State v. Darby ( 2020 )


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  •                         NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 121,124
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    CRAIG CASSANOVA DARBY,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Saline District Court; JARED B. JOHNSON, judge. Opinion filed March 13, 2020.
    Affirmed.
    Submitted for summary disposition pursuant to K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6820(g) and (h).
    Before GREEN, P.J., HILL AND LEBEN, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: While on postrelease supervision for a prior felony, Craig Darby was
    arrested for committing a new one: failure to register as a sex offender. Under an
    agreement with the State, Darby pleaded no contest to a less severe version of his crime,
    attempted failure to register. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 22-4903(a), (c)(1)(A); K.S.A. 2019
    Supp. 21-5301(c)(1). In return, he agreed not to seek probation and to accept a sentence
    within the presumed range for his offense under the sentencing guidelines. The judge
    accepted his plea and sentenced him to a 19-month prison term—the standard
    presumptive sentence for his offense—for the registration offense followed by 1 year of
    postrelease supervision.
    On appeal, Darby raises two arguments. First, he says the judge erred by not
    imposing a lesser sentence. But we lack jurisdiction to review his sentence because it is
    within the presumptive range and resulted from a plea agreement. Second, he argues that
    the district court should have counted his jail time in this case as time spent serving his
    postrelease supervision sentence in his prior case. But Darby was no longer serving that
    sentence while he was in jail awaiting plea, trial, or sentencing for the new failure-to-
    register offense. So the district court didn't err in denying jail credit for his prior case.
    ANALYSIS
    Darby first argues that the district court abused its discretion in not finding
    grounds to depart from the presumptive sentence it imposed. But we lack the authority, or
    jurisdiction, to review that argument. We have a duty to consider our jurisdiction on our
    own even if no party raises the issue. Wiechman v. Huddleston, 
    304 Kan. 80
    , 84-85, 
    370 P.3d 1194
    (2016). Here, our jurisdiction is limited by a statute, K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-
    6820(c). That statute precludes appellate review of a sentence that's within the
    presumptive range for the crime, and of one that results from an agreement with the State
    that the judge approves on the record. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6820(c).
    Both preclusions apply here. Darby's 19-month prison sentence was within the
    presumptive range for his offense under the sentencing guidelines, so K.S.A. 2019 Supp.
    21-6820(c)(1) precludes us from reviewing it. So does subsection (c)(2), because his
    sentence resulted from a plea agreement in which he agreed to serve a presumptive
    sentence. By imposing the sentence that Darby had requested and that was provided in
    the plea agreement, the district court implicitly approved the sentence the parties
    bargained for. See State v. Starks, 
    20 Kan. App. 2d 179
    , 183, 
    885 P.2d 387
    (1994),
    superseded by statute on other grounds by State v. Huerta, 
    291 Kan. 831
    , 835, 
    247 P.3d 1043
    (2011). Thus, we lack jurisdiction to review Darby's sentence.
    2
    Next, Darby argues that the district court abused its discretion by not granting him
    more jail-time credit. The right to credit for time spent in jail awaiting resolution of a
    criminal charge comes from a statute. See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615; State v. Hopkins,
    
    295 Kan. 579
    , 581, 
    285 P.3d 1021
    (2012). That statute treats the time a defendant spends
    in jail before sentencing as time spent serving the beginning of a sentence that's later
    imposed in that case. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615(a); State v. Denney, 
    278 Kan. 643
    , 648,
    
    101 P.3d 1257
    (2004). In other words, jail-time credits don't reduce a defendant's
    sentence; they simply credit the defendant for time already served for the offense. See
    K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615(c).
    Under the jail-credit statute, the time Darby spent in jail from his arrest until
    sentencing was time he spent serving the beginning of his prison sentence. So the district
    court credited him for that time by counting it as time he'd already served for his 19-
    month prison sentence he received on the failure-to-register conviction. Darby says the
    court should have also counted that time as time spent serving the unrevoked postrelease
    supervision sentence from his prior case.
    But the district court couldn't do that because as soon as Darby was arrested, he
    was no longer serving the postrelease sentence from his prior case. A postrelease
    supervision sentence can't be served when the defendant goes back to jail because the
    defendant is no longer released from confinement. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6803(p); State
    v. Gaudina, 
    284 Kan. 354
    , 358-59, 
    160 P.3d 854
    (2007). So a court can't count jail time
    for a new crime—time spent in jail for the new crime from the arrest until sentencing—as
    time spent serving the unrevoked postrelease supervision sentence. White v. Bruce, 
    23 Kan. App. 2d 449
    , Syl. ¶ 2, 
    932 P.2d 448
    (1997).
    In sum, when Darby was arrested and imprisoned for not registering as a sex
    offender, he stopped serving the postrelease supervision sentence because he was now
    3
    confined. So the district court didn't err by not counting jail time in this case as time spent
    on postrelease supervision in his prior case.
    On Darby's motion, we accepted this appeal for summary disposition under K.S.A.
    2019 Supp. 21-6820(g) and (h) and Supreme Court Rule 7.041A (2019 Kan. Ct. R. 47).
    After reviewing the record available to the sentencing court, we lack jurisdiction to
    review Darby's sentence and find no error in the decision to not credit jail time towards
    his prior postrelease supervision sentence.
    We affirm the district court's judgment.
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 121124

Filed Date: 3/13/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/13/2020