State v. Berens ( 2022 )


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  •                          NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 124,125
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    BRADLEY LEON BERENS,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Dickinson District Court; BENJAMIN J. SEXTON, judge. Opinion filed August 5,
    2022. Affirmed.
    Jennifer C. Bates, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Daryl E. Hawkins, assistant county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.
    Before HURST, P.J., BRUNS and GARDNER, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: Bradley Leon Berens appeals his sentence and the district court's
    denial of his motion for a dispositional departure. Berens argues that although the district
    court ordered a durational departure to a shorter prison term, the district court abused its
    discretion by denying his request for a dispositional departure to probation. Finding no
    error, we affirm.
    1
    Factual and Procedural Background
    In July 2020, police stopped Berens' car after seeing him commit various traffic
    violations. Berens tried to evade the officers, but they caught and later arrested him.
    While searching the car incident to the arrest, police found methamphetamine and drug
    paraphernalia. Based on these events, the State charged Berens with single felony counts
    of distribution or possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, possession of
    drug paraphernalia, and fleeing or attempting to elude law enforcement, and three counts
    of misdemeanor offenses.
    Berens appeared at his first appearance by Zoom in August 2020. After he failed
    to appear for other scheduled hearings, the district court issued two bench warrants for
    Berens' arrest. Berens later attended a hearing in December 2020, where the district court
    granted his request to amend his bond to allow his admission into a drug treatment
    program.
    Berens entered plea negotiations with the State and eventually pleaded guilty to
    one count of possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute under K.S.A. 2020
    Supp. 21-5705(a)(1), (d)(3)(A). The State dismissed the remaining counts and agreed not
    to file additional charges. The parties' plea agreement did not include a recommended
    sentence but it gave Berens the option to move for a departure sentence, which he did.
    At his sentencing hearing, Berens admitted that the presentence investigation
    report (PSI) accurately showed his criminal history score as A. Berens objected to the
    PSI's finding that special rule 26 applied under the revised Kansas Sentencing Guidelines
    Act (KSGA). But he agreed with the State that special rule 9 applied because he had
    committed his crime while on felony probation. Based on the parties' stipulations about
    both special rules, the district court found that only rule 9 applied.
    2
    Berens also argued in support of his request for a dispositional and durational
    departure. According to the transcript of the sentencing hearing, much of Berens'
    argument supporting his motion was "inaudible" or "unintelligible," perhaps because the
    hearing was held over Zoom. Even so, the record shows that Berens based his request for
    a dispositional and durational departure on his methamphetamine addiction, recent
    completion of a drug treatment program, and need to continue treatment. Berens also
    submitted a certificate proving he had completed a residential inpatient program, and a
    plan outlining future treatment.
    The State, however, contended that Berens' criminal history score showed Berens
    deserved the aggravated term of the presumptive sentence—51 months' imprisonment.
    The State emphasized that Berens' criminal history spanned 29 years and included 36
    convictions, at least one of which was a felony conviction for domestic battery.
    In reply, Berens provided the following personal statement supporting his
    departure request:
    "I've got a lovely family here. That's my main concern. I've [done a] 180-degree turn
    around, . . . I . . . was addicted to methamphetamines, you know. Now I'm working, I'm
    doing everything I'm supposed to do, outpatient therapy, Your Honor. You know . . . I
    screwed up . . . [b]ut I don't think prison would help me. You know, I'm . . . playing with
    my kids, doing what I'm supposed to do."
    When asked by the district court whether he had ever been ordered to complete a
    domestic violence program in his domestic abuse cases, Berens responded that he had
    only recently been ordered to complete that program but had not yet started it.
    The district court found that the standard term under the KSGA was 49 months in
    prison but granted Berens a durational departure to 32 months. The district court denied
    3
    Berens' request for a dispositional departure to probation, however, and ordered Berens to
    serve his sentence consecutive to any sentence in his separate ongoing case.
    Berens timely appeals.
    Jurisdiction
    The State first argues that Berens waived his right to appeal any issue related to
    his conviction or sentence by signing his plea agreement. The State acknowledges our
    Supreme Court's decision in State v. Looney, 
    299 Kan. 903
    , 909, 
    327 P.3d 425
     (2014),
    finding departure sentences appealable absent certain exceptions, but it still invites us to
    enforce Berens' waiver. This raises a question of our subject matter jurisdiction.
    In Looney, our Supreme Court considered whether the denial of a dispositional
    departure is appealable when the district court durationally departs from the KSGA under
    a plea agreement, as here. After a panel of this court determined that appellate
    jurisdiction was lacking, our Supreme Court reversed, holding that "all departure
    sentences are subject to appeal under K.S.A. 21-4721(a) unless appellate jurisdiction is
    divested by a more specific provision." 299 Kan. at 909. See, e.g., State v. Cooper, 
    54 Kan. App. 2d 25
    , 28, 
    394 P.3d 1194
     (2017) (finding K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-6820[c][2]
    more specific than provision authorizing appellate jurisdiction over departure sentences
    under subsection [a] and holding more specific provision divests appellate jurisdiction
    when parties agreed to specific duration and disposition). The court noted that the parties
    had agreed to a downward durational departure, but the defendant's requested
    dispositional departure was not part of the plea agreement. The court thus determined that
    it had jurisdiction to consider the defendant's appeal. 299 Kan. at 909-10.
    As in Looney, the parties here made no agreement regarding the disposition of
    Berens' sentence. In fact, the parties left both duration and disposition as open issues that
    4
    could be argued at sentencing. Thus, applying K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6820(a) and the
    principles considered in Looney, we find we have jurisdiction to consider this appeal.
    Still, we lack jurisdiction to review the district court's imposition of a consecutive
    sentence. See State v. Young, 
    313 Kan. 724
    , 740, 
    490 P.3d 1183
     (2021) (appellate court
    lacks jurisdiction to review imposition of consecutive sentences when such disposition is
    authorized by statute).
    Berens' Waiver
    We next examine the State's argument that Berens waived his right to appeal. A
    defendant's waiver of their statutory right to appeal is generally enforceable if it is
    knowing and voluntary. See State v. Patton, 
    287 Kan. 200
    , 226, 
    195 P.3d 753
     (2008). But
    the waiver must be unambiguous. And even when a plea agreement with an appeal
    waiver is ambiguous, it must be strictly construed in favor of the defendant to allow an
    appeal. State v. Shull, 
    52 Kan. App. 2d 981
    , 987-88, 
    381 P.3d 499
     (2016).
    In his acknowledgment of rights and entry of plea, Berens agreed to waive his
    right to appeal specific sentences or raise certain claims:
    "I understand that because of my agreement with the State, I am waiving any
    right to appeal any issues raised or that could have been raised in this case. I understand
    that my waiver of any right to appeal includes, and is not limited to: (1) the sentence
    imposed if the sentence is the presumptive sentence; (2) the accuracy of any criminal
    history score; (3) the accuracy of the crime severity level determination; (4) if the
    sentence imposed is not the presumptive sentence, claims of partiality, prejudice, or
    oppression or corrupt motive; and/or (5) a sentence imposed that is greater than agreed to
    in the plea agreement."
    This provision does not, however, include any terms that would prevent Berens from
    raising the arguments he makes here. Berens is not appealing a presumptive sentence or a
    5
    sentence greater than the parties agreed to. Nor is he challenging his criminal history
    score. And his challenge to the district court's sentencing decision is not based on claims
    of partiality, prejudice, oppression, or corrupt motive.
    But Berens also generally waived his right to appeal in another paragraph of plea
    agreement:
    "The parties agree that at the time of sentencing, each side is free to make an independent
    sentencing recommendation, including that Defendant may file a motion for a
    dispositional and/or durational departure. The defendant, after being made aware of and
    fully advised by counsel of all of his appellate rights, voluntarily and knowingly waives
    any and all of his rights of appeal."
    We thus ask whether this provision is unambiguous. In Patton, our Supreme Court
    held that a similar statement in a plea agreement when the defendant generally waived
    "'his right to appeal'" did not bar the defendant from appealing the sentence imposed. 
    287 Kan. 200
    , Syl. ¶ 5. The Patton court found that the language was, "at best, ambiguous
    about the availability of any appeal of the sentences yet to come." 287 Kan. at 228.
    In other cases, we have also considered the effect the district court's statements at
    sentencing may have on a defendant's ability to knowingly waive their right to appeal
    their sentence. In Shull and State v. Bennett, 
    51 Kan. App. 2d 356
    , 
    347 P.3d 229
     (2015),
    this court noted that contrary to the terms of the parties' plea agreements, the district court
    told the defendants at sentencing that they had the right to appeal. Shull, 52 Kan. App. 2d
    at 989; Bennett, 51 Kan. App. 2d at 364-66. That happened here as well—after ruling, the
    district court told Berens that he had the right to appeal its sentencing findings and
    decision. And as in Shull and Bennett, neither the State nor Berens' attorney corrected this
    statement. The ambiguity of this provision, coupled with the confusion created by the
    court's statement, renders it unenforceable. Because Berens did not unambiguously waive
    his right to this appeal, we will consider the merits of his claim.
    6
    Did the District Court Abuse Its Discretion?
    Berens argues that the district court abused its discretion by denying his request
    for a dispositional departure because he provided substantial and compelling reasons to
    depart. A sentencing court must impose the presumptive sentence under the sentencing
    guidelines absent substantial and compelling reasons for a departure. K.S.A. 2021 Supp.
    21-6815(a). For a reason to be substantial, it "must be real, not imagined, and of
    substance, not ephemeral." State v. Blackmon, 
    285 Kan. 719
    , 724, 
    176 P.3d 160
     (2008).
    To be compelling, it "must be one which forces the court, by the facts of the case, to
    abandon the status quo" and impose a different sentence. 285 Kan. at 724.
    We review a district court's denial of a departure motion for an abuse of discretion.
    Because Berens does not allege an error of fact or law, he must show that no reasonable
    person would agree with the district court's sentencing decision. See State v. Ibarra, 
    307 Kan. 431
    , 433-34, 
    411 P.3d 318
     (2018) (district court abuses its discretion in denying a
    departure motion if it relies on an error of fact or law, or if no reasonable person would
    agree with its decision).
    Berens Shows No Abuse of Discretion
    In granting Berens' request for a durational departure, the district court found that
    Berens was sincere about his efforts toward sobriety and had taken responsibility for his
    most recent crime. But contrary to Berens' claim on appeal, the district court's reliance on
    these facts to grant a durational departure did not require the district court to also grant
    Berens' request for probation. Cf. State v. Robinson, No. 122,599, 
    2021 WL 5992034
    , at
    *7 (Kan. App. 2021) (unpublished opinion) (affirming decision granting departure from
    duration but not disposition of KSGA sentence in drug possession case when defendant
    showed "accountability and desire to better his life"). The district court found Berens was
    not an appropriate candidate for probation and the record supports that finding.
    7
    Berens admitted that he had a long-term substance abuse issue and that he was
    under the influence of methamphetamine when he committed his crime of conviction. He
    also admitted that he had committed several previous offenses and had a criminal history
    score of A. Although Berens provided proof of recent drug treatment and a plan to
    continue treatment, that evidence does not establish that the district court's decision was
    so unreasonable that no reasonable person could agree with it. Because Berens has shown
    no abuse of discretion, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 124125

Filed Date: 8/5/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2022