delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Michael Mclntire was convicted of burglary in the District Court for the Eighth Judicial District, Cascade County. He appeals from the court’s sentencing order requiring him to pay restitution. We affirm.
¶2 We address the following issues on appeal:
¶3 1. Whether the District Court erred when it ordered Mclntire to pay restitution on two counts of misdemeanor forgery when those charges had been dismissed.
¶4 2. Whether the District Court erred when it ordered Mclntire to pay restitution as a condition of his suspended sentence.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶5 On January 9, 2003, the Cascade County Attorney filed an Information charging Mclntire with one count of felony burglary, one count of misdemeanor theft, and two counts of misdemeanor forgery. In the affidavit supporting the State’s motion for leave to file the Information, the investigating officer stated that Mclntire’s neighbor died on November 3, 2002, and that Mclntire admitted entering her apartment shortly after her death and removing her computer. The officer also stated that Mclntire admitted forging two of his deceased neighbor’s checks, making them payable to himself in the amounts of $200 and $250. Those checks were cashed on November 14 and 15, *498 2002.
¶6 Mclntire entered into a plea agreement with the Cascade County Attorney on May 7, 2003. In the plea agreement, Mclntire agreed to plead guilty to the charge of burglary and the county attorney agreed to dismiss the misdemeanor theft and forgery charges. The county attorney also agreed to recommend to the court that Mclntire be sentenced to a three-year suspended sentence. The plea agreement specified that the county attorney may recommend restitution to any victim.
¶7 On May 27, 2003, the District Court accepted Mclntire’s
Alford
plea after receiving the testimony of the investigating officer and finding a sufficient factual basis for the burglary charge.
See North Carolina v. Alford
(1970),
¶8 The prosecutor argued, on the other hand, that the restitution order was appropriate because Mclntire removed the checks from the victim’s apartment during the burglary and that forging the checks was part of the same transaction as the burglary. The prosecutor also argued that there was a victim to the forgery-the estate of Mclntire’s neighbor.
¶9 The District Court determined that the burglary and the forgery of the stolen checks were a continuing transaction, hence the court ordered Mclntire to pay restitution in the amount of $450. Mclntire appeals the District Court’s restitution order.
Issue 1.
¶10 Whether the District Court erred when it ordered Mclntire to pay restitution on two counts of misdemeanor forgery when those charges had been dismissed.
¶11 Mclntire argues on appeal that the court exceeded its statutory authority by requiring him to pay restitution for offenses for which he was not convicted and which he did not admit to committing. Mclntire also argues that because the forgery charges were dismissed, there was no “victim of the offense” as required by § 46-18-201(5), MCA (2001).
¶12 The State argues that the District Court did have statutory *499 authority to order Mclntire to pay restitution for funds he received as a direct result of the burglary charge to which he pled guilty. The State maintains that the burglary was sufficiently connected to forging the checks to amount to a continuous criminal transaction and that dismissal of the forgery charges as part of the plea agreement did not deprive the District Court of authority to impose a restitution obligation upon Mclntire.
¶13 This Court reviews criminal sentences for legality only, and our inquiry is limited to determining whether the sentence is within the parameters provided by statute.
State v. McLeod,
¶14 Section 46-18-201(5), MCA (2001), provides, in pertinent part, that
if the sentencing judge finds that the victim of the offense has sustained a pecuniary loss, the sentencing judge shall require payment of full restitution to the victim as provided in 46-18-241 through 46-18-249.
The term “victim” is defined as “a person who suffers loss of property, bodily injury, or death as a result of the commission of an offense” and includes “the estate of a deceased or incapacitated victim.” Section 46-18-243(2)(a), MCA (2001).
¶15 In the case
sub judice,
Mclntire does not dispute that his deceased neighbor (and thus her estate) suffered a loss of property as a result of the commission of an offense. Instead, Mclntire maintains that the loss was suffered as a result of the commission of forgery, an offense to which he did not plead guilty, rather than burglary, the offense for which he was sentenced. Mclntire argues that since the forgery charges were dismissed, there was no crime to support the order of restitution. For this proposition, Mclntire relies on this Court’s decisions in
Horton
and
State v. Setters,
¶16 In Horton, this Court held that a defendant who pled guilty to felony DUI as part of a plea agreement in which a separate charge of felony nonsupport was dismissed, could not be ordered to pay child *500 support arrearages as restitution since there was no “victim” of the crime to which he pled guilty and there was no connection between the DUI charge and the child support. Horton, ¶¶ 27-28. In Setters, decided the same day as Horton, we reversed another restitution order, where the defendant pled guilty to tampering with public records, since the restitution pertained only to an unrelated theft charge which had been dismissed pursuant to a plea agreement. Setters, ¶ 25. We applied the Horton analysis in Setters and concluded that the district court lacked statutory authority to order restitution in connection with an unrelated and dismissed charge. Setters, ¶ 28.
¶17 Nevertheless, both Horton and Setters involved the propriety of restitution orders based upon dismissed charges wholly unrelated to the charges to which the defendants pled guilty. Contrary to Mclntire’s assertions, the dismissed charges in the present case are directly related to the burglary charge to which he pled guilty. The victim of the burglary is the same as the victim of the forgeries and the loss of the victim’s property resulted directly from the burglary and Mclntire’s subsequent acts with the stolen property.
¶18 In addition, we acknowledged in
Horton
and
Setters
that § 46-18-202(l)(e), MCA (renumbered in 1999 as § 46-18-202(l)(f), MCA), permits a sentencing court to impose any reasonable restriction or condition upon a sentence, including any restriction or condition considered necessary for rehabilitation of the defendant or for the protection of the victim or society. However, we noted in both
Horton
and
Setters,
that our previous interpretation of that statutory provision required the restriction or condition to have some correlation or connection to the underlying offense for which the defendant is being sentenced.
Horton,
¶ 28;
Setters,
¶ 27 (citing
State v. Ommundson,
¶19 Accordingly, we hold that the District Court did have the statutory authority to order Mclntire to pay restitution for the checks stolen from the victim during the burglary and the subsequent forgery of those checks.
*501 Issue 2.
¶20 Whether the District Court erred when it ordered Mclntire to pay restitution as a condition of his suspended sentence.
¶21 Mclntire argues on appeal that the District Court was without statutory authority to order restitution because restitution may only be ordered when a defendant receives a deferred sentence. Relying on a footnote in Horton, Mclntire contends that § 46-18-201, MCA (2001), restricts restitution orders to cases involving deferred impositions of sentence and that a district court is without statutory authority to impose payment of restitution as a condition of a suspended sentence. See Horton, ¶ 28 n.3.
¶22 Mclntire’s claim is based upon an apparent codification error arising from the 1999 Montana Legislature’s amendments to § 46-18-201, MCA, the general sentencing statute. The 1999 amendments reorganized and renumbered the provisions concerning the sentencing judge’s dispositional options. Provisions concerning suspended sentences, which had previously been contained in subsection (1) along with the provisions concerning deferred sentences, were removed from subsection (1) and placed in a separate section. The subsection on restitution, which was renumbered as subsection (5), was not changed to reflect the reorganization of the statute. Thus, because of this error, it appeared that a district court could require restitution only in cases involving deferred imposition of sentence and not in cases involving suspended execution of sentence.
¶23 We recently discussed this issue at length in
State v. Heath,
the reference made in subsection (5) of § 46-18-201, MCA (1999), to “the penalties imposed pursuant to subsection (1)” was a simple codification error which was not intended to make any change in the substance or effect of the statute. The re-codification of the statute... resulted in a cross reference error which was completely inconsistent with clear legislative intent. We further conclude that it was the Legislature’s full intention that subsection (5) cross-refer, not to subsection (1), but to subsection (4), which contains all of the penalties and conditions which may be imposed for both deferred impositions of sentences and for suspensions of sentences.
Heath, ¶ 36 (emphasis in original). Based on these conclusions, we stated in Heath that we would “not permit legislative intent to be *502 thwarted, and the whole of the judiciary’s sentencing authority to be undermined, by a mere scrivener’s error.” Heath, ¶ 37.
¶24 Consequently, we held in Heath that the 1999 amendments to § 46-18-201, MCA, do not limit a court’s authority to impose restitution to cases in which sentencing has been deferred. Rather, restitution is a sentencing option whenever the sentencing court considers it necessary for rehabilitation or for the protection of the victim or society, and there is an appropriate correlation to the offense committed. Heath, ¶ 38.
¶25 Having already found that such a correlation does exist in this case, we hold that the District Court did not err in ordering Mclntire to pay restitution as a condition of his suspended sentence.
¶26 Affirmed.
