State of Iowa v. Christopher Craig Hawk ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 19–1814
    Submitted November 18, 2020—Filed December 23, 2020
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    CHRISTOPHER CRAIG HAWK,
    Appellant.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wayne County, Patrick W.
    Greenwood, Judge.
    The defendant appeals his restitution order. AFFIRMED.
    Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices
    joined.
    Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Stephan J.
    Japuntich, Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Tyler J. Buller, Assistant
    Attorney General, and Alan M. Wilson, County Attorney, for appellee.
    2
    OXLEY, Justice.
    Criminal restitution—specifically the determination of a defendant’s
    ability to pay criminal restitution—has been the topic of numerous appeals
    and recent legislation.   The defendant seeks review of the amount of
    restitution ordered by the district court, while the State argues recent
    amendments to the restitution statutes preclude our review. We conclude
    we can consider the district court’s order, which we affirm.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Hawk was a passenger in his Jeep when his son ran a stop sign and
    was stopped by police officers on September 2, 2018. Officers arrested
    Hawk’s son for driving without a valid license. The officers conducted a
    weapons    pat    down    of   Hawk       as   the   passenger,   discovered
    methamphetamine in Hawk’s pocket, and arrested him too.
    The State charged Hawk with possession of methamphetamine in an
    amount greater than five grams with intent to distribute, in violation of
    Iowa Code sections 124.401(1) and 124.401(b)(7) (2018), a Class “B”
    Felony, and failure to affix a drug tax stamp, in violation of Iowa Code
    sections 453B.1 and 453B.12, a Class “D” Felony. After a denied motion
    to suppress and plea negotiations, Hawk pled guilty to possession of
    methamphetamine in an amount less than five grams with intent to
    distribute, in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(1)(c)(6), a Class “C”
    Felony. He does not appeal his guilty plea.
    Hawk was sentenced on October 2, 2019, to the maximum sentence
    of ten years in prison and ordered to pay a $1000 fine plus a 35%
    surcharge. During sentencing, the district court considered Hawk’s ability
    to pay court costs.   According to the presentence investigation report,
    Hawk claimed earnings of $12,000 in 2018 from unemployment.              He
    claimed debt from two vehicle loans totaling $18,000, both of which were
    3
    in default, $600 in credit card debt, and $2400 owed for court fees. At
    sentencing, he testified he lost his Jeep to a $3400 towing bill following
    his arrest and that he had been close to starting his own business when
    he was arrested, although he did not elaborate on what type of business.
    In considering whether to order Hawk to pay court costs and his
    court-appointed attorney fees, the court concluded Hawk was “not
    incapable” of working and would be able to repay some amount of
    restitution. The court ordered Hawk to pay the full court costs of $343.50
    but capped repayment of his court-appointed attorney fees at the lesser of
    $250 or the actual amount of fees.                  Thus, the “second category”
    restitution1 ordered, apart from the $1000 fine, totaled $593.50. Hawk
    appealed this restitution order on October 30, arguing the amount of
    restitution was excessive.
    II. Legal Analysis.
    A. Jurisdiction to Hear Hawk’s Appeal. We initially retained this
    case to determine whether we could hear Hawk’s appeal following a guilty
    plea in light of the changes to Iowa Code section 814.6, which went into
    effect on July 1, 2019.        See Iowa Code § 814.6(1)(a)(3) (2020) (limiting
    direct appeals from a final judgment of sentence following a guilty plea to
    Class “A” felonies or a showing of “good cause”).               The State “assumes
    without conceding” we have jurisdiction to hear Hawk’s appeal under the
    1Prior  to revisions enacted on June 25, 2020, the Iowa Code recognized two
    categories of restitution, the second of which could be ordered only if the defendant had
    the reasonable ability to pay the restitution.           See Iowa Code § 910.2(1) (2019);
    id. § 910.2(1) (2018).
    Court costs and reimbursement for court-appointed attorney fees
    were both considered “second category” restitution to which the ability-to-pay
    determination applied. See
    id. § 910.2(2) (2019).
    Those items are now considered
    Category B restitution and are still subject to an ability-to-pay determination. See 2020
    Iowa Acts ch. 1074, § 69 (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.1(001) (2021)) (defining
    Category “B” restitution);
    id. § 71 (to
    be codified at Iowa Code § 910.2(1)(a)(2) (2021)).
    4
    good cause provision of section 814.6(1)(a)(3) where Hawk is appealing the
    restitution order included in his sentence and not his guilty plea.
    Since the time that we retained Hawk’s appeal, the legislature
    enacted Senate File 457 (SF 457), which made changes to the criminal
    restitution scheme. See 2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1074, §§ 65–83. In short,
    SF 457 changed the procedure by which a defendant’s ability to pay
    Category “B” restitution is determined, including shifting presumptions,
    imposing statutory waivers, and requiring financial affidavits. See
    id. The statutory amendments
    at issue took effect on June 25, 2020.
    Id. § 83. The
    State argues that those changes apply retroactively to strip us of
    jurisdiction to hear Hawk’s challenge to the restitution order.
    Criminal defendants can be ordered to pay different types of
    restitution. Some types of restitution such as restitution for pecuniary
    damages incurred by victims of the defendant’s crimes, are not limited in
    amount. See Iowa Code § 910.2(1) (2018). Regardless of a defendant’s
    financial wherewithal, he must make restitution for the monetary damages
    caused by his criminal actions. See
    id. Other types of
    restitution, such
    as court costs and reimbursement of court-appointed attorney fees, are
    limited to an amount the defendant is reasonably able to pay. See
    id. It is not
    uncommon for the total amount of some of those items to not be
    available at the time of sentencing. When that happens, we have directed
    that district
    [c]ourts must wait to enter a final order of restitution until all
    items of restitution are before the court. Once the court has
    all the items of restitution before it, then and only then shall
    the court make an assessment as to the offender’s reasonable
    ability to pay.
    5
    State v. Albright, 
    925 N.W.2d 144
    , 162 (Iowa 2019); see also Iowa Code
    § 910.3(9) (providing for temporary and supplemental orders “[i]f the full
    amount of restitution cannot be determined at the time of sentencing”).
    Most recently, we reinforced that until a proper final restitution
    order had been entered—complete with a determination of the amount of
    second category restitution the defendant had the reasonable ability to
    pay—such restitution orders were not enforceable. See State v. Davis, 
    944 N.W.2d 641
    , 646 (Iowa 2020) (“[W]e reemphasize that ‘any temporary,
    permanent, or supplemental order regarding restitution is not . . .
    enforceable until the court files its final order of restitution’ after
    determination of the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay.” (quoting
    
    Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 162
    (second alteration in original))).
    Within days of Davis, the legislature passed SF 457, changing the
    process for determining a defendant’s reasonable ability to pay second
    category (now Category “B”) restitution items. See 2020 Iowa Acts ch.
    1074, § 69 (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.1(001) (2021)).              The
    legislature addressed pending Albright-type cases awaiting a final
    restitution order that included consideration of a defendant’s reasonable
    ability to pay by enacting Iowa Code section 910.2B. See
    id. § 73 (to
    be
    codified at Iowa Code § 910.2B (2021)). Section 910.2B identified specific
    restitution orders that, “if entered by a district court prior to the effective
    date of this Act, shall be converted to permanent restitution orders,”
    including “temporary restitution order[s],” “supplemental restitution
    order[s]” and “restitution order[s] that do[] not contain a determination of
    the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay the restitution ordered.”
    Id. (to be codified
    at Iowa Code § 910.2B(1)(c) (2021)).           Thus, under the
    legislation, orders we had previously concluded were unenforceable
    became enforceable on June 25, 2020, even absent a reasonable-ability-
    6
    to-pay determination. See
    id. § 69 (to
    be codified at Iowa Code § 910.1.3A
    (2021)) (defining a “permanent restitution order”).
    Under the new statutory scheme, a defendant can challenge the
    conversion of one of those orders only through a petition for hearing in the
    district court under section 910.7. See
    id. § 73 (to
    be codified at Iowa Code
    § 910.2B(2) (2021)).   Further, the new procedures outlined in section
    910.2A are required to be applied in that section 910.7 proceeding. See
    id. (to be codified
    at Iowa Code § 910.2B(3) (2021)). The State relies on the
    conversion statute to support its argument that we now lack jurisdiction
    to hear Hawk’s appeal, arguing he must bring his challenge first to the
    district court through a section 910.7 petition.
    We reject the State’s reliance on section 910.2B in this case because
    Hawk is not challenging the conversion of a restitution order to a
    permanent restitution order.     Rather, he challenges only whether the
    district court ordered an excessive amount of restitution.      The district
    court considered Hawk’s ability to pay restitution and ordered him to pay
    the full $343.50 in court costs but capped restitution for his court-
    appointed attorney fees at $250 even though the district court did not yet
    know the full amount of those fees. The order did not purport to order
    temporary restitution to be supplemented later. Rather, it entered a final
    restitution order, complete with an ability-to-pay determination. Hawk’s
    restitution order therefore is not a temporary order, a supplemental order,
    or an order lacking an ability-to-pay determination—the types of orders
    specifically identified in section 910.2B that were converted to permanent
    orders. Section 910.2B simply does not apply to the restitution order
    entered in Hawk’s criminal case on October 1, 2019.
    The State relies on another provision of newly enacted section
    910.2B to argue the legislature intended the procedures in SF 457 to apply
    7
    retroactively to sentencing orders entered prior to its enactment, including
    ones on appeal. See Iowa Acts ch. 1074, § 73 (to be codified at Iowa Code
    § 910.2B(3) (2021)) (“The provisions of this chapter, including but not
    limited to the procedures in section 910.2A, shall apply to a challenge to
    the conversion of an existing restitution order in the district court and on
    appeal.” (emphasis added)). Construing the plain language of the statute,
    see State v. Wickes, 
    910 N.W.2d 554
    , 569 (Iowa 2018) (“[W]hen the terms
    and meaning of a statute are plain and clear, we enforce the statute as
    written.”), this directive is expressly limited to “challenge[s] to the
    conversion of an existing restitution order.” 2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1047, § 73
    (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.2B(3) (2021)). Having concluded Hawk’s
    order was not converted under section 910.2B, his appeal does not fall
    within section 910.2B’s directive. The purpose of section 910.2B is to
    make existing restitution orders immediately enforceable and to provide
    the mechanism by which a defendant can receive an ability-to-pay
    determination first from the district court. But here, Hawk has already
    received that determination. Section 910.2B(3) does not prevent us from
    considering Hawk’s appeal.
    That leaves the question of what we would do with Hawk’s appeal
    under our pre-SF 457 jurisprudence. In a perfect world, the district court
    would have all items of restitution before it at the time of sentencing,
    consider the defendant’s ability to pay the second category items of
    restitution, and include the restitution order in its sentencing order and
    judgment. When that occurs, the restitution order is part of the judgment
    of sentence and is appealable the same as any other part of the sentence.
    In State v. Janz, the defendant appealed the amount of victim restitution
    ordered at sentencing, and the state argued the defendant was required to
    exhaust her remedies in the district court by bringing a section 910.7
    8
    petition for hearing. 
    358 N.W.2d 547
    , 548 (Iowa 1984). We recognized
    that avenue was available to the defendant but not required.
    Id. at 549.
    Where section 814.6(1)(a) granted a criminal defendant the right of a direct
    appeal from “[a] final judgment of sentence,” and section 910.2
    contemplated that restitution orders would be part of a judgment of
    conviction, we held that the “defendant’s appeal from the final judgment
    was also a permissible appeal from all orders incorporated in that
    sentence, including the order of restitution here challenged.”
    Id. (alteration in original)
    (first quoting Iowa Code § 814.6(1)(a) (1983)).
    Here, the district court knew all relevant information except the total
    amount of court-appointed attorney fees. There was no victim restitution
    (Hawk pleaded guilty to drug possession charges), and no claims were
    made for jail fees to be paid as part of restitution.      The district court
    ordered Hawk to pay a $1000 fine, the accompanying $350 criminal
    penalty surcharge, a $125 Law Enforcement Initiative fee, and a $10
    D.A.R.E. surcharge. Knowing Hawk faced these payment obligations, the
    district court considered Hawk’s ability to pay second category restitution,
    ordered Hawk to pay $343.50 in court costs, and capped the amount of
    restitution he could pay toward his attorney fees at $250. Even though
    the district court did not know the total amount of the fees at that time, it
    would not have mattered whether they totaled $250 or $25,000—the court
    considered Hawk’s financial situation and concluded he could pay no more
    than $250. Thus, where the district court conducted a reasonable-ability-
    to-pay determination and capped the defendant’s restitution based on that
    determination, the fact that it lacked information about the total amount
    of attorney fees subject to restitution does not violate the rule we set out
    in Albright. Cf. State v. Covel, 
    925 N.W.2d 183
    , 189 (Iowa 2019) (reversing
    and remanding restitution order where “the district court did not have the
    9
    total amount of restitution owed when it entered its order finding Covel
    reasonably able to pay” restitution in full). In short, had we considered
    Hawk’s appeal before enactment of SF 457, we would have been able to
    reach the merits of his appeal.
    Having concluded that we would have jurisdiction to consider
    Hawk’s appeal under both our pre-SF 457 jurisprudence and under the
    new provisions enacted in SF 457, we need not, and do not, dive into the
    morass of whether SF 457 applies retroactively to cases on appeal prior to
    its enactment.
    B. Was Hawk Required to Exhaust Remedies Under Section
    910.7? In a related argument, the State argues that Hawk was required
    to exhaust his remedies by first challenging the amount of his restitution
    order in a section 910.7 petition in district court. Even assuming SF 457
    applies to Hawk’s appeal, the State’s argument still fails.
    Section 80 of SF 457 provides:
    An appellate court shall not review or modify an offender’s
    plan of restitution, restitution plan of payment, or any other
    issue related to an offender’s restitution under this
    subsection, unless the offender has exhausted the offender’s
    remedies under this section and obtained a ruling from the
    district court prior to the issue being raised in the appellate
    courts.
    2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1074, § 80 (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.7(4)
    (2021)).   The State’s argument ignores the context of section 80 and
    another new provision added by SF 457. See Doe v. State, 
    943 N.W.2d 608
    , 610 (Iowa 2020) (“In determining the ordinary and fair meaning of the
    statutory language at issue, we take into consideration the language’s
    relationship to other provisions of the same statute and other provisions
    of related statutes.”); Phillips v. Chi. Cent. & Pac. R.R., 
    853 N.W.2d 636
    ,
    649 (Iowa 2014) (noting “that statutory terms are often ‘clarified by the
    10
    remainder of the statutory scheme’ ” (quoting United Sav. Ass’n of Tex. v.
    Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., 
    484 U.S. 365
    , 371, 
    108 S. Ct. 626
    , 630
    (1988))). Section 910.7 provides the mechanism for addressing restitution
    not ordered at the time of sentencing, unlike the order Hawk appeals. But
    “[a] permanent restitution order entered at the time of sentencing is part of
    the final judgment of sentence as defined in section 814.6 and shall be
    considered in a properly perfected appeal.” 2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1074, § 74
    (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.3(8) (2021)) (emphasis added). Read
    together, these provisions reveal that even after SF 457’s amendments,
    challenges to a final restitution order made at sentencing, like Hawk’s
    challenge, are properly brought on direct appeal. The district court has
    already provided its ruling on the issue Hawk appeals; SF 457 does not
    require him to seek reconsideration of the district court’s ability-to-pay
    determination.
    C. Did Hawk Preserve His Challenge to the Restitution Order?
    Separately, the State argues, citing State v. Rutledge, 
    600 N.W.2d 324
    ,
    325–26 (Iowa 1999), that Hawk was required to preserve his challenge to
    the district court’s reasonable-ability-to-pay determination by objecting at
    the sentencing hearing or otherwise seeking reconsideration from the
    district court. But Rutledge involved an unobjected-to challenge to the
    prosecutor’s actions, which we distinguished from a “complain[t about]
    any ruling or action of the trial court.”
    Id. at 326.
       Here, Hawk is
    complaining about the determination the district court actually made.
    Thus, this is not a case where the “court fail[ed] to rule on a matter,”
    triggering our preservation requirements under which the defendant
    “must request a ruling by some means.” State v. Krogmann, 
    804 N.W.2d 518
    , 524 (Iowa 2011). Hawk did not need to object further in district court
    11
    to preserve his challenge to the amount his of restitution order. See 
    Janz, 358 N.W.2d at 548
    –49.
    D. Did the District Court Abuse its Discretion in Determining
    the Amount of Restitution Hawk Had the Ability to Pay?                      Having
    navigated the State’s procedural challenges, we now consider the merits of
    Hawk’s appeal. We review the district court’s determination of the amount
    Hawk is reasonably able to pay towards second category restitution for an
    abuse of discretion. See State v. Kaelin, 
    362 N.W.2d 526
    , 528 (Iowa 1985).2
    [A] court should not order payment of restitution unless the
    convicted person “is or will be able to pay it without undue
    hardship to himself or dependents, considering the financial
    resources of the defendant and the nature of the burden
    payment will impose.”
    
    Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 161
    (quoting State v. Rogers, 
    251 N.W.2d 239
    , 245
    (Iowa 1977) (en banc)).
    The State argues we should apply the new rules provided in section
    910.2A to determine Hawk’s reasonable ability to pay, and Hawk argues
    such retroactive application would violate his constitutional rights, citing
    State v. Haines, 
    360 N.W.2d 791
    , 796 (Iowa 1985) (recognizing ability-to-
    pay limitation on requirement to repay court-appointed attorney fees
    satisfied defendant’s due process rights). Ultimately, the State argues the
    district court properly exercised its discretion in setting the total amount
    of Hawk’s restitution under either pre- or post-SF 457 standards. Because
    we agree with the State that the district court’s determination is consistent
    with our pre-SF 457 caselaw, we avoid the constitutional issue and affirm
    on that basis.
    2Thisis the same standard of review we would apply under the standards set out
    in SF 457. See 2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1074, § 72 (to be codified at Iowa Code § 910.2A(5)
    (2021)).
    12
    Hawk argues he is indigent, has debt of over $20,000, and is
    incarcerated, so the district court should have found he did not have the
    ability to pay any of the second category restitution items. The district
    court noted these facts, but the court also considered Hawk’s prior work
    experience, his relatively young age, and his ability to work. The court
    concluded:
    In light of the fact that Mr. Hawk is not incapable of working;
    in other words, he does have the capacity to work and he has
    some employment history, the Court finds that given time and
    the ability to repay some of the financial obligation or all of it
    according to a fine payment plan, that he does have the
    reasonable ability to pay the court costs in the amount of
    $343.50.
    However, his ability to repay attorney fees is limited
    because of his incarceration, lack of current employment and
    substantial debts. Therefore, the Court will impose attorney
    fees in the amount of $250 or the actual amount if the actual
    amount paid is less.
    We recognize the obstacles criminal defendants face when saddled
    with large amounts of court debt that make it difficult to make a fresh start
    after serving their term of imprisonment. But we cannot say the district
    court abused its discretion in ordering Hawk to pay $343.50 in court costs
    and capping repayment of his court-appointed attorney fees at $250. The
    district court considered the proper factors and did not consider any
    improper factors. See 
    Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 161
    (identifying as factors
    “the financial resources of the defendant, including income and net assets,
    and the defendant’s financial obligations, including the amount necessary
    to meet minimum basic human needs such as food, shelter, and clothing
    for the defendant and his or her dependents” as well as “the present and
    potential future financial needs and earning ability of the defendant and
    his or her dependents, and other factors as the court deems appropriate”
    (first quoting Commonwealth v. Henry, 
    55 N.E.3d 943
    , 953 (Mass. 2016)));
    see also Walters v. Grossheim, 
    525 N.W.2d 830
    , 832 (Iowa 1994) (“By
    13
    statute, incarceration creates no obstacle to performance under the
    restitution plan.”); 
    Kaelin, 362 N.W.2d at 528
    (“The record shows
    defendant is indigent but has several skills that should enable him to earn
    income. He also appears to be in good health. Therefore we cannot say
    under the present record that he met his burden to upset the restitution
    order.”); State v. Storrs, 
    351 N.W.2d 520
    , 522 (Iowa 1984) (concluding
    defendant had the reasonable ability to pay because she owned property,
    “had training and experience as a beautician,” and did not prove she
    lacked ability to pay). The district court acted within its discretion when
    it ordered Hawk to pay some second category restitution but limited it to
    less than $600.
    III. Conclusion.
    We affirm the restitution order of the district court.
    AFFIRMED.