State v. Christensen

866 P.2d 533, 229 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 1993 Utah LEXIS 161, 1993 WL 538257
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1993
Docket920586
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 866 P.2d 533 (State v. Christensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Christensen, 866 P.2d 533, 229 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 1993 Utah LEXIS 161, 1993 WL 538257 (Utah 1993).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice:

The State of Utah petitions for review of the court of appeals’ ruling that the judgment of conviction against defendant, including a restitution order, abated in toto on defendant’s death. We reverse and remand.

In 1991, defendant Edward Dean Christensen was charged with two counts of failure to' pay state income tax, a class B misdemeanor, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 59-14A-92(5) (Supp.1986); four counts of failure to file a tax return, a third degree felony, in. violation of Utah Code Ann. § 59-l-401(6)(b) (1987); and four counts of failure to pay state income tax, a second degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 59-l-401(6)(c) (1987). Christensen was convicted on all counts. He was sentenced to several jail terms and several prison terms. He was also ordered to pay fines, victim restitution surcharges, and restitution for all unpaid taxes for the period 1984 through 1989.

Christensen appealed his convictions. During pendency of the appeal, Christensen died. The court of appeals required the parties to prepare memoranda outlining their positions on the issue of whether Christensen’s death abated all or part of the criminal action. The court of appeals held that the judgment of conviction against Christensen, including the restitution order, abated in toto on Christensen’s death. 1 The court of appeals relied on this court’s decision in State v. Fanalous, 2 where we held that when a defendant dies during the pendency of an appeal in a criminal case, the criminal action does not survive, but abates upon the defendant’s death. 3 The court of appeals reasoned that in addition to the judgment of conviction against defendant, the restitution order abates as well because “[it] is part of the court’s judgment and is dependent upon a finding of guilt.” 4 The court of appeals further relied on Utah’s restitution statute, which allows an order of restitution of up to twice the amount of pecuniary damages or less if appropriate, 5 reasoning that because restitution is punitive in nature as well as designed to compensate the victim, once a conviction is void, the restitution order is also rendered void. 6

The State challenges only the portion of the court of appeals’ ruling regarding abatement of the restitution order. Therefore, the sole issue on appeal is whether the court of appeals correctly concluded that when defendant died during the pendency of *535 appeal, the restitution order abated. 7 The court of appeals’ determination involves a question of law. When reviewing questions of law, we accord no particular deference to the conclusions of law made by the court of appeals but review them for correctness. 8

The State contends that Utah statutory law provides that a criminal restitution award shall have the same effect as a civil judgment 9 and that because a civil judgment survives the death of a judgment debtor, so should a restitution award. 10 The State further contends that Fanalous held that only criminal judgments abate upon a defendant’s death and that the Fanalous holding was based on the premise that criminal judgments are “wholly punitive” in nature. According to the State, Fanalous is not disposi-tive of this issue because it did not anticipate Utah’s restitution statute.

The State points to United States v. Dudley, 11 a decision out of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that distinguished between fines and prison terms, which abate upon a defendant’s death, 12 and restitution awards, which do not. 13 The State urges us to limit Fanalous to fines and prison sentences, which are purely penal, to follow Dudley, and to hold that restitution awards survive a defendant’s death.

There is no question but that upon Christensen’s death, the sentences to prison terms and the levy of criminal fines, being purely penal, abated. That is this court’s holding in Fanalous. 14 However, the order of restitution in the exact amount of taxes owing stands on a different footing. This order was not a criminal penalty because it ordered payment of only the amount of taxes Christensen owed, plus penalties and interest. This is no different from what is required of any other taxpayer. Fanalous did not deal with such an order and is not controlling. The legislature has made such an order the equivalent of a civil judgment. 15 Civil judgments do not abate upon the death of a judgment debtor pending appeal. 16 The appeal continues unaffected by the death except for the proper substitution of parties for the deceased appellant.

In Fanalous, we stated the issue to be decided as “Has the appeal abated?” and we concluded that it had. 17 We did not go further, as we are now urged to do, and wipe out the conviction as if the defendant had never been charged. As will be seen infra, a number of courts have declined to so rule.

Some older cases from other jurisdictions state that the conviction abates “ab initio.” We have never subscribed to that extreme and now discredited theory, however, and we do not adopt it now. More recent cases reject the abates-ab-initio theory and instead simply abate or sometimes dismiss the appeal. 18 Typical of such modern cases *536 is Whitehouse v. State, 19 where upon the death of the defendant pending his appeal, his counsel moved the court to remand the ease to the trial court to dismiss the charges. He argued that under the federal and Indiana constitutions, the defendant had a right of appeal and now that his death had frustrated those appeal rights, “all of the proceedings had in the prosecution from its inception should abate.” 20

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Bluebook (online)
866 P.2d 533, 229 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 1993 Utah LEXIS 161, 1993 WL 538257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-christensen-utah-1993.