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Garcia v. State

Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
Mar 2, 2022
No. PD-0025-21 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 2, 2022)

Opinion

PD-0025-21

03-02-2022

DANIEL GARCIA, Appellant v. THE STATE OF TEXAS


ON STATES PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE THIRD COURT OF APPEALS BELL COUNTY

Keel, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., Hervey, Richardson, Walker, Slaughter, and McClure, JJ., joined. Newell, J., concurred. Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

OPINION

Keel, J.

A jury convicted Appellant of aggravated sexual assault, and the trial court sentenced him to twelve years' imprisonment and ordered him to pay $1,000 in restitution to the Office of the Attorney General. The court of appeals modified the trial court's judgment to delete the restitution requirement and affirmed Appellant's conviction as modified. Garcia v. State, No. 03-19-00375-CR, 2020 WL 4462805, at *1 (Tex. App.-Austin July 21, 2020) (mem. op., not designated for publication). We granted review to consider, among other things, whether an objection was required to preserve Appellant's challenge to the restitution order. We conclude that an objection was required, none was made, and Appellant forfeited his challenge to the restitution order, so we do not reach the remaining grounds for review.

I. Overview

Appellant maintains that his complaint is a challenge to the "factual basis" of the restitution order, and the State says it is a challenge to the propriety of the order. Under Idowu v. State, a propriety complaint must be preserved, but a factual-basis complaint may not need to be preserved because it could be construed as an evidentiary sufficiency complaint. 73 S.W.3d 918, 921-22 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).

But Idowu offered no guidelines for construing a factual-basis complaint to be an evidentiary-sufficiency complaint or for distinguishing a factual-basis complaint from a propriety challenge. Even if these concepts were clear, the idea that a sufficiency complaint need not be preserved rests on the constitutional requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt to support a conviction, a misplaced consideration in the context of a restitution order. Moreover, we find no controlling or persuasive authority for foregoing a preservation requirement for a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a restitution order. And imposing a preservation requirement would be consistent with our rules and jurisprudence that favor error correction in the trial court where possible. Consequently, we abandon the factual basis/sufficiency-vs.-propriety distinction in the context of a restitution order and hold that even if Appellant's challenge were a factual-basis complaint that qualified as a sufficiency challenge, he would have forfeited it by his failure to object in the trial court.

II. Background

The parties agree that Appellant's victim underwent a forensic sexual assault exam that was paid for by the Bell County District Attorney's Office, and the AG reimbursed the DA for the exam. The record shows that after assessing Appellant's punishment, the trial judge stated, "I'll also order that you pay $1,000 to the office of the attorney general as restitution in this case. Is there any legal reason why sentence should not be imposed?" Appellant's counsel responded, "Not at this time, Your Honor." The written judgment included the restitution order, and Appellant did not challenge it in a motion for new trial but did raise it on appeal.

The court of appeals observed that the payment by the Attorney General did not compensate a victim for any loss or injury. Garcia, 2020 WL 4462805, at *2. It reasoned that "restitution may only be paid to the victim or to a person who has 'compensated the victim for the loss.'" Id. (citing Ceballos v. State, 246 S.W.3d 369, 373 (Tex. Crim. App.-Austin 2008, pet. ref'd)). It held that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering restitution because there was no evidence that the victim paid for or was responsible for paying for any part of the sexual assault exam. Id. It did not explicitly address preservation.

Should we address the preservation issue or remand to the court of appeals to give it an opportunity to do so? We think judicial economy justifies addressing it now because we granted review of the issue, the parties briefed it, and our caselaw on this point is muddled. See Ford v. State, 305 S.W.3d 530, 532-33 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (footnotes omitted) ("Ordinarily, a court of appeals should review preservation of error on its own motion, but if it does not do so expressly, this Court can and should do so when confronted with a preservation question."); see also Jordan v. State, 54 S.W.3d 783, 786 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (concluding that although the appellant asked the Court in his petition for discretionary review to extend an exception to his situation, the Court abandoned the exception as set forth in previous cases because "it creates unnecessary confusion and fails to satisfy its original rationale of promoting judicial economy."). So we will not remand the case for the court of appeals to address preservation.

III. Preservation

Generally, to preserve an issue for appellate review, the complaining party must first raise the issue in the trial court. Tex.R.App.P. 33.1(a). Specifically, the propriety of a restitution order must be raised in the trial court. Idowu, 73 S.W.3d at 921. But Idowu drew a distinction between challenges to the factual basis of restitution orders and those that challenge the propriety of such orders; challenges to "the appropriateness of (as opposed to the factual basis for) a trial court's restitution order" must be explicitly raised in the trial court. Id.

But Idowu did not decide whether challenges to the factual basis for restitution orders must be raised in the trial court. Id. at 922. It only said that a "factual basis" question "could be considered an evidentiary sufficiency question" that did not need to be preserved at trial. Id. Ultimately, it decided that "there was a factual basis for the amount of restitution the trial court ordered[, ]" satisfying due process, and that Idowu failed to preserve any error in the "accuracy" of the restitution order. Id. at 922-23.

Idowu did not define "factual basis" but seemed to use it in reference to the amount of restitution ordered. Id. at 922 (noting that a preservation requirement for "an evidentiary sufficiency claim concerning a restitution order, or the amount of restitution, need not be resolved in this case"); id. (noting that "there was a factual basis for the amount of restitution the trial court ordered."); id. at n. 11 (noting that under our cases "the amount of restitution ordered must be 'just,' it must have a factual basis in the record, and it must compensate the victim.") That is consistent with treatment of "factual basis" in the restitution context in other cases. E.g., Cartwright v. State, 605 S.W.2d 287, 289 (Tex. Crim. App. 1980) (citing Thompson v. State, 557 S.W.2d 521, 525-26 (Tex. Crim. App. 1977)) ("Due process considerations thus implicated require that there must be some evidence in the record to show that the amount set by the court has a factual basis."). Due process challenges can be forfeited by failure to object in the trial court, so a challenge to the factual basis for a restitution order likewise should require preservation. See Clark v. State, 365 S.W.3d 333, 340 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); id. at 339 (citing Briggs v. State, 789 S.W.2d 918, 924 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (stating that constitutional errors can be forfeited if a party does not properly object at trial) (footnote omitted)).

Idowu also acknowledged that disputes about "the proper amount or type of restitution" are required by statute to be resolved in the trial court. Idowu, 73 S.W.3d at 920 n. 5 (citing Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.037(k)). The statute puts the burden of proof on the prosecution to demonstrate the amount of loss sustained by the victim and the burden of proof on the defense to show the defendant's financial resources and needs. Act of Sept. 1, 1993, 73rd Leg., R.S., ch. 806 § 1, 1993 Tex. Gen. Laws 3207 (current version at Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.037(k)). It gives the trial court the discretion to put the burden of proof about other matters on the "appropriate" party "as justice requires." Id. Given the statute's requirements, it seems unlikely that a challenge to the amount of restitution ordered might be entertained on appeal without it having first been addressed in the trial court.

Even setting aside Article 42.037(k), the distinction between "factual basis" and "appropriateness" would not necessarily be clear cut. Here, for example, Appellant argues that his challenge is to the factual basis of the order, but he does not dispute that the victim in his case underwent a sexual assault exam, the exam cost $1,000, the DA paid for it, or the AG reimbursed the DA for it. He instead argues that restitution should not have been awarded to the AG, which sounds like a propriety issue rather than a factual-basis issue. The court of appeals took it as the former, characterizing Appellant's complaint as a challenge "to the propriety" of the restitution order. Garcia, 2020 WL 4462805, at *1. Even so, the court justified striking the restitution order by citing a lack of evidence to show that the victim had paid for the sexual assault exam, id. at *2, which sounds like a sufficiency issue. Since the distinction between factual basis and appropriateness is unclear, we should not rely on it to decide whether challenges to restitution orders must be preserved in the trial court.

Even if the distinction were clear, however, we have found no persuasive or controlling authority to hold that factual-basis challenges to restitution orders require no preservation in the trial court.

Appellant relies on Idowu, but Idowu did not decide whether preservation was required to challenge the factual basis of a restitution order; rather it said that no such challenge had been raised. Idowu, 73 S.W.3d at 922-23.

Appellant also relies on Burt v. State, arguing that he could not have objected to the restitution order because the written judgment was not filed until after the sentencing hearing. 396 S.W.3d at 578. Burt is inapposite. Burt had no opportunity to object to the restitution order because the trial judge did not orally pronounce it at the sentencing hearing; he only ordered it in the written judgment. Id. In Appellant's case, the trial judge orally ordered restitution at the sentencing hearing, so Appellant had the opportunity to object.

Mayer v. State might be said to lend support to Appellant's position that his complaint did not need to be preserved in the trial court. 309 S.W.3d 552 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). Mayer held that no trial objection was required to preserve a complaint about the sufficiency of the evidence to support an order to reimburse a county for court-appointed-attorney's fees. Id. at 556. But we will not extend Mayer's holding to restitution orders because its reasoning rested in part on a misreading of Moff v. State, 131 S.W.3d 485 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004), and it is distinguished from this case by the statute underlying it.

Mayer cited Moff as authority for answering affirmatively the question that Idowu left open-that is, whether a challenge to the factual basis for a restitution order "could be considered an evidentiary sufficiency question that need not be preserved by objection at the trial level." Mayer, 309 S.W.3d at 555 (citing Idowu, 73 S.W.3d at 922). But Moff didn't address that point. Rather, Moff addressed the need for a trial objection to preserve a complaint about the sufficiency of the evidence to support a theft conviction. Moff, 131 S.W.3d at 486. Moff said nothing about the preservation of challenges to restitution or reimbursement orders, so Mayer rests on a faulty premise.

Furthermore, Mayer was undergirded by Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 26.05(g) which requires a trial court-before ordering reimbursement of attorney's fees-to determine whether a defendant has the ability to pay. Mayer, 309 S.W.3d at 556. Mayer stated, "the defendant's financial resources and ability to pay are explicit critical elements in the trial court's determination of the propriety of ordering reimbursement of costs and fees." Id. Mayer's complaint was with the sufficiency of the evidence to show his financial resources and ability to pay, and his failure to object at trial did not waive that complaint. Id.

But unlike the statute governing reimbursement of attorney fees, the statute authorizing restitution does not explicitly require a trial court to make a determination about the defendant's ability to pay when restitution is ordered; it requires the court to consider the victim's loss, net of any compensation by the crime fund, and "other factors the court deems appropriate." Act of Sept. 1, 1993, 73rd Leg., R.S., ch. 806 § 1, 1993 Tex. Gen. Laws 3207 (amended 2001) (current version at Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.037(c)). Consideration of the defendant's financial circumstances and ability to pay is explicitly required only in the event of a possible revocation for failure to pay restitution. Id. at 42.037(h). Since the statutory requirements underlying Mayer are distinguishable from those applicable here, we will not extend Mayer to this case.

Appellant's restitution complaint would have been more efficiently dealt with in the trial court. Preservation requirements ensure that the judicial system is not burdened by costly appeals and time-consuming retrials. Gillenwaters v. State, 205 S.W.3d 534, 537 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (citations omitted). A timely objection allows the trial court an opportunity to prevent or correct errors. Id. Such a requirement also "guarantees that opposing counsel will have a fair opportunity to respond to complaints[, ]" and "promotes the orderly and effective presentation of the case to the trier of fact." Id. Given these considerations, a restitution complaint should be forfeited by a defendant who foregoes the opportunity to address it in the trial court.

IV. Conclusion

Challenges to restitution orders must be raised in the trial court to preserve them for appellate review. Appellant did not object to the restitution ordered here though he had the opportunity to do so. He forfeited his complaint. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

DISSENTING OPINION

Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

The court of appeals resolved the merits of Appellant's challenge to the trial court's restitution order in this case without mentioning, much less addressing, any question of procedural default. Garcia v. State, No. 03-19-00375-CR, 2020 WL 4462805 (Tex. App.- Austin Jul. 21, 2020) (mem. op., not designated for publication). We could easily remand this case to the court of appeals to address the procedural default question in the first instance, as it should have done on original submission. Because the Court does not, I respectfully dissent.

I. My Reasons for Preferring Remand

The State did not make an issue of procedural default until rehearing in the court of appeals. As the State Prosecuting Attorney [SPA] points out, however, because error preservation is "systemic," the State may raise it for the first time even on discretionary review. State's Petition for Discretionary Review at 6 n.8 (citing Darcy v. State, 488 S.W.3d 325, 327-28 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016)). The Court has sometimes said that, when a court of appeals reverses a conviction without addressing this threshold issue, this Court "can and should" address the issue itself. Darcy, 488 S.W.3d at 328. This proposition is somewhat at odds, however, with our ordinary practice to remand cases to the intermediate appellate court to address indispensable issues that the lower court has failed to address on original submission. See Stringer v. State, 241 S.W.3d 52, 59 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (declining to address the State's "alternative waiver" arguments for the first time on discretionary review; leaving those issue for the lower court on remand). The problem with this Court addressing this "systemic" issue in the first instance, instead of remanding for the first-tier appellate court to do so, is that the issue is not always adequately briefed in this Court. That, in my view, is what is going on in this case.

As far as I know, the Court has never said that it must address procedural default issues for the first time on discretionary review under these circumstances, and I would not be inclined to so conclude. There will undoubtedly be other circumstances in which, as in this case, a remand for an initial resolution of the procedural default question would be greatly preferred.

In its petition for discretionary review and in its brief on the merits, the SPA has argued that it was incumbent on Appellant to complain about the trial court's restitution order at trial, in order to preserve error for appeal, because of the character of the complaint itself: that the trial court's restitution order was not "appropriate." State's Brief on the Merits at 4-6. In Idowu v. State, 73 S.W.3d 918, 921-23 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002), the Court held that an appellate complaint about the "appropriateness" of a restitution order must be preserved in the trial court. At the same time, the Court strongly suggested that a claim that the restitution order lacked a "factual basis" in the record (like a challenge to legal sufficiency of the evidence to establish guilt) need not be preserved at trial. Id.

In the present case, the SPA argues only that Appellant's challenge to the restitution order in this case is of the former "appropriateness" kind, and therefore will be forfeited if not raised in the trial court. There is no further argument that Idowu's distinction between "appropriateness" claims and "factual basis" claims should simply be disowned, as the Court does today. I originally believed that we granted the SPA's petition to explore and explain the difference between the two, not to decide whether to dispense with the distinction altogether. The parties have not briefed that question.

Were the Court to resolve this argument in the SPA's favor, then, as in Idowu itself, it would not have to decide definitively whether a "factual basis" claim must also be preserved by a trial-level objection. It could once again save that question for a later day.

I would remand the case to the court of appeals to address the procedural default question in the first instance. If at that point the State wished to argue-contrary to the suggestion in Idowu-that any complaint about a restitution order, of any character, must be preserved in the trial court before it may be raised on appeal, it would be free to do so. The parties could then fully brief that issue accordingly. This Court would then have the benefit of that briefing and the lower appellate court's resolution of the issue to inform our own review of the question, should we even deem that necessary in a subsequent petition for discretionary review. See McClintock v. State, 444 S.W.3d 15, 20 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) ("[O]ur resolution of the issue (if any should even be necessary after a remand) would benefit from a carefully wrought decision from the court of appeals.").

Many of the Court's reasons today for subjecting a "factual basis" claim to a preservation requirement would apply equally well to an argument that claims of legal sufficiency should also have to be preserved at the trial-court level before they may be brought on appeal. But surely the Court would not hold that legal sufficiency claims must be preserved! The Court should do a better job of explaining why Idowu's analogy between "factual basis" claims and legal sufficiency claims, dicta though it may be, is improper. Briefing could facilitate a more proper resolution of the issue.

II. Conclusion

We should remand this case to the court of appeals to address procedural default in the first instance. Because the Court instead insists on addressing and resolving the question today-and because it also resolves the question on a basis not even prompted by the pleadings or fully briefed by the parties-I respectfully dissent.


Summaries of

Garcia v. State

Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
Mar 2, 2022
No. PD-0025-21 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 2, 2022)
Case details for

Garcia v. State

Case Details

Full title:DANIEL GARCIA, Appellant v. THE STATE OF TEXAS

Court:Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas

Date published: Mar 2, 2022

Citations

No. PD-0025-21 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 2, 2022)

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