For her financial abuse of an elderly man and her fraudulent use of bank cards that she obtained under his name, defendant pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated identity theft, ORS 165.803, and one count of first-degree criminal mistreatment, ORS 163.205. The trial court sentenced her to pay a compensatory fine in the amount of $156,565.82 and to a term of incarceration and other monetary obligations. On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s imposition of the compensatory fine. She argues that the trial court erred in imposing a compensatory fine for losses incurred outside the time period covered by her guilty plea, and in imposing a fine that exceeds the statutory maximum fine for first-degree criminal mistreatment. We review for legal error, State v. Neese,
The relevant facts are largely procedural and not disputed on appeal. As the state explained at defendant’s plea hearing, the factual basis for defendant’s plea is as follows. In late 2011, defendant, along with codefendant Kelly Dresser, approached O, an elderly man with dementia, in a Fred Meyer parking lot after witnessing him looking for his car. Defendant and Dresser obtained O’s phone number and became friendly with him. They eventually moved into his home and took over his care, including payment of his bills. They also began to use his money for their own purposes, filling out and cashing his checks—some of which O signed, and some of which defendant and Dresser forged. Defendant and Dresser also obtained and used bank cards under O’s name, without his understanding or consent. In all, defendant and Dresser amassed $156,565.82 in debt in O’s name. He lost $110,130.91 personally, and four different banks reported the remainder as losses that they had written off as resulting from fraud. Defendant and Dresser’s appropriation of O’s money and identification began around October 2011, and ended in October 2013 when they were arrested and each charged with one count of criminal mistreatment in the first degree, one count of aggravated theft in the first degree, and two counts of aggravated identity theft.
After the subsequent hearing, the court issued a letter opinion in which it found that the conduct of defendant
Defendant appeals, challenging the compensatory fine on two grounds. In her first assignment of error, she argues that the trial court erred in awarding a compensatory fine exceeding the damages incurred by O and the banks within the date range set out by her guilty plea. Specifically, she contends that the fine imposed was in excess of that which is permissible, because not all of the fine amount stemmed from the conduct to which defendant admitted when she entered her guilty pleas. In other words, in defendant’s view, a fine designated as compensatory cannot exceed the economic losses in fact caused by the specific conduct to which defendant admitted. In her second assignment of error, defendant contends that the court plainly erred by imposing a compensatory fine on Count 1 that exceeds the statutory maximum fine permitted for a Class C felony.
Defendant’s first assignment of error misapprehends the operation of the compensatory fine statute. Under ORS 161.625, a sentencing court is authorized to impose a fine upon a defendant as penalty for the commission of classified felonies. ORS 137.101, in turn, authorizes a sentencing court to direct that some or all of that fine money be
In other words, ORS 137.101 is simply a distribution mechanism that permits a sentencing court to redirect money, which ordinarily would be paid to the state, to certain private parties. Although a sentencing court’s authority to redirect that money is not unlimited, the amount of the compensatory fine need not be calibrated to—or limited to— the economic damages
“[t]he only requirements that must be met for a trial court to impose a compensatory fine are that the injured victim have a remedy by civil action for the injuries that he or she suffered as a result of defendant’s crime and that punitive damages have not been previously decided in a civil case arising out of the same act and transaction.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, those minimal requirements were met. It is not disputed that defendant’s conduct caused O and the banks to suffer economic damages that they could seek to recover from defendant in a civil action, and it is not disputed that the issue of punitive damages for defendant’s conduct has not previously been decided in a civil case. Thus, under
Turning to defendant’s second assignment of error, the issue is whether the trial court erred when it imposed a total fine in excess of the statutory maximum for defendant’s conviction of criminal mistreatment. Because defendant did not raise this issue below, she asks that we review for plain error and exercise our discretion to correct the alleged error. As we explain, we agree with defendant that the alleged error is plain, but we decline to exercise our discretion to correct the error.
In order for this court to reach an unpreserved assignment of error, that error “must be one of law; * * * must be apparent, i.e., the point must be obvious, not reasonably in dispute; and * * * must appear on the face of the record, i.e., the reviewing court must not need to go outside the record to identify the error or choose between competing inferences, and the facts constituting the error must be irrefutable.” Ailes v. Portland Meadows, Inc.,
The assigned error in question involves statutory máximums for penalty fines, which are established by ORS 161.625. There are two provisions under which a court can ascertain the statutory maximum for a penalty fine imposed for a classified felony. Under ORS 161.625(1), a court can look to the classification of the crime; a Class B felony can result in a fine of up to $250,000, and a Class C felony fine can rise to $125,000. Alternatively, a court can rely on ORS 161.625(3), which establishes that, “[i]f a person has gained money or property through the commission of a felony, then upon conviction thereof the court *** may sentence the defendant to pay an amount, fixed by the court, not
In this case, defendant pleaded guilty to a Class B felony (Count 4) and a Class C felony (Count 1). The court sentenced defendant to pay a fine of $156,565.82, and the case register reflects that the fine was assigned to defendant’s conviction for the Class C felony. That amount plainly exceeds the $125,000 maximum permitted by ORS 161.625(1). Careful consideration of the damages incurred within the date range of defendant’s guilty plea—relevant here, unlike within the first assignment of error—reveals that those losses amount to $43,195.49.
The next question for us is “whether to exercise our discretion to correct the error.” State v. Gray,
While the absence of evidence of certain factors— evidence that defendant’s failure to object to the sentence was a strategic choice, for example, or that defendant even
In this case, it is those considerations—the need for efficiency and the lack of prejudice to defendant—that lead us to decline to exercise our discretion to correct the trial court’s error in imposing the compensatory fine on Count 1.
Not only could the trial court sentence defendant to the same fine on remand, but it would almost certainly do so. Extensive evidence was presented during the compensatory fine hearing to establish the losses sustained by O and relevant financial institutions. In the trial court’s letter opinion assessing the fine, the court tied the fine amount to victims’ losses, noting that
“ [t]he evidence was overwhelming that the charges incurred and monies spent were without permission of [O], and were not for his benefit. On the contrary, the expenses caused him economic harm, and the overall pattern of behavior of the defendants caused emotional harm to [O], and interfered with his family relationships.”
As a result, the court awarded the exact amount requested by the state. Under those circumstances, we have no doubt that a remand for resentencing ultimately would not result in a change in the fine that the court imposed, and that the trial court would simply assign the fine to the conviction on which it was authorized or otherwise allocate it between defendant’s two convictions.
One other point bears mentioning. On this record, it appears to us that the error is clerical in nature. As noted, neither the trial court’s letter opinion nor its supplemental judgment assigned the compensatory fine to one or the other of defendant’s convictions, and nothing in the record suggests that the court intended the fine to attach to the conviction for which it was not authorized rather than to the conviction for which it was authorized. Rather, it appears that the clerk simply erroneously docketed the fine as part of defendant’s sentence on the wrong conviction. In terms of judicial efficiency, we think this sort of docketing error
Affirmed.
Notes
ORS 137.101(1) provides:
“Whenever the court imposes a fine as penalty for the commission of a crime resulting in injury for which the person injured by the act constituting the crime has a remedy by civil action, unless the issue of punitive damages has been previously decided on a civil case arising out of the same act and transaction, the court may order that the defendant pay any portion of the fine separately to the clerk of the court as compensatory fines in the case. The clerk shall pay over to the injured victim or victims, as directed in the court’s order, moneys paid to the court as compensatory fines under this subsection. This section shall be liberally construed in favor of victims.”
Although the court referred to the later hearing as a “restitution” hearing, at the initial plea hearing, the court informed the parties that its intention was to use the compensatory fine mechanism, rather than restitution, to provide redress to the victims. The court stated:
“It would be this Court’s intention that once you got a certain figure involved, because the parties are agreeing that the money that has already been forfeited, because of the repeated violations over the release agreements, I assume you guys are asking the Court to reinstate those, and it would be this Court’s *** recommendation [to the presiding judge] that those are reinstated, that once a figure is determined as far as restitution goes, that it end up being a compensatory fine. And that then these funds are used to pay the compensatory fine. It’d be better for the victim to get this money sooner than later, in other words, while he is still alive.”
Neither defendant nor the state objected to the trial court’s use of this procedure to impose a compensatory fine and the correctness of that procedure is not at issue in this appeal. Notwithstanding the court’s stated intention to use the compensatory fine mechanism to provide compensation to defendant’s victims, the court and the parties continued to refer to the subsequent hearing as a restitution hearing.
ORS 161.625(1) provides:
“A sentence to pay a fine for a felony shall be a sentence to pay an amount, fixed by the court, not exceeding:
“(a) $500,000 for murder or aggravated murder.
“(b) $375,000 for a Class A felony.
“(c) $250,000 for a Class B felony.
“(d) $125,000 for a Class C felony.”
By definition, a “victim” under ORS 137.101 is “[t]he person or decedent against whom the defendant committed the criminal offense, if the court determines that the person or decedent has suffered or did suffer economic damages as the result of the offense.” ORS 137.103(4)(a). Thus, a person must have suffered economic damages in order to receive a compensatory fine under ORS 137.101 because the statute, by its terms, only permits such fines to be directed to a “victim” of a defendant’s crimes. State v. Alonso,
This figure resulted from calculations based on the dated transactions in the state’s Exhibit B.
