A.J., a child, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*936 Richard L. Jorandby, Public Defender, and Allen J. DeWeese, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee; and Sharon A. Wood, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
Rehearing, Rehearing En Banc, and Certification Denied August 29, 1996.
GROSS, Judge.
Appellant, a 15 year old, pled guilty to aggravated battery. The factual basis supporting the plea was that appellant kicked and stomped the victim unconscious in a junior high school library. For a short while after the beating, the victim was paralyzed from the waist down. He was transported from school to the hospital. The trial court withheld adjudication, placed appellant on community control and set a restitution hearing to determine the amount of restitution.
At the restitution hearing, the victim's mother testified that she met her son's ambulance at the hospital, where "CAT scans and EKGs and EEGs" were performed. That evening, the hospital released her son to her care because she was a nurse. The mother identified a packet of medical bills as being complete copies of the bills relating to her son's injuries from the battery. She said that the medical charges arising from the incident totalled $4,741.90. She also indicated that insurance had paid all but $2,400.98 of the bills. The mother testified that they had begun to pay "little bits" of the other bills because the medical providers had begun to "hound" them for money. The prosecutor then sought to introduce the packet of medical bills. Defense counsel objected to the introduction of the medical bills themselves as hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection.
The court ordered appellant to pay restitution of $2,498.00[1] to the victim's parents and $1,243.90 to the insurance company. Other than ruling that the victim's family was to be paid first, the court left the manner and amount of payments to the discretion of the community control officer.
Appellant first challenges the admission of the medical bills over his hearsay *937 objection to establish the amount of restitution. Hearsay is generally inadmissible in a restitution hearing where there is a proper objection to it. E.g., Rae v. State,
Liability for a medical expense usually arises because of a contract implied in factservices are rendered with the expectation that the patient will pay a reasonable amount in return. Nursing Care Services, Inc. v. Dobos,
Florida case law has never directly confronted a hearsay challenge to medical bills.[3] Well embedded in Florida law is the recognition that a factfinder may properly consider a medical bill with a minimal evidentiary foundationthat the witness received the bill for medical services related to the injury which is the subject of the litigation. Irwin v. Blake,
[w]hen a plaintiff testifies as to the amount of his or her medical bills and introduces such bills into evidence, it becomes "a question for a jury to decide, under proper instructions, whether these bills represented reasonable and necessary medical expenses."
eliminate[es] unnecessary cost to parties and inconvenience to the public, and can be overcome by proper proof in those few cases where the bill is not correct in one or more aspects.
Id. (quoting Smith v. Champaign Urbana City Lines, Inc.,
The issue in this restitution hearing was whether the juvenile victim's parents suffered a loss or monetary expense "as a direct or indirect result of [appellant's] offense or criminal episode." § 775.089(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (1995). The victim's mother's testimony linked the medical bills to her son's injuries from the beating. The bills were properly admitted into evidence as non hearsay. At the restitution hearing, appellant was free to contest the reasonableness of the charges or the necessity of the treatment for the injuries sustained by the victim.
Appellant next contends that because he was too young to get a job, the court erred in imposing restitution since appellant did not have the ability to pay it. Section 39.054(1)(a)1, Florida Statutes (1995), requires that the amount of restitution ordered as part of community control "may not exceed an amount the child ... could reasonably be expected to make." The statute gives the trial court flexibility in fashioning restitution requirements that change as the child ages and his potential to generate income increases. See § 39.054(1)(f), Fla. Stat.(1995). Section 39.054(1)(a)2 provides that the court may conduct review hearings for a child placed on community control "for the purpose of fostering ... compliance with... restitution and community service." A court may order an unemployed child to pay restitution without a showing of present ability to pay. J.A.M. v. State,
We reverse the restitution portion of the order of community control and remand for a new hearing on restitution addressed to what amount of restitution appellant can reasonably be expected to make. On resentencing, we note that the trial court may not delegate the responsibility for setting the terms and conditions of payment of restitution to the Department of Juvenile Justice or other community control officers. G.A.Z. v. State,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
WARNER, J., and GROSSMAN, MELVIN, B., Associate Judge, concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The award of $2,498.00 instead of $2,400.98 is a clerical error that can be corrected on remand.
[2] Because of our conclusion that the bills were not hearsay, we do not reach the issue of whether section 39.052(4)(h), Florida Statutes (1995), applies a looser evidentiary standard for restitution hearings which are part of Chapter 39 disposition hearings than is applicable in criminal cases in general.
[3] In dicta, two cases have suggested that a victim's production of receipts or bills would have avoided hearsay problems fatal to restitution claims. Winborn v. State,
