ORDER REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED WITH ■ DIRECTIONS
Opinion by
¶-1 Defendant, Louis-Madden, appeals'the district court’s order denying his request for a refund of restitution. For the reasons set forth in People v. Nelson,
I. Background
¶2 Madden was convicted of attempted patronizing a prostituted child and attempted third degree sexual assault by force, and he was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $910. The supreme court ultimately reversed the conviction for attempted patronizing a prostituted child but upheld the attempted third degree sexual- assault conviction. People v. Madden,
¶3 Thereafter, Madden sought relief .pursuant to Crim. P. 35(e), arguing that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective. The postconviction court granted -Madden’s motion, vacated his- remaining conviction, and ordered the prosecution to advise the court within thirty days whether it intended to retry Madden. The prosecution advised the court- that it would not appeal the postconvietion court’s order or retry the case.
¶ 4 Madden then moved for a refund of the fees and costs, including the restitution, that he paid pursuant to his now vacated conviction. The postconviction court conducted a hearing on this motion and ordered a, refund of all monies paid except for the restitution. Although the court expressly recognized that there was no longer any conviction, it stated that it could not see requiring the victim to have to pay anything back just because Madden’s attorney was ineffective. In the court’s view, “[i]t wasn’t anything that [the victim] did wrong.”
¶ 5 Madden now appeals.
II. Discussion
¶ 6 In Nelson, ¶ 1, decided today, we held that a defendant whose conviction is overturned on appeal is entitled to seek a refund .of the restitution paid in connection with the overturned conviction when the People fail to prove on remand the defendant’s guilt of the charged..crimes beyond a reasonable doubt (e.g., due to a subsequent acquittal or a decision not to retry the defendant). 'We further held that-such a defendant may seek the refund of restitution from the state in. his or her criminal ease without.having to file a separate proceeding. Id. ■
¶ 7 Applying that reasoning here, we conclude that Madden is entitled to a refund of the restitution that he paid in connection with his now overturned conviction and that he may seek a refund by filing a motion in this case.
¶ 8 In reaching this conclusion, we acknowledge that at least one court has held that a refund of restitution is inappropriate when a conviction was affirmed on direct appeal but all remaining charges were later
¶ 9 We are not persuaded that we should adopt a rule that so distinguishes between cases in which a defendant is retried and acquitted after a reversal' on appeal and those in which a conviction is ultimately nullified in the context of 'a collateral attack on that conviction. Such a distinction would rest the pertinent inquiry on whether the state had acted wrongfully, In our view, however, the proper focus should be on re-toning the defendant to the status quo ante. See Cooper v. Gordon,
¶ 10 We likewise are not persuaded by the People’s assertion that because Madden was never exonerated, this case is analogous to the division’s decision in People v. Daly,
¶ 11 Here, in contrast, Madden’s conviction was vacated in postconyiction proceedings, and the prosecution chose not to appeal the postconviction order or to retry the ease. Thus, the prosecution did not ultimately prove Madden’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and as a result, there is, no conviction to which restitution could properly be tied. See Nelson, ¶ 12 (noting that restitution must be tied to a valid, conviction). In these circumstances, we conclude that the restitution order cannot stand. See id. Indeed, to hold otherwise would allow a prosecutor to preserve an unfounded restitution award merely by choosing not to retry a case in which the judgment was invalidated on appeal or in postconviction proceedings, subject to retrial. In our view, such a scenario would be absurd, and, thus, we cannot countenance it.
-¶ 12 Accordingly, we conclude that Madden is entitled to a refund of the restitution that he paid in connection with his now overturned conviction. We again note, however,
III. Conclusion and Remand Order
¶ 13 For these reasons, the order is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court to award Madden a refund of the restitution that he paid in this case.
