State of Maryland v. Kenneth Martin Stachowski, Jr., No. 15, September Term, 2014
C RIMINAL L AW – S ENTENCING – R ESTITUTION –
A trial court has the authority to order, as a condition of probation, a defendant to pay
restitution to a victim or victims of criminal activity unrelated to that crime for which the
defendant is convicted and probation is ordered, when the defendant agrees voluntarily
and expressly to pay the restitution as part of a valid plea agreement and the trial court
has a sufficient factual basis from which to determine the victim’s or victims’ injury and
the defendant’s responsibility for it.
Circuit Court for Somerset County
Case No. 19-K-06008089
Argued: 7 October 2014
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
MARYLAND
No. 15
September Term, 2014
STATE OF MARYLAND
v.
KENNETH MARTIN STACHOWSKI,
JR.
Barbera, C.J.,
Harrell,
Battaglia,
Greene,
Adkins,
McDonald,
Watts,
JJ.
Opinion by Harrell, J.
Filed: November 20, 2014
We determine finally1 under what circumstances, if any, Maryland’s trial courts
may order restitution as a condition of probation in a criminal case for injuries to victims
of other crimes committed by the defendant that have no direct relationship to the crime
for which the defendant has been convicted and the restitution ordered. The Court of
Special Appeals held that imposing restitution under the circumstances of the present case
violated Maryland Code (1957, 2008 Repl. Vol.), Criminal Procedure Article, §11-603
(“CP”). We shall reverse.
I. The Circumstances.
In 2003 and 2004, Kenneth Stachowski violated Maryland’s home improvement
regulations codified in Maryland Code (1957, 2008 Repl. Vol.), Business Regulation
Article, §8-101 et. seq. (“BR”). Stachowski entered into three separate home
improvement contracts with different Somerset County residents. When he failed to
perform the agreed upon work, the aggrieved parties filed complaints with the Maryland
Home Improvement Commission. The result was that Stachowski was charged criminally
in the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Somerset County, with failing to perform
home improvement contracts (in violation of BR § 8-605) and acting as a contractor
without a license (in violation of BR § 8-601). As there were three contracts, three
separate criminal proceedings were docketed as the units of prosecution.
1
This is our third encounter with Stachowski and the questions presented here. In Stachowski
v. State, 403 Md. 1, 939 A.2d 158 (2008), and Stachowski v. State, 416 Md. 276, 6 A.3d 907
(2010), we failed to reach the merits of the questions because of procedural and jurisdictional
obstacles, respectively.
The charges were resolved through a plea agreement. Stachowski pleaded guilty to
failing to perform a home improvement contract in two of the cases and acting as a
contractor without a license in the third. The State nolle prossed the remaining charge in
each case. The District Court imposed a suspended sentence of incarceration, a suspended
fine, and supervised probation. As a condition of his probation, the District Court ordered
Stachowski to pay restitution to each of the three victims. Stachowski was ordered to pay
each victim $250 a month, until they were compensated for their respective losses of
$2,142.85, $4,140, and $8,997.
When Stachowski failed to make his restitution payments, the State sought to
revoke his probation. The District Court determined, after a hearing, that Stachowski
violated his probation in each of the three cases. The Court ordered Stachowski to serve
consecutively his suspended sentences of incarceration and pay a fine of $1,000 in each
case, which would be “served off” at a rate of $10 per day of confinement. Stachowski
appealed to the Circuit Court for Somerset County.
Meanwhile, in an unrelated case, Stachowski was charged with obtaining property
or services by issuing a bad check, as well as theft. It was asserted that, in June 2005,
Stachowski passed a check of $182.86, drawn on a closed account, to Somerset Well
Drilling to obtain services from the company. The case was transferred by the District
Court to the Circuit Court, upon Stachowski’s request for a jury trial.2
2
While the case was pending, Stachowski’s spouse made full restitution to Somerset Well
Drilling.
2
On 11 October 2006, the bad check / theft case and the three probation violation
home improvement cases were called for trial in the Circuit Court. At the beginning of the
proceeding, the State informed the judge that the parties had reached plea agreements to
resolve the four cases and announced the terms:
THE COURT: Is there anything I need to know about these cases
before we proceed?
[THE STATE]: Your Honor, I believe we’ve worked out a plea
agreement although I had not stated that on the record. My understanding of
the plea agreement, Your Honor, three of these are an appeal for violation
of probation from District Court. I think that we’re in agreement and the
State would consent to the fact that Judge Hayman had imposed all of the
backup time for the cases. And in addition to that he had imposed a
thousand dollar fine per case and ordered that the Defendant serve that off
at ten dollars a day.
Your Honor, the portion that we’re in agreement with is that the
thousand dollar fine that he would serve off at ten dollars a day was an
illegal sentence. My understanding as part of the plea agreement the
Defendant will agree to serve the suspended portion of the sentence which
was six months, six months and thirty days. If you need to know for each
case it will take me a minute to find that out.
THE COURT: I’ll look at it in a minute. Go ahead and finish up and
we’ll make sure the numbers are right.
[THE STATE]: Your Honor, as well the Defendant has agreed to
plead guilty in [the bad check case] to the only count, single count of bad
check. Your Honor, the State would recommend an active portion of five
months incarceration which would be consecutive to the three other
sentences as well. Those would be six months consecutive, consecutive to
six months, consecutive to thirty days.
***
Consecutive to five months. In this case the suspended portion, Your
Honor, we would leave up to you, but we would recommend some sort of a
split sentence with an active period of incarceration.
3
As well, Your Honor, restitution has already been paid in this case.
His wife provided documentation this morning –
THE COURT: So all restitution is paid?
[THE STATE]: In [the bad check case] a hundred and eighty-two
dollars and fifty cents has been paid by cash to the victim.[3 ]
***
Your Honor, as well, the State is not opposed to work release for
those active incarcerations as well as local time contingent on the fact that if
he is granted work release that he would pay restitution to the victims in the
violation of probation cases. Your Honor, he will agree to pay three
hundred dollars a month that would be a hundred dollars per victim. Your
Honor, that’s not going to be enough to cover all of the restitution but at
least they’ll be able to recover some portion of it. And then either sue him
civilly or you know –
THE COURT: Central Collection.
[THE STATE]: Central Collection or put a lien on his house or
something of that nature.
And, Your Honor, I believe that would be the nature of the plea
agreement.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I would like to add that the three hundred
dollars a month starts at the end of the first full calendar months he’s out.
[STATE]: Your Honor, that would be contingent on work release.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yeah, if he is out on work release.
Stachowski pleaded guilty to the charge of passing a bad check to Somerset Well Drilling
and the State nolle prossed the related theft charge. When the Circuit Court turned to the
3
When providing the factual basis for the guilty plea, the State asserted that the bad check
passed by Stachowski to Somerset Well Drilling was for $182.86. The $0.36 difference
between the amount of the bad check and the restitution paid on Stachowski’s behalf appears
to have been treated as immaterial.
4
three violation of probation cases, Stachowski pled guilty again. The judge found
expressly that Stachowski’s guilty pleas were valid.
For passing the bad check, the Circuit Court sentenced Stachowski to eighteen
months of incarceration, with all but five months suspended, and five years of probation
contingent on Stachowski making restitution payments to the victims of the three home
improvement cases. For violating his probation in the home improvement cases,
Stachowski was sentenced to a total of one year and thirty days incarceration. The
sentences were to be served consecutively at the Somerset County Detention Center, with
the sentence for writing the bad check as the last to expire of all outstanding sentences.4
The Circuit Court approved work release, subject to Stachowski clearing up an
outstanding detainer in Delaware. In short, the Circuit Court implemented the terms of the
plea agreement. Neither Stachowski nor his attorney objected at the time to the
requirement of restitution.5
In November 2006, Stachowski applied for leave to appeal the four cases to the
Court of Special Appeals. The applications with regard to the three probation violation
cases were transferred to this Court by order of the Court of Special Appeals.
Stachowski’s application for leave to appeal in the bad check case was denied by the
4
In addition to the sentences for writing the bad check and the home improvement violations,
Stachowski had outstanding sentences for unrelated theft and for driving with a suspended
license which were to run consecutively.
5
Stachowski expressed some concern about his ability to pay restitution in light of his other
financial obligations, but agreed to the terms nonetheless.
5
Court of Special Appeals. He filed a motion for reconsideration with the intermediate
appellate court, which motion remained pending for some time.
On 22 August 2007, we issued a writ of certiorari as to the home improvement
cases to consider the same questions that are before this Court now. We dismissed,
however, the writ. Stachowski v. State, 403 Md. 1, 939 A.2d 158 (2008) (Stachowski I).
We held that we could not consider the lawfulness of the Circuit Court’s order for
restitution to the home improvement victims because it was imposed as a condition of
probation in the bad check case, not the violation of probation stemming from
Stachowski’s home improvement charges. Thus, the issue was not before us properly at
that time in the context of the home improvement cases.
Stachowski supplemented subsequently his motion for reconsideration in the bad
check case that remained pending before the Court of Special Appeals. The motion was
granted on 28 May 2008. The intermediate appellate court directed the parties to brief
whether the trial judge had authority to require restitution for the injuries arising from the
unrelated home improvement cases as a condition for probation in the bad check case.
After Stachowski filed his initial brief with the Court of Special Appeals, this
Court issued a writ of certiorari, on its initiative, to consider the question. We dismissed
this writ for lack of jurisdiction as well because the intermediate appellate court had not
ruled on the merits of the application. Stachowski v. State, 416 Md. 276, 6 A.3d 907
(2010) (Stachowski II). On remand, the Court of Special Appeals decided Stachowski’s
appeal on the merits in Stachowski v. State, 213 Md. App. 1, 73 A.3d 290 (2013).
6
The Court of Special Appeals, interpreting the language of Maryland’s restitution
statute and relevant common law jurisprudence, held that the Circuit Court was without
authority to condition probation in the bad check case on the payment of restitution to the
victims in the home improvement cases because the latter were unrelated directly to the
former, either factually or legally. The Court of Special Appeals struck the restitution
requirement of Stachowski’s probation, but upheld otherwise the sentence.
We issued a writ of certiorari to the Court of Special Appeals, at the behest of the
State, State v. Stachowski, 436 Md. 327, 81 A.3d 457 (2013), to consider the following
questions:
1. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in holding that a court
may not order restitution as part of a plea agreement on a
charge as a condition of a probation in another matter before
the court, creating uncertainty in conflict with this Court’s
holdings in Walczak and Lee?
2. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in vacating only the
negotiated and accepted restitution condition required of
Stachowski, which was part of the plea agreement, rather than
rescinding the entire plea agreement, thus allowing
Stachowski the full benefit of his bargain with the State
without assuming any of his negotiated burden?
II. Third Time a Charm.
A. Maryland’s Restitution Scheme.
Restitution may be ordered as part of a sentence, according to CP §
11-603(a), or as condition of probation, according to CP § 2-221. Pete v.
State, 384 Md. 47, 55, 862 A.2d 419, 423 (2004). In both instances,
7
restitution is a criminal sanction, not a civil remedy. Grey v. Allstate Ins.
Co., 363 Md. 445, 451, 769 A.2d 891, 895 (2001). Although restitution
serves to recompense the victim, it aims also to punish and rehabilitate the
criminal. Pete, 384 Md. at 55, 862 A.2d at 423.
A trial court may order restitution, in the sound exercise of its
discretion, when, “as a direct result of the crime or delinquent act, property
of the victim was stolen, damaged, destroyed, converted, or unlawfully
obtained, or its value substantially decreased. . . .” CP § 11-603(a)(1)
(emphasis added).6 Medical and funeral expenses, direct out-of-pocket loss,
loss of earnings, and certain government expenses may provide the basis for
restitution. See CP § 11-603(a). The term “victim” is defined as “a person
who suffered death, personal injury, or property damage or loss as a direct
result of a crime or delinquent act; or, if the person is deceased, the personal
representative the estate of the person.” CP § 11-601(j).
Determining whether an injury is a “direct result” of the criminal
conduct is central traditionally to mapping the outer limits of a trial court’s
discretion in ordering restitution in most cases. Our cases are clear that
restitution may be compelled only where the injury results from the actions
that made the defendant’s conduct criminal. See Goff v. State, 387 Md. 327,
6
Whether restitution is ordered as condition of probation or as a sentence, the trial court’s
order must meet the “direct result” requirement of Maryland Code (1957, 2008 Repl. Vol.),
Criminal Procedure Article, § 11-603. Silver v. State, 420 Md. 415 n.16, 427, 23 A.3d 867,
874 (2011); see also Pete v. State, 384 Md. 47, 65-66, 862 A.2d 419, 429-30 (2004).
8
344, 875 A.2d 132, 142 (2005) (finding that the defendant’s conduct was a
direct result of the injury for which restitution was ordered because the
property damage was caused “during and because of” the crime, without
any intervening cause); Pete, 384 Md. at 60-61, 862 A.2d at 426-27
(rejecting proximate causation, mere nexus, or single charging document
theories of defining the direct result of the crime and, instead, requiring “a
direct result between the qualifying crime committed and the damages
inflicted” in order for restitution to authorized). Further, as we announced in
Walczak v. State, restitution may be compelled ordinarily only for the
criminal conduct for which the defendant was convicted. 302 Md. 422, 429,
488 A.2d 949, 952 (1985).
We acknowledged a narrow exception to these principles in Lee v.
State. 307 Md. 74, 512 A.2d 372 (1986).7 Lee was charged in the Circuit
7
The pertinent statute in effect when we decided Lee v. State was the same essentially as the
current statute:
On conviction of a crime, the court may order the defendant to
make restitution in addition to any other penalty for the
commission of the crime, if:
(i) Property of the victim was stolen, converted, unlawfully
obtained, or its value substantially decreased as a direct result of
the crime;
(ii) The victim suffered actual medical expenses, direct out-
of-pocket losses, or loss of earnings as a direct result of the
crime;
(iii) The victim incurred medical expenses that were paid for
by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene or any other
governmental entity; or
(iv) A governmental entity incurred expenses in the removal,
towing, transporting, preserving, storage, sale, or destruction
of an abandoned vehicle.
9
Court for Montgomery County with forging a check and theft. Id., 307 Md.
at 76, 512 A.2d at 373. Pursuant to a plea agreement, he pleaded guilty to a
single count of forgery. The State nolle prossed the theft count. Id. As part
of the agreement, Lee admitted to the facts underlying the theft charge and
told the Circuit Court that he wanted to make restitution for the theft. Id.
The trial judge sentenced Lee for the forgery conviction to seven years of
incarceration, with all but six months suspended, upon the expiration of
which the defendant would be placed on probation for three years. Id. Lee
signed an order of probation in which he agreed to pay restitution in the
amount of the loss charged in the theft count. Id.
Lee failed to pay the restitution as required. The State filed a petition
to revoke his probation. At the probation revocation hearing, Lee argued
that the court lacked authority to order restitution for theft because he had
not been convicted of that charge. The Circuit Court reviewed the terms of
the plea agreement, noting that Lee had agreed expressly to make restitution
to the victims of the nolle prossed theft charge, and revoked the probation.
Id., 307 Md. at 76-77, 512 A.2d at 373. The Court of Special Appeals
affirmed, in a reported opinion, the judgment of the Circuit Court. Lee v.
State, 65 Md. App. 149, 499 A.2d 969 (1985).
Maryland Code (1957, 1982 Rep. Vol., 1986 Cum. Supp.), Article 27, § 640(b)(1). The
statute authorized directing payment of restitution to the victims of crime, government entity
that suffered loss, and third party payors (including insurers). See Art. 27, § 640 (b)(2). The
prior iteration of Maryland’s restitution statute, the version at issue in Walczak v. State, was
also essentially the same. Lee v. State, 307 Md. 74, 78, 512 A.2d 372, 374 (1986).
10
On certiorari, we held that a trial court has the authority, under these
circumstances, to order restitution for charged crimes for which no
conviction ensued, if it is ordered as the result of a plea agreement as to the
crime for which a conviction was entered. See id., 307 Md. at 81, 512 A.2d
at 376. Like the Court of Special Appeals, we found that this exception was
contemplated by Walczak. Id. (citing Walczak, 302 Md. at 426 n.1, 488
A.2d 949).
In Silver v. State, we clarified that, for the exception in Lee to apply,
the defendant must agree expressly to pay restitution as part of the plea
bargain.8 420 Md. 415, 432, 23 A.3d 867, 877 (2011). In Silver, the
defendants, a husband and wife, were each charged with three counts of
animal cruelty for neglecting three horses. Id., 420 Md. at 424, 23 A.3d at
874. Pursuant to a plea agreement, the defendants each pleaded guilty to
one charge of animal cruelty for their treatment of the euthanized horse.
The State nolle prossed the two remaining counts against each defendant
which charged them with mistreatment of the surviving horses. Id. After
hearing a stipulated statement of facts, the District Court judge sentenced
the defendants to six days imprisonment, to be served over three weekends,
and ordered restitution to the veterinarians who euthanized the one horse
and provided rehabilitation for the other two. Id., 420 Md. at 424-25, n.6, 23
8
Silver v. State was interpreting the current iteration of Maryland’s restitution statute. See 420
Md. 415, 427 n.15, 23 A.3d 867, 873 (2011).
11
A.3d at 874. The Circuit Court, on appeal, also ordered restitution for the
care given the three horses. Id., 420 Md. at 426, 23 A.3d at 873.
We vacated the judgment that ordered the defendants to pay
restitution for the rehabilitation of the surviving horses. Id., 420 Md. at 437,
23 A.3d at 880. The determinative factor in Silver was that, unlike in Lee,
the defendants had not agreed expressly to pay restitution for the fall-out of
the nolle prossed charges as part of the valid plea agreement.9 See id, 420
Md. at 432, 23 A.3d at 876-77.
B. The Circuit Court Was Authorized to Condition Stachowski’s Probation
in the Bad Check Conviction on the Payment of Restitution to the
Victims in the Home Improvement Cases.
In the instant case, Stachowski agreed voluntarily and expressly to
pay restitution to the victims in his home improvement fraud cases as a
condition of probation entered on his bad check conviction.10 The
9
A defendant need not agree expressly to pay restitution of a specified amount for a trial court
to order restitution for crimes other than the one or ones representing the conviction for
which probation is entered. In Lee, we found valid an order of restitution where the defendant
agreed “to make restitution in the full amount” for the nolle prossed charges as part of a plea
agreement. 307 Md. at 81, 512 A.2d at 376.
10
Stachowski argues to us that he did not agree voluntarily to make restitution to the victims
of the home improvement cases because he was incarcerated at the time restitution was
ordered and was in a difficult financial situation. Although there was clear incentive for
Stachowski to accept a plea agreement—namely, to limit incarceration and provide support
for his family through work release—these pressures do not diminish the knowing and
voluntary nature of his plea. Stachowski indicated on the record that he understood the
nature of the charges and had discussed them with his attorney. Further, the trial judge
questioned Stachowski regarding his understanding of the ramifications of his plea. Such
circumstances, absent other indications negating voluntariness, are strong evidence that the
plea was knowing and voluntary. State v. Daughtry, 419 Md. 35, 75, 18 A.3d 60, 84 (2011).
12
agreement was announced to the Circuit Court judge and acknowledged as
correct by Stachowski’s attorney. In exchange for the State (1) not
prosecuting the theft charge, (2) recommending a sentence of five months
incarceration for the bad check case, and (3) suggesting work release,
Stachowski agreed to plead guilty to the bad check charge and pay
restitution to the victims of his fraudulent home improvement scheme.
There were respective quid pro quos for what Stachowski and the State
agreed to (and the Court implemented) that fell squarely within the narrow
exception announced in Lee.
The Court of Special Appeals, in reaching the opposite conclusion,
focused on dicta in Silver that it construed as suggesting that the Lee
exception applies only when the other charges or crimes for which
restitution is ordered are related to the crime for which the defendant was
convicted and probation entered. The relevant language of Silver states:
“[a]s Walzcak and Lee have long since established, the State may request, in
plea negotiations, that a criminal defendant agree to pay restitution for
related, though uncharged, crimes.” 420 Md. at 432, 23 A.3d at 876-77
(emphasis added). Although, as a matter of formal logic, this statement does
not frustrate the State from requesting restitution for unrelated crimes,
oftentimes, in typical usage, the express mention of one thing is the
exclusion of the other. Thus, the intermediate appellate court’s view is not
without basis.
13
We make clear here, therefore, that the Lee exception is not limited
only to related charges or crimes. Our analysis in Walzack and Lee did not
turn on whether the crimes were related and neither case mentioned
relatedness when discussing the authority of a trial judge to order restitution
for crimes for which the defendant was not convicted, but agreed
nonetheless to make restitution. The allowance of restitution for other
criminal conduct as the result of a plea bargain is just as rational for
unrelated crimes as related crimes, provided a defendant gives his or her
voluntary and express agreement to the restitution. As U.S. v. McLaughlin,
a case we relied upon in Lee, noted:
First, plea-bargaining in situations involving multicount
indictments would be severely restricted. If a defendant could
not consent to make restitution for the actual loss caused by
his or her conduct relating to the indictment, and have such be
a condition of any probation he or she might receive, then the
government would have little reason to dismiss indictment
counts in order to limit a defendant's potential period of
incarceration. More importantly, however, it would frustrate
the rehabilitation goals of the probation system. . . . To permit
a defendant who freely admits his or her guilt, and the amount
of loss caused thereby, to avoid making the aggrieved party at
least economically whole is intolerable from a societal
perspective.
512 F. Supp. 907, 912 (D. Md. 1981) (quoted in Lee, 307 Md. at 80-81, 512 A.2d at 375).
Plea agreements are useful equally to realize the punitive, rehabilitative, and
compensatory goals of Maryland’s restitution statute in the context of unrelated crimes.
Enforcing the reasonable expectations of the parties to plea agreements benefits
defendants, the State, and victims. The Maryland General Assembly did not aim to limit
14
the State’s use of plea agreements to resolve efficiently cases involving multiple,
unrelated charged crimes pursuant to CP § 11-603(a), or its statutory predecessor that was
at issue in Lee.
Other jurisdictions with restitution regulatory regimes similar to Maryland’s do not
require the other criminal conduct, for which restitution is ordered, to be related to the
conviction associated with the probation in order for trial courts to impose restitution,
provided the defendant consents to it through a valid plea agreement. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C.
§ 3663 (authorizing in federal courts restitution to persons other than the victim of an
offense, if agreed to by the parties in a plea agreement); Ex parte Killough, 434 So. 2d
852, 853 (Ala. 1983); Kimbrell v. State, 666 P.2d 454, 455 (Alaska Ct. App. 1983);
People v. Quinonez, 735 P.2d 159, 164 (Colo. 1987); Barnes v. State, 489 So. 2d 1182,
1183 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986); State v. Dorsey, 889 P.2d 93, 96 (Idaho Ct. App. 1995)
(discussing an Idaho statute authorizing restitution for crimes not before the court, if with
consent of the parties); People v. McClard, 834 N.E.2d 984, 985 (Ill. App. Ct. 2005)
(discussing Illinois statute authorizing restitution for losses arising from dismissed
charges, if agreed to as part of a plea agreement); Kinkead v. State, 791 N.E.2d 243, 246
(Ind. Ct. App. 2003); State v. Hymer, 26 P.3d 63, 68 (Kan. 2001) (implying restitution
that was ordered in a case decided previously could have been imposed as a condition of
probation, if part of a plea agreement); Commonwealth v. Morseman, 379 S.W.3d 144,
152 (Ky. 2012) (considering Maryland’s restitution regime as persuasive authority in its
holding); State v. Stephenson, 706 So. 2d 604, 608-09 (La. Ct. App. 1998); State v.
LaCasce, 512 A.2d 312, 316 (Me. 1986); State v. Kennedy, 327 N.W.2d 3, 4-5 (Minn.
15
1982); Sims v. State, 134 So. 3d 300, 303-04 (Miss. 2014); State v. Blanchard, 889 P.2d
1180, 1183 (Mont. 1995); State v. McMann, 541 N.W.2d 418, 422 (Neb. Ct. App. 1995)
(discussing the Nebraska statute authorizing restitution for uncharged crimes and crimes
dismissed, with the parties’ consent, pursuant to a plea agreement); Erickson v. State, 821
P.2d 1042, 1042-43 (Nev. 1991); State v. Steinolfson, 483 N.W.2d 182, 185 (N.D. 1992);
State v. Carson, 243 P.3d 73, 75 (Or. Ct. App. 2010); Martin v. State, 874 S.W.2d 674,
680 n. 16 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994); State v. Bickley, 60 P.3d 582, 584 (Utah Ct. App.
2002) (discussing Utah’s statute authorizing the trial court to order restitution for conduct
which the defendant agreed to make restitution as part of a plea agreement); State v.
Gorton, 90 A.3d 901, 905 (Vt. 2014) (discussing Vermont’s statute authorizing the trial
court to order restitution when the defendant, knowingly and voluntarily, accepts it as part
of a plea agreement); State v. Kinneman, 119 P.3d 350, 357 (Wash. 2005); Graham v.
State, 261 P.3d 239, 242 (Wyo. 2011).
Our reference to “related cases” in Silver does not erode the plea agreement
exception described in Walzack and Lee, which mirrors, as noted above, the rule in many
of our sister states and the Federal courts. Rather, Silver recognized merely that, as was
the case in Lee, plea agreements including restitution for uncharged crimes or convictions
will often involve related charges.11
11
Even in the context of a plea agreement, the amount of restitution the defendant agrees to
pay the victim of the uncharged crimes must be certain and there must be no factual dispute
that the defendant’s criminal conduct caused or was responsible for the aggrieved party’s
loss. See Lee, 307 Md. at 80, 82, 512 A.2d at 375, 376 (1986). In Stachowski’s case, the
previous convictions supplied the factual basis for the amount of restitution ordered and
Stachowski’s responsibility for it.
16
C. We Decline to Abrogate Lee.
In the end, Stachowski asks us to revisit Lee, pointing to alternative interpretations
of CP § 11-603(a) and invoking the noted ambiguous dicta from Silver. He points
particularly to the statutory requirement that restitution ordered be the “direct result” of
the crime. Before engaging Stachowski’s arguments, we pause to reflect on the
implications of the doctrine of stare decisis.
The crux of the doctrine of stare decisis is that courts should reaffirm, follow, and
apply ordinarily the published decisional holdings of our appellate courts even though, if
afforded a blank slate, the court might decide the matter differently. Coleman v. Soccer
Ass'n of Columbia, 432 Md. 679, 689, 69 A.3d 1149, 1154-55 (2013). The doctrine of
stare decisis encourages the consistent development of legal principles, public reliance on
our judicial decisions, and the perceived integrity of the courts. Livesay v. Baltimore
Cnty., 384 Md. 1, 14, 862 A.2d 33, 40 (2004).
Our devotion to stare decisis, however, is not absolute. We may decline to follow
the doctrine when persuaded the prior decision is clearly wrong, Townsend v. Bethlehem-
Fairfield Shipyard, 186 Md. 406, 417, 47 A.2d 365, 370 (1946), or when the precedent
has been rendered archaic and inapplicable to modern society through the passage of time
and evolving events, Harrison v. Montgomery Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 295 Md. 442, 459-60,
456 A.2d 894, 903 (1983). Neither of these “outs” release us from honoring Lee in the
present case.
As noted above, allowing a defendant to consent to pay restitution for his or her
other crimes in addition to the crime for which he or she stands convicted, as the result of
17
a plea agreement, is consistent with the goals and purposes of Maryland’s restitution
statute. The General Assembly contemplated restitution to serve compensatory,
rehabilitative, and punitive goals. Pete, 384 Md. at 55, 862 A.2d at 423. If courts could
not order a defendant who admits freely to wrongdoing and accepts the responsibility to
pay restitution as part of a plea agreement, prosecutors would have less incentive to
refrain from prosecuting to the fullest all charges and seeking the maximum allowable
sentence. Contrary to the goals of the statute, the reading of CP § 11-603(a) urged by
Stachowski would limit compensation of the victim and the commencement of the
voluntary rehabilitation of the defendant. There was, and remains, strong support for our
interpretation in Lee of Maryland’s restitution statute.
The Lee approach is accepted widely, as noted supra at 14-16. Thus, Lee is not an
aberration or an outlier from a bygone era inapplicable to modern society12 : several states
and the Federal courts, as noted earlier, follow a similar rule.13 Further, the Maryland
12
Indeed, this line of reasoning continues to gain new adherents. In 2012, the Supreme Court
of Kentucky considered for the first time whether a trial court could order restitution for
crimes for which the defendant had not been convicted if the defendant agreed to restitution
pursuant to a plea agreement. Commonwealth. v. Morseman, 379 S.W.3d 144 (Ky. 2012).
The Court noted that the Kentucky restitution statutes, strictly construed, would only allow
a court to order restitution for crimes for which the defendant had been convicted. Id. at 148-
49. After considering, however, the nature and aims of the statute and the interpretation of
similar statutes by the courts of other states, including Maryland, the Kentucky Court held
“that a trial court is authorized to order restitution for damages not suffered as a direct result
of the criminal act(s) for which the defendant has been convicted when, as part of a plea
agreement, the defendant freely and voluntarily agrees to the restitution condition.” Id. at
152.
13
The U.S. Supreme Court interpreted narrowly the federal statute authorizing restitution in
Hugey v. U. S., 495 U.S. 411 (1990). The Supreme Court held that the relevant federal statute
did not authorize the federal courts to order restitution for crimes for which the defendant had
18
General Assembly, in the twenty-eight years since Lee, not only has failed to abrogate
Lee, but also has broadened the scope of restitution. See 2006 Md. Laws Ch. 428 (adding
to courts’ authority to order restitution the performance of services); 2006 Md. Laws Ch.
429 (broadening the class of persons and entities to which a court may order criminal
restitution paid).
We stand by our decision in Lee.
III. C ONCLUSION
Under Walzack, Lee, and Silver, the Circuit Court for Somerset County had authority
to condition Stachowski’s probation on the bad check conviction on his payment of
restitution to the victims of his home improvement fraud. Stachowski agreed voluntarily
and expressly to pay restitution to the victims of his home improvement fraud in
exchange for the State’s agreement to: (1) refrain from prosecuting the theft count in the
bad check case; (2) recommend that Stachowski be allowed work release; and (3)
encourage the court to impose a sentence of incarceration less than the maximum
allowable. It was clear on this record that the ordered restitution was attributed properly
to Stachowski in the proper amount.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE
REMANDED TO THE COURT OF
SPECIAL APPEALS WITH DIRECTIONS
not been convicted, even if the defendant consented expressly to pay the restitution as part
of a plea agreement. Id. at 413, 422. That same year, however, Congress responded to Hugey
by passing the Crime Control Act of 1990, which broadened the class of “victims” under the
federal restitution statute and allowed courts to order restitution “‘to the extent agreed to by
the parties in a plea agreement.’” U.S. v. Broughton-Jones, 71 F.3d 1143, 1147 (4th Cir.
1995) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(3)).
19
TO AFFIRM THE JUDGMENT OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT FOR S OMERSET C OUNTY.
COSTS IN THIS COURT AND IN THE
COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE
PAID BY RESPONDENT.
20