NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
No. 122,360
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
STATE OF KANSAS,
Appellee,
v.
TAGAN J. MOSS-BARRETT,
Appellant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appeal from Clay District Court; JOHN F. BOSCH, judge. Opinion filed February 5, 2021.
Affirmed.
Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
Richard E. James, county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.
Before GARDNER, P.J., SCHROEDER, J. and WALKER, S.J.
PER CURIAM: After Tagan Moss-Barrett violated her probation, the district court
sanctioned her and reinstated her probation. She now objects to the probation violation
journal entry because it does not include jail credit time. But our statutes do not require a
district court to include jail credit time in a probation violation journal entry unless the
district court revokes probation and orders confinement. See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-
6615(b). Because that did not happen here, we affirm.
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Factual and Procedural Background
In 2018, Moss-Barrett pleaded no contest to felony possession of
methamphetamine. The district court sentenced her to an 11-month prison term but
suspended that sentence, granted her 18 months' probation, and awarded her 105 days of
jail credit time.
About eight months later, Moss-Barrett violated her probation and the district
court sanctioned her to 60 days in the county jail for failing to report to probation and
failing to follow through with drug rehabilitation. The State prepared a journal entry that
did not reflect jail credit time. When Moss-Barrett's attorney asked the State to include
jail credit time, the State declined, saying that the Kansas Sentencing Commission (KSC)
had asked them not to include jail credit time in journal entries unless the court had
revoked defendant's probation. KSC had advised the State to complete the jail-credit-time
section of a probation violation journal entry only when the district court has ordered the
defendant to serve the prison sentence. The State included a copy of the KSC's Desk
Reference Manual that says the incarceration credit box "should only be completed if the
offender is being revoked to prison."
Moss-Barrett's attorney rejected that explanation, arguing that her client could be
prejudiced if the journal entry does not include jail time credit:
"I understand you have a reference book for completing journal entries that
advises this section is not to be completed unless the person is remanded. However, the
journal entry, the document that the court looks to for the orders of the Court DOES NOT
state that.
"If either the judge, or anyone looks back through the journal entries on file with
the court, they will look to this section for the orders as it relates to jail credit. If nothing
is included, the awarded jail time credit is not reflected.
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"Therefore, I object to the journal entry without the proper entries as to the prior
jail time credit and the jail time credit the Court granted at this probation hearing."
Still, the State sent its proposed journal entry to the district court. Its cover letter
attached an email from KSC's attorney encouraging the district court to use its Desk
Reference Manual. The State noted that including jail credit time on journal entries when
revocation has not occurred is an ongoing issue that creates the possibility of double
counting:
"The sentencing commission has called us numerous times in the last year or so
when we have filled out the form in the manner Ms. Jordan requests. It is not in line with
their published instructions to do it the way Ms. Jordan would have us do it . . . . For
further clarification, we spoke with Christopher Lyon, attorney to the Sentencing
Commission. He wanted to be here [at the conference with the district court] but in the
end could not be, so he sent me the attached email to show the Court. He told us that the
computation unit calculates good time from ALL the journal entries in the file and we
risk double credit when time is put where it does not belong."
The probation violation journal entry filed by the district court did not state any
jail credit for Moss-Barrett's 60-day sanction. Moss-Barrett appeals.
Analysis
The right to jail credit time is statutory. State v. Hopkins, 295 Kan. 579, 581, 285
P.3d 1021 (2012). Statutory interpretation presents a question of law over which appellate
courts have unlimited review. State v. Alvarez, 309 Kan. 203, 205, 432 P.3d 1015 (2019)
Moss-Barrett argues that K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615(b) requires the district court
to reflect jail credit in a probation revocation journal entry. This statute provides that,
when a district court revokes probation and orders the defendant to prison, it should
properly calculate the defendant's sentence date and jail credit time:
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"In any criminal action in which probation, assignment to a conservation camp or
assignment to community corrections is revoked and the defendant is sentenced to
confinement, for the purpose of computing the defendant's sentence and parole eligibility
and conditional release date, the defendant's sentence is to be computed from a date,
hereafter to be specifically designated in the sentencing order of the journal entry of
judgment. Such date shall be established to reflect and shall be computed as an allowance
for the time which the defendant has spent in a residential facility while on probation,
assignment to a conservation camp or assignment to community correctional residential
services program. The commencing date of such sentence shall be used as the date of
sentence and all good time allowances as are authorized by law are to be allowed on such
sentence from such date as though the defendant were actually incarcerated in a
correctional institution." K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615(b).
Moss-Barrett then argues that "while her probation was not revoked, the district
court did sentence her to confinement. It was either 60 days or until a bed became
available. Consequently, the district court was required to award her jail time she had
accumulated and have that amount reflected in the journal entry."
Yet the statute does not support Moss-Barrett's conclusion. The statute contains a
conjunctive, and, not a disjunctive, or: "In any criminal action in which probation . . . is
revoked and the defendant is sentenced to confinement . . ." (Emphasis added.) K.S.A.
2019 Supp. 21-6615(b). The statute's operative language unambiguously requires both
probation revocation and confinement. It is uncontested that although Moss-Barrett
violated her probation, the district court did not revoke her probation. Instead, it ordered
only a 60-day sanction in the county jail. Thus K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 21-6615(b) does not
require the district court to include jail credit time in this journal entry. If the district
court revokes Moss-Barrett's probation and imposes her sentence, the journal entry of
revocation shall state the total number of days of jail credit awarded, including any time
served as a sanction before revocation of probation.
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We find no error in the district court's decision to omit from its journal entry the
time Moss-Barrett spent in jail while serving an intermediate sanction for her probation
violation.
Affirmed.
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