STATE of Iowa, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Kendall Chavez JOHNSON, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 15-2101.
Court of Appeals of Iowa.
Sept. 14, 2016.
887 N.W.2d 178
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Elisabeth Reynoldson, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
DOYLE, Judge.
Kendall Johnson appeals from the sentence imposed following his guilty pleas to the charges of second-degree burglary and assault while displaying a dangerous weapon. He argues the district court imposed an illegal sentence by assessing court costs for counts dismissed under the plea agreement. The sentencing order erroneously states that the costs of the dismissed counts are assessed to Johnson. We vacate that portion of the sentencing order assessing court costs against Johnson for the dismissed counts and remand for entry of a corrected sentencing order assessing Johnson with the appropriate amount of court costs. Johnson also argues the district court erred in failing to inquire about his ability to pay before imposing restitution. We agree and vacate that portion of the sentence concerning court costs and remand for a determination of Johnson‘s reasonability to pay.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
In August 2015, Johnson was charged by trial information in six separate counts with first-degree burglary, assault while displaying a dangerous weapon, false imprisonment, interference with official acts, and two counts of child endangerment. In exchange for Johnson‘s agreement to plead guilty to a lesser-included offense of second-degree burglary and the assault-while-displaying-a-dangerous-weapon charge, the State agreed to dismiss the remaining charges. In October 2015, Johnson filed a waiver of rights and written guilty plea, and appeared before the district court for a plea colloquy. The court accepted the guilty pleas.
Johnson was sentenced the following month. In its written sentencing order, the district court imposed prison sentences of no more than ten years on the burglary charge and no more than two years on the assault charge. The court ordered Johnson to pay fines on both charges, “together with all applicable costs and surcharges.” The court also ordered Johnson to “pay victim restitution, if any,” “all applicable surcharges and fees,” and “court costs assessed by the Clerk of Court, including any costs accruing after this date.” The sentencing order also states: “The court has reviewed the documentation surrounding [Johnson]‘s financial circumstances and finds [Johnson] is reasonably able to pay $100.00 for the expense of court-appointed counsel.” Finally, the court dismissed the remaining charges “with costs assessed to [Johnson].”1 Thereafter, Johnson appealed.
II. Assessment of Costs.
Because his plea agreement is silent as to the question of court costs, Johnson contends the court entered an illegal sentence by requiring him to pay court costs associated with the dismissed counts, and requests that portion of the sentencing order be vacated and the case be remanded for a corrected sentencing order.2 The
“Criminal restitution is a creature of statute.” State v. Watson, 795 N.W.2d 94, 95 (Iowa Ct.App.2011).
In cases such as this—where a defendant has been charged in one trial information with multiple criminal violations, pled guilty to some charges, and had others dismissed—there are three categories of costs: (1) those clearly attributable to the charges on which the defendant is convicted, (2) those clearly attributable to dismissed charges, and (3) those not clearly associated with any single charge. See id. A defendant may be assessed costs clearly attributable to the charges on which the defendant is convicted but may not be assessed costs clearly attributable to dismissed charges. See id. “Fees and costs not clearly associated with any single
At the sentencing hearing, the court asked if there was any agreement that Johnson pay costs associated with the dismissed counts, acknowledging “[t]here may not be any [such costs].” The court noted, “There‘s just been some case law where costs have been assessed where it hasn‘t been a part of the agreement and I don‘t want to run afoul of the case law.” Defense counsel noted that “the dismissed counts are all within the same Trial Information, so obviously court costs for Counts One and Two are assessed against [Johnson]. There‘s no way of bifurcating or not having those assessed.... There‘s no additional cost.” Defense counsel stated there was no agreement to pay any costs beyond those associated with the counts for which Johnson was convicted. The prosecutor agreed. Inexplicably, the sentencing order erroneously states that the dismissed counts are dismissed “with costs assessed to [Johnson].”
The fact that some counts were dismissed does not automatically establish that a part of the assessed court costs are attributable to the dismissed counts. Here, the record shows just the opposite. The combined general docket report prepared by the district clerk of court on December 10, 2015, two days after Johnson filed his notice of appeal, shows a total of $210 in court costs accrued as of that date.3 These costs would have been the same even had the State not charged Johnson with the counts later dismissed. Moreover, the record shows none of the assessed charges are clearly attributable or discrete to the dismissed counts. We therefore conclude the total court costs are clearly attributable to the counts to which Johnson pled guilty and, therefore, fully assessable to him.4
Additionally, it is telling that Johnson makes no attempt to demonstrate that any of the taxed court costs in this case are not clearly attributable to the charges to which he pled guilty; in fact, Johnson does not even claim he was over-assessed court costs. In this illegal sentence claim, it is up to Johnson to establish an over-assessment of court costs. He has failed to do so.
Although a remand for a corrected order in this case would appear to only elevate form over substance as it would have no practical effect upon Johnson since the assessed court costs will remain the same, we remand for a corrected sentencing order because we are already remanding the case on the ability-to-pay issue. We therefore vacate that portion of the sentencing order assessing court costs against Johnson for the dismissed counts, and we remand for entry of a corrected sentencing
III. Ability to Pay Restitution.
Johnson also appeals the portion of his sentence requiring him to make restitution, arguing the court erred in assessing restitution without determining his reasonable ability to pay. Specifically, he argues,
The sentence in the instant matter is illegal by virtue of the fact that Mr. Johnson was ordered to pay $1000.00 (Count I) and $625.00 (Count II), surcharges and court costs, $100 for court-appointed counsel, and costs for the dismissed counts (Counts II-V) without any showing that he had the reasonable ability to repay those obligations.
The court ordered Johnson “to pay a fine in the amount of $1000.00 (Count One) and $625.00 (Count Two), together with all applicable costs and surcharges.” The sentencing order further provided that Johnson
shall pay victim restitution, if any, in the amount(s) set forth in the Statement(s) of Pecuniary Damages previously filed or to be filed/amended by the State within [thirty] days from today‘s date; the fine(s), plus all applicable surcharges and fees; and court costs as assessed by the clerk of court, including any costs accruing after this date. The court has reviewed the documentation surrounding [Johnson]‘s financial circumstances and finds [Johnson] is reasonably able to pay $100.00 for the expense of court-appointed counsel.
The sentencing order stated, “The financial obligations imposed by this order are due today.”
Johnson‘s argument focuses on imposition of victim restitution, fines, surcharges, court costs, and attorney fees. In this case, we find the sentencing order contained the plan of restitution—the total amount of restitution owed by Johnson to his court-appointed attorney and court costs, as reflected on the clerk of court‘s combined general docket report.5 The district court‘s inclusion of an established due date—“financial obligations imposed by this order are due today“—constituted a restitution plan of payment. The State argues the issue of Johnson‘s ability to pay is not directly appealable. We disagree. It was proper for Johnson to raise the issue on direct appeal because, when the plan of restitution and restitution plan of payment are part of a sentencing order, a defendant has the right to direct appeal. See State v. Kurtz, 878 N.W.2d 469, 472 (Iowa Ct.App.2016); see also State v. Tanner, No. 14-1963, 2016 WL 4384468, at *5 (Iowa Ct.App. Aug. 17, 2016). “We con-
Generally, “restitution ordered to the victim is made without regard to the defendant‘s ability to pay.” Wagner, 484 N.W.2d at 215-16; see also
“Thus, before ordering payment for court-appointed attorney fees and court costs, the court must consider the defendant‘s ability to pay.” Kurtz, 878 N.W.2d at 473. Although the sentencing court did state Johnson was reasonably able to pay $100 of his court-appointed attorney fees, the record is silent as to whether the court considered Johnson‘s ability to pay the court-ordered court costs. Because we cannot determine whether the court reasonably exercised its discretion when it ordered restitution for court costs, we vacate that portion of the sentence and remand for a determination of Johnson‘s reasonable ability to pay.
SENTENCE VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
RICK L. DOYLE
JUDGE, IOWA COURT OF APPEALS
