Court Opinion

ID: 8487711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-18 16:04:27.791687+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:04.721337
License: Public Domain

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

                                             No. 122,392

               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

                                           STATE OF KANSAS,
                                               Appellee,

                                                    v.

                                      JOSEPH EDWARD MIXON,
                                            Appellant.

                                    MEMORANDUM OPINION

        Appeal from Saline District Court; JARED B. JOHNSON, judge. Opinion filed November 10, 2022.
Sentence vacated in part.

        Kai Tate Mann, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

        Alexander C. Driskell, assistant county attorney, Jeffery Ebel, county attorney, and Derek
Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before CLINE, P.J., GREEN and ATCHESON, JJ.

        PER CURIAM: Joseph Edward Mixon challenges the portion of his criminal
sentence which required him to pay restitution because he claims the victim suffered no
damage or loss from his crimes. Since the restitution award does not arise out of Mixon's
crimes of conviction, we vacate that portion of his sentence.

        The story of this case begins on October 5, 2018, when Mixon, his girlfriend, and
their dog were discovered uninvited inside a Salina residence. Because they left when the
victim confronted them and he found nothing missing, the victim did not contact the

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police. But after Mixon returned twice over the next few days, the victim obtained a
protection from stalking (PFS) order against Mixon on October 15, 2018, and installed a
home security system shortly thereafter.

       But our story does not end there. The victim's newly installed security system
recorded Mixon trying to open the victim's front door at 3:30 a.m. on December 9, 2018,
and again a few days later.

       Mixon was arrested and first charged with one count of stalking, four counts of
criminal trespass, and one count of violation of a stalking order. These charges were
amended several times, and Mixon ultimately pleaded no contest to attempted residential
burglary and criminal trespass, both relating to his actions on December 9, 2018.

       The State sought restitution at Mixon's sentencing hearing, to reimburse the victim
for his legal fees to obtain the PFS order and the cost of the security system. Mixon
objected to awarding restitution for these expenses, arguing the victim suffered no loss to
his home or property from Mixon's actions, and that restitution would unjustly enrich him
by improving the value of his residence. But the district court found the victim's costs
were reasonable and directly caused by Mixon's actions. The court determined it was
reasonably foreseeable that someone in the victim's situation would take the steps the
victim did to protect his personal security. As a result, it ordered Mixon to pay restitution
in the amount of $255 for legal fees and $2,930.81 for the security system.

       Mixon challenges this restitution order on appeal, arguing his actions were not the
proximate cause of the victim's costs. We agree, but for a slightly different reason than
Mixon argues. We find Mixon's actions were not the proximate cause of the victim's costs
because his crimes of conviction occurred after the victim incurred those costs.

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       As a matter of law, restitution must arise out of the crime of conviction, i.e., be
proximately caused by the crime of conviction unless the defendant expressly agrees to
pay restitution for other losses of the victim. That is and has been a basic principle
governing restitution in Kansas for some time. See State v. Arnett, 307 Kan. 648, 655,
413 P.3d 787 (2018); State v. Dexter, 276 Kan. 909, 919, 80 P.3d 1125 (2003).

       Mixon pleaded no contest to the crimes alleged in the fourth amended complaint:
attempted residential burglary and criminal trespass. Both the fourth amended complaint
and journal entry of judgment identify the date of these offenses as December 9, 2018.
Yet the victim had obtained the PFS order and the security system by then.

       The PFS order was granted on October 15, 2018, and the victim testified the
security system was installed in the October/November time frame. Indeed, both invoices
entered as exhibits by the State to support the restitution costs were dated November
2018. And as the State points out, it was this "newly-installed security system" which
caught Mixon committing the actions on December 9, 2018, which gave rise to his crimes
of conviction.

       The State asserts that we cannot reach this issue because Mixon did not precisely
raise it. While the State is correct that Mixon did not allege restitution was improper
because his crimes of conviction occurred after the victim's costs were incurred, he did
argue the victim suffered no loss or damage from his crimes. And while the State
attempts to assert some ambiguity about the dates of Mixon's crimes of conviction, the
record shows they arose out of his actions in December 2018, not October.

       Crimes which occurred after restitution costs were incurred cannot satisfy the
causation requirement of our restitution statute. See K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 21-6604(b)(1)
("the court shall order the defendant to pay restitution, which shall include, but not be
limited to, damage or loss caused by the defendant's crime"). Because the restitution costs

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were not caused by Mixon's crimes of conviction, we vacate the district court's restitution
order. Since we are vacating this order, we need not consider Mixon's challenges to the
constitutionality of the restitution statutes, which he raises for the first time on appeal.

       Sentence vacated in part.

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