OPINION
¶ 1 Appellant James Lewandowski appeals the trial court’s entry of a criminal restitution order, pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-805, at the time of his sentencing. 1 He contends that under § 13-805, a criminal restitution order may not be entered prior to the expiration of a defendant’s prison term or sentence of probation and that the early entry of the order constitutes an illegal sentence due to the mandatory imposition of interest under § 13-805(C). For the reasons that follow, we vacate the restitution order.
Facts and Procedural Background
¶ 2 “We view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the convictions.”
State v. Robles,
¶ 3 The next day, Lewandowski, the owner of the truck, reported it stolen. Blevins went to an address in Tucson and immediately recognized Lewandowski as the person driving the truck the previous evening. Le-wandowski was arrested and charged in connection with the items found in his truck. Following a jury trial, he was convicted on all counts, and the trial court sentenced him to concurrent, enhanced, mitigated prison terms, the longest of which was eight years. The court also imposed fines and surcharges totaling $5,400 and entered a criminal restitution order for that amount. This appeal followed.
Discussion
¶4 Lewandowski argues the trial court’s reduction of his criminal fines to a criminal restitution order (CRO) pursuant to § 13-805 before the expiration of his prison sentence constitutes an illegal sentence that must be vacated.
2
Because he failed to raise this issue below, we review for fundamental error only.
See State v. Moreno-Medrano,
¶ 5 At sentencing, the trial court entered an order requiring Lewandowski to pay $5,400 in fines and surcharges, a $25 indigent assessment fee, and a $20 time payment fee. In its sentencing minute entry, the court affirmed these fines and costs and further ordered that “all fines, fees and/or assessments are reduced to a criminal restitution order this date pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-805.” 3 Lewandowsld contends § 13-805 expressly precludes the entry of a CRO until after a defendant’s sentence or term of probation expires. He argues that, because § 13-805(C) permits the accrual of interest upon the entering of the CRO, the premature entry of such an order “exacts an additional penalty on the defendant,” unauthorized by law.
¶ 6 We review issues of statutory interpretation de novo.
State v. Ontiveros,
¶ 7 Preliminarily, it is beyond dispute that, at the time of sentencing, a trial court has the authority to enter judgment for the total amount a defendant will be required to pay, including fines, fees, costs, and restitution. The court may also order a defendant to make payments during the term of incarceration or probation.
See generally
A.R.S. §§ 13-801, 13-804, 13-808; see
also State v. Moore,
¶ 8 Section 13-805 provides, in pertinent part:
A. The trial court shall retain jurisdiction of the case for purposes of modifying the manner in which court-ordered payments are made until paid in full or until the defendant’s sentence expires. At the time the defendant completes the defendant’s period of probation or the defendant’s sentence, the court shall enter both:
1. A criminal restitution order in favor of the state for the unpaid balance, if any, of any fines, costs, incarceration costs, fees, surcharges or assessments imposed.
2. A criminal restitution order in favor of each person entitled to restitution for the unpaid balance of any restitution ordered.
C. A criminal restitution order may be recorded and enforced as any civil judg-ment____Enforcement of a criminal restitution order by any person who is entitled to restitution or by the state includes the collection of interest that accrues pursuant to [AR.S.] § 44-1201 in the same manner as any civil judgment. A criminal restitution order does not expire until paid in full.
The meaning of the statute is clear on its face. First, it requires the trial court to enter a CRO for the unpaid balances of any monies owed to the state or to individuals as restitution. And second, it instructs the court to do so “at the time the defendant completes the defendant’s period of probation or the defendant’s sentence.” The statute does not give the trial court authority to enter the CRO before Lewandowski’s period of probation or term of imprisonment has expired.
¶ 9 The legislature added § 13-805 well after the other restitution and fine statutes were enacted. 1986 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 248, § 7 (enacting § 13-805); 1978 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 201, §§ 110,115 (transferring and renumbering restitution statutes formerly numbered §§ 13-1001 through 13-1006 and 13-4015). Thus, to adopt the state’s argument that the statute permits entry of a CRO at any time before expiration of the defendant’s sentence would render irrelevant the preexisting statutory sections that already provide for the imposition and payment of fines, restitution, and costs during that time — a result we generally seek to avoid.
4
In re Maricopa County Superior Court No. MN 2001-001139,
¶ 10 Therefore, we conclude that § 13-805 applies only at the expiration of a defendant’s sentence or period of probation. Consequently, the trial court erred by entering the CRO at the time of sentencing. However, this does not end our inquiry. The early entry of such an order might be harmless error except that the entry of a CRO under § 13-805 triggers the additional requirement that the defendant pay interest on the judgment at a statutory rate of ten percent. See §§ 13-805(C); 44-1201. Thus, we must still determine whether a CRO entered at sentencing constitutes an illegal sentence because it causes interest on a defendant’s obligation to accrue prematurely. 5
¶ 11 In
Moreno-Medrano,
¶ 12 At common law, judgments did not bear interest, and entitlement to interest derived solely from statutory provisions authorizing it.
State v. Foy,
¶ 13 This view was adopted by Division One of this court in
Foy.
There, the trial court had ordered interest on a restitution award to accrue from the date of sentencing, apparently believing interest on the judgment was included in the definition of “economic loss” as used in the statute governing restitution, § 13-804.
¶ 14 Foy was consistent with the statutes governing restitution and fines in existence when that case was decided. At the time, although the statutes provided for payment of restitution and fines during incarceration and probation, none of them provided for the *536 accrual of interest. See 1986 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 248, § 7; 1978 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 201, §§ 110, 115. However, in 2005, twelve years after Foy was decided, the legislature amended § 13-805(0 to provide for the accrual of interest on criminal restitution orders entered pursuant to that statute after a term of probation or incarceration expires. 2005 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 260, § 6.
¶ 15 Section 13-805(Q therefore represents a change to the common law and grants a trial court limited authority to do something it could not do before — impose interest on all court-ordered payments, beginning when a defendant’s sentence or probationary term expires. However, § 13-805(0 is limited in scope and, as we have noted,
no other
provision in the criminal fine and restitution statutes provides for the accrual of interest on any type of payment. Thus, by obligating a defendant to pay more than the statute requires, the early entry of a CRO constitutes an illegal sentence, which is necessarily fundamental, reversible error.
See Soria,
Notes
. Lewandowski raised additional issues concerning prosecutorial misconduct and the courts reasonable doubt instruction. However, pursuant to Rule 28(g), Ariz. R. Civ.App. P., we have addressed those in a separately filed memorandum decision.
See Ne. Phoenix Holdings, LLC v. Winkleman,
. At oral argument, the state conceded that under the language of the statute, the CRO was entered prematurely. However, it noted that the language in § 13 — 805(C) is quite broad and may apply to other types of criminal restitution orders. It therefore urged that we decide only the limited question before us concerning the entry of the specific CRO contemplated in § 13-805(A). We agree and so limit our holding. We neither decide nor comment upon the application of § 13-805(C) to any other statute.
. Lewandowski alternatively argues that, because the trial court did not state aloud at sentencing that it was reducing his fines and fees to a criminal restitution order, its oral pronouncement controls over the later, written judgment. Generally, when there is a discrepancy "between the written judgment of conviction and the oral sentence, ... the oral pronouncement ... controls].”
State v. Johnson,
. Our interpretation is consonant with the statute's purpose, which is to ensure that a defendant makes any court-ordered payments "at the earliest possible opportunity,'' thus making it unnecessary for "the State and the victims to pursue other, more time-consuming remedies to collect the sums due them.”
State v. Pinto,
. We recognize that notwithstanding § 13-805, a victim may pursue restitution by filing a civil complaint, which, if successful, would entitle the victim to interest on the judgment regardless of the defendant's incarceration or probationary status. However, in § 13-805, the legislature did not distinguish between restitution, fees, and fines. We therefore cannot escape the plain language of the statute, which conditions entry of the CRO for any type of court-ordered payment upon the defendant's release from incarceration or completion of probation.
