State of Minnesota v. Paul Scott Seeman
Minnesota Court of Appeals
State of Minnesota v. Paul Scott Seeman
Opinion
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A23-0571
State of Minnesota,
Appellant,
vs.
Paul Scott Seeman,
Respondent.
Filed April 8, 2024
Affirmed in part and reversed in part
Segal, Chief Judge
Rice County District Court
File No. 66-CR-14-1473
Keith Ellison, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
Brian M. Mortenson, Rice County Attorney, Sean R. McCarthy, Assistant County
Attorney, Faribault, Minnesota (for appellant)
Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Roy G. Spurbeck, Assistant
Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)
Considered and decided by Johnson, Presiding Judge; Segal, Chief Judge; and
Cochran, Judge.
SYLLABUS
Before the state has a duty to bring forward evidence to prove the amount of loss
for an item of restitution at a hearing on an offender’s challenge under Minn. Stat.
§ 611A.045, subd. 3 (2022), the offender’s sworn affidavit submitted in support of the
challenge must, at a minimum, be sufficiently detailed to put the state on notice that the
offender is challenging the amount of loss for that item.
OPINION
SEGAL, Chief Judge
In this prosecution appeal, the state argues that the district court abused its discretion
when the court eliminated or reduced eight restitution awards on the ground that the state
failed to prove the amounts of loss sustained by the restitution claimants. The state
maintains that respondent failed to provide notice of his intent to challenge the amounts of
loss for the eight awards in his sworn affidavit submitted pursuant to Minn. Stat.
§ 611A.045, subd. 3(a). The state contends that the district court therefore erred by shifting
the burden at the restitution hearing to the state to produce evidence to prove the amount
of loss. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
FACTS
In 2014, appellant State of Minnesota charged respondent Paul Scott Seeman with
multiple offenses, including racketeering, perjury, theft, and receiving stolen property. The
charges primarily stemmed from an allegation that Seeman was involved in a criminal
scheme in which he would purchase used vehicles with clean titles, remove the vehicle
identification number (VIN) plates from those vehicles, place the VIN plates on stolen
vehicles, and then sell the stolen vehicles.
As relevant here, Seeman was convicted in 2022 of 29 offenses involving charges
of racketeering, theft, receiving stolen property, and falsifying information in applications
for motor-vehicle titles. The district court sentenced Seeman to 117 months in prison for
2
racketeering. 1 The district court also ordered Seeman to pay restitution to 13 victims in
the total amount of $124,018.65.
Seeman filed a timely “Pro Se affidavit challenging Restitution.” In the affidavit,
Seeman challenged all 13 restitution awards. Seeman subsequently filed a supplemental
affidavit in support of his restitution challenge in which he detailed his limited financial
resources and requested that the district court consider his inability to pay restitution.
The district court held a hearing on the restitution challenge. At the start of the
restitution hearing, the prosecutor explained:
The State does not plan on calling any witnesses for the
restitution hearing today given that both Mr. Seeman’s initial
affidavit and his supplemental affidavit outline legal arguments
as far as whether or not the Court can order restitution based
on his inability to pay and also whether or not insurance
companies are victims.
The prosecutor then went through each challenge in Seeman’s initial affidavit,
acknowledging that two of the restitution awards should be reduced, but otherwise arguing
that Seeman’s challenge should be denied. Defense counsel argued in support of Seeman’s
challenge and noted that there was “really no witness [at the hearing]” or “really no
documentation” to explain or support some of the restitution requests that Seeman had been
ordered to pay. The prosecutor countered that Seeman’s affidavits challenged the items of
restitution and Seeman’s ability to pay, not the amounts of loss, and that Seeman’s
challenge to the amounts of restitution awarded was therefore untimely.
1
Seeman separately appealed his convictions and 117-month sentence; this court affirmed
and the supreme court denied review. State v. Seeman, No. A22-1117, 2023 WL 8178144,
at *1 (Minn. App. Nov. 27, 2023), rev. denied (Minn. Feb. 20, 2024).
3
Following the restitution hearing, the district court granted Seeman’s restitution
challenge in part and denied it in part. As relevant to this appeal, the district court reduced
the restitution awards to one victim and eliminated the restitution awards to seven victims,
but rejected Seeman’s challenges to the remaining five awards. The district court’s order
reduced the total amount of restitution Seeman was ordered to pay from $124,018.65 to
$5,877.69. The district court based its decision to eliminate or reduce the eight restitution
awards on the fact that the state failed to produce evidence proving the amount of loss for
those awards.
ISSUES
I. Does Minn. Stat. § 611A.045, subd. 3(a), require an offender to specify in the
offender’s sworn affidavit an intent to challenge the amount of loss for a restitution
item before the burden can be transferred to the state to produce evidence supporting
the claimed amount?
II. Were the allegations in Seeman’s sworn affidavit sufficiently detailed to put the
state on notice of Seeman’s intent to challenge the amount of loss for the eight
restitution awards at issue on this appeal?
ANALYSIS
I.
The state argues that the district court’s order denying or reducing eight restitution
awards must be reversed because Seeman failed to provide notice in his sworn affidavit
that he intended to challenge the amounts of loss. 2 Seeman counters that the level of detail
2
As noted above, Seeman submitted two affidavits in support of his restitution challenge.
Because his second affidavit addressed only his inability to pay restitution, that affidavit is
not relevant to the issues on appeal. We therefore focus our analysis on the first affidavit.
4
required in a sworn affidavit under subdivision 3(a) of the restitution statute is not that high
and that he satisfied it in this case.
This court “generally review[s] a restitution order for an abuse of the district court’s
broad discretion,” but “[t]hat discretion . . . is constrained by the statutory requirements.”
State v. Wigham, 967 N.W.2d 657, 662 (Minn. 2021) (quotation omitted). The state’s argument here presents a question of statutory interpretation that we review de novo. State v. Cloutier,987 N.W.2d 214
, 218 (Minn. 2023).
State law provides crime victims with a “right to receive restitution as part of the
disposition of a criminal charge . . . if the offender is convicted.” Minn. Stat. § 611A.04,
subd. 1(a) (Supp. 2023). The district court “may order restitution only for losses that are
directly caused by, or follow naturally as a consequence of, the defendant’s crime.” State
v. Boettcher, 931 N.W.2d 376, 381 (Minn. 2019).
An offender can challenge a restitution order by timely requesting a hearing. Minn.
Stat. § 611A.045, subd. 3(b). The offender must then provide “a detailed sworn
affidavit . . . setting forth all challenges to the restitution or items of restitution, and
specifying all reasons justifying dollar amounts of restitution which differ from the
amounts requested by the victim or victims.” Id., subd. 3(a). The statute specifies that, at
a hearing on the challenge, “the offender shall have the burden to produce evidence if the
offender intends to challenge the amount of restitution or specific items of restitution or
their dollar amounts.” Id. After this initial “burden of production” is satisfied, “[t]he
burden of demonstrating the amount of loss sustained by a victim as a result of the offense
and the appropriateness of a particular type of restitution is on the prosecution.” Id.; see
5
also State v. Thole, 614 N.W.2d 231, 235 (Minn. App. 2000) (noting that the burden shifts
to the state to prove the amount of loss “only after an offender meets the threshold burden
of raising a specific objection by affidavit”).
We are tasked in this appeal with deciding whether subdivision 3(a) requires an
offender to specify each type of challenge that an offender intends to assert before the state
can be required to bring forward evidence to support a restitution award. We answer that
question in the affirmative. We conclude that subdivision 3(a) of section 611A.045
requires that the offender’s affidavit must be sufficiently detailed to put the state on notice
of each type of challenge being made to a particular item of restitution. For example, if an
offender intends to challenge the amount of loss for a particular item, the affidavit must
state that intent. If an offender’s affidavit fails to include such notice, then the state cannot
be faulted for failing to submit proof of the amount of loss at the restitution hearing.
We are persuaded that this is the correct interpretation based on the plain language
of subdivision 3(a), which requires the offender to provide “a detailed sworn affidavit . . .
setting forth all challenges to the restitution or items of restitution, and specifying all
reasons justifying dollar amounts of restitution which differ from the amounts requested
by the victim or victims.” Minn. Stat. § 611A.045, subd. 3(a) (emphasis added). The
adjectives chosen by the legislature—that the affidavit must be “detailed” and include “all”
challenges and reasons—demonstrates the high degree of specificity required of offenders
under subdivision 3(a).
In addition, in its recent Cloutier opinion interpreting the restitution statute, the
supreme court highlighted the specificity required in challenges to restitution awards. 987
6
N.W.2d at 221. The supreme court commented in Cloutier that the statute “make[s] clear
that (1) a defendant can challenge items of restitution and the amount of restitution ordered
for specific items and that (2) these challenges are distinct from one another.” Id. The
supreme court thus recognized that a challenge to an item of restitution—for example, on
the ground the claimed loss was not caused by the offense—does not encompass a
challenge to the amount of the loss.
Because of this distinction between a challenge to an item of restitution and to the
amount of loss claimed for that item, combined with the requirement that an offender must
provide a “detailed sworn affidavit . . . setting forth all challenges . . . and specifying all
reasons,” we are persuaded that subdivision 3(a) requires an offender to specify the type of
challenge being made in the affidavit—whether it is a challenge to the inclusion of the
specific item, the amount of restitution ordered for that item, or both. Minn. Stat.
§ 611A.045, subd. 3(a) (emphasis added). An offender’s affidavit challenging restitution
therefore must, at a minimum, be sufficiently detailed to provide notice of the offender’s
intent to challenge the amount of restitution ordered for a specific item before the state can
be required to produce evidence establishing the amount of loss.
II.
We now apply that standard to assess whether the district court abused its discretion
in reducing or eliminating the eight awards.
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A. Seeman’s affidavit provided sufficient notice of his intent to challenge
the amount of restitution ordered for the awards to C.R., C.P., and JM
Truck & Equipment. 3
The state challenges the elimination of the restitution requests of C.R. and C.P., and
the reduction of JM Truck & Equipment’s request from $2,808.96 to $500. The following
are the applicable statements in Seeman’s sworn affidavit related to the three awards:
Restitution should not be awarded to [C.R.] in the amount of
$2,240.00. [C.R.] has taken possession of several thousands of
dollars in Defendant’s property without Defendant’s consent.
Additionally, [C.R.] was paid by his insurance company and
was allowed to keep insurance covered property and therefore
was unduly enriched.
***
Restitution should not be awarded to [C.P.] in the amount of
$12,300.00. Defendant was convicted of receiving the motor
from the truck which was valued at $2500. Additionally, the
motor was returned, so [C.P.] has suffered no loss.
***
Restitution should not be awarded to JM Truck and Equipment
in the amount of $2,808.96 because the returned truck exceeds
the value of the claimed loss.
For each of these three awards, Seeman’s allegations were adequate to put the state
on notice of an intent to challenge the amount of the restitution requested. The clearest
allegation of a challenge to the amount of loss is in the case of JM Truck & Equipment,
where Seeman alleged that “the returned truck exceed[ed] the value of the claimed loss.”
While less clearly articulated, we are persuaded that the allegations related to C.R., where
Seeman alleged that C.R. had no loss because he received insurance proceeds and had
possession of Seeman’s property, and to C.P., where Seeman alleged that his conviction
3
These restitution awards are denoted as b., e., and h., respectively, in the district court’s
order.
8
related only to the truck’s motor at a value of $2,500, not $12,300, were nevertheless
sufficient to put the state on notice of Seeman’s intent to challenge the amount of the
claimed losses. Consequently, the affidavit satisfied Seeman’s burden as to those three
restitution awards. Because the state failed to submit evidence proving the amounts of the
claimed losses, the district court correctly eliminated or reduced the restitution previously
awarded for all three.
B. Seeman’s affidavit failed to put the state on notice of his intent to
challenge the amount of restitution ordered for the awards to Rainbow
Play Systems, Javens Mechanical, R.H., and Metro Snow Removal
Services. 4
In his affidavit relating to the four restitution awards for Rainbow Play Systems,
Javens Mechanical, R.H., and Metro Snow Removal Services, Seeman stated:
Restitution should not be awarded to Rainbow Play Systems in
the amount of $880.00. Defendant was not found guilty of
breaking a lock, breaking glass or breaking a seat.
***
Restitution should not be awarded to Javens Mechanical in the
amount of $912.00. Defendant was not charged with the theft
of chains and straps.
***
Restitution should not be awarded to [R.H.] in the amount of
$912.00. Defendant was not convicted of damaging tractor or
theft of parts. Further restitution should not be awarded to
[R.H.] as [R.H.] is deceased.
***
Restitution should not be awarded to [Metro Snow Removal
Services] in the amount of $91,000.00. The Defendant was
convicted of receiving stolen red doors which were valued at
$2000.00.
4
These restitution awards are denoted as d., i., j., and k., respectively, in the district court’s
order.
9
While each of these assertions states that “restitution should not be awarded to [the
victim] in the amount of” a dollar sum, the explanation that follows this initial sentence
challenges the nexus between the award and Seeman’s convictions, not the amount of the
loss being claimed. By contrast, Seeman’s allegations relating to restitution for C.R., C.P.,
and JM Truck & Equipment contain the same initial statement but then offer details related
to the actual amount of loss. For example, as to the JM Truck & Equipment award, Seeman
alleged that JM Truck & Equipment should not be awarded “$2808.96 because the returned
truck exceeds the value of the claimed loss.” We therefore conclude that Seeman’s
affidavit failed to put the state on notice of an intent to challenge the amount of loss for the
four restitution awards and, consequently, reverse the district court’s elimination of the
awards to Rainbow Play Systems, Javens Mechanical, R.H., and Metro Snow Removal
Services.
C. We affirm the district court’s order eliminating the award to Nelson
R.V. because Nelson R.V. never made a restitution claim.
The state includes in its appeal a challenge to the district court’s order eliminating
the restitution award in the amount of $4,000 to Nelson R.V. Seeman asserted in his
affidavit: “Restitution should not be awarded to Nelson R.V. in the amount of $4,000.00.
Defendant was not found guilty of causing damage to the Ice Castle fish house.” The
district court noted that it had initially ordered $4,000 in restitution to Nelson R.V. “based
on the request made at the hearing by the State.” But apparently, the restitution claim
should have been made to a company called Noble R.V., which submitted a restitution
claim of $4,000 for damage to its trailer that was found at Seeman’s residence. Nelson
10
R.V. made no restitution request. Substituting Noble R.V. for Nelson R.V. is outside the
issue asserted by the state on this appeal, and we therefore affirm the district court’s
elimination of the restitution award to Nelson R.V.
DECISION
Before the state has a duty to bring forward evidence to prove the amount of loss
for an item of restitution at a hearing on an offender’s challenge to a restitution order, the
offender’s sworn affidavit must, at a minimum, be sufficiently detailed to put the state on
notice that the offender is intending to challenge the amount of loss for that item. We
affirm the district court’s order eliminating or reducing the restitution awards to C.R., C.P.,
JM Truck & Equipment, and Nelson R.V., but we reverse the district court’s elimination
of the restitution awards to Rainbow Play Systems, Javens Mechanical, R.H., and Metro
Snow Removal Systems.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
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Reference
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Before the state has a duty to bring forward evidence to prove the amount of loss for an item of restitution at a hearing on an offender's challenge under Minn. Stat. § 611A.045, subd. 3 (2022), the offender's sworn affidavit submitted in support of the challenge must, at a minimum, be sufficiently detailed to put the state on notice that the offender is challenging the amount of loss for that item. Affirmed in part and reversed in part.