Opinion
Scott Busser appeals an order requiring him to pay restitution to his insurance carrier after he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor hit and run (Veh. Code, § 20002, subd. (a)) and to presenting a materially false statement to his insurance company (Pen. Code,
1
§ 550, subd. (b)(1)), a felony. Busser’s insurer, Government Employees Insurance Company (GEICO), paid the repair costs from an accident involving Busser but later discovered Busser had lied about the circumstances of the accident. When he lied, Busser violated the terms of the insurance policy and provided GEICO with grounds to rescind the contract. However, GEICO would have been contractually obligated to pay all the repair costs from the collision if Busser had not lied about the facts of the accident. Thus, Busser’s misrepresentation did not actually induce GEICO to provide coverage where there was none or to pay more in repair costs than it was otherwise obligated to pay under the contract. Nevertheless, the trial court ordered Busser to pay restitution to GEICO under subdivision (a)(3)(B) of section 1202.4 for the repair costs from the accident.
2
We conclude, based on the rule first stated in
People v. Crow
(1993)
*1507 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In the early morning of January 21, 2007, Busser’s car collided with Michael Fuhr’s car on the freeway and sped away rapidly. Fuhr followed Busser’s car and unsuccessfully attempted to get Busser to stop. However, Fuhr did manage to record Busser’s license plate number. The following day, he filed a hit-and-run collision report with the California Highway Patrol (CHP). The accident caused about $4,500 in damages to Fuhr’s car, which he repaired through his insurance company, 21st Century Insurance.
On January 23, Busser reported to GEICO that an unknown vehicle had struck his car while it was parked in front of his home the previous night. GEICO opened a claim, appraised the damages to Busser’s car, and paid him $2,450.60 for repairs.
Meanwhile, the CHP investigated Fuhr’s hit-and-run claim and determined the car that hit his car was registered at Busser’s address. On January 25, an officer mailed a hit-and-run letter to Busser requesting contact regarding the accident. Busser never responded to the letter. The CHP also contacted GEICO about the hit and run, causing GEICO to reopen Busser’s claim and assign it to the special investigations unit.
GEICO investigator David McCauley interviewed Busser while investigating the reopened claim. At first, Busser repeated his initial statement that the damage to his car occurred while it was parked. Eventually, however, Busser admitted to McCauley that all of the damage resulted from the collision with Fuhr’s car on January 21. GEICO investigators ultimately determined Busser was at fault for the collision with Fuhr and reimbursed 21st Century Insurance $4,553.21 for the amount it paid to repair Fuhr’s car.
Busser was charged with four offenses arising out of the hit-and-run accident and the insurance fraud. Busser pleaded guilty to misdemeanor hit and run and to presenting materially false or misleading information to his insurance company, a felony. The remaining charges were dismissed. The trial court imposed a suspended sentence and granted Busser three years of formal probation for the felony, and denied probation but gave Busser credit for time served for the misdemeanor.
The trial court held a restitution hearing several months after Busser’s sentencing. GEICO requested reimbursement for the repair costs to both cars and the costs of investigating Busser’s claim. McCauley was the only
*1508
witness. He testified to the repair costs and the costs of the GEICO investigation. He also indicated GEICO would have paid for the damages to both Busser’s and Fuhr’s cars under the insurance policy if Busser had been truthful about the facts of the accident from the start. At the hearing, the court awarded GEICO $7,003.81 for the repair costs to both cars and $1,459.80 for its investigation into Busser’s fraud. Busser timely appeals the order as it relates to the repair costs. He concedes the trial court properly imposed restitution for GEICO’s investigative costs. (See
People
v.
Ortiz
(1997)
DISCUSSION
Busser argues GEICO should not receive any restitution for the costs of repairing the damaged cars because his fraud did not actually cause GEICO to pay the repair costs. We review the trial court’s restitution order for abuse of discretion.
(People
v.
Thygesen
(1999)
The California Constitution confers on “all persons who suffer losses as a result of criminal activity . . . the right to seek and secure restitution from the persons convicted of the crimes causing the losses they suffer.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (b)(13)(A).) The “primary purpose of victim restitution is to fully reimburse the victim,” although restitution also furthers rehabilitative and deterrent objectives for the defendant and others.
(People
v.
Bernal
(2002)
Subdivision (f) of section 1202.4 provides that “in every case in which a victim has suffered economic loss as a result of the defendant’s conduct, the court shall require that the defendant make restitution to the victim or victims . . . .” (Italics added.) The restitution award amount must “fully reimburse the victim or victims for every determined economic loss incurred as the result of the defendant’s criminal conduct . . . .” (§ 1202.4, subd. (f)(3), italics added.) Thus, restitution not only requires a crime, a victim, and an economic loss, but the victim must have actually suffered the economic loss because of the criminal conduct.
*1509
“A ‘victim’ is a ‘person who is the object of a crime ....’”
(Crow, supra,
Insurance companies that “suffer[] the consequences of crime only by reimbursing the crime-related losses of their policyholders [do] not reasonably fit within [the] definition [of direct victims].”
(People v. Birkett
(1999)
Here, Busser intentionally lied to GEICO when he claimed the damage to his car came from an unknown source. Thus, Busser directly victimized GEICO because he criminally presented false information to the company. However, GEICO is not a direct victim in the same sense as the insurers in
O’Casey
and
Moloy.
Whereas those insurers would not have paid out any money absent the defendants’ frauds because there were no other underlying
*1510
events triggering coverage, GEICO would have paid the repair costs from the hit-and-run accident even if Busser had not lied. (See
O’Casey, supra,
The Legislature intended restitution to “restore the economic status quo” by returning to the victim “ ‘funds in which he or she has an ownership interest’ ” following a criminal conviction.
(People v. Giordano, supra,
In
Crow, supra,
The
Crow
court’s pronouncements on properly calculating a victim’s restitution award apply equally in this case, even though the victim here was an insurance company rather than a government agency. The amount of GEICO’s restitution award must reflect the actual loss GEICO incurred due to
*1511
Busser’s crime. (See
People v. Fortune, supra,
“[Rescission stands as a contract remedy.”
(People ex rel. Kennedy v. Beaumont Investment, Ltd.
(2003)
Busser’s criminal misrepresentation contractually entitled GEICO to rescind the insurance policy. GEICO may pursue this right in a civil action. However, the fact remains GEICO did not incur an economic loss from its payment of the accident repair costs as a result of Busser’s criminal misrepresentation. The accident itself triggered an existing lawful obligation on the part of GEICO to pay for the repair costs. We cannot say whether GEICO should recover these expenditures in a separate action to rescind the insurance contract, but we can say that a restitution order is not the proper method of deciding the issue.
*1512 DISPOSITION
The portion of the restitution order requiring Busser to reimburse GEICO $7,003.81 for the repair costs arising out of the hit-and-run accident is reversed.
Nares, J., and O’Rourke, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 16, 2010.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
The court also ordered Busser to pay GEICO the costs it incurred to investigate his fraud. Busser does not contest the court’s order that he repay these investigative costs.
See
People
v.
Giordano
(2007)
