FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The San Diego District Attorney filed an information alleging Hurtado committed three counts of vandalism over $400 ( Pen. Code,
Hurtado pled guilty to counts 4 and 5, admitted the gang enhancement for each count, and admitted the prior strike conviction. Hurtado also agreed to a Harvey
Hurtado opposed the amount of restitution the City requested, arguing in his restitution brief that the amount claimed by the City was not bаsed on the actual damages caused by Hurtado but instead, on a generalized and non-case specific restitution estimate. Specifically, he stated the $3.39 cost per square foot did not consider the specifics of Hurtado's graffiti, such as the method of creating the graffiti, the surface the graffiti was on, the materials used to abate, or the manpower used for abatement. Hurtado also maintained that the sole factor considered by the City's damage estimate was square footage, which was "highly subjective." Hurtado thus requested the court order restitution in the amount of $963.78 and submitted a chart explaining how he calculated the requested amount.
In response, the People filed a supplemental brief, arguing there was a sufficient factual nexus between the City's calculations and Hurtado's acts of graffiti.
The court subsequently held a restitution hearing. The People submitted on the preliminary hearing transcript, which the court took judicial notice of and admitted into еvidence.
Relevant here, P.H., a supervising management analyst for the City, testified at the preliminary hearing. He explained that graffiti on City property is abated by in-house utility workers while graffiti on private property is abated by Urban Corps, a nonprofit organization that had a contract with the
According to P.H., the City uses Sales Force, an app, to track all graffiti removed in San Diego. For each incident, the individual abating the graffiti uploads a photograph of the graffiti as well as the date, time, location, type of surface defaced, and the removal method. The individual also includes the total square footage of damage. The information contained in Sales Force is then entered into a graffiti tracking program сalled Graffiti Tracker. Graffiti Tracker can generate a "D.A. Report" that details all information about a specific graffiti incident. Additionally, the report includes the estimated cost of abatement for each incident, which is automatically calculated using a cost per square foot
For the 2016 fiscal year, the City's graffiti restitution cost per square foot for graffiti abatement was $3.39. P.H. calculated this amount by dividing the total expenses for the graffiti abatement program ($1.1 million) by the total square footage abated (332,000 square feet).
At the restitution hearing, Hurtado's counsel called P.H. as a witness. In addition to having P.H. repeat some of his preliminary hearing testimony, including reviewing the calculations that led to the $3.39 per square foot figure, counsel asked P.H. to specifically look at the incident of graffiti for count 3. In doing so, Hurtado's counsel referred P.H. to an email where P.H. was analyzing the specific cost of the abatement for count 3. In conducting that analysis, P.H. assumed the abatement would take two and a half to three and a half hours for the actual abatement. This assumption was based on P.H.'s discussion with the superintendent overseeing the graffiti abatement section for the City. P.H. also assumed that the abatement would require typical staffing; thus, he posited two utility workers would be used for the abatement, with one being paid $54 an hour and the other being paid $62 per
Hurtado's counsel asked P.H. to use the same method to estimate the cost to abate the graffiti underlying count 1, which was double the size as the graffiti in count 3. Under counsel's hypothetical, P.H. estimated the cost for count 1 to be $812.
Hurtado's counsel also called L.C., whо worked for Urban Corps, as a witness. She abated the graffiti underlying counts 1 and 2. Using a measuring reel, she measured
After the witnesses finished testifying, the court admitted into evidence a seven-page Graffiti Tracker D.A. Report of each alleged graffiti incident аttributable to Hurtado. The report listed the total restitution amount as $3,112.02, consisting of $1,444.14 to abate count 1, $474.60 to abate count 2, $847.50 to abate count 3, $84.75 to abate count 4, $135.60 to abate count 5, $40.68 to abate to count 6, and $84.75 to abate count 7. For each alleged incident, the report included a photograph of the graffiti, the square footage, the name of the person who completed the abatement, the date, and the time.
After the close of evidence, the People argued that the City's method of calculating the restitution amount did not run afoul of Luis M. , supra ,
Hurtado's counsel asserted that P.H. was not a graffiti abatement expert, noting that hе did not perform abatements or know the number of hours or equipment abatement required. Counsel further contended that the City's method of calculation violated the requirements set forth in Luis M. , supra ,
After considering the evidence and entertaining oral argument, the court stated:
"I'm not going to engage in any specific calculations. It's a fool's errand, in my opinion, to try to figure out exactly what was spent on a particular cleanup job when there are no invoices and this is all based on projections, estimates, and the like. [¶] I think it's important to remember that the essential law of restitution gives extremely broad almost unfettered discretion to courts to set restitution solong as there is a rational basis for that restitution order."
The court further explained:
"The essential purpose of restitution is for the court to attempt, as much as possible, to make the victim whole. Obviously the court is not interested in providing a windfall to any victim, but, on the other hand, the court has to make a reasonable attempt to restore whatever the victim has lost as a result of the defendant's crime. And it is-all this is because the defendant committed a crime."
"Square footage is one factor, but I can't say it's an irrational factor where it's impossible to calculate the exaсt cost of labor, the time it takes, the surface-I mean, there are so many variables involved in this type of remedial activity, it would be impossible in any given case absent specific invoices from contractors to calculate the exact amount of loss."
Ultimately, the court determined that Hurtado was to pay victim restitution in the amount of $3,000.
Hurtado timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
Under section 1202.4, subdivision (f), a restitution order "shall be of a dollar amount that is sufficient to fully reimburse the victim or victims for every determined economiс loss incurred as the result of the defendant's criminal conduct ...." It shall include payment for the value of damaged property, which, when repairs are made, shall be "the actual cost of repairing the property." (§ 1202.4, subd. (f)(3)(A).) The restitution statute expressly provides that a governmental entity may be entitled to restitution when it is responsible "for repairing, replacing, or restoring public or privately owned property that has been defaced with graffiti," when it has sustained an economic loss because of graffiti vandalism. (§ 1202.4, subd. (k)(5).)
Courts have broad discretion in fixing the amount of restitution, and they may use any rational method, provided it is reasonably calculated to make the victim whole. ( In re Dina V. (2007)
The California Supreme Court determined the restitution award "was not based on sufficient evidence that the amount of claimed loss was a result of [the minor's] conduct." ( Luis M. , supra ,
Contrary to the facts in Luis M. , in the instant action, the trial court's determination had "some factual nexus to the damage caused" by Hurtado's criminal acts. As the People point out, at the restitution hearing, they
In addition, our conclusion does not change when we consider Kyle T. In that case, the minor challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support his charge of felony vandalism, which required at least $400 in damage. ( Kyle T. , supra ,
However, the evidence relied upon the by People in Kyle T. was de minimis. In fact, the оnly evidence of damages was a police department "graffiti removal cost list." ( Kyle T. , supra ,
Although we find this case to be distinguishable from both Luis M. and Kyle T. , we conclude that the method used by the City to calculate victim restitution here compares favorably with the method that passed muster in Santori , supra ,
The defendant contended that the evidence underlying the order was insufficient to establish the "factual nexus" required
In the instant action, the calculation used by the City is like the one used in Santori . Here, the City established the average cost per square foot to abate graffiti and multiplied that number by the total square footage of Hurtado's incidents of graffiti. This is similar to the method the court found sufficient in Santori , wherein the city estimated that each incident of graffiti would require 100 minutes to abate and then multiplied the 32 incidents by the 100 minutes and by the per-minute cost of abatement to arrive at an estimated restitution amount.
Nevertheless, Hurtado asserts that we should not follow Santori , supra ,
DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed.
WE CONCUR:
BENKE, Acting P. J.
DATO, J.
Notes
Statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
People v. Harvey (1979)
A portion of Hurtado's prison sentence arises from another case (No. SCD276119). The facts and underlying crime of that case are not relevant here.
P.H. testified that the amount of restitution calculated was low because the City used $3.39 per square foot based on the 2016 fiscal year. However, most of Hurtado's incidents of graffiti occurred in 2017 wherein the cost per square foot was $5.01.
This total was less than the $847.50 amount calculated based on the $3.39 per square foot formula for count 3. However, P.H. stated that the $456 amount did not consider other costs, like running the dispatch center and other overhead. Nor did it consider whether the incident required multiple coats of paint, additional chemicals, or more time beсause of a hard to reach location. Additionally, P.H. stated that the analysis of the cost of abatement for graffiti for count 3 was focused on whether the graffiti resulted in more than $400 in damage to warrant a felony charge as opposed to calculating a restitution amount.
The Graffiti Tracker D.A. Report listed a restitution amount of $1,444.14 to abate the graffiti for count 1.
Additionally, the factors Hurtado's counsel asked P.H. to use to create an alternative calculation of the cost of abatement appeared to be based on abatement tasks completed by the City. Here, Urban Corps abated Hurtado's incidents of graffiti.
