Ruth M. Cheeney appeals from the district court’s order of restitution and judgments of restitution. For the reasons set forth below, we vacate the judgments of restitution in favor of Wells Fargo Bank and Stuart Allan and Associates and remand for entry of an amended judgment of restitution payable to the direct victim of Cheeney’s crime.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
As an employee at a doctor’s office, Cheeney was responsible for billing and deposits, including deposits of checks received for the doctor’s services, into his account at Wells Fargo Bank. When making the deposits at Wells Fargo, Cheeney would apparently deposit all checks but one, instructing the teller that one check needed to be cashed for use at the doctor’s office. Cheeney would keep the cash. In August 2003, the doctor terminated Cheeney’s employment for allegedly procuring fraudulent prescriptions and for irregularities with office petty cash. The doctor soon thereafter discovered that substantial amounts of money were missing. Cheeney allegedly embezzled over $200,000 between January 2000 and August 2003.
Thereafter, Wells Fargo entered into a settlement agreement with the doctor, whereby the bank paid the doctor $157,500 for losses he incurred as a result of Cheeney’s theft. Additionally, Safeco Insurance Company apparently paid the doctor $15,000 for his loss. Stuart Allan and Associates, a collection agency, began pursuing the $15,000 from Cheeney on behalf of the insurance company.
The state charged Cheeney with grand theft. I.C. §§ 18-2403(2)(b) and 18-2407(1)(b)(8). Cheeney pled guilty, and the *296 state dismissed charges filed in a separate criminal case. The district court sentenced Cheeney to a unified term of seven years, with a minimum period of confinement of three years, and ordered restitution in the amount of $232,788.49. The district court subsequently suspended Cheeney’s sentence and placed her on probation for seven years. Cheeney objected to the order of restitution. At a hearing on Cheeney’s objection, Cheeney stipulated to $220,589.55 being the proper amount of restitution but argued that the bank and the collection agency were not entitled to restitution. The district court entered an order for restitution and separate judgments in favor of the doctor for $48,089.55, Wells Fargo Bank for $157,500, and Stuart Allan for $15,000. Cheeney appeals the order of restitution and the judgments in favor of Wells Fargo and Stuart Allan.
II.
ANALYSIS
Cheeney does not dispute that the doctor was authorized to receive restitution. Cheeney disputes the district court’s ruling and the state’s argument on appeal that the bank and the insurance company’s collection agency were also authorized to receive restitution.
Orders for the payment of restitution to crime victims are governed by I.C. § 19-5304.
State v. Taie,
The present case requires us to determine whether the bank and the insurance company’s collection agency fall within the statutory definition of “victims” who are authorized to receive restitution. This Court addressed this issue in
State v. Gardiner,
This Court exercises free review over the application and construction of statutes.
State v. Reyes,
Section 19-5304(1)(e)(iv) unambiguously includes in the definition of victim any person or entity who suffers economic loss because such person or entity has made payments to or on behalf of a directly-injured victim pursuant to a contract. A plain reading therefore includes third parties who incurred a loss pursuant to a contractual obligation to make payments to or on behalf of a directly-injured victim. Without such a contractual obligation, the third party is not a victim as defined in Section 19-5304(1)(e)(iv). Such third-party victims could include insurance companies or any other party that makes payments to or on behalf of the directly-injured victim pursuant to a contract. The determination of whether payments were made pursuant to a contract is a question of fact for the trial court. Each party has the right to present evidence on whether a person or entity qualifies as a victim, and the court may consider such hearsay as may be contained in the presentence report (PSI), victim impact statement, or otherwise provided to the court.
See
I.C. § 19-5304(6). On appeal, factual findings in ordering restitution will not be disturbed if supported by substantial evidence.
See Hamilton,
Nothing in Section 19-5304 requires that the directly-injured victim’s award must be reduced by amounts paid to him or her by any third party who does not qualify as a victim under the statute. As it did at the time of the
Gardiner
decision, Section 19-5304(2) still provides that the existence of an insurance policy covering the victim’s loss does not absolve a defendant of the obligation to pay restitution. We conclude that, in amending Section 19-5304, the legislature did not intend to supersede the portion of the
Gardiner
decision holding that the district court could award the directly-injured victim the full amount of the economic loss even though a third party had already paid the directly-injured victim for the loss.
See id.,
This Court has relied on Section 19-5304(l)(e)(iv) to hold that insurance companies that paid benefits for damage inflicted by a defendant’s criminal actions were victims entitled to recover their economic loss.
See Taie,
In the present case, Cheeney argues that the state did not present sufficient evidence that Wells Fargo or Safeco were victims who made their payments to the doctor because of contractual obligations requiring them to do so. The district court found, in a written order on restitution, that the doctor carried a business insurance policy with Safe-co and that the insurance company subsequently contracted with Stuart Allan to collect the $15,000 payment from Cheeney. If the district court’s findings were supported by substantial evidence, Safeco could be a victim because the district court found that Safeco paid the doctor pursuant to a contract — an insurance policy. However, the district court did not find, and the state does not argue, that the collection agency paid the doctor $15,000. The district court could therefore order restitution to be paid directly to Stuart Allan only if Section 19-5304 authorizes payment of restitution to be made to an agent of a person or entity that qualifies as a victim. We need not decide whether the district court may award restitution to Stuart Allan, as Safeco’s agent, because the record before us does not contain substantial evidence of an insurance contract to qualify Safeco as a victim. The only evidence pertinent to Safeco is a collection letter to Cheeney from Stuart Allan for $15,000. The letter indicates that Safeco is Stuart Allan’s client, but it makes no reference to an insurance policy or a payment from Safeco to the doctor.
Likewise, we need not determine whether the district court made a finding that Wells Fargo made its payment pursuant to a contract because the record before us does not support such a finding. The record includes a settlement agreement between Wells Fargo and the doctor, a letter from the bank’s counsel regarding the settlement agreement, and a copy of a check for $157,500 from the bank to the doctor. These exhibits refer to an agreement to settle an account dispute, but the exhibits do not indicate that the dispute arose from a contract between the bank and the doctor. Based on the evidence before us, the dispute could have arisen, as Cheeney asserts it did, from an allegation that the bank acted negligently rather than from a contractual obligation the bank had to the doctor. We are therefore not persuaded by the state’s argument that evidence of the settlement agreement qualifies as evidence that the $157,500 payment was made pursuant to a contract.
The state argues that it provided Cheeney with a three-inch-thick stack of documents regarding restitution, which included information establishing that the payments made by Wells Fargo and Safeco were made pursuant to contracts with the doctor. The state does not show, however, that this three-inchthiek stack of documents was ever presented to the district court and it is not included in the record before us. The district court therefore could not rely upon it. The state also cites several pages from the PSI. None of the portions of the PSI cited by the state refer to Safeco or Stuart Allan. The PSI indicates that Cheeney embezzled the money at the bank, but it does not indicate that the bank paid the doctor pursuant to a contract.
The transcript from the restitution hearing indicates that the state did not present any testimony or evidence during the hearing. At the hearing, however, the doctor and the prosecutor represented that the doctor had an insurance policy with Safeco.
THE COURT: Safeco Insurance was evidently the insurance provider for [the doctor], some kind of business operation policy.
[DOCTOR]: That’s correct, Your Honor.
[PROSECUTOR]: Yes, Your Honor.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, I’m going to object to people in the gallery making comments to the court.
*299 THE COURT: That’s fine....
The doctor was not under oath when he responded to the district court. Pursuant to Section 19-5804(6), the court may consider such hearsay as may be contained in the PSI, victim impact statement, or otherwise provided to the court. Section 19-5304(6) therefore sets a lower standard than the rules of evidence that would apply to a criminal trial. If the doctor had indicated that he had an insurance policy with Safeco while testifying under oath at the restitution hearing or in his victim impact statement in the PSI, the district court could have relied upon his statement as evidence. However, the doctor’s unsolicited comment while he was not under oath and the prosecutor’s unsupported representations cannot be relied upon as evidence of the existence of a contract, even under the low evidentiary standard established in Section 19-5304(6).
In sum, the record is devoid of any evidence, hearsay or otherwise, that Wells Fargo and Safeco made payments pursuant to contractual obligations to the doctor. Section 19-5304(1)(e)(iv) requires evidence of a contractual obligation before the district court may enter an order of restitution and judgment for a third-party victim that incurred a loss by making payments to a directly-injured victim. Courts of criminal jurisdiction have no power to direct restitution to a crime victim in the absence of a statutory provision authorizing such restitution.
See Richmond,
Cheeney, however, does not gain a windfall due to the doctor’s foresight and diligence in securing substantial compensation for his loss. Cheeney stipulated that the proper amount of restitution was $220,589.55. As noted above, nothing in Section 19-5304 limits the directly-injured victim’s award by amounts paid to him or her by any other third party who does not qualify as a victim under the statute. Indeed, in
Gardiner,
this Court held that the district court could award the directly-injured victim the full amount of the economic loss even though an insurance company had already paid the directly-injured victim for the loss.
See Gardiner,
III.
CONCLUSION
We hold that the district court erred by ordering Cheeney to pay restitution directly to Wells Fargo and Stuart Allan when the state failed to present substantial evidence that those parties incurred an economic loss pursuant to contracts with the doctor. We therefore reverse the district court’s order to the extent that it awarded restitution to the bank and collection agency and vacate the judgments of restitution for the bank and the collection agency. The district court was authorized, however, to order Cheeney to pay restitution in favor of the doctor for the entire amount of the economic loss to which Cheeney stipulated, $220,589.55. We therefore affirm the district court’s order to the extent that it awarded restitution to the doctor in the amount of $48,089.55. On remand, however, the district court is instructed to enter an amended order of restitution and enter an additional judgment for $172,500 in favor of the doctor.
Notes
. Cheeney’s reliance on
Gardiner
as authority establishing which persons or entities may be victims is therefore misplaced. This Court recognized the amendment to the definition of victim in a case not cited in Cheeney’s opening brief.
See Taie,
. It will be up to Wells Fargo and Safeco to work out with the doctor any reimbursement for the amounts they paid to the doctor.
See Gardiner,
