State v. Brown , 2014 Utah LEXIS 179 ( 2014 )


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  •               This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter.
    
    2014 UT 48
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    ———————
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MICHAEL ADAM BROWN,
    Appellee.
    ______________________________________________
    L.N., Victim and Appellant
    ———————
    No. 20130275
    Filed October 24, 2014
    ———————
    Sixth District, Kane County
    The Honorable Wallace A. Lee
    No. 11160026
    ———————
    Attorneys:
    Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Laura B. Dupaix, Ryan D. Tenney,
    Asst. Att’ys Gen., Salt Lake City, Richard Van Dyke,
    Kane County, for appellee State of Utah
    William Leigh, Cedar City, for appellee Michael Adam Brown
    Brandon Simmons, Spencer Banks, Salt Lake City, for appellant
    ———————
    JUSTICE LEE authorized the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING,
    JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUSTICE PARRISH joined.
    ———————
    JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1 L.N. is the alleged victim of the sex crimes charged in this
    criminal case against Michael Adam Brown. In the proceedings
    below, L.N. sought to intervene by filing a notice of a claim for
    restitution. The district court rejected L.N.’s filing on the ground
    that she was not a proper party and thus lacked standing to file
    pleadings. It also denied a parallel request for restitution filed by
    STATE v. BROWN
    Opinion of the Court
    the State, concluding that the travel expenses and lost wages in-
    curred by L.N. and her mother fell beyond the scope of recovera-
    ble restitution under Utah Code section 77-38A-302(5)(b).
    ¶2 L.N. appeals, asserting error in the district court’s denial of
    her right to file a notice of claim for restitution and in the denial of
    the State’s parallel claim. Brown defends the district court’s deci-
    sions on all counts. The State, for its part, essentially agrees with
    L.N. Although the State claims that the question of L.N.’s stand-
    ing to file pleadings is somehow moot, it nonetheless defends
    L.N.’s limited-party status. And it also argues against the denial of
    its claim for restitution on L.N.’s behalf.
    ¶3 We conclude that a crime victim has limited-party status
    under Utah Code Title 77, Chapter 38a and related provisions,
    and thus has standing to file a request for restitution. Yet we deem
    the error in denying L.N.’s filing harmless, as we affirm the denial
    of the State’s (identical) request for restitution for travel expenses
    and lost wages on its merits. On this question, we interpret the
    governing statutes to allow restitution only for the pecuniary
    damages that a victim could recover in a civil action arising out of
    the defendant’s criminal conduct. And because the travel ex-
    penses and lost wages sought here would not be available in such
    a proceeding, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I
    ¶4 In March 2011, defendant Michael Brown was charged with
    several crimes involving sexual conduct with a minor. L.N. was
    the alleged victim on each charge. Early in the proceedings, L.N.’s
    counsel sought to enter an appearance for the purpose of asserting
    a claim for restitution for L.N. The district court denied that re-
    quest. In so doing it held that L.N. was not a proper party, but in-
    dicated that counsel would be allowed to speak on L.N.’s behalf
    where appropriate.
    ¶5 In early 2012, Brown pleaded guilty to a single count of un-
    lawful sexual activity with a sixteen or seventeen year old. He re-
    ceived a term not to exceed five years, probation, and was ordered
    to pay an award of restitution to the victim. Restitution was not
    fixed at an exact amount, however, but was to remain open dur-
    ing Brown’s probation and to be determined later.
    ¶6 During the criminal proceedings L.N.’s mother attended
    several hearings on her daughter’s behalf. Sometimes the mother
    2
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    2014 UT 48
                           Opinion of the Court
    attended alone. On other occasions she was accompanied by L.N.
    About one month after Brown was sentenced, L.N. filed a notice
    of a claim for restitution, seeking $612.00 for lost wages incurred
    by L.N.’s mother while attending the hearings, and $616.00 for
    costs incurred in traveling to the hearings.
    ¶7 Brown objected and moved to strike L.N.’s request, assert-
    ing that L.N. and her mother were not entitled to restitution for
    such expenses under Utah law and, in any event, that L.N. did not
    have standing to file such a pleading in the criminal action. Thus,
    according to Brown, a crime victim’s only avenue for seeking res-
    titution in a criminal case is through the intermediary of the pros-
    ecution, which could file a request for restitution on the victim’s
    behalf.
    ¶8 At that point the State filed its own request for restitution,
    seeking $1,228.00 on L.N.’s behalf. 1 Brown objected to the State’s
    request on the ground that travel costs and lost wages incurred to
    attend hearings are not recoverable as restitution.
    ¶9 In August 2012, the district court heard oral argument from
    counsel for the State, Brown, and L.N. on the merits of the State’s
    restitution request and on the question whether L.N. was a proper
    party with standing to file her own request. The district court
    granted Brown’s motion to strike, holding that crime victims are
    not parties to criminal proceedings and thus lack standing to file
    pleadings, including requests for restitution. The district court al-
    so rejected the restitution claim on its merits, concluding that a
    victim’s lost wages and costs of traveling to hearings are not eligi-
    1  The evidence submitted in support of the restitution requests
    indicated that L.N. and her mother had moved from Page, Arizo-
    na, to Flagstaff, Arizona, because the defendant was a prominent
    member of the community in Page and it had become difficult for
    them to continue residing there. The trial and hearings were held
    in Kanab, Utah. When L.N. and her mother attended, they tra-
    veled 140 miles round-trip from Page and 420 miles round-trip
    from Flagstaff. The travel expenses were based on 2011 federal
    mileage reimbursement rates. The lost wages were based on
    L.N.’s mother’s pay rates in Page and Flagstaff, for twelve hours
    at each rate.
    3
    STATE v. BROWN
    Opinion of the Court
    ble for restitution under Utah Code section 77-38A-302(5)(b) when
    the victim is not subpoenaed or otherwise compelled to attend.
    ¶10 L.N. filed a timely notice of appeal. See UTAH CODE § 77-38-
    11(2)(b) (recognizing right of appeal from “[a]dverse rulings . . .
    on a motion or request brought by a victim of a crime”). The ap-
    peal was certified for our consideration by the court of appeals.
    See UTAH CODE § 78A-4-103(3). Our review of the district court’s
    legal determinations is de novo; we afford no deference to its legal
    analysis. City of Grantsville v. Redev. Agency, 
    2010 UT 38
    , ¶ 9, 
    233 P.3d 461
    .
    II
    ¶11 L.N. raises two grounds for challenging the district court’s
    decision on appeal. First is her challenge to the denial of her right
    to intervene as a party for the purpose of filing a notice of a claim
    of restitution. Second is her assertion of error—seconded by the
    State—in the determination that travel expenses and lost wages
    are not compensable restitution under Utah Code section 77-38a-
    302.
    ¶12 We agree on the first point and thus find error in the denial
    of L.N.’s right to intervene for the limited purpose of filing a no-
    tice of claim for restitution. But we deem that error harmless
    based on our affirmance of the merits of the decision denying the
    State’s request for restitution on L.N.’s behalf. Thus, because we
    deem the travel expenses and lost wages sought by L.N.—and
    echoed by the State—to be non-compensable, we affirm despite a
    threshold error in the denial of L.N.’s request for intervention.
    A
    ¶13 The right of crime victims to be heard in criminal cases is a
    matter enshrined in our constitution and expounded upon in our
    code. Under article I, section 28 of the Utah Constitution, victims
    have the right “to be heard at important criminal justice hearings
    related to the victim.” UTAH CONST. art. I, § 28(1)(b). By statute,
    moreover, the term “[i]mportant criminal justice hearings” in-
    cludes court proceedings involving restitution. UTAH CODE § 77-
    38-2(5)(f).
    ¶14 The right to be heard, however, is not the same as a right to
    file a pleading in a criminal case. Pleadings are filed only by par-
    ties, and the traditional parties to a criminal proceeding are two—
    4
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                            Opinion of the Court
    the prosecution and the defendant. The question presented here is
    whether the governing statutes recognize a victim’s limited-party
    status for the purpose of filing a notice of a claim for restitution.
    ¶15 We interpret the governing statutes to protect that right,
    and thus to preserve L.N.’s standing to file her notice of restitu-
    tion. 2 In so holding, we first reject Brown’s threshold assertion of
    mootness—a position he bases on the fact that the State filed its
    own request for restitution seeking the same funds requested by
    L.N. This is not a problem of mootness—a change of circums-
    tances resulting in the elimination of the parties’ controversy, or
    rendering the relief requested by the claimant impossible or of no
    effect. Utah Transit Auth. v. Local 382 of the Amalgamated Transit
    Union, 
    2012 UT 75
    , ¶ 14, 
    289 P.3d 582
    . It is a much more ordinary
    circumstance, involving only the existence of two alternative
    grounds for the relief sought by L.N. The existence of two alterna-
    tives is not a mooting event rendering our decision advisory. We
    accordingly proceed to the question of L.N.’s standing to file a
    claim for restitution as a party in this criminal proceeding.
    ¶16 As an initial matter, we concede a general point advanced
    by Brown: The traditional parties to a criminal proceeding are the
    prosecution and the defense, and a crime victim is not that kind of
    party; a victim is not entitled to participate at all stages of the pro-
    ceedings or for all purposes. But that does not eliminate the possi-
    2  The notion of “standing” at issue here is not the traditional
    sense of that term—as argued by the parties at some length in
    their briefs on appeal. Thus, the issue is not whether L.N. suffered
    a cognizable injury with a causal nexus to Brown’s misconduct
    and redressable by an order of the court. See Jenkins v. Swan, 
    675 P.2d 1145
    , 1148, 1150 (Utah 1983) (stating that standing requires a
    “distinct and palpable injury” with a “causal relationship” to the
    alleged misconduct for which the court’s relief is “substantially
    likely to redress the injury claimed”). On that point there is no
    question of L.N.’s standing. But there is a threshold, antecedent
    issue that is also sometimes framed in terms of standing. That is-
    sue does not concern injury, nexus, or redressability, but party
    status. Thus, to be legally eligible—or in this sense to have stand-
    ing—to participate in certain proceedings, a person or entity must
    also qualify as a proper party. That is the question here, addressed
    in detail below.
    5
    STATE v. BROWN
    Opinion of the Court
    bility that a victim may qualify as a limited-purpose party—with
    standing to assert a claim for restitution. And we conclude that
    crime victims possess that status under our law.
    ¶17 Some victims’ statutory rights are expressly framed as re-
    quests to be submitted to the prosecution (and in terms of a duty
    of the prosecution). Under Utah Code section 77-37-3(1)(b), for ex-
    ample, victims “have a right to be informed and assisted as to
    their role in the criminal justice process,” but that right is express-
    ly tied to a “duty” of “[a]ll criminal justice agencies . . . to provide
    this information and assistance.” Thus, the right to be informed is
    not coupled with a direct right of participation; it is mediated
    through a duty of the prosecution.
    ¶18 The right to restitution is different. Our crime victims bill of
    rights recognizes the right of a victim to “seek restitution or repa-
    rations.” UTAH CODE § 77-37-3(1)(e). The right to “seek” connotes
    a proactive right to “go in search of,” or to “try to acquire or
    gain.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 2055
    (2002). And other provisions of the code confirm that the antic-
    ipated mode of seeking restitution is not through the intermediary
    of the prosecution, but by a direct filing by the victim. Thus, “after
    giving notice to the prosecution and the defense,” a victim is ex-
    pressly authorized to “seek an appropriate remedy for a violation
    of a victim’s right from the judge assigned to the case involving the is-
    sue.” UTAH CODE § 77-38-11(2)(a)(iii) (emphasis added).
    ¶19 These provisions recognize a victim’s status as a limited-
    purpose party. They confirm that our law contemplates a formal
    role for crime victims—a role in which they have standing to file
    and pursue a claim for restitution and are not required to await
    and benefit from the filings of the prosecution. That conclusion is
    confirmed by the recognition of a victim’s right to appeal any
    “[a]dverse rulings on . . . . a motion or request brought by a victim
    of a crime or representative of a victim of a crime.” 
    Id. § 77-38-
    11(2)(b) (emphasis added). Non-parties have no standing to file
    motions or to otherwise request relief. Such rights are conferred
    only on parties.
    ¶20 We accordingly deem victims to possess the status of a li-
    mited-purpose party with the right to file a request for restitution.
    And on that basis we find error in the district court’s decision to
    strike L.N.’s request for restitution.
    6
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                           Opinion of the Court
    B
    ¶21 When a defendant is convicted of a crime resulting in “pe-
    cuniary damages,” our statutes require the court to “order that the
    defendant make restitution” to the victims. UTAH CODE § 77-38a-
    302(1). Two kinds of restitution are described in the code: “com-
    plete restitution,” a calculation of the restitution necessary to
    compensate for all losses caused, and “court-ordered restitution,”
    a subset of complete restitution that, among other things, takes
    into account the defendant’s circumstances. 
    Id. § 77-38a-302(2).
    See
    generally State v. Laycock, 
    2009 UT 53
    , ¶19–34, 
    214 P.3d 104
    (dis-
    cussing the differences between complete and court-ordered resti-
    tution).
    ¶22 In the calculation of complete and court-ordered restitu-
    tion, the victim is limited to recovering only “pecuniary damag-
    es.” UTAH CODE § 77-38a-102(11) (limiting all restitution to “full,
    partial, or nominal payment for pecuniary damages to a victim,
    including prejudgment interest”). And “[p]ecuniary damages,” in
    turn, are defined as “all demonstrable economic injury, whether
    or not yet incurred, which a person could recover in a civil action
    arising out of the facts or events constituting the defendant’s crim-
    inal activities.” 
    Id. § 77-38a-102(6).
    By statute, such damages in-
    clude “the fair market value of property taken, destroyed, broken,
    or otherwise harmed, and losses including lost earnings and med-
    ical expenses,” but exclude “punitive or exemplary damages and
    pain and suffering.” 
    Id. ¶23 The
    restitution at issue in this case is not properly com-
    pensable under this definition. In a civil tort action against Brown
    arising out of his criminal activity, L.N. and her mother would not
    be eligible to recover the lost wages or travel costs that were re-
    quested in this case. There is no Utah authority directly on point
    here, but there is no question that such damages would not be
    compensable pecuniary damages in an action for sexual assault
    and battery under Utah law. After all, the longstanding, well-
    settled rule of the Restatement generally forecloses recovery of
    costs or expenses incurred in the maintenance of, or related to, lit-
    igation. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 914 (1979). This prin-
    ciple, moreover, has been endorsed nearly universally in the
    7
    STATE v. BROWN
    Opinion of the Court
    courts of the various states, 3 and we find it likewise consistent
    with our law. 4
    ¶24 On that basis we conclude that the lost wages and expenses
    requested for L.N. and her mother are not “pecuniary damages”
    compensable as an element of restitution. And we affirm the dis-
    trict court’s decision denying the State’s request on that ground,
    and therefore conclude that the error in not allowing L.N. to file
    her own notice of a claim for restitution was harmless.
    ———————
    3 See 1 ATTORNEYS’ FEES § 6:1 (3d ed.) (citing cases); 22 AM. JUR.
    2D Damages § 444 (2013) (citing cases).
    4  See Hughes v. Cafferty, 
    2004 UT 22
    , ¶ 21, 
    89 P.3d 148
    ; Blake v.
    Blake, 
    412 P.2d 454
    , 456 (Utah 1966).
    8