796 June 30, 2016 No. 42
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON
STATE OF OREGON,
Respondent on Review,
v.
RASOOL ISLAM ISLAM,
Petitioner on Review.
(CC 130331128; CA A154949; SC S063202)
On review from the Court of Appeals.*
Argued and submitted November 13, 2015.
Emily P. Seltzer, Deputy Public Defender, Salem, argued
the cause and filed the brief for petitioner on review. With
her on the brief was Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Office
of Public Defense Services.
Michael S. Shin, Assistant Attorney General, argued the
cause and filed the brief for respondent on review. With him
on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and
Paul L. Smith, Deputy Solicitor General.
Before Balmer, Chief Justice, Kistler, Walters, Landau,
Baldwin, Brewer, and Nakamoto, Justices.**
WALTERS, J.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judg-
ment of the trial court is reversed, and the case is remanded
to circuit court for further proceedings.
______________
** On appeal from Multnomah County Circuit Court, Eric J. Bergstrom,
Judge. 269 Or App 22, 344 P3d 22 (2015).
** Linder, J., retired December 31, 2015, and did not participate in the deci-
sion of this case.
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 797
Case Summary: Defendant, who was convicted of a theft crime for shoplifting
merchandise from a retailer, seeks review of a decision of the Court of Appeals
upholding an award of restitution to the retailer based on the retail price of the
stolen goods. The Court of Appeals affirmed the award of restitution. Held: A
defendant must pay criminal restitution to a victim in the amount that equals the
full amount of the victim’s economic damages. ORS 137.106(1)(a). Economic dam-
ages under ORS 137.106 are determined based on principles enunciated in civil
cases concerning recoverable economic damages. The civil action that is analo-
gous to theft crimes is conversion. Damages for conversion are measured in terms
of the reasonable market value of the goods converted and the time and place of
the conversion. The market that must be used to determine the reasonable value
of an item stolen from a retailer is the market to which the retailer would resort
to replace the stolen goods, generally the wholesale market. A seller may also
prove other types of economic losses, such as lost profits. Because the state did
not prove that the victim incurred any damages in addition to the reasonable
market value of the stolen items, the victim’s recovery is limited to the wholesale
value of those items.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the trial
court is reversed and remanded.
798 State v. Islam
WALTERS, J.
Defendant shoplifted 15 pairs of jeans from a Macy’s
retail department store and was convicted of one count
of theft in the second degree. ORS 164.045. Under ORS
137.106(1)(a), the prosecutor sought restitution for Macy’s
economic damages based on the retail price of the jeans at
the time and place of the theft. Defendant argued that res-
titution instead should be based on the value of the jeans on
the wholesale market—the market to which Macy’s would
resort to replace the jeans—and any lost profits that Macy’s
could prove resulted from the theft. The trial court granted
restitution based on the retail value of the jeans, and the
Court of Appeals affirmed. State v. Islam, 269 Or App 22,
29, 344 P3d 22 (2015). For the reasons that follow, we con-
clude that a retail seller of goods that have been stolen may
recover, as restitution, the reasonable value of those goods
on the market to which the seller would resort to replace
those goods at the time and place of conversion, together
with any additional losses that the state proves the victim
sustained. In this case, because the state did not prove any
such additional losses, the victim is limited to restitution in
the amount of the reasonable wholesale value of the jeans.
We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Oregon law provides that restitution may be
awarded when a defendant has been convicted of a crime
that results in economic damages and the state has pre-
sented evidence of such damages. The court must enter a
judgment “requiring that the defendant pay the victim res-
titution in a specific amount that equals the full amount of
the victim’s economic damages as determined by the court.”
ORS 137.106(1)(a). As used in that statute, “economic dam-
ages” “[h]as the meaning given that term in ORS 31.710,
except that ‘economic damages’ does not include future
impairment of earning capacity.” ORS 137.103(2). ORS
31.710(2)(a) defines “economic damages” as follows:
“ ‘Economic damages’ means objectively verifiable mone-
tary losses including but not limited to reasonable charges
necessarily incurred for medical, hospital, nursing and
rehabilitative services and other health care services,
burial and memorial expenses, loss of income and past
and future impairment of earning capacity, reasonable
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 799
and necessary expenses incurred for substitute domestic
services, recurring loss to an estate, damage to reputation
that is economically verifiable, reasonable and necessarily
incurred costs due to loss of use of property and reasonable
costs incurred for repair or for replacement of damaged
property, whichever is less.”
In this court, defendant argues that the victim’s
economic damages must be measured by what it lost—the
jeans—and the cost of replacing them. Defendant focuses on
the general phrase “objectively verifiable monetary losses,”
and, in particular, on the losses described in the last phrase
of ORS 31.710(2)(a), describing “reasonable and necessar-
ily incurred costs due to loss of use of property” and “costs
incurred for repair or replacement of damaged property.”
Defendant acknowledges that, in this case, the stolen jeans
were not recovered, and thus that the final phrase is inappli-
cable as the jeans were not “damaged property.” Nonetheless,
he argues that the proper measure of economic damages for
unrecovered stolen goods is the monetary loss represented
by their “loss of use,” which is, in this circumstance, the
cost necessary to replace them. Defendant contends that,
when the victim of a theft is a retail seller of goods and is
able to replace stolen goods by paying the wholesale price
of those goods, the wholesale cost of those goods represents
the victim’s economic loss. Defendant acknowledges that
such a retail seller also may incur additional losses, such as
lost profits, but, defendant asserts, those additional losses
should not be assumed; they must be proved. In this case,
defendant argues, the state failed to prove any such losses,
and Macy’s was therefore not entitled to recover restitution
in a sum greater than the value of the jeans on the whole-
sale market.1
In response, the state argues that the lower courts
correctly concluded that the proper measure for economic
damages when goods are stolen from a retail seller is the
1
At the restitution hearing, no evidence was presented of the wholesale price
at which Macy’s had obtained the jeans or the price at which it could replenish its
stock. Defendant suggested that a price of $35.98 per pair would be an appropri-
ate estimate of their wholesale value, based on the price at which apparently sim-
ilar items were listed on an online auction website. Defendant does not contend
that Macy’s is not entitled to recover at least that wholesale value in restitution.
800 State v. Islam
reasonable market value of the goods at the time and place
they were stolen, which, in a shoplifting case, is the price
at which the retail seller offers the goods for sale. The state
maintains that defendant misapprehends the significance
of the reference in ORS 31.710(2)(a) to the “loss of use” of
goods or the “costs incurred” for their replacement. Those
references, the state argues, are to damages incurred when
property has been recovered or damaged, not to damages
incurred for goods that have been stolen and not recovered.
Furthermore, the state contends, limiting a victim’s recov-
ery to the wholesale price of stolen items would not fully
compensate the victim, even if the victim also were enti-
tled to recover its lost profits. The state explains that the
difference between the wholesale price at which a retailer
acquires goods and the retail price for which it sells them is
not, as defendant suggests, merely “lost profits”; defendant
neglects to account for the costs of bringing the goods to the
retail market.
We agree with the parties that the final phrase of
ORS 31.710(2)(a)—“reasonable costs incurred for repair or
for replacement of damaged property, whichever is less”—
applies to “damaged property,” not stolen property, and is
inapplicable here.2 As to the phrase “loss of use of property,”
we take a different view from that of either party. In our
view, the phrase “loss of use” is used to describe a specific
type of loss—the damages resulting from property being
unavailable for a limited period of time—and not the type of
loss that occurs when goods are stolen and not recovered.
As we explained in State v. Ramos, 358 Or 581, 368
P3d 446 (2016), restitution under ORS 137.106 is informed
by principles enunciated in civil cases concerning recover-
able economic damages. See id. at 594 (legislature’s “pur-
pose in creating the restitution procedure as a substitute
for a civil proceeding make[s] civil law concepts relevant” to
determination of damages for purposes of restitution). And,
in civil cases, the phrase “loss of use” is used to describe the
damages that result when conduct results in property being
temporarily unavailable for use for a limited period of time.
2
We express no opinion as to whether, or how, damages might be measured
in situations in which stolen goods are recovered and returned to the victim.
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 801
“Temporary injury, or injury which is reasonably susceptible
of repair, justifies damages measured by the loss of use or
rental value during the period of the injury, or the cost of res-
toration, or both, depending on the circumstances.” Hudson
v. Peavey Oil Company, 279 Or 3, 10, 566 P2d 175 (1977). See
also Bullock v. Hass, 280 Or 501, 503-04, 571 P2d 902 (1977)
(plaintiff was entitled to “loss of use” damages, measured in
terms of lost profits, where defendant’s fraud caused deliv-
ery truck to be out of commission for six weeks); Scott v.
Elliott, 253 Or 168, 182, 451 P2d 474 (1969) (in dispute over
possession of land, the “measure of damages for the tempo-
rary loss of the use of the property is the fair rental value of
the property”); Parker v. Harris Pine Mills, Inc., 206 Or 187,
204, 291 P2d 709 (1955) (“Where defendant’s wrongful act
has deprived plaintiff temporarily of the use and enjoyment
of his property, plaintiff is entitled to recover therefor, and
is not limited to the mere cost of restoring the property to its
former condition.” (Citations omitted.)). In using the phrase
“loss of use” in ORS 31.710, we think it likely that the leg-
islature meant to address situations concerning temporary
interference with or deprivation of property, and not circum-
stances such as those in this case, in which the deprivation
of property is permanent.
More importantly, however, ORS 31.710(2)(a) lists
“loss of use” as just one of the “objectively verifiable monetary
losses” recoverable in restitution. ORS 31.710(2)(a) defines
recoverable “economic damages” to mean “objectively verifi-
able monetary losses” and states that those losses include,
but are not limited to, “loss of use,” and other specifically
listed losses. Objectively verifiable monetary losses also
include monetary losses that a victim could recover if the
victim were a plaintiff in a civil action against the defen-
dant. Ramos, 358 Or at 593-94.
If the victim in this case were a plaintiff in a civil
action against defendant, the victim would have a claim
against defendant for conversion. In such an action, Oregon
has long followed the rule that “the measure of damages for
the conversion of personal property is the reasonable market
value of the goods converted at the time and place of conver-
sion with interest thereon from that date.” Hall v. Work, 223
802 State v. Islam
Or 347, 357, 354 P2d 837 (1960); see also Swank v. Elwert, 55
Or 487, 499, 195 P 901 (1910) (citing case law and treatises).3
When there is only one market for the sale and pur-
chase of goods at the time and place of conversion, then there
will be only one market value. There may, however, be more
than one market on which goods are bought and sold at that
time and place. For instance, a retail seller may be able to
purchase in bulk on a wholesale market for a price that is
lower than the price that consumers pay for the same item
on the retail market. In that instance, it becomes necessary
to decide whether the reasonable value of converted goods is
measured by their retail or their wholesale market value.
In answering that question, it is important to
remember that even if the wholesale market is the rele-
vant market, an item’s reasonable wholesale value will
not be the only loss that a victim of theft may recover. The
purpose of damages and criminal restitution is to make a
victim whole, and a retail seller is entitled to recover the
“full” extent of the loss it incurs when its goods are sto-
len. ORS 137.106(1)(a). Therefore, as defendant acknowl-
edges, a retail seller’s recovery is not limited to the mar-
ket value of stolen goods. The seller also may recover other
provable losses, including its lost profits. At least in the
abstract, then, either measure of damages—retail value,
or wholesale value plus additional losses—could yield sim-
ilar results. Still, the allocation of the burden of proof may
be significant in a particular case, and it is an issue we
must resolve. We turn therefore to defendant’s additional
arguments, which are based on the statutory definition of
“economic damages” and defendant’s understanding of the
common law.
Defendant first argues that the plain meaning
of “objectively verifiable monetary losses” as used in ORS
31.710 is “the amount of money that has ‘gone out’ of the
3
This court has recognized, however, that there may be circumstances in
which the market value does not provide a suitable measure for conversion dam-
ages. In Hall, 223 Or at 362-63, the court explained that, “while market value is
ordinarily the measure of damages for conversion, that is because market value is
ordinarily just compensation. It is not the exclusive measure, and where market
value would not be just compensation, other means may be used to show actual
value.” (Citations omitted.)
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 803
victim’s ‘possession or control,’ ” quoting Webster’s Third New
Int’l Dictionary 1338 (unabridged ed 2002), for the definition
of “lost.” He concludes, therefore, that conversion damages
depend solely on the amount that the victim “lost,” as mea-
sured by victim’s out-of-pocket replacement cost for items
stolen. His premise, however, is not sound. To have “eco-
nomic damages” as that term is defined in ORS 31.710(2)(a),
a person need not necessarily demonstrate an out-of-pocket
loss. See White v. Jubitz Corp., 347 Or 212, 232, 219 P3d 566
(2009) (in tort case, rejecting argument that, for purposes of
ORS 31.710, “loss” means that tort victim must “part with
money”).
Next, defendant cites Mock v. Terry, 251 Or 511,
446 P2d 514 (1968), a negligence case in which the court
held that the plaintiff, a retail seller, was entitled to recover
the value of damaged vehicles on the wholesale market plus
other demonstrated losses. In Mock, the court explained the
reason for choosing that measure of damages:
“In determining a just measure of damages we have exam-
ined the problem from the standpoint of both the plaintiff
and defendant.
“ ‘* * * While the fundamental rule of the law is to award
compensation, yet rules for ascertaining the amount of
compensation to be awarded are formed with reference
to the just rights of both parties, and the standard fixed
for estimating damages ought to be determined not only
by what might be right for an injured person to receive in
order to afford just compensation, but also by what is just
to compel the other party to pay: * * *.’ Hansen v. Oregon-
Wash. R. & N. Co., [97 Or 190, 201, 188 P 963 (1920)].”
251 Or at 513. In the court’s view, measuring a retail sell-
er’s loss by the value of the damaged items on the wholesale
market plus other provable losses was just because
“[u]sing retail value as market value would grant the
plaintiff recovery for his cost of doing business and a profit.
If plaintiff can prove that these amounts would have been
realized if defendant had not damaged his property, plain-
tiff can recover for such items; however, in the absence of
such proof, such items of damage are not recoverable.”
Id.
804 State v. Islam
Defendant also points out that the court’s decision
in Mock is consistent with section 911 of the Restatement
(Second) of Torts (1979). Section 911 is not specific to the
tort of conversion; it is one of the “general statements” con-
cerning damages in tort actions. Section 911 provides that
“value means exchange value or the value to the owner if
this is greater than the exchange value.” Comment e to sec-
tion 911 provides:
“Wholesale or retail value. From the time when a chattel
is manufactured to the time of its actual use, there may be
many markets in which it is sold. Thus, different prices are
paid by the wholesaler, the retail dealer and the consumer.
Since the measure of recovery is determined by the harm
done, the market that determines the measure of recovery by
a person whose goods have been taken, destroyed or detained
is that to which he would have to resort in order to replace
the subject matter. Thus, the consumer can recover the retail
price; the retail dealer, the wholesale price. The manufac-
turer, who does not buy in a market, receives his selling
price. Damages for the profits that the wholesale dealer or
the retail dealer would normally anticipate from a sale are
not ordinarily allowed.”
(Emphasis added.) Defendant argues that section 911 and
comment e accord with this court’s decision in Mock and
require reference to the market to which the seller would
have to resort to replace the goods, generally the wholesale
market.
The state responds that the more appropriate ref-
erence is to the measure of damages that would be avail-
able in an action for conversion—an intentional tort. That
is so, the state submits, because the crime of theft neces-
sarily involves intentional wrongdoing and the measure of
damages should be greater than what might otherwise be
available for unintentional torts such as negligence. Mock,
the state points out, was a negligence action. In support of
its argument, the state cites the Restatement section 901,
which indicates that the general principles of tort damages
are intended both to provide compensation to wrongdoers
and to “punish wrongdoers and deter wrongful conduct.” We
have no quarrel with that statement of general principles.
However, that statement is presumably consistent with the
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 805
measure of damages that the Restatement provides for con-
version actions. The section of the Restatement that specifi-
cally addresses the damages in a conversion action is section
927(1). That section provides that damages for conversion
include the “value” of the property “at the time and place
of the conversion.” And, as indicated, section 911 comment
e defines the term “value” to mean, for a retail seller, the
value of goods on the market to which the seller would resort
to replace the items. Section 901 of the Restatement does not
foreclose the use of the wholesale market to determine dam-
ages in a conversion action.
Nor do we find the state’s reliance on comment i to
section 927 of the Restatement (Second) persuasive. That
comment indicates that when the tortfeasor has disposed of
converted goods, the plaintiff “can elect to recover the value
of the chattel at the time of the disposition.” Thus, if a thief
sells stolen goods for more than their market value, that
comment would permit damages based on the thief’s gain
rather than the victim’s loss. In this case, we need not decide
whether such a measure of damages would be permitted
under ORS 137.106(1)(a). Here, the state did not prove that
defendant sold the stolen jeans. And, more to the point, com-
ment i provides an alternative measure of damages in spe-
cial circumstances and does not address the specific issue
before us. Our focus is on how the general rule measuring
damages by the market value of goods at the time and place
of conversion applies when there is more than one market
for those goods.
On that question, the state’s primary argument is
that, when the “place of conversion” is a place where goods
are displayed for retail sale, the relevant market is the retail
market. In our view, that argument evidences a misunder-
standing of the “place of conversion.” The “place of conver-
sion” is a geographic location. When more than one market
operates at that location, the particular place where an item
is displayed does not determine which of those markets is
the relevant market. The item may be displayed at a retail
facility, but its value may be measured on the retail or whole-
sale market. We must consult other law to determine which
of those markets provides the appropriate starting point in
the analysis.
806 State v. Islam
The state’s final argument is that other courts have
recognized that the retail market is the relevant market
when determining the value of stolen goods. None of the
cases that the state cites convinces us, however, that our
interpretation of the statute at issue in this case is incorrect.
In United States v. Lively, 20 F3d 193, 203 (9th Cir 1994),
the court interpreted a federal restitution statue, and its
reasoning is not helpful to us. In United States v. Robinson,
687 F2d 359, 360 (11th Cir 1982), and United States v.
Cummings, 798 F2d 413 (10th Cir 1986), the statutes that
the courts interpreted were not restitution statutes. They
were statutes that defined theft crimes or their elements
and that specifically required reference to the value of stolen
items to determine the relevant crime or element.4
We conclude, based on Mock and the Restatement,
that the market that must be used to determine the rea-
sonable value of an item stolen from a retail seller is the
market to which the seller would resort to replace the sto-
len goods, generally the wholesale market. Although Mock
was a negligence case and comment e to section 911 of the
Restatement applies generally to all torts, the principles on
which they rest are equally applicable in this criminal resti-
tution context. To permit the use of the retail market would
potentially permit a retail seller to recover more than its
actual losses. When a retailer seller recovers the retail value
of stolen goods, it recovers not only the wholesale cost of
4
Oregon similarly defines degrees of theft crime based on the value of the
items stolen. ORS 164.115(1) provides that for purposes of the theft statutes,
“value means the market value of the property at the time and place of the crime
* * *.” This section was “derived substantially from New York Revised Penal Law
§ 155.20.” Commentary to Criminal Law Revision Commission Proposed Oregon
Criminal Code, Final Draft and Report, 139 (July 1970). In State v. Callaghan, 33
Or App 49, 57-58, 576 P2d 14, rev den, 284 Or 1 (1978), the court applied the test
for “market value” set forth in People v. Irrizari, 5 NY 2d 142, 182 NYS 2d 361,
364, 156 NE 2d 69, 71 (1959) (Market value “denotes not the value of the goods in
the market in which the owner had purchased them or in which he could replace
them, but the value in the market in which the goods were being traded, namely,
the price at which they would probably have been sold in the regular course of
business at the time when and place where they were stolen.”). In the present
case, we are not called upon to interpret the provisions of ORS 164.115 relating
to “market value” for purposes of determining what theft crime has been commit-
ted, because that statute, by its terms, applies to statutes that were part of the
1971 criminal code, and ORS 137.106, the restitution statute at issue in this case,
was not part of the 1971 criminal code.
Cite as 359 Or 796 (2016) 807
those goods, but also the profits it anticipated it would make
from the sale of those goods. If the retailer actually loses
such profits, it is entitled to recover them. But if the retailer
does not lose such profits, then recovery of the retail value
of the goods grants the seller more than is just. Cf. Pearson
v. Schmitt, 259 Or 439, 442, 487 P2d 84 (1971) (to recover
lost profits, a party must demonstrate “the existence and
the amount of such profits with reasonable certainty” and
the factfinder may not “freely speculate as to the amount of
damages”). Requiring the retail seller to prove its lost prof-
its is a way of ensuring that a retail seller recovers no more
than just compensation for its loss.
To summarize, when goods for sale are stolen from
a retail seller and not recovered, those goods are converted,
and the measure of “economic damages” for the seller in a
restitution proceeding is the same measure of damages that
would be available to the seller in a tort action for conver-
sion. That measure of damages is the reasonable market
value of the goods converted at the time and place of conver-
sion, and the market that determines that reasonable value
is the market to which the seller would resort to replace the
stolen goods, generally the wholesale market. The seller also
is entitled to recover other “economic damages,” including
lost profits, but they must be proved. In this case, because
the state did not prove that the victim incurred any such
additional damages, the victim’s recovery is limited to the
wholesale value of the jeans.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the case is
remanded to circuit court for further proceedings.