State of Iowa v. Darryl B. Shears Jr.
This text of 920 N.W.2d 527 (State of Iowa v. Darryl B. Shears Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
APPEL, Justice.
*530 In this case, we consider whether the City of Davenport is entitled to restitution for damage to patrol vehicles in a criminal case. The defendant pled guilty to criminal mischief and eluding an officer. After acceptance of the guilty plea, the city filed a restitution claim totaling approximately $7,093 for damage to its police vehicles. The district court determined that the damages sought by the city were a result of the defendant's criminal activity and ordered the defendant to pay restitution to the city.
For the reasons expressed below, we affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background.
The State charged Darryl Shears with three crimes: criminal mischief in the second degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 716.1 and 716.4(1) (2015), possession of a controlled substance, second offense, in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(5), and eluding while participating in a public offense in violation of Iowa Code section 321.279(3)( a ).
Pursuant to a plea agreement, Shears pled guilty to criminal mischief and to eluding under Iowa Code section 321.279(2), a lesser included offense of the original charge of eluding while participating in a public offense.
After the court accepted the plea agreement and sentenced Shears, the district court held a restitution hearing. At the restitution hearing, the district court found that Shears had to reimburse the State for damages to the patrol vehicles in the amount of approximately $7,093. On appeal, Shears challenges the restitution ruling of the district court.
II. Standard of Review.
Restitution orders are reviewed for errors of law.
State v. Dubois
,
III. Discussion.
A. Introduction.
Restitution as part of a criminal action is a relatively recent development in the law. Traditionally, recovery of damages sustained by victims was not part of the criminal proceeding. A victim who suffered economic harm as a result of a crime was required to pursue recovery in a civil action. With the spread of the victim's rights movement in the 1980s, legislatures-including Iowa's-enacted statutes that provided for at least partial recovery by victims of economic harm as restitution in the sentencing phase of the criminal proceeding.
See
Jenkins
,
The purpose of these criminal restitution statutes is said to include protecting the public by compensating victims for criminal activities and rehabilitating the offender by instilling responsibility in the offender.
See
*531
State v. Izzolena
,
Analytically, criminal restitution is an odd duck that is hard to categorize.
See
State v. Mayberry
,
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APPEL, Justice.
*530 In this case, we consider whether the City of Davenport is entitled to restitution for damage to patrol vehicles in a criminal case. The defendant pled guilty to criminal mischief and eluding an officer. After acceptance of the guilty plea, the city filed a restitution claim totaling approximately $7,093 for damage to its police vehicles. The district court determined that the damages sought by the city were a result of the defendant's criminal activity and ordered the defendant to pay restitution to the city.
For the reasons expressed below, we affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background.
The State charged Darryl Shears with three crimes: criminal mischief in the second degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 716.1 and 716.4(1) (2015), possession of a controlled substance, second offense, in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(5), and eluding while participating in a public offense in violation of Iowa Code section 321.279(3)( a ).
Pursuant to a plea agreement, Shears pled guilty to criminal mischief and to eluding under Iowa Code section 321.279(2), a lesser included offense of the original charge of eluding while participating in a public offense.
After the court accepted the plea agreement and sentenced Shears, the district court held a restitution hearing. At the restitution hearing, the district court found that Shears had to reimburse the State for damages to the patrol vehicles in the amount of approximately $7,093. On appeal, Shears challenges the restitution ruling of the district court.
II. Standard of Review.
Restitution orders are reviewed for errors of law.
State v. Dubois
,
III. Discussion.
A. Introduction.
Restitution as part of a criminal action is a relatively recent development in the law. Traditionally, recovery of damages sustained by victims was not part of the criminal proceeding. A victim who suffered economic harm as a result of a crime was required to pursue recovery in a civil action. With the spread of the victim's rights movement in the 1980s, legislatures-including Iowa's-enacted statutes that provided for at least partial recovery by victims of economic harm as restitution in the sentencing phase of the criminal proceeding.
See
Jenkins
,
The purpose of these criminal restitution statutes is said to include protecting the public by compensating victims for criminal activities and rehabilitating the offender by instilling responsibility in the offender.
See
*531
State v. Izzolena
,
Analytically, criminal restitution is an odd duck that is hard to categorize.
See
State v. Mayberry
,
Because of the ambiguous nature of restitution, the courts have struggled with questions related to the scope of criminal restitution. Among other things, courts have pondered on the question of who is a "victim" for purposes of criminal restitution. For example, one of the frequently litigated issues is whether a government entity may be considered a victim for purposes of criminal restitution.
See generally
Kimberly J. Winbush, Annotation,
Persons or Entities Entitled to Restitution as "Victim" Under State Criminal Restitution Statute
,
*532
B. Iowa Criminal Restitution Framework.
We now turn to the language and structure of the Iowa criminal restitution statute, Iowa Code chapter 910.
See
McGill v. Fish
,
At the outset, the Iowa criminal restitution statute provides that in all cases where the defendant pled or is found guilty, the sentencing court "shall order that restitution be made by each offender to the victims of the offender's criminal activities."
The burden is on the state to show entitlement to criminal restitution.
See
State v. Tutor
,
The total amount of restitution, however, is not immediately payable as in a civil judgment, but instead is subject to an order or payment based on ability to pay. The limitation of payment of restitution according to ability to pay removes restitution from a facial challenge as an excessive fine.
See
Goodrich v. State
,
The legislature provided a number of interlocking definitions in the statute to delineate the scope of mandatory criminal restitution. The legislature provided a definition of "pecuniary damages" available to a victim in Iowa Code section 910.1(3). The provision states that pecuniary damages means "all damages ... which a victim could recover against the offender in a civil action arising out of the same facts or event."
The relationship between an award of criminal restitution for pecuniary damages for "all damages ... which a victim could recover against the offender in a civil action arising out of the same facts or event,"
The legislature provided a definition of "restitution."
Iowa Code section 321J.2(13)(
b
) provides that a court "may" order restitution paid to any public agency for the cost of emergency response resulting from drunk driving violations.
The legislature also provided a definition of "victim" in Iowa Code section 910.1(5). Generally, a victim is defined as "a person who has suffered pecuniary damages as a result of the offender's criminal activities."
We have stated that because criminal restitution is penal in nature, the provisions of Iowa Code chapter 910 should be interpreted strictly.
See
Bonstetter
,
C. Positions of the Parties. On appeal, Shears claims that the district court erred in awarding criminal restitution to the City of Davenport for the damage to its police vehicles. Shears concedes that the Davenport police vehicles incurred damage when the officers attempted to stop him. Further, *534 Shears does not challenge the amount of damage to the vehicles. Shears asserts, however, that the damage was not caused by him , but instead was caused by the actions of the officers trying to stop him.
Shears believes that entitlement to restitutionary damages should be limited to damages caused by a defendant's criminal conduct. Shears's causation theory is based on the scope-of-liability standard for causation applicable in civil actions,
see
Thompson v. Kaczinski
,
In support of his causation theory, Shears points to two Wisconsin cases. First, Shears cites
State v. Haase
,
The State agrees that in order for criminal restitution to be proper, there must be "a causal connection between the established criminal act and the injuries to the victim."
Holmberg
,
Under the causation standard of a tort case, the State presses several reasons why the damage to the police vehicles was within the range of harms risked by Shears's conduct. The State argues that it was foreseeable that police officers would hit Shears's car to try to stop him because Shears's high speed and disregard of stop signals posed a hazard to pedestrians and other drivers. In addition, police had tried using their lights, sirens, and spike strips to stop Shears without success.
The State cites two federal appellate cases for the proposition that harms caused by flight are caused by the underlying crime.
See
United States v. Washington
,
*535
The State also distinguishes the Wisconsin appellate precedent cited by Shears. The State acknowledges that in
Storlie
, the court emphasized that a government entity cannot recover restitution for "collateral expenses incurred in the normal course of law enforcement."
The State further seeks to distinguish
Haase
or, in the alternative, suggests that
Haase
should not be followed. The State notes that the
Haase
court distinguished between direct harm, such as when a defendant vandalized equipment belonging to the state, and indirect harm, such as overtime costs incurred in a police standoff.
See
Haase
,
D. Iowa Criminal Restitution Caselaw. There are no Iowa cases directly dealing with the ability of a government entity to recover pecuniary damages under Iowa Code chapter 910 when police cars were damaged in a high-speed chase involving the crime of eluding. There are, however, precedents that brush on the periphery of the precise legal issues posed in this case.
Generally, when ordering restitution, a court must first identify the "victim" entitled to compensation.
Bonstetter
,
Also instructive is
State v. Taylor
,
The state, however, has not always been found a victim under our criminal restitution statute. For example, in
State v. Stewart
,
A number of our cases have explored the contours of causation required under Iowa Code chapter 910. Not surprisingly in light of the definition of "pecuniary damages" in Iowa Code section 910.1(3), our cases repeatedly reference potential liability under tort law.
For instance, in
State v. Starkey
,
The
Starkey
court emphasized that under Iowa Code section 910.1, a victim must "prove a prima facie case of liability premised on some civil theory."
Similarly, in
Holmberg,
Finally, we used similar reasoning in
Bonstetter
,
Our criminal restitution cases have sometimes emphasized that the criminal offense was a "direct cause" of the claimed pecuniary injury. For example, in
Hagen
,
E. Criminal Restitution Caselaw from Other Jurisdictions Dealing with Damage to Police Vehicles.
There are a substantial number of state cases that consider whether a police department may be considered a victim under various criminal restitution statutes. A number of cases have held that state law enforcement agencies are not victims under criminal restitution statutes.
See, e.g.
,
People v. Chaney
,
Yet, in
Dubois v. People
,
The
Dubois
court determined that the police agency and the driver were victims for purposes of criminal restitution.
On the question of causation, we have uncovered several state court cases dealing with efforts of police departments to obtain restitution from damage to police vehicles. The first case is
State v. Dillon
,
The
Dillon
court considered whether (1) the damage to a police vehicle bashed by the defendant, (2) the damage to another police vehicle as a result of gunfire at the scene, and (3) the costs incurred by the state in providing medical services to the defendant were recoverable under Oregon's criminal restitution statute.
See id.
The applicable Oregon criminal restitution statute provided that a court could order restitution "[w]hen a person is convicted of criminal activities which have resulted in pecuniary damages."
Id.
at 608 (quoting
The
Dillon
court first addressed whether the damage to the police car caused by the defendant's vehicle was subject to restitution.
The
Dillon
court next turned to the damage to the police vehicle due to gunshots and the defendant's medical bills paid for by the state.
More recently, an Oregon appellate court reviewed a decision to impose restitution on a defendant for damage to a police vehicle following an officer's execution of a "pursuit intervention technique," or PIT, maneuver.
State v. Parsons
,
Another criminal restitution case involving recovery of damages to a police car is
People v. Barnett
,
Similarly, in
People v. Ford
,
There is also federal court authority under federal criminal restitution statutes that may provide us with insight. In
United States v.Donaby
,
According to the
Donaby
court, the district court correctly ruled that the bank robbery "directly and proximately led to the high-speed chase and the property damage that ensued."
F. Discussion.
1.
Government entities as victim
. At the outset, we believe that a government entity may, under the right circumstances, be a victim under the Iowa criminal restitution statute under our precedents.
See
Hagen
,
2.
Standard of causation in tort
. We also think it plain, as a general matter, that the standard of causation generally applicable in civil matters controls the scope of restitution under the statute. Although we have declared that the Iowa criminal restitution statute should be construed strictly, the explicit language used by the legislature in the definition of pecuniary damages in Iowa Code section 910.1(3) prevents the adoption of a narrow gloss on causation. Because of the explicit statutory language, it is not surprising that many of our criminal restitution cases employ the causation test applicable in ordinary tort settings.
See
Bonstetter
,
It is true that, along with the court of appeals, we sometimes have used language suggesting that "direct causation" is required to support a claim of criminal restitution.
*540
See
Hagen
,
While we believe that damage to a police vehicle is generally recoverable under either the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical & Emotional Harm (Am. Law Inst. 2010) [hereinafter Restatement (Third) of Torts], or prior tort law, we consider three concepts that might undermine our conclusion: intervening or superseding cause, the so-called firefighter's rule, and language in the Iowa criminal restitution statute specifically authorizing but capping payment of emergency response costs by government.
3.
Frozen or dynamic application of tort law.
While the legislature directed that the liability standard of tort law should apply to restitution claims, there is a question of whether the standard should reflect the tort law at the time the statute was enacted or whether the criminal restitution statute was designed to incorporate changes in our tort law. Specifically, the question arises whether we should utilize the tort concepts recently adopted from the Restatement (Third) of Torts,
see
Thompson
,
*541
4.
Application of tort principles
. We begin with a brief review of the recent case of
Thompson
,
In
Thompson
, we considered the question of causation in negligence cases.
See
We think the issue of potential damage to police vehicles as a result of a high-speed chase would be within the scope of liability in a negligence action against Shears. Certainly, a reasonable fact finder could conclude under the circumstances of this case that it was foreseeable that police would engage in an effort to apprehend the speeding Shears and that police vehicles could be damaged in the effort to bring Shears's vehicle to a halt. Most of the state and federal caselaw dealing with police vehicle crashes supports our conclusion.
See
Washington
,
We do not find the Wisconsin cases cited by Shears very compelling. In
Haase
, the police vehicle burst into flames after the chase.
If we chose to analyze this case under the tort law in existence at the time of the enactment of our criminal restitution statute, we would not arrive at a different result. Our prior law utilized the now abandoned concept of "proximate cause." But foreseeability was a key component of the proximate cause analysis. See, e.g. , Benn , 512 N.W.2d at 539. While the scope-of-liability analysis of Thompson may be cleaner and use different expressions, we do not believe a different result would occur in this case if we applied the proximate cause approach of prior tort law.
5. Intervening or superseding cause . Although he does not expressly use this label, Shears seems to be claiming that the cause of the damage to the police cars were the acts of the officers in performing *542 a PIT maneuver to stop his vehicle and not his act of eluding. This amounts to an argument that the actions of the police in performing the PIT maneuver are an intervening or superseding cause that breaks the chain of causation and therefore prevents a court from imposing restitution on the offender.
A number of provisions in the Restatement (Second) of Torts dealt with intervening and superseding causes. See Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 440 - 453, at 465-91 (Am. Law Inst. 1965). "An intervening force is one which actively operates in producing harm to another after the actor's negligent act or omission has been committed," id. § 441, at 465, while a superseding cause was a type of intervening force that relieved the original actor from liability for certain harms, id. § 440, at 465 ("A superseding cause is an act of a third person or other force which by its intervention prevents the actor from being liable for harm to another which his antecedent negligence is a substantial factor in bringing about."). The Restatement (Second) provided at least six different considerations for determining whether an intervening force is a superseding cause of harm. Id. § 442, at 467-68.
The Restatement (Second) contains a few rules on whether or not an intervening force would relieve the original actor from liability. First, "[w]here the negligent conduct of the actor creates or increases the foreseeable risk of harm through the intervention of another force, and is a substantial factor in causing the harm, such intervention is not a superseding cause." Id. § 442A, at 468. Second, an intervening cause that brings about the same harm as that risked by an original actor's negligent conduct does not relieve the original actor from liability, unless the harm is intentionally caused by a third person and is not within the scope of the risk created by the negligent defendant's conduct. Id. § 442B, at 469. Third, "[t]he intervention of a force which is a normal consequence of a situation created by the actor's negligent conduct is not a superseding cause of harm which such conduct has been a substantial factor in bringing about." Id. § 443, at 472. "The word 'normal' is not used ... in the sense of what is usual, customary, foreseeable, or to be expected. It denotes rather the antithesis of abnormal, of extraordinary." Id. § 443 cmt. b , at 472-73. In addition, "[i]f the actor's negligent conduct threatens harm to another's person, land, or chattels, the normal efforts of the other or a third person to avert the threatened harm are not a superseding cause of harm resulting from such efforts." Id. § 445, at 475.
Before
Thompson
, we had approved the considerations identified in the Restatement (Second) of Torts for determining whether an intervening force is a superseding cause.
See
Hollingsworth v. Schminkey
,
Under the law that existed at the time the restitution statute was adopted in 1982, we do not believe that the actions of the police in performing the PIT maneuver would constitute an intervening or superseding cause that would relieve Shears of liability. A reasonable fact finder could determine that the police officers' PIT maneuver was either a normal consequence of Shears's actions or one that would have been reasonably foreseeable to Shears.
Haumersen
,
Under the Restatement (Third) of Torts, the law on intervening and superseding forces is significantly simplified. The Restatement (Third) simply provides that "[w]hen a force of nature or an independent act is also a factual cause of harm, an actor's liability is limited to those harms that result from the risks that made the actor's conduct tortious." Restatement (Third) of Torts § 34, at 569. According to a comment to that provision, "[i]n cases in which the source of the risk is an intervening act, the foreseeability of the intervening act will determine whether an actor's liability extends to any harm that occurs."
The provision on intervening and superseding causes in the Restatement (Third) is inextricably linked with the general causation limitation on liability for tortious conduct.
See
Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29, at 493 ("An actor's liability is limited to those harms that result from the risks that made the actor's conduct tortious."). In fact, a comment to the provision on intervening and superseding causes provides that the law on intervening and superseding forces is of "declining importance" and, "[w]ere it not for the long history of intervening and superseding causes playing a significant role in limiting the scope of liability, this Section would not be necessary."
Under the causation standard in the Restatement (Third) of Torts, as discussed above, we believe that the damage to the police vehicles would be within the scope of liability in a negligence action against Shears. In addition, a reasonable fact finder could determine that damage to police vehicles was foreseeable. Thus, even if the PIT maneuver was an independent act that was also a factual cause of the damage to the police vehicles, Shears would be liable for the damage.
See
6.
Firefighter's rule
. Although not explicitly raised by the parties, there could be a question of whether recovery might be barred by what has been called "the firefighter's rule." Although there are many permutations in different jurisdictions, the firefighter's rule generally stands for the proposition that firefighters or police officers may not recover for injuries that occur in the ordinary course of their duties.
See
Pottebaum v. Hinds
,
*544
In
Pottebaum
,
Although Shears has not raised the firefighter's rule in this case as a defense against imposition of restitution obligation, he does generally raise the question of whether he owes a common law duty to the city sufficient to support a restitution claim. Because the larger issue of duty has been raised, we conclude that the narrow issue of the applicability of the firefighter's rule is minimally preserved.
We conclude that the firefighter's rule has no application in this case. The firefighter's rule is a narrow doctrine that does not apply where subsequent acts of negligence or misconduct occur once the officer is on the scene.
Pottebaum
,
7.
Impact of statutory language related to restitution for emergency responses in drunk driving cases.
Finally, we consider the impact of language in the Iowa criminal restitution statute that expressly authorizes restitution to government entities for emergency response in cases involving drunk driving.
See
The fact that the legislature expressly authorized restitution to public agencies for emergency response in drunk driving situations, but capped that restitution at $500, gives us pause. While the language utilized in Iowa Code section 910.1(3) broadly embraces tort concepts in civil cases, the explicit legislative authorization of government restitution in Iowa Code section 910.1(4) and Iowa Code section 321J.2(13)( b ) is quite limited. It only involves drunk driving situations. And, it is capped at $500.
The question then is whether the express legislative adoption of limited restitution for emergency response costs in drunk driving cases implies the exclusion of other kinds of restitution by government agencies for emergency response. Phrased somewhat differently, does the limited restitution for emergency response costs for drunk driving evince a legislative intent to expand restitution under Iowa Code chapter 910, thus implying that generally such restitution is not available? Or, conversely, does the limited restitution available in drunk driving cases demonstrate *545 a legislative intent to limit at $500 what might otherwise be a more expansive restitution? In this case, the restitution sought by the City of Davenport far exceeds the $500 authorized for emergency responses for drunk driving.
We think the facts of this situation and the emergency response scenarios contemplated by Iowa Code section 910.1(4) are apples and oranges. Here, the crime of eluding generates a police chase that results in a crash involving the offender and police vehicles that is within the scope of liability under the Restatement (Third) of Torts and under our prior tort law. In the emergency response context, the public agency is responding to the results of the crime of drunk driving in the ordinary course of business. The causation element in the latter situation is one-step removed from the former. If the drunk driver bashed into an emergency response vehicle, we do not think the limitations of restitution in 910.1(4) would apply. As a result, we conclude that the provision of Iowa Code section 910.1(4) does not prevent a restitution to the City of Davenport under the different factual scenario posed in this case.
IV. Conclusion.
For the above reasons, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED.
The court of appeals has ruled that concepts of comparative fault do not apply to criminal restitution.
State v. Wagner
,
There is a body of literature suggesting that there may be constitutional issues lurking behind restitution statutes.
See, e.g.
, Fern L. Kletter, Annotation,
Mandatory Victims Restitution Act-Constitutional Issues
,
See also
State v. Sprecher
,
There are two separate questions presented on the issue of whether to apply the causation standard of the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431, at 428 (Am. Law Inst. 1965), which we generally recognized in our common law at the time of the adoption of the restitution statute, or the causation approach of the Restatement (Third) of Torts, which was adopted in
Thompson
,
Related
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