Appellant Anthony John Palubicki challenges an order to make restitution payments to K.O. and M.B., children of the man Palubicki was convicted of murdering. Palubicki contends that K.O. and M.B. are not entitled to restitution for their personal losses because they are entitled only to the expenses their father would have incurred had he survived, and even if KO.’s and M.B.’s personal expenses were permitted under Minnesota law, they are not entitled to restitution for expenses incurred while voluntarily attending the trial.
On remand, the district court entered a life sentence on Palubicki’s first-degree premeditated murder conviction and vacated the first-degree felony murder sentences, but failed to vacate Palubicki’s two first-degree felony murder convictions. After resentencing, the district court conducted a restitution hearing to address restitution requests from the Minnesota Crime Victims Reparations Board and the victim’s two children and next of kin, K.O. and M.B. K.O. and M.B. requested restitution for lost wages, the cost of meals, and travel expenses incurred throughout the murdеr investigation and subsequent trial. 2 K.O. also requested restitution for cleaning his father’s home and long-distance telephone calls made during the criminal investigation and trial. Palubicki challenged KO.’s and MJB.’s restitution requests. Palubicki did not dispute the Crime Victims Reparations Board’s restitution request, acknowledging that the funds, which had been used to cover funeral expenses, were clearly reimbursable under the law.
K.O. testified at the grand jury proceedings and at trial. When not compelled to testify, K.O. voluntarily attended hearings and the trial. M.B. never testified, but she voluntarily attended Palubicki’s trial and related hearings. At the restitution hearing, she testified that she did so because she “felt a strong obligation to make sure that [her] father was treated with respect and * ⅜ * that this whole process would come to closure somehow.”
Palubicki conceded that any expenses arising from meetings with police investigators to give statements about the case were reimbursable under the statute. But Palubicki argued that when the family members voluntarily attended the criminal trial, they were not entitled to restitution.
The district court ordered restitution payments of $3,832 to be made to the Minnesota Crime Victims Reparations Board to cover the cоsts of the victim’s funeral expenses and cleaning the murder scene. The court also ordered Palubicki to pay $4,769 to M.B. in restitution for lost wages and transportation and to pay $5,134 to K.O. in restitution for lost wages, transportation, long-distance telephone
I.
Under Minnesota law, victims of crimes are permitted to request restitution from a defendant if the defendant is convicted. Minn.Stat. § 611A.04, subd. 1 (2006). When the crime victim is deceased, the victim’s surviving spouse or next of kin may receive restitution. Minn. Stat. § 611A.01(b) (2002).
4
In the restitution context, we apply the common law definition of “next of kin,” which is the “nearest living blood relation.”
State v. Jones,
Neither party disputes that K.O. and M.B., the victim’s children and “nearest living blood relation,” are victims under Minn.Stat. § 611A.01(b). Palubieki, however, disputes the type of reimbursement to which K.O. and M.B. are entitled undеr the statute. Palubieki argues that K.O. and M.B. are entitled to seek restitution only for the expenses to which the victim, their father, would have been entitled had he survived. Palubieki bases his argument on the language in
Jones,
which indicates that “victims” under Minnesota law are those “who step into the shoes of the deceаsed direct victim of the crime.”
Although
Jones
limits the number of people eligible for compensation under the statute,
Jones
does not in any way limit the types of restitution recoverable under the statute.
II.
We next turn to whether K.O. and M.B. are entitled to restitution for expenses arising from their voluntary attendance at Palubicki’s trial. Under Minn. Stat. § 611A.04, subd. 1(a), a restitution request “may include, but is not limited to, any out-of-pocket losses resulting from the crime, including * * * replacement of wages and services.” The primary purpose of the statute is to restore crime victims to the same financial position they were in before the crime.
See, e.g., State v. Pflepsen,
In this case, Palubicki acknowledges that he is liable for the funeral expenses of the victim. However, he contests the other claims brought by the victim’s children, claiming that their voluntary attendance at trial did not directly result from the crime. He asserts that the losses must be
directly
caused by the defendant’s conduct.
See State v. Latimer,
We agree with Palubicki that the potential exists for a restitution claim to become so attenuated in its cause that it cannot be said to result from the defendant’s criminal act. For that reason, a but-for test has the potential to expand a restitution award beyond the statutory provision, and we decline to adopt such a broad test. We conclude, however, that this case does not present a claim where the claimed loss is too attenuated from the criminal act. The next of kin were in court as a direct result of Palubicki’s crime. As victims of the crimе under the statute, the next of kin did not choose to attend the court proceedings as disinterested bystanders. They attended because they were unavoidably entwined in the criminal proceedings. At the restitution hearing, M.B. testified that she “felt a strong obligation” to attend the trial. M.B. did not attend Palubicki’s trial as аn interested member of the public. Rather, she attended his trial to achieve closure in coping with her father’s death. It is a direct result of the crime that the children of the murder victim attended the proceedings and suffered lost wages. Therefore, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion when it ordered Palu-bicki to pay restitution for K.O.’s and M.B.’s expenses.
III.
Palubicki also contends that the district court erred in reimbursing K.O. $300 for meal expenses because the state did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the meal request was an appropriate reimbursement request. “Information submitted relating to restitution must describe the items or elements of loss, itemize the total dollar amounts of restitution claimed, and specify the reasons justifying these amounts.” Minn. Stat. § 611A.04, subd. 1(a). KO.’s restitution request identified the days he attended the trial, thereby providing the court with a guide for the dаys for which meal reimbursement was requested. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion when ordering $300 in compensation for K.O.’s meals because the restitution request in its entirety provided sufficient detail to meet the statutory requirement.
IV.
Palubicki asserts that even if K.O. and M.B. were entitled to restitution, the district court erred by ordering him to pay for KO.’s and M.B.’s entire loss, because his accomplice had already been ordered to pay $19,380.54 in restitution. Palubicki argues that since the purpose of restitution is to compensate a victim for his or her loss, the total amount of restitution ordered by the court cannot exceed the actual loss suffered by the victim. The state responds that because Palubicki was not ordered to pay restitution beyond KO.’s and M.B.’s recoverable costs, Palubicki does not have standing to pursue the matter.
Palubicki established at the restitution hearing that he has nо assets and he earns
V.
Palubicki argues that the district court erred when on remand it vacated two of his three sentences, but failed to vacate two of his convictions for first-degree murder. The state concedes that this was an error and in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.035 (2006). Bеcause the district court should have formally adjudicated and imposed sentence on one count only, and because this issue has already been remanded to the district court once, we vacate Palubicki’s two first-degree felony murder convictions in the interest of judicial econоmy. We acknowledge, however, that if Palubicki’s first-degree murder conviction is later vacated for any reason, the district court may then enter a first-degree felony murder judgment against Palubicki.
Affirmed in part; two convictions for first-degree felony murder in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.185(a)(3) are vacated.
Notes
. We alsо concluded that the district court erred when it ordered Palubicki to pay a $200 co-payment for public defender services without first determining whether he had the ability to pay. We vacated the order requiring payment.
Palubicki,
. K.O.’s and M.B.'s restitution requests also included expenses incurred by K.O.’s significant other and the signifiсant other's children, and M.B.'s husband during the investigation and trial. The district court concluded that only K.O. and M.B. qualified as victims under the restitution statutes and limited restitution costs to expenses actually incurred by ICO. and M.B. K.O. and M.B. did not appeal that decision.
. The state contends that Palubicki's blanket assertion that K.O.’s and M.B.’s expеnses were "not allowable” was not sufficiently detailed to meet the requirements for affidavits challenging restitution requests under Minn. Stat. § 611A.045, subd. 3(a) (2006), and therefore he is not entitled to challenge the restitution order. We conclude that although Palubicki’s affidavit meets only the bare minimum definition of "detailed,” the affidаvit was sufficiently detailed for purposes of the statute and Palubieki preserved his restitution challenge for appeal.
. Minnesota Statutes § 611A.01(b) was amended in 2005 and broadened the definition of "victim” to include "family members, guardian, or custodian of a minor, incompetent, incapacitated, or deceased person.” Act of June 2, 2005, ch. 136, art. 8, § 22, 2005 Minn. Laws 901, 1016.
