IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 19–0022
Filed June 5, 2020
STATE OF IOWA,
Appellee,
vs.
DANIEL WESLEY DAVIS JR.,
Appellant.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Tama County, Mary E.
Chicchelly, Judge.
Defendant appeals restitution orders. RESTITUTION ORDERS
VACATED AND CASE REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Darrel Mullins, Assistant
Attorney General, and Brent D. Heeren, County Attorney, for appellee.
2
WATERMAN, Justice.
In State v. Albright, we held that “any temporary, permanent, or
supplemental order regarding restitution is not appealable or enforceable
until the court files its final order of restitution” after a determination of
the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay. 925 N.W.2d 144, 162 (Iowa
2019) (emphasis added). Daniel Davis Jr. filed this direct appeal from his
judgment of conviction challenging only the restitution awarded without a
determination of his reasonable ability to pay and without the district
court’s final order of restitution. The State argues his appeal must be
dismissed because such restitution orders are not “appealable” under
Albright. We retained this case to clarify Albright.
On our review, we reiterate that such interim restitution orders are
not enforceable and collection efforts must await the district court’s
determination of the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay all items of
restitution and entry of the final order of restitution. Interim orders should
state that no sums are due before then. Defendants may seek appellate
review of interim restitution orders in a direct appeal of right from the
judgment of conviction. The district court in this case did not have the
benefit of Albright, and we vacate the restitution orders and remand this
case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
On August 23, 2017, Detective Jacob Molitor of the Meskwaki
Nation tribal police investigated a hit and run collision in the Meskwaki
Bingo Casino Hotel parking lot in Tama. Surveillance video showed a gray
4x4 pickup backing out of a parking spot into a hotel guest’s Lexus
ES 350, which suffered a broken taillight and scrapes on the bumper. Two
days later, hotel security and the tribal police located the suspect truck,
which had scrapes and plastic consistent with taillight material embedded
3
in its fender. They apprehended the truck’s occupants, two males, in the
hotel lobby. The suspects were uncooperative and placed under arrest.
Officers determined that one of the suspects, Daniel Davis Jr., had been
the driver of the truck.
Officers soon learned that the truck, a silver 2015 Dodge Ram 2500
Cummins Diesel Laramie 4x4 pickup truck, had been stolen from
Car City, Inc. in Des Moines. They also learned that the license plates on
the Dodge were registered to a different vehicle. During their search of the
Dodge, the officers found a bag containing methamphetamine in the truck
bed belonging to Davis and located two DEWALT® rechargeable batteries
that later were determined to have been stolen from a hotel guest’s work
truck in the parking lot of the Drury Inn in Grove City, Ohio.
On May 9, 2018, Davis was charged with theft in the first degree for
the stolen Dodge, theft in the third degree for the DEWALT® rechargeable
batteries, theft in the third degree for the stolen dealer plate, and
possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine), third offense.
Given that he had at least two prior felony convictions, Davis faced the
habitual offender enhancement for the felony charges. The district court
appointed counsel to represent Davis.
On August 16, Davis reached a plea agreement pursuant to which
he entered Alford 1 pleas to second-degree theft in violation of Iowa Code
sections 714.4 and 714.2(2) (2017) for the stolen Dodge and to possession
of a controlled substance, third offense, in violation of sections 124.401(5),
703.1, and 703.2. Under the plea agreement, the other two theft charges
were dismissed, and the State agreed not to pursue the habitual felony
enhancement. During the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor described
1North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 91 S. Ct. 160 (1970).
4
the plea agreement and stated, “I’d recommend the minimum fine and
restitution. I have no objection to the Court suspending that fine in lieu
of the restitution owed, Defendant’s costs and attorney fees.” Defense
counsel agreed, and Davis told the court he understood the plea. The
court described the fines and surcharges and engaged in a colloquy to
ensure that Davis understood that he may be required to pay restitution:
THE COURT: Also, Mr. Davis, as a consequence for
pleading guilty, you may also be required to make restitution
to any victims of each of these offenses. Do you understand
that?
MR. DAVIS: Yes, ma’am.
THE COURT: And you will also be required to pay any
court costs and court appointed attorney fees. Do you
understand that?
MR. DAVIS: Yes, ma’am.
Later, the court again emphasized this point:
THE COURT: Now, if you plead guilty, you may also
have to make victim restitution, restitution for court costs and
restitution for court-appointed attorney fees if your lawyer is
court appointed. Do you understand all of that?
MR. DAVIS: Yes, ma’am.
At the close of the sentencing hearing, the court ordered Davis to pay
certain fines, surcharges, and victim restitution, stating,
The Defendant is further sentenced to pay a fine in the
amount of $750, together with a 35 percent surcharge. The
Defendant is further sentenced to pay a law enforcement
initiative surcharge in the amount of $125 with regard to each
count and a DARE surcharge associated with Count Four.
The fine shall be suspended in each of these counts. . . . The
Defendant shall be ordered to pay restitution to the victim or
victims of his crime relative to Count One. That restitution
will be determined -- the Court is now ordering the State to
file a statement of pecuniary damages with regard to Count
One within 30 days of today’s date.
On August 16, the district court entered an order accepting the
guilty plea in the same filing as its judgment of conviction and sentence.
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The court sentenced Davis to a maximum of five years imprisonment for
the theft offense (count I) and a maximum of five years imprisonment for
the drug possession offense (count IV), to run concurrently along with
other sentences that Davis was already serving. The written order
addressed costs and restitution as follows:
Defendant is ordered to pay a fine in the amount of $750
on Count I and $750 on Count 4; and the required 35 percent
surcharges on each count. The Defendant is assessed the
$125 Law Enforcement Initiative Surcharge on each Count I
and Count IV; and on Count 4, the Defendant is assessed the
$10 DARE surcharge. The fines on both Count I and Count
IV are suspended by the court.
Defendant is assessed the fees of court-appointed
counsel in the amount approved pursuant to the contract with
the State Public Defender in addition to any and all court costs
in this matter.
....
Counts II and III are dismissed at Defendant’s cost.
With regard to Count I, the Defendant is ordered to pay
victim restitution pursuant to a Statement of Pecuniary
Damages which shall be filed by the State within 30 days.
(Emphasis added.)
On August 28, the clerk of court filed a “restitution plan” listing
$405.50 in costs that Davis was “ordered to pay,” which reflected a $100
filing and docketing fee, a $40 court reporter fee, and $265.50 in Sheriff’s
(jail) fees. Three days later, the State filed a statement of pecuniary
damages seeking $2000 in restitution to the owner of the stolen Dodge.
That same day the court granted the statement, ordered Davis to pay
victim restitution of $2000, and ordered Davis to file any objection within
ten days. Davis instead filed a notice of appeal. 2
2Five days later, the Iowa Department of Corrections (DOC) filed a restitution plan
reflecting both the $405.50 in costs and $2000 in victim restitution for a total of
$2405.50. This document states that Davis “has been ordered to pay the County Clerk
of Court 20 percent of all credits” to his prison account, and it states that an attempt to
violate the plan’s conditions will result in major disciplinary proceedings. This plan was
6
On appeal, Davis challenges the restitution he was ordered to pay
without a determination of his reasonable ability to pay. He does not
challenge his conviction or prison sentence, nor the victim restitution
award. We retained the appeal.
II. Standard of Review.
“We review restitution orders for correction of errors at law.”
Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 158. “[W]e determine whether the court’s findings
lack substantial evidentiary support, or whether the court has not properly
applied the law.” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Klawonn, 688
N.W.2d 271, 274 (Iowa 2004)).
III. Analysis.
This dispute concerns the proper application of Albright. There, we
held that “any temporary, permanent, or supplemental order regarding
restitution is not appealable or enforceable until the court files its final
order of restitution.” Id. at 162. Davis asserts that the district court erred
by ordering him to pay restitution without a final order of restitution or
finding as to his reasonable ability to pay. Davis asks that we vacate the
portion of the sentencing order requiring him to pay court costs and
attorney fees and remand for a restitution hearing and final order at which
the district court will determine his reasonable ability to pay. The State
contends that under Albright, the district court was not required to
determine Davis’s reasonable ability to pay before entry of its final order of
restitution, which had not yet occurred when Davis filed his notice of
appeal. Accordingly, the State argues that the appeal must be dismissed
as premature.
signed by a DOC official. The district court never entered an order approving the DOC
statement or providing a final order of restitution, nor did it conduct a hearing or
otherwise determine Davis’s reasonable ability to pay restitution.
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We begin our analysis by reviewing restitution requirements. Iowa
Code chapter 910 governs restitution. See id. at 158–61. There are two
categories of restitution. Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 159; see Iowa Code
§ 910.2(1). The first category involves “restitution ‘to the victims of the
offender’s criminal activities [and] to the clerk of court for fines, penalties,
[and] surcharges,’ ” and “[t]he court is required to order restitution for the
items in this first category regardless of the offender’s reasonable ability to
pay.” Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 159 (first and second alteration in original)
(quoting Iowa Code § 910.2(1)). The court’s order for Davis to pay $2000
in restitution to the victim of his crime falls within this first category, and
the court was not required to determine his reasonable ability to pay this
amount before ordering the victim restitution. That amount is not in
dispute.
The second category of restitution includes,
(1) Crime victim [compensation program]
reimbursement.
(2) Restitution to public agencies pursuant to section
321J.2, subsection 13, paragraph “b”.
(3) Court costs including correctional fees approved
pursuant to section 356.7.
(4) Court-appointed attorney fees ordered pursuant to
section 815.9, including the expense of a public defender,
when applicable.
(5) Contribution to a local anticrime organization.
(6) Restitution to the medical assistance program
pursuant to chapter 249A.
Iowa Code § 910.2(1)(a)(1)–(6) (emphasis added). The court can only order
the defendant to pay second-category restitution after “all such items are
before the court and the court has then made a reasonable-ability-to-pay
determination.” State v. Gross, 935 N.W.2d 695, 702 (Iowa 2019); Albright,
925 N.W.2d at 162. Davis challenges the correctional fees included in the
8
$405.50 in court costs and the unknown amount of court-appointed
attorney fees he was ordered to pay without a determination of his
reasonable ability to pay.
In Albright, we “urg[ed] the sentencing court to take whatever steps
necessary to ensure the items of restitution are before the court at the time
of sentencing.” 925 N.W.2d at 160. However, the Code recognizes that
the amount of restitution may not be available at the time of sentencing,
and it allows the court to enter supplemental orders. See Iowa Code
§ 910.3. Importantly,
A plan of restitution is not complete until the court
issues the final restitution order. Until the court issues the
final restitution order, the court is not required to consider
the offender’s reasonable ability to pay. Restitution orders
entered by the court prior to the final order are not appealable
as final orders or enforceable against the offender. The reason
for these orders being nonappealable or enforceable is that the
final order of restitution must take into account the offender’s
reasonable ability to pay.
Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 160–61 (citations omitted).
After thoroughly discussing the governing statutes in Albright, we
vacated the restitution order because “the court found Albright had the
reasonable ability to pay and ordered restitution for items in the second
category of restitution without having the amount of each item of
restitution before it.” Id. at 162. We remanded the case to the district
court to conduct the proper process for restitution as laid out in the
opinion. Id. at 162–63. Our disposition in Albright and subsequent
decisions generated some confusion over the timing and path for appellate
review.
Shortly after Albright, in State v. Headley, we reviewed a restitution
order and the defendant’s claim that the court imposed restitution without
determining his reasonable ability to pay. 926 N.W.2d 545, 548 (Iowa
9
2019). Headley’s appeal was properly before us because the court had
issued a final restitution order:
On June 8, the Polk County Sheriff’s Department filed
an application for reimbursement for $13,695. The
reimbursement covered Headley’s room and board for 238
days of incarceration. On June 12, the court approved the
sheriff’s application for reimbursement and assessed a total
of $14,228.80 to Headley for court costs and correctional fees.
Id. at 549. We vacated the order and remanded the case for the district
court to determine Headley’s reasonable ability to pay. Id. at 553. Headley
is consistent with Albright.
In three other cases, we vacated restitution orders entered without
the requisite final restitution order. Each of these cases was decided either
on the same day as Albright or within days of that decision, and as in
Albright, our dispositions in each case reflected that the district courts did
not have the benefit of Albright in issuing the restitution orders. See State
v. McMurry, 925 N.W.2d 592, 601 (Iowa 2019); State v. Petty, 925 N.W.2d
190, 197 (Iowa 2019); State v. Covel, 925 N.W.2d 183, 189 (Iowa 2019).
The same is true in this case. Accordingly, we vacate the $405.50 cost
order as unenforceable. We also vacate the restitution provision in the
sentencing order that ordered Davis to pay his court-appointed attorney
fees (in an unstated amount) and court costs without a final restitution
order or determination of his reasonable ability to pay.
We reiterate that the district court does not have an obligation to
conduct the reasonable-ability-to-pay determination until all items of
restitution are before it and the final order of restitution is entered. See
Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 160–61. Going forward, we reemphasize that “any
temporary, permanent, or supplemental order regarding restitution is not
. . . enforceable until the court files its final order of restitution” after
determination of the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay. Id. at 162.
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Such interim orders should state that the defendant is not obligated to pay
the sum until entry of the final order of restitution and the reasonable-
ability-to-pay determination. These interim orders are like an open bar
tab, or the “shopping cart” for online purchases, with payment delayed
until the final tally. The district court should halt premature efforts to
collect restitution.
Before the final judgment of sentence, there is no right of direct
appeal from interim restitution orders preceding the court’s final order of
restitution, as such interim orders are nonfinal. Id. at 160–61. Appeals
from such nonfinal orders alone should be dismissed as premature or
treated as requesting discretionary or certiorari review. Our appellate
courts, however, can and should review interim restitution orders included
in direct appeals from the final judgment of sentence. To the extent that
such interim restitution orders purport to allow enforcement, our appellate
courts should vacate the order or remand for clarification that the order is
not enforceable until the court enters a final order of restitution after the
requisite determination of the defendant’s reasonable ability to pay.
We reiterate that “a defendant challenging a restitution order
entered as part of the original sentence has two options: to file a petition
in district court under section 910.7, or to file a direct appeal.” State v.
Blank, 570 N.W.2d 924, 926 (Iowa 1997) (per curiam). “[O]nce the
deadline for direct appeal has run, the defendant is limited to filing a
petition to modify restitution (or the plan of restitution) under Iowa Code
section 910.7.” Gross, 935 N.W.2d at 699. But as we hold today, the
defendant is not required to exhaust remedies under section 910.7 3 as a
3Iowa Code section 910.7 reads,
1. At any time during the period of probation, parole, or
incarceration, the offender or the office or individual who prepared the
offender’s restitution plan may petition the court on any matter related to
11
prerequisite for appellate review of a restitution order in a direct appeal
from a judgment of sentence. We hereby overrule statements to the
contrary in State v. Jackson, 601 N.W.2d 354, 357 (Iowa 1999) (“Unless
that [section 910.7] remedy has been exhausted, we have no basis for
reviewing the issue in this court.”), and State v. Swartz, 601 N.W.2d 348,
354 (Iowa 1999) (same).
IV. Disposition.
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the restitution orders and
remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
RESTITUTION ORDERS VACATED AND CASE REMANDED WITH
INSTRUCTIONS.
All justices concur except McDonald, J., who dissents.
the plan of restitution or restitution plan of payment and the court shall
grant a hearing if on the face of the petition it appears that a hearing is
warranted.
2. After a petition has been filed, the court, at any time prior to the
expiration of the offender’s sentence, provided the required notice has been
given pursuant to subsection 3, may modify the plan of restitution or the
restitution plan of payment, or both, and may extend the period of time for
the completion of restitution.
3. If a petition related to a plan of restitution has been filed, the
offender, the county attorney, the department of corrections if the offender
is currently confined in a correctional institution, the office or individual
who prepared the offender’s restitution plan, and the victim shall receive
notice prior to any hearing under this section.
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#19–0022, State v. Davis
McDONALD, Justice (dissenting).
Criminal restitution is a creature of statute. Over the course of
many years, our cases have interpreted and applied the relevant statutes
to create a practical and workable procedure for district courts to assess
and impose restitution against an offender in a manner that also protects
the offender’s rights. I would adhere to those precedents. The majority
overrules those precedents and instead directs district courts to enter
unenforceable open-bar-tab and shopping-cart orders. In my view, the
majority opinion is not supported by statute or case law. The majority
opinion further unsettles established practices and procedures and
creates more confusion for the district courts and other government
officials involved in the administration of criminal restitution. I
respectfully dissent.
I.
The relevant statutes and cases can be harmonized to create fairly
clear rules regarding the assessment, imposition, and administration of
restitution. Judge Mullins provided an excellent overview of the statutory
restitution scheme in State v. Kurtz, stating,
There are two distinct parts that make up a restitution
order: the plan of restitution and the restitution plan of
payment. The plan of restitution sets out the amounts and
kind of restitution in accordance with the priorities
established in section 910.2. The restitution plan of payment
is the next step that sets out the schedule for the offender to
carry out the terms of the plan of restitution.
878 N.W.2d 469, 471–72 (Iowa Ct. App. 2016) (citations omitted). As
Judge Mullins explained in Kurtz, a complete plan of restitution sets out
all of “the amounts and kind of restitution.” Id. A complete plan of
13
payment includes an ability-to-pay determination as well as the schedule
for the defendant “to carry out the terms of the plan of restitution.” Id.
A.
I first address the plan of restitution. It is always the district court’s
obligation to create the plan of restitution. That is, only the district court
can assess and impose the “amounts and kind of restitution in accordance
with the priorities established in section 910.2.” Kurtz, 878 N.W.2d at 471.
The Code creates two categories of restitution. The first category of
restitution involves “restitution ‘to the victims of the offender’s criminal
activities [and] to the clerk of court for fines, penalties, [and] surcharges.’ ”
State v. Albright, 925 N.W.2d 144, 159 (Iowa 2019) (alterations in original)
(quoting Iowa Code § 910.2(1) (2017)). The district “court is required to
order restitution for the items in this first category regardless of the
offender’s reasonable ability to pay.” Id.
The second category of restitution includes various items, such as
court costs, costs of appointed counsel, and jail fees. See Iowa Code
§ 910.2(1)(a)(1)–(6). At the time of sentencing, the district court has no
duty to determine whether the defendant has the reasonable ability to pay
second-category restitution where the district court does not have each
item of restitution before it. Albright explained, “Until the court issues the
final restitution order, the court is not required to consider the offender’s
reasonable ability to pay.” Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 160–61. Albright
reiterated, “Once the court has all the items of restitution before it, then
and only then shall the court make an assessment as to the offender’s
reasonable ability to pay.” Id. at 162 (emphasis added).
Indeed, Albright held that it was an abuse of discretion for the
district court to affirmatively find the defendant had the reasonably ability
to pay restitution “without having the amount of each item of restitution
14
before it.” Id. We reaffirmed this holding in State v. Gross.
935 N.W.2d 695, 701–02 (Iowa 2019) (“In Albright, the court had made an
advance determination that the defendant had a reasonable ability to pay
before certain second-category restitution amounts were actually known.
We held this was ‘contrary to the statutory scheme’; accordingly, we
reversed and remanded.” (citation omitted) (quoting Albright, 925 N.W.2d
at 162)).
The fact that the district court does not have each item of restitution
before it at the time of sentencing does not preclude the district court from
ordering an offender to pay category-two restitution in a particular
amount. The Code specifically contemplates the district court may not be
able to set the complete plan of restitution at the time of sentencing and
provides a mechanism for the district court to establish the plan of
restitution in piecemeal fashion:
If the full amount of restitution cannot be determined at the
time of sentencing, the court shall issue a temporary order
determining a reasonable amount for restitution identified up
to that time. At a later date as determined by the court, the
court shall issue a permanent, supplemental order, setting
the full amount of restitution. The court shall enter further
supplemental orders, if necessary. These court orders shall
be known as the plan of restitution.
Iowa Code § 910.3. This court has acknowledged that “a district court
may set the actual ‘amount’ of restitution either ‘[a]t the time of sentencing
or at a later date to be determined by the court.’ ” Speer v. Blumer, 483
N.W.2d 599, 600 (Iowa 1992) (alteration in original) (quoting Iowa Code
§ 910.3). Recognizing the statutory scheme, this court has also recognized
that the district “court need not set the actual ‘amount’ of restitution at
the same time that it ‘orders’ restitution.” Id. at 600–01.
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B.
The second part of criminal restitution is the restitution plan of
payment. The Code gives the primary responsibility for establishing the
restitution plan of payment to persons other than the district court,
subject to the district court’s review and approval in some circumstances.
When the district court places an offender on probation, the
responsibility for fashioning the restitution plan of payment is set forth in
Iowa Code sections 910.4 and 910.6. When the district court places an
offender on probation, the probation officer shall set the restitution plan
of payment and need not obtain court approval in setting the restitution
plan of payment. See id. §§ 910.4, .6. “When the offender is committed to
a county jail, or to an alternate facility, the office or individual charged
with supervision of the offender shall prepare a restitution plan of payment
taking into consideration the offender’s income, physical and mental
health, age, education, employment and family circumstances.” Id.
§ 910.4(2). In this latter circumstance, “[t]he office or individual charged
with supervision of the offender shall review the plan of restitution ordered
by the court, and shall submit a restitution plan of payment to the
sentencing court.” Id. § 910.4(2)(a). The sentencing court “may approve
or modify the plan of restitution and restitution plan of payment.” Id.
§ 910.4(2)(c).
When an offender is committed to the custody of the Iowa
department of corrections “pursuant to a sentence of confinement, the
sentencing court shall forward to the director a copy of the offender’s
restitution plan [and] present restitution payment plan if any.”
Id. § 910.5(1)(a). The Code vests the director of the department or the
director’s designee with the authority to “prepare a restitution plan of
payment or modify any existing plan of payment.” Id. § 910.5(1)(d). The
16
restitution plan of payment shall be based on the offender’s ability to pay
when taking into consideration the offender’s individual circumstances.
See id. at § 910.5(1)(d)(1)–(2) (requiring the department of corrections to
consider the offender’s “present circumstances” when making or modifying
a plan of payment); id. at § 910.5(2)(a)(1)–(2) (same); id. at § 910.5(3)(a)(1),
(3) (same); id. at § 910.5(4)(a)(1), (3) (same); Walters v. Grossheim, 525
N.W.2d 830, 832 (Iowa 1994) (“Nevertheless the restitution plan of
payment is required to reflect individualized factors bearing on the
inmate’s ability to pay.”).
The code also provides that the director of the department of
corrections shall adopt administrative rules relating to restitution plans of
payment. See Iowa Code § 910.5(5) (“The director of the Iowa department
of corrections shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 17A concerning the
policies and procedures to be used in preparing and implementing
restitution plans of payment for offenders . . . .”). The department has
adopted the required rules. The rules provide for predeprivation notice
and the opportunity to challenge any restitution plan of payment prior to
deduction from an inmate’s account. See Iowa Admin. Code r. 201—
20.11(4)–(5).
C.
As set forth above, the Code creates a flexible and workable
structure for the assessment, imposition, and administration of criminal
restitution. The Code recognizes that frequently a sentencing court will
not have all of the relevant information before it at the time of sentencing.
The Code allows the sentencing court to proceed based upon the
information “identified up to that time.” Iowa Code § 910.3. The Code also
recognizes that other government officials have a part to play in
17
establishing and administering the restitution plan of payment subject, in
some instances, to the district court’s review and approval.
In the event that an offender actually has an issue with the plan of
restitution or restitution plan of payment, the Code also provides a
mechanism for the district court to review and modify the offender’s plan
of restitution or restitution plan of payment. “[T]he offender or the office
or individual who prepared the offender’s restitution plan may petition the
court on any matter related to the plan of restitution or restitution plan of
payment. . . .” Id. § 910.7(1). Upon notice and a hearing, the district court
“may modify the plan of restitution or the restitution plan of payment, or
both.” Id. § 910.7(2). The section 910.7 process is a failsafe that ensures
an offender who takes issue with the plan of restitution or restitution plan
of payment or who needs modification based on changed circumstances
can obtain review in the district court.
II.
With that background, I directly address Davis’s claim. Davis
contends the district court failed to determine his reasonable ability to pay
second-category restitution when, at the time of sentencing, the district
court did not have each item of restitution before it. Under long-
established precedents, Davis’s challenge is premature and does not
entitle him to any relief.
The leading cases resolving this type of challenge are State v. Swartz,
601 N.W.2d 348 (Iowa 1999), and State v. Jackson, 601 N.W.2d 354
(Iowa 1999). In Swartz, the district court “ordered restitution for the
amount of the court costs and defendant’s court-appointed attorney fees
without first making a determination of the defendant’s ability to pay.”
Swartz, 601 N.W.2d at 354. Swartz concluded the defendant could not
assert his challenge on direct appeal for two reasons. “First, it [did] not
18
appear that the plan of restitution contemplated by Iowa Code
section 910.3 was complete at the time the notice of appeal was filed.
Second, Iowa Code section 910.7 permits an offender who is dissatisfied
with the amount of restitution required by the plan to petition the district
court for a modification.” Id.
In Jackson, the district court ordered the defendant to pay court
costs, “court-appointed attorney fees,” “restitution for pecuniary
damages,” and “room and board jail expenses,” although restitution for
pecuniary damages and restitution for room and board jail expenses were
not yet available. Jackson, 601 N.W.2d at 355. Jackson concluded the
defendant was precluded from asserting that challenge on appeal because
the plan of restitution was not complete and because the defendant could
seek relief pursuant to Code section 910.7. See id. at 357.
We reaffirmed and clarified Swartz and Jackson in State v. Jose,
636 N.W.2d 38 (Iowa 2001). Unlike the defendants in Swartz and Jackson,
who challenged the district court’s failure to make an ability-to-pay
determination, the defendant in Jose challenged “the amount of restitution
ordered.” Id. at 43. Jose concluded the defendant could challenge on
direct appeal the amount of restitution. Id. at 45. The court explained a
challenge to the amount of restitution was separate and distinct from a
challenge to the district court’s failure to determine the defendant’s
reasonable ability to pay:
Likewise, the facts in this case differ from those in
Swartz and Jackson in only one respect. Here, Jose
challenges the amount of restitution, whereas in Swartz and
Jackson the defendants only challenged the district court’s
failure to determine their ability to pay. The defendants in
Swartz and Jackson were therefore challenging the
“restitution plan of payment,” rather than the actual “plan of
restitution.” At issue here is the plan of restitution, rather
than the plan of payment.
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Id. (citation omitted). Jose further explained “[t]he amount of restitution
is part of the sentencing order and is therefore directly appealable, as are
all orders incorporated in the sentence. The ability to pay is an issue apart
from the amount of restitution and is therefore not an ‘order[] incorporated
in the sentence’ and is therefore not directly appealable as such.” Id.
(second alteration in original) (citation omitted).
Just like the defendants in Swartz and Jackson, Davis challenges
the district court’s restitution order on the ground the district ordered
Davis to pay restitution “without first making a determination of [Davis]’s
ability to pay.” Swartz, 601 N.W.2d at 354; see Jackson, 601 N.W.2d at
357. Just like the defendants in Swartz and Jackson, “the plan of
restitution contemplated by Iowa Code section 910.3 was [not] complete at
the time [Davis’s] notice of appeal was filed.” Swartz, 601 N.W.2d at 354;
see Jackson, 601 N.W.2d at 357. Just like the defendants in Swartz and
Jackson, Davis’s challenge to the district court’s failure to determine his
reasonable ability to pay is premature. Pursuant to Swartz and Jackson,
Davis must exhaust his remedies under Iowa Code section 910.7. See
State v. Haas, 930 N.W.2d 699, 704 (Iowa 2019) (“It does not appear there
was a plan of restitution in place when Haas filed her appeal, so ‘the court
is not required to consider the offender’s reasonable ability to pay.’ ”
(quoting Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 161)); Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 161;
Swartz, 601 N.W.2d at 354; Jackson, 601 N.W.2d at 357.
III.
Rather than adhering to these precedents, the majority overrules
them. In lieu of the long-standing framework established by statute and
case law, the majority vacates the district court’s sentence with instruction
that the district court create an unenforceable order that the majority
likens to an open bar tab or an online shopping cart. I respectfully
20
disagree with this approach. Stare decisis counsels against it. Case law
and the relevant statutes prohibit it.
A.
The doctrine of stare decisis counsels against the majority’s decision
to overrule the relevant precedents. The doctrine of stare decisis holds
that courts should defer to precedent. The doctrine has much to commend
it. See State v. Gaskins, 866 N.W.2d 1, 39–40 (Iowa 2015) (Waterman, J.,
dissenting) (summarizing “values fostered by stare decisis”). Among other
things, stare decisis advances stability and consistency in the law. See
Miller v. Westfield Ins., 606 N.W.2d 301, 310 (Iowa 2000) (en banc) (Cady,
J., dissenting). It increases efficiency in the decision making process. See
Benjamin N. Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process 145 (Dover
Publ’ns 2005) (1921) (“[T]he labor of judges would be increased almost to
the breaking point if every past decision could be reopened in every case,
and one could not lay one’s own course of bricks on the secure foundation
of the courses laid by others who had gone before him.”). It promotes
respect for the judiciary as a neutral decision maker and advances the rule
of law. See Gaskins, 866 N.W.2d at 40.
The doctrine of stare decisis has particular force with respect to
cases interpreting statutes. As this court recently explained:
[T]he path we follow in this case is one primarily built
on the venerable principles of stare decisis and legislative
acquiescence. We are slow to depart from stare decisis and
only do so under the most cogent circumstances. Moreover,
we presume the legislature is aware of our cases that interpret
its statutes. When many years pass following such a case
without a legislative response, we assume the legislature has
acquiesced in our interpretation.
....
. . . Overall, we think our legislature would be quite
surprised to learn if we decided to reverse course and take a
different position under the guise of statutory interpretation.
21
We did our job twenty-seven years ago and will leave it for the
legislature to take any different approach. The specific
arguments presented by the plaintiffs are not so powerful or
obvious that they plainly undermine our prior line of cases.
Doe v. New London Cmty. Sch. Dist., 848 N.W.2d 347, 355–56 (Iowa 2014)
(alteration in original) (quoting Ackelson v. Manley Toy Direct, L.L.C., 832
N.W.2d 678, 688 (Iowa 2013)).
There are no cogent circumstances present in this case that warrant
overruling Swartz or Jackson. Albright did not in any way modify or limit
Swartz or Jackson. To the contrary, Albright reaffirmed those decisions.
Citing Jackson, Albright explained, “Until the court issues the final
restitution order, the court is not required to consider the offender’s
reasonable ability to pay.” Albright, 925 N.W.2d at 160–61. Albright
reiterated, “Once the court has all the items of restitution before it, then
and only then shall the court make an assessment as to the offender’s
reasonable ability to pay.” Id. at 162 (emphasis added). Jackson and
Swartz worked in tandem with a very complex statutory scheme to create
a workable and fair framework for the assessment, imposition, and
administration of restitution in criminal matters. As in Doe, the legislature
will be “quite surprised” to learn that we have switched course after
twenty-one years and reinterpreted the restitution statutes.
B.
Neither the case law nor the relevant statutes support the majority’s
decision to vacate the district court’s sentencing order with instruction
that the district court issue an unenforceable order.
The case law does not support the majority’s conclusion that the
district court can create an unenforceable order. The statute grants the
district court the right to enter a “temporary order” when the district court
does not have each item of restitution before it. Iowa Code § 910.3. By
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definition, an order, even a temporary order, is an enforceable command,
direction, or instruction issued by a court. See Order, Black’s Law
Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (stating that an order is “[a] command, direction,
or instruction” and that “[a]n order is the mandate or determination of the
court” (second quote 1 Henry Campbell Black, A Treatise on the Law of
Judgments § 1, at 5 (2d ed. 1902))). A temporary order remains
enforceable until such time as it is superseded by or merged into a
permanent order. See E. Buchanan Tel. Coop. v. Iowa Util. Bd., 738 N.W.2d
636, 641 (Iowa 2007) (holding a temporary injunction merges into a
permanent injunction and any challenge to the temporary injunction
becomes moot after issuance of a permanent injunction); Bartsch v.
Bartsch, 636 N.W.2d 3, 10 (Iowa 2001) (“We reject the first of these claims
because it is moot; the court entered its permanent order, which did not
purport to deal with issues of child support or visitation, and at the point
the permanent order was entered, the temporary order became
ineffective.”); In re Marriage of Wagner, 604 N.W.2d 605, 610 (Iowa 2000)
(“Under these principles, when a support award in a final decree is
vacated, a temporary award is automatically reinstated as if there had
been no final decree, unless the court’s order vacating the support award
shows otherwise.”); Speer, 483 N.W.2d at 601 (stating the district court
need not set the amount of restitution at the same time it orders
restitution).
The statutes also do not support the creation of an unenforceable
order. The majority’s concern appears to be motivated to prevent the
department of corrections from enforcing the district court’s sentencing
order. Specifically, after sentencing, the department of corrections filed a
restitution plan. The restitution plan provided, “Pursuant to Chapter 910
of the Code of Iowa, the above listed Inmate has been ordered to pay the
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County Clerk of Court 20 percent of all credits to this inmate’s
institutional account.” The “enforcement order” about which the majority
is concerned is the statutory restitution plan of payment. The Code
requires that persons supervising or having custody of an offender prepare
a restitution plan of payment. It is nondiscretionary. Where an offender
is on probation, the probation officer must create the plan of restitution.
See Iowa Code §§ 910.4(1), .6. Where the offender “is committed to a
county jail, or to an alternate facility, the office or individual charged with
supervision of the offender shall prepare a restitution plan of payment.”
Id. § 910.4(2). Finally, where the offender is incarcerated and placed in
the custody of the department of corrections, the department “shall
prepare a restitution plan of payment.” Id. § 910.5(1)(d). The majority’s
effort to disallow the entry of the department of corrections’ restitution
plan of payment seeks to prohibit the Department of Corrections from
doing what it is statutorily required to do.
Swartz, Jackson, and Jose understood this statutory structure—
that the restitution plan of payment is frequently prepared in the first
instance by someone other than the district court and that an offender
who has concerns regarding the restitution plan of payment and the
ability-to-pay determination can petition the district court for review
pursuant to section 910.7. Those cases reach a workable solution in
accord with the statutory restitution scheme. The majority opinion works
contrary to the statutory restitution scheme.
C.
Although it appears to me our precedents can be reconciled well
enough, if there is any precedent that should be overruled, it is Albright.
Albright—not Swartz and Jackson—caused the recent problems in the
assessment, imposition, and administration of criminal restitution and the
24
concomitant flood of litigation. It is Albright—not Swartz and Jackson—
that is contrary to the restitution statutes and contrary to the actual
operation of the district courts and other government officials responsible
for criminal restitution.
First, the statute. Albright held that the district court could not
affirmatively find the defendant has the reasonable ability to pay second-
category restitution until all amounts of restitution were before the court.
The relevant statute specifically provides to the contrary. Indeed, the
relevant statute requires it. Iowa Code section 910.3 provides, “If the full
amount of restitution cannot be determined at the time of sentencing, the
court shall issue a temporary order determining a reasonable amount for
restitution identified up to that time.” (Emphasis added.)
The statutory text is in accord with the actual operation of the
district court and other government officials responsible for criminal
restitution. There is no reason why the district court, at the time of
sentencing, cannot determine “a reasonable amount of restitution
identified up to that time” without knowing what additional items and
amounts of restitution will be later presented to the court. Id. § 910.3.
This is true because all items of restitution are subject to revision by the
district court. For example, at sentencing, the district court could
determine the defendant, based on his individual circumstances, had the
reasonable ability to pay court costs and court-appointed counsel’s fees in
the amount of X dollars. Later, if the district court is presented with a
request for victim restitution, the district court could always revisit and
modify its prior assessment and imposition of court costs and court-
appointed attorney’s fees. The offender could also petition for
reconsideration of the amount pursuant to section 910.7. If the defendant
25
is dissatisfied with the result of the 910.7 hearing, he or she may appeal
the district court’s decision.
Further, as this court has explained before, the reasonable ability to
pay is not necessarily determined by an offender’s ability to “pay the total
amount due.” State v. Van Hoff, 415 N.W.2d 647, 649 (Iowa 1987).
Instead, the reasonable ability to pay is “more appropriately based on the
inmate’s ability to pay the current installments.” Id. The restitution plan
of payment, which is based on the offender’s individualized ability to pay,
is in accord with this requirement.
In contrast to Albright, the rule created in Swartz and Jackson is
practical and works to the advantage of the offender. First, an offender
who files a petition pursuant to section 910.7 will obtain relief more
quickly in the district court versus pursing an appeal. A petition
challenging the reasonable ability to pay can be resolved in weeks. In
contrast, as this case demonstrates, an appeal challenging the reasonable
ability to pay can take months or years. Second, and related, in the
absence of a section 910.7 hearing, there is no record for appellate review.
In the absence of such a record, the only relief an appellate court can
provide is to remand the case for a hearing on the defendant’s reasonable
ability to pay—a remedy an offender could have had long prior had he or
she simply sought relief pursuant to section 910.7.
IV.
In my view, the State is correct in contending the defendant’s
challenge to the district court’s failure to make an ability-to-pay
determination is premature. In accord with Swartz, Jackson, and Jose, I
would affirm the defendant’s sentence and would affirm the requirement
that a defendant exhaust his or her remedies pursuant to section 910.7
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before challenging the district court’s ability-to-pay determination or the
failure to make the same. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.