State Of Louisiana in the Interest of L.J.G. ( 2021 )


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  •                      NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2020 KJ 0927
    O&
    STATE OF LOUISIANA IN THE INTEREST OF L.J. G.
    DATE OF JUDGMENT.-
    MAR 0 4 2021
    ON APPEAL FROM THE JUVENILE COURT OF EAST BATON ROUGE,
    NUMBER J U 114140, DIVISION B
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    HONORABLE GAIL GROVER, JUDGE
    Hillar C. Moore, III                       Counsel for Appellee
    District Attorney                          State of Louisiana
    Dylan C. Alge
    Andi Neal
    Assistant District Attorneys
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana
    Alyson Lang                                Counsel for Defendant -Appellant
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                     L.J. G.
    BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., WELCH, AND CHUTZ, JJ.
    Disposition: ADJUDICATION AND DISPOSITION AFFIRMED.
    j
    CHUTZ, J.
    L.J. G.,' who is a juvenile, was charged by petition in juvenile court with hit-
    and-run driving ( count 1), a violation of La. R. S. 14: 100, and reckless operation of
    a vehicle ( count     2), a violation of La. R.S.         14: 99.    L.J. G. initially denied the
    allegations.
    He subsequently withdrew his denial and entered into a plea
    agreement wherein he admitted to the allegation of reckless operation of a vehicle.
    In accordance with the agreement, the State dismissed the hit-and-run driving
    charge.
    The juvenile court adjudicated the juvenile a delinquent and placed him on
    a deferred dispositional agreement with unsupervised probation for three months.
    The juvenile court also ordered the juvenile to pay $ 5, 138. 13 in restitution. L.J. G.
    now appeals, designating three assignments of error. We affirm the adjudication
    and disposition.
    FACTS
    The following facts are taken from the plea agreement. On July 23, 2019,
    Louisiana State Trooper Boudreaux was dispatched to the Innovation Park area
    near Burbank in East Baton Rouge Parish. L.J. G. was driving a vehicle and had
    attempted to turn at a fast rate of speed.            He lost control of the vehicle and hit a
    pedestrian and four parked vehicles.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NUMBER ONE
    In his first assignment of error, L.J. G. asserts the juvenile court erred in
    ordering restitution as a condition of probation when the court lacked jurisdiction
    of the case because the disposition had expired.           Specifically, L.J. G. asserts that the
    juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to impose restitution because he had completed
    his probation period prior to the ruling setting the amount of restitution L.J. G. was
    z Because this matter involves a delinquency proceeding, we have used L.J.G.' s initials to protect
    his identity. See Uniform Rules -Courts of Appeal, Rules 5- 1( a)( 3) and 5- 2.
    2
    required to pay. As such, L.J. G. argues the juvenile court was without authority to
    order restitution. This assertion is baseless.
    The juvenile court maintained jurisdiction to impose restitution, and, as
    such, the restitution order is valid.    Louisiana Children' s Code article 313( A)
    provides:
    A court exercising juvenile jurisdiction no longer exercises such
    jurisdiction in any proceeding authorized by this Code upon:
    1)    Declination ofjurisdiction.
    2)    Transfer of the proceeding.
    3)    Expiration or satisfaction of an informal adjustment agreement.
    4)
    Expiration or satisfaction of an informal family services plan
    agreement.
    5)    Expiration, satisfaction, or vacation of a juvenile disposition or
    adult sentence.
    6)    Dismissal of the proceeding.
    On February 10,      2020, L.J. G. was placed on a deferred dispositional
    agreement for a term of three months.           As part of his plea agreement, L.J. G.' s
    conditions of probation required him to complete a driving course and to pay
    restitution in an amount to be determined.
    The initial restitution hearing held on March 12, 2020, was laid over until
    April 1, 2020, which was prior to the expiration of L.J. G.' s unsupervised probation
    on May 10, 2020. On April 1, 2020, the juvenile court continued the hearing until.
    May 13, 2020, due to COVID- 19 concerns. Upon joint motion of the parties, the
    hearing was then continued until June 9, 2020. Following the hearing held on that
    date, the juvenile court set the amount of restitution to be paid by L.J. G.
    Given that a condition of the plea was always that L.J. G. would be required
    to pay restitution, satisfaction of the deferred dispositional agreement was
    incomplete until restitution had been determined, ordered, and paid.         See La. Ch.
    3
    Code art. 313( A).       That is, the deferred disposition did not end when L.J. G.
    finished his unsupervised probation since all conditions of the agreement had not
    been satisfied.   The juvenile court still possessed jurisdiction of the case and will
    continue to possess jurisdiction until restitution is fully paid. See Id.
    Moreover, the period for ordering restitution was extended by both the
    juvenile court' s continuance and the joint continuance of the parties. L.J. G. asserts
    in brief that the State had a duty to orally, or by written motion, seek to extend the
    duration of the disposition. L.J. G. cites no authority for this assertion. While the
    held -over restitution hearing originally was scheduled to be completed on April 1,
    2020, the continuance invoked by the juvenile court, as well as the continuance
    joined in by L.J.G.' s own counsel, extended the restitution hearing past L.J. G.' s
    three- month period of unsupervised probation.                The restitution hearing was
    completed on the first possible date that all parties were available.'
    L.J. G.' s reliance on State v. Broussard, 
    408 So. 2d 909
     ( La. 198 1)                   is
    misplaced.
    Broussard did not involve restitution being disallowed because the
    defendant' s probationary period had terminated.             Rather, the Broussard Court
    found that, even granting the State' s contention that a defendant' s probationary
    period is interrupted by personal service of a rule to revoke his probation, no
    interruption had occurred when the rule to revoke Broussard' s probation was not
    served on him prior to the expiration of his probationary period.             Broussard, 408
    So, 2d at 910.
    Based on the foregoing, this assignment of error is without merit.
    2 Furthermore, La. Ch. Code art. 896( D) provides that a deferred dispositional agreement shall
    remain in force for six months unless the child is discharged sooner by the court. See also La.
    Ch. Code art. 896( F). While the juvenile court initially placed the juvenile on unsupervised
    probation for a period of three months, the term of the deferred dispositional agreement, by
    operation of law, remained in force for six months. The juvenile court' s order of restitution was
    rendered within that six-month period.
    4
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR NUMBERS TWO AND THREE
    In these related assignments of error, L.J. G. argues, respectively, that the
    juvenile court erred in ordering restitution in an amount exceeding the actual
    pecuniary loss to the victim and in ordering an indigent juvenile to pay restitution
    in an excessive amount.
    Under La. Ch. Code art. 899( B)( 2)( c), after adjudication of a delinquent act,
    the court may, as a condition of probation, impose a requirement that the child
    make reasonable restitution to any victim for any personal or property damage
    caused by the child in the commission of the delinquent act.               It is within the
    juvenile court' s vast discretion to choose an appropriate amount of restitution to be
    paid.   See State in Interest of N.J., 2020- 0056 ( La. App. lst Cir. 7/ 24/20),
    So. 3d ,     
    2020 WL 4250993
    , * 3.
    At the restitution hearing, Mary Lee Ellerson, the victim whose 2013
    Chevrolet Malibu was totaled by L.J. G.,               testified   her insurance company,
    Progressive Insurance ( Progressive) paid $ 5, 778. 62 on the vehicle, on which she
    still owed $ 8, 832. 04.   The State asked for restitution in the amount of $8, 832. 04 to
    be ordered. The juvenile court ordered restitution in the amount of $5, 639. 13, but
    authorized $
    500. 00 ( the maximum amount allowed) of that amount to be paid by
    the victim' s compensation fund. L.J. G.        was ordered to pay the remaining balance
    of $5, 138. 13 as restitution.
    L.J. G.    asserts in brief that the restitution ordered exceeds the actual
    pecuniary loss Ms. Ellerson sustained. Noting the market value of the vehicle at
    the time it was totaled was $ 5, 638. 133 and Progressive paid $ 5, 778. 62 directly to
    the finance company Ms. Ellerson used to finance the vehicle, L.J. G. argues Ms.
    Ellerson is being unjustly enriched by the amount he was ordered to pay.             L.J. G.
    maintains he is not responsible for the financial arrangements Ms. Ellerson made
    This figure represented the market value set by Progressive.
    5
    with the finance company prior to her vehicle being totaled. Therefore, he asserts
    the actual loss Ms. Ellerson sustained was only the market value of the vehicle at
    the time of the accident, which Progressive has already paid on her behalf.
    We disagree.      At the time Ms. Ellerson' s vehicle was totaled, she owed
    15, 559. 55 on the vehicle.    After Progressive paid $ 5, 778. 62 on the claim, the
    remaining balance owed was still almost $ 10, 000. 00. Even though she no longer
    had use of her vehicle, Ms.
    Ellerson         was still obligated to continue making
    payments to the finance company. By the time of the March 2020 hearing, her
    additional payments had reduced the balance owed to $ 8, 832. 04.
    While L.J. G. had nothing to do with the financial arrangements Ms. Ellerson
    made to purchase her vehicle, he is certainly responsible for the financial straits
    she has found herself in, which is that she is still required to pay the finance
    company $ 8, 832. 04 for a totaled vehicle she can no longer drive. The loss suffered
    by Ms. Ellerson was caused by the offense L.J. G. committed. Further, the juvenile
    court' s order of restitution is reasonably related to the juvenile' s rehabilitation.
    See State in Interest of D.B., 2013- 1364 ( La. App. 3d Cir. 4/ 23/ 14), 
    137 So. 3d 1282
    , 1285- 88, writ denied, 2014- 1092 ( La. 1/ 9/ 15), 
    157 So.3d 596
     ( affirming an
    order that a juvenile, who admitted a charge of unauthorized use of a movable,
    pay restitution for tools taken from the truck, even though the juvenile was not
    charged with theft, and the items were not been listed in the police report).         See
    also State in Interest of K.Z., 2015- 1029 ( La. App. 3d Cir. 3/ 2/ 16), 
    186 So. 3d 799
    , 807, writ denied, 2016- 0610 ( La. 5/ 2/ 16), 
    206 So. 3d 881
    .   Accordingly, there
    has been no unjust enrichment to the victim, and the juvenile court did not abuse
    its discretion in ordering the juvenile to pay restitution in the amount of $5, 13 8. 13.
    L.J. G. further contends the amount of restitution ordered was unreasonable
    because he is indigent, and it serves no rehabilitative purpose. Requiring a juvenile
    D
    to account for a portion of the reasonable and direct consequences of his crime is
    an acceptable form of rehabilitation. State in Interest of D.B, 
    137 So. 3d at 1288
    .
    In State in Interest of N.J., 2020- 0056 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 7/ 24/20),
    So. 3d ,          
    2020 WL 4250993
    ,     a   seventeen -year-old juvenile       admitted      to
    unauthorized use of a motor vehicle from which items had gone missing.
    Restitution was ordered in the amount of $3, 229. 15. The juvenile contended the
    amount was excessive because she was indigent. Affirming the restitution order,
    this court determined that the juvenile court did not abuse its vast discretion and
    requiring N.J. to account for a portion of the reasonable and direct consequences
    of her crime is an acceptable form of rehabilitation despite her indigence, we find
    that the restitution amount of $3, 229. 15 was not an unreasonable burden to place
    on the now eighteen -year-old N.J."         State in Interest of N.J, 
    2020 WL 4250993
    ,
    at * 3.
    L.J. G. cites State in Interest of B.A., 2012- 659 ( La. App. 3d Cir. 12/ 19/ 12),
    
    104 So. 3d 833
    , wherein the Third Circuit found that $ 5, 805. 00 in restitution was
    excessive.     In State in Interest of B.A., 104 So. 3d at 836, the court found that the
    restitution amount was excessive, in part, because the amount exceeded the actual
    pecuniary loss resulting from the juvenile' s burglary                 of   a   middle      school.
    Moreover, unlike in State in Interest of B. A., the restitution L.J. G. was ordered to
    pay does not exceed the victim' s actual pecuniary loss.                Although the victim
    established that she owed a balance of $8, 832. 04 on the vehicle L.J.G. totaled
    after payment by Progressive), the juvenile court only ordered L.J. G. to pay
    5, 138. 13 in restitution.4
    This reduced amount clearly indicates the juvenile court considered L.J. G.' s
    ability to pay and the financial situation of his family. L.J. G.' s stepmother, Miriam
    4 As previously noted, the juvenile court also authorized the Victim' s Compensation Fund to pay
    500. 00 to the victim, which when combined with L.J. G.' s payment of $5, 138. 13 in restitution,
    would leave the victim with a remaining balance owed of $3, 193. 91 on a totaled vehicle.
    7
    Hernandez, testified at the restitution hearing that she worked at a restaurant that
    had closed because of COVID.         At the time of the hearing, Ms. Hernandez was
    working only two to three days a week cleaning construction sites.        She stated she
    would return to the restaurant when it reopened. L.J.G.' s father does construction
    work approximately thirty to thirty-two hours a week, which is less than he
    normally worked before COVID. According to Ms. Hernandez, the only thing
    preventing L.J.G. from working is the fact that he is still in school.       She further
    testified that L.J. G.' s twenty -year- old brother is working and also lives in their
    household.     When the juvenile court asked Ms. Hernandez if her family would
    have the ability to pay $ 8, 000. 00 in restitution, she replied, " Not at the moment."
    The juvenile court deferred the date that restitution payments were to begin
    for ninety days. Further, while the juvenile court set $ 5, 638. 13 as the amount of
    restitution,   it reduced the amount L.J. G.      was ordered to pay by $ 500. 00 by
    ordering the Victim' s Compensation Fund to contribute $ 500. 00 toward the total
    amount.
    We find that requiring a juvenile to account for a portion of the reasonable
    and direct consequences of his crime is an acceptable form of rehabilitation. We
    further find the juvenile court properly balanced the needs of the child with the
    best interest of society. It was within the juvenile court' s discretion to choose an
    appropriate amount of restitution, and the court herein clearly acted within its
    discretion.    Accordingly, we find the order for him to pay $ 5, 138. 13 in restitution
    was not an unreasonable burden to place on seventeen -year- old L.J. G.        See State
    in Interest of K.Z., 
    186 So. 3d at
    807- 08.
    These assignments of error are without merit.
    ADJUDICATION AND DISPOSITION AFFIRMED.
    8
    2020 KJ 0927
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    IN THE INTEREST OF
    COURT OF APPEAL
    L.J.G.
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    WELCH, J., concurring in part, and dissenting in part.
    IVJI agree with the majority in affirming the juvenile' s adjudication; however, I
    must respectfully dissent as to the juvenile' s sentencing.      While I sympathize with
    the victim of the crime, there is no way this juvenile, nor his parents, are going to
    be able to pay restitution in the amount of $5, 638. 13 in six months as required by
    the juvenile court' s restitution order.     The restitution order is setting this juvenile
    up for failure, which will most assuredly end in incarceration.          For these reasons, I
    must   respectfully   dissent   from   the    majority' s   affirmance    of the juvenile' s
    sentencing.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 2020KJ0927

Filed Date: 3/4/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024