IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 19-0916
Filed November 30, 2020
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
CLINT C. ROE,
Defendant-Appellant.
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Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Nancy S. Tabor,
Judge.
Clint Roe appeals an order for victim restitution. AFFIRMED.
Thomas Hurd of Greenberg & Hurd, LLP, Des Moines, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Mullins, P.J., and May and Schumacher, JJ. Tabor, J., takes
no part.
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MULLINS, Presiding Judge.
Pursuant to a plea agreement, Clint Roe pled guilty to first-degree theft and
third-degree burglary.1 The plea agreement called for Roe to “pay victim restitution
in an amount to be determined.” The matter proceeded to a restitution hearing
following sentencing. The victim of Roe’s crimes testified to damages to his
personal property on or about March 15, 2018, resulting from Roe’s acts, and
exhibit evidence in the form of invoices and estimates was admitted concerning
the repair and replacement costs concerning the damages.
The property included a motorhome, which the victim testified was not taken
but was “destroyed.” The victim explained: “You couldn’t even walk in. All the
drawers, walls, everything was ripped out of it, everything underneath of it. All the
doors were broken open. . . . We couldn’t get it started at first because the engine
cover was off and some things were ripped off.” He also explained “wiring [was]
pulled out of the walls, [and] stuff [was] ripped out of the bathroom.” When the
victim got a repair estimate, he was advised it could be fixed, “but it just wasn’t
worth it because it was the value of the motorhome to fix it.” A repair estimate was
submitted for the motorhome totaling $21,400.00. The victim also had to pay
$674.09 to get the motorhome started in order to transport it for an estimate and
$101.12 for the estimate, both of which were evidenced by receipts.
Also among the property was a truck hooked up to a trailer carrying a
commercial heating and air conditioning unit. An invoice as to the heating and
cooling unit, which was never recovered, provided the replacement cost for the
1 A third charge of criminal mischief was dismissed.
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unit would be $9800.00. The trailer was equipped with “ramps and boxes with
equipment and stuff in them, ratchet straps and all the things you need for a trailer,
chains and stuff and then LED light and a big winch in the front of it.” The record
contains what appears to be a sales advertisement of a similar trailer that was
priced at $4595.00.2 The victim testified that price would not include “any of the
stuff on it, you know, no boxes, no equipment, no winch, no anything.” The victim
testified adding in all the other components would elevate the cost of the trailer “in
the range of $6500.00.” The truck, which was not stolen, was also damaged. An
invoice was submitted showing the repair cost was $620.87. Some equipment
was also stolen from the truck, which the victim opined would cost $350.00 to
replace.
The victim submitted an itemization of his alleged costs: $21,400.00 for cost
of repair to the motorhome, $674.09 to get motorhome running for transport,
$101.12 for the estimate on the motorhome, $620.87 for repairs to the truck,
$350.00 for stolen equipment from the truck, $9800.00 for replacement cost of the
heating and cooling unit, and $6500.00 for replacement cost of trailer and
associated equipment, for a total of $39,446.08. Following the restitution hearing,
the court entered an order for restitution in favor of the victim for the requested
amount.
Roe now appeals, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting
the award of restitution. Our review is for legal error, and our sole task is to
2 This item was not admitted as evidence at the hearing, and Roe complains the
court erred in considering it. However, it was attached to the previously filed
pecuniary damages statement. And testimony was provided concerning the
relevant content of the exhibit.
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“determine whether the court’s findings lack substantial evidentiary support, or
whether the court has not properly applied the law.” State v. DeLong, 943 N.W.2d
600, 604 (Iowa 2020) (quoting State v. Jenkins, 788 N.W.2d 640, 642 (Iowa 2010)).
Roe claims “$23,655.00 of the pecuniary damages awarded to the victim
are speculative, lack a reasonable basis, and are not supported by substantial
evidence.” As to the damages for the motorhome in the amount of $21,400.00,
Roe claims the estimate exhibit supporting those damages is “ambiguous and
unreliable.” First he complains the estimate notes the estimate is for a 2005 model,
while the minutes of evidence note the vehicle is a 2002 model. He also complains
the estimate lacks itemization specificity to his liking. He finally complains that the
October 23, 2018 estimate notes the “Estimate is good for only 30 days” and was
therefore stale by the time of the May 2019 restitution hearing.
On the first point, while there is a discrepancy in the year of the vehicle, the
court could reasonably infer the estimate was for the motorhome that was
inspected for purposes of the quote. The presumed typo is inconsequential. On
the specificity of the itemization, Roe largely complains the estimate noted
inclusion of “MISC” (miscellaneous) repairs, and there is no way of knowing if those
repairs were connected to the criminal acts. But the estimate specified the
miscellaneous repairs were part of the repairs for “damage from vandalization,” so
the court could reasonably conclude those damages were causally connected to
the criminal acts. Cf. id. at 607 (“[W]hen the record contains an expense
verification . . . that reasonably identifies the service provided, identified the cost
borne by the victim, and verifies that the costs were incurred as a direct result of
crime, we think the claim is supported by substantial evidence.”). On the staleness
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issue, we agree with the State that “the fact that the court relied on an older
estimate would only benefit Roe as it is unlikely that the cost to repair the motor
home would decrease.” We find the evidence sufficient to support the portion of
the award attributable to the motorhome.
Next, Roe challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the award
of $6500.00 for the trailer and equipment. As to the trailer itself, Roe complains
the victim’s testimony at the restitution hearing was internally inconsistent and
inconsistent with the minutes of evidence and therefore not credible to support the
award. While there were some inconsistencies in the evidence, it is not our role to
resolve conflicts in the evidence or to pass upon the credibility of witnesses in a
sufficiency-of-the-evidence review. See State v. Musser, 721 N.W.2d 758, 761
(Iowa 2006) (quoting State v. Williams, 695 N.W.2d 23, 28 (Iowa 2005)). The court
was provided with evidence that the value of “the same trailer” listed in the sales
advertisement was $4595.00. The court’s award of that amount attributable to the
trailer is supported by sufficient evidence.
Finally, Roe challenges the sufficiency of evidence to support the award of
restitution for the stolen equipment from the trailer and the truck. As to the trailer
equipment, this would include the excess over $4595.00 of the $6500.00 request
for the trailer and its equipment, $1905.00. The victim requested $350.00 for the
equipment stolen from the truck.
While these amounts were essentially supported only by the victim’s
estimates of the items’ costs, testimony about value “is liberally received, with its
weight to be determined by the” factfinder, State v. Savage, 288 N.W.2d 502, 504
(Iowa 1980), and an owner of property is competent to testify to its value, State v.
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Boyken, 217 N.W.2d 218, 220 (1974). The court received evidence that several
pieces of equipment were stolen and testimony of the victim of his estimated value
of the same. There was substantial evidence before the court to support its award
or restitution attributable to the stolen equipment.
Finding substantial evidence to support the court’s award of restitution for
the challenged items, we affirm.
AFFIRMED.