original sentencing hearing were less than clear. The district court made no express
    finding that his felony murder conviction was sexually motivated and simply informed
    Garcia that he needed to register as a sex offender. The journal entry, meanwhile,
    revealed the district court found the felony murder conviction was sexually motivated.
    The court explained, however, that there was no conflict between the journal entry
    and the oral pronouncement of the sentence. The journal entry merely acted to clarify the
    sentence imposed at the hearing. "While the oral pronouncement of sentence from the
    bench was not clear on which crimes were sexually motivated, the journal entry [made] it
    expressly clear." Garcia, 288 Kan. at 766. Because there was no sign that the district
    court was trying to change the sentence it imposed orally at the hearing, the journal entry
    reflected a clarification—rather than a modification—of Garcia's sentence as pronounced
    at the hearing. 288 Kan. at 766. The court contrasted this to the scenarios involving actual
    modifications, like where a district court tries to fix an error made at the hearing—such as
    imposing concurrent sentences when the court meant to impose consecutive sentences—
    or where the district court changes its mind and attempts to modify a sentence after oral
    pronouncement. 288 Kan. at 767.
    Even when a district court's oral pronouncement of a sentence appears to conflict
    with the journal entry of the hearing, the Kansas Supreme Court has cautioned against
    reading the specific words of the pronouncement in isolation. Rather, reviewing courts
    should evaluate the meaning of the sentence imposed based on the context of the entire
    sentencing hearing—including the sentences requested by the parties—to determine
    whether there is actual variance between what occurred at the hearing and what is
    reflected in the journal entry memorializing the hearing. See Juiliano, 315 Kan. at 81;
    State v. Hill, 
    313 Kan. 1010
    , 1015-16, 
    492 P.3d 1190
     (2021).
    21
    Looking to the context of the entire sentencing hearing here, the district court
    designated count one as the primary offense in originally sentencing McMillan. While the
    State is correct that the district court did not explicitly identify which count it was
    designating as the primary offense, the district court found that it was imposing the
    sentence requested by the State. And the State clearly requested that the district court
    designate count one as the primary offense.
    In describing how it believed McMillan should be sentenced, the State repeatedly
    suggested that count one should operate as the primary offense. It specifically requested
    that McMillan receive a sentence of 267 months on count one and 165 months on counts
    two and three and asked the district court to impose an upward durational departure to
    double the sentences on these counts. The State confirmed to the district court that the
    maximum sentence a defendant can receive under the KSGA is double the sentence
    imposed on the primary count. And it said that McMillan's maximum possible sentence
    under the KSGA was thus limited to twice the sentence imposed on count one.
    We therefore do not agree with the State's claim that the district court implicitly
    designated count two as the primary offense in its oral pronouncement of McMillan's
    sentence.
    The State also claims, seemingly in the alternative, that if the district court's oral
    pronouncement of McMillan's original sentence on count two was unclear, it would
    constitute an illegal sentence, as it would be ambiguous as to the time and manner in
    which it is to be served. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504(c)(1). If this is the case, the
    State argues, then the district court had jurisdiction to resentence McMillan on count two.
    And if this panel concludes that the original transcript is unclear as to which crime the
    district court designated as the primary offense and as to the sentence for each individual
    count, the State argues that McMillan's original sentence would be illegal as a whole. In
    22
    this scenario, the State contends, the district court had jurisdiction to resentence
    McMillan on all three counts.
    A sentence ambiguous as to the time and manner in which it is to be served when
    it is pronounced is illegal. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 22-3504(c)(1).
    In a slightly different but analogous situation, another panel has found that the
    terms of a defendant's individual sentences are clear where the terms of the individual
    sentences are implied by the district court pronouncement of the total controlling
    sentence. See State v. Finley, 
    18 Kan. App. 2d 419
    , 422, 
    854 P.2d 315
     (1993).
    In Finley, the defendant pleaded no contest to committing three counts of
    attempted terroristic threat. Each of these counts carried a maximum possible sentence of
    one year imprisonment. The Topeka State Hospital subsequently evaluated Finley and
    after determining he needed psychiatric care, recommended that he be committed to
    Larned State Security Hospital rather than imprisonment. The district court complied
    with this recommendation and ordered Finely committed to Larned State Hospital for a
    period of detention "'not exceed[ing] three years.'" 
    18 Kan. App. 2d at 420
    . Although not
    explicitly stated by the district court, the parties agreed that the district court apparently
    imposed the maximum sentence on each count, with the three counts running
    consecutively.
    As relevant here, Finley argued the district court's pronouncement of his sentence
    could not impose three consecutive sentences, since the record was silent on how the
    district court arrived at the maximum three-year term of commitment. He noted that
    K.S.A. 1992 Supp. 21-4608(1), which is now codified at K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6606(a),
    requires that "'[w]henever the record is silent as to the manner in which two or more
    sentences imposed at the same time shall be served, they shall be served concurrently.'"
    
    18 Kan. App. 2d at 422
    .
    23
    The panel rejected the argument that the record was silent on the manner in which
    the sentences for the individual counts were to be served. It explained that although the
    district court did not announce sentences for the individual counts, the way the sentences
    for the individual counts were to be served was implied by the district court's
    announcement of the total controlling term of commitment. The court committed Finley
    for a period not to exceed three years for three crimes, each of which was punishable by
    up to one year of imprisonment. Thus, the implication was that the district court
    committed Finley for a period up to three consecutive maximum sentences. 
    18 Kan. App. 2d at 422
    .
    Here, like in Finley, the district court did not announce the time or manner in
    which the individual sentences were to be served. At the same time, also like in Finley, it
    announced the total controlling sentence, which implied the terms of the individual
    sentences. Based on the district court's pronounced sentence of 1,068 months, it was
    implied that the district court had imposed upward departure sentences on all three counts
    and ran the counts consecutively. Otherwise, the sentences would not have exceeded the
    statutory cap of 1,068 months.
    On the other hand, this case differs from Finley in some respects. Because the
    district court here imposed upward departures and imposed a controlling sentence based
    on the statutory cap, the total controlling sentence announced by the district court did not
    imply the specific length of each sentence.
    Yet this deficiency seems to be cured by the fact that the district court suggested it
    was adopting the sentence requested by the State in imposing a total controlling sentence
    of 1,068 months. The State requested that the district court sentence McMillan to 267
    months as to count one and 165 months on counts two and three, run the sentences
    consecutively, and depart up to a controlling sentence of 1,068 months. And in explaining
    to the district court how it should apply the aggravating factors found by the jury to reach
    24
    a controlling sentence of 1,068 months, the State seemed to recommend the district court
    give a sentence of the aggravated number on each count and then double each of those
    sentences, before the district court cut it off and adopted the State's recommendation as
    the order of the court. These statements, taken together, implied that the district court
    imposed a sentence of 534 months on count one and 330 months on counts two and three,
    as these sentences represent double the aggravated number on each count.
    Finally, and even more to the point, the State does not point to any authority that a
    sentence is ambiguous where a district court pronounces the total controlling sentence but
    does not specify the sentences for the individual counts. Instead, it merely points to the
    statutory definition of an illegal sentence. Here, the sentence pronounced by the district
    court made it clear the time and manner in which McMillan's sentence was to be served:
    1,068 months in prison.
    In summary, McMillan's sentence does not appear to be so ambiguous as to render
    it illegal. The district court's pronouncement of McMillan's total controlling sentence,
    when read in context with the State's requested sentence, made the time and manner in
    which McMillan was to serve his sentence clear. We thus find that McMillan's sentence
    was not ambiguous as to the time and manner in which it was to be served when it was
    pronounced.
    CONCLUSION
    Looking to both the journal entry and the transcript of the sentencing hearing, we
    find that McMillan's characterization of his original sentence is correct. The sentence
    originally imposed by the district court included an upward durational departure on all
    three counts. And because the district court was justified imposing upward departure
    sentences on counts two and three but not count one, McMillan's original sentence is only
    illegal as to count one. We thus find the district court could not modify McMillan's
    25
    sentence on count two at resentencing by making it the primary offense and increasing
    the sentence from 330 to 534 months.
    As in Hayden II, we vacate McMillan's sentences and remand to the district court
    with instructions to resentence McMillan to his original sentences on counts two and
    three and to resentence him on count one in accordance with the KSGA. This means that
    the district court must designate count one as the primary offense and impose consecutive
    sentences of 330 months on counts two and three.
    And as McMillan notes, should the district court decide to exercise its discretion to
    again impose the maximum presumptive sentence of 267 months on count one, his
    maximum controlling sentence would be limited to twice that figure: 534 months. See
    K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6819(c)(2).
    Sentence vacated and case remanded with directions.
    26