The opinion of the court was delivered by
In
State v. Spain,
This is the second time Spain has appealed his sentence to this court. In the first appeal, we stated:
“These essential facts are not in dispute: On March 17,1995, David Spain and two other inmates escaped from the Haskell County Jail after Spain shot the dispatcher, Irvin Powell. Spain fired one shot from behind, which struck Powell in the neck. After being told by one of the other escapees to “[p]lug him again,” Spain fired a second shot into Powell’s chest. Powell died 3 days later from the bullet wounds inflicted by Spain. Spain entered a plea of no contest to one count of premeditated first-degree murder. He was sentenced to serve a mandatory term of imprisonment of 40 years.”263 Kan. at 709 .
When sentencing Spain the first time, the trial court found one mitigating circumstance — that Spain was dominated by his code-fendant. The codefendant was Douglas Winter, who conceived the *55 escape plan and got other inmates involved. It was Winter who urged Spain to fire the second shot. The trial court found two aggravating circumstances for Spain — that he committed the murder in order to avoid prosecution and that he knowingly created a great risk of death to more than one person.
The evidence on which the trial court based its finding that Spain created a great risk of death to someone other than die murder victim was that several hours after shooting the dispatcher and escaping from the jail, he threatened a Colorado man who offered to help Spain with a flat tire. This court concluded that these facts did not constitute an aggravating circumstance within the meaning of the statute: “Under K.S.A. 21-4636(b), a direct relationship must exist between the great risk of death to another and the charged murder. Such a risk need not be contemporaneous with the homicide, but it must occur in the course of a defendant’s conduct in committing the charged murder.”
Upon remand, the trial court weighed the one aggravating and the one mitigating circumstance. At the resentencing hearing, the trial court stated:
'Tm unable to make a determination that either factor outweighs the other factor. I find them to be of equal weight. . . .
“I have no option under the statute because of that finding to do anything but require that the hard 40 be imposed, and it will, therefore, be the order of the Court that that will be the sentence imposed.”
In this appeal, Spain questions the constitutionality of the provision of K.S.A. 1999 Supp. 21-4635(c) that requires imposition of a hard 40 sentence if aggravating and mitigating factors are of equal weight. It states, in part:
“If the court finds that one or more of the aggravating circumstances enumerated in K.S.A. 21-4636 and amendments thereto exist and, further, that the existence of such aggravating circumstances is not outweighed by any mitigating circumstances which are found to exist, the defendant shall be sentenced pursuant to K.S.A. 21-4638 and amendments thereto; otherwise, the defendant shall be sentenced as provided by law.”
Spain contends that imposing a hard 40 sentence where the explanations for the criminal conduct are as significant as the culpable *56 aspects of it amounts to cruel and unusual punishment. We disagree.
Spain concedes on appeal that in the trial court, he based the constitutional challenge solely on the state constitutional provision that prohibits the infliction of cruel or unusual punishment. Kan. Const. Bill of Rights, § 9. On appeal, he also invokes the prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment in the Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution. He cites
State v. Puckett,
Spain relies entirely on death penalty cases to support his challenge to the hard 40 statute. In the first appeal of his sentence, he tried to convince this court to rule that both hard 40 and capital sentences were to be governed by the same authority. The court stated:
“A body of case law has been developed for the hard 40, and those cases are governing precedents for the present case. Spain was not sentenced under K.S.A. 21-4624; thus, we need not go beyond established case law in order to adjudicate die case before die court. We will not anticipate whether the governing principles should be modified in a death penalty case. Such an opinion would be beyond determining the issue before us.”263 Kan. at 710 .
In the present appeal, no cases interpreting the Kansas hard 40 statute have been cited by defendant. In the absence of controlling precedent, Spain directs the court’s attention to death penalty cases from federal courts and other states’ courts. The cases relied on by Spain are
Hulsey v. Sargent,
In
Young,
the Colorado Supreme Court invalidated that state’s death penalty statute, which required imposition of the death penalty when a jury decides that aggravating and mitigating factors are equally balanced. The Colorado court reasoned that the statute
*57
“does not reflect the degree of certainty and reliability that the Colorado Constitution requires to support the imposition of the uniquely severe and irrevocable sentence of death,” thus violating the Colorado constitutional proscription of cruel and unusual punishments.
In
Biegenwald,
the New Jersey Supreme Court took up the question of equally balanced aggravating and mitigating factors even though defendant had not raised it at trial or on appeal. The relevant portion of the New Jersey statute is quoted in the opinion as follows: “If the jury or the court finds that any aggravating factor exists and is not outweighed by one or more mitigating factors, the court shall sentence the defendant to death.”
In
Hulsey,
the federal district court held that the Arkansas death penalty statute unconstitutionally mandated death if aggravating and mitigating factors were equally balanced. Its decision was made according to “the strictures of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments with their requirements of individualized sentencing and full consideration of evidence in mitigation.”
Spain urges this court to conclude that to avoid the constitutional infirmities that felled the death penalty statutes in Young, Biegen-wald, and Hulsey, the sentencer must be afforded some discretion in a Kansas hard 40 case. He illustrates the need for discretion by calling to the court’s attention that the district court imposed a lesser sentence on Winter than it imposed on Spain, despite the sentencing judge’s conviction that Winter was the leader. At the time of resentencing, the district court stated:
*58 “I am concerned about the fact that Mr. Winter received 25 as the controlling time before he was eligible for consideration by the parole board, whereas Mr. Spain has the potential of it being 40 before he was eligible for consideration. I looked through the statute and it does not say to me that I have the right to make a determination that because Mr. Spain cut a different deal than Mr. Winter did, and that Mr. Winter’s was a better deal, that I can deviate from the statute.
“I don’t take [the prosecutor’s] argument that there is a difference between the two, and tire argument that there is an additional aggravating circumstance, but it is a valid argument that there were reasons why one defendant was able to cut a better deal with the State than another defendant. Because even though they were involved in the same crime, they had different roles in that crime, and it’s not my prerogative to go and look behind that issue.
“. .. I’m unable to make a determination that either factor outweighs the other factor. I find them to be of equal weight. . . .
“I have no option under the statute because of that finding to do anything but require that the hard 40 be imposed, and it will, therefore, be the order of die Court diat that will be the sentence imposed.”
In
State v. Bailey,
Thus, when the court previously has faced the question of disparate sentencing, the issue raised has been an abuse of discretion. *59 In the present case, the contention is that the lack of discretion renders the statutory scheme unconstitutional.
Although Spain emphasizes the disparity of his and his cofelon’s sentences, and the sentencing judge seemed to be concerned about it, disparate sentences can be justified by the different acts committed by Spain and Winter. There is no question that it was Spain who shot and killed the dispatcher. Winter aided Spain and urged him to fire the second shot, but Winter did not shoot the victim.
The State argues that in
Walton v. Arizona,
As previously noted, the Colorado Supreme Court interpreted its own constitutional provisions to grant greater protection than the comparable United States constitutional provision. Thus,
Walton
was not controlling. In contrast, this court has never extended greater protection to our citizens beyond the federal guarantees. See
State v. Schultz,
In addition, we reaffirm that death penalty cases are not controlling in hard 40 cases. The distinction between the two is obvious. The death penalty as it existed prior to the decision in
Furman v. Georgia,
“So long as a State’s method of allocating the burdens of proof does not lessen the State’s burden to prove every element of the offense charged, or in this case to prove the existence of aggravating circumstances, a defendant’s constitutional rights are not violated by placing on him the burden of proving mitigating circumstances sufficiently substantial to call for leniency.”497 U.S. at 650 .
The trial court’s weighing of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances is within its sound discretion and will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. Here, the trial court considered the mitigating circumstance and found it did not outweigh the aggravating circumstance. There was no abuse of discretion and nothing further is required to impose the hard 40 sentence. Such imposition did not constitute cruel and unusual punishment as prohibited by the Kansas Constitution or the Eighth Amendment to the federal Constitution.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
