State v. Edelman

984 P.2d 421, 97 Wash. App. 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 30, 1999
Docket42812-8-I
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 984 P.2d 421 (State v. Edelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Edelman, 984 P.2d 421, 97 Wash. App. 161 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Coleman, J.

The primary issue presented in this case is whether a court has the authority to modify a restitution order entered under RCW 9.94A.142 to provide for payment to a victim’s estate after the victim has passed away. The State appeals the trial court’s orders dismissing its motion to sanction Elizabeth Edelman for noncompliance *163 with a restitution order after the death of the named recipient and denying a motion to amend the order. We hold that a defendant’s restitution obligation does not automatically end when a victim dies and that the statutes permit the modification of a restitution order to provide for payments to the victim’s estate. We conclude that the court erred in finding it did not have the jurisdiction to continue restitution in this case and in dismissing the State’s motion for sanctions. Therefore, we reverse.

FACTS

In 1990, Elizabeth Edelman was convicted of first degree theft. As part of her sentence, she was ordered to pay $51,600 to the victim of her crime, Fred Sharp, as restitution. The sentence directed Edelman to make payments of at least $200 per month to the court clerk.

In 1996, Edelman failed to submit a financial declaration requested by her community corrections officer (CCO). The court ordered her to meet with her CCO to review her payment schedule. In January 1997, Edelman’s sentence was modified to require payments of $250 per month.

Before Edelman’s sentence was modified, Fred Sharp died. When Edelman learned that Sharp had passed away, she informed the court clerk and the Department of Corrections that Sharp was dead. The Department told Edelman that she should go back to court “to ask that the restitution stop, and that the case be closed.” But in May 1997, Edelman stopped making payments. In court documents, she explained that she ceased making payments because she “thought the restitution was just for [Sharp].”

In June 1997, the court entered an amended order ex parte that directed payments to Sharp’s estate. Nothing in the record indicates that Edelman received notice of the amendment before it was entered. Edelman made one payment in August 1997 under the amended order, but then stopped.

Edelman did not return a financial declaration for 1997 and missed a total of ten payments through March 1998. *164 She had paid $12,590.50 toward her restitution obligation. In March 1998, the State moved to modify Edelman’s sentence to include sanctions for sentence violations, citing the ten payments she had missed and her failure to return a 1997 financial declaration. In support of its motion, the State acknowledged that the restitution order had been amended ex parte by mistake but argued that Edelman had to continue paying restitution under the amended order until it was vacated. The State further argued that if the ex parte order was void, it had not changed Edelman’s obligation under her sentence and she was still required to submit financial information to the Department and make monthly payments.

The trial court dismissed the State’s motion for sanctions, ruling that the ex parte order was invalid because Edelman was not present when it was entered and had received no notice of the hearing, in violation of her right to due process. The order of dismissal noted that Edelman’s sentence originally required her to make payments to Sharp, who was now deceased. But the court concluded in its oral ruling that the restitution order in Edelman’s sentence was not enforceable because it had been replaced or superseded by the invalid ex parte order.

There are two orders setting restitution and only two .... One is in the Judgment and Sentence and the second is the Amended Order Setting Restitution. That supersedes the prior order and I have determined it is invalid. Therefore, we have nothing before the Court to act upon. The proceeding today is dismissed.

The State moved to amend the restitution order to require payment to Sharp’s estate. The court denied the motion, ruling that the restitution statutes did not authorize payments to Bonnie Tuck, Sharp’s daughter and his estate’s personal representative and executrix. The court found that Tuck was not a victim of the crime within the statutory scheme and was not within the class of survivors recognized by statute for the purpose of receiving restitution. The State appealed.

*165 DISCUSSION

The State contends that the restitution obligation does not automatically terminate when a victim dies and that the restitution order may be modified to require payment to a victim’s estate under RCW 9.94A.142(1). The statute provides that a sentence may be modified “as to [the] amount, terms and conditions” of restitution while the offender remains under the court’s jurisdiction. 1 The State argues that providing for payment to a victim’s estate may be characterized as a “term” or “condition” of restitution because the victim’s estate stands in the victim’s shoes and substituting the estate as the payee does not change the nature of the obligation. We review questions on the interpretation of the restitution statutes de novo. State v. Angulo, 77 Wn. App. 657, 660, 893 P.2d 662 (1995).

Edelman first contends that a court may not transfer payments to a victim’s estate absent specific statutory authorization, noting that the Crime Victims’ Compensation Act explicitly provides that restitution ordered under the act is paid to the state victims compensation fund after the original payee’s death. 2 The authority to impose restitution is derived from statute. See State v. Enstone, 137 Wn.2d 675, 682, 974 P.2d 828 (1999) (citing State v. Davison, 116 Wn.2d 917, 919, 809 P.2d 1374 (1991)). But our courts have repeatedly held that “[i]n enacting RCW 9.94A.142, the Legislature granted broad power to the trial court to order restitution.” Enstone, 137 Wn.2d at 679 (citing State v. Smith, 119 Wn.2d 385, 389, 831 P.2d 1082 (1992)). In so holding, our courts have also affirmed that the statutes authorizing restitution should be interpreted broadly to *166 carry out the goals of the statutory provisions. Enstone, 137 Wn.2d at 680; see also Davison, 116 Wn.2d at 922 (“We will not give the [restitution] statutes an overly technical construction which would permit the defendant to escape from just punishment.”).

Edelman responds that continuing restitution does not further compensate Sharp after he has died.

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Bluebook (online)
984 P.2d 421, 97 Wash. App. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-edelman-washctapp-1999.