JED A. GRESSMAN v. STATE OF UTAH
No. 20110965
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
October 18, 2013
2013 UT 63
Fourth District, Nephi Dep‘t
The Honorable Steven L. Hansen
No. 090600014
Attorneys:
Douglas G. Mortensen, Salt Lake City, for appellee
John E. Swallow, Att‘y Gen., Nancy L. Kemp, Patrick B. Nolan, Asst. Att‘ys Gen., Salt Lake City, for appellant
JUSTICE DURHAM authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, and JUSTICE PARRISH joined.
JUSTICE LEE filed a dissent.
JUSTICE DURHAM, opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
¶1 The State appeals from the district court‘s order posthumously declaring Jed Gressman factually innocent of the crimes he was convicted of in 1993 and awarding his widow financial assistance payments under the Post-Conviction Remedies Act (PCRA). The State argues the district court erred by (1) finding that Mr. Gressman‘s claims under the PCRA survived his death; (2) determining Mr. Gressman to be factually innocent as a matter of law based on the prior vacatur of his conviction; and (3) awarding prejudgment interest on the financial assistance payments.
¶2 We find that Mr. Gressman‘s PCRA claims did not abate upon his death and that the district court properly substituted his widow as the plaintiff in this suit. The district court erred, however, when it found that the vacatur of Mr. Gressman‘s conviction conclusively
BACKGROUND
¶3 Mr. Gressman was accused of rape and aggravated sexual assault after he and his co-defendant, Troy Hancock, offered a woman a ride in Mr. Hancock‘s truck. The woman claimed that during this ride, Mr. Gressman and Mr. Hancock began to fondle her, over her protests, and that they ultimately forced her out of the truck at a secluded location, where Mr. Gressman raped her, aided by Mr. Hancock. At trial, the State presented the testimony of the alleged victim and a DNA expert, who testified that DNA testing of semen recovered from the alleged victim could not exclude Mr. Gressman as the source of the semen.
¶4 Mr. Gressman was convicted of aggravated sexual assault and sentenced to a term of five years to life. In 1996, after Mr. Gressman had served thirty-nine months of that sentence, he and the Juab County Attorney jointly moved the district court to dismiss all charges against him based on newly-discovered evidence. Most importantly, more advanced DNA testing established that semen recovered from the victim did not come from Mr. Gressman. Reasoning that this newly-discovered evidence would have materially influenced the jury‘s deliberations, the district court vacated Mr. Gressman‘s conviction and granted him a new trial. The State chose not to file new charges against Mr. Gressman, and no trial occurred.
¶5 In 2009, Mr. Gressman filed suit under the PCRA, seeking to establish his factual innocence and obtain financial assistance payments under that statute. Mr. Gressman died during the pendency of the suit, so counsel moved to substitute his widow. The State moved to dismiss, claiming that Mr. Gressman‘s claims abated upon his death. Ultimately, both sides moved for summary judgment on Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence petition. The district court, in a single order, granted the motion to substitute Mr. Gressman‘s widow, denied the State‘s motion to dismiss, denied the State‘s motion for summary judgment, and granted Mr. Gressman‘s widow‘s motion for summary judgment. This latter decision was premised on the notion that Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence had already been determined when his conviction was vacated. After so ruling, the district court awarded Mr. Gressman‘s
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶6 The appellate briefing raises two issues of statutory interpretation: (1) whether Mr. Gressman‘s claims survive his death and (2) whether the district court properly awarded prejudgment interest on the assistance payments it awarded. Because the answer to both of these questions turns upon our interpretation of the PCRA and Utah‘s survival statute, we afford no deference to the district court. See Vorher v. Henriod, 2013 UT 10, ¶ 6, 297 P.3d 614 (The interpretation of a statute is a legal question reviewed de novo.) We likewise review de novo the district court‘s summary adjudication of Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence. See Gudmundson v. Del Ozone, 2010 UT 33, ¶ 10, 232 P.3d 1059 (“We review the district court‘s decision to grant summary judgment for correctness . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
ANALYSIS
I. MR. GRESSMAN‘S PCRA CLAIMS SURVIVED HIS DEATH
A. Mr. Gressman‘s Claims Would Abate Under the Common Law
¶7 At common law, personal tort actions abate upon the death of either the claimant or the tortfeasor, while tort claims for property damage or conversion survive. Morrison v. Perry, 140 P.2d 772, 781-82 (Utah 1943); see Mason v. Union Pac. Ry. Co., 24 P. 796, 796 (Utah Terr. 1890) (“In the case of injuries to the person, whether by assault, battery, false imprisonment, slander, or otherwise, if either party who received or committed the injury die, no action can be supported either by or against the executors, or other personal representatives.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). The rationale for this distinction is
that the reason for redressing purely personal wrongs ceases to exist either when the person injured cannot be benefited by a recovery or the person inflicting the injury cannot be punished, whereas, since the property or estate of the injured person passes to his personal representatives, a cause of action for injury done to these can achieve its purpose as well after the death of the owner as before.
Barnes Coal Corp. v. Retail Coal Merchs. Ass‘n, 128 F.2d 645, 649 (4th Cir. 1942).
¶9 A factual innocence claim, rather, is essentially a claim for injury to the person, which abated at common law. The closest analogues at common law appear to be claims for false imprisonment and for malicious prosecution, both of which were subject to abatement. See Mason, 24 P. at 796 (false imprisonment does not survive death); State ex rel. Crow v. Weygandt, 162 N.E.2d 845, 848 (Ohio 1959) (“A cause of action for malicious prosecution did not survive the death of its owner at common law.“) These claims are comparable to a factual innocence claim in the nature of the harm (false imprisonment) and the wrong (malicious prosecution) they vindicate. And they were both personal claims that abated at death under the common law.
¶10 Because Mr. Gressman‘s claims would abate upon his death under the common law, his suit may only survive under the aegis of a statutory provision. We therefore examine whether the PCRA or Utah‘s general survival statute operate to preserve Mr. Gressman‘s claims.
B. The Relevant Version of the PCRA does not Provide for the Survival of Mr. Gressman‘s Claims
¶11 When a cause of action is created by statute, we look first to that statute for an indication of survival or abatement. The survivability of the factual innocence claim under the PCRA implicates two subsidiary questions. First is which version of the PCRA applies—the 2012 amendment, which speaks explicitly to survivability,1 or the prior version of the statute, which does not.
1. The Preamendment Version of the PCRA Applies
¶12 The Utah Code articulates a general presumption against retroactivity.
¶13 Under our case law, “the parties’ substantive rights and liabilities are determined by the law in place at the time when a cause of action arises,” while their procedural rights and responsibilities are governed by “the law in effect at the time of the procedural act” at issue. Id. ¶¶ 12, 14 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, if survivability is a matter of substance, then that question is governed by the law in place when Mr. Gressman‘s claim arose. If it is a procedural matter, on the other hand, then subsequent enactments (like the 2012 amendments) could be deemed to apply.
¶14 We view the 2012 amendments in question as clearly substantive. The amended provisions foreclose postjudgment interest for financial assistance payments and cut off such payments altogether after the death of the defendant-petitioner. See
¶15 In arguing the contrary, the State seeks to invoke a narrow exception to the retroactivity ban for amendments that merely clarify existing law, insisting that the bill introducing the amendments announced that it “ma[de] clarifying amendments to factual innocence provisions.” 2012 Utah Laws 896. We decline to invoke this exception.
¶16 Though our case law has occasionally referred to “amendments clarifying statutes” as an “exception” to the retroactivity ban, see, e.g., Keegan v. State, 896 P.2d 618, 620 (Utah 1995), we have never applied them as such. Instead, our retroactivity case law has invoked this “exception” only in connection with statutory amendments that we have characterized as procedural.2
¶17 In any event, the 2012 amendments cannot be construed as a mere clarification. “An amendment serves as a clarification when it corrects a discrepancy or merely amplif[ies] . . . how the law should have been understood prior to [the amendment].” Salt Lake Cnty. v. Holliday Water Co., 2010 UT 45, ¶ 43, 234 P.3d 1105 (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). In past cases, we have decided whether an amendment is a mere clarification by asking whether it alters or explains language already present in the original statute or whether the amendment added new language or subsections that “did not exist in any form before the amendments were made.” Id. ¶ 44. An amendment that does the former is more likely clarifying in nature; one that does the latter is not. See id.
¶18 The 2012 amendments concerning survivability fall in the latter category. The amendments set up a bifurcated survival scheme, wherein a basic claim for expungement survives a claimant‘s death, but claims for monetary assistance payments abate.
¶19 The preamble to the amendment, relied on heavily by the State, is not to the contrary. Though the preamble describes the bill as “mak[ing] clarifying amendments to factual innocence provisions,” it goes on to specify the changes made, in a manner differentiating clarifying changes from substantive ones. 2012 Utah Laws 896. For instance, it states that the bill “clarifies the requirement of a hearing if the state does not stipulate to factual innocence” and “clarifies that all proceedings are governed by Utah Rules of Civil procedure, Rule 65C.” Id. In describing the amendments related to survivability, however, the preamble in no way paints them as merely clarifying. Instead, it states that the bill “disallows prejudgment interest on payments made to a person after a finding of factual innocence” and “provides that assistance payments on a claim of factual innocence are extinguished upon the death of the petitioner.” Id. Thus, the preamble recognizes that some of the amendments are clarifications and some are not—and places the survivability provision in the latter category.
¶20 For these reasons, we determine that the 2012 amendments discussing the survivability of factual innocence claims are not retroactive.4 Rather, survivability for purposes of this case is governed by the versions of the PCRA and Utah‘s survival statute in effect when Mr. Gressman‘s claim arose. A cause of action arises “when it becomes remediable in the courts,” which normally occurs when “all elements of a cause of action come into being.” Davidson Lumber Sales, Inc. v. Bonneville Inv., Inc., 794 P.2d 11, 19 (Utah 1990). This case is unusual, however, in that Mr. Gressman did not have a remediable factual innocence claim until the legislature first created the cause of action in 2008. See 2008 Utah Laws 2298-2300. Therefore, Mr. Gressman‘s claim did not arise until that time, and we look to
2. The Preamendment PCRA Does Not Provide for the Survival of Mr. Gressman‘s Claims
¶21 The applicable version of the PCRA does not speak to survivability. As the State notes, the statute does contemplate a claimant “who has been convicted of a felony offense” petitioning the court “for a hearing to establish that the person is factually innocent of the crime or crimes of which the person was convicted.” See
¶22 The legislative history relied on by the district court is not to the contrary. At most, that history indicates only that members of the legislature generally analogized the PCRA‘s compensation scheme to “a workers compensation system” and suggested that it was patterned after the 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund of 2001. But that tells us nothing of consequence to the survivability of the statutory factual innocence claim under the PCRA. The PCRA‘s compensation provisions may be analogous to workers compensation and the 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund in some respects, but they are distinguishable in another, more salient sense: workers compensation statutes and the 9/11 fund expressly provide for survivability, while the PCRA does not.5 Absent some specific provision for survivability in the PCRA, we cannot rely on general references to other claims that do survive death to import the same principle into the PCRA. We accordingly find no basis in the
C. Utah‘s Survival Statute Preserves Mr. Gressman‘s Claims
¶23 Because the PCRA does not address the survival of Mr. Gressman‘s claims, we examine Utah‘s general survival statute to determine whether it supplants the common law rule of abatement in this case. We find that it does.
¶24 The common law rule of abatement of personal tort claims has been modified to one extent or another by survival statutes, which have been adopted by most states. PROSSER AND KEETON ON THE LAW OF TORTS § 126 (W. Page Keeton et al. eds., 5th ed. 1984). Utah‘s survival statute provides that “[a] cause of action arising out of personal injury to a person . . . does not abate upon the death of the wrongdoer or the injured person.”
¶25 Under the common law, both false imprisonment and the malicious prosecution of a criminal action are categorized as torts against the person (as opposed to torts against property) because these torts infringe upon an individual‘s personal liberty interests.6 The Restatement (Second) of Torts groups false imprisonment with other personal torts, such as battery and the negligent infliction of bodily harm, because false imprisonment similarly implicates an invasion of the “interests of personality.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
¶26 In accord with this long-standing division between personal torts and property torts, other states have interpreted statutory references to actions for “personal injury,” “injury to the person,” or similar references to personal torts to include actions for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. Merimee v. Brumfield, 397 N.E.2d 315, 318 (Ind. Ct. App. 1979) (Interpreting the term “personal injuries” in a survival statute, the Indiana Court of Appeals held that “[t]here is considerable authority for the proposition that the term ‘personal injuries’ is a broader, more comprehensive and significant term than the term ‘bodily injury.’ It includes malicious prosecution [and] false imprisonment.“); Rivera v. Double A Transp., Inc., 727 A.2d 204, 207-08 (Conn. 1999) (A two-year statute of limitations on actions “to recover damages for injury to the person” applied to an action for false imprisonment because “the term ‘injury,’ . . . under both the common and legal usage of the term, includes harm to the mind as well as to the body.“); Morton v. W. Union Tel. Co., 41 S.E. 484, 485 (N.C. 1902) (Interpreting the term “injury to the person” in a survival statute, the North Carolina Supreme Court held that “[p]ersonal injuries may be either bodily or mental, but, whether one or the other, they infringe upon the rights of the person, and not of property.“); Ex parte Holsonback, 182 So. 28, 29-30 (Ala. 1938) (malicious prosecution claim survives under a statute providing for the survival of “all personal actions, except for injuries to the reputation“); Fricke v. Geladaris, Inc., 533 A.2d 971, 971, 973 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1987) (malicious prosecution claim survives under a statute providing for the survival of an action for any “trespass done to the person“).
¶27 In addition, the United States Supreme Court has held that a statutory section 1983 action, which provides a remedy for
¶28 Because common law analogs to a factual innocence claim under the PCRA are commonly included in the definition of actions for “personal injury” or “injury to the person” under survival statutes, and because a similar federal statutory claim has been defined as a personal injury action for the purposes of statutes of limitations, Mr. Gressman‘s statutory claim survives because it is an action for “personal injury to a person.” See
¶29 The dissent reaches a contrary conclusion, reasoning that the phrase “personal injury to a person” could be read broadly to include all actions that are personal in nature or narrowly to include only bodily injury claims. Infra ¶ 59. The dissent prefers the narrow interpretation, concluding that the addition of the phrase “to a person” to the term “personal injury” connotes “physical harm to a claimant‘s ‘person.‘”7 Infra ¶ 61. Thus, while the dissent concedes
¶30 First, the history and context of the adoption of the current version of the survival statute demonstrates that the legislature did not intend that the statute be confined to actions for physical injury. Prior to 1991, Utah‘s general survival statute provided for the survival of actions “arising out of physical injury to the person.”
¶31 In light of the well-established principle that a statutory reference to “personal injury” claims includes all personal torts (as opposed to property torts), the legislature‘s 1991 amendment evidences an intent to expand the types of actions that would survive. See supra ¶ 26. Moreover, statutes of limitations for personal injury claims are widely recognized to include all personal tort claims—not just claims involving physical injury—further demonstrating the legislature‘s intent to expand the scope of the survival statute. See 51 AM. JUR. 2D Limitation of Actions § 123 (2011) (“A claim which is personal injury in nature, for purposes of [a statute of limitations for personal injuries], need not involve a direct
¶32 Indeed, the legislature‘s definition of the term “personal injury” in a contemporary statute indicates that it intended to alter the meaning of the survival statute when it changed “physical injury” to “personal injury.” At the time the legislature amended the survival statute, Utah‘s governmental immunity statute defined the phrase “personal injury” to mean “an injury of any kind other than property damage,” demonstrating that the legislature recognized that “personal injury” referred to all personal torts as opposed to property torts.
¶33 Second, we disagree with the dissent‘s conclusion that the phrase “to a person” indicates the legislature intended to limit the application of the survival statute to physical injury claims. Both a claim for false imprisonment and a claim for negligent infliction of a physical injury seek redress for harm done “to a person.” Thus, this phrase does nothing to distinguish one from the other. If anything, the repetition of the root word “person” in the phrase “personal injury to a person” emphasizes the inclusion of all personal tort claims in the survival statute. Indeed, the most common statutory phrases used to reference personal tort claims are “personal injury” and “injury to the person.” See supra ¶ 26. The 1991 amendment to the survival statute simply conflated these two phrases to create the term “personal injury to the person.” 1991 Utah Laws 401. A subsequent 2008 amendment changing the article “the” to the article “a,” such that the statute now reads “personal injury to a person,” was deemed by the legislature to be merely stylistic and
¶34 The essence of the dissent‘s reading of the phrase “to a person” is that “[t]he noun ‘person’ indicates a natural body.” Infra, ¶ 61 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, the dissent interprets the survival statute to provide for the survival of claims for “personal injury to a person‘s body.” But the law recognizes that a person is more than a physical conglomeration of tissue and bones that may be cut, bruised, or broken:
In law the word ‘person’ does not simply mean the physical body, for, if it did, it would apply equally to a corpse. It means a living person, composed of body and soul. . . . The mind is no less a part of the person than the body, and the sufferings of the former are some times more acute and lasting than those of the latter.
Morton, 41 S.E. at 485 (internal quotation marks omitted).8 Additionally, the Supreme Court has emphasized that the rights secured by the U.S. Constitution are guaranteed to persons:
[T]he Fourteenth Amendment . . . unequivocally recognizes the equal status of every “person” subject to the jurisdiction of any of the several States. The Constitution‘s command is that all “persons” shall be accorded the full privileges of citizenship; no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law or be denied the equal protection of the laws. A violation of that command is an injury to the individual rights of the person.
Wilson, 471 U.S. at 277. In sum, the inherent, unalienable rights recognized by the U.S. Constitution are also fundamental to the meaning of what it is to be a person. Taken as a whole, therefore, the definition of “person” is broader than an individual‘s natural body and is necessarily coextensive with the “interests of personality” vindicated by personal tort law. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS, Chapter 2, Introductory Note (1965).
¶35 We therefore conclude that Mr. Gressman‘s claims survived his death and the district court properly substituted his widow into the lawsuit.
II. THE 1996 VACATUR OF MR. GRESSMAN‘S CONVICTION DID NOT CONCLUSIVELY ESTABLISH HIS FACTUAL INNOCENCE
A. The District Court Erred in Granting Summary Judgment on the Issue of Mr. Gressman‘s Factual Innocence
¶36 The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Mr. Gressman‘s widow based upon its finding that the 1996 vacatur of his aggravated sexual assault conviction was effectively a determination that Mr. Gressman was factually innocent. In essence, the district court ruled that the 1996 order vacating Mr. Gressman‘s conviction collaterally estopped the State from contesting his claim of innocence. We hold that the district court erred because the 1996 order did not conclusively establish Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence, as defined by the PCRA.
¶37 “The doctrine of res judicata embraces two distinct theories: claim preclusion and issue preclusion.” Buckner v. Kennard, 2004 UT 78, ¶ 12, 99 P.3d 842. “Issue preclusion, which is also known as collateral estoppel, prevents parties or their privies from relitigating facts and issues in the second suit that were fully litigated in the first suit.” Oman v. Davis Sch. Dist., 2008 UT 70, ¶ 28, 194 P.3d 956 (internal quotation marks omitted). Issue preclusion applies only if four elements are satisfied:
(i) the party against whom issue preclusion is asserted was a party to or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication; (ii) the issue decided in the prior adjudication was identical to the one presented in the instant action; (iii) the issue in the first action was completely, fully, and fairly litigated; and (iv) the first suit resulted in a final judgment on the merits.
Moss v. Parr Waddoups Brown Gee & Loveless, 2012 UT 42, ¶ 23, 285 P.3d 1157 (internal quotation marks omitted).
¶38 The second element of issue preclusion is not met here because the issue decided by the 1996 order—whether to vacate Mr. Gressman‘s conviction and grant a new trial based upon newly discovered evidence—is not identical to the issue presented in the instant action under the PCRA—whether Mr. Gressman is factually innocent of aggravated sexual assault. See Jensen ex rel. Jensen v. Cunningham, 2011 UT 17, ¶ 49, 250 P.3d 465 (The final adjudication of a federal constitutional claim did not collaterally estop a plaintiff from making a similar claim under the Utah constitution because the legal standards governing these claims are not identical.).
(a) engage in the conduct for which the person was convicted;
(b) engage in conduct relating to any lesser included offenses of the crime for which the person was convicted; or
(c) commit any other felony arising out of or reasonably connected to the facts supporting the indictment or information upon which the person was convicted.
¶40 The district court that vacated Mr. Gressman‘s conviction in 1996 did not apply the PCRA‘s factual innocence standard, which was not established by the legislature until 2008. See 2008 Utah Laws 2298-2301. Instead, the court cited
¶41 The district court‘s 1996 finding that a new trial was warranted is not equivalent to a finding of factual innocence because these two findings involve very different legal standards and resolve different issues. The grant of a new trial under the civil standard applied by the district court in 1996 requires only a finding of a reasonable likelihood that the defendant could have obtained a different result at trial if the newly discovered evidence had been available, while a factual innocence claim requires a convicted individual to affirmatively prove innocence by clear and convincing evidence. In other words, the former is finding that the State might not have carried its burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, whereas the latter is a finding that the convicted individual actually carried the burden of proving innocence by clear and convincing evidence. Because the question of whether to grant a new trial necessarily evaluates the State‘s burden to prove guilt, while the question of whether an individual is factually innocent involves the convicted individual‘s burden to prove innocence, the issue resolved in the 1996 vacatur proceeding is not identical to the question of factual innocence at issue in the present action.11
¶43 Because the issue resolved by the district court in 1996 when it vacated Mr. Gressman‘s conviction and ordered a new trial is not identical to the issue before the court in the current action under the PCRA, the district court erred by finding that the 1996 order conclusively established Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence.
B. We Do Not Find Alternative Grounds for Affirming Summary Judgment
¶44 Mr. Gressman‘s widow raises several alternative arguments for affirming the grant of summary judgment in her favor. We find none to be meritorious.
¶45 First, Mr. Gressman‘s widow argues that we should not review the district court‘s application of collateral estoppel because the State did not preserve the issue by arguing against the preclusive effect of the 1996 vacatur order. This assertion is incorrect. At the summary judgment hearing, the State argued that the 1996 vacatur “is not a finding of factual innocence, and that is not a finding that the defendant did not commit the crime for which he was convicted.” See Warne v. Warne, 2012 UT 13, ¶ 19, 275 P.3d 238 (issue raised during a summary judgment hearing was preserved). Moreover, the argument advanced by Mr. Gressman‘s widow misapprehends the preservation rule. Issues must be preserved, not arguments for or against a particular ruling on an issue raised below. See
¶46 Mr. Gressman‘s widow also argues we should not consider the State‘s appeal from the district court‘s grant of summary judgment because the State failed to marshal the record evidence in support of the “district court‘s factual innocence finding.” See
¶47 Finally, Mr. Gressman‘s widow argues that even if the district court erred by basing its grant of summary judgment on the preclusive effect of the 1996 vacatur order, we may affirm on the alternative ground that the State produced no admissible evidence that would create a dispute of material fact regarding his factual innocence. We decline to affirm on this alternative ground because the record evidence before the district court demonstrated disputes of material fact that would preclude summary judgment.
¶48 Mr. Gressman‘s widow supported her motion for summary judgment on the factual innocence claim with (1) Mr. Gressman‘s verified petition for postconviction relief, in which he asserts in general terms that he is factually innocent, (2) Mr. Gressman‘s parole hearing transcript in which he consistently maintained his innocence despite the fact that his denials of culpability could negatively affect his chances of being paroled, and (3) a DNA test report confirming that semen recovered from vaginal swabs performed on the alleged victim did not come from Mr. Gressman. The State supported its opposition to summary judgment with (1) the record of Mr. Gressman‘s criminal trial,
¶49 Because the district court found that the alleged victim‘s affidavit also contained inadmissible statements that were argumentative or were not based upon personal knowledge, the court struck the affidavit in its entirety. Mr. Gressman‘s widow argues that the State‘s opposition to her summary judgment motion is based entirely upon the affidavit and that without it, the district court must accept Mr. Gressman‘s sworn statement of factual innocence. But the PCRA requires the district court to consider “the record of the original criminal case and . . . any postconviction proceedings in the case” in making a factual innocence determination.
III. PREJUDGMENT INTEREST MAY NOT BE ADDED TO ANY AWARD OF FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS UNDER THE PCRA
¶50 Because we reverse summary judgment in favor of Mr. Gressman‘s widow, we also reverse the award of PCRA assistance payments and prejudgment interest on those payments, mooting the State‘s argument that prejudgment interest may not be awarded. But since we reverse for further proceedings and it is possible that the issue of prejudgment interest may arise in this case again, we address the State‘s argument in order to provide guidance to the district court.
¶52 We have previously held that prejudgment interest may not be awarded where a “statute fixes a penalty or determines the damages to be allowed.” Fell v. Union Pac. Ry. Co., 88 P. 1003, 1006 (Utah 1907). Thus, where a statute fixes the damages to be awarded, the statutory amount is deemed to be the full compensation allowed by the legislature, and prejudgment interest may not be added unless provided for in the statute. Indeed, the relevant version of the PCRA confirms that the legislature did not contemplate compensation in addition to the amount specifically provided by the statute: “Payments pursuant to this part constitute a full and conclusive resolution of the petitioner‘s claims on the specific issue of factual innocence.”
¶53 Therefore, if assistance payments are ultimately awarded in this case, we hold that prejudgment interest may not be awarded.
CONCLUSION
¶54 We find that Mr. Gressman‘s factual innocence claim survived his death and that the district court properly substituted his widow into the case. But the district court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Mr. Gressman‘s widow and awarding prejudgment interest on the statutory financial assistance payments. We accordingly reverse for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
JUSTICE LEE, dissenting:
¶55 I agree with the court‘s construction of the Post-Conviction Remedies Act, and concur in its determination that Gressman‘s claims are not subject to survival under that statute. I respectfully
¶56 I agree that false imprisonment and malicious prosecution are “the closest common law analogs” to Gressman‘s statutory factual innocence claim. Supra ¶ 24. And I acknowledge that those claims “are categorized as torts against the person (as opposed to torts against property)” at common law. Supra ¶ 25. But that is not the question before us. The scope of our general survival statute is not dictated by the treatment of these common law claims under the law of other states, or in federal caselaw on the appropriate limitations period for § 1983 claims. See supra ¶¶ 26-28 (noting that such claims are categorized as personal injury claims in various state decisions and in federal cases analyzing the applicable limitations period for claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983).
¶57 The scope of our statute, rather, is dictated by its terms—which provide for survival not for “personal injury” claims, or for claims for injury “to the person,” but for “[a] cause of action arising out of personal injury to a person, or death caused by the wrongful act or negligence of another.”
¶58 The majority seeks to parse the component terms of the statute—“personal injury” and “to a person“—and to piece them together additively in a manner depriving the terms of independent meaning. It reasons as follows: “Because common law analogs to a factual innocence claim under the PCRA are commonly included in the definition of actions for ‘personal injury’ or ‘injury to the person’ under survival statutes, and because a similar federal statutory claim has been defined as a personal injury action for the purposes of statutes of limitations, Mr. Gressman‘s statutory claim survives because it is an action for ‘personal injury to a person.‘” Supra ¶ 28 (emphasis added). But the court‘s conclusion does not follow from its premises. The cited “common law analogs” may well be defined in various states as “actions for personal injury” and in others as actions involving “injury to the person.” See supra ¶ 26. But it does
¶59 For me the key to interpreting the statute is the time-worn canon of independent meaning, or its corollary presumption against surplusage. See In re Estate of Kampros, 2012 UT 57, ¶ 19, 289 P.3d 428 (noting our presumption that the legislature uses “each word advisedly” and against a construction rendering any part “inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant“). By themselves, the individual references to “personal injury” or injury “to a person” could be construed in either a narrow or broad sense. See Allred v. Solaray, Inc., 971 F. Supp. 1394, 1397 (D. Utah 1997). These terms could be understood to be limited to physical harm or injury to a person (as by a cut, bruise, or broken bone),1 or they
¶60 But in the context of the full statutory phrase, the narrow reading is the better one. Our statute does not speak in the broad terms of the common law; it does not provide for survival, for example, of all tort claims for harms in the nature of “personal injury.” Instead it adds to that phraseology by avoiding abatement for claims arising from “personal injury to a person.”
¶61 In context, we should read the meaningful addition (“to a person“) as narrowing. We should read it, in other words, as focusing the sub-class of claims saved from common-law abatement to those involving physical harm to a claimant‘s “person.” See Allred, 971 F. Supp. at 1398 (concluding, in interpreting this provision, that “[t]he noun ‘person’ indicates a natural body . . . and the injuries contemplated are injuries to that body“).
¶62 The majority rejects this conclusion in light of the “history and context of the adoption of the current version of the survival statute.” Supra ¶ 30. It notes that before the current language was adopted in 1991, the statute “provided for the survival of actions ‘arising out of physical injury to the person.‘” Supra ¶ 30 (quoting
¶63 That conclusion is tautologically true but analytically unhelpful. It is hard to argue with the proposition that a “material change bespeaks a legislative intent to change the meaning of the statute.” Id. But that proposition begs the key question, which is
¶64 I view it in the latter sense. And my conclusion is no mere assumption. Supra ¶ 30 (challenging my approach as “nullif[ying] the legislature‘s amendment” and “improperly assum[ing] this substantive change was an idle act“). It is based on the terms and context of the 1991 amendment. That amendment‘s title is telling. It is “AN ACT RELATING TO JUDICIAL ACTIONS; AMENDING THE DEFINITION OF HEIR AND A REFERENCE TO INJURY AS APPLICABLE TO RECOVERY IN WRONGFUL DEATH ACTIONS; AND MAKING TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS.” 1991 Utah Laws 401. Thus, the amendment expressly encompassed changes the legislature specifically flagged as “technical corrections.” And the change in question—replacing “physical injury” with “personal injury“—falls clearly in that category, as it has nothing to do with the other amendments (to provisions other than the survival statute3) designated as more material.
¶65 Moreover, the full range of changes made to the survival statute in 1991 are, on their face, obviously technical (non-material) alterations. The changes in question were these:
(1)(a) Causes of action arising out of [
physical] personal injury to the person or death[-] caused by the wrongful act or negligence of another [,shall] do not abate upon the death of the wrongdoer or the injured person [, and the]. The injured person or the personal representatives or heirs [one meeting death, as above stated, shall] the person who died have a cause of action against the
wrongdoer for special and general damages[.However, if], subject to Subsection (1)(b).
1991 Utah Laws 401. Thus, the only other changes to this provision were to delete a comma; to replace “shall” with “do“; to break the provision into separate sentences and sub-sections; and to replace “one meeting death, as above stated” with “the person who died.”
¶66 None of these changes can conceivably be deemed to “bespeak[] a legislative intent to change the meaning of the statute.” Supra ¶ 30. For me this confirms what is already apparent in the title of the amendment—that the changes to the survival statute (one of several provisions being altered by the 1991 amendment) are mere “technical corrections,” not material alterations.4
¶67 I therefore see no basis for reading the 1991 amendment to the survival statute to “evidence[] an intent to expand the types of actions that would survive” a claimant‘s death. Supra ¶ 31. The definition of “personal injury” in the government immunity act, cited by the majority, supra ¶ 32 (citing
¶68 The majority‘s only other ground for its construction is the assertion that, “if anything, the repetition of the root word ‘person’ in the phrase ‘personal injury to a person‘” emphasizes a legislative intent to include “all personal tort claims in the survival statute.” Supra ¶ 33. But that is just a rejection of the canon of independent meaning, cloaked in the court‘s assurance as to the legislature‘s real intent. That is insufficient. We should give the operative canon—the presumption against surplusage—its usual effect. The presumption is certainly rebuttable, but the rebuttal must be found in something more than the court‘s take-our-word-for-it assurance of legislative intent.
¶69 A multi-member, bi-partisan body of legislators has no discoverable intent—except to enact the terms of its legislative work-product. Legislators work collaboratively—sometimes combatively—toward a statute representing a majority of votes and, inevitably, a compromise. We cannot possibly discern the body‘s collective intent in arriving at that compromise. There is no such thing.5 Instead, the reality reflects a range of intentions among a patchwork of legislative factions—of those who preferred a stronger bill, of others who wanted a weaker one (or none at all), and perhaps of some who had a different goal altogether (through logrolling) or even no sense of the matter at all (due to apathy).
¶70 We ignore the nuances of this process when we claim to know the real intentions of the legislature. And we upset the
¶71 I see no basis for an inference of the legislature‘s intent to include “all personal tort claims in the survival statute.” Supra ¶ 33. The only intent that I have the capacity to discern is in the text of the statute. And that text appears to me to provide for survival of only a subset of “personal injury” claims—of those involving injury “to a person” in the sense of physical injury.
¶72 Only that reading gives effect to each term of the statute. The court‘s broader construction focuses myopically on “personal injury” without regard to the qualifying phrase “to a person“—openly “conflat[ing] these two phrases.” Supra ¶ 33. Thus, it is the majority‘s reading that would “nullif[y]” and render “idle” the legislature‘s pronouncement. See supra ¶ 30. The legislature did not amend the statute simply to save “personal injury” actions; it amended it to save actions arising out of “personal injury to a person.” I would reject the majority‘s construction and embrace mine on the ground that only mine preserves independent meaning for both clauses.7
¶73 I would accordingly affirm the dismissal of Gressman‘s PCRA claim. That claim is not for physical injury to a person. It is a claim for “personal injury” (not injury to property), but not for
