2013 UT App 166
_________________________________________________________
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
STATE OF UTAH,
Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
JONATHAN A. RUIZ,
Defendant and Appellant.
Opinion
No. 20110796‐CA
Filed July 5, 2013
Fourth District, Provo Department
The Honorable Samuel D. McVey
No. 101402012
Neil D. Skousen, Attorney for Appellant
John E. Swallow, Erin Riley, and Bret J. Delporto,
Attorneys for Appellee
JUDGE JAMES Z. DAVIS authored this Opinion in which JUDGE
CAROLYN B. MCHUGH concurred, with opinion. JUDGE MICHELE
M. CHRISTIANSEN concurred in part and dissented in part, with
opinion.
DAVIS, Judge:
¶1 Jonathan A. Ruiz appeals the trial court’s order that he pay
$51,995 in restitution in connection with his convictions for
attempted unlawful sexual activity with a minor. We reverse and
remand.
State v. Ruiz
BACKGROUND
¶2 On June 22, 2010, twenty‐one‐year‐old Ruiz twice had sexual
intercourse with the fifteen‐year‐old victim (Victim) at her home.
Victim’s younger sister (Sister) witnessed this event. Immediately
following the incident, Victim became unusually upset and
expressed suicidal thoughts. Concerned that Victim might hurt
herself, Victim’s parents enrolled her in La Europa, a residential
treatment facility, approximately a week after the incident.
¶3 Ruiz’s abuse of Victim was apparently only “the
culminating factor . . . bringing [her] to treatment.” Prior to the
incident with Ruiz, Victim had “a history of depression, anxiety,
self‐harm, substance abuse, lying, arguing, stealing, and sexually
acting out.” She had also attempted suicide on three previous
occasions. In fact, when Victim was initially admitted to La Europa,
her trauma from the incident with Ruiz was identified as only one
of five major areas of concern to be addressed in therapy, which
also included depression, hypersexuality, family issues, and
substance abuse. Victim’s family problems comprised an extensive
portion of her treatment at La Europa, which included almost
weekly sessions of family therapy to help Victim and her parents
work through the issues in their relationships. Although a number
of preexisting conditions were addressed during Victim’s stay at La
Europa, the therapist who performed the initial interview of Victim
when she was admitted surmised that it would “take [Victim]
longer to engage in the therapeutic process” due to the trauma she
had suffered following the incident with Ruiz.1 Victim was on
twenty‐four‐hour suicide watch for the first month of her stay at La
Europa, in direct response to Victim’s parents’ concern that she had
become severely suicidal following the abuse. By the time Victim
1. Although Victim’s father asserted at the restitution hearing that
Victim was too traumatized to even address the incident with Ruiz
until four months into her inpatient therapy, it is clear from the
notes from La Europa that she began to discuss the event in
therapy, at least to some extent, immediately after being admitted.
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State v. Ruiz
left La Europa, she was still struggling to process the incident with
Ruiz and had experienced nightmares, hallucinations, and panic
attacks relating to the incident.
¶4 After spending $51,000 on Victim’s treatment at La Europa
over the course of nine months, Victim’s parents removed her from
the program because they could no longer afford it. They then
enrolled Victim in outpatient counseling for a short period of time
but again removed her because of the cost. Sister was also briefly
enrolled in outpatient counseling due to the trauma she suffered
after witnessing the incident. The total cost of both girls’ outpatient
counseling was $995.
¶5 Ruiz pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted unlawful
sexual activity with a minor and was sentenced to two years in jail
with one year and 155 days suspended. The trial court then held a
restitution hearing to receive evidence relating to the cost of
Victim’s therapy and Ruiz’s ability to pay. See generally Utah Code
Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(5)(b)(ii) (LexisNexis 2012) (directing trial courts
to consider “the cost of necessary . . . professional services and
devices relating to . . . mental health care” as one form of pecuniary
loss relevant to a determination of complete restitution). The court
determined that the cost of Victim’s therapy was reasonable and
appropriate. Although the court recognized that Victim “may have
benefitted from the treatment for the preexisting conditions,” it
determined that the therapy was ultimately necessitated by the
suicidal thoughts Victim began to have as a result of Ruiz’s actions.
The court also determined that Ruiz had a limited ability to pay the
entire amount of restitution but that he was capable of paying it in
installments over the course of his working life. It further
recognized the rehabilitative and deterrent effects the restitution
would have. Accordingly, the court ordered that Ruiz pay
complete restitution in the amount of $51,995, to be paid in
installments “set by his probation officer in conjunction with taking
into account all of his other financial obligations.” Ruiz appeals.
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State v. Ruiz
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶6 Ruiz argues that the trial court’s restitution award was
excessive and did not appropriately weigh the factors relating to
his ability to pay. “In the case of restitution, a reviewing court will
not disturb a district court’s determination unless the court exceeds
the authority prescribed by law or abuses its discretion.” State v.
Laycock, 2009 UT 53, ¶ 10, 214 P.3d 104.
ANALYSIS
¶7 Ruiz contests both the trial court’s calculation of complete
restitution and the propriety of its ultimate imposition of court‐
ordered restitution. “In determining restitution, the court shall
determine complete restitution and court‐ordered restitution.”
Utah Code Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(2); see also Laycock, 2009 UT 53, ¶ 20.
Complete restitution is the amount of “restitution necessary to
compensate a victim for all losses caused by the defendant.” Utah
Code Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(2)(a). Court‐ordered restitution, on the
other hand, is “the restitution the court having criminal jurisdiction
orders the defendant to pay.” Id. § 77‐38a‐302(2)(b).
¶8 Ruiz first asserts that the trial court erred in its calculation
of complete restitution because it did not appropriately consider
the impact of Victim’s preexisting conditions on her need for
inpatient therapy in determining the loss attributable to Ruiz. In
determining the amount of complete restitution, Utah courts
employ “[a] modified ‘but for’ test,” which “requires (1) that the
damages would not have occurred but for the conduct underlying
the [defendant’s] . . . conviction and (2) that the causal nexus
between the [criminal] conduct and the loss . . . not [be] too
attenuated (either factually or temporally).” State v. Harvell, 2009
UT App 271, ¶ 12, 220 P.3d 174 (alterations and omissions in
original) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
¶9 Accordingly, a defendant may be ordered to pay restitution
only for pecuniary loss resulting from a crime he either was
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State v. Ruiz
convicted of or admitted responsibility for. See Utah Code Ann.
§ 77‐38a‐302(1); State v. Mast, 2001 UT App 402, ¶ 16, 40 P.3d 1143.
For example, in State v. Harvell, 2009 UT App 271, 220 P.3d 174, a
defendant pleaded guilty to attempted burglary and attempted
theft by receiving stolen property—a vehicle. Id. ¶ 6. While on
vacation, the victim had left the vehicle with a friend, from whose
house it was stolen. Id. ¶ 2. When she recovered the vehicle, the
victim discovered that an iPod she had left in the vehicle was
broken; approximately one week later, she began to notice a
problem with the brake system. Id. ¶ 5. The trial court ordered the
defendant to pay for the cost of replacing the damaged brake
system and broken iPod. Id. ¶ 6. We reversed the trial court’s
restitution order because “there [was] nothing in the record to
support the conclusion that the failure of the brake system was
caused by [the defendant’s] brief episode of reckless driving” and
“the State failed to make a causal connection between the broken
iPod and [the defendant’s] attempted theft by receipt of the stolen
vehicle” in light of the fact that “at least two other persons . . . had
access to the vehicle and the iPod.” Id. ¶¶ 13–14.
¶10 Similarly, in State v. Mast, 2001 UT App 402, 40 P.3d 1143,
we reversed a trial court’s order that a defendant pay restitution for
all property stolen in a burglary when she admitted only to
receiving certain items of property stolen by the burglar and
denied having any involvement in the burglary. Id. ¶¶ 3–5, 16–19.
We explained that the restitution “statute requires that
responsibility for the criminal conduct be firmly established, much
like a guilty plea, before the court can order restitution,” and that
the trial court could therefore order the defendant to pay
restitution only for the stolen property she admitted to receiving.
Id. ¶ 18 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
¶11 Although the trial court in this case recognized that Victim
had a number of preexisting conditions and that the inpatient
therapy provided by La Europa likely addressed those conditions,
it nevertheless determined that complete restitution—the amount
relating to losses caused by Ruiz—included the entire cost of the
therapy provided to Victim during the year following the incident.
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State v. Ruiz
Although the trial court determined that Ruiz’s actions were the
“but for” cause of Victim’s enrollment in La Europa, triggering the
“severe suicidal ideations [she] expressed” as a consequence of the
incident, it failed to explain the causal nexus between the incident
and the nine months of intensive inpatient therapy Victim
underwent and failed to examine how Victim’s preexisting
conditions impacted her need for that level of therapy.2 Thus, the
trial court’s findings in support of its determination of complete
restitution were insufficient, and we must remand for the trial
court to make more detailed findings in support of its
determination of complete restitution, taking into account the
extent to which the therapy at La Europa was necessitated by
preexisting conditions that were neither caused nor exacerbated by
Ruiz’s actions and thus were too temporally or factually attenuated
to have been the result of Ruiz’s criminal conduct.3 See Harvell, 2009
2. We are particularly concerned with the trial court’s
determination that the entire portion of therapy relating to Victim’s
preexisting family issues and substance abuse problems should be
included in the complete restitution calculation. It is difficult to see
how Ruiz’s actions could have more than minimally impacted
Victim’s need for therapy on those issues. The fact that Ruiz’s
actions may have necessitated Victim’s residential treatment does
not mean that there is a causal nexus between his actions and all
the treatment she actually received.
3. The record contains extensive evidence regarding the details of
Victim’s therapy, from which the trial court could make a
reasonable determination of what portion of the therapy was
causally connected to Ruiz’s actions. However, even if it were
impossible to make such a determination, the trial court should
have considered whether the apparent existence of contributing
factors, i.e., the preexisting conditions, might constitute “other
circumstances which . . . may make [court‐ordered] restitution
inappropriate,” Utah Code Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(5)(c)(iv) (LexisNexis
2012). See State v. Robinson, 860 P.2d 979, 983 (Utah Ct. App. 1993)
(“Restitution should be ordered only in cases where liability is clear
(continued...)
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State v. Ruiz
UT App 271, ¶ 12. See generally Utah Code Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(3)
(LexisNexis 2012) (“If the court determines that restitution is
appropriate or inappropriate . . . , the court shall make the reasons
for the decision part of the court record.”).
¶12 Ruiz next contends that the trial court did not adequately
consider the factors outlined in Utah Code section 77‐38a‐
302(5)(c)(i)–(iv) relating to his ability to pay restitution and that it
therefore exceeded its discretion by declining to impose court‐
ordered restitution in an amount less than complete restitution. The
amount of court‐ordered restitution need not be equal to the
amount of complete restitution, and its determination is highly
discretionary. See State v. Laycock, 2009 UT 53, ¶ 28, 214 P.3d 104.
Nevertheless, in determining the amount of court‐ordered
restitution, the trial judge must consider
(i) the financial resources of the defendant and
the burden that payment of restitution will impose,
with regard to the other obligations of the defendant;
(ii) the ability of the defendant to pay
restitution on an installment basis or on other
conditions to be fixed by the court;
(iii) the rehabilitative effect on the defendant
of the payment of restitution and the method of
payment; and
(iv) other circumstances which the court
determines may make restitution inappropriate.
Utah Code Ann. § 77‐38a‐302(5)(c)(i)–(iv).
¶13 Here, while the amount of complete restitution may or may
not have been appropriate, it appears that the trial court adequately
considered the necessary factors with respect to court‐ordered
3. (...continued)
as a matter of law and where commission of the crime clearly
establishes causality of the injury or damages.”).
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State v. Ruiz
restitution. Specifically, the court determined that although Ruiz
was not in a position to pay the money immediately, he was young
and able to work and could therefore pay off the restitution in
installments over the course of his working life. The court also
found that restitution would have a rehabilitative effect for Ruiz.
Furthermore, the court allowed for the amount of the installments
to be determined by Ruiz’s probation officer, taking into account
all of his other obligations. Though it does seem rather harsh
(depending on the amount of restitution ordered on remand) to
expect Ruiz to continue paying restitution throughout his entire
working life, we cannot say that such an order was beyond the
court’s discretion, given that the court clearly considered the
statutory factors. See generally Laycock, 2009 UT 53, ¶ 23 n.2
(“[Section 77‐38a‐302(3)] unambiguously cedes to trial courts the
discretion to either award or to decline to make an award so long
as the court explains its reasoning on the record.”).
CONCLUSION
¶14 Although we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in applying the statutory factors relating to court‐
ordered restitution, we determine that its calculation of complete
restitution was not adequately explained and did not appropriately
take into account other factors contributing to Victim’s need for
therapy. We therefore reverse and remand for the trial court to
reconsider its determination of complete restitution and, if
appropriate, to make corresponding adjustments to its
determination of court‐ordered restitution.
McHUGH, Judge (concurring):
¶15 I agree with the lead opinion that the restitution award
should be set aside and the matter remanded for further
consideration. However, in my view, the question on remand is
simply whether the counseling fees for preexisting conditions, such
as Victim’s substance abuse, are too factually or temporally
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State v. Ruiz
attenuated to meet Utah’s modified “but for” test for determining
complete restitution.
¶16 “A modified ‘but for’ test requires that (1) the damages
‘would not have occurred but for the conduct underlying the . . .
[defendant’s] conviction’ and (2) the ‘causal nexus between the
[criminal] conduct and the loss . . . is not too attenuated (either
factually or temporally).’” State v. Brown, 2009 UT App 285, ¶ 11,
221 P.3d 273 (alterations and omissions in original) (quoting State
v. McBride, 940 P.2d 539, 544 n.5 (Utah Ct. App. 1997)). In Brown,
the defendant entered his girlfriend’s home and assaulted his
girlfriend’s mother. Id. ¶ 2. As part of the total restitution award
imposed, the trial court included the expenses the girlfriend
incurred in relocating to her own apartment seven or eight months
after the incident. Id. ¶¶ 4, 11. On appeal, we reversed because the
State had failed to prove a causal connection between the relocation
expenses and the crime. Id. ¶¶ 11–13.
¶17 I agree with the lead opinion that a similar conclusion may
be appropriate here with respect to some of the counseling
expenses. I view as well supported the trial court’s finding that the
commitment of Victim to a residential facility was necessary due to
the real concerns that she might harm herself, and that the
triggering event for her suicidal intent was Ruiz’s sexual assault.
Once in the residential facility, however, the treatment and
counseling addressed mental health issues that Victim had suffered
from long before the assault. While some or all of that counseling
may meet Utah’s modified “but for” test, I would remand for the
trial court to examine the various categories of treatment to
determine if they are too factually or temporally attenuated to do
so.
CHRISTIANSEN, Judge (concurring in part and dissenting in part):
¶18 I concur in the lead opinion’s conclusion that the trial court
did not abuse its discretion in determining the amount of court‐
ordered restitution that Ruiz must pay. I disagree, however, with
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State v. Ruiz
the lead opinion’s determination that in calculating complete
restitution, the trial court failed to sufficiently examine how
Victim’s preexisting conditions impacted her need for nine months
of intensive inpatient treatment. In my view, the Crime Victims
Restitution Act (the Act) should be liberally construed to
accomplish the purpose of making crime victims whole for the
harms they suffer because of a defendant’s criminal conduct. See
Utah Code Ann. §§ 77‐38a‐101 to ‐601 (LexisNexis 2012). The
current version of the Act defines pecuniary damages as “all
demonstrable economic injury, whether or not yet incurred, which
a person could recover in a civil action arising out of the facts or
events constituting the defendant’s criminal activities.” Id. § 77‐38a‐
102(6) (2012). While the lead decision correctly points out that
complete restitution is that amount necessary “to compensate a
victim for all losses caused by [a criminal] defendant,” I believe the
trial court correctly determined that complete restitution in this
case amounted to the entire cost of the therapy provided to Victim.
See id. § 77‐38a‐302(2)(a).
¶19 In my view, the record supports the trial court’s
determination that Ruiz’s criminal actions were the cause of
Victim’s need to participate in inpatient treatment and that Ruiz
should pay for the entire amount of that treatment. Victim’s
treatment records demonstrate that her need for professional
mental health treatment in an inpatient setting was necessitated by
Ruiz’s illegal actions. In other words, the need for and expense
incurred in seeking inpatient treatment for Victim would not have
been required at that time but for Ruiz’s sexual assault on her.
Victim’s treatment records also demonstrate that it took her longer
to engage in the therapeutic process due to the trauma she suffered
following the incident with Ruiz. And “[b]y the time Victim left La
Europa, she was still struggling to process the incident with Ruiz.”
See supra ¶ 3. That Victim may have had preexisting mental health
issues or a more vulnerable psyche at the time of Ruiz’s assault
should not bar Victim and her family from being fully
compensated for all of the pecuniary damages they incurred
because of Ruiz’s criminal behavior. In this context, the treatment
Victim received for any preexisting mental health conditions and
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State v. Ruiz
the treatment Victim received to aid in her recovery from Ruiz’s
criminal conduct seem to be interrelated.
¶20 In State v. Behnke, 553 N.W.2d 265 (Wis. Ct. App. 1996), the
Wisconsin Court of Appeals grappled with a similar restitution
issue. Id. at 272–73. There, the defendant was convicted of false
imprisonment, battery, and sexual assault. Id. at 268. On appeal, he
argued that the restitution amount he was ordered to pay should
be reduced because at least some of the victim’s mental health
expenses were for a preexisting condition stemming from prior
abuse she suffered before the defendant’s assault. Id. at 272. The
court acknowledged that it was the victim’s burden to prove that
the defendant’s actions caused her injuries, but found that the
victim successfully did so and ordered restitution in the full
amount of the victim’s therapy costs. Id. at 273. “[The victim]
proved that [the defendant] attacked her and that as a result of her
attack, her mental health regressed and she had to return to a
mental health setting.” Id. The court noted “that if the defendant’s
actions were the precipitating cause of the injury complained of,
and such injury was the natural consequence of the actions, the
defendant is liable, although the victim’s preexisting condition
might have aggravated the injury.” Id.
¶21 Here, the evidence submitted at the restitution hearing
similarly revealed that Victim had preexisting mental health
conditions that may have left her more vulnerable to Ruiz and
which may have contributed to her emotional distress following his
criminal act. Based upon the record, in my opinion, the trial court
correctly found a sufficient causal nexus between Ruiz’s criminal
conduct and all of Victim’s pecuniary damages. Thus, I would
affirm the trial court’s complete restitution award.
20110796‐CA 11 2013 UT App 166