STATE OF MONTANA, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. JERRY DANIELS, D.P.M., Defendant and Appellant.
No. 01-209.
SUPREME COURT OF MONTANA
Decided February 25, 2003.
Submitted on Briefs December 13, 2001.
2003 MT 30 | 314 Mont. 208 | 64 P.3d 1045
For Respondent: Hon. Mike McGrath, Montana Attorney General, Kathy Seeley and Barbara C. Harris, Assistant Attorneys General, Helena.
¶1 A jury in the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, found Jerry Daniels, D.P.M., guilty of felony theft of public assistance, and the District Court entered judgment against him. Daniels appeals. We affirm.
¶2 The issues are:
¶3 1. Whether Daniels was properly charged with theft under
¶4 2. Whether Daniels was properly charged and convicted under the definition of the offense in effect at the time he committed the crime.
¶5 In November of 1999, the State of Montana charged Daniels, a podiatrist practicing in Anaconda, Montana, with felony theft under
A person commits the offense of theft when the person purposely or knowingly obtains or exerts unauthorized control over any part of any public assistance provided under Title 52 or 53 by a state or county agency, regardless of the original source of assistance, by means of:
(a) a knowingly false statement, representation, or impersonation; or
(b) a fraudulent scheme or device.
At Daniels’ October 2000 trial, the State presented evidence that between January of 1996 and June of 1999, Daniels billed a number of his Medicaid-eligible patients for custom orthotic shoe inserts which he did not provide to the patients, but for which he claimed and obtained Medicaid reimbursement.
¶6 The jury found Daniels guilty of theft and, as part of a special verdict form, that the total amount Medicaid paid for the claims for which Daniels was guilty was over $500. The District Court deferred imposition of sentence for six years and ordered Daniels to pay restitution of $10,587.26 to the Medicaid program and $4,955 to the court for witness costs. Daniels appeals.
Issue 1
¶7 Was Daniels properly charged with theft under
¶8 Daniels contends he should have been charged with Medicaid fraud under
¶9 Daniels asserts this issue must be analyzed in accordance with the rules of statutory construction outlined in State ex rel. Holt v. District Court, 2000 MT 142, 300 Mont. 35, 3 P.3d 608. We disagree. As the dissent in Holt, ¶ 16, pointed out, the rules of construction outlined in that case are superfluous when statutory language is plain on its face. If the intent of the Legislature can be determined from the plain meaning of the words used, courts may not go further and apply other means of construction. Spoonheim v. Norwest Bank Montana, N.A. (1996), 277 Mont. 417, 420, 922 P.2d 528, 530.
¶10
¶11 Daniels points out that
Issue 2
¶12 Was Daniels properly charged and convicted under the definition of the offense in effect at the time he committed the crime?
¶13 The 1999 Montana Legislature amended
¶15 Daniels relies on State v. Wilson (1996), 279 Mont. 34, 926 P.2d 712, in his argument on this issue. In that case, we held that when a sentencing statute is repealed between the date a defendant commits an offense and the date the defendant is sentenced, the effect of the repeal lessens or ameliorates the defendant‘s punishment and the repealer contains no savings clause, the defendant is entitled to be sentenced according to the sentencing statute in effect on the date of sentencing. Wilson, 279 Mont. at 40, 926 P.2d at 716.
¶16 Value is an element of the offense of felony theft, and must be proven to support the charge. See State v. Furlong (1984), 213 Mont. 251, 255-56, 690 P.2d 986, 988. As a result, when the 1999 Legislature increased the value required to support a charge of felony theft, it changed the definition of the offense, not a sentencing statute. Therefore, Wilson does not control.
¶17 Persons alleged to have committed criminal offenses must be charged with violating the law in effect at the time the crime was committed. See State v. Cline (1976), 170 Mont. 520, 532, 555 P.2d 724, 732. Furthermore, a change in the definition of an offense does not affect acts committed prior to the effective date. “The repeal of any law creating a criminal offense does not constitute a bar to an indictment or information and the punishment of an act already committed in violation of the law so repealed unless the intention to bar such indictment or information and punishment is expressly declared in the repealing act.”
¶18 We hold that Daniels was properly charged and convicted under the definition of the offense of felony theft in effect at the time he committed the crime.
¶19 Affirmed.
CHIEF JUSTICE GRAY, JUSTICES TRIEWEILER, LEAPHART and RICE concur.
