In the Iowa Supreme Court
No. 24–0353
Submitted October 8, 2025—Filed January 9, 2026
State of Iowa,
Appellee,
vs.
Ronald Richard Pagliai,
Appellant.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Tabitha Turner,
district associate judge.
Defendant seeks discretionary review of dispositional orders assessing
costs in dismissed cases. Convictions, Sentences, and Dispositional Orders
Conditionally Vacated and Remanded with Instructions.
McDonald, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Mansfield,
Oxley, and May, JJ., joined. McDermott, J., filed an opinion concurring in the
judgment. Waterman, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Christensen, C.J.,
joined.
Erin M. Carr (argued) of Carr Law Firm, P.L.C., Des Moines, and Ronald W.
Kepford (until withdrawal) of Kepford Law Office, Winterset, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and David Banta (argued), Louis S. Sloven
(until withdrawal), and Linda J. Hines (until withdrawal), Assistant Attorneys
General, for appellee.
Alexander Vincent Kornya (argued) and Rita Bettis Austen of ACLU of Iowa
Foundation, Inc., Des Moines, and Charles Moore of Public Justice, Washington, 2
D.C., for amici curiae ACLU of Iowa, Fines and Fees Justice Center, and Public
Justice. 3
McDonald, Justice.
This case presents the question of whether the parties in a criminal case
can, by plea agreement, confer on the district court the authority to dispose of a
criminal case in a manner not authorized by statute. Ronald Pagliai was charged
with theft in the third degree, enhanced, in three separate cases for shoplifting,
and he was charged with interference with official acts in a fourth case when he
resisted arrest after being caught shoplifting. As part of a single plea agreement
to resolve the cases, Pagliai agreed to plead guilty in two of the theft cases, and
the State agreed to dismiss the two remaining cases with Pagliai to pay the costs
in the dismissed cases. Pursuant to the plea agreement, the district court
sentenced Pagliai in the two theft cases, dismissed the two other cases, and
ordered Pagliai to pay costs in the dismissed cases (a docket search shows the
costs as $329.85 for indigent defense fund recoupment and $160 for filing fees).
Pagliai filed notices of appeal from his convictions, and we granted Pagliai’s
application for discretionary review to address his challenge to the district court’s
authority to assess costs in the dismissed cases.
I.
A.
Matters of crime and punishment are creatures of statute. The legislative
department has the sole “power and the responsibility to define crimes and
prescribe punishment.” State v. Fuhrmann, 261 N.W.2d 475, 479 (Iowa 1978)
(en banc); see State v. Jepsen, 907 N.W.2d 495, 501 (Iowa 2018) (“In sum, the
legislature has the substantive power to define criminal activity and its attendant
punishment.”). The legislative department’s power and responsibility to define
crimes and prescribe punishments includes the power to prescribe whether and
how the district court can assess costs upon the disposition of a criminal case. 4
The judicial department must administer the criminal law in accord with
legislative command. See State v. Campbell, 251 N.W. 717, 719 (Iowa 1933)
(stating that it is “settled in this state that there are no common-law offenses
and that all crimes are statutory”); State v. McGrew, 11 Iowa 112, 113 (1860)
(“We cannot look to the common law for a ‘manner’ of prosecution and
punishment . . . .”). The judicial department does not have the authority to
assess costs upon disposition of a criminal case in the absence of statutory
authorization to do so. See City of Ottumwa v. Taylor, 102 N.W.2d 376, 378 (Iowa
1960) (stating that costs “are now taxable only to the extent provided by statute”);
20 Am. Jur. 2d Costs § 100, at 116 (2015) (“The right of a court to impose costs
in a criminal case is statutory, and thus, courts may impose costs in criminal
cases only where such costs are authorized by statute.”). As this court explained
in Woodbury County v. Anderson almost sixty years ago, “Costs in criminal
prosecutions are unknown at common law; their recovery in any criminal case
depends wholly upon statutory provisions therefor.” 164 N.W.2d 129, 133 (Iowa
1969) (quoting 20 Am. Jur. 2d, Costs § 100).
B.
The State concedes that no statute authorizes the district court to assess
costs in dismissed criminal cases. We agree with the concession. Neither of the
relevant chapters of the Code—chapters 815 and 910—authorize the district
court to assess costs against the defendant in dismissed criminal cases.
Chapter 815 of the Code governs, among other things, the assessment and
recoupment of indigent defense fees and costs. The Code authorizes the district
court to assess indigent defense fees and costs against a defendant only when
the defendant “is convicted in a criminal case” or is “acquitted in a criminal case”
but only “to the extent the person is reasonably able to pay.” Iowa Code 5
§ 815.9(5)–(6) (2023). A dismissal is neither a conviction nor an acquittal, so
neither of these provisions is applicable here.
A prior version of section 815.9 authorized the district court to assess
indigent defense fees and costs against the defendant in a dismissed case:
If the case is a criminal case, all costs and fees incurred for legal assistance shall become due and payable to the clerk of the district court by the person receiving the legal assistance not later than the date of sentencing, or if the person is acquitted or the charges are dismissed, within thirty days of the acquittal or dismissal.
Id. § 815.9(4) (2012). But the legislature revoked that authority in 2012. See
2012 Iowa Act ch. 1063, § 8.
Chapter 910 of the Code governs the imposition of restitution in criminal
proceedings. The Code defines restitution to include, among other things, “court
costs” and “court-appointed attorney fees ordered pursuant to section 815.9.”
Iowa Code § 910.1(2) (2023). The Code authorizes the district court to order
restitution only where “there is a plea of guilty, verdict of guilty, or special verdict
upon which a judgment of conviction is rendered.” Id. § 910.2(1)(a). There is no
judgment of conviction in a dismissed case. Thus, the district court has no
statutory authority to impose restitution in a dismissed case.
C.
Pagliai contends that the lack of any statute authorizing the district court
to assess costs in a dismissed case creates a jurisdictional problem. In his view,
the district court lacked jurisdiction to assess costs in a dismissed case. We
disagree.
Pagliai conflates jurisdiction and authority. See State v. Rutherford,
997 N.W.2d 142, 144 (Iowa 2023) (“There is an important difference between a
court’s subject matter jurisdiction and its authority to act.”). Jurisdiction is a
court’s power to preside over a case. See State v. Mandicino, 509 N.W.2d 481, 6
482 (Iowa 1993) (discussing jurisdiction). Authority is the district court’s power
to act in a case where it has jurisdiction. See id.
The district court here undoubtedly had jurisdiction over the case. The
state constitution vests district courts with “jurisdiction in civil and criminal
matters arising in their respective districts, in such manner as shall be
prescribed by law.” Iowa Const. art. V, § 6. The constitutional grant of
jurisdiction in criminal matters is confirmed by statute. See Iowa Code
§§ 602.6101, .6202 (providing the district court is a court of general jurisdiction
with power over all criminal matters). This was a criminal case subject to the
district court’s original jurisdiction. A district court loses jurisdiction over a
criminal matter “once a final judgment is rendered.” State v. T.J.W., 2 N.W.3d
853, 857 (Iowa 2024) (quoting State v. Olsen, 794 N.W.2d 285, 287 (Iowa 2011)).
In State v. T.J.W., we held that the court lacked jurisdiction to order the
defendant to pay restitution in a criminal case after the case had been dismissed.
Id. at 859. “As a result,” there was no statutory “basis for giving the court
jurisdiction to enter the order.” Id. at 858. Here, in contrast, the district court
still had jurisdiction over the pending criminal cases at the time it entered the
challenged disposition orders.
Thus, the proper question presented in this case is whether the district
court had statutory authority to assess costs against Pagliai in the dismissed
cases. We turn to that question next.
D.
The district court’s disposition of a criminal case not authorized by statute
cannot be cured on the basis of contract, waiver, estoppel, or detrimental
reliance. 7
The leading case is State v. Howell, 290 N.W.2d 355, 356 (Iowa 1980). In
that case, the defendant was convicted of possession of a controlled substance
with intent to deliver. Id. The parties agreed upon a probationary sentence not
authorized by statute. See id. at 357. When the State later challenged the
sentence, Howell argued that the sentence was bargained for and that the state
should be “estopped from now challenging the bargain.” Id. This court rejected
Howell’s argument, explaining that a bargained-for but unauthorized disposition
impermissibly shifted lawmaking authority from the legislature to the parties
and the courts:
Because it was invalid, the sentence upon which he relies was outside the power or discretion of the sentencing court. There is no hint of deception. Apparently the presiding judge, the prosecutor, and Howell’s own counsel honestly misapprehended the power of the trial court. Surely it should not lie within the authority of bargaining counsel and a willing judge to thus reshape the parameters of allowable punishment. If Howell were to prevail upon either of these contentions we would be left the anomalous situation in which parties could make their own law whenever a judge could be persuaded to allow it.
Id. at 358.
Howell was reaffirmed in State v. Ohnmacht, 342 N.W.2d 838, 840 (Iowa
1983). There, the defendant was convicted of two counts of first-degree robbery.
Id. The district court, concluding it would be an injustice to sentence the
defendant to the required sentence, suspended the defendant’s sentence and
placed the defendant on probation. Id. Approximately seven months later, the
attorney general moved to correct the defendant’s sentence as illegal. See id. at
840–41. This court rejected the defendant’s claim that the sentence could be
affirmed by agreement, waiver, or estoppel. Id. at 845. Ohnmacht explained that
“[t]he legislature possesses the inherent power to prescribe punishment for
crime, and the sentencing authority of the courts is subject to that power.” Id. at 8
842 (quoting State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 308 N.W.2d 27, 30 (Iowa 1981)). “When the
sentencing judge departed from the legislatively mandated sentence, the
pronouncement became a nullity.” Id. Relying on Howell, this court explained
that the defendant’s contention would impermissibly allow the parties to make
their own law. See id. at 844–45. The court concluded that the “Defendant is not
entitled to rely on a bargain struck to uphold an illegal sentence.” Id. at 845.
In accord with Howell and Ohnmacht, Iowa’s appellate courts have
repeatedly held that an illegal sentence is void and cannot be upheld on the basis
of contract, waiver, estoppel, or detrimental reliance. See, e.g., State v. Louisell,
865 N.W.2d 590, 598 (Iowa 2015) (“Because there was no statutory authority for
the determinate sentence of twenty-five years in prison . . . that part of the
district court’s sentencing order must be vacated.”); State v. Copenhaver,
844 N.W.2d 442, 447 (Iowa 2014) (“An illegal sentence is a sentence that is not
permitted by statute.”); State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 630 N.W.2d 778, 779 (Iowa 2001)
(“Because the district court had no power to sentence the defendant to a ten-year
indeterminate sentence, we . . . vacate the defendant’s sentence . . . .” (footnote
omitted)); State v. Woody, 613 N.W.2d 215, 218 (Iowa 2000) (en banc) (“Neither
party may rely on a plea agreement to uphold an illegal sentence.”); State v.
Austin, 503 N.W.2d 604, 607 (Iowa 1993) (“Our case law has provided that
criminal sentences not authorized by statute are void and cannot be permitted
to stand.”); State v. Draper, 457 N.W.2d 600, 605 (Iowa 1990) (“[W]hen a
sentencing court departs . . . from the legislatively authorized sentence for a
given offense, the pronounced sentence is a nullity subject to correction . . . .”);
State v. Peterson, 327 N.W.2d 735, 738 (Iowa 1982) (en banc) (rejecting
contention that “estoppel mandated the enforcement of an invalid sentence”);
State v. Strable, 313 N.W.2d 497, 499 (Iowa 1981) (same), abrogated on other 9
grounds by, State v. White, 9 N.W.3d 1, 9 (Iowa 2024); Noble v. Iowa Dist. Ct.,
919 N.W.2d 625, 631 (Iowa Ct. App. 2018) (“It is well established the parties
cannot agree upon an illegal sentence.”); State v. Fix, 830 N.W.2d 744, 747 (Iowa
Ct. App. 2013) (“[T]he parties may not rely on a plea agreement to uphold an
illegal sentence . . . .”); State v. Hallock, 765 N.W.2d 598, 602 (Iowa Ct. App.
2009) (“Void sentences are not subject to the usual concepts of waiver . . . .”).
This case does not involve an illegal sentence. A sentence is the “judgment
formally pronounced by the court or judge upon the defendant after his
conviction in a criminal prosecution, imposing the punishment to be inflicted.”
Klouda v. Sixth Jud. Dist. Dep’t of Corr. Servs., 642 N.W.2d 255, 261 (Iowa 2002)
(quoting Sentence, Black’s Law Dictionary 1362 (6th ed. 1990)). A dispositional
order does not follow a judgment of conviction. It is thus not a sentencing order.
Because an order dismissing a case is a dispositional order and not a sentencing
order, the imposition of costs in a dispositional order is not an illegal sentence
within the meaning of Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 2.24(5).
Although this case involves a dismissal order rather than a sentencing
order, the “distinction does not obviate the important policy considerations
underlying the Howell decision.” Ohnmacht, 342 N.W.2d at 844. The rationale in
our illegal sentencing cases apply with equal force to any dispositional order in
a criminal case because the district court’s dispositional authority is prescribed
by statute. See, e.g., Overton v. State, 493 N.W.2d 857, 859 (Iowa 1992) (“While
Wiese and Ohnmacht both involve criminal sentencing, we believe that the
reasoning employed in these cases is also applicable to unauthorized sanctions
imposed in prison disciplinary proceedings.”); State v. Ryan, 351 N.W.2d 186,
188 (Iowa 1984) (“The district court did not have any statutory or other power to 10
make this kind of decision. Despite personal beliefs or good intentions, the
district court is bound to act only under its statutory authority.”).
We recently addressed an unauthorized dispositional order in State v.
Rasmussen, 7 N.W.3d 357 (Iowa 2024). In Rasmussen, as part of a global plea
agreement to resolve different cases, the district court entered a no-contact order
in a dismissed case without any objection from the defendant. See id. at 362. We
concluded that the no-contact order was void even though it was entered in a
dismissed case because a statutorily unauthorized disposition of a criminal case
“cannot be affirmed on the basis of contract, waiver, estoppel, or detrimental
reliance.” Id. at 365.
As in Howell, Ohnmacht, and Rasmussen, allowing the parties to confer
statutory authority on the district court to dispose of a case in a manner not
allowed by statute would create the “anomalous situation in which
parties . . . make their own law” because “a judge [was] persuaded to allow it.”
Howell, 290 N.W.2d at 358. In fact, affirming the dispositional orders in this case
would allow the parties and the district court to exercise a veto of the legislature’s
2012 repeal of this statutory authority.
Where, as here, no statute authorizes a district court to assess costs in a
dismissed criminal case, the dismissal order is ultra vires and invalid. See
State v. Brown, 905 N.W.2d 846, 857 (Iowa 2018) (stating that “an assessment
of court costs for the dismissed simple misdemeanor charge” is illegal and
vacating the order for costs); State v. Vogel, No. 18–0230, 2018 WL 6706231, at
*2 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 19, 2018) (vacating order assessing costs on dismissed
simple misdemeanor case); State v. Landis, No. 17–1369, 2018 WL 6720036, at
*5 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 19, 2018) (same); see also Thomas v. State, 418 S.W.2d
792, 793 (Ark. 1967) (“The order assessing court costs against the defendant 11
upon dismissal of the indictment is void and of no effect . . . .”); State v. Richey,
569 S.W.3d 420, 423 (Mo. 2019) (en banc) (“Costs may only be granted ‘by virtue
of express statutory authority.’ . . . ‘[N]o right to or liability for costs exists in the
absence of statutory authorization.’ ” (alteration in original) (first quoting State
ex rel. Merrell v. Carter, 518 S.W.3d 798, 800 (Mo. 2017) (en banc); and then
quoting Cramer v. Smith, 168 S.W.2d 1039, 1040 (Mo. 1943) (en banc))).
E.
While the State concedes “that the district court lacked statutory authority
to order [Pagliai] to pay costs for dismissed charges,” it nonetheless urges us to
affirm the assessment of costs. The State argues that our precedents allow the
parties to bargain for the assessment of costs in dismissed cases. The State relies
primarily on two cases in support of its argument: State v. Petrie, 478 N.W.2d
620 (Iowa 1991) (per curiam), and State v. McMurry, 925 N.W.2d 592 (Iowa
2019). We conclude the argument is unavailing.
Petrie and McMurry are distinguishable from this case. Petrie involved the
assessment of court costs associated with dismissed counts in a multicount trial
information where the defendant was convicted of at least one count in the
information and a judgment of conviction was entered in the case. Petrie,
478 N.W.2d at 622. In that context, the Petrie court stated that the parties could
bargain for the assessment and apportionment of costs. Id. McMurry was a
follow-up to Petrie. In that case, the court addressed the manner of determining
the “equitable apportionment of fees and court costs” in a multicount trial
information where there was a conviction on one but not all of the counts in the
information. McMurry, 925 N.W.2d at 594.
As is apparent, neither Petrie nor McMurry involved the assessment of
costs in a dismissed case where there was no judgment of conviction. In addition, 12
in both Petrie and McMurry, a statute authorized the district court to assess costs
against the defendant upon entry of the judgment of conviction. See Iowa Code
§ 910.2 (1989) (“In all criminal cases . . . upon which a judgment of conviction
is rendered, the sentencing court shall order that restitution be made by each
offender . . . for court costs . . . .” (emphasis added)); id. § 910.2 (2016). Petrie
and McMurry merely hold that the parties may bargain for the assessment and
apportionment of costs related to dismissed charges in a multicount trial
information where there is a judgment of conviction in the case. See State v.
Headley, 926 N.W.2d 545, 552–53 (Iowa 2019) (stating that McMurry held that
“requiring a defendant to pay the court costs associated with the dismissed
charges did not constitute an illegal sentence as long as the costs would have
been incurred in prosecuting the charges that were not dismissed.”). Those cases
offer no support for the proposition that the district court can assess costs
against the defendant in a dismissed case.
II.
Having concluded that the district court’s dispositional orders assessing
costs against Pagliai were not authorized by statute and thus invalid, we must
address the question of remedy. The question of remedy is somewhat
complicated here because the problem extends beyond the unauthorized
dispositional orders. If the district court had merely assessed costs in the
dismissed cases on its own accord, we could simply vacate the orders without
any further concern. See Brown, 905 N.W.2d at 857. Here, however, the parties
bargained for a disposition not authorized by statute; the object of the plea
agreement was unlawful. That fact complicates the issue.
It seems to us there are two potential remedies. See Woody, 613 N.W.2d
at 218 (“If neither party may rely on the plea agreement, what remedy is 13
appropriate here? Do we allow the State to reinstate the original charge or do we
remand for sentencing on the reduced charge?”). One remedy is to vacate the
dispositional orders and enforce the remainder of the plea bargain. See State v.
Ceretti, 871 N.W.2d 88, 97 (Iowa 2015). By vacating the unauthorized
dispositional orders, however, we may create a perverse incentive for defendants
“to enter plea agreements quietly,” seek appellate review, and “transform what
was a favorable plea bargain in the district court to an even better deal on
appeal.” Id. (quoting State v. Walker, 610 N.W.2d 524, 526 (Iowa 2000) (en banc)).
A second remedy is to vacate all of the “convictions and the entire plea bargain
and remand the case to the district court.” Id. In Ceretti, this court concluded
the second remedy was consistent with principles of bargaining and fairer to the
State. Id.
We conclude that the best disposition of the claim is to allow the
prosecutor to elect one of these two remedies on remand. Noble, 919 N.W.2d at
633. While vacating the dispositional orders and enforcing the remainder of the
plea bargain might allow the defendant to turn a favorable plea into a better deal,
in some circumstances the State may consider that a preferable remedy to
vacating the plea bargain and all of the convictions and beginning anew. Id. The
passage of time often works to the detriment of the prosecution: evidence is lost
or degrades; witnesses move or pass away; of those witnesses who remain,
memories fade. See Est. of Kuhns v. Marco, 620 N.W.2d 488, 491 (Iowa 2000)
(en banc) (discussing these concerns in the context of stale claims). The
prosecution must also consider whether the incremental gain in having the
defendant pay costs is worth starting anew. These are legitimate concerns best
left to the prosecutor’s discretion. 14
III.
We conditionally vacate these four cases and remand for further
proceedings. On remand, at the State’s election, the district court shall either:
(1) vacate the dispositional orders assessing fees and costs to the defendant; or
(2) vacate the plea bargain, the resulting convictions, the sentences, and the
dispositional orders. In the event the State elects the latter remedy, “the State
may reinstate any charges dismissed in contemplation of a valid plea bargain, if
it so desires, and file any additional charges supported by the available
evidence.” Ceretti, 871 N.W.2d at 97 (quoting State v. Allen, 708 N.W.2d 361, 369
(Iowa 2006)). Because we have concluded that the district court was without
statutory authority to dispose of these cases in this manner, we need not reach
the defendant’s constitutional challenges to the dispositional orders.
Convictions, Sentences, and Dispositional Orders Conditionally
Vacated and Remanded with Instructions.
Mansfield, Oxley, and May, JJ., join this opinion. McDermott, J., files an
opinion concurring in the judgment. Waterman, J., files a dissenting opinion, in
which Christensen, C.J., joins. 15
#24–0353, State v. Pagliai
McDermott, Justice (concurring).
The title of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment succeeds in part because
of the intuitive, seemingly inevitable connection between the two concepts: basic
notions of justice tell us that commission of a crime leads to punishment. But
the plea practice spotlighted in this case—where a prosecutor agrees to dismiss
a criminal charge in exchange for a defendant’s agreement to pay costs—contorts
the title’s equation into one lacking either intuitive spark or elemental justice;
we have no crime, yet punishment.
The claim that courts may impose a criminal punishment in the absence
of a criminal conviction defies fundamental notions of due process. The Due
Process Clauses of both the United States and Iowa Constitutions protect a
defendant’s presumption of innocence. “The principle that there is a
presumption of innocence in favor of the accused is the undoubted law,
axiomatic and elementary, and its enforcement lies at the foundation of the
administration of our criminal law.” Coffin v. United States, 156 U.S. 432, 453
(1895). Imposing court costs on a defendant whose charges were dismissed is
functionally identical to imposing a punishment on a person who is, by law,
presumed innocent. A state “may not presume a person, adjudged guilty of no
crime, nonetheless guilty enough for monetary exactions.” Nelson v. Colorado,
581 U.S. 128, 136 (2017).
The United States Supreme Court addressed similar due process concerns
in Nelson v. Colorado. In that case, two defendants had already paid costs when
their convictions were overturned. 581 U.S. at 132–33. They challenged a state
statute that imposed burdensome restrictions on their ability to get a refund. Id.
The Court declared that once a conviction is invalidated, the state has “zero 16
claim” to the money and may not impose “monetary exactions” on a person
“adjudged guilty of no crime.” Id. at 136, 139. The burdens imposed by the
statute, the Court held, violated the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due
process. Id. at 130. Applied in the present case, the Court’s logic operates with
equal, if not greater, force for a person whose charges were dismissed without
any adjudication of guilt to begin with.
An earlier case, Giaccio v. Pennsylvania, hews to this path. 382 U.S. 399
(1966). In Giaccio, the defendant challenged a state law that allowed a jury to
impose court costs on him even after an acquittal. Id. at 401. In striking down
the statute, the Court declared the state law unconstitutionally vague and
arbitrary, as it essentially allowed the jury to impose costs to punish someone
for conduct that did not result in a criminal conviction. Id. at 403–04. Two
concurring opinions presented their views of the statute’s defect at a more
fundamental level, with one stating that “allow[ing] a jury to punish a defendant
after finding him not guilty . . . violates the most rudimentary concept of due
process of law,” id. at 405 (Stewart, J., concurring), and the other stating that
“the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not permit a State
to impose a penalty or costs upon a defendant whom the jury has found not
guilty of any offense with which he has been charged,” id. (Fortas, J., concurring).
The State cannot circumvent due process protections “by the simple label
a State chooses to fasten upon its conduct or its statute.” Giaccio, 382 U.S. at
402. “Labels don’t control.” Mueller v. Raemisch, 740 F.3d 1128, 1133 (7th Cir.
2014) (Posner, J.). A fee or cost is generally viewed as “compensation for a service
provided to, or alternatively compensation for a cost imposed by, the person
charged the fee.” Id. The label attached to the financial obligation in a dismissed
case—“costs,” “fees,” “indigent defense fee recoupment,” “restitution”—does not 17
change its character; it is a court-ordered punishment in a criminal case
imposed on someone who has not been convicted of the crime.
Nor does it matter what label the court applies to the court’s order
imposing the penalty—whether “dispositional,” “sentencing,” or otherwise. What
matters is what the order does. Here, the court’s order imposed a financial
penalty in a criminal case on a person legally innocent of the crime charged.
Ordering a monetary sanction against a legally innocent person in effect imposes
a sentence where no sentence is permitted. “Both liberty and property are
specifically protected by the Fourteenth Amendment against any state
deprivation which does not meet the standards of due process . . . .” Giaccio, 382
U.S. at 402.
The State argues that by entering into the plea agreement, Pagliai “waived”
any challenge to the order imposing costs. As an initial matter, it’s not hard to
understand why a legally innocent defendant might agree to pay costs in
exchange for a dismissal. As Justice Scalia observed, our plea-bargaining system
“presents grave risks of prosecutorial overcharging that effectively compels an
innocent defendant to avoid massive risk by pleading guilty to a lesser offense.”
Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156, 185 (2012) (Scalia, J., dissenting). But a
defendant’s consent to a plea deal does not somehow insulate it from illegality.
In the mid-2000s, in a series of attorney disciplinary cases, we addressed
a common plea practice where prosecutors and defendants cut deals to allow
defendants to plead guilty to an archaic “cowl lamp” violation instead of the
actual crime charged. See, e.g., Iowa Sup. Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Borth,
728 N.W.2d 205, 208–09 (Iowa 2007); Iowa Sup. Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v.
Zenor, 707 N.W.2d 176, 179–80 (Iowa 2005); Iowa Sup. Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd.
v. Howe, 706 N.W.2d 360, 367–68 (Iowa 2005). Iowa’s now-repealed cowl-lamp 18
statute prohibited motor vehicles from having “more than two side cowl or fender
lamps.” Iowa Code § 321.406 (2005), repealed by, 2010 Iowa Acts ch. 1045, § 1.
Cowl lamps hadn’t been installed on automobiles for many decades. Howe,
706 N.W.2d at 367. We held that the plea agreements to these sham violations
were unlawful. Borth, 728 N.W.2d at 209; Zenor, 707 N.W.2d at 179–80; Howe,
706 N.W.2d at 368–70. “It makes a mockery of the justice system,” we declared,
“when a defendant is punished for violating a statute that he unquestionably did
not violate.” Howe, 706 N.W.2d at 379. That the defendant agreed to the plea
deal didn’t negate the underlying illegality. So too here: a person can’t waive his
right to the presumption of innocence in this way since an agreement to accept
a punishment for a crime without a conviction creates an illegal sentence that a
court has no power to impose regardless of consent.
The cowl-lamp pleas resulted in punishments untethered to the correct
crime; the dismissed charges here resulted in punishments untethered to any
crime. When the State dismisses charges against a person, the person is legally
innocent, and the State’s ability to impose financial penalties disappears. Guilt
is a binary state: you are either guilty or not guilty, and unless convicted, you
always remain not guilty. People thus never reside in some in-between place,
some guilt purgatory, where they are somewhat guilty and thus somewhat
punishable. Yet deals where defendants pay costs in exchange for dismissal
operate under just such a logic.
When the State can impose the costs of its failed prosecutorial efforts on
legally innocent defendants, we undermine the protections and benefits of
innocence, creating instead “a system in which an acquittal might be nearly as
ruinous to the defendant as a conviction.” Schilb v. Kuebel, 404 U.S. 357, 379
(Douglas, J., dissenting). What’s more, assessing costs in the absence of a 19
conviction leads to the anomalous result that a dismissed defendant often fares
worse than a guilty one. This is because a convicted defendant has a statutory
right to later contest their ability to pay court-imposed costs, while a dismissed
defendant does not. See Iowa Code § 910.7(1) (2023) (permitting a defendant to
modify payment obligations only “during the period of probation, parole, or
incarceration”). Defendants in dismissed cases are stuck with whatever financial
punishment the court imposes, regardless of their ability to pay it. Cf. id. The
legally innocent are thus treated worse—and often pay far more—than the
convicted.
“[T]he accused is always presumed innocent until convicted.” Ray v. State,
1 Greene 316, 318 (Iowa 1848). Costs imposed against a legally innocent person
violate the constitutional presumption of innocence protected under the federal
and state Due Process Clauses. Because the lack of a conviction leaves the court
without power to impose any penalties on the dismissed defendant, the
legislature could not authorize a court to impose a sentence on a dismissed
charge—even if it wanted to—that complied with due process. So while I
respectfully concur in the result that the majority reaches in vacating the
unlawful plea agreement and the related orders implementing it, I disagree that
the problem is a purely statutory one. The ultimate defect here is one of
constitutional dimension. 20
#24–0353, State v. Pagliai Waterman, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. Ronald Pagliai took a plea deal that dismissed two
of four charges against him, and he agreed to pay costs on those dismissed
counts. He indisputably entered into that plea agreement knowingly, voluntarily,
and intelligently, and the district court approved the plea. Plea agreements like
Pagliai’s have been in widespread use throughout Iowa for many years,
supported by precedent from our court that the majority leaves intact today. As
an amicus brief of the Iowa County Attorneys Association noted in a prior appeal,
“[a]n agreed dismissal at the defendant’s cost is a staple of the practice of
criminal law in this state.” Final Brief of Amicus Curiae Iowa County Attorneys
Association at 19, State v. Mathes, No. 17–1909, 2020 WL 2267274 (Iowa May 8,
2020), https://www.iowacourts.gov/courtcases/5430/briefs/2632/embedBrief
[https://perma.cc/YB62-V63D]. In that earlier appeal, our court split evenly,
allowing the practice to continue by operation of law, even in cases where the
defendant had not been convicted. Mathes, 2020 WL 2267274, at *1 (affirmed by
operation of law). Today’s case is easier because Pagliai was convicted on two
counts. I would affirm the dispositional orders approving his agreement to pay
costs on the dismissed counts.
The majority correctly decides several legal issues. First, I agree with the
majority’s conclusion that the dispositional orders at issue are not illegal
sentences. Second, I agree that a party cannot rely on a plea agreement to uphold
an illegal sentence. Third, I agree that the district court had subject matter
jurisdiction to enter the dispositional orders. Fourth, I agree that the issue is one
of the district court’s authority, not its jurisdiction. Fifth, I agree that there
currently is no Iowa statute authorizing the district court to order a defendant 21
to pay costs on dismissed counts. Sixth, I agree with the majority’s conclusion
that a party generally can waive an objection to the court’s lack of authority. So
far so good. But the majority fails to take the inescapable next step to hold that
Pagliai waived his objection to the district court’s lack of authority when he
entered into a plea agreement that required him to pay costs on the two
dismissed counts. Although it takes that wrong turn, the majority grants the
right remedy by allowing the State on remand to elect whether to reinstitute the
charges it had dismissed under the plea bargain. State v. Ceretti, 871 N.W.2d 88,
97–98 (Iowa 2015). Appellants should be careful what they ask for.
Merely vacating the costs that the defendant agreed to pay on the
dismissed counts would rewrite the plea agreement. We should not allow a
defendant “to transform what was a favorable plea bargain in the district court
to an even better deal on appeal.” Id. (quoting State v. Walker, 610 N.W.2d 524,
526 (Iowa 2000) (en banc)). Pagliai got what he bargained for: the dismissal of
two out of four charges in exchange for his payment of costs on those charges.
It is well settled that parties can waive objections to orders that the court
enters without statutory authority. See State v. Emery, 636 N.W.2d 116, 123
(Iowa 2001) (“Any deficiency in the district court’s authority was waived when
the defendant failed to object to the district court’s adjudication of his case.”);
State v. Mandicino, 509 N.W.2d 481, 483 (Iowa 1993) (“[W]here subject matter
jurisdiction exists, an impediment to a court’s authority can be obviated by
consent, waiver or estoppel.” (emphasis omitted)); Jasper v. State, 477 N.W.2d
852, 856 (Iowa 1991) (“Applicant cannot deliberately act so as to invite error and
then object because the court has accepted the invitation.”). The majority fails to
follow this precedent. 22
Instead, the majority marshals string citations to inapposite cases
vacating illegal sentences,1 or vacating sentences with unauthorized terms where
there was no plea bargain or where the defendant did not waive his objections to
the sentencing court’s lack of statutory authority. The majority cites no case
directly on point holding that a defendant can’t agree to pay costs on a dismissed
count. This case is the first to so hold.
One saving grace is that the majority distinguished but did not overrule
State v. McMurry, 925 N.W.2d 592, 594 (Iowa 2019), and State v. Petrie, 478
N.W.2d 620, 622 (Iowa 1991) (per curiam). In those cases, our court recognized
that defendants could agree to pay costs on dismissed counts within a single
case that included a conviction. McMurry, 925 N.W.2d at 601; Petrie, 478 N.W.2d
at 622; see also State v. Ruth, 925 N.W.2d 589, 591 (Iowa 2019) (reversing
assessment of costs on dismissed counts because “there was no agreement
between the parties for Ruth to pay these costs” and stating that “sentencing
courts can no longer routinely order the defendant to pay the court costs [on
dismissed counts], unless supported by an agreement between the parties”). In
McMurry, “we reiterate[d] the observation in Petrie that the parties are free to
agree to the apportionment of fees and costs in a plea agreement.” 925 N.W.2d
at 601. In this case, the majority concludes that because Pagliai was charged in
four separately numbered cases, McMurry and Petrie are inapplicable. That is a
distinction without a difference when, as here, the parties enter into a global plea
agreement resolving all four cases together simultaneously.2 But in any event,
1The majority mischaracterizes State v. Rasmussen, 7 N.W.3d 357, 360 (Iowa 2024), as
involving a dispositional order rather than an illegal sentence. But that unanimous decision made clear that the challenged no-contact order on a dismissed count was in fact an “illegal sentence.” Id. at 365 (“The defendant is correct in stating that the no-contact order entered in the dismissed simple misdemeanor case involving Victim 3 is an illegal sentence and void.”). 2We have used a single case number approach, or “whole file basis,” in interpreting Iowa
Code section 901C, in order to permit “mixed-file expungements” to effectuate the purpose of the 23
McMurry and Petrie remain on the books and continue to permit defendants to
agree to pay costs on dismissed counts within a single case. Prosecutors can
draft trial informations accordingly.3
Nevertheless, the majority limits the scope of global plea bargains when
charges are brought in multiple cases. Its holding today removes an important
tool from the toolbox for prosecutors and defense lawyers alike. As the lawyer for
the State argued in this case, assigning costs on dismissed counts allows
prosecutors to extend clemency:
Mr. Pagliai’s attorney—Pagliai, excuse me—said it’s possible [removing the payment of costs as a bargaining chip] will affect plea bargaining. I disagree. It is absolutely certain that this will affect plea bargaining in a hugely significant way across the state. My second year of law school, I interned in the Linn County Attorney’s Office, and it was my job to do [simple misdemeanors] in the basement. I had four cases on the hour every hour for four hours, and I had defendants who--victims who would come in and say, “Y’know what, my younger co-worker, he’s thirty years younger than me, punched me in the face over a bet, and if he just apologizes to me, I’m fine to let this go.” And you know, if that case involved a property crime—where his glasses were damaged or something where you could get victim pecuniary damages from it—this--it would be a hugely valuable tool for me standing there to say, “Alright, if you apologize, we’ll dismiss this at your cost and the court will assess victim pecuniary damages in the amount to replace his glasses or whatever property was injured in the course of that simple assault.” That tool is so important to efficient dispositions and not just efficient ones, but ones that extend clemency as well to defendants. This is not just the state trying to get through the inordinate number of cases on a simple misdemeanor docket; this is a tool that prosecutors use every day in the state and have for a long time to extend clemency.
I would allow this beneficial practice to continue.
statutes by enabling the applicant to clear his criminal record including dismissed charges. See Doe v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 27 N.W.3d 264, 266–69 (Iowa 2025); State v. Doe, 903 N.W.2d 347, 351–55 (Iowa 2017). Those cases are inapplicable here, and the majority does not try to rely on them. 3Separate case numbers will be necessary when, for example, the defendant is charged
with multiple crimes against one or more victims in different counties. 24
Of course, the legislature is free to respond to today’s decision by
reenacting legislation such as Iowa Code section 815.9(4) (2012) to resume the
practice by expressly authorizing courts to impose costs on dismissed charges.
Notably, in the thirteen years since the repeal of the statute that expressly
allowed courts to assess costs on dismissed counts, and in the six years since
we reiterated our blessing of plea agreements allowing that practice in McMurry,
the legislature never enacted a statute prohibiting courts from enforcing such
plea agreements. The legislature’s silence speaks volumes.
Able counsel for amici in support of Pagliai make excellent policy
arguments that court costs impose an undue burden on downtrodden
defendants, and the lion’s share of the court-ordered costs remain uncollectible
while precluding defendants from expunging their criminal records to improve
their employability. Iowa is one of the few states that charges jail fees for
incarcerated defendants, including those ultimately acquitted. And Iowa is one
of the few states to seek reimbursement of attorney fees from indigent
defendants. But those policy arguments should be directed to the legislature.
Meanwhile, as a practical matter, today’s decision operates only
prospectively; it does not allow other defendants to renege on pleas in which they
agreed to pay costs and to collaterally attack prior dispositional orders.
Postconviction relief is not available to challenge any “alleged error relating to
restitution, court costs, or fees under [Iowa Code] section 904.702 or chapter
815 or 910.” Iowa Code § 822.2(1)(g) (2023). And our court unanimously agrees
that dispositional orders such as Pagliai’s are not illegal sentences that can be
challenged at any time.
Finally, the single-justice concurrence argues that it is unconstitutional to
assess costs on Pagliai’s dismissed counts. The concurrence relies on inapposite 25
cases addressing acquittals4 and nonexistent cowl lamp violations5. Pagliai
wasn’t acquitted of any crime. Nor did he plead guilty to a crime that no longer
exists. He was charged with three theft crimes and with resisting arrest. All four
charges were supported by probable cause. He pleaded guilty to two of those
charges in a combined plea agreement, with the remaining charges dismissed.
The concurrence cites no case on point from any jurisdiction holding that it is
unconstitutional to assess costs in a situation like Pagliai’s. And neither Pagliai
nor the amici curiae cite such a case. Dostoevsky wouldn’t consider Pagliai, a
convicted shoplifter, to be an innocent man. Our court has never held it is
unconstitutional to assess costs on dismissed counts as part of a plea bargain
with or without a conviction. The concurrence doesn’t even attempt to address
the fact that Pagliai’s plea agreement waived any constitutional claims. See State
v. Carroll, 767 N.W.2d 638, 641 (Iowa 2009). The majority decides this case by
statutory analysis without relying on the constitutional avoidance doctrine. The
concurrence’s constitutional argument could carry the day for a defendant who
is acquitted of the charges, but that doesn’t help Pagliai.
Christensen, C.J., joins this dissent.
4I agree that it violates due process to impose costs on charges for which the defendant
was acquitted. Oddly, the concurrence directs no fire on Iowa Code section 815.9(6) (2023), which allows the imposition of costs following an acquittal. 5The problem in the cowl lamp cases was that the plea agreements allowed citations for
speeding or other moving violations to be amended to an equipment violation with no factual basis for the amended charge. See, e.g., Iowa Sup. Ct. Disciplinary Bd. v. Howe, 706 N.W.2d 360, 367 (Iowa 2005). The defendant was happy to plead guilty to a fake cowl lamp violation to avoid a moving violation on his driving record that could affect his auto insurance premiums or driver’s license. Id. By contrast, Pagliai pleaded guilty to two of the original charges from his shoplifting spree and the factual basis for his plea is undisputed. The concurrence views each charge in isolation. In my view, the resolution of all four charges under Pagliai’s plea agreement should be viewed wholistically. To use the concurrence’s chosen term, Pagliai agreed to pay costs on his dismissed theft charges that were “tethered” to his convictions.