Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Andrew McMichael ( 2023 )


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  •                                                 RENDERED: MARCH 23, 2023
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2021-SC-0207-DG
    2021-SC-0572-DG
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                       APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                          NO. 2020-CA-0515
    JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 19-CR-000882-2
    ANDREW MCMICHAEL                               APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE LAMBERT
    AFFIRMING
    On October 22, 2019, Andrew McMichael (McMichael) pled guilty to theft
    by unlawful taking over $500, but less than $10,000. This charge stemmed
    from McMichael and a co-defendant removing several pieces of stainless-steel
    siding from an old, kitchen-less diner and selling them for $155.81, which they
    split between themselves. As part of his plea agreement, McMichael agreed to
    pay restitution to the diner’s owner, Mosely Putney (Putney). Because
    McMichael and the Commonwealth could not agree to a restitution sum, the
    trial court held a combined sentencing and restitution hearing on March 9,
    2020.
    During the restitution hearing, Putney was the Commonwealth’s sole
    witness. Putney testified that he purchased the diner in early 1990s for
    “around $25,000.” The diner is a 1950s Mountain View modular diner with
    stainless steel siding that was custom formed onto it when the diner was
    assembled. Although the diner lacked a kitchen, Putney testified that he
    originally intended to renovate the diner and make it a restaurant. However,
    those intentions were never brought to fruition, and the diner has sat on an
    outdoor storage lot exposed to the elements for the last fifteen years and is in a
    significant state of disrepair. Putney testified that, prior to the theft, he
    believed he could have sold the diner for $30,000 - $60,000. He provided no
    documentation to support this estimate and testified that he never had a buyer
    for that amount.
    Putney testified that, although much of the siding was later recovered, it
    was bent during the theft in such a way that it cannot be re-attached to the
    diner. Putney therefore had a sheet metal and roofing contracting company
    provide estimates to replace the siding. The first estimate the company
    provided was the cost to replace only the siding that was removed by
    McMichael and his co-defendant. The company estimated this would cost a
    total of $62,493. The second estimate was the cost to replace both the stolen
    siding and the original siding so that all of the siding would “match.” This
    estimate was $221,800.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel pointed out that the criminal
    complaint in this case stated, “value of diner $3,000,” and that this amount
    was the basis for the underlying charge. Putney denied telling the police that
    the diner was worth $3,000, and instead claimed that he told the police that
    amount because he believed that was the value of the stolen siding.
    2
    Nevertheless, he acknowledged that he “threw out a number” because he did
    not know the actual scrap value of the siding. He provided no documentation
    or any other evidentiary support to prove the diner’s value prior to the siding
    being removed or its value after the siding was removed.
    McMichael requested that restitution be set at either $155.81, the
    amount for which he sold the siding, or the $3,000 amount set forth in the
    criminal complaint. He further contended that the diner was not worth what
    Putney claimed as, even before the siding was removed, its current state would
    require significant repair both inside and out to bring it back to a useable
    condition. The Commonwealth disagreed, arguing that Putney was competent
    to testify and that his testimony was supported by the estimates provided by
    the contracting company. The Commonwealth requested that restitution be set
    at $62,493, the amount required to replace the stolen siding. The trial court
    agreed with the Commonwealth and ordered McMichael to pay $62,493 in
    restitution jointly and severally with his co-defendant. McMichael appealed the
    restitution ruling to the Court of Appeals.
    The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that there was insufficient
    evidence to support the restitution amount.1 In so ruling, the unanimous
    Court of Appeals panel provided much needed guidance on how trial courts
    may reliably determine restitution in cases in which restitution is warranted
    1 McMichael v. Commonwealth, No. 2020-CA-0515-MR, 
    2021 WL 1045482
     (Ky.
    App. Mar. 19, 2021).
    3
    due to damage to the victim’s property.2 Neither the Commonwealth nor
    McMichael challenge the framework established by the Court of Appeals, and
    we therefore need not discuss it at length. Suffice it to say, the Court of
    Appeals held that
    pre- and post-incident values must be established and their
    difference serve as a cap on recovery. Here, little or no effort was
    made to establish pre- or post-theft values of the diner or its
    siding, much less calculate their difference to serve as a cap on
    restitution. We believe these values must be determined, and the
    cap applied, to set restitution which comports with its intent in
    order to obtain substantial justice.
    Yet another consideration the trial court must apply when
    calculating restitution is the value of the recovered siding.
    Although Putney testified the siding was “worthless,” presumably
    when it came to re-attaching it for use on the diner's exterior, it
    undoubtedly had some value, even if only as scrap metal.
    McMichael is entitled to an offset against his restitution by the
    value of the recovered siding. . . . Consequently, the value of the
    returned siding must be established and deducted from the
    amount of otherwise allowable restitution.3
    As noted, neither of the parties challenge this framework. Rather, the
    sole argument raised by the Commonwealth is that “the Court of Appeals
    ignored controlling precedent when it determined a property owner’s testimony,
    by itself, was insufficient to establish a restitution award.” The full language
    from the Court of Appeals’ opinion to which the Commonwealth refers states as
    follows:
    2 Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 532.350(1)(a) (“‘Restitution’ means any form
    of compensation paid by a convicted person to a victim for counseling, medical
    expenses, lost wages due to injury, or property damage and other expenses suffered by
    a victim because of a criminal act[.]”) (emphasis added).
    3   McMichael, 
    2021 WL 1045482
    , at *8.
    4
    Kentucky courts have addressed the establishment of value of
    stolen property in the context of determining the proper crime
    charged. In Allen v. Commonwealth, 
    148 Ky. 327
    , 
    146 S.W. 762
    (1912), the Court observed:
    In cases like this, where the degree of the offense
    depends upon the value of the property, it often
    happens that the witnesses will differ as to its value;
    and, when there is a difference of opinion as to this
    matter, it is for the jury to form their own conclusion
    from the evidence as to the value of the property
    stolen. Evidence of the cost price of an article is not
    conclusive as to its value; nor, indeed, is evidence as to
    its selling price. The test by which the degree of guilt
    of the accused is to be determined is the value of the
    article at the time it was stolen, and this value is to be
    arrived at by the jury from a consideration of all the
    facts and circumstances shown in the evidence. Where
    the article stolen is in general use, and has what might
    be called a standard market value, of course the best
    evidence of the value of such an article is the price at
    which it sells in the open market. But where the
    article does not appear to have a standard value in the
    open market, or its standard value is not shown, the
    evidence of its value must be arrived at from facts and
    circumstances testified to by witnesses who qualify
    themselves to speak as to its value.
    Id. at 762-63 (emphasis added). Here, the question of the stainless
    steel's value is not needed to determine the degree of the offense,
    as that had already been agreed upon; rather, the determination of
    its value goes to the issue of restitution. Since the stainless steel
    at issue herein does not appear to have a standard value in the
    open market, and its standard value was not shown, the evidence
    of its value must be determined from facts and circumstances
    testified to by a witness who qualifies himself to speak to its value.
    The sole witness for the Commonwealth was the diner's owner,
    Putney; no evidence of his qualifications to testify as to the diner's
    worth, beyond merely being its owner, was presented.
    As previously noted, in [Fields v. Commonwealth, 
    123 S.W.3d 914
    (Ky. App. 2003)], we held that “[t]he due-process clauses of the
    federal constitution require that sentences not be imposed on the
    basis of material misinformation, and that facts relied on by the
    5
    sentencing court have some minimal indicium of reliability beyond
    mere allegation.” Fields, 
    123 S.W.3d at 917
     (emphasis added)
    (internal quotation marks and footnotes omitted). Following Fields,
    in [Wiley v. Commonwealth, 
    348 S.W.3d 570
    , 575 (Ky. 2010)], our
    Supreme Court further held that “the record must establish a
    factual predicate for the restitution order.” Wiley, 348 S.W.3d at
    575.
    “In the ordinary case, the proper yardstick is the market value of
    the property at the time and place of the larceny; the original cost
    of the property or any special value to the owner personally is not
    considered.” 3 CHARLES E. TORCIA, GRADES OF LARCENY—
    DETERMINATION OF VALUE, WHARTON'S CRIMINAL LAW § 345
    (15th ed. 2020) (footnotes omitted). Herein, Putney offered nothing
    more than his mere opinion of the worth of both the metal and the
    diner. There was no evidence of the current value of the diner or of
    the stainless steel at the time it was taken. This is simply
    insufficiently detailed or reliable to establish a fair restitution
    computation; due process requires more.4
    The Commonwealth interprets the foregoing to hold that an owner of
    damaged property “must provide heightened qualifications—seemingly
    requiring specific qualifications beyond being an owner with experience and
    knowledge of the property—and that personal knowledge is no longer sufficient
    to establish value.” In turn, the Commonwealth argues that this holding
    ignores established precedent that an owner’s testimony is competent evidence
    4   Id. *3-4.
    6
    regarding the value of stolen property, citing, in relevant part,5 Poteet v.
    Commonwealth,6 Mitchell v. Commonwealth,7 and Brewer v. Commonwealth.8,
    We disagree with the Commonwealth’s interpretation of the Court of
    Appeals’ holding, and further hold that it comports with each of the precedents
    cited by the Commonwealth.
    To begin, we do not construe the quoted language from Allen that “where
    the article does not appear to have a standard value in the open market, or its
    standard value is not shown, the evidence of its value must be arrived at from
    facts and circumstances testified to by witnesses who qualify themselves to
    speak as to its value,” to mean that the owners of damaged property are
    subject to higher scrutiny regarding their ability to testify as to the value of
    their property. Rather, it simply means that the owner must be able to provide
    5 The Commonwealth also relies on Commonwealth v. Reed, 
    57 S.W.3d 269
     (Ky.
    2001), and Meyer v. Commonwealth, 
    393 S.W.3d 46
     (Ky. App. 2013). Neither case
    supports its argument.
    In Reed, there was no dispute as to the total value of the stolen property. 57
    S.W.3d at 271. Instead, the issue was whether the Commonwealth demonstrated that
    the specific items ultimately found in the defendant’s possession were worth the
    requisite amount to support the charge against him. Id.
    In Meyer, the defendant stole two projectors from the University of Kentucky.
    
    393 S.W.3d at 55-6
    . The evidence as to their value came not from their owner, but
    from an employee of the university who worked in Information Technology in
    Audio/Visual Services. 
    Id. at 56
    .
    6   
    556 S.W.2d 893
     (Ky. 1977).
    7   
    538 S.W.3d 326
     (Ky. App. 2017).
    8   
    632 S.W2d 456
     (Ky. App. 1982).
    7
    “reliable facts [and circumstances] . . . [that provide] some minimal indicum of
    reliability beyond mere allegation.”9 This is supported by the Court of Appeals’
    later statement that “Putney offered nothing more than his mere opinion of the
    worth of both the metal and the diner.”
    Indeed, we have long held that “the testimony of the owner of stolen
    property is competent evidence as to the value of the property.”10 Putney could
    accordingly, theoretically, be qualified to testify to the value of the diner before
    and after the theft, and as to the value of the recovered stainless-steel siding.
    But to do so his testimony must be supported by facts and circumstances
    providing some minimal indicum of reliability beyond mere allegation. This, we
    discern, is the “qualification” the Court of Appeals refers to.
    For example in Poteet, the Defendant was convicted of receiving stolen
    property valued at more than $100.11 On appeal, the defendant asserted that
    there was insufficient evidence as to the value of the stolen property, in
    particular: a welding wrench, a welding helmet, an 18-inch pipe wrench, and a
    “chain hoist come along.”12 The owner of the items testified that the welding
    wrench was worth $30 and the helmet was worth $15.13 More importantly for
    9  Wiley v. Commonwealth, 
    348 S.W.3d 570
    , 575 (Ky. 2010) (“When ordering
    restitution, a trial court must base an award on reliable facts. . . . although a lower
    standard of due process applies at sentencing, the facts relied on by the court must
    have some minimal indicium of reliability beyond mere allegation.”).
    10   Reed, 57 S.W.3d at 270 (citing Poteet, 556 S.W.2d at 896).
    11   556 S.W.2d, at 894.
    12   Id. at 895-96.
    13   Id. at 894.
    8
    our purposes, the victim testified that the chain hoist come along was worth
    $130, supported by his insurance claim on that item for $130.14 The Poteet
    Court held that “there was sufficient evidence to show that [the victim’s] stolen
    property knowingly received by [the defendant] was of the value of more than
    $100.”15 Accordingly, the owner’s testimony was more than just a mere
    allegation as to their value: he provided proof that at least one of the items was
    worth $130 in the form of an insurance claim. This would of course mean that
    the aggregate value of all the items taken exceeded $100.
    Similarly, in Mitchell, the defendants stole several pieces of jewelry from
    the victim.16 At their restitution hearing, the victim testified that “she obtained
    the value of the missing jewelry listed by researching their value on
    Amazon.com and that she determined the value by using the median prices for
    the items.”17 On appeal, the defendants argued that the victim’s testimony as
    to the value of the jewelry based on her internet research was insufficient to
    constitute substantial evidence, and that “the Commonwealth was required to
    prove their value with photographs, insurance records, receipts or other
    documented proof of the value and quality of the missing jewelry.”18 The Court
    of Appeals disagreed:
    Even in the guilt phase, the Supreme Court has ruled that the
    testimony of the owner of stolen property is competent evidence as
    14   Id.
    15   Id. at 896 (emphasis added).
    16   Mitchell, 
    538 S.W.3d at 328
    .
    17   
    Id.
    18   
    Id. at 329
    .
    9
    to the value of the property. The same is true in restitution
    hearings where the standard is preponderance of the evidence, not
    the reasonable doubt standard. While it may have been preferable
    for the Commonwealth to produce documentation, it was not
    required. . . . If [the defendants’ argument] was taken to its logical
    conclusion, restitution could never be imposed for an item of
    jewelry that had not been photographed, appraised, measured,
    weighed and insured. Although they have pointed to some
    weaknesses in the Commonwealth’s evidence, [the victim] had
    sufficient reliable information, based on her memory and the
    photographs, to find comparable items on the Internet. We are
    required to give “due regard ... to the opportunity of the trial court
    to judge the credibility of the witnesses.” [CR] 52.01; as a sign of
    her reliability, [the victim] did not choose the highest-priced
    Internet comparables in assigning values to her jewelry.19
    Finally, in Brewer, a case from 1982, the defendant was convicted of
    stealing a two-month-old 1980 Suzuki motorcycle, and argued on appeal that
    there was insufficient evidence that the motorcycle was worth more than
    $100.20 The Court of Appeals disagreed, stating:
    The owner of the motorcycle can certainly state his opinion as to
    the value of his property. His testimony was not unreasonable
    since the motorcycle, only two months old when stolen, had only
    3000 miles on it and was unwrecked. There was sufficient
    descriptive testimony about the motorcycle which would enable the
    jury to make an informed conclusion that the cycle was worth
    more than $100.00 in value.21
    Accordingly, the particular circumstances in Brewer were such that the
    owner’s testimony as to the motorcycle’s value exceeding $100 was sufficient.
    19   
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    20   
    632 S.W.2d at 457
    .
    21   
    Id.
    10
    In this case, Putney provided absolutely no evidence as to the diner’s
    worth at the time of the theft, the diner’s worth after the theft, or the value of
    the recovered stainless-steel, let alone evidence or circumstances that would
    support those respective values. On remand, if he can provide some reliable
    evidence as to those values, he would certainly be qualified to testify as to
    those amounts given that he is the owner of the diner. At bottom, we do not
    interpret the Court of Appeals as altering in anyway our precedents that state
    an owner may give testimony as to the value of his or her property. Instead,
    the Court of Appeals found fault in the fact that Putney had provided nothing
    to suggest that he was qualified to testify as to the value of the diner before and
    after the theft or the value of the recovered sheet metal. This is consistent with
    our precedents as provided above.
    Consequently, we decline McMichael’s invitation to uphold the Court of
    Appeals’ holding on the basis that it drew a distinction between items that are
    “merchandise,” i.e., items found in “standard markets” that have easily
    discernable values—televisions, jewelry, tools, etc.—and items that are not
    found in standard markets like the antique diner at issue herein. We further
    decline to hold that owners of such unique property should be “qualified” to
    testify to the value of their property under the factors espoused in Summe v.
    Gronotte.22 This would needlessly complicate restitution determinations
    because, regardless of what the item at issue in a given case is, a restitution
    22  
    357 S.W.3d 211
     (Ky. 2011) (relying on Commonwealth, Dep’t of Highways v.
    Slusher, 
    371 S.W.2d 851
     (Ky. 1963)). Slusher held that “[a] witness, to be qualified to
    testify as to the value of realty, must know the property to be valued and the value of
    11
    determination must be based on reliable facts that have some minimal indicum
    of reliability beyond mere allegation. Such evidence was altogether absent in
    this case, and that absence formed the basis for the Court of Appeals’ holding.
    CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the Court of Appeals and remand this
    case to Jefferson Circuit Court for a retrial on restitution consistent with both
    this opinion and that of the Court of Appeals.
    VanMeter, C.J.; Bisig, Conley, Keller, Lambert, and Nickell, JJ., sitting.
    All concur. Thompson, J., not sitting.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE:
    Daniel J. Cameron
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Kristin Leigh Conder
    Assistant Attorney General
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT:
    Christopher Barrett Thurman
    Louisville Metro Public Defender
    Leo Gerard Smith
    Louisville Metro Public Defender
    the property in the vicinity, must understand the standard of value, and must be
    possessed of the ability to make a reasonable inference.”
    12