State v. Calata ( 2022 )


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    2022 UT App 127
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MAXIMO GABRIEL CALATA,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20200145-CA
    Filed November 17, 2022
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable James T. Blanch
    No. 171908445
    Emily Adams and Freyja Johnson, Attorneys
    for Appellant, assisted by law students Jared Erekson
    and Jonathan Mena*
    Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey S. Gray, Attorneys
    for Appellee, assisted by law student Jessica Holzer*
    JUSTICE JILL M. POHLMAN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES
    GREGORY K. ORME and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.1
    POHLMAN, Justice:
    ¶1    Two Utah Highway Patrol troopers pulled over Maximo
    Gabriel Calata after a license plate check revealed the plate on the
    *
    See Utah R. Jud. Admin. 14-807 (governing law student practice
    in the courts of Utah).
    1. Justice Jill M. Pohlman began her work on this case as a member
    of the Utah Court of Appeals. She became a member of the Utah
    Supreme Court thereafter and completed her work on the case
    sitting by special assignment as authorized by law. See generally
    
    id.
     R. 3-108(4).
    State v. Calata
    car Calata was driving had been reported as stolen. As the
    troopers approached Calata, he fled the scene in the car, leading
    the troopers on a high-speed chase for nearly twenty blocks.
    Eventually, after Calata’s car slowed, both troopers employed a
    pursuit intervention technique (PIT maneuver), causing Calata’s
    car to come to a stop. Calata was arrested, and he later pled guilty
    to failure to stop at command of police. As part of his sentence,
    the district court ordered Calata to pay restitution for damages
    sustained by the troopers’ patrol cars in ending the chase.
    ¶2     Calata appeals, arguing that the district court erred when
    it refused to calculate court-ordered restitution and that his
    defense counsel provided constitutionally ineffective assistance in
    the restitution proceedings. We reject his claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, but we reverse and remand for the district
    court to determine court-ordered restitution.
    BACKGROUND2
    ¶3      On July 13, 2017, a Utah Highway Patrol trooper
    (Trooper 1) ran a license plate check on a damaged car he
    observed at a gas station. Calata was the driver of that car. The
    check revealed that the license plate had been reported stolen, so
    Trooper 1 followed the car as it left the gas station. After another
    Utah Highway Patrol trooper (Trooper 2) arrived as backup, the
    troopers pulled Calata over. The troopers exited their patrol cars
    “to conduct a felony stop,” but as they approached Calata, he
    drove away. The troopers pursued Calata as he “weaved in and
    out of traffic on I-15,” reaching speeds between 100 and 105 miles
    2. Because Calata pled guilty to failure to stop at command of
    police, there was no trial and so we recite the facts consistent with
    the district court’s factual findings made in support of
    its restitution order. Like the parties, we also draw background
    facts from the information, as well as from the restitution hearing
    transcript.
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    State v. Calata
    per hour. The pursuit ended when both troopers performed PIT
    maneuvers.
    ¶4     Trooper 1 later explained that a PIT maneuver is a
    technique used to “rotate the vehicle” an officer is “in pursuit of
    in an attempt to get [the vehicle] to stop.” The Utah Department
    of Public Safety has policies and procedures that apply to police
    pursuit and PIT maneuvers. According to one such policy, an
    officer is “required to request permission” to perform a PIT
    maneuver when traveling “over 45 miles per hour.” Here, when
    it appeared that Calata was slowing and was going to exit the
    freeway, the troopers executed PIT maneuvers in an effort to end
    the pursuit.
    ¶5     The troopers testified that they were going 40–50 miles per
    hour when Trooper 1 executed the first PIT maneuver by using
    his patrol car to contact the rear passenger side of Calata’s car,
    which caused Calata’s car to come to a rest after rotating 360
    degrees and skidding toward the freeway off-ramp. As Trooper 2
    “was pulling up on” Calata’s car to box it in from behind, he
    noticed that its brake lights were off and that it “began rolling
    towards the . . . [freeway] off ramp.” Trooper 2 then performed a
    second PIT maneuver, also striking the rear passenger side of
    Calata’s car to “prevent it from moving and fleeing again.” The
    PIT maneuvers damaged both troopers’ vehicles but successfully
    stopped Calata.
    ¶6     Calata was arrested and later pled guilty to failure to stop
    at command of police, a third-degree felony. As part of the plea
    agreement, the State recommended no prison time provided that
    Calata commit no new violations, obtain his presentence
    investigation report, and appear at his sentencing hearing. But
    when Calata failed to appear for his mandatory sentencing
    hearing, he was arrested and sentenced to an indeterminate
    prison term not to exceed five years.
    ¶7     After sentencing, the State moved for an order of
    restitution, arguing that Calata was liable for the cost of repairing
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    State v. Calata
    the troopers’ patrol cars. Calata requested a restitution hearing, at
    which the district court asked for briefing on whether Calata’s
    actions proximately caused the damage to the troopers’ vehicles.
    Calata argued that the State’s request for restitution should be
    denied because he was not the proximate cause of the damage. He
    asserted that the troopers’ PIT maneuvers violated Utah
    Department of Public Safety policies and procedures and, as a
    result, their actions were a “superseding cause that relieve[d]
    [him] of liability for the damage to the patrol vehicles.”
    ¶8     The district court disagreed. It first addressed whether the
    troopers’ actions were foreseeable “to a reasonable person in Mr.
    Calata’s circumstances.” It found that even if the troopers “might
    have violated the policies in one way or another,” their actions
    were foreseeable because they were working “to protect the
    community from the dangers posed by [Calata’s] vehicle,” which
    was traveling “105 miles an hour down the freeway.” The court
    further explained that “a reasonable person would foresee that
    the [troopers] might initiate a collision in order to stop [Calata]
    from continuing with a high speed flight,” regardless of what the
    Utah Department of Public Safety policies and procedures
    provide.
    ¶9     The court also addressed whether the restitution statute
    required it to determine complete restitution and court-ordered
    restitution. The court explained it did not need to determine
    court-ordered restitution because the statute “only contemplates
    the determination of court ordered restitution in the event the
    defendant is placed on probation.” Calata objected, arguing that
    the restitution statute requires the district court to consider both
    complete restitution and court-ordered restitution. But the court
    ruled that it was obligated only “to make a finding of complete
    restitution” because Calata was in prison, not on probation.
    ¶10 The court then granted the State’s motion for restitution
    and ordered Calata to pay $3,071.01—an amount to which both
    parties stipulated.
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    State v. Calata
    ¶11    Calata now appeals.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶12 Calata first argues that the district court erred in declining
    to determine court-ordered restitution. “We will not disturb a
    district court’s restitution determination unless the court exceeds
    the authority prescribed by law or abuses its discretion.” State v.
    Ogden, 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 25, 
    416 P.3d 1132
     (cleaned up). “We review a
    district court’s interpretation of restitution statutes for
    correctness.” State v. Hedgcock, 
    2019 UT App 93
    , ¶ 11, 
    443 P.3d 1288
     (cleaned up).
    ¶13 Second, Calata raises two claims of ineffective assistance of
    counsel. “A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel raised for the
    first time on appeal presents a question of law . . . .” State v.
    Tapusoa, 
    2020 UT App 92
    , ¶ 9, 
    467 P.3d 912
     (cleaned up).
    ANALYSIS
    I. Court-ordered Restitution
    ¶14 Calata contends that the district court erred when, over his
    objection, it refused to calculate court-ordered restitution. Calata
    argues that “this determination is mandatory” under the plain
    language of the Crime Victims Restitution Act (the Restitution
    Act)3 and the caselaw interpreting it.
    ¶15 “Complete restitution and court-ordered restitution are
    distinct concepts.” State v. Grant, 
    2021 UT App 104
    , ¶ 56, 
    499 P.3d 3
    . Calata asserts that the 2017 version of the Restitution Act—in
    effect at the time of his charged conduct—applies in this case.
    Although the State asserts that the 2020 version of the Restitution
    Act controls, it acknowledges that as between the 2017 and 2020
    (continued…)
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    State v. Calata
    176. Complete restitution is the restitution “necessary to
    compensate a victim for all losses caused by the defendant.” 
    Id.
    (cleaned up). Court-ordered restitution, in contrast, is the
    restitution the court “orders the defendant to pay as a part of the
    criminal sentence.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up). It is “a subset of complete
    restitution” and accounts for, among other things, the defendant’s
    ability to pay.4 
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    ¶16 Although the district court calculated complete restitution,
    the court did not calculate court-ordered restitution, concluding
    that the Restitution Act “only contemplates the determination of
    court ordered restitution in the event the defendant is placed on
    probation.” Stated another way, the court reasoned that because
    court-ordered restitution is “essentially . . . a condition of
    probation,” it need not determine court-ordered restitution when,
    as here, “the defendant is committed to prison.”
    ¶17 The State agrees with Calata that this was error and
    warrants remand to the district court for a determination of court-
    ordered restitution. At the time of Calata’s restitution hearing, the
    Restitution Act explained that “[i]n determining restitution, the
    court shall determine complete restitution and court-ordered
    versions, “the text of the relevant provisions is the same.” Given
    the State’s acknowledgment that any differences in the Restitution
    Act are immaterial to the issues raised on appeal, we assume
    without deciding that the 2017 version of the Restitution Act
    applies.
    4. The distinction between complete restitution and court-ordered
    restitution “no longer exists in current law.” State v. Blake, 
    2022 UT App 104
    , ¶ 7 n.2, 
    517 P.3d 414
    ; see also 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38b-
    205(1)(a)(i) (LexisNexis Supp. 2022) (“[T]he court shall order a
    defendant, as part of the sentence imposed under Section 76-3-
    201, to pay restitution to all victims . . . for the entire amount of
    pecuniary damages that are proximately caused to each victim by
    the criminal conduct of the defendant,” or, in the case of a plea
    agreement, “in accordance with the terms of” that agreement.).
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    State v. Calata
    restitution.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38a-302(2) (LexisNexis 2017).
    Our appellate courts have interpreted this language as “a clear
    directive that district courts are to make two separate restitution
    determinations, one for complete restitution and a second for
    court-ordered restitution.” State v. Laycock, 
    2009 UT 53
    , ¶ 20, 
    214 P.3d 104
    ; see also State v. Ogden, 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 26, 
    416 P.3d 1132
    (same); Grant, 
    2021 UT App 104
    , ¶ 57 (collecting cases). Based on
    this governing law and the State’s concession of error, we reverse
    the court’s ruling, and we remand with instructions for the court
    to determine court-ordered restitution under the factors set forth
    in the Restitution Act.
    II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims
    ¶18 Calata contends that defense counsel rendered
    constitutionally ineffective assistance in two ways. First, Calata
    asserts that defense counsel was ineffective in failing to request
    that the court apportion the fault of Calata and the troopers in
    assessing Calata’s restitution liability, arguing that “the district
    court should apportion fault in restitution proceedings if
    requested to do so.” Second, Calata asserts that defense counsel
    was ineffective in failing to argue to the district court “that the
    Restitution Act impermissibly infringed” on Calata’s
    “constitutional right to have a jury determine the damages giving
    rise to a civil judgment,” as well as on Calata’s “due process rights
    to the procedural safeguards and remedies in a civil action.” We
    disagree with Calata.
    ¶19 To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant
    must meet the two-part test of Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984). The defendant must show, first, that counsel’s
    performance was deficient in that it “fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness” under prevailing professional
    norms, 
    id.
     at 687–88, and, second, that “the deficient performance
    prejudiced the defense,” 
    id. at 687
    . It is well established that we
    need not “address both components of the inquiry if we
    determine that a defendant has made an insufficient showing on
    one.” Archuleta v. Galetka, 
    2011 UT 73
    , ¶ 41, 
    267 P.3d 232
     (cleaned
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    State v. Calata
    up). Here, we resolve and reject both of Calata’s ineffective
    assistance claims on the deficient-performance component of
    Strickland.
    ¶20 To establish deficient performance, a defendant must show
    that “counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not
    functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
    Amendment.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    . Counsel’s challenged
    conduct is judged “on the facts of the particular case, viewed as of
    the time of counsel’s conduct.” 
    Id. at 690
    . Although attorneys are
    not “categorially excused from failure to raise an argument not
    supported by existing legal precedent,” State v. Silva, 
    2019 UT 36
    ,
    ¶ 19, 
    456 P.3d 718
    , “it is not the case that attorneys must raise
    every conceivable objection in order to render constitutionally
    effective assistance,” State v. Samora, 
    2021 UT App 29
    , ¶ 44, 
    484 P.3d 1206
    , cert. granted, 
    497 P.3d 828
     (Utah 2021). Rather, attorneys
    are entitled to “pick [their] battles,” and “[w]e must view a
    decision to not object in context and determine whether correcting
    the error was sufficiently important under the circumstances that
    failure to do so was objectively unreasonable—i.e., a battle that
    competent counsel would have fought.” State v. Ray, 
    2020 UT 12
    ,
    ¶ 32, 
    469 P.3d 871
    . Additionally, “the failure of counsel to make
    motions or objections which would be futile if raised does not
    constitute ineffective assistance.” State v. Karren, 
    2018 UT App 226
    ,
    ¶ 31, 
    438 P.3d 18
     (cleaned up).
    ¶21 We are also mindful that “‘judicial scrutiny of counsel’s
    performance is highly deferential’ and includes a strong
    presumption that counsel ‘rendered adequate assistance and
    made all significant decisions in the exercise of reasonable
    professional judgment.’” State v. Reigelsperger, 
    2017 UT App 101
    ,
    ¶ 92, 
    400 P.3d 1127
     (cleaned up) (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at
    689–90). Indeed, “[t]he proper measure of attorney performance
    remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional
    norms.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 688
    ; accord Silva, 
    2019 UT 36
    , ¶ 20;
    State v. Jones, 
    2020 UT App 31
    , ¶ 44, 
    462 P.3d 372
    .
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    State v. Calata
    ¶22 We now examine Calata’s two claims of ineffective
    assistance in turn.
    A.     Apportionment of Fault
    ¶23 Calata asserts that defense counsel was ineffective “in
    failing to request apportionment of fault” between Calata and the
    troopers. In Calata’s view, both the “Restitution Act and the Utah
    Liability Reform Act (LRA) demonstrate that the district court
    should apportion fault in restitution proceedings if requested to
    do so.”5 Because defense counsel did not argue that the court
    should apportion damages in the restitution proceedings, Calata
    contends his counsel’s performance fell below an objective level
    of reasonableness, which, in turn, prejudiced him.
    ¶24 In support, Calata first argues that “[t]he Restitution Act
    and case law interpreting it . . . demonstrate that the causation
    language of the Restitution Act should be interpreted to require
    apportionment as part of the causation analysis.” The Restitution
    Act “requires courts to order restitution when a defendant enters
    into a plea disposition or is convicted of criminal activity that has
    resulted in pecuniary damages.” State v. Ogden, 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 26,
    
    416 P.3d 1132
     (cleaned up); 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38a-302(1)
    (LexisNexis 2017). Calata argues that “Utah’s appellate courts
    have long recognized the legislature’s intent to incorporate civil
    standards into the Restitution Act.”
    ¶25 Specifically, Calata points to State v. Laycock, 
    2009 UT 53
    ,
    
    214 P.3d 104
    , in which the Utah Supreme Court held “that issues
    5. The LRA “delineates the apportionment of comparative fault in
    civil actions.” State v. Grant, 
    2021 UT App 104
    , ¶ 30, 
    499 P.3d 176
    .
    It provides that the “fact finder may, and when requested by a
    party shall, allocate the percentage or proportion of fault
    attributable to each person seeking recovery, to each defendant,
    to any person immune from suit, and to any other [non-
    parties] . . . for whom there is a factual and legal basis to allocate
    fault.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-818(4)(a) (LexisNexis 2018).
    20200145-CA                      9               
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    State v. Calata
    of comparative negligence may be relevant in determining
    restitution.” Id. ¶ 27. Calata then turns to State v. Ogden, which
    addressed causation in the Restitution Act. 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶¶ 26–48.
    There, the supreme court explained that the Restitution Act
    addresses causation in two provisions. Id. ¶ 32. First, “[t]he statute
    allows the district court to enter an order when a defendant enters
    into a plea disposition or is convicted of criminal activity that has
    resulted in pecuniary damages.” Id. (cleaned up). And second, “the
    district court awards complete restitution to compensate a victim
    for all losses caused by the defendant.” Id. (cleaned up). The
    relevant language the court analyzed was “resulted in” and
    “caused by.” See id. (cleaned up). After examining the Restitution
    Act’s “structure,” the court concluded “that the Legislature
    intended that the same causation standard apply in a restitution
    hearing that would apply in a parallel civil action.” Id. ¶ 38. That
    is, a proximate cause standard. Id. ¶ 39.
    ¶26 From this analysis, Calata extrapolates that “[u]nder the
    language and structure of the Restitution Act, ‘caused by’ and
    ‘resulted in’ also requires apportionment.” While he concedes that
    “Laycock and Ogden did not decide the question of whether
    apportionment applies in restitution proceedings,” Calata
    contends that “the analysis in these cases dictates that the same
    apportionment standards that would apply in a parallel civil
    action apply in restitution proceedings, just as the same causation
    standard that applies in a parallel civil action applies to restitution
    proceedings.”
    ¶27 Next, Calata contends that “the plain language of the LRA
    demonstrates that a defendant is entitled to apportionment when
    requested in restitution proceedings.” Under the LRA, “[t]he fact
    finder may, and when requested by a party shall, allocate the
    percentage or proportion of fault attributable to each person
    seeking recovery, to each defendant, to any person immune from
    suit, and to any other person identified under Subsection 78B-5-
    821(4) for whom there is a factual and legal basis to allocate fault.”
    Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-818(4)(a) (LexisNexis 2018).
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    State v. Calata
    ¶28 Calata argues that the LRA applies to restitution
    proceedings because its definition of “fault” “encompasses
    criminal acts.” The LRA defines “fault” as “any actionable breach
    of legal duty, act, or omission proximately causing or contributing
    to injury or damages sustained by a person seeking recovery,
    including negligence in all its degrees, comparative negligence,
    assumption of risk, strict liability, breach of express or implied
    warranty of a product, products liability, and misuse,
    modification, or abuse of a product.” 
    Id.
     § 78B-5-817(2). Relying
    on Graves v. North Eastern Services, Inc., 
    2015 UT 28
    , 
    345 P.3d 619
    ,
    Calata proffers that “[a]ny breach of duty, act, or omission counts
    as fault so long as it is proximately connected to injury or
    damages.” Id. ¶ 49. Because “a criminal act qualifies both as a
    ‘breach of legal duty’ and an ‘act’ proximately causing the injury
    or damages,” Calata reasons that his “criminal act constitutes
    ‘fault’ under the LRA and is therefore subject to apportionment.”
    ¶29 And finally, Calata asserts that the LRA would have
    required fault to be apportioned between him and the troopers
    had his counsel requested it. The LRA provides that “[a] person
    immune from suit may not be named as a defendant, but fault
    may be allocated to a person immune from suit solely for the
    purpose of accurately determining the fault of the person seeking
    recovery and all defendants.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-821(2)
    (LexisNexis 2018). Here, Calata argues that although the troopers
    are immune from suit, he was “entitled to have fault allocated
    between him . . . and the troopers” because their “acts” also fall
    under the LRA’s “fault” definition. Specifically, Calata contends
    that “the troopers’ acts in intentionally driving their vehicles into
    [his] car fall under the broad and categorical definition of fault, as
    an intentional tort, any intentional act, and indeed, any act that
    proximately causes or contributes to injury or damages—that is,
    the damage to their vehicles.” (Cleaned up.) Calata also contends
    that “there is proximate cause between the troopers’ acts because
    their driving maneuvers were a but-for cause of the damage to
    their vehicles, and it was foreseeable that their vehicles would
    incur damage as a result of their maneuvers.”
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    State v. Calata
    ¶30 In Calata’s view, his arguments are “well-founded on
    established caselaw and statutory language,” and it was
    objectively unreasonable for his counsel “not to argue the
    apportionment issue to the district court.” Although Calata has
    presented a thoughtful argument in support of his claim that “a
    defendant is entitled to apportionment when requested in
    restitution proceedings,” we do not share his view that it was
    objectively unreasonable for defense counsel not to make these
    arguments.
    ¶31 First, the legal argument Calata weaves together from
    various sources is a difficult one. See State v. Grant, 
    2021 UT App 104
    , ¶ 27 & n.9, 
    499 P.3d 176
     (stating that resolving “whether
    comparative fault principles apply to restitution proceedings”
    “would be difficult”). Utah appellate courts have not addressed
    whether the causation language in the Restitution Act should be
    interpreted to allow apportioning fault or whether the LRA
    applies in this context. See Ogden, 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 32 n.7 (“We do not
    decide whether the [LRA] has any place in restitution proceedings
    because Ogden did not preserve the argument below.”); Grant,
    
    2021 UT App 104
    , ¶ 27 (“[W]e assume, without deciding, that
    comparative fault principles apply to restitution proceedings.”).
    It is also not expressly provided in the statute that the LRA applies
    in this context, nor is there authority that indicates it does.
    ¶32 Further, the authority on which Calata relies would have
    to be extended to reach the result for which Calata advocates. For
    example, Laycock is a negligent homicide case in which the court
    held “that issues of comparative negligence may be relevant in
    determining restitution.” Laycock, 
    2009 UT 53
    , ¶¶ 25, 27 (emphasis
    added). Not only did our supreme court stop short of saying
    issues of comparative negligence are relevant in determining
    restitution, but whether the court would have made the same
    observation in a case involving an intentional crime, like failure to
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    State v. Calata
    stop at command of police,6 is questionable. And while the
    supreme court in Ogden concluded that the legislature “intended
    that the same causation standard apply in a restitution hearing
    that would apply in a parallel civil action,” 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 38, it did
    not hint that the apportionment standard should likewise be
    imported into the Restitution Act’s causation analysis.
    ¶33 Given the lack of clarity in the law and the difficulty
    defense counsel would have faced in advocating for the
    application of the apportionment standard in restitution
    proceedings, we are unpersuaded that it was unreasonable for
    defense counsel to not make the argument Calata now crafts on
    appeal. While it is true that we do not “judge an attorney’s
    performance based only on settled law,” Silva, 
    2019 UT 36
    , ¶ 19,
    we agree with the State that without a clear basis in the statutory
    language and given the lack of legal precedent, defense counsel’s
    performance here did not fall below an objective standard of
    reasonableness, see Jones, 
    2020 UT App 31
    , ¶¶ 46–47 (explaining
    that counsel could reasonably conclude there was no legal
    problem to correct and that “such a conclusion is particularly
    reasonable given that no Utah appellate court has squarely
    addressed” the relevant legal issue).
    ¶34 Further, even if defense counsel believed she could succeed
    in persuading the court to extend the law to apply apportionment
    principles in restitution hearings, it would not have been
    unreasonable for counsel to conclude that arguing that the
    troopers were at fault would have been a futile effort. See Karren,
    
    2018 UT App 226
    , ¶ 31 (“[T]he failure of counsel to make motions
    or objections which would be futile if raised does not constitute
    ineffective assistance.” (cleaned up)).
    ¶35 The LRA provides that “[a] person immune from suit may
    not be named as a defendant, but fault may be allocated to a
    6. See State v. Bird, 
    2015 UT 7
    , ¶ 23, 
    345 P.3d 1141
     (stating that “the
    failure-to-respond offense . . . implicates an intentional mens
    rea”).
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    State v. Calata
    person immune from suit solely for the purpose of accurately
    determining the fault of the person seeking recovery and all
    defendants.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-821(2) (LexisNexis 2018)
    (emphases added). As relevant here, fault is defined in the LRA
    as “any actionable breach of legal duty, act, or omission
    proximately causing or contributing to injury or damages
    sustained by a person seeking recovery.” Id. § 78B-5-817(2)
    (emphasis added). Thus, to apportion fault to the troopers,
    defense counsel would have had to show that they were at “fault”
    by first establishing that their conduct was “actionable.” See id.
    Although Calata argues that at least one of the troopers’ PIT
    maneuvers violated the Utah Department of Public Safety policies
    and procedures, he has not undertaken the analysis to
    demonstrate that either trooper’s conduct was “actionable”7 and
    therefore constituted fault under the LRA that could be
    apportioned. Without additional analysis on this point, it is not
    apparent to us that either trooper’s conduct fell under the LRA,
    and thus Calata has not shown that it was unreasonable for
    defense counsel to harbor similar doubt.
    ¶36 Finally, even if fault could legally be apportioned to the
    troopers, it would not have been unreasonable for defense counsel
    7. In Graves v. North Eastern Services, Inc., 
    2015 UT 28
    , 
    345 P.3d 619
    ,
    in reaching its conclusion that the definition of fault in the LRA
    encompasses “intentionally tortious activity,” the Utah Supreme
    Court observed that the “core definition is broad and categorical.”
    Id. ¶ 49. Quoting the statute, the court stated that the definition of
    fault “extends to ‘any actionable breach of legal duty, act or
    omission proximately causing or contributing to injury or
    damages.’” Id. (quoting Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-817(2)). Two
    sentences later, the court then emphasized, “Any breach of duty,
    act, or omission counts as fault so long as it is proximately
    connected to injury or damages.” Id. In making the latter
    statement, the court omitted the word “actionable,” but we do not
    read that omission as intentional or meaningful. After all, the
    word “actionable” is part of the LRA’s definition of fault as the
    supreme court acknowledged. See id.
    20200145-CA                      14               
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    State v. Calata
    to conclude that seeking apportionment would be futile under the
    circumstances. Assuming the LRA applies to the Restitution Act
    and that at least one trooper was at fault for the damages incurred
    by the patrol cars, the district court could not have apportioned
    fault to them unless their “combined percentage or proportion of
    fault” was “40% or more.” See 
    id.
     § 78B-5-819(2)(b). In other words,
    if the troopers’ combined percentage or proportion of fault was
    less than 40%, the court would have been statutorily obligated to
    “reduce that percentage or proportion of fault to zero and
    reallocate that percentage or proportion of fault to the other
    parties . . . for whom there is a factual and legal basis to allocate
    fault.” See id. § 78B-5-819(2)(a).
    ¶37 Here, defense counsel could have reasonably concluded
    that the district court would not find that the troopers’ combined
    percentage or proportion of fault equaled 40% or more. After all,
    it was Calata who fled from the troopers and engaged in a high-
    speed chase that posed a danger to the public. And the troopers
    performed their PIT maneuvers only after Calata had slowed
    down but still demonstrated an intent to flee. Given these facts,
    reasonable counsel could conclude that undertaking the
    considerable effort to convince the court that apportionment
    should be considered in setting restitution would ultimately be a
    futile effort because the court was unlikely to apportion more than
    40% of the damages to the troopers. See Karren, 
    2018 UT App 226
    ,
    ¶ 31.
    ¶38 In sum, because defense counsel would have faced
    significant hurdles in attempting to persuade the district court to
    apportion damages between Calata and the troopers in setting
    restitution, we conclude that it was not objectively unreasonable
    for counsel not to raise apportionment arguments related to the
    Restitution Act and LRA before the district court. Therefore,
    Calata has not established ineffective assistance of counsel. See
    Archuleta, 
    2011 UT 73
    , ¶ 41.
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    State v. Calata
    B.     Constitutional Arguments
    ¶39 Last, Calata contends that defense counsel was ineffective
    in failing to argue to the district court that the Restitution Act
    impermissibly infringes on his constitutional right to have a jury
    determine the damages forming the basis of a civil judgment and
    “also infringes on the due process rights he would have had in a
    civil jury trial,” which includes “the right to have apportionment
    for fault . . . like he would have had in a civil court.” Thus, in
    Calata’s view, the Restitution Act is unconstitutional, and defense
    counsel acted deficiently in not making such an argument to the
    district court. He also claims that he was prejudiced as a result.
    ¶40 Article I, Section 10 of the Utah Constitution “guarantees
    the right of jury trial in civil cases.” Simler v. Chilel, 
    2016 UT 23
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    379 P.3d 1195
     (cleaned up); see also Utah Const. art. I, § 10
    (“A jury in civil cases shall be waived unless demanded.”). The
    Restitution Act defines the “pecuniary damages” resulting from
    criminal activity that are part of a restitution order. “‘Pecuniary
    damages’” means, in part, “all demonstrable economic injury,
    whether or not yet incurred, including those which a person could
    recover in a civil action arising out of the facts or events constituting
    the defendant’s criminal activities.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38a-
    102(6) (LexisNexis 2017) (emphasis added). And an order of
    complete restitution ultimately will be entered “on the civil
    judgment docket.” 
    Id.
     § 77-38a-401(1). Consequently, “even
    though the restitution proceeding takes place as part of a criminal
    proceeding, the end result is a civil judgment that a victim is
    entitled to enforce.” Ogden, 
    2018 UT 8
    , ¶ 38. Calata derives from
    this and other authority that the Utah Constitution’s right to a jury
    trial in civil cases entitles him to have a jury determine the
    damages for purposes of a restitution order.
    ¶41 Calata further argues that defense counsel should have
    raised these constitutional arguments because counsel should
    have been aware of a footnote in Ogden in which the defendant
    there contended that the Restitution Act is unconstitutional
    because it denied him “due process by preventing him access to
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    State v. Calata
    the procedural remedies he would have had in civil court.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 24 n.3 (cleaned up). Although the supreme court concluded that
    the “due process argument [was] unpreserved and decline[d] to
    review [the defendant’s] ineffective assistance of counsel
    argument because it [was] inadequately briefed,” 
    id.,
     Calata
    asserts that “Ogden would have alerted reasonable counsel to the
    importance of considering constitutionality issues in regard to the
    LRA in restitution proceedings.”
    ¶42 Once again, Calata presents interesting arguments. But we
    need not definitively determine whether the Restitution Act is in
    fact unconstitutional in the ways Calata claims. See State v. Huey,
    
    2022 UT App 94
    , ¶¶ 48, 53, 
    516 P.3d 345
    ; State v. Squires, 
    2019 UT App 113
    , ¶ 32 n.7, 
    446 P.3d 581
    . Instead, because Calata did not
    preserve these arguments in the district court, our obligation is
    limited to assessing whether it was “objectively unreasonable” for
    defense counsel not to raise these constitutional objections. See
    Ray, 
    2020 UT 12
    , ¶ 32. We conclude that it was not.
    ¶43 Not only has no Utah appellate court addressed whether
    criminal defendants have a right to jury trial on damages in
    restitution proceedings, but on the facts of this case, it would not
    have been unreasonable for defense counsel to conclude that
    Calata had little to gain from making these constitutional
    arguments. See Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690
     (judging counsel’s
    challenged conduct “on the facts of the particular case”). Even if
    defense counsel ultimately could have persuaded the district
    court that a jury should determine the damages for which Calata
    was liable, counsel could have reasonably decided that a jury was
    unlikely to be sympathetic toward Calata or to find that the
    troopers were at fault. See State v. Gallegos, 
    2020 UT 19
    , ¶ 34, 
    463 P.3d 641
     (“We give wide latitude to trial counsel to make tactical
    decisions and will not question such decisions unless there is no
    reasonable basis supporting them.” (cleaned up)). Indeed, Calata
    fled from the troopers and endangered the public by leading a
    high-speed chase that ended only when the troopers executed PIT
    maneuvers. Under the circumstances, counsel could have
    reasonably concluded that a jury would not be receptive to
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    State v. Calata
    Calata’s efforts to minimize his own fault for these events and
    ensuing damage and thus Calata was better off (or at least no
    worse off) arguing his case to the judge. Thus, defense counsel did
    not act deficiently under Strickland, and Calata’s claim for
    ineffective assistance of counsel fails. See Archuleta, 
    2011 UT 73
    ,
    ¶ 41.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶44 We reject Calata’s two claims of ineffective assistance of
    counsel and affirm the district court’s order of complete
    restitution. But we conclude that the court erred when it declined
    to determine court-ordered restitution. Accordingly, we affirm in
    part, reverse in part, and remand for the district court to
    determine court-ordered restitution in accordance with the
    Restitution Act.
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