State v. Garcia

2018 UT 3
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 2018
DocketCase No. 20160932
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 UT 3 (State v. Garcia) 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. Garcia, 2018 UT 3 (Utah 2018).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter

2018 UT 3

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

STATE OF UTAH, Respondent, v. DENNIS J. GARCIA, Petitioner.

No. 20160932 Filed January 29, 2018

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable Randall N. Skanchy No. 061901607

Attorneys: Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Tyler R. Green, Solic. Gen., Brent A. Burnett, Asst. Solic. Gen., Salt Lake City, for respondent Stephen G. Homer, West Jordan, for petitioner

ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE HIMONAS, JUSTICE PEARCE, and JUDGE JOHNSON joined. Due to her retirement, JUSTICE DURHAM did not participate herein; DISTRICT JUDGE CHRISTINE S. JOHNSON sat. JUSTICE PETERSEN became a member of the Court on November 17, 2017, after oral argument in this matter, and accordingly did not participate.

ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court: ¶1 Dennis Garcia served a five-year sentence for automobile homicide. Following his release, the Board of Pardons and Parole ordered him to pay $7,000 of restitution toward his victim’s funeral expenses. Garcia filed various motions with the sentencing court STATE v. GARCIA Opinion of the Court

challenging the restitution order as untimely and therefore legally invalid. The district court determined that it did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate these motions, and the court of appeals affirmed. ¶2 We affirm the court of appeals under Utah Code section 77-27-5(3). That provision states that restitution decisions of the board are “not subject to judicial review.” This statutory section was all but ignored by the courts below, but it is properly before us here. And it is decisive. It forecloses the judicial review sought by Garcia in this case. ¶3 Garcia offers no way around this conclusion under the language of the statute. Instead he alleges that section 77-27-5(3) infringes his constitutional rights under the Open Courts Clause of the Utah Constitution. This is an issue Garcia raised both in the district court and in the court of appeals. But he did not raise it in his opening brief in this court. We do not reach it here for that reason.

I ¶4 In March 2006, Dennis Garcia crashed a car and killed his passenger. He was convicted of automobile homicide in April 2008, and he was sentenced to serve zero to five years in prison. ¶5 Garcia was released from prison in April 2013. Months later, the Board of Pardons and Parole issued an order of restitution that required Garcia to pay $7,000 to the Utah Office for Victims of Crime for funds paid to the victim’s mother for funeral expenses. The board sent the order to the district court per Utah Code section 77-27-6(4), and the court entered the order into its docket. ¶6 Garcia moved the district court to set aside the restitution order on the ground that it was untimely.1 In opposing Garcia’s motion the Office of State Debt Collection asserted that the court lacked jurisdiction under Utah Code section 77-27-5(3). That section states that “[d]ecisions of the board in cases involving . . . restitution . . . are final and are not subject to judicial review.” The district court denied Garcia’s motion, holding that it lacked jurisdiction. It based

_____________________________________________________________ 1The Parole Board must “make all orders of restitution within 60 days after the termination or expiration of the defendant’s sentence.” UTAH CODE § 77-27-6(2)(c). Garcia contends that the board’s order was entered after that timeframe.

2 Cite as: 2018 UT 3 Opinion of the Court

its order not on section 77-27-5(3) but on other grounds.2 Garcia then filed three other motions requesting similar relief. He argued, among other things, that section 77-27-5(3) violated the Open Courts Clause. The court denied all three motions on the grounds stated in its previous order; it did not address Garcia’s constitutional argument. ¶7 Garcia appealed the denial of these three motions to the court of appeals. In his brief, he renewed his constitutional argument and made an additional statutory argument. The statutory argument was that the district court had jurisdiction over the restitution order because it entered the order on its docket pursuant to Utah Code section 77-27-6(4). That section states that: [I]f the board makes an order of restitution within 60 days after the termination or expiration of the defendant’s sentence, the matter shall be referred to the district court for civil collection remedies. The Board of Pardons and Parole shall forward a restitution order to the sentencing court to be entered on the judgment docket. The entry shall constitute a lien and is subject to the same rules as a judgment for money in a civil judgment. UTAH CODE § 77-27-6(4). Garcia asserted that this statute “reinvests” the district court with jurisdiction, at least to review a restitution order that it has entered. ¶8 The court of appeals affirmed, but it addressed only Garcia’s statutory argument. It held that section 77-27-6(4) did not reinvest the district court with jurisdiction “to rule upon challenges to the fact, amount, or validity of the judgment itself,” but only to “order such civil remedies to assist the claimant in collecting on the judgment . . . .” State v. Garcia, 2016 UT App 96, ¶ 17, 374 P.3d 1039. This conclusion was rooted in part in the notion that section 77-27-6(4) refers to “order[s]” rather than “judgment[s]”—a distinction the court of appeals found significant. Id. ¶ 16. The court of appeals also noted that “the legislature’s use of the term ‘district

_____________________________________________________________ 2 The district court relied on the principle that “[o]nce a court imposes a valid sentence, it loses subject matter jurisdiction over the case.” State v. Montoya, 825 P.2d 676, 679 (Utah Ct. App. 1991). It noted that while the court does have one year following sentencing to make restitution determinations, that year had expired, leaving the court without jurisdiction. UTAH CODE § 77-38a-302(5)(d)(i) (2005) (“[T]he court shall determine complete restitution . . . within one year after sentencing.”).

3 STATE v. GARCIA Opinion of the Court

court’ as opposed to ‘sentencing court’ . . . indicates that any jurisdiction is vested in the district court system rather than the specific trial court that tried and sentenced a defendant.” Id. ¶ 17. The court’s opinion does not mention Garcia’s open courts challenge. ¶9 We granted certiorari to consider whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the district court’s determination that it lacked jurisdiction. We review the court of appeals’ decision de novo. State v. Levin, 2006 UT 50, ¶ 15, 144 P.3d 1096 (“On certiorari, we review for correctness the decision of the court of appeals . . . .”). II ¶10 The question presented is whether the district court had jurisdiction to review the Parole Board’s order of restitution. Utah Code section 77-27-5(3) provides the answer. It says that the board’s restitution decisions are “not subject to judicial review.” ¶11 That clear and simple directive controls the disposition of this case. The legislature has said that our courts are foreclosed from “judicial review” of the legality or merits of a restitution order entered by the Parole Board. And Garcia’s motions were improper because they sought such review—by challenging the order in question as untimely and thus illegal. ¶12 We affirm on this basis. We conclude that the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider the legality of the Parole Board’s restitution order on Garcia’s motions because the district court’s “judicial review” of the order was foreclosed by Utah Code section 77-27-5(3).

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Related

State v. Levin
2006 UT 50 (Utah Supreme Court, 2006)
State v. Montoya
825 P.2d 676 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1991)
State v. Laycock
2009 UT 53 (Utah Supreme Court, 2009)
Pinder v. State
2015 UT 56 (Utah Supreme Court, 2015)
State v. Garcia
2018 UT 3 (Utah Supreme Court, 2018)
State v. Garcia
2016 UT App 96 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2016)
State v. Schultz
2002 UT App 297 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2002)

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