FILED
Mar 22 2019, 7:36 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Leanna Weissmann Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Lawrenceburg, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Tyler G. Banks
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Steven Linville, March 22, 2019
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
18A-CR-983
v. Appeal from the Ripley Circuit
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Ryan King, Special
Appellee-Plaintiff Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
69D01-1601-F6-20
May, Judge.
[1] Steven Linville appeals following his convictions of three counts of Level 6
felony theft 1 and three counts of Level 6 felony making or delivering a false
1
Ind. Code 35-43-4-2(a) (2014).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 1 of 22
sales document. 2 He argues his fifteen-year sentence is inappropriate and the
order that he pay $98,310.30 in restitution is “obvious error.” (Br. of Appellant
at 12.) We affirm in part, and we reverse and remand in part.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] For about sixteen years, Linville was employed by Laughery Valley AG
(hereinafter, “Laughery Valley”). On behalf of Laughery Valley, Linville
delivered fuel, oil, washer fluid, and antifreeze to about four hundred
customers. In 2015, Laughery Valley began to suspect that Linville had been
issuing false receipts to customers so that he could steal money from the
payments due to Laughery Valley. When Laughery Valley confronted Linville,
he admitted he took the money.
[3] On January 29, 2016, the State filed thirty-four counts against Linville for
events occurring on seventeen separate dates between October 6, 2014, and
October 21, 2015. Seventeen of the counts alleged Linville committed Level 6
felony theft because he “sold property belonging to Laughery Valley AG to
Bob’s Service Station and accepted a check totaling [date-specific amount].
Steven D. Linville did not turn the funds over to the Laughery Valley AG.”
(Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27,
28, 29, 30.) Seventeen other counts alleged Linville, on the same dates as the
2
Ind. Code 35-43-5-2(b)(1) (2014).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 2 of 22
seventeen thefts, “delivered a false receipt to Bob’s Service Station for property
belonging to Laughery Valley AG.” (Id. at 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40,
41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47.)
[4] On October 23, 2017, Linville entered an agreement whereby he would plead
guilty to three counts of Level 6 felony theft 3 and three counts of Level 6 felony
delivering a false sales document, 4 in exchange for the State dismissing the
remaining twenty-eight counts. The agreement left the sentence for each count
to the Court’s discretion but required all counts be served consecutively.
Finally, the agreement provided: “Defendant shall pay restitution to Laughery
Valley AG. The restitution amount shall be determined by the Court following
a Restitution Hearing.” (Id. at 119.)
[5] On October 24, 2017, the trial court accepted that agreement, entered those six
convictions, and ordered the production of a presentence investigation report.
The victim impact statement filed by Laughery Valley indicated that, between
May of 2011 and November of 2015, Linville “stole at least $369,426.59 worth
of sales proceeds through his scheme.” (Id. at 127.) At sentencing, Linville
argued the court could not order him to pay more than $35,729.00, based on
3
Linville pleaded guilty to Counts 1, 8, and 17, which occurred on October 6, 2014, March 19, 2015, and
October 21, 2015, respectively.
4
Linville pleaded guilty to Counts 20, 26, and 31, which occurred on November 13, 2014, April 16, 2015,
and August 10, 2015, respectively.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 3 of 22
the six counts to which Linville pled guilty. The trial court entered lengthy
findings in support of its sentencing decision:
I. Under the terms of the Plea Agreement, Defendant faces a
minimum sentence of 3 years and a maximum sentence of 15
years (180 days to 910 days on each count), with a total Advisory
Sentence of 6 years.
II. The Defense asked for a sentence of probation or
community corrections. The Prosecutor asked for a sentence of
15 years with 5 years suspended.
III. The AGGRAVATING FACTOR(S) are as follows:
a. The facts and circumstances of the crime go far
beyond that necessary to prove Level 6 Felony Thefts.
The offenses to which the Defendant pleaded guilty could
have been proven by Defendant having stolen just a few
thousand dollars. The facts of this case show that the
Defendant stole tens of thousands of dollars that he was
charged with and the evidence further shows that he had
been stealing from the victim well before the period for
which he was charged. These facts are substantially more
egregious than what would be necessary to prove the
commission of the six Level 6 felonies. The significant
value of the Defendant’s theft is an aggravating factor of
great weight.
b. Defendant violated a position of trust. First,
Defendant violated his employer’s trust when he, on many
occasions, misappropriated the employer’s property
knowing his employer had entrusted him to provide a
service to their customers. Second, Defendant violated the
trust of his employer’s customers. Because the Defendant
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 4 of 22
violated the position entrusted to him to serve as the
middle-man between his employer (the victim herein) and
a significant number (approximately 350-400) of
customers, the Court considers this two-prong violation of
trust to be a significant aggravating factor of great weight.
c. Defendant committed the crime of theft outside the
times alleged in this Cause. Defendant is charged with
committing crimes within a very narrow window of time;
specifically, the theft of over $98,000 over the period of
one year (October 2014 to October 2015). Defendant held
his position for Laughery Valley for several years and
other thefts, not brought within this case, were committed.
The Court also recognizes that this aggravator is a basis for
not affording the Defendant’s lack of criminal history
more weight, otherwise, this aggravator would have been
heavier. Therefore, the Court considers this an
aggravating factor and affords it moderate weight.
d. Defendant’s actions have damaged Laughery
Valley’s business reputation in the community. According
to Keith Everheart [sic], Laughery Valley has lost
customers due to the Defendant’s actions. Further,
customers of Laughery Valley, not alleged victims herein,
appeared in the court room at sentencing, as they believe
that they too have been wronged by the Defendant’s
actions. The damage done to the victim from the wedge
driven by the Defendant between the victim and its
customers is palpable. The Court gives this aggravating
factor moderate weight.
IV. The MITIGATING FACTOR(S) are as follows:
a. Defendant lacks criminal history. Although the
Defendant does not have any previous convictions, the
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Court finds this mitigating factor should be viewed within
the light that the evidence (Everhart testimony, Main PC,
and Boring Letter) shows that he had committed
numerous offenses over the course of many years against
the victim herein. Although Defendant is only charged
with the commission of crimes occurring between October
2014, and October 2015, the evidence shows thefts over
the course of years. While the Court recognizes that the
Defendant has no previous criminal convictions, the Court
also recognizes that Defendant had been victimizing
Laughery Valley for years before October of 2014.
Therefore, the Court does not give this mitigating factor
much weight.
b. Defendant shows remorse for the commission of the
offense. Defendant recognizes that his crimes have
embarrassed certain persons that had nothing to do with
his criminal enterprise. The Court recognizes this as a
mitigating factor, but because he’s now before the Court
for sentencing under the terms of a favorable plea
agreement, the Court does not believe this factor to be of
substantial weight. Further, it appears that the Defendant
is more remorseful for humiliating other persons and
himself than he is remorseful for stealing from the victim.
Therefore, this is a mitigating factor, but not of substantial
weight.
V. Defendant’s guilty plea is not a mitigating factor because he
already received a benefit of a Plea Agreement; namely the
dismissal of 28 counts. This was a significant benefit to the
Defendant.
(App. at 129-30 (emphases in original) (formatting altered).) The trial court
found the aggravators “significantly outweigh” the mitigators, (id. at 130), and
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 6 of 22
imposed a fifteen-year sentence with three years suspended to probation. The
court also ordered Linville to “pay restitution to Laughery Valley . . . in the
amount of $98,310.30.” (Id. at 131.)
[6] Linville then filed a motion to correct error that challenged both his sentence
and the restitution order. He argued the court “relied on aggravating
circumstances that are not supported by the record or are improper as a matter
of law.” (Id. at 138.) As to restitution, Linville asserted the court’s ruling was
“incorrect as a matter of law. Under Indiana law the restitution order could not
have exceeded $35,729.00.” (Id.) The trial court denied Linville’s motion to
correct error in a lengthy order that will be quoted where relevant to the issues
raised on appeal.
Discussion and Decision
[7] Linville appeals from the denial of his motion to correct error. We generally
review the trial court’s grant or denial of a motion to correct error for an abuse
of the trial court’s discretion. State v. Johnston, 65 N.E.3d 1061, 1062 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2016). An abuse of discretion has occurred if the trial court’s decision is
“clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before the
court, or the reasonable, probable, and actual deductions to be drawn
therefrom.” State v. Collier, 61 N.E.3d 265, 268 (Ind. 2016) (quoting McElfresh v.
State, 51 N.E.3d 103, 107 (Ind. 2016)). If, however, the issues raised on appeal
are pure questions of law, we review those issues de novo. Johnston, 65 N.E.3d
at 1062.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 7 of 22
Sentence Length
[8] Linville first argues his fifteen-year sentence is inappropriate. Pursuant to
Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B), we “may revise a sentence authorized by statute
if, after due consideration of the trial court’s decision, [we] find that the
sentence is inappropriate in light of the nature of the offense and the character
of the offender.” As we conduct our review, we give “substantial deference” to
the decision of the trial court. Knapp v. State, 9 N.E.3d 1274, 1292 (Ind. 2014),
cert. denied 135 S. Ct. 978 (2015). “The principal role of appellate review should
be to attempt to leaven the outliers . . . but not to achieve some perceived
‘correct’ result in each case.” Cardwell v. State, 895 N.E.2d 1219, 1225 (Ind.
2008).
Ultimately the length of the aggregate sentence and how it is to
be served are the issues that matter. In the vast majority of cases,
whether these are derived from multiple or single counts, involve
maximum or minimum sentence, and are concurrent or
consecutive is of far less significance than the aggregate term of
years. And whether we regard a sentence as appropriate at the
end of the day turns on our sense of the culpability of the
defendant, the severity of the crime, the damage done to others,
and myriad other factors that come to light in a given case.
Id. at 1224. We “focus on the forest—the aggregate sentence—rather than the
trees—consecutive or concurrent, number of counts, or length of the sentence
on any individual count.” Id. at 1225.
[9] Linville was convicted of six Level 6 felonies, each of which carried a potential
sentence of six months to two-and-a-half years, with the advisory sentence
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 8 of 22
being eighteen months. See Ind. Code § 35-50-2-7(b). The court imposed two-
and-a-half years for each conviction and, pursuant to the plea agreement,
ordered those sentences served consecutively. Thus, Linville received the
maximum possible aggregate sentence for his convictions, fifteen years. 5
[10] As to the nature of his crime, Linville notes he “caused only pecuniary loss and
not physical damage to the crime victim.” (Br. of Appellant at 11.) However,
as the trial court noted in its sentencing order, Linville’s crimes constituted a
“two-prong violation of trust,” (App. Vol. 2 at 130), because Linville was the
middle man between Laughery Valley and nearly 400 of its customers, so he
violated the trust of his employer and the trust of the employer’s customers.
Evidence of this extended impact of Linville’s crimes was presented in the
victim impact letter presented on behalf of Laughery Valley, which stated:
. . . Laughery Valley wants the Court to know that the seventeen
charged instances of theft/making or delivering a false sales
document represents but a fraction of the overall harm Steve
Linville has caused to Laughery Valley.
[T]o this day Laughery Valley experiences the lasting effects of
Steve’s crimes. Not only was Laughery Valley deprived of
hundreds of thousands of dollars of potential revenue, but
Laughery Valley has expended considerable resources pursuing
5
Linville argues his fifteen-year sentence is inappropriate because it is the same length “as people who have
committed much more egregious crimes.” (Br. of Appellant at 15.) While the cases Linville cited involved
rape, battery of a child, and dragging a police officer behind a car, which are more egregious, they all
involved crimes that occurred in a single incident. Linville, by comparison, pled guilty to committing his
crimes repeatedly over the course of one full year, such that his comparison to those other cases does not
convince us that his sentence is inappropriate for his crimes.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 9 of 22
the civil litigation against Steve and the other defendants, with no
end in sight. Laughery Valley has also been forced to defend
against counterclaims in that suit alleging that Laughery Valley
was negligent in hiring, supervising, and retaining Steve as an
employee.
In addition, Laughery Valley continues to battle rumors in the
community that one of its former delivery drivers stole fuel
directly from Laughery Valley’s customers. In fact, just this
month Laughery Valley received a new claim from a customer
who says they believe that Steve stole fuel from them. Laughery
Valley has turned that claim over to its insurance carrier.
Steve’s crimes have caused ripples of consequences in the lives of
everyone involved . . . . While many of those consequences are
monetary and can be itemized and accounted for, others are
more difficult to quantify. The full extent of reputational harm
experienced by Laughery Valley, and the interference with its
customer relationship, may never be known, but it will continue
to be experienced for months and years to come. In determining
Steve Linville’s sentence, Laughery Valley hopes the Court will
fully consider both the direct, readily-quantifiable harms caused
by Steve’s actions, as well as those that are more indirect and
difficult to calculate, but no less real.
(Id. at 128.) Based on the harm caused, and thus the nature of Linville’s
offense, we cannot say a fifteen-year sentence is inappropriate for his crimes.
[11] Regarding his character, Linville notes he “expressed genuine remorse and he
has no criminal history.” (Br. of Appellant at 11.) However, the trial court
explicitly found “it appears that the Defendant is more remorseful for
humiliating other persons and himself than he is remorseful for stealing from
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 10 of 22
the victim.” (App. Vol. 2 at 130.) Furthermore, while Linville has no criminal
history, he spent more than a year stealing repeatedly from his employer,
creating false documents to facilitate his commission of theft, and involving his
uncle, who owned Bob’s Service Station, in his scheme. Thus, we also cannot
say a fifteen-year sentence is inappropriate for Linville’s character. We
accordingly affirm the length of his sentence. See, e.g., Keller v. State, 987
N.E.2d 1099, 1122 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013) (twenty-nine-year sentence not
inappropriate for convictions of repeated acts of burglary and theft, where
criminal history included only prior conviction of conversion), trans. denied.
Restitution Order
[12] “As part of a sentence or as a condition of probation, a trial court may order a
defendant to pay restitution to a victim.” Morgan v. State, 49 N.E.3d 1091, 1093
(Ind. Ct. App. 2016). Traditional goals of restitution are to “vindicate the rights
of society[,]” Iltzsch v. State, 981 N.E.2d 55, 56 (Ind. 2013), and to “impress
upon a criminal defendant the magnitude of the loss he has caused and his
responsibility to make good that loss as completely as possible.” Kotsopoulos v.
State, 654 N.E.2d 44, 46 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995), reh’g denied, trans. denied.
[13] Orders of restitution are within the trial court’s discretion, and we will reverse
only if the trial court has abused that discretion. Green v. State, 811 N.E.2d 874,
877 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court
misinterprets or misapplies the law.” Id. A restitution order must be supported
by sufficient evidence. Rich v. State, 890 N.E.2d 44, 49 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008),
trans. denied. “Evidence supporting a restitution order is sufficient if it affords a
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 11 of 22
reasonable basis for estimating loss and does not subject the trier of fact to mere
speculation or conjecture.” J.H. v. State, 950 N.E.2d 731, 734 (Ind. Ct. App.
2011).
[14] Herein, the State charged Linville with thirty-four crimes based on seventeen
occurrences of theft, and on those seventeen dates Linville stole a total of
$98,310.30 from Laughery Valley. 6 Pursuant to his plea agreement, Linville
was convicted of six crimes. The trial court ordered Linville to pay $98,310.30,
and Linville argues that was error under Dull v. State, 44 N.E.3d 823 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2015).
[15] Dull was indicted for one count of Class D felony theft for an act that occurred
in the “summer or fall of 2013.” Id. at 825. He pled guilty to that crime and
agreed the court could determine restitution. A witness from the business
testified Dull committed additional thefts and had stolen $145,633.40. At the
guilty plea hearing, Dull admitted two other thefts from the same business
during the charged timeframe and “agreed to pay restitution for the grain he
took . . . on three occasions.” Id. at 832. Cancelled checks demonstrated that
“during the relevant time period in the indictment, there were fourteen
transactions . . . that totaled $26,110.98.” Id. at 828. Dull’s counsel argued his
6
Laughery Valley’s investigation of Linville’s sales and behavior concluded that Linville began stealing from
Laughery Valley in 2011 and that, all told, he had stolen around $350,000 in sixty-one acts that occurred over
four years. As the trial court noted in its order on Linville’s motion to correct error, Indiana law prohibits the
trial court from ordering Linville to pay restitution for those additional uncharged amounts. (See App. at 145
(citing Dull v. State, 44 N.E.3d 823 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).)
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-983 | March 22, 2019 Page 12 of 22
restitution should not be more than $26,110.98. The court ordered Dull to pay
$145,633.40.
[16] On appeal, we reversed the trial court’s order because the trial court could not
order Dull to pay restitution for acts prior to the summer of 2013 when Dull
had not pled guilty to committing theft before that summer and had not agreed
to pay restitution for acts committed before that time. Id. at 832. In the process
of so holding, we explained:
Indiana Code § 35-50-5-3(a), which governs restitution, provides
that a “court shall base its restitution order upon a consideration
of: (1) property damages of the victim incurred as a result of the
crime, based on the actual cost of repair (or replacement if repair
is inappropriate).” (Emphasis added). The trial court cannot
order a defendant to pay restitution for crimes to which he did
not plead guilty, has not been convicted, or did not agree to pay
as restitution. See Polen [v. State], 578 N.E.2d [755,] 756-57 [(Ind.
Ct. App. 1991)]. See also Hill v. State, 25 N.E.3d 1280, 1283 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2015) (“Absent an agreement to pay restitution, a
defendant may not be ordered to pay restitution for an act that
did not result in conviction.”).
Id. at 831. Because Dull had agreed to pay restitution for the summer and fall
of 2013 and, through counsel, had agreed the amount was the total of the
fourteen checks written in that time period, the restitution order had to be
reduced to $27,778.18. Id. at 832-33.
[17] At the sentencing hearing, Linville argued: “Dull requires the Court to enter
restitution in the amount of Thirty-Five Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty-
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Nine Dollars ($35,729.00) . . . for the six counts to which were pled.” 7 (Tr. at
61.) However, in pronouncing its order, the trial court said:
[T]he law states the Trial Court cannot order a Defendant to pay
restitution for crimes which he did not plead guilty, has not been
convicted or did not agree to pay as restitution. Well, these
proceedings got started a little late today because the Court went
back and listened to the guilty plea hearing and at the guilty plea
hearing, everybody was in agreement that your amount could be
readily determined by the informations. There wasn’t such an
argument. The argument there was between Ninety-Eight
Thousand (98,000) and three hundred and forty-four thousand
(344,000). So, you were in agreement at the time of the guilty
plea that you owed Ninety-Eight Thousand Dollars ($98,000.00)
and that is sufficient to find that that should be the amount of
restitution that you should have to pay. . . . Specifically, it’s
Ninety-Eight Three Ten and Thirty Cents ($98,310.30). So, the
Court’s going to iss . . . enter a restitution order in that amount.
(Id. at 70.)
7
On appeal, Linville argues the restitution order should have been only “$17,786.50.” (Br. of Appellant at
21.) Appellate counsel notes $17,786.50 is the total for the three thefts, and then she suggests “it is unclear
how [trial] counsel arrived at” $35,729.00, suggesting trial counsel may have added improperly. (Id. at 21
n.2.) However, on the same page of the Transcript to which appellate counsel cites, trial counsel explained
how he reached $35,729.00. (See Tr. Vol. 2 at 61 (explaining there were seventeen acts of theft and each
charge of making a false sales document had a corresponding theft that occurred on the same day, such that
the damages from each false document was that day’s theft).) (See also id. at 19-20 (discussing that there were
seventeen dates on which the two crimes occurred concurrently, resulting in thirty-four charged crimes).)
Linville was convicted of three counts of theft during which he stole a total of $17,786.50 and three counts of
making a false sales document, which facilitated his theft of an additional $17,942.50, bringing the damages
for his six crimes to a total of $35,729.00. On this basis, trial counsel urged the court to enter a restitution
order of $35,729.00, and Linville cannot now assert that amount is error. See Dull, 4 N.E.3d at 832-33
(Appellate court ordered Dull to pay restitution for fourteen transactions during summer and fall of 2013,
because that was the timeframe in which Dull admitted thefts and, through counsel, Dull had agreed the
amount he should be ordered to pay was the total of the fourteen checks written in that time period, even
though Dull was only convicted of three counts of theft).
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[18] Linville then filed a motion to correct error challenging the validity of the
restitution order that required him to pay $98,310.30. In response, the trial
court entered the following findings and conclusions:
I. $98,310.30 in restitution is supported by the law and
evidence.
1) The Parties entered into a Plea Agreement wherein the
parties agreed as follows: “Defendant shall pay restitution to
Laughery Valley Ag. The restitution amount shall be determined by the
Court following a Restitution Hearing.” The Plea Agreement was
filed on October 23, 2017, and the Guilty Plea Hearing was held
on October 24, 2017.
2) During the Guilty Plea Hearing, the defense stated that the
restitution should be approximately $100,000. At that time, the
State said it would be asking for $344,023.45. The defense
contested a letter submitted by the victim who was asking for
“much more restitution than what’s charged.” (asking for over
$360,000)
The Guilty Plea Hearing Transcript shows that the restitution
dispute was in regards to the defense’s position that restitution
was approximately $100,000 (the amount “charged”) versus the
State’s position that the restitution was $344,023.45. Probative
excerpts from the Guilty Plea Hearing include at least the
following:
Excerpt 1:
MR. WATSON: “… I note that this letter that’s just been delivered to
the Court is, I think, indicating much more restitution than what’s
charged. I just would make that point.”
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Excerpt 2 (State’s Statement and Defense Counsel’s Response
thereto):
MR. TUCKER: “Your Honor, I know what’s alleged in the probable
cause affidavit … I know it’s $344,023.45.”
MR. WATSON: But the counts look to me like they don’t add up to
that ($344,023.45). Maybe I’m wrong… I mean, it looks to me like that
the theft counts, seventeen (17) of them add up to, and these are rounded
numbers, around a hundred thousand ($100,000).
Excerpt 3:
MR. WATSON: And then just roughing the seventeen (17) out and,
again, this is not an exact number and everybody in this courtroom
knows I’m not a mathematician, okay, but it looks to me like those
seventeen (17) counts add up to about a hundred grand ($100,000).
3) Further, the Transcript of the Guilty Plea Hearing shows
that the defense may have even agreed to the Court having the
discretion to find a higher amount of, or additional, restitution as
defense counsel referred to the “various ways” that restitution
may be figured, including “loss of sale” and counsel further
pondered that there could be a “combination request”. The
defense certainly made no suggestion that restitution should be,
or could be, limited to the $35,729.00 or that restitution was
limited to the amounts Defendant pleaded guilty to. The
dialogue in the Guilty Plea Hearing is absolutely contrary to that
assertion.
4) During the Sentencing Hearing, the State and the Defense
changed their positions wherein the State backed the victim’s
request for over $360,000 and the Defense responded by
requesting restitution of $35,729.00.
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5) Based upon Dull v. State, 44 N.E.[3]d 823 (Ind.
App.2015), the Court found that the Court was limited to
$98,310.30, which was the amount “charged” and the amount
that the defense was advocating for during the Guilty Plea
Hearing. Defendant had been agreeable to, or acquiesced in,
restitution for the amount “charged”, but certainly contested the
larger figures.
6) The Court also finds that the Probable Cause shows that
the Defendant admitting to stealing at least $82,000. “STEVE
LINVILLE further told MIKE BORING that he deposited $82,000 from
the thefts into his and his wife’s bank account … from the stolen fuel, oil,
washer fluid, and antifreeze … that belonged to LAUGHERY VALLEY
AG”. Defendant’s admission in the Probable Cause is consistent
with the defense’s Guilty Plea Hearing position.
7) Dull allows restitution to be determined in an amount
beyond the offense(s) to which a Defendant pleaded guilty to, if
the Defendant so agrees. Further, Kinkead v. State, supports a
finding of restitution based upon statements made by the
Defense. 791 N.E.2d 243 (Ind. App. 2003) (holding that the
Defendant was appropriately ordered to pay restitution in a
higher amount when he stated he would pay “whatever the Judge
decides my restitution should be is what I, what I will . . . be willing to
pay”. Here, during the Guilty Plea Hearing the Defense made
several statements that restitution should be the amount
“charged” in the 17 counts (approximately $100,000), not
$344,023.45 or $360,000.
8) The record shows that the Defendant was correct during
the Guilty Plea Hearing that appropriate restitution is $98,310.30
and Dull prevented an award for $340,000 or more. The Court’s
decision, now alleged to be error, actually provided a substantial
benefit to Defendant.
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Where there is a Plea Agreement dismissing numerous
counts and for a restitution hearing, and where, during the Guilty
Plea Hearing, the defense made clear statements evidencing the
Defendant’s position that restitution was the approximately
$100,000 “charged”, and where the Court found that Dull
significantly limits the Defendant’s restitution and the evidence,
even by the Defendant[’s] own omission [sic], supports the
amount of restitution awarded herein, the Court finds that the
restitution award was the legally appropriate amount after
considering the law and evidence.
WHEREFORE, the Court DENIES the Motion to Correct Errors
as to restitution.
(App. Vol. 2 at 144-45 (emphases and errors in original).)
[19] Our review of the transcript of the Guilty Plea Hearing leads us to a very
different conclusion. At that hearing, defense counsel was discussing his need
for further discovery to determine whether additional documentation existed to
support an order of restitution greater than the amount charged as to each
offense:
I can tell the Court that one of [the] things I’m going to do in a
response, it might just be there’s nothing new, but I probably will
ask for an order for additional discovery to indicate any, you
know, documentation that, if the State believes there’s any
documentation for restitution that’s not already been discovered
or sent to us that’s out there or anything that’s new that’s come
into them, um, so I’ll probably be asking for that.
*****
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But the counts look to me like they don’t add up to [the
$344,023.45 alleged in the probable cause affidavit]. Maybe I’m
wrong. In any event, it is what it is. I’m just . . . That’s my
whole point. The restitution issue is . . . an issue in terms of
trying to come down to an exact number or the various ways that
restitution might be collected. For instance, um, it’s noted in the
letter that, you know, there’s, there’s the actual dollar amounts
that are alleged because of checks that were written, but then
there’s the question of loss of sale in terms of, well, their
allegation is that, you know, the, the gas being sold at a value
lower than the, you know, than the market value. So, I’m not
clear if there’s going to be a combination request based on that or
if that maybe makes up a difference that I’m not seeing. I mean,
it looks to me like that the theft counts, seventeen (17) of them
add up to, and these are rounded numbers, around a hundred
thousand (100,000). . . .
*****
. . . I just want to be clear before I come to the hearing, exactly
what are the streams of restitution that Laughery is asking for. Is
it just flat out the transaction that occurred on these individual
dates? Are they also asking for loss related to the gas they could
have sold at a higher price and how do we propose to prove that?
That’s, that’s what some of the technicalities are here.
*****
. . . it looks to me like those seventeen (17) counts add up to
about a hundred grand (100,000). Each one of those counts
states a specific amount and the low amount running somewhere
around Forty-Three Hundred Dollars ($4,300.00) and the high
amount running as high as eighty-three (83), but most of them
ranging between five and six or five and seven, I should say, and
I just went through them again just to . . . So, you see, Judge,
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what I’m saying is there’s, there’s a lot of numbers here. The
Proba . . .[sic] the PC Affidavit says one thing. I know what’s
going on in the civil litigation, because I’m in it. There’s, in the
letter they seem to be alleging there’s a different stream of
restitution, which may be logical and reasonable and that might
be that we intend to prove what the gas price was on each one of
these days and what the difference was, we could have sold it for
that too, and that our only loss is not the number here but it’s
more because the gas itself was worth much more than what was
taken. I’m not sure. That’s why I want to send a little discovery
to make sure I know what the State intends to present, um-
(Tr. Vol. 2 at 14-21.)
[20] When considered within the context of his full arguments at the guilty plea
hearing, we cannot agree Linville’s counsel agreed that his client was
responsible for the nearly $100,000 alleged in support of the seventeen counts of
theft. Rather, counsel was explaining that he needed additional discovery to
understand why the probable cause affidavit indicated Linville had stolen
$344,023.45 and the newly submitted letter indicated Linville had stolen more
than $360,000, but the amounts listed in the criminal charges amounted to only
approximately $100,000.00. He explained that, to represent Linville’s interests
at the sentencing hearing, he needed to understand how the State intended to
demonstrate the amounts of restitution it would be requesting, if that amount
would be greater than the amounts alleged in the charging affidavits, which
were supported by the checks that Linville received from Bob’s Service Station.
At no point did counsel agree that Linville should be or would be responsible
for the money alleged to have been stolen during all seventeen thefts. “The trial
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court cannot order a defendant to pay restitution for crimes to which he did not
plead guilty, has not been convicted, or did not agree to pay as restitution.”
Dull, 44 N.E.3d 831. We therefore hold the trial court’s denial of Linville’s
motion to correct error as to restitution was an abuse of discretion. See Wright v.
Wright, 782 N.E.2d 363, 368 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (denial of father’s motion to
correct error was abuse of discretion where evidence before trial court did not
support denial).
[21] Because Linville did not agree to pay restitution for all seventeen thefts that
were charged, he could not be ordered to pay $98,310.30 in restitution when he
was convicted of only six crimes. See Dull, 44 N.E.3d at 832 (court abused its
discretion by ordering Dull to pay for more checks than those written during the
timeframe he agreed to pay). Linville’s counsel did concede the restitution
order for those six crimes should be $35,729.00, based on the amounts of the
checks written by Bob’s Service Station to Linville on those dates. (See Tr. Vol.
2 at 61.) At the restitution hearing, the witness for Laughery Valley testified the
restitution it was requesting was based only on sixty-one checks written to
Linville from Bob’s Service Station. (Id. at 40-41.) As such, Laughery Valley
was not requesting reimbursement in this criminal context for any other form of
loss caused by Linville’s actions. We therefore can determine that the trial
court should have ordered Linville to pay $35,729.00 in restitution. We
accordingly reverse the trial court’s order as to restitution and remand for the
trial court to modify the judgment against Linville to indicate he must pay
$35,729.00 in restitution to Laughery Valley.
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Conclusion
[22] In light of Linville’s character and offense, we see nothing inappropriate about
his fifteen-year sentence, three of which were suspended to probation, and we
affirm the length of his sentence. However, the trial court abused its discretion
when it ordered Linville to pay $98,310.30 in restitution. We therefore reverse
and remand for the trial court to enter a new order requiring Linville to pay
$35,729.00 in restitution to Laughery Valley.
[23] Affirmed in part, reversed and remanded in part.
Baker, J., and Robb, J., concur.
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