Lead Opinion
Opinion by
We address here the applicability of the doctrine of abatement ab initio-abatement "from the beginning"-in a criminal case. This is a court-created common law doctrine, see United States v. Estate of Parsons,
In this case, defendant was convicted at trial of a felony, and he died while his direct appeal was pending. Citing authority from other jurisdictions, the Attorney General asks us to abandon the doctrine of abatement ab initio. Relying on Colorado precedent, we decline this invitation, and we conclude that this case should eventually be remanded to the trial court to abate defendant's conviction.
However, because defendant was ordered to pay restitution to the victim of his crime at the sentencing hearing, this case presents an additional issue of first impression in Colorado: should the doctrine of abatement ab initio be applied when its effect would be to erase the civil judgment created by a restitution order? We hold that this civil judgment should not be abated.
I. Background
Defendant, Markham G. Daly, was conviet-ed of the class four felony of stalking on January 21, 2010. On March 8, 2010, the trial court sentenced him to serve a probationary sentence monitored by the intensive supervision program. The court also ordered him to pay restitution to the victim of his crime.
He filed his notice of appeal with this court on March 22, 2010. It stated that he intended to raise issues involving both his conviection and sentence.
On August 183, 2010, defendant's counsel filed a motion to dismiss this appeal. It stated that defendant had died on April 29, 2010, and a copy of his death certificate was attached.
We issued an order requiring the prosecution to show cause why, instead of dismissing the appeal, the case should not be remanded
In response, defendant's counsel argued that the doctrine of abatement ab initio should be applied to all of defendant's case because (1) the doctrine has a long pedigree in Colorado; (2) permitting defendant's con-viection and sentence to stand would deny him his appellate rights; (8) the prosecution's reliance on authority from other jurisdictions was misplaced; and (4) the victim could pursue a separate civil case against defendant's estate to obtain redress for her financial losses.
IL Analysis
A. General Principles
1. Statutory Construction
When construing a statute, we first look to the statutory language. We give words and phrases their plain and ordinary meanings. We read the statute as a whole, and we interpret it in a manner that gives all its parts plain and sensible effect. We avoid absurd constructions. If the statute is unambiguous, we need look no further, and we do not need to employ other tools of statutory construction. Seguna v. Maketa,
2. The Present Status of the Doctrine of Abatement in Colorado Criminal Cases
The doctrine of abatement ab initio was first recognized in Colorado in Overland Cotton Mill Co. v. People,
[tlhe purpose of enforcing a penal statute is to punish the person found guilty of violating its provisions. The representatives of [the] deceased are not responsible for the alleged violation of the statute by him during his lifetime. They cannot be required to satisfy the judgment rendered against him. It is only the person adjudged guilty who can be punished, and a judgment cannot be enforced when the only subject-matter upon which it can operate has ceased to exist.
Id. In reaching this result, the supreme court cited several cases from other jurisdictions. At least one, March v. State,
The supreme court followed Overland in Crowley v. People,
Crowley leaned heavily on a federal case, United States v. Mitchell,
In People v. Lipira,
IAipira was analyzed in People v. Valdes,
[AJn appeal is an integral part of our system of adjudicating guilt or innocence and defendants who die before the conclusion of their appellate review have not obtained a final adjudication of guilt or innocence. Ordinarily, the interests of justice require that defendants not stand convicted without resolution of an appeal.
Id. at 704. Further, the division noted that, once a defendant dies, "the state's interest in protecting society has been satisfied and there is no further interest in punishing the wrongdoer." Id.
These justifications for the doctrine of abatement establish its boundaries. For example, if a defendant dies after a direct appeal has affirmed a conviection-for example while awaiting a decision on a petition for a writ of certiorari, or during an appeal of postconviction proceedings initiated under Crim. P. 35(c)-the conviction should not be abated. The "sole action that we take" in such cireumstances is to dismiss the appeal as moot. Id. at 704. This is so because the defendant has already been afforded the protections of a direct appeal, and the interests of justice would not be served by abating the conviction. Id.
A division of this court further refined the parameters of the doctrine of abatement ab initio in People v. Rickstrew,
According to Surland v. State,
No Colorado appellate court has decided whether a civil judgment created by a restitution order should be abated ab initio. We turn next to that issue, recognizing that we write on a clean slate.
3. The Effect of Abatement Ab Initio on Restitution Orders
We begin this portion of the analysis by observing that restitution is not the equivalent of a fine. "A fine is solely a monetary penalty, while restitution serves to make the victim whole." People v. Stafford,
Courts that have specifically addressed this question have reached different results. For example, there is a split among the federal circuits. See United States v. Rich,
One rationale supporting the conclusion that a restitution order should not be abated
[RJestitution in this case is more compensatory in nature than penal. Historically, restitution, an equitable remedy, was intended to reimburse a person wronged by the actions of another. To absolve the estate from refunding the fruits of the wrongdoing would grant an undeserved windfall. We are persuaded that abatement should not apply to the order of restitution in this case, and thus, it survives against the estate of the deceased [defendant].
Based on this analysis, the court in Christopher ordered the parties to address the merits of the restitution order on appeal. Id.
Several state appellate courts have held that restitution orders should not be abated. In re Estate of Vigliotto,
4. Rights of Victims of Crimes
The doctrine of abatement ab initio has recently generated criticism aimed at how its application undermines the rights of victims to obtain restitution. See Timothy A. Razel, Note, Dying to Get Away with It: How the Abatement Doctrine Thwarts Justice-and What Should Be Done Instead, 75 Fordham L.Rev. 2198 (Mar. 2007) Tim E. Staggs, Note, Legacy of a Scandal: How John Geo-ghan's Death May Serve as an Impetus to Bring Abatement Ab Initio in Line with the Victims' Rights Movement, 38 Ind. L.Rev. 507 (2005).
Colorado's early applications of the doe-trine of abatement ab initio in criminal cases preceded any constitutional or statutory recognition of victims' rights. Colorado's Constitution was amended, effective January 14, 1993, to provide crime victims with the right to be heard in certain cireumstances. Colo. Const. art. II, § 16a. In addition, the legislature adopted statutes providing additional rights to crime victims that became effective at the same time. Ch. 77, sees. 3 & 9, § 24-4.1-802.5, 1992 Colo. Sess. Laws 418-21 (effective upon governor's proclamation of voters' approval of constitutional amendment).
Crime victims do not have a constitutional right to receive restitution from the defendants who have victimized them. Rather, they have a statutory right. § 24-4.1-8302.5(1)(b), C.R.S.2010 (victims have the right "to have the court determine the amount, if any, of restitution to be paid to a victim ... by any person convicted of a crime against such victim for the actual pecuniary damages that resulted from the commission of the crime").
The General Assembly has declared that requiring defendants to pay victims restitution serves important public purposes. § 18-1.3-601(1)(a)-(e), C.R.8.2010. Thus the General Assembly has (1) recognized that victims "endure undue suffering and hardship" caused by crime; (2) declared that defendants who cause such damage "should be under a moral and legal obligation" to make restitution to those they have harmed; (8) observed that requiring defendants to pay restitution assists in their rehabilitation; (4) stated that restitution serves as a deterrent to future crimes; and (5) connected the effectiveness of the criminal justice system with timely restitution, because timely restitution lessens the financial onus that crime places on victims, compensates them for their suffering, and preserves their dignity. Id.
The legislature declared that the restitution statute must be liberally construed to further these goals. § 18-1.83-601(2), C.R.S. 2010.
With exceptions that are not pertinent here, every criminal conviction must be accompanied by an order requiring the defendant to pay restitution, which is defined to include the pecuniary losses suffered by vice-tims. § 18-1.8-602(8)(a), C.R.S.2010 (definition of "restitution"); § 18-1.83-608(1), C.R.S. 2010 (assessment of restitution). A restitution order creates "a final civil judgment in favor of the state and any victim," which, "[nlotwithstanding any other civil or criminal statute or rule," shall "remain in foree until the restitution is paid in full." $ 18-1.3-603(4)(a), C.R.S.2010. The restitution order also creates a lien against the defendant's personal property, § 18-1.3-608(4)(c), C.R.S. 2010, and is to be considered a debt that qualifies as an exception to discharge in bankruptey, § 18-1.3-608(4)(d), C.R.S.2010.
B. Application of General Principles
We are bound by the supreme court's holdings in Overland and Crowley. See People v. Smith,
Abating defendant's conviction ab initio furthers important policies described in Lipi-ra and its progeny. First, defendant's death removes society's ability to punish him, and society no longer requires protection from him. See Overland,
Second, although defendant did not have a constitutional right to appeal from his erimi-nal conviction, Jones v. Barnes,
However, we reach a different result concerning the issue whether the civil judgment created by the restitution order entered at defendant's sentencing should be abated ab initio. Well after Overland, Crowley, and Liptra were decided, our legislature made clear that restitution serves an important function in the criminal justice system by including it in victims' rights legislation. In the course of providing victims with the statutory right to receive restitution, it expanded the right beyond a simple sentencing condition by mandating that restitution orders create final civil judgments. § 18-1.3-603(4)(a). These judgments remain in effect until restitution is fully collected "[nJotwith-standing any other civil or criminal statute or rule." Id. They function as liens against the defendant's personal property, and they cannot be discharged in bankruptcy. § 18-1.3-603(4)(c)-(d).
The plain language of these statutes leads us to the following conclusions. First, the legislature saw civil judgments created by § 18-1.3-603(4)(a) as an important part of guaranteeing victims' rights.
Second, these statutorily created civil judgments are designed, in part, to save victims the time and expense necessary to file separate civil cases to collect their restitution awards. See Roberts v. People,
Third, the General Assembly made these civil judgments robust and durable: they
Fourth, this durability indicates that the legislature intended to place a high priority on such civil judgments being satisfied.
Fifth, the statutory emphasis preserving these civil judgments until they are satisfied persuades us that they are designed to survive a defendant's death.
Sixth, the legislature understood that these civil judgments would survive a defendant's death because the legislature was presumed to be aware of its prior enactments when it passed the victimg' rights legislation. See People v. Santisteven,
When a judgment is obtained in any court of record in this state against any person who after the rendition of said judgment dies, a claim based upon such judgment may be filed against the estate of the deceased judgment debtor without first reviving the judgment against his heirs or personal representatives.
This statute has been in effect, in substantially the same form, since at least 1888. Gen. Stat. 1883 § 1871, at 608. Similarly, judgment liens that attach to property while parties to lawsuits are alive survive their deaths. Willis v. Neilson,
Seventh, because these civil judgments are designed to survive a defendant's death, they should not be abated ab initio, even though the doctrine of abatement ab initio is a product of common law, and not a civil or eriminal rule or statute. Indeed, the common law, as represented by Overland, Crowley, Lipira, Vaidez, and Rickstrew, did not address this issue, nor even mention it, leaving an empty space adjacent to the common law rule that this opinion occupies for the first time.
Eighth, the seventh conclusion is consistent with the legislature's express direction in section 18-1.3-601(2) that the restitution statute be construed liberally to accomplish its purposes. One of these purposes is to make timely restitution to victims "to compensate them for their suffering and hardship" and to preserve their dignity. See § 18-1.3-601(1)(e).
Further, the result we reach here is not unprecedented. Courts from other jurisdictions have also relied on similar components of comparatively recent victims' rights statutes to conclude that the doctrine of abatement ab initio should not apply to restitution orders. See, eg., Vigliotto,
Moreover, as Vaides and Rickstrew point out, the doctrine of abatement ab initio is not triggered when its underlying policies are not implicated. Here, those policies are not implicated, and we hold that the doctrine is thus not triggered. This is so because we have concluded that, in section 18-1.3-603(4)(a), the legislature created a civil judgment intended to survive a defendant's death. See also Dudley,
Last, "[wle also note that a eriminal conviction establishing the defendant's culpability is not required to impose restitution." People v. Pagan,
C. Conclusion
We conclude that the doctrine of abatement ab initio applies to criminal convictions in the circumstances described by Lipira, Vaidez, and Rickstrew. This is one of those cireumstances.
However, we further conclude that the doctrine does not apply to civil judgments created by restitution orders, such as the one here. We also hold that, in order to vindicate his statutory right to an appeal, defendant's estate is entitled to challenge the restitution order that forms the basis for the civil judgment. See Christopher,
We order defendant's present appellate counsel to notify defendant's personal representative of this appeal within ten days of this order. The personal representative will then have ten days to inform this court in writing whether he or she wishes to be substituted as a party by filing a motion under C.A.R. 48(a), and whether he or she wishes to proceed with this appeal.
If defendant has no personal representative, defendant's present counsel will so inform this court within ten days of this order, and we will then appoint present counsel to represent defendant's estate for the purposes of this appeal. See C.A.R. 48(a), State v. Salazar,
The only issues to be considered in this appeal will be those that address the merits of the restitution order that created the civil judgment, including any issues arising out of the conviction that bear directly on that order. See, eg., § 18-1.3-602(8)(a), (4), C.R.S. 2010 (definitions of "restitution" and "vie-tim"); People v. Bowerman,
If the decision is made to proceed with this appeal, the briefing schedule will be governed by C.AR. 3l1(a) The opening brief will be due within forty days after the date on which the court is notified that the appeal will proceed.
If we affirm the restitution order, or if the appeal of that issue is withdrawn, the civil judgment created by the restitution order will remain in full force and effect. The case will be remanded to the trial court with directions to abate the eriminal conviction, to dismiss the charges against defendant, but to leave this case open for the sole purpose of enforcing the civil judgment created by the restitution order. If we reverse the restitution order, the case will be remanded with appropriate directions.
We grant defendant's motion to dismiss the appeal as far as defendant's conviction is concerned. We deny the motion to dismiss as far as the civil judgment created by the restitution order is concerned, and the appeal concerning the civil judgment shall proceed as described in this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring.
I agree the restitution order creates "a final civil judgment in favor of the state and any victim," which shall "remain in force until the restitution order is paid in full." § 18-1.3-603(4)(a), C.R.8.2010. I write separately only to emphasize that the application of abatement ab initio leads to a paradoxical result in which defendant's criminal convietion is both vacated in its entirety and used as the basis for a final civil judgment.
The doctrine of abatement ab initio, which has been applied when a criminal defendant dies while an appeal of a conviction is pend
The supreme court, both in Overland Cotton and in Crowley, applied abatement ab initio based solely on its reasoning that "ilt is only the person adjudged guilty who can be punished, and a judgment cannot be enforced when the only subject-matter upon which it can operate has ceased to exist." Overland Cotton,
As the majority points out, however, the legislature has significantly altered the interests involved in a criminal conviction by enacting provisions for restitution of crime vie-tims. Restitution, in the form of a civil judgment, creates an interest in the convietion beyond that of punishment. The victim now has an interest in being made whole through the repayment of losses resulting from the criminal act. See § 18-1.3-608, C.R.S.2010.
Although the majority relies on the due process reasoning in People v. Valdes,
Further, citing People v. Pagan,
I therefore concur in the judgment.
