Saturday, July 30, 2016

Stay agreement did not effectively waive right to jury trial

Washburn student intern Adam King and I won in State v. Stamps, No. 113,510 (Kan. App. July 15, 2016)(unpublished), obtaining a new trial in a Johnson County nonsupport prosecution. In November 2008, after being charged with criminal nonsupport, Mr. Stamps had entered into a stay agreement to work on paying the back child support, which included a stipulation of facts in the probable cause affidavit and a provision that "the defendant, after consultation with counsel, waives trial by jury." 

Several years later, the district court revoked the stay agreement finding that Mr. Stamps had failed to comply with its terms. After revocation of the agreement, the district court proceeded to convict Mr. Stamps after a bench trial on stipulated facts. The district court imposed a 6-month prison sentence and granted probation.

On appeal, Mr. Stamps argued that the district court had failed to obtain a valid jury trial waiver on the record. The COA applied KSC precedent (blogged about here) and agreed:

Where a jury trial waiver is in writing, Kansas caselaw "requires that the written waiver be after the defendant is 'advised by the court of his right to a jury trial.'" The mere form of a jury trial waiver alone does not ensure a court fully considered the facts and circumstances surrounding a defendant's waiver of his or her jury trial right, which is necessary in deciding whether a knowing and voluntary waiver occurred. There is nothing in the record here indicating that the district court made any attempt to advise Stamps of the nature and extent of his constitutional right to a jury trial prior to Stamps signing the stay agreement. 

The State also points to language in the stay agreement that Stamps "waives any constitutional right to confront the witnesses or evidence as a part of this stipulation of facts" and "agrees that the matter of determining guilt based upon these [sic] stipulated set of facts is to be considered by the court without any further evidence being presented or argument being made by either party." But the general waiver language does not indicate the court advised Stamps about the nature of his right to a trial by jury as opposed to a trial to the court. See [State v. Frye, 294 Kan. 364, 373, 277 P.3d 1091 (2012)] ("Pointedly, the document does not even hint that Frye may actually know what his 'right to a Jury Trial' may be or understand what it means to 'try the case to the Court.'"). Without such an understanding, the jury trial waiver cannot be voluntary and knowing.

In this case, the district court did not address Stamps at all regarding his right to a trial by jury at the hearing on the stay agreement, and the court only briefly addressed Stamps' attorney.

Because the jury trial waiver was not valid, the COA reversed the bench trial conviction and remanded for a new trial. 

[Update: the state filed a PR on August 15, 2016.]

[Further update: the KSC denied the state's PR and the COA mandate issued on February 24, 2017.]

Saturday, July 09, 2016

September 2016 KSC docket

Here are the criminal cases on the KSC docket for September 12-16, 2016. These summaries are based on the issues listed in the briefs filed and may not very accurately or fully describe the actual issues in the cases. I recommend you review the briefs yourself if you would like more details. Don't forget, arguments are streamed live at the appellate court website and archived (here) if you would like to watch any of these arguments.

September 12--Monday--a.m.

In re Todd Ellison, No. 112,256 (Sedgwick)
SVPA state appeal
Michael P. Whalen
[Affirmed; Biles; December 9, 2016]
  • District court correctly dismissed SVPA proceeding
Shannon Bogguess v. State, No. 111,299 (Sedgwick)
K.S.A. 60-1507 appeal (petition for review)
Michael P. Whalen
[Affirmed; Stegall; June 9, 2017]
  • Failure to hold evidentiary hearing on IAC claim

September 13--Tuesday--a.m.

State v. Jack LaPointe, No. 112,019 (Johnson)
State appeal (petition for review)
Richard Ney
[Dismissed; Luckert; March 3, 2017]
  • District court properly allowed DNA testing
State v. Brian Bailey, No. 112,888 (Johnson)
Motion to correct illegal sentence appeal
Catherine A. Zigtema
[Affirmed/Remanded; Stegall; May 19, 2017]
  • Improper restitution award
  • Failure to correct illegal sentence
State v. Maurice Stewart, No. 111,995 (Johnson)
Direct appeal; felony murder
Korey A. Kaul
[Affirmed; Johnson; April 28, 2017]
  • Improper instruction regarding lesser-included offenses
  • Improper instruction excluding self-defense as a matter of law
  • Erroneous competency finding
  • Improper admission of blood spatter evidence

September 14--Wednesday--a.m.

State v. Nicholas Corbin, No. 113,585 (Saline)
Sentencing appeal
Joanna Labastida
[Reversed/Remanded; Nuss; December 23, 2016]
  • Failure to find defendant intellectually disabled
State v. Dane Deweese, No. 112,372 (Saline)
Direct appeal; first-degree premeditated murder
Kurt P. Kerns (brief), Melanie S. Morgan (brief and argue)
[Affirmed; Nuss; January 20, 2017]
  • Failure to disclose exculpatory evidence

September 15--Thursday--a.m.

State v. William Holt, II, No. 113,990 (Shawnee)
Sentencing appeal
Meryl Carver-Allmond
[Affirmed; Biles; February 24, 2017]
  • Improper restitution finding
State v. Casey Baker, No. 111,915 (Douglas)
Direct appeal; possession
Corrine E. Gunning
[Reversed/Remanded; Stegall; June 9, 2017]
  • Failure to suppress evidence (Fourth Amendment)

September 16--Friday--a.m.

State v. Douglas Belt, No. 94,435 (Sedgwick)
Direct appeal; capital murder
Rebecca E. Woodman (brief), Sarah Ellen Johnson (brief and argue)
[Affirmed in part/Reversed in part; Beier; October 21, 2016]
  • Multiplicity of capital murder and attempted rape
  • Insufficient evidence
  • Abatement of appeal on death of defendant