Case Information
*1
T HE U TAH C OURT OF A PPEALS
S TATE OF U TAH , Appellee, v.
D ARRON L AVEN B ECKER Appellant.
Memorandum Decision No. 20131151-CA Filed December 24, 2015 Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Ann Boyden No. 131902981 Debra M. Nelson and Lacey C. Singleton, Attorneys for Appellant
Sean D. Reyes and Tera J. Peterson, Attorneys for Appellee
J UDGE S TEPHEN L. R OTH authored this Memorandum Decision, in which J UDGES M ICHELE M. C HRISTIANSEN and J OHN A. P EARCE
concurred.
ROTH, Judge: Darron Laven Becker appeals an order of restitution. We
dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Becker was charged with third degree felony aggravated
assault based on allegations that he had attacked and struck his neighbor. Becker entered into a plea-in-abeyance agreement on a reduced charge of class A misdemeanor attempted aggravated assault. The agreement described the factual basis for the assault to be that ‚on or about March 2, 2013, . . . Becker attempted to hit his neighbor with the handle of a shovel during an argument regarding loose dogs.‛ Among other things, the plea agreement required Becker to pay restitution for damages suffered by the neighbor. The parties agreed to reserve the amount of restitution for a later hearing. The district court accepted the plea and held it in abeyance for twenty-four months. It also ordered the State to submit documentation supporting an order of restitution within ninety days. Two months later, the State filed a motion for restitution,
to which it attached a ‚Restitution/Subrogation Notice‛ from the Utah Office for Victims of Crime (OVC). The notice listed Becker as the defendant and identified the date, location, and type of crime. It then stated that OVC had paid the neighbor $663.01 to replace a ‚Medically Necessary Device‛ and that OVC requested reimbursement for that pay-out. Attached to the notice was a list of payments indicating that OVC had paid the neighbor $39 for a ‚Medically Necessary Device‛ received on March 4, 2013, and $624.01 for a ‚Medically Necessary Device‛ received on March 6, 2013. No other documentation or description of the damages was included with the motion for restitution. Becker objected to the motion, arguing that the documentation was insufficient to support the requested restitution. The court set the matter for a restitution hearing. At the hearing, the State explained to the court that the
medically necessary devices listed in OVC’s notice appeared to be for an eye exam and eyeglasses, respectively. In support, the State presented a handwritten document submitted by the neighbor. The document, which was addressed to the prosecutor, identified Becker’s case number and then listed two categories of ‚Monetary Damages‛: $39 for an eye exam and $624 for eyeglasses. [1] After the State represented that OVC had 1. These figures total $663, and the breakdown very nearly aligns with OVC’s itemization of the medically necessary devices. It is not apparent why OVC paid an additional $0.01 on the eyeglasses.
paid the claim ‚just based on *the handwritten documentation before the court+ in conjunction with the police report,‛ Becker ‚strenuously object*ed+,‛ arguing that restitution, whether paid by OVC or not, could not be ‚based on a handwritten piece of notebook paper.‛ Accordingly, Becker argued that there was not ‚enough information right now . . . [to] know what exactly this claim was‛ and how it related to his attempted aggravated assault charge.
¶5 Although the district court expressed doubt that the State would be able to produce more restitution information, it agreed to set another restitution hearing six weeks later ‚to give *the parties] some time to see if in fact [the OVC payment] is not what it claims to be.‛ The court explained that unless Becker came up with something that undercut OVC’s decision to reimburse the neighbor, it planned to order restitution in the amount of $663.01. By the time of the second restitution hearing, the State
had not received any further documentation. Over Becker’s objection that there was insufficient evidence to find that the ‚damage was directly caused by Mr. Becker’s criminal conduct,‛ the court determined that the documentation included ‚sufficient foundation and nexus‛ between the requested damages and the criminal conduct. Accordingly, the court ordered Becker to pay restitution in the amount of $663.01 plus interest. Becker appeals. As a threshold matter, we must determine whether we
have jurisdiction to consider Becker’s appeal.
See Robinson v.
Baggett
,
this court decided
State v. Mooers
, 2015 UT App 266,
petition for
cert. filed
, Dec. 2, 2015 (No. 20150996).
Mooers
held that we lack
jurisdiction to consider appeals regarding restitution orders
under the Crime Victims Restitution Act (the Act) when a
defendant appeals that restitution order during the plea-in-
abeyance period.
Id.
¶ 19;
see also
Utah Code Ann. §§ 77-38a-101
to -601 (LexisNexis 2012). In
Mooers
, the defendant appealed a
trial court’s determination that all of the ordered restitution fell
within the scope of amounts recoverable, contending that over
$1,000 of the ordered restitution monies did not constitute
‚pecuniary damages‛ under the Act.
Mooers
, 2015 UT App 266,
¶¶ 5–6;
see also
Utah Code Ann. § 77-38a-102(6). The defendant
in filed his appeal while his plea-in-abeyance
probationary period was still in effect. ,
prior case law, analyzed the plea-in-abeyance statute and
the Act in light of relevant precedent, and we are bound to
follow as a matter of stare decisis.
See State v. Thurman
846 P.2d 1256, 1269 (Utah 1993) (‚*S+tare decisis has equal
application when one panel of a multi-panel appellate court is
faced with a prior decision of a different panel.‛);
id.
(stating that
horizontal stare decisis requires that ‚the first decision by a court
on a particular question of law governs later decisions by the
same court‛);
State v. Tenorio
,
challenge a restitution order in the context of a plea in abeyance
is not left entirely without options. He or she may seek
interlocutory review pursuant to rule 5 of the Utah Rules of
Appellate Procedure or file a petition for extraordinary relief
under rule 65B of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.
[2]
We
recognize that both these avenues of relief are discretionary and
may not be had as a matter of right. However, as points
out, in the absence of a final, appealable order, these avenues
place the burden on the defendant to show that ‚‘review prior to
the full adjudication of the case is justified or that the order will
escape review altogether if an appeal is not allowed.’‛ 2015 UT App 266, ¶ 18 (quoting
Tyler v. Department of Human
Servs.
,
2.
Mooers
also noted that rule 54(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil
Procedure may provide another possible avenue of relief but
that rule 54(b) did not appear to apply to the circumstances in
that case.
See State v. Mooers
,
