OPINION
Appellant-defendant James R. Ault appeals his sentence for Battery, 1 a Class C felony. Specifically, he argues that the trial court violated due process when it imposed a “more severe” sentence than it did for his previous conviction for Aggravated Battery, 2 a Class B felony. Furthermore, he maintains that the imposition of a restitution order to the mother of the injured infant and to the State is contrary to law.
FACTS
The facts most favorable to the judgment reveal that Ault was entrusted with the temporary care of the two-month-old N.F., on March 8, 1995. Ault admitted shaking N.F. and seeing the baby’s head move back and forth three to four times. Upon returning home, N.F.’s mother brought N.F. to the emergency room, where he was diagnosed with Shaken Baby Syndrome. He suffered retinal hemorrhaging and permanent brain damage which has left him severely retarded. N.F. takes his food through a tube in his stomach. At age-three, he could not sit up, roll over or consistently hold up his head. N.F. will require full-time nursing care throughout his life. He will continually suffer from seizures, and his life expectancy is less than twenty years. In addition, N.F. will never learn to crawl, walk, or talk. As a result of his injuries, N.F. requires medical care amounting to nearly $10,000 per month. Most of N.F.’s medical expenses have been covered by Medicaid. In addition, as a result of the injuries to N.F., N.F.’s mother has had to leave her position as a respiratory therapist in order to care for her son. She has also been obliged to move to a smaller apartment and to purchase a van costing $4,500 in order to transport N.F. N.F.’s mother estimates her additional out-of-pocket expenses related to N.F.’s care to be $200 per month.
After a bench trial on October 4,1995, Ault was found guilty of Aggravated Battery, a Class B felony. The trial court found that aggravating and mitigating circumstances balanced in this case and sentenced Ault to the presumptive sentence of ten years. Ault appealed his conviction to this court, and we affirmed in a memorandum decision.
Ault v. State,
No. 18A02-9601-CR-42,
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. MORE SEVERE PENALTY?
Ault argues that his aggravated sentence resulted from the trial judge’s vindictiveness following Ault’s successful post-conviction challenge. He points out that the trial court ordered the presumptive sentence for his first conviction and then ordered an
We note initially our standard of review. Sentencing decisions rest within the sound discretion of the trial court.
Smith v. State,
After a petitioner has obtained post-conviction relief, a trial court may not impose a more severe penalty when the petitioner is subsequently convicted unless it articulates reasons based upon information regarding the defendant’s conduct after the time of the original sentencing. 3 The question raised in this case is whether the enhanced penalty of eight years, for a lesser offense, coupled with a restitution order, is a more severe penalty than the presumptive ten-year sentence imposed for the original, greater offense. If it is, the court’s reasons for the more severe sentence would have to fulfill the requirements of PC Rule 1, § 10. However, for the reasons set forth below, we find that Ault’s current sentence is not a more severe penalty than his original sentence.
Ault cites
McBroom v. State,
In the instant ease, no additional charge was involved, but rather a lesser charge. Moreover, Ault was sentenced to a term of fewer years. The sentence is thus not a more severe penalty, and PC Rule 1, § 10 does not apply. The trial court was therefore not required to give reasons for the sentence related to the defendant’s conduct occurring after the original date of sentencing. Instead, we apply the abuse of discretion standard and affirm the trial court’s finding that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors in the context of a conviction for a lesser offense.
See Tumulty v. State,
Ault also maintains that the imposition of the restitution order together with his sentence constitutes a “more severe penalty.” Appellant’s brief at 17. For the same reasons outlined above, we are not inclined to second-guess the trial court’s evaluation of the severity of the restitution order and sentence. The restitution statute provides that the court may order restitution “in addition to any sentence imposed.” Ind'.Code § 35-50-5-3. Moreover, Ault expressed a wish to pay restitution. R. at 143, 160. We find no rational way to measure whether a restitution order and an eight-year sentence is “more severe” than a ten-year sentence, and thus we again find that the trial court was
II. ORDER OF RESTITUTION
Ault next contends that the order of restitution was contrary to law. He argues that neither the State nor N.F.’s mother is a “victim” under the terms of the restitution statute and thus neither may be compensated. Secondly, he maintains that the order exceeded the amount of actual loss suffered by N.F., the actual victim before the time of sentencing.
We note initially our standard of review. An order of restitution is within the trial court’s discretion and will be reversed only upon a finding of abuse of discretion.
Vanness v. State,
A. Who Is the Victim?
Ault argues that the State is not the victim of his actions, as contemplated by I.C. § 35-50-5-3. 4 He also maintains that case law has only deemed the State a victim when it suffered loss as a “direct and immediate result of the defendant’s actions.” Appellant’s brief at 12. 5 He argues, therefore, that restitution to the State cannot be ordered under the statute in the instant case.
We note that a trial court has the authority to order a defendant convicted of a felony to make restitution to the victims. I.C. § 35-50-5-3(a). Restitution is a means of impressing upon a criminal defendant the magnitude of the loss he has caused.
Kotsopoulos v. State,
Ault next argues that the payment ordered to N.F.’s mother is improper because her losses were not “suffered by the victim as a direct result of the crime.” Appellant’s brief at 10. Ault attacks payments made to N.F.’s mother, maintaining that the statute does not contemplate loss incurred by someone other than the victim. He argues that the victim was “only a baby and suffered no loss of income.” Appellant’s brief at 9-10.
I.C. § 35-50-5-3 does not define “victim.” Moreover, it does not specifically contemplate income lost by the victim’s parent as a result of the defendant’s crime. However, the statute does contemplate “medical costs incurred by the victim.” I.C. § 35-50-5-3(a)(2). Furthermore, the statute does not require that the victim, in this case a tiny infant, directly receive the payment covering the cost of his care.
In the instant case, N.F.’s mother’s professional care of her child for the past three years represents part of the medical costs incurred by N.F. as a direct result of his injuries. 6 Likewise, the expenses cited by N.F.’s mother are part of the necessary costs of caring for N.F. Had payment been made to a legal representative of the victim, N.F., that representative would have paid them in part to N.F.’s mother. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering payment to the state and that payment to N.F.’s mother was a proper, although indirect, payment to N.F., the victim of the crime.
B. Did Order Exceed Amount of Loss?
Ault next argues that the restitution order was improper because it considered future medical costs, and I.C. § 35-50-5-3 permits restitution only for medical expenses incurred before the date of sentencing. Specifically, he maintains that the amount ordered paid to the State and N.F.’s mother, and the amount to be paid to N.F.’s mother alone, are both unsupported by the evidence, which does not show sufficient actual expenses before the date of sentencing.
I.C. § 35-50-5-3 provides in pertinent part that a restitution order shall be based upon a consideration of: “(2) medical and hospital costs incurred by the victim (before the date of sentencing) as a result of the crime....” Case law interprets the statute to mean that only actual costs incurred by the victim before the date of sentencing may be considered.
Kotsopoulos,
In the instant case, contrary to Ault’s assertion, the restitution order is based upon expenses already incurred at the time of sentencing and not on future expenses. We first address the order to pay $350,000 jointly to N.F.’s mother and to the State. The record shows that thirty-six months and twenty-five days elapsed from the time of N.F.’s injuries and Ault’s sentencing. Record at 10, 22. N.F.’s “baseline medical expenses,” when he is not hospitalized, have amounted to $7,400 per month, for a total of $266,400.
8
R. at 134. In addition, his monthly expense for medications is $1,400, for a total of $50,400. R. at 134. These expenses augment during N.F.’s frequent hospitalizations, rising to approximately $800 per day. R. at 134. His first hospital stay following his injury was one month long and included twelve days in intensive care. R. at 79. As a result, the cost amounted to at least $24,000, not including the additional expense associated with a stay in the intensive care unit. Furthermore, N.F. has been hospitalized more than forty times. R. at 79. N.F.’s special equipment, including a specially made car seat, costs a total of $7,800. R. at 134. N.F. has also had nine surgeries. R. at 79. The record reveals that N.F.’s medical expenses will continue throughout his life, but that they have al
The order to pay $100,000 to N.F.’s mother is likewise a payment for expenses incurred for N.F.’s care before the date of sentencing. In her testimony, N.F.’s mother compares her experience to that of families who lack medical training and whose children have impairments such as N.F.’s. N.F.’s mother testified that these families must have medical care for their impaired children even when the parents are at home because the families are not equipped to handle the frequent emergency situations that their children encounter. R. at 135. Moreover, the cost of the van which is required to transport N.F., the van’s maintenance, and the $200 per month in additional expenses for N.F. have all been paid by N.F.’s mother in providing for his necessary care. Thus, in ordering restitution to N.F.’s mother, the court is again concerned with compensating the victim for expenses which were incurred as a direct result of Ault’s raime. The ordered restitution represents payment to N.F.’s mother for the professional care she rendered and reimbursement for other expenses incurred in caring for her son at home. 9 We thus find the court was within its discretion in ordering restitution to N.F.’s mother.
In conclusion, there is ample evidence in the record to support the trial court’s judgment. We find that the trial court did not impose a more severe penalty for this conviction subsequent to post-conviction relief, thus we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in sentencing Ault. Furthermore, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion either in ordering the amounts specified in the restitution order or in designating payment to the State and to the victim’s mother.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-42-2-1.
. I.C. § 35-42-2-1.5.
. Post-conviction Rule 1, § 10 provides that:
If a prosecution is initiated against a petitioner who has successfully sought [post-conviction] relief and a conviction is subsequently obtained ... then the sentencing court shall not impose a more severe penalty than that originally imposed unless the court includes in the record of the sentencing hearing a statement of the court’s reasons for selecting the sentence that it imposes which includes reliance upon identifiable conduct on the part of the petitioner that occurred after the imposition of the original sentence, and the court shall give credit for time served.
. I.C. § 35-50-5-3(a) provides in pertinent part:
[I]n addition to any sentence imposed under this article for a felony or misdemeanor, the court may, as a condition of probation or without placing the person on probation, order the person to make restitution to the victim of the crime, the victim's estate, or the family of a victim who is deceased. The court shall base its restitution order upon a consideration of:
(1) property damages of the victim incurred as a result of the crime, based on the actual cost of repair ...;
(2) medical and hospital costs incurred by the victim (before the date of sentencing) as a result of the crime;
(3)earnings lost by the victim (before the date of sentencing) as a result of the crime including earnings lost while the victim was hospitalized or participating in the investigation or trial of the crime; ...
. The case that Ault cites, however, is concerned not with whether the State is a victim, but whether survivors of a murder victim can be considered victims if they have shown "loss as a direct and immediate result of the criminal acts of a defendant.”
Roach v. State,
. N.F.'s mother is a respiratory therapist.
. We note, however, that the statute does not preclude either the State or N.F., by next friend, from bringing a civil action for medical expenses incurred after the date of Ault's sentencing, or any other expenses not covered by the restitution order. I.C. § 35-50-5-3(e) provides that:
An order of restitution ... does not bar a civil action for:
(1) damages that the court did not require the person to pay to the victim under the restitution order but arise from an injury or property damage that is the basis of restitution ordered by the court; and
(2) other damages suffered by the victim.
.For the sake of mathematical simplicity, we do not count the twenty-five days between N.F.’s injury and Ault’s sentencing but note that nearly one additional month of baseline expenses is thus not included in our above calculations. All calculations are based on multiplying monthly expenses by 36 months.
. We note that, in caring for N.F. at home, N.F.'s mother prevented the State from bearing the even greater cost of nursing care in an institution.
