After admitting to facts sufficient to warrant a find
1. Background. After conducting a restitution hearing, the judge found the following facts. Armed with a can of spray paint, the juvenile “tagged” several properties in Easthampton. At Richard Dudkiewicz’s home, letters were spray painted on some newly installed vinyl siding on the garage. The paint could not be removed from the siding. The professional estimate to replace the siding was $276.45. Dudkiewicz performed the repair himself. The siding material cost him $160, and the job took two days to complete. Utilizing the minimum wage rate of eight dollars per hour, multiplied by fifteen hours, the judge calculated the labor cost to be worth $120; the professional labor estimate was $110.
At Eric SergaTs home, the juvenile spray painted some symbols and numerals on the concrete foundation. Sergal received a $500 estimate to remove the paint. The judge found that the damage to Sergal’s property was very similar in size and location to that done to the home of his neighbor, Robert Blanchette.
A year after his admission to sufficient facts and his agreement to pay restitution, the juvenile had paid nothing towards the amount owed. As a result, he was brought before the court for violating his probation. The juvenile, who was twelve years
2. Discussion, a. The restitution order. Unlike our adult criminal justice scheme, the underlying philosophy of our juvenile justice system is that it is not punitive. See Police Commr. of Boston v. Municipal Court of the Dorchester Dist.,
The juvenile claims the judge abused his discretion by ordering him, as a twelve year old boy, to pay restitution for the damage he did to the victims’ property. We disagree. To constitute an abuse of discretion, the juvenile must show that “no conscientious judge, acting intelligently, could honestly have taken the view expressed by him.” Commonwealth v. Medeiros,
“If, in adjudging a person a delinquent child, the court finds, as an element of such delinquency, that he has committed an act involving liability in a civil action, and such delinquent child is placed on probation, the court may require, as a condition thereof, that he shall make restitution or reparation to the injured person to such an extent and in such sum as the court determines. If the payment is not made at once, it shall be made to the probation officer, who shall give a receipt therefor, keep a record of the payment, pay the money to said injured person, and keep on file his receipt therefor.”
G. L. c. 119, § 62, inserted by St. 1906, c. 413, § 12.
When a judge exercises his or her discretion to order restitution following a delinquency determination by an admission to sufficient facts or by verdict, the child is entitled to a hearing on the question of the proper amount of restitution. See Commonwealth v. Nawn,
To satisfy its burden to prove the dollar amount of the damage caused by the juvenile, the Commonwealth offered the
What lies at the heart of the juvenile’s claim is his belief that the judge’s order requiring the juvenile to pay restitution for the damage he did was contrary to the purpose of the juvenile justice system. More specifically, the juvenile claims the restitution order was punitive, and the judge’s stated desire for the victims to be made whole ignored the fact that in our system of juvenile justice, the juvenile’s welfare trumps that of the victims he has harmed. We disagree..
As an initial matter, as stated above, the legislative enactment of G. L. c. 119, § 62, which does not exempt juveniles under the age of fourteen from orders of restitution, contradicts the juvenile’s argument. We further note that the payment of restitution was an agreed-to condition that enabled the juvenile to receive the benefit of a continuance without a finding. As the judge stated in his order extending the juvenile’s probation, the juvenile has received that benefit “without making even the barest gesture towards paying the restitution ordered” and he appears to have been “simply running out the clock as the end of probation neared.”
However, most importantly, the judge’s order was not contrary to the purpose of the juvenile justice system. The Legislature has mandated that the juvenile justice provision of G. L. c. 119, §§ 52-63, must be liberally construed “so that the care, custody and discipline of the children brought before the court shall approximate as nearly as possible that which they should receive from their parents, and that, as far as practicable, they shall be treated, not as criminals, but as children in need of aid, encouragement and guidance.” G. L. c. 119, § 53. In fact, this was the
“The purpose of the Juvenile Court in the main is to be able to help people, young people, become principled, ethical law abiding citizens of our society, and I think it is a very important moral lesson for [all] of us to know that if we ever hurt anybody in life we have got to make them whole again.”
Indeed, it was not unreasonable, let alone an abuse of discretion, for the judge to view this matter as a parent would who was seeking to aid and guide his or her child. When he extended the period of probation, the judge properly sought to teach the juvenile one of life’s primary lessons: he is responsible for the actions he takes. Such an order not only provided an opportunity to build the juvenile’s character and integrity, but also to promote his life as a law-abiding citizen. The judge’s order had the added benefit of instilling in the juvenile the important values of respect for others (as well as their property) and a basic understanding of the value of work and money.
Like the judge, we also reject the juvenile’s suggestion that he should be excused from paying restitution because it is contrary to contemporary mores or even “taboo” to permit a juvenile of twelve to sixteen years to earn money by obtaining a paper route, mowing lawns, raking leaves, shoveling snow, baby-sitting, delivering groceries, or by recycling items upon which a deposit had been paid. As the judge properly noted, there exists statutory permission for children as young as nine years of age to participate in the delivery and sales of newspapers, G. L. c. 149, § 69, and there is no statutory prohibition against the other remunerative pursuits ordinarily associated with childhood listed above.
Finally, the juvenile claims the judge’s restitution order ignores G. L. c. 231, § 85G, which provides a civil cause of action against parents for victims of intentional acts done by the parents’ child.
b. Extending probation. There is similarly no merit to the juvenile’s claim that the judge abused his discretion by extending the period of probation. Given that the juvenile had paid nothing towards the ordered restitution, it was not an abuse of discretion to provide the juvenile more time to make good on his end of the bargain he received. Indeed, as the juvenile gets older, his opportunities for employment only increase.* *
c. Calculating the damages. The juvenile also claims that the judge improperly calculated the restitution amount by relying on the estimated cost to repair the damage to Sergal’s property in order to determine the cost to repair Blanchette’s property. Even assuming this claim was properly preserved, we disagree.
Ordering restitution and determining the amount thereof rest within the sound discretion of the judge. Commonwealth v. Nawn,
Blanchette, an octogenarian in ill health, did not obtain his own estimate to repair the damage done to his home. Based on his review of photographic exhibits, the judge found that the damage done to Sergal’s property was similar in size and location to the damage done to Blanchette’s home. Given that prior to the hearing on restitution, the juvenile’s counsel remarked that Blanchette’s home sustained more damage than Sergal’s house, and the lack of a requirement that the victim himself must document his loss, see Commonwealth v. Yeshulas,
The juvenile also claims that the judge abused his discretion in calculating the restitution amount for the Dudkiewicz property. We disagree. Dudkiewicz received a repair estimate that totaled $276.45. Because Dudkiewicz could not afford to pay for the work to be done, he did it himself, which took him two days. Although the judge calculated the cost of labor based on a work day of 7.5 hours at the minimum wage amount, i.e., eight dollars per hour, for $120, he used the lesser labor figure of $110 that had been provided in the professional estimate. The juvenile’s claim that Dudkiewicz’s restitution amount was not properly supported with documentation is without merit where the professional estimate was admitted and where Dudkiewicz testified at the restitution hearing.
Order extending probation affirmed.
Notes
The judge was provided photographic exhibits of the damage done to both properties.
The juvenile also stipulated to the amount of damages incurred by two other victims. Those amounts were $29.27 for the Easthampton Housing Authority, and $8.06 for Tim McCarthy.
A separate statute authorizes a Juvenile Court judge to order restitution where a child has been found delinquent by reason of having violated a motor vehicle statute, bylaw or regulation. See G. L. c. 119, § 58B.
Section 85G states, in pertinent part, “Parents of an unemancipated child under the age of eighteen and over the age of seven years shall be liable in a
The juvenile’s reliance of Commonwealth v. Rescia,
The juvenile’s claim that Dudkiewicz was required to submit an accounting of his time, and whether he missed work or was on vacation during the two days he did the repairs, does not require discussion.
