Legal Case Summary

Nelson v. Colorado


Date Argued: Mon Jan 09 2017
Case Number: 15-1256
Docket Number: 4567496
Judges:Not available
Duration: 57 minutes
Court Name: Supreme Court

Case Summary

**Case Summary: Nelson v. Colorado** **Docket Number:** 4567496 **Court:** Supreme Court of the United States **Decided:** 2017 **Facts:** The case of Nelson v. Colorado arose from a situation involving the state of Colorado's procedures for recovering fines, fees, and restitution paid by individuals who had been convicted of crimes but later exonerated. The petitioner, Shannon Nelson, was convicted of a crime, paid various financial obligations as a part of her sentence, and subsequently had her conviction overturned. Despite her exoneration, Colorado law required her to prove her innocence and to go through a specific process to have her financial obligations refunded. **Issue:** The main issue before the Court was whether the state of Colorado's requirement for individuals to prove their innocence before recovering funds was unconstitutional, violating the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. **Holding:** The Supreme Court held that Colorado's process for recovering fines and fees was indeed unconstitutional. The Court ruled that the state’s approach imposed an unfair burden on individuals who had been wrongfully convicted as it effectively treated them as guilty until proven innocent. This was found to violate the principles of due process, as the state failed to provide an adequate mechanism for exonerated individuals to reclaim their money without undue difficulty or stigma. **Reasoning:** The Court emphasized that once a conviction is overturned, the presumption of innocence should be restored, and individuals should not have to prove their innocence to reclaim funds that they were unjustly compelled to pay. The majority opinion highlighted the need for a fair and reasonable process that recognizes the loss endured by wrongfully convicted individuals and stressed the importance of protecting their rights. **Conclusion:** The ruling in Nelson v. Colorado established that states must afford exonerated individuals a fair and accessible means to recover wrongful financial losses without placing the onus on them to prove their innocence again. This case reinforces the protection of due process rights for those who have been wrongfully convicted, ensuring that justice is served not just in verdicts but also in the rectification of wrongful punishments. This case serves as a significant precedent for similar situations regarding the treatment of individuals post-exoneration and the obligations of states to rectify wrongful financial obligations.

Nelson v. Colorado


Oral Audio Transcript(Beta version)

We'll hear argument first this morning in case 15, 1256 Nelson versus Colorado. Mr. Banner? Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court, when a judgment is reversed, a person who has paid money pursuant to the judgment is entitled to get the money back. That's common sense, and that has unsurprisingly been normal practice for centuries. As far as we can tell, Colorado is the first state ever to adopt a rule to the contrary. In Colorado now, when a judgment of conviction is reversed, the state keeps the defendant's money, unless the defendant files a separate civil action and can prove by clear and convincing evidence that she's actually innocent. What is the basis of the right? You said the person whose conviction is overturned has a right to be. Is it a constitutional right? What kind of right is it? It's a right under the common law of property that's existed for centuries. That it has always been the case that a successful appellant gets her money back. In this case, the money was taken from Shannon Nelson and Lewis Madden pursuant to criminal convictions. But those. It has to be constitutional. If Colorado says we don't want to follow the common law, this is not the law here. But if it's not constitutional, then what's the basis for your case? No, so here the Colorado Supreme Court did not say that this money belongs to the state of Colorado. Rather, the Colorado Supreme Court said the Exoneration Act is a good enough remedy for returning the money to Nelson and Madden. You're absolutely right, though, to say that if the Colorado Supreme Court had said, it doesn't matter what process we use because it's not their property. It's the state's property. If the Colorado Supreme Court had said that, then you're right. Then we would be having to say, making an argument that the Constitution itself gives the money, gives a right to the money to Nelson and Madden. Excuse me? Make that argument. Okay. So if Colorado, if the Colorado Supreme Court had said that this money belongs to the state rather than to Nelson and Madden, that would be tantamount to charging people money for the privilege of trying them unlawfully, right? It would be the state taking money as a result of a trial that has been reversed, a trial that was conducted unlawfully. That would. And the dissent here said something quite simple, which was the only entitlement to the money was the conviction. If the conviction has been voided, then what legal right does the state have to retain the money? We agree with that exactly. The Colorado Supreme Court, on the other hand, said, when you paid the money, we were entitled to it

. So where there's a disconnect there, if they were entitled to it initially, we're still back to the operative question of why are they entitled, what is the constitutional right for you to get it? The state was entitled to the money initially because there were judgments of conviction in place, judgments of conviction that required the payment of the money. Those judgments of conviction no longer exist. They were reversed on appeal. Shannon Nelson was retried and was acquitted of all charges. Lewis Madden with convictions were reversed and the prosecutor declined to retry the case. And so while it was the state's money, while the convictions existed, once those judgments of conviction ceased to exist, at that point, it's no longer the state's money. At that point, I thought your argument was this, but what you're saying now and a lot of your brief is much more complicated. But the simple argument I thought was this. This was your client's money. It's a certain amount of dollars, OK? It was taken away from them as a result of a trial that was flawed, and therefore they were deprived of that property without due process of law. I thought that was the argument. Am I right or not? Now, if that is the argument, there are two complications that I see in your briefing. One is that you can see that they could be denied restitution for equitable reasons. Let's just take that. Where else in the law of due process would something like that come up? No, the reason why we said that is that in several of this Court's older cases, the Court describes these refunds as equitable. Now, in a garden variety, in garden variety criminal cases like this one, there would be no equitable considerations that would interfere with a refund of the money. But there are, it's possible to imagine other sorts of cases where it would. And so, for example, the Court has this Court mentioned, as we say in the reply brief, this Court mentioned an example in which an insurance case, in which a full refund would provide overcompensation for some reason to the successful appellant. And in such a case, the refund for equitable reasons would have to be scaled back. In an ordinary criminal case like ours, there's nothing like that. Those sorts of equitable considerations are very, very far from a case like this one. And, you know, Colorado top. Kallorado. That's right. And this is the basic argument. It's our money by virtue of State law, and once the conviction disappears, why doesn't the State have to proactively return the money? In other words, why is it even required for the person to bring any kind of refund action against the State? No, the State does proactively have to refund the money

. There is no requirement for the successful appellant to bring an action. Rather, what the State is doing. So, your complaint is not to the nature of this action and to exactly what you have to prove. You're saying that as soon as the conviction is vacated, the State has to put a check in the mail. Well, okay. That may be a little too simple. So, in our view, the A-proper procedure would be the procedure that was followed in these cases where after, in Shannon Nelson's case, after she was acquitted, she filed a motion back in the original trial court saying, look, I've been acquitted. Please give me my money back. No, I guess I'm asking, if your theory is right, why is even that necessary? If your theory is right, it seems, I mean, you know, you might file a motion because the State hasn't done what it's supposed to do, but it seems as though the obligation on the State's part is immediately to put a check in the mail. No, that's right. That's right. That's right. And so, when that hadn't happened after several months, we filed the motions in both cases. I understood the other comp. I mean, I just said, I understood you in responding to Justice Alito to say that the State had to give the money back because they acquired it as a result of a flawed prosecution. Is that right? Right? Well, that's not true for some of the payments. You know, there's a $30 docket fee. In other words, that's not something that depends upon whether the conviction is valid or not in the normal case. Yes, well, in, in, in, under, all of these payments under Colorado law are collected only from defendants who are convicted. Including the docket. Including the docket. Right. None of these, none of these fees, charges, et cetera, are the sorts of sort of filing fees that are collected from any litigant winter loose. There's nothing like that in this case. This is all money that is contingent upon the existence of a conviction. The other complication that I see in this make-hole argument, in other words, the State took things away from you

. They took property away from you and when the conviction is reversed, they have to restore you to the position you were in before the prosecution. Is this the, the restitution and all of these fees are small in comparison with the main thing that was taken away and that was, that was liberty. So if you were, argument is correct. Why shouldn't this, what, what, didn't the State, the State took away your client's liberty without due process of law? So would they be automatically entitled to be made whole in that respect? No, and the reason, the reason for that is that while there's a long historical tradition of providing refunds of monetary payments upon the reversal of a conviction, there is no comparable tradition of providing compensation for periods of lost liberty. That's why Colorado passed the examination. Exactly. Exactly. If there already was a tradition of providing compensation for lost liberty, there'd be no need for statutes. Well, if tradition, I mean, if tradition like that can defeat the argument for compensation for time wrongfully spent in prison, then can tradition defeat the argument that you make with respect to the fees and the restitution? No, because the tradition is, is, the, the, the normal practice for centuries has been to refund monetary payments that are contingent upon a, a judgment when that judgment. Okay. So the argument is tradition could do it if there were such a judgment. We have to work the opposite way. And so it's an issue. We look at the tradition, again, it seems to me for constitutional reasons, not for state law reasons. That's why I'm somewhat confused. I mean, who cares about tradition if the State says X and the tradition is Y, unless there's a constitution? No, that's right. That's right. That's right. And so tradition, tradition comes in, you know, in determining what processes do. Courts always, always look to traditions is always a factor in considering what Well, getting back to the State law for a moment, are you saying that if a State creates a right under State law, it cannot unduly complicate that right by flawed procedures under our procedural due process jurisprudence? Well, I'd say it even more simply than that. I would say that when State is holding on to property that belongs to one of its citizens, the State has an obligation to have a procedure that is adequate for returning the property. I mean, that's the error that we're complaining about in the Colorado Supreme Court below. The Colorado Supreme Court said that it was Colorado Supreme Court analyzed this as a procedural due process case. The Court said the question is, is the Exoneration Act a good enough procedure for returning this money to Nelson Edmaden? The Colorado Supreme Court applied Matthews V. Eldridge and the State cases following Matthews V. Eldridge

. And the Colorado Supreme Court determined, yes, this is a good enough process for returning the money. I think your argument has moved from the simple one I started out with, which is that you're absolutely entitled to be made whole to the argument that they have to provide that we look to tradition and we have to see what sort of tradition is adequate. So what would be an adequate procedure here? I guess I don't think I'm saying anything different from what you're saying. I'm saying that what the due process clause requires is for Colorado to provide a process adequate to make defendants whole when they're convicted. So what is that process? Actually, conviction is reversed. I'm simply simply to refund the money. It's their money. Colorado can't make defendants have to approve that they're actually innocent in order to get their own money back. Let's take the act. What parts of the procedure of the act are you saying violating process? Well, the requirement of proving one's innocence in order to get one's own money back. That's the most obvious one. Q. Would seem to me that if the State had an equitable reason, it should prove it not. A. Exactly. And as I've said, the State talks a lot in very general terms about equitable principles but the State has yet to identify what equitable principle entitles the farmer. Q. Do you think a requirement to start a separate civil action comports what do you think is a required process? That's a harder question. So let's imagine a requirement that you have to file a separate civil action, but all you have to prove is that your conviction was reversed. If it was something that that ministerial may be, maybe that would satisfy due process. Although even there, I suppose it would be hard to see what purpose would be served by such an action when you can't go. Q. You have to get paid as filing fee. You'd have to engage a lawyer. And we're talking about hundreds of dollars, not even a thousand in one case. So that's right

. Q. If any, it seems to me any requirement that you see to get the money back. I agree. I agree. As I was saying, you would have to be a very streamlined, some very streamlined, very easy sort of civil action, but that would be pointless. I mean, it would be hard to see what purpose would be served by requiring such an action. I'm agreeing with you. What purpose would be served by that when you can just do what a balance has been doing, successful appellance, have been doing for centuries, which is going back to the trial court and saying, okay, judgment reversed, please give us our money back. Q. As soon you apply the Matthews framework, do you agree that the court got it right, or do you think even under Matthews, the court below got it wrong? Q. Oh, no. Under Matthews, the court got it terribly wrong. I mean, the Colorado Supreme Court's application of Matthews was basically to say, do process require some kind of a hearing? Well, the Exoneration Act that gives you some kind of a hearing, so good enough. If you look at the Matthews factors, one by one, they all point very, very strongly in favor of finding the Exoneration Act an inadequate remedy. It's, first of all, this is the defendant's property, not the State's property. Second of all, this is a terrible procedure for returning property to successful appellance. The Exoneration Act was not really intended to serve that purpose. It doesn't serve that purpose at all. It's virtually insures that successful appellance aren't going to get their money back when their convictions are reversed. And finally, it's impossible to see what interest the State has in holding on to this money, right? Nelson, Shannon Nelson, she was acquitted. Lewis Madden, his convictions were reversed. There's no chance that either of these defendants will ever be reprocessed. This money will never belong to Colorado. Colorado has yet to explain what interest it has in preventing this money from the If we're writing this opinion and we begin, tradition is very important here because. Well, in the Court's due process cases, the Court has often said the tradition. That's very important

. And it's that's if we're trying to define the substantive right. Right. And also in determining what process he's doing. So the fact that successful appellance have always gotten their money back. I mean, that's that is that that is the tradition that that we're invoking. And tradition is important in due process cases because, you know, in determining what what's what process is due and determining what's the law of the land. Well, what what better place to look than what the law of the land has always been? Well, so that's a different analysis than the Matthews analysis. That's right. You know, the thing about this case is that what Colorado is doing here has never been done before. So there are there is no precedent directly on point at a very high level of specificity. So we have to look to other lines of the Court's due process precedent. That's what we've done. It seems, Mr. Banner, that you could be approaching this in two ways. I mean, one is you could be claiming a substantive due process right along the lines that Colorado said you were doing and then you came back and said no. Now, if you were suggesting that you had a substantive due process, right, then surely tradition would be important. That's right. But in if you're looking at procedural due process, I would have thought that your argument is the simple one of this is property under State law. It's my property. It's your client's property. And then we apply the Matthews test to determine what kind of procedure is due to get that property back. And tradition wouldn't be any part of it. No, that's right. So if looking just at the Matthews test, you're absolutely right. The tradition would not be part of that, but the Matthews test is not the only way the Court has looked at this general class of issues. And as I said, because no State has ever done what Colorado is doing, we're trying to draw from various strands of due process precedent

. One strand is the Matthews test, but another strand is the, you know, the cases like Honda Motor and so on that say, if a State takes away a procedure that has traditionally been present, traditionally been afforded, that's a pretty good sign that the State is violating due process. What did Colorado do before the Exoneration Act with respect to returning? Just gave back the money, just like every other jurisdiction. That's right. And so the novelty here is that this case got to the Colorado Supreme Court immediately after the Exoneration Act was enacted, and the Colorado Supreme Court said, well, now we have a statute that tells how money is supposed to be refunded to exonerated defendants under State law. That must be now the exclusive remedy for defendants to recover the money. But before the Exoneration Act, there was no statute governing this topic, just like in many jurisdictions, and it was just as a matter of routine practice successful appellants got their money back. Well, is that true? I mean, I still don't understand the difference between the simple argument that you're required to be made whole, and the argument that a court could deny restitution based on equitable considerations. As this Court has said, which is your argument? The automatically get it back, that's the end of it. You know, you procedure is necessary or that you could be denied of receiving the money back for equitable reasons. You automatically get it back unless there is some equitable reason that you shouldn't get it back. But what I'm trying to say is in an ordinary criminal case like this one, there is no equitable reason why you shouldn't get it back, and it's impossible, it almost to conceive of an equitable reason. The reason why- Well, what the State says that you, that the defendant has the obligation to move for a stay of the judgment of restitution when the defendant takes an appeal, and if the defendant doesn't do that, then the money is not refunded. Yeah, that's, that is impossible under State law for indigent defendants to seek a stay of monetary payments, pending appeal for two reasons. One is that you have to get a stay pending appeal. You have to post a bond in the full amount of the payment. That's way out of reach for any indigent defendant. In fact, we talked to experienced Colorado defense lawyers who say they have never heard ever of any indigent defendant seeking a stay of monetary payments, pending appeal. Our clients, indigent defendants, they couldn't have done that. Second, by statute, stays appear to be unavailable where the money is being taken from the appellants inmate accounts, which is the case here. So even if they had some sort of money outside of their inmate, they would have to be taken to account. Excuse me, I'm sorry. The money is being taken from the inmate accounts, so that's the second reason why a stay would be unavailable. I should add, yeah. Should we be differentiating between some jurisdictions that don't collect the money until the conviction is final and a conviction that's overturned on collateral review, where the possibility of money having been collected may exist. Should there be a difference in how we think about those two situations? No, because whatever the reason for the disappearance of the judgment of conviction, the key thing is that these are, these are the states only right to this money is in the judgments of conviction. Well, I have a problem because there are some cases in our jurisprudence, not in English jurisprudence, but certainly in American jurisprudence, where the payment of restitution to a third party would have been good reason, an equitable reason for the state not to have to return that money

. Yeah, let me say a word about restitution. In the modern sense of restitution, restitution to protect the victims. Right, right, right, right. Restitution in Colorado is, you can only have restitution pursuant to a criminal conviction. Without a criminal conviction, there can be no restitution. There's no separate proceeding, there's no separate proof apart from the amount of restitution. Otherwise, it's just part of the sentence. What does states generally do if they've collected this money, they've paid it out to the victim, and then the conviction is overturned. Do they usually leave it the money with the victim and just take it out of their general treasury, or do states try to take it back from the victim? That, that I do not know. And the thing is, there are very few reported cases raising the issue of refunds of restitution after the reversal of a conviction. And I think the reason it must be that restitution, although restitution to victims, although quite old and principle really has only been applied in significant amounts recently. Your argument is that if, let's say there's a very substantial judgment of restitution, and the money is paid to the victims, let's say they're victims like the ones in this case, so that it's therapy, who's for abuse, and then even after the judgment has become final, if there is, if the defendant is given relief on collateral review, the State would have to, would have to compensate the defendant for all the money that was paid to the victims. That's your argument? I will agree with all of that except the word compensate, the State would have to refund the amount of money it had taken from the defendant. Remember that, I mean, as between the State and the victims, that's between, that's between the State and the victims. That's no bearing on the property rights of the due process rights of the defendant. Bear in mind that all the money the State collects from convicted defendants, whether it's a denominated restitution or a denominated anything else, all of that money, the State is spending on something. The State isn't hiding that money under a mattress, all that money even finds paid into a State's general fund. The State is spending that money on something, and so it's no excuse when you owe a debt to say, oh, geez, I'm sorry, I already spent the money on something else. Well, you don't have to make that argument to prevail in this case, do you? I think there are severe equitable problems with the hypothetical of the State having paid the victim and the victim having spent the money. No, no, you misunderstood me. The State is saying, I'm not talking about the victim spending the money. I'm meant to be talking about the State saying, well, I'm sorry, we can't, we can't, upon the reversal of a canviction, the State saying, we can't refund the money, sorry, we already dispersed it as restitution to victims. And what I'm saying is, the State disperses all the money it collects for one purpose or another, that doesn't set restitution apart from anything else. If I could reserve the balance of my time. Thank you, Mr. Banner

. General Yarder. Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court. The despositive question in this case is substantive, not procedural. Petitioners are not claiming that they've been denied an opportunity to prove that they are, that they meet the substantive elements of the Colorado Exoneration Act. Instead. The argument is that that act is an inappropriate procedure, that the procedure set up by the Exoneration Act where they have to prove themselves actually innocent, is a procedure that does not comport with due process. Justice Ginsburg, if I understand Petitioner's argument appropriately, what they're saying is that they shouldn't have to prove actual innocence at all. So those procedures, because they are geared toward and focused on that inquiry, shouldn't have to apply. And what that means is what Petitioners are arguing is that they have a substantive right to automatic compensation without having to prove anything at all. And so that's why. Sotomayor, I think that that's just mistaken, Mr. General. They're saying that they have a general state law property right in the money. Now, do you disagree with that? Do you think that this is their money? No, Justice Kagan. That is the nub of the dispute. The question in this case is whether as a matter of success in the money. This is the State's money, as the Colorado Supreme Court held. You could look at Petitioner's. Why is it the State's money? Because as Petitioners acknowledged during opening argument, it was properly taken pursuant to a conviction. And the Colorado Supreme Court described this money as public funds. It never said that this is properly a conviction. But it's probably this condition on a valid conviction. And when that valid conviction goes away, it seems the most natural, obvious thing in the world to say that the State's right to that money evaporates at exactly the same moment. Why isn't that true? Justice Kagan, it's the same reason that upon reversal of the conviction, certainly the Petitioners can't be subject to that conviction anymore. They have to be released from incarceration, and they cannot be subject to continued imposition of the monetary judgment

. But what due process has never held, and what this Court's decisions have not had. Kagan, I'm not talking about due process. I'm really just talking about whose money it is. Under State law, State property law, whose money is it? They say it's their money because there's no longer a valid conviction. You say, notwithstanding that the valid conviction has been reversed, it's the State's money. I want to know why. The reason why is that, well, first of all, the Colorado Supreme Court described this as public funds, and that's precisely how this Court and other courts have treated this when they encountered the issue of sovereign immunity. So, for example, the United States versus Getinger, this Court held that claims like these are not return of property type claims. They are claims that can be subject to sovereign immunity. And if that is true, it's not property of the criminal defendant after a lawful conviction has been entered. And it's just sort of described to me in sort of common sense of the terms, you know, rather than point me to a sovereign immunity case or something. But just in common sense of the terms, why is this the State's money? Kagan, it's the State's money just as it, just as the State lawfully incarcerated these defendants, and petitioners don't dispute that. The State lawfully but erroneously took the defendant's liberty away in this case. That was lawful. Same as the Court or the State lawfully took custody of and property in the States or it receives me the criminal defendants' money. And so, do you have any obligation to return the money at all, pursuant to any procedures? Could you just say, once you pay the money, we have no procedure for you to get it back. In fact, we won't give it back to you ever. It's our money, we don't have to give it back. So long as the conviction itself existed at the time that the money was taken, no, the State does not have that obligation just as it was required to pass the Exoneration Act in order to compensate criminal defendants who were erroneously but not wrongfully convicted. Otherwise, they have to prove that they meet the elements of, for example, a constitutional tort that they were wronged in some way. So if you said, instead of $128 for this, the $30, if you said everybody who is convicted owes the State $10,000, and you don't get it back if you're later, if the conviction is later overturned. That is the rule that this Court has adhered to and that that is precisely the implication of courts that when deciding these claims look for waivers of sovereign immunity, because the assumption is that the deprivation of both the liberty and the property at the time of conviction is lawful and that the property passes into public funds. Kagan, it was Mr. Banner wrong then when he told us that before the Exoneration Act Colorado, like every other State, just gave the money back. He is, that is incorrect, Your Honor. What do Colorado do? Well, respect to monetary sanctions for the Exoneration Act. They didn't have authority to give it back. One example I can give, and there aren't many, as people versus no, it's a Colorado Court of Appeals case from 2005, where the Court declined to order what they described as a refund of amounts charged for probation, even though that conviction was later overturned. Now, the chief case they rely upon is Tolin versus Stroll. It's a Colorado case from 1961, and the Court there did order refunds of the fines, but in that case, and as interpreted by the Colorado Supreme Court in this case, there was specific wrongful conduct that violated the Constitution on the part of the Justice of the Peace that presided over that case. So as the Colorado Supreme Court understands it, that was a case about wrongful conduct on the part of someone adjudicating the case, rather than merely an erroneous conviction that requires the status quo to be restored after that conviction. Is there anything that there were courts that lower courts that routinely ordered the refund of these monies? I am, Justice Sotomayor. In call- I think in the briefing, we're pointed to any number of situations in which lower courts did order the- They're- They're automatically ordered the money to go back. Justice Sotomayor, we're not denying that there are certainly some courts that have done so, but there are many courts that do not treat these claims as return of property claims. They treat them as claims for compensation against the State for which a waiver of sovereign immunity is required. That's to me a question of labels. And if you have no conviction to justify the payment of money because it's been voided, why is it your money now? Just simply because you collected it beforehand, even though the basis for the collection is wrong. Well, as petitioners, how about if you took his car? Well, that would be a four-fature situation in their other- Why isn't this comparable to four-fature? Well, in fact, the four-fature proceedings in some cases provide a useful analogy. If the district court orders four-fature and a- someone with an ownership interest in that property does not properly appeal or seek a stay of the disposition of that four-fitted property. Let's go to the stay. Could you, can you honestly say to me that if this defendant had moved for a stay that the trial court would have granted one? And how many cases do you think of the thousands of convictions that Colorado goes through would a court order a stay? The Justice Sotomayor, you're correct not many, as the requirement is that there must be a serious question of substance. And if that is the case, then the district court can order a stay, both execution of the judgment of incarceration and- So for an ample procedural quagmire you're throwing on courts below. The number of vacated convictions are tiny. The number of proceedings you want now with stay motions to be determined by trial courts is hundreds, if not thousands. That's what you're advocating. I'm sorry, Justice Sotomayor. You want every trial court to decide whether a stay is appropriate. No, I'm just describing what current procedure provides in terms of stays. But the issue and this question. Suppose we have a criminal trial. The jury comes in with a verdict of guilty. And then the trial judge said judgment vacated there was insufficient evidence to convict

. They didn't have authority to give it back. One example I can give, and there aren't many, as people versus no, it's a Colorado Court of Appeals case from 2005, where the Court declined to order what they described as a refund of amounts charged for probation, even though that conviction was later overturned. Now, the chief case they rely upon is Tolin versus Stroll. It's a Colorado case from 1961, and the Court there did order refunds of the fines, but in that case, and as interpreted by the Colorado Supreme Court in this case, there was specific wrongful conduct that violated the Constitution on the part of the Justice of the Peace that presided over that case. So as the Colorado Supreme Court understands it, that was a case about wrongful conduct on the part of someone adjudicating the case, rather than merely an erroneous conviction that requires the status quo to be restored after that conviction. Is there anything that there were courts that lower courts that routinely ordered the refund of these monies? I am, Justice Sotomayor. In call- I think in the briefing, we're pointed to any number of situations in which lower courts did order the- They're- They're automatically ordered the money to go back. Justice Sotomayor, we're not denying that there are certainly some courts that have done so, but there are many courts that do not treat these claims as return of property claims. They treat them as claims for compensation against the State for which a waiver of sovereign immunity is required. That's to me a question of labels. And if you have no conviction to justify the payment of money because it's been voided, why is it your money now? Just simply because you collected it beforehand, even though the basis for the collection is wrong. Well, as petitioners, how about if you took his car? Well, that would be a four-fature situation in their other- Why isn't this comparable to four-fature? Well, in fact, the four-fature proceedings in some cases provide a useful analogy. If the district court orders four-fature and a- someone with an ownership interest in that property does not properly appeal or seek a stay of the disposition of that four-fitted property. Let's go to the stay. Could you, can you honestly say to me that if this defendant had moved for a stay that the trial court would have granted one? And how many cases do you think of the thousands of convictions that Colorado goes through would a court order a stay? The Justice Sotomayor, you're correct not many, as the requirement is that there must be a serious question of substance. And if that is the case, then the district court can order a stay, both execution of the judgment of incarceration and- So for an ample procedural quagmire you're throwing on courts below. The number of vacated convictions are tiny. The number of proceedings you want now with stay motions to be determined by trial courts is hundreds, if not thousands. That's what you're advocating. I'm sorry, Justice Sotomayor. You want every trial court to decide whether a stay is appropriate. No, I'm just describing what current procedure provides in terms of stays. But the issue and this question. Suppose we have a criminal trial. The jury comes in with a verdict of guilty. And then the trial judge said judgment vacated there was insufficient evidence to convict. In that case, the defendant would not owe any fees to the state, right? That's correct, you're wrong. But the judge instead says there was sufficient evidence appeal. The Court of Appeals then says there was insufficient evidence, so we vacate the conviction. In that case, all that money can be kept by the State. What's the difference whether the finding was made by the trial judge or by an appellate court? The difference is that at that time there was a lawful conviction in place, and that is what's required. And that's why the question in this case is whether this is a return of property that is properly thought of as the criminal defendants or it's a claim for compensation. Just as in United States versus Gettinger where the conviction was overturned because the statute on which it was based was unconstitutionally vague, the Court, this Court denied compensation because there was no waiver of sovereign immunity. So you're not talking about compensation, you're talking about getting money by? Well, that's the Justice Ginsburg. That's the question, is this properly considered under State law or under the Constitution as a substantive matter, property of the criminal defendant, or is it not? And what is it? It says in the page 27 of their brief, they have three cases, when going back to 1832 of this Court that says the law is that when you reverse the judgment in a civil case, I wouldn't know why I would apply to as well to criminal, the person on the other side gets the money back. And now, it doesn't say what law. And moreover, you heard your brother here say, well, Colorado Supreme Court said that this wasn't a question here of whose property it was. It was a question of the remedy, the property belonging to the criminal defendant. Now, so what do you say about those cases? Two, what did the Colorado Supreme Court say as a matter of property law? Yes, Justice Breyer. First of all, the cases, there are cases that say upon reversal of an erroneous judgment, there can be restitution, but two. Say, can, it says the law raises an obligation to the one who has received the benefit of the erroneous judgment to make restitution to the other party. Well, it creates an obligation, doesn't say may. Respectfully, Justice Breyer, some courts use that specific formulation. This court used that. This court likewise in two cases. In 1832, in two cases, Justice Breyer, Atlantic Coastline Railroad, which is a Justice Cardozo case from 1935, the United States versus Morgan, which is a case from 1939, the court overturned an order from the district court and yet declined to provide a refund because what the court said is that it had to remand for a hearing on the merits of the substantive dispute. One of Petitioner's own sources, a deep question. And what does the Colorado, did the Colorado Supreme Court say this is his money, but we don't have a remedy? Did it say this is our money and we don't have to have a remedy? What did it say? It said that these amounts are considered public funds, such that a statute is required providing that courts may draw on public funds to award these amounts. So what the Colorado Supreme Court necessarily decided was that this is not under state law property of the criminal defendant. But that's a question. It seems to me that you keep talking about compensation, the issue's restitution. And under normal, equitable principles of restitution, it in fact still is the property of the person from whom the money has been taken away

. In that case, the defendant would not owe any fees to the state, right? That's correct, you're wrong. But the judge instead says there was sufficient evidence appeal. The Court of Appeals then says there was insufficient evidence, so we vacate the conviction. In that case, all that money can be kept by the State. What's the difference whether the finding was made by the trial judge or by an appellate court? The difference is that at that time there was a lawful conviction in place, and that is what's required. And that's why the question in this case is whether this is a return of property that is properly thought of as the criminal defendants or it's a claim for compensation. Just as in United States versus Gettinger where the conviction was overturned because the statute on which it was based was unconstitutionally vague, the Court, this Court denied compensation because there was no waiver of sovereign immunity. So you're not talking about compensation, you're talking about getting money by? Well, that's the Justice Ginsburg. That's the question, is this properly considered under State law or under the Constitution as a substantive matter, property of the criminal defendant, or is it not? And what is it? It says in the page 27 of their brief, they have three cases, when going back to 1832 of this Court that says the law is that when you reverse the judgment in a civil case, I wouldn't know why I would apply to as well to criminal, the person on the other side gets the money back. And now, it doesn't say what law. And moreover, you heard your brother here say, well, Colorado Supreme Court said that this wasn't a question here of whose property it was. It was a question of the remedy, the property belonging to the criminal defendant. Now, so what do you say about those cases? Two, what did the Colorado Supreme Court say as a matter of property law? Yes, Justice Breyer. First of all, the cases, there are cases that say upon reversal of an erroneous judgment, there can be restitution, but two. Say, can, it says the law raises an obligation to the one who has received the benefit of the erroneous judgment to make restitution to the other party. Well, it creates an obligation, doesn't say may. Respectfully, Justice Breyer, some courts use that specific formulation. This court used that. This court likewise in two cases. In 1832, in two cases, Justice Breyer, Atlantic Coastline Railroad, which is a Justice Cardozo case from 1935, the United States versus Morgan, which is a case from 1939, the court overturned an order from the district court and yet declined to provide a refund because what the court said is that it had to remand for a hearing on the merits of the substantive dispute. One of Petitioner's own sources, a deep question. And what does the Colorado, did the Colorado Supreme Court say this is his money, but we don't have a remedy? Did it say this is our money and we don't have to have a remedy? What did it say? It said that these amounts are considered public funds, such that a statute is required providing that courts may draw on public funds to award these amounts. So what the Colorado Supreme Court necessarily decided was that this is not under state law property of the criminal defendant. But that's a question. It seems to me that you keep talking about compensation, the issue's restitution. And under normal, equitable principles of restitution, it in fact still is the property of the person from whom the money has been taken away. And I wonder if your analysis has to be adjusted when you appreciate that it's not compensation, that's not sort of the normal state, give us some money. Under equitable principles, it's state, give me my money back. Yes, Justice or Mr. Chief Justice, that is the question. Is under the historical treatment of this issue. Is this property properly considered a return of money? The courts do say restitution. They also say that it is a claim of unjust enrichment that depends on factors, including the merits of the case. One of Petitioners' own sources, a tainture article. As we go by what this Court said in 1832, which seems like historical tradition, suppose I take that, unless you give me a reason not to, as stating what the law is. That's what it says. So what's your response to that? My response to that, Justice Breyer, is I respectfully, I don't think that's exactly what the law says. If the law says it, if Petitioners establish a substantive due process right to this money back, we agree with them. Caller out a law doesn't vindicate that particular substantive interest, and we're not arguing that that. I know the issue, I've never known us to wonder or call it a substantive due process right to own money. Money is property. We all have a right to own our property, correct? Yes, Justice Sommaiorin. So I'm a little confused by what you're asking for. They're saying it's my money. We either agree with that or don't. If it is their money, then you need to do a procedure that comports with due process, correct? That's correct. And you don't deny that. I don't deny that, no. And so the question is whether under either state law, this is properly considered How about we borrow from double jeopardy? Once the, once the judgment is void, you no longer have a basis to that property. It's theirs. They had, it was their money to begin with. The only basis you had to collect it or keep it was a constitutional conviction

. And I wonder if your analysis has to be adjusted when you appreciate that it's not compensation, that's not sort of the normal state, give us some money. Under equitable principles, it's state, give me my money back. Yes, Justice or Mr. Chief Justice, that is the question. Is under the historical treatment of this issue. Is this property properly considered a return of money? The courts do say restitution. They also say that it is a claim of unjust enrichment that depends on factors, including the merits of the case. One of Petitioners' own sources, a tainture article. As we go by what this Court said in 1832, which seems like historical tradition, suppose I take that, unless you give me a reason not to, as stating what the law is. That's what it says. So what's your response to that? My response to that, Justice Breyer, is I respectfully, I don't think that's exactly what the law says. If the law says it, if Petitioners establish a substantive due process right to this money back, we agree with them. Caller out a law doesn't vindicate that particular substantive interest, and we're not arguing that that. I know the issue, I've never known us to wonder or call it a substantive due process right to own money. Money is property. We all have a right to own our property, correct? Yes, Justice Sommaiorin. So I'm a little confused by what you're asking for. They're saying it's my money. We either agree with that or don't. If it is their money, then you need to do a procedure that comports with due process, correct? That's correct. And you don't deny that. I don't deny that, no. And so the question is whether under either state law, this is properly considered How about we borrow from double jeopardy? Once the, once the judgment is void, you no longer have a basis to that property. It's theirs. They had, it was their money to begin with. The only basis you had to collect it or keep it was a constitutional conviction. Once it's voided, you have no basis to keep the money. And Justice Sommaiorin, I think that that wouldn't necessarily explain cases like Getinger from 1980s, 1927 when this Court denied that kind of a remedy or X Part A Morris is another example where the Court ordered that certain forfeited property be returned. But the Court said the Court has no authority to order the United States property that had been placed in the United States to refund. So that's the question is- Kagan, can I go back to what, I'm sorry, I interrupt you, midstream. That's the, you said that's the question, is there something big was coming up? I think Justice Kagan probably said it before. It's just a question of whether this is treated as a return of property or a claim on compensation. Okay. So you said to Justice Sommaiorin, you said we agree that if this were their money, we would have to refund it in normal ways consistent with procedural due process. Yes, Justice Kagan. Okay. So it really all does depend on whether we think it's their money or it's your money. That's correct. So if this were your money, on this, on the simple theory of, there once was a conviction, it once was valid, we collected the money at that time, and that makes it our money going forward forever and ever, no matter what happens to the conviction. If that's your theory, it's not only true, as the Chief Justice said, that you wouldn't have to provide any remedy or any process for getting that money back, right? You could just keep it and say, doesn't you can prove your innocence? You can not prove your innocence too bad. It's our money. You agree with that. I think you said that to the Chief. That's correct, Justice Kagan. And it would also be true, I would think, that even if that conviction were improperly gained, not just in the sense that it was later vacated, but let's say it was the state's fault that that conviction occurred. In other words, let's say, oh, I don't know. There was a Brady violation or something like that. It would still be your money. Justice Kagan, in that, that actually neatly illustrates the decisions that states like Colorado have to make before the Exoneration Act, for example. Criminal defendants whose convictions were overturned for error and they were actually innocent had no remedy, except if they proved some sort of a wrong, such as the one you're describing, then they could sue for a constitutional tort. In fact, a significant case from Colorado had exactly that. A criminal defendant sued for a Brady violation and received millions of dollars in compensation

. Once it's voided, you have no basis to keep the money. And Justice Sommaiorin, I think that that wouldn't necessarily explain cases like Getinger from 1980s, 1927 when this Court denied that kind of a remedy or X Part A Morris is another example where the Court ordered that certain forfeited property be returned. But the Court said the Court has no authority to order the United States property that had been placed in the United States to refund. So that's the question is- Kagan, can I go back to what, I'm sorry, I interrupt you, midstream. That's the, you said that's the question, is there something big was coming up? I think Justice Kagan probably said it before. It's just a question of whether this is treated as a return of property or a claim on compensation. Okay. So you said to Justice Sommaiorin, you said we agree that if this were their money, we would have to refund it in normal ways consistent with procedural due process. Yes, Justice Kagan. Okay. So it really all does depend on whether we think it's their money or it's your money. That's correct. So if this were your money, on this, on the simple theory of, there once was a conviction, it once was valid, we collected the money at that time, and that makes it our money going forward forever and ever, no matter what happens to the conviction. If that's your theory, it's not only true, as the Chief Justice said, that you wouldn't have to provide any remedy or any process for getting that money back, right? You could just keep it and say, doesn't you can prove your innocence? You can not prove your innocence too bad. It's our money. You agree with that. I think you said that to the Chief. That's correct, Justice Kagan. And it would also be true, I would think, that even if that conviction were improperly gained, not just in the sense that it was later vacated, but let's say it was the state's fault that that conviction occurred. In other words, let's say, oh, I don't know. There was a Brady violation or something like that. It would still be your money. Justice Kagan, in that, that actually neatly illustrates the decisions that states like Colorado have to make before the Exoneration Act, for example. Criminal defendants whose convictions were overturned for error and they were actually innocent had no remedy, except if they proved some sort of a wrong, such as the one you're describing, then they could sue for a constitutional tort. In fact, a significant case from Colorado had exactly that. A criminal defendant sued for a Brady violation and received millions of dollars in compensation. But what the state is not required to do is merely because the conviction is overturned, provide compensation for losses that occur attendant to a conviction that is overturned. And is your analysis why doesn't it apply to criminal fines? In other words, the fine for whatever the offense is is what being owed to $10,000. In other words, it's not money that they paid fees along with the process. It's the end of the process. You're convicted. You pay a $10,000 fine. Why don't when the conviction is overturned, why don't you say, well, you know, this is our money now. It's in the state treasury. You can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. But Mr. Chief Justice, two points, these amounts here are not purely punitive. So that precise question isn't presented, but our line does not depend on the difference between punitive fines and payments such as these and neither have passed. You say your line doesn't depend. Does that mean you could apply this rule to fines? Yes, Justice. Are you? Are fines in Colorado unredeemable once you put them in the treasury? As we understand the Colorado Supreme Court's decision, yes, just as this Court held and get injured, that was a fine, that was that the Court did not repay even though the conviction was invalidated for constitutional reasons, and the reason the Court didn't order the fine repaid was because of sovereign immunity. So what happens then? I mean, I grant you you have a tough side of this argument. It doesn't seem very fair, but you're doing. But the, the, the, you have a corporate criminal defendant. You can't put him in jail. And, and so what they do is they find the corporation $15 million. And then the States is, by the way, why appeal? If you win, we're not going to give you the money back, as the Chief Justice said, but we'll, we'll, uh, search sovereign immunity. Now there's something wrong with that. I'm trying to put my finger on. Justice prior, I, if there's something wrong with that, then there was something wrong with those long, uh, the, the cases decided previously. And this is, maybe they were right in 1832, and then they went off on a wrong track. You're not, it doesn't, maybe those cases were wrong

. But what the state is not required to do is merely because the conviction is overturned, provide compensation for losses that occur attendant to a conviction that is overturned. And is your analysis why doesn't it apply to criminal fines? In other words, the fine for whatever the offense is is what being owed to $10,000. In other words, it's not money that they paid fees along with the process. It's the end of the process. You're convicted. You pay a $10,000 fine. Why don't when the conviction is overturned, why don't you say, well, you know, this is our money now. It's in the state treasury. You can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. But Mr. Chief Justice, two points, these amounts here are not purely punitive. So that precise question isn't presented, but our line does not depend on the difference between punitive fines and payments such as these and neither have passed. You say your line doesn't depend. Does that mean you could apply this rule to fines? Yes, Justice. Are you? Are fines in Colorado unredeemable once you put them in the treasury? As we understand the Colorado Supreme Court's decision, yes, just as this Court held and get injured, that was a fine, that was that the Court did not repay even though the conviction was invalidated for constitutional reasons, and the reason the Court didn't order the fine repaid was because of sovereign immunity. So what happens then? I mean, I grant you you have a tough side of this argument. It doesn't seem very fair, but you're doing. But the, the, the, you have a corporate criminal defendant. You can't put him in jail. And, and so what they do is they find the corporation $15 million. And then the States is, by the way, why appeal? If you win, we're not going to give you the money back, as the Chief Justice said, but we'll, we'll, uh, search sovereign immunity. Now there's something wrong with that. I'm trying to put my finger on. Justice prior, I, if there's something wrong with that, then there was something wrong with those long, uh, the, the cases decided previously. And this is, maybe they were right in 1832, and then they went off on a wrong track. You're not, it doesn't, maybe those cases were wrong. I, I don't know. I have to go read them and figure it out, but, but it can't be that there's no point to an appeal because we're not going to give you back the fine. Well, now that, that, I stopped right there, and then I'm asking, I don't know what, I have to ask him, and that's why his brief has several different arguments. Because it's hard to figure out, but there's, okay, you want to say anything in response to this question? Just as Breyer, I understand what you're struggling with. We, we struggle with it as well. But the, the, the long Colorado supported by decisions of this Court and others, uh, in the 1800s and early 1900s, suggests that this is a question of whether the State has decided to provide this kind of compensation. And if the Court rules that this is a matter of substantive procedural, or excuse me, substantive right under the Constitution, I think you do encounter very significant problems about why compensation is an awarded for the serious deprivation of liberty that occurs. Why does it, why does it matter who owns this money at this time under Colorado law? This was the defendant's money, and it was taken away from them. So if it, you say that at some point it ceased to be their money and it became the State's money. But then you have to show that it was taken away, a pursuant to due process, a consistent with due process. Yes, and the due process is, as, as petitioners admit, and they did so below in their petitions for a year into the Colorado Supreme Court. They said that the, the deprivations of their liberty and their property, uh, support of the imposition of cost fees and restitution. I believe my friend, Mr. Banner, said it again today. So that is the due process that led to the depraved. Well, how come the conviction, how come the conviction have been reversed if they were convicted, uh, consistent with due process? Uh, you're on a, there were errors, there were errors in these trials, but the question is, um, whether there was process sufficient to allow the conviction to attach, and certainly petitioners don't argue otherwise, if there were defects sufficient enough that this was a wrongful deprivation of liberty. For example, um, like the manual versus the city of Jolietk case, this Court encountered, there would be a claim for compensation due to a wrongful defect in the due process, in the procedures that led to that deprivation. But the question here, there was no wrongful conduct that occurred. There was an error that occurred. And the way that this course precedents have treated that is not as a return for property, but as a claim for compensation. Why is it an violation of the taking clause? For the same so- I have a property shall not be taken without just compensation. Can I ask you any procedure or process, just give me just compensation? Chief Justice, or, or, Mr. Chief Justice, um, that's why the, the tax cases that petitioner cite don't apply here, either. That's the precise issue there where there is simply no process given before, um, the taking occurs. Here, the criminal process supported the conviction, and that was an appropriate conviction at the time it was entered. And again, if that were true, uh, Mr

. I, I don't know. I have to go read them and figure it out, but, but it can't be that there's no point to an appeal because we're not going to give you back the fine. Well, now that, that, I stopped right there, and then I'm asking, I don't know what, I have to ask him, and that's why his brief has several different arguments. Because it's hard to figure out, but there's, okay, you want to say anything in response to this question? Just as Breyer, I understand what you're struggling with. We, we struggle with it as well. But the, the, the long Colorado supported by decisions of this Court and others, uh, in the 1800s and early 1900s, suggests that this is a question of whether the State has decided to provide this kind of compensation. And if the Court rules that this is a matter of substantive procedural, or excuse me, substantive right under the Constitution, I think you do encounter very significant problems about why compensation is an awarded for the serious deprivation of liberty that occurs. Why does it, why does it matter who owns this money at this time under Colorado law? This was the defendant's money, and it was taken away from them. So if it, you say that at some point it ceased to be their money and it became the State's money. But then you have to show that it was taken away, a pursuant to due process, a consistent with due process. Yes, and the due process is, as, as petitioners admit, and they did so below in their petitions for a year into the Colorado Supreme Court. They said that the, the deprivations of their liberty and their property, uh, support of the imposition of cost fees and restitution. I believe my friend, Mr. Banner, said it again today. So that is the due process that led to the depraved. Well, how come the conviction, how come the conviction have been reversed if they were convicted, uh, consistent with due process? Uh, you're on a, there were errors, there were errors in these trials, but the question is, um, whether there was process sufficient to allow the conviction to attach, and certainly petitioners don't argue otherwise, if there were defects sufficient enough that this was a wrongful deprivation of liberty. For example, um, like the manual versus the city of Jolietk case, this Court encountered, there would be a claim for compensation due to a wrongful defect in the due process, in the procedures that led to that deprivation. But the question here, there was no wrongful conduct that occurred. There was an error that occurred. And the way that this course precedents have treated that is not as a return for property, but as a claim for compensation. Why is it an violation of the taking clause? For the same so- I have a property shall not be taken without just compensation. Can I ask you any procedure or process, just give me just compensation? Chief Justice, or, or, Mr. Chief Justice, um, that's why the, the tax cases that petitioner cite don't apply here, either. That's the precise issue there where there is simply no process given before, um, the taking occurs. Here, the criminal process supported the conviction, and that was an appropriate conviction at the time it was entered. And again, if that were true, uh, Mr. Chief Justice, it wouldn't explain why there's no constitutional requirement to provide compensation for the deprivation of liberty that occurs. Well, that's, I mean, what are you going to do? I mean, you can't, you can't give them back, uh, whatever, uh, time they've spent in jail. You just can't do it, but you can give them the money back. That's true, but, but you can compensate them for it, and certainly for a very long time, the common law and other principles of, of jurisprudence have supported the notion that you can, you can, or either order restitution or some other compensation to account for a deprivation such as a deprivation of liberty. And so if the rule were that this is petitioner's property, and it was, it certainly was petitioner's liberty before it was, uh, properly, although, or not wrongfully although erroneously taken, its unclear why petitioner's principle wouldn't apply to that same question. One source of the difficulty we're having, it seems to me, is that the Exoneration Act was addressed to some, a situation very different than what we have here. It was addressed to, you know, someone's, uh, wrongfully imprisoned for 20 years, and the State felt some obligation to, uh, remedy that, at least in a symbolic way, uh, but in order to qualify for that, you do need to show all these other things. And, I mean, is it completely settled? I guess we have the decision from the Colorado Supreme Court that that same act applies, and this strikes me as a very different situation. Well, Mr. Chief Justice, I agree with you that the substantive right encompassed by the Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it doesn't cover the claimed right that's an issue in this case. And what the Colorado Supreme Court told us is that there is no other statutory mechanism for the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case. So, I agree with you. The Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it is not addressed to- Well, thanks for agreeing with me. I don't think that's what I said. Okay. I guess what I said is that by its, its, its, as I understand the background, at least, the act was not addressed to this specific situation. It was addressed to a different situation. And yet, the Court, below, has interpreted it far more broadly, not narrowly, but broadly, to cover a very different situation. I don't, Mr. Chief Justice, I don't think that's necessarily a fair understanding of what the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of. What the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of was, where is the statutory authority to order this type of refund? The Court hadn't really encountered this situation before, and so it looked, and it found only the Exoneration Act. So, what it concluded is that as a matter of substance, compensation like the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case is available only on a claim of actual innocence. So, I'm agreeing with you because, yes, the statute is that narrow, but the Colorado Supreme Court determined that as a matter of law, this is public property, and there must be a proper claim for compensation against state funds, and there wasn't one in this case. So, General, you said a couple of times that if we were to look at this as this is not public property once the conviction is vacated, then instead it once again becomes the criminal defendant's property, the acquitted defendant's property. If that were true, what kind of procedure would you have to set up to return the property, do you think? Just as Kagan, I think it would be fairly minimal. I think it would involve perhaps a motion filed in the district court

. Chief Justice, it wouldn't explain why there's no constitutional requirement to provide compensation for the deprivation of liberty that occurs. Well, that's, I mean, what are you going to do? I mean, you can't, you can't give them back, uh, whatever, uh, time they've spent in jail. You just can't do it, but you can give them the money back. That's true, but, but you can compensate them for it, and certainly for a very long time, the common law and other principles of, of jurisprudence have supported the notion that you can, you can, or either order restitution or some other compensation to account for a deprivation such as a deprivation of liberty. And so if the rule were that this is petitioner's property, and it was, it certainly was petitioner's liberty before it was, uh, properly, although, or not wrongfully although erroneously taken, its unclear why petitioner's principle wouldn't apply to that same question. One source of the difficulty we're having, it seems to me, is that the Exoneration Act was addressed to some, a situation very different than what we have here. It was addressed to, you know, someone's, uh, wrongfully imprisoned for 20 years, and the State felt some obligation to, uh, remedy that, at least in a symbolic way, uh, but in order to qualify for that, you do need to show all these other things. And, I mean, is it completely settled? I guess we have the decision from the Colorado Supreme Court that that same act applies, and this strikes me as a very different situation. Well, Mr. Chief Justice, I agree with you that the substantive right encompassed by the Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it doesn't cover the claimed right that's an issue in this case. And what the Colorado Supreme Court told us is that there is no other statutory mechanism for the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case. So, I agree with you. The Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it is not addressed to- Well, thanks for agreeing with me. I don't think that's what I said. Okay. I guess what I said is that by its, its, its, as I understand the background, at least, the act was not addressed to this specific situation. It was addressed to a different situation. And yet, the Court, below, has interpreted it far more broadly, not narrowly, but broadly, to cover a very different situation. I don't, Mr. Chief Justice, I don't think that's necessarily a fair understanding of what the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of. What the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of was, where is the statutory authority to order this type of refund? The Court hadn't really encountered this situation before, and so it looked, and it found only the Exoneration Act. So, what it concluded is that as a matter of substance, compensation like the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case is available only on a claim of actual innocence. So, I'm agreeing with you because, yes, the statute is that narrow, but the Colorado Supreme Court determined that as a matter of law, this is public property, and there must be a proper claim for compensation against state funds, and there wasn't one in this case. So, General, you said a couple of times that if we were to look at this as this is not public property once the conviction is vacated, then instead it once again becomes the criminal defendant's property, the acquitted defendant's property. If that were true, what kind of procedure would you have to set up to return the property, do you think? Just as Kagan, I think it would be fairly minimal. I think it would involve perhaps a motion filed in the district court. I think the only burden that could perhaps be placed on a criminal defendant would be proving the amounts that were in fact taken from the defendant, and then there would have, there could be, for example, time limits put in place, but if this truly is petitioner's property, they would have to be minimal requirements. This is what they did, they made a motion. That's correct. So, it would be similar to the route that they attempted to take, but the courts below held that they did not have authority, except in the case of Madden just for the fee. I thought you told me that it was not their property. In other words, even, but even if it was, once it's in your treasury, they can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. Chief Justice Roberts, or excuse me, Mr. Chief Justice, if this is their property, if they have a present entitlement to it, it is their property. Their property then do process requires them some procedure to get it back. And that's the question, is this as a matter of substantive law, their property, or is it public funds as the Colorado Spring Court held, and therefore there can only be a mechanism for compensation from public funds for those losses? And so that is the key question in this case. There are no further questions. Thank you, Mr. Yarger. Mr. Banner, you have four minutes. Okay, just a couple of quick things. First of all, I believe that this argument is the first time in this litigation that the State has come out and said this is, this money belongs to the State. The Colorado Supreme Court did not say that. The Court doesn't say the opposite either. It doesn't say the opposite. So what do we do about that? But the, but the, but the Colorado Supreme Court did was to skip over that question and proceed straight to the next logical question that would occur if it was how the money was our property, which is, is the Exoneration Act an adequate procedure for returning it? Because that could be consistent with the money's their property, but they have an obligation to give it back. Not really, because if the, if the, if the, if the money is the State's property, then it doesn't matter. They don't have to provide any procedure to give it back, right? So the question that the, that the, the Colorado Supreme Court actually decided to one thing, the issue that, I mean, the, the, the part of the decision that we're attacking is that this is an adequate procedure for the return of the property. Okay, that's my first point. The only reason to use the word return. I mean, I'm looking for something here that, I mean, you see what's, I'm looking for something here in the opinion that will, that I could just say, okay, see, they concede that it is this man's property

. I think the only burden that could perhaps be placed on a criminal defendant would be proving the amounts that were in fact taken from the defendant, and then there would have, there could be, for example, time limits put in place, but if this truly is petitioner's property, they would have to be minimal requirements. This is what they did, they made a motion. That's correct. So, it would be similar to the route that they attempted to take, but the courts below held that they did not have authority, except in the case of Madden just for the fee. I thought you told me that it was not their property. In other words, even, but even if it was, once it's in your treasury, they can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. Chief Justice Roberts, or excuse me, Mr. Chief Justice, if this is their property, if they have a present entitlement to it, it is their property. Their property then do process requires them some procedure to get it back. And that's the question, is this as a matter of substantive law, their property, or is it public funds as the Colorado Spring Court held, and therefore there can only be a mechanism for compensation from public funds for those losses? And so that is the key question in this case. There are no further questions. Thank you, Mr. Yarger. Mr. Banner, you have four minutes. Okay, just a couple of quick things. First of all, I believe that this argument is the first time in this litigation that the State has come out and said this is, this money belongs to the State. The Colorado Supreme Court did not say that. The Court doesn't say the opposite either. It doesn't say the opposite. So what do we do about that? But the, but the, but the Colorado Supreme Court did was to skip over that question and proceed straight to the next logical question that would occur if it was how the money was our property, which is, is the Exoneration Act an adequate procedure for returning it? Because that could be consistent with the money's their property, but they have an obligation to give it back. Not really, because if the, if the, if the, if the money is the State's property, then it doesn't matter. They don't have to provide any procedure to give it back, right? So the question that the, that the, the Colorado Supreme Court actually decided to one thing, the issue that, I mean, the, the, the part of the decision that we're attacking is that this is an adequate procedure for the return of the property. Okay, that's my first point. The only reason to use the word return. I mean, I'm looking for something here that, I mean, you see what's, I'm looking for something here in the opinion that will, that I could just say, okay, see, they concede that it is this man's property. They concede it, but I haven't found that sentence. That's my. No, unfortunately, they don't explicitly concede it. They assume it is what, is what we would say. Okay. I know that's not helpful to you. All right, the other, the other, the other, the other, the other quick point I want to make is, I just want to explain very briefly why sovereign immunity has never been thought to be, provide any bar to these refunds. And that is, we're not asking for the right to bring a new lawsuit against the State. The State already brought these suits against us when it charged Nelson and Madden with crimes, right? We're not, we're not seeking a new judgment against the State. We already have judgments in these cases. Judgments in our favor. We won, and yet the State is holding on to our money as if we lost. We're not seeking compensation. We're just seeking a refund of the money that we paid pursuant to judgments that no longer exist. Well, wait, as long as you have a minute. Can you, I mean, that's the way we are. I'm not going anywhere. There are cases that you like, the Bank of Washington versus the United States, 1832, and it says the law, what law? The common law. I believe the common law. I believe all those cases are about the common law. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Thank you. Thank you, Council. The case is submitted.

We'll hear argument first this morning in case 15, 1256 Nelson versus Colorado. Mr. Banner? Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court, when a judgment is reversed, a person who has paid money pursuant to the judgment is entitled to get the money back. That's common sense, and that has unsurprisingly been normal practice for centuries. As far as we can tell, Colorado is the first state ever to adopt a rule to the contrary. In Colorado now, when a judgment of conviction is reversed, the state keeps the defendant's money, unless the defendant files a separate civil action and can prove by clear and convincing evidence that she's actually innocent. What is the basis of the right? You said the person whose conviction is overturned has a right to be. Is it a constitutional right? What kind of right is it? It's a right under the common law of property that's existed for centuries. That it has always been the case that a successful appellant gets her money back. In this case, the money was taken from Shannon Nelson and Lewis Madden pursuant to criminal convictions. But those. It has to be constitutional. If Colorado says we don't want to follow the common law, this is not the law here. But if it's not constitutional, then what's the basis for your case? No, so here the Colorado Supreme Court did not say that this money belongs to the state of Colorado. Rather, the Colorado Supreme Court said the Exoneration Act is a good enough remedy for returning the money to Nelson and Madden. You're absolutely right, though, to say that if the Colorado Supreme Court had said, it doesn't matter what process we use because it's not their property. It's the state's property. If the Colorado Supreme Court had said that, then you're right. Then we would be having to say, making an argument that the Constitution itself gives the money, gives a right to the money to Nelson and Madden. Excuse me? Make that argument. Okay. So if Colorado, if the Colorado Supreme Court had said that this money belongs to the state rather than to Nelson and Madden, that would be tantamount to charging people money for the privilege of trying them unlawfully, right? It would be the state taking money as a result of a trial that has been reversed, a trial that was conducted unlawfully. That would. And the dissent here said something quite simple, which was the only entitlement to the money was the conviction. If the conviction has been voided, then what legal right does the state have to retain the money? We agree with that exactly. The Colorado Supreme Court, on the other hand, said, when you paid the money, we were entitled to it. So where there's a disconnect there, if they were entitled to it initially, we're still back to the operative question of why are they entitled, what is the constitutional right for you to get it? The state was entitled to the money initially because there were judgments of conviction in place, judgments of conviction that required the payment of the money. Those judgments of conviction no longer exist. They were reversed on appeal. Shannon Nelson was retried and was acquitted of all charges. Lewis Madden with convictions were reversed and the prosecutor declined to retry the case. And so while it was the state's money, while the convictions existed, once those judgments of conviction ceased to exist, at that point, it's no longer the state's money. At that point, I thought your argument was this, but what you're saying now and a lot of your brief is much more complicated. But the simple argument I thought was this. This was your client's money. It's a certain amount of dollars, OK? It was taken away from them as a result of a trial that was flawed, and therefore they were deprived of that property without due process of law. I thought that was the argument. Am I right or not? Now, if that is the argument, there are two complications that I see in your briefing. One is that you can see that they could be denied restitution for equitable reasons. Let's just take that. Where else in the law of due process would something like that come up? No, the reason why we said that is that in several of this Court's older cases, the Court describes these refunds as equitable. Now, in a garden variety, in garden variety criminal cases like this one, there would be no equitable considerations that would interfere with a refund of the money. But there are, it's possible to imagine other sorts of cases where it would. And so, for example, the Court has this Court mentioned, as we say in the reply brief, this Court mentioned an example in which an insurance case, in which a full refund would provide overcompensation for some reason to the successful appellant. And in such a case, the refund for equitable reasons would have to be scaled back. In an ordinary criminal case like ours, there's nothing like that. Those sorts of equitable considerations are very, very far from a case like this one. And, you know, Colorado top. Kallorado. That's right. And this is the basic argument. It's our money by virtue of State law, and once the conviction disappears, why doesn't the State have to proactively return the money? In other words, why is it even required for the person to bring any kind of refund action against the State? No, the State does proactively have to refund the money. There is no requirement for the successful appellant to bring an action. Rather, what the State is doing. So, your complaint is not to the nature of this action and to exactly what you have to prove. You're saying that as soon as the conviction is vacated, the State has to put a check in the mail. Well, okay. That may be a little too simple. So, in our view, the A-proper procedure would be the procedure that was followed in these cases where after, in Shannon Nelson's case, after she was acquitted, she filed a motion back in the original trial court saying, look, I've been acquitted. Please give me my money back. No, I guess I'm asking, if your theory is right, why is even that necessary? If your theory is right, it seems, I mean, you know, you might file a motion because the State hasn't done what it's supposed to do, but it seems as though the obligation on the State's part is immediately to put a check in the mail. No, that's right. That's right. That's right. And so, when that hadn't happened after several months, we filed the motions in both cases. I understood the other comp. I mean, I just said, I understood you in responding to Justice Alito to say that the State had to give the money back because they acquired it as a result of a flawed prosecution. Is that right? Right? Well, that's not true for some of the payments. You know, there's a $30 docket fee. In other words, that's not something that depends upon whether the conviction is valid or not in the normal case. Yes, well, in, in, in, under, all of these payments under Colorado law are collected only from defendants who are convicted. Including the docket. Including the docket. Right. None of these, none of these fees, charges, et cetera, are the sorts of sort of filing fees that are collected from any litigant winter loose. There's nothing like that in this case. This is all money that is contingent upon the existence of a conviction. The other complication that I see in this make-hole argument, in other words, the State took things away from you. They took property away from you and when the conviction is reversed, they have to restore you to the position you were in before the prosecution. Is this the, the restitution and all of these fees are small in comparison with the main thing that was taken away and that was, that was liberty. So if you were, argument is correct. Why shouldn't this, what, what, didn't the State, the State took away your client's liberty without due process of law? So would they be automatically entitled to be made whole in that respect? No, and the reason, the reason for that is that while there's a long historical tradition of providing refunds of monetary payments upon the reversal of a conviction, there is no comparable tradition of providing compensation for periods of lost liberty. That's why Colorado passed the examination. Exactly. Exactly. If there already was a tradition of providing compensation for lost liberty, there'd be no need for statutes. Well, if tradition, I mean, if tradition like that can defeat the argument for compensation for time wrongfully spent in prison, then can tradition defeat the argument that you make with respect to the fees and the restitution? No, because the tradition is, is, the, the, the normal practice for centuries has been to refund monetary payments that are contingent upon a, a judgment when that judgment. Okay. So the argument is tradition could do it if there were such a judgment. We have to work the opposite way. And so it's an issue. We look at the tradition, again, it seems to me for constitutional reasons, not for state law reasons. That's why I'm somewhat confused. I mean, who cares about tradition if the State says X and the tradition is Y, unless there's a constitution? No, that's right. That's right. That's right. And so tradition, tradition comes in, you know, in determining what processes do. Courts always, always look to traditions is always a factor in considering what Well, getting back to the State law for a moment, are you saying that if a State creates a right under State law, it cannot unduly complicate that right by flawed procedures under our procedural due process jurisprudence? Well, I'd say it even more simply than that. I would say that when State is holding on to property that belongs to one of its citizens, the State has an obligation to have a procedure that is adequate for returning the property. I mean, that's the error that we're complaining about in the Colorado Supreme Court below. The Colorado Supreme Court said that it was Colorado Supreme Court analyzed this as a procedural due process case. The Court said the question is, is the Exoneration Act a good enough procedure for returning this money to Nelson Edmaden? The Colorado Supreme Court applied Matthews V. Eldridge and the State cases following Matthews V. Eldridge. And the Colorado Supreme Court determined, yes, this is a good enough process for returning the money. I think your argument has moved from the simple one I started out with, which is that you're absolutely entitled to be made whole to the argument that they have to provide that we look to tradition and we have to see what sort of tradition is adequate. So what would be an adequate procedure here? I guess I don't think I'm saying anything different from what you're saying. I'm saying that what the due process clause requires is for Colorado to provide a process adequate to make defendants whole when they're convicted. So what is that process? Actually, conviction is reversed. I'm simply simply to refund the money. It's their money. Colorado can't make defendants have to approve that they're actually innocent in order to get their own money back. Let's take the act. What parts of the procedure of the act are you saying violating process? Well, the requirement of proving one's innocence in order to get one's own money back. That's the most obvious one. Q. Would seem to me that if the State had an equitable reason, it should prove it not. A. Exactly. And as I've said, the State talks a lot in very general terms about equitable principles but the State has yet to identify what equitable principle entitles the farmer. Q. Do you think a requirement to start a separate civil action comports what do you think is a required process? That's a harder question. So let's imagine a requirement that you have to file a separate civil action, but all you have to prove is that your conviction was reversed. If it was something that that ministerial may be, maybe that would satisfy due process. Although even there, I suppose it would be hard to see what purpose would be served by such an action when you can't go. Q. You have to get paid as filing fee. You'd have to engage a lawyer. And we're talking about hundreds of dollars, not even a thousand in one case. So that's right. Q. If any, it seems to me any requirement that you see to get the money back. I agree. I agree. As I was saying, you would have to be a very streamlined, some very streamlined, very easy sort of civil action, but that would be pointless. I mean, it would be hard to see what purpose would be served by requiring such an action. I'm agreeing with you. What purpose would be served by that when you can just do what a balance has been doing, successful appellance, have been doing for centuries, which is going back to the trial court and saying, okay, judgment reversed, please give us our money back. Q. As soon you apply the Matthews framework, do you agree that the court got it right, or do you think even under Matthews, the court below got it wrong? Q. Oh, no. Under Matthews, the court got it terribly wrong. I mean, the Colorado Supreme Court's application of Matthews was basically to say, do process require some kind of a hearing? Well, the Exoneration Act that gives you some kind of a hearing, so good enough. If you look at the Matthews factors, one by one, they all point very, very strongly in favor of finding the Exoneration Act an inadequate remedy. It's, first of all, this is the defendant's property, not the State's property. Second of all, this is a terrible procedure for returning property to successful appellance. The Exoneration Act was not really intended to serve that purpose. It doesn't serve that purpose at all. It's virtually insures that successful appellance aren't going to get their money back when their convictions are reversed. And finally, it's impossible to see what interest the State has in holding on to this money, right? Nelson, Shannon Nelson, she was acquitted. Lewis Madden, his convictions were reversed. There's no chance that either of these defendants will ever be reprocessed. This money will never belong to Colorado. Colorado has yet to explain what interest it has in preventing this money from the If we're writing this opinion and we begin, tradition is very important here because. Well, in the Court's due process cases, the Court has often said the tradition. That's very important. And it's that's if we're trying to define the substantive right. Right. And also in determining what process he's doing. So the fact that successful appellance have always gotten their money back. I mean, that's that is that that is the tradition that that we're invoking. And tradition is important in due process cases because, you know, in determining what what's what process is due and determining what's the law of the land. Well, what what better place to look than what the law of the land has always been? Well, so that's a different analysis than the Matthews analysis. That's right. You know, the thing about this case is that what Colorado is doing here has never been done before. So there are there is no precedent directly on point at a very high level of specificity. So we have to look to other lines of the Court's due process precedent. That's what we've done. It seems, Mr. Banner, that you could be approaching this in two ways. I mean, one is you could be claiming a substantive due process right along the lines that Colorado said you were doing and then you came back and said no. Now, if you were suggesting that you had a substantive due process, right, then surely tradition would be important. That's right. But in if you're looking at procedural due process, I would have thought that your argument is the simple one of this is property under State law. It's my property. It's your client's property. And then we apply the Matthews test to determine what kind of procedure is due to get that property back. And tradition wouldn't be any part of it. No, that's right. So if looking just at the Matthews test, you're absolutely right. The tradition would not be part of that, but the Matthews test is not the only way the Court has looked at this general class of issues. And as I said, because no State has ever done what Colorado is doing, we're trying to draw from various strands of due process precedent. One strand is the Matthews test, but another strand is the, you know, the cases like Honda Motor and so on that say, if a State takes away a procedure that has traditionally been present, traditionally been afforded, that's a pretty good sign that the State is violating due process. What did Colorado do before the Exoneration Act with respect to returning? Just gave back the money, just like every other jurisdiction. That's right. And so the novelty here is that this case got to the Colorado Supreme Court immediately after the Exoneration Act was enacted, and the Colorado Supreme Court said, well, now we have a statute that tells how money is supposed to be refunded to exonerated defendants under State law. That must be now the exclusive remedy for defendants to recover the money. But before the Exoneration Act, there was no statute governing this topic, just like in many jurisdictions, and it was just as a matter of routine practice successful appellants got their money back. Well, is that true? I mean, I still don't understand the difference between the simple argument that you're required to be made whole, and the argument that a court could deny restitution based on equitable considerations. As this Court has said, which is your argument? The automatically get it back, that's the end of it. You know, you procedure is necessary or that you could be denied of receiving the money back for equitable reasons. You automatically get it back unless there is some equitable reason that you shouldn't get it back. But what I'm trying to say is in an ordinary criminal case like this one, there is no equitable reason why you shouldn't get it back, and it's impossible, it almost to conceive of an equitable reason. The reason why- Well, what the State says that you, that the defendant has the obligation to move for a stay of the judgment of restitution when the defendant takes an appeal, and if the defendant doesn't do that, then the money is not refunded. Yeah, that's, that is impossible under State law for indigent defendants to seek a stay of monetary payments, pending appeal for two reasons. One is that you have to get a stay pending appeal. You have to post a bond in the full amount of the payment. That's way out of reach for any indigent defendant. In fact, we talked to experienced Colorado defense lawyers who say they have never heard ever of any indigent defendant seeking a stay of monetary payments, pending appeal. Our clients, indigent defendants, they couldn't have done that. Second, by statute, stays appear to be unavailable where the money is being taken from the appellants inmate accounts, which is the case here. So even if they had some sort of money outside of their inmate, they would have to be taken to account. Excuse me, I'm sorry. The money is being taken from the inmate accounts, so that's the second reason why a stay would be unavailable. I should add, yeah. Should we be differentiating between some jurisdictions that don't collect the money until the conviction is final and a conviction that's overturned on collateral review, where the possibility of money having been collected may exist. Should there be a difference in how we think about those two situations? No, because whatever the reason for the disappearance of the judgment of conviction, the key thing is that these are, these are the states only right to this money is in the judgments of conviction. Well, I have a problem because there are some cases in our jurisprudence, not in English jurisprudence, but certainly in American jurisprudence, where the payment of restitution to a third party would have been good reason, an equitable reason for the state not to have to return that money. Yeah, let me say a word about restitution. In the modern sense of restitution, restitution to protect the victims. Right, right, right, right. Restitution in Colorado is, you can only have restitution pursuant to a criminal conviction. Without a criminal conviction, there can be no restitution. There's no separate proceeding, there's no separate proof apart from the amount of restitution. Otherwise, it's just part of the sentence. What does states generally do if they've collected this money, they've paid it out to the victim, and then the conviction is overturned. Do they usually leave it the money with the victim and just take it out of their general treasury, or do states try to take it back from the victim? That, that I do not know. And the thing is, there are very few reported cases raising the issue of refunds of restitution after the reversal of a conviction. And I think the reason it must be that restitution, although restitution to victims, although quite old and principle really has only been applied in significant amounts recently. Your argument is that if, let's say there's a very substantial judgment of restitution, and the money is paid to the victims, let's say they're victims like the ones in this case, so that it's therapy, who's for abuse, and then even after the judgment has become final, if there is, if the defendant is given relief on collateral review, the State would have to, would have to compensate the defendant for all the money that was paid to the victims. That's your argument? I will agree with all of that except the word compensate, the State would have to refund the amount of money it had taken from the defendant. Remember that, I mean, as between the State and the victims, that's between, that's between the State and the victims. That's no bearing on the property rights of the due process rights of the defendant. Bear in mind that all the money the State collects from convicted defendants, whether it's a denominated restitution or a denominated anything else, all of that money, the State is spending on something. The State isn't hiding that money under a mattress, all that money even finds paid into a State's general fund. The State is spending that money on something, and so it's no excuse when you owe a debt to say, oh, geez, I'm sorry, I already spent the money on something else. Well, you don't have to make that argument to prevail in this case, do you? I think there are severe equitable problems with the hypothetical of the State having paid the victim and the victim having spent the money. No, no, you misunderstood me. The State is saying, I'm not talking about the victim spending the money. I'm meant to be talking about the State saying, well, I'm sorry, we can't, we can't, upon the reversal of a canviction, the State saying, we can't refund the money, sorry, we already dispersed it as restitution to victims. And what I'm saying is, the State disperses all the money it collects for one purpose or another, that doesn't set restitution apart from anything else. If I could reserve the balance of my time. Thank you, Mr. Banner. General Yarder. Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court. The despositive question in this case is substantive, not procedural. Petitioners are not claiming that they've been denied an opportunity to prove that they are, that they meet the substantive elements of the Colorado Exoneration Act. Instead. The argument is that that act is an inappropriate procedure, that the procedure set up by the Exoneration Act where they have to prove themselves actually innocent, is a procedure that does not comport with due process. Justice Ginsburg, if I understand Petitioner's argument appropriately, what they're saying is that they shouldn't have to prove actual innocence at all. So those procedures, because they are geared toward and focused on that inquiry, shouldn't have to apply. And what that means is what Petitioners are arguing is that they have a substantive right to automatic compensation without having to prove anything at all. And so that's why. Sotomayor, I think that that's just mistaken, Mr. General. They're saying that they have a general state law property right in the money. Now, do you disagree with that? Do you think that this is their money? No, Justice Kagan. That is the nub of the dispute. The question in this case is whether as a matter of success in the money. This is the State's money, as the Colorado Supreme Court held. You could look at Petitioner's. Why is it the State's money? Because as Petitioners acknowledged during opening argument, it was properly taken pursuant to a conviction. And the Colorado Supreme Court described this money as public funds. It never said that this is properly a conviction. But it's probably this condition on a valid conviction. And when that valid conviction goes away, it seems the most natural, obvious thing in the world to say that the State's right to that money evaporates at exactly the same moment. Why isn't that true? Justice Kagan, it's the same reason that upon reversal of the conviction, certainly the Petitioners can't be subject to that conviction anymore. They have to be released from incarceration, and they cannot be subject to continued imposition of the monetary judgment. But what due process has never held, and what this Court's decisions have not had. Kagan, I'm not talking about due process. I'm really just talking about whose money it is. Under State law, State property law, whose money is it? They say it's their money because there's no longer a valid conviction. You say, notwithstanding that the valid conviction has been reversed, it's the State's money. I want to know why. The reason why is that, well, first of all, the Colorado Supreme Court described this as public funds, and that's precisely how this Court and other courts have treated this when they encountered the issue of sovereign immunity. So, for example, the United States versus Getinger, this Court held that claims like these are not return of property type claims. They are claims that can be subject to sovereign immunity. And if that is true, it's not property of the criminal defendant after a lawful conviction has been entered. And it's just sort of described to me in sort of common sense of the terms, you know, rather than point me to a sovereign immunity case or something. But just in common sense of the terms, why is this the State's money? Kagan, it's the State's money just as it, just as the State lawfully incarcerated these defendants, and petitioners don't dispute that. The State lawfully but erroneously took the defendant's liberty away in this case. That was lawful. Same as the Court or the State lawfully took custody of and property in the States or it receives me the criminal defendants' money. And so, do you have any obligation to return the money at all, pursuant to any procedures? Could you just say, once you pay the money, we have no procedure for you to get it back. In fact, we won't give it back to you ever. It's our money, we don't have to give it back. So long as the conviction itself existed at the time that the money was taken, no, the State does not have that obligation just as it was required to pass the Exoneration Act in order to compensate criminal defendants who were erroneously but not wrongfully convicted. Otherwise, they have to prove that they meet the elements of, for example, a constitutional tort that they were wronged in some way. So if you said, instead of $128 for this, the $30, if you said everybody who is convicted owes the State $10,000, and you don't get it back if you're later, if the conviction is later overturned. That is the rule that this Court has adhered to and that that is precisely the implication of courts that when deciding these claims look for waivers of sovereign immunity, because the assumption is that the deprivation of both the liberty and the property at the time of conviction is lawful and that the property passes into public funds. Kagan, it was Mr. Banner wrong then when he told us that before the Exoneration Act Colorado, like every other State, just gave the money back. He is, that is incorrect, Your Honor. What do Colorado do? Well, respect to monetary sanctions for the Exoneration Act. They didn't have authority to give it back. One example I can give, and there aren't many, as people versus no, it's a Colorado Court of Appeals case from 2005, where the Court declined to order what they described as a refund of amounts charged for probation, even though that conviction was later overturned. Now, the chief case they rely upon is Tolin versus Stroll. It's a Colorado case from 1961, and the Court there did order refunds of the fines, but in that case, and as interpreted by the Colorado Supreme Court in this case, there was specific wrongful conduct that violated the Constitution on the part of the Justice of the Peace that presided over that case. So as the Colorado Supreme Court understands it, that was a case about wrongful conduct on the part of someone adjudicating the case, rather than merely an erroneous conviction that requires the status quo to be restored after that conviction. Is there anything that there were courts that lower courts that routinely ordered the refund of these monies? I am, Justice Sotomayor. In call- I think in the briefing, we're pointed to any number of situations in which lower courts did order the- They're- They're automatically ordered the money to go back. Justice Sotomayor, we're not denying that there are certainly some courts that have done so, but there are many courts that do not treat these claims as return of property claims. They treat them as claims for compensation against the State for which a waiver of sovereign immunity is required. That's to me a question of labels. And if you have no conviction to justify the payment of money because it's been voided, why is it your money now? Just simply because you collected it beforehand, even though the basis for the collection is wrong. Well, as petitioners, how about if you took his car? Well, that would be a four-fature situation in their other- Why isn't this comparable to four-fature? Well, in fact, the four-fature proceedings in some cases provide a useful analogy. If the district court orders four-fature and a- someone with an ownership interest in that property does not properly appeal or seek a stay of the disposition of that four-fitted property. Let's go to the stay. Could you, can you honestly say to me that if this defendant had moved for a stay that the trial court would have granted one? And how many cases do you think of the thousands of convictions that Colorado goes through would a court order a stay? The Justice Sotomayor, you're correct not many, as the requirement is that there must be a serious question of substance. And if that is the case, then the district court can order a stay, both execution of the judgment of incarceration and- So for an ample procedural quagmire you're throwing on courts below. The number of vacated convictions are tiny. The number of proceedings you want now with stay motions to be determined by trial courts is hundreds, if not thousands. That's what you're advocating. I'm sorry, Justice Sotomayor. You want every trial court to decide whether a stay is appropriate. No, I'm just describing what current procedure provides in terms of stays. But the issue and this question. Suppose we have a criminal trial. The jury comes in with a verdict of guilty. And then the trial judge said judgment vacated there was insufficient evidence to convict. In that case, the defendant would not owe any fees to the state, right? That's correct, you're wrong. But the judge instead says there was sufficient evidence appeal. The Court of Appeals then says there was insufficient evidence, so we vacate the conviction. In that case, all that money can be kept by the State. What's the difference whether the finding was made by the trial judge or by an appellate court? The difference is that at that time there was a lawful conviction in place, and that is what's required. And that's why the question in this case is whether this is a return of property that is properly thought of as the criminal defendants or it's a claim for compensation. Just as in United States versus Gettinger where the conviction was overturned because the statute on which it was based was unconstitutionally vague, the Court, this Court denied compensation because there was no waiver of sovereign immunity. So you're not talking about compensation, you're talking about getting money by? Well, that's the Justice Ginsburg. That's the question, is this properly considered under State law or under the Constitution as a substantive matter, property of the criminal defendant, or is it not? And what is it? It says in the page 27 of their brief, they have three cases, when going back to 1832 of this Court that says the law is that when you reverse the judgment in a civil case, I wouldn't know why I would apply to as well to criminal, the person on the other side gets the money back. And now, it doesn't say what law. And moreover, you heard your brother here say, well, Colorado Supreme Court said that this wasn't a question here of whose property it was. It was a question of the remedy, the property belonging to the criminal defendant. Now, so what do you say about those cases? Two, what did the Colorado Supreme Court say as a matter of property law? Yes, Justice Breyer. First of all, the cases, there are cases that say upon reversal of an erroneous judgment, there can be restitution, but two. Say, can, it says the law raises an obligation to the one who has received the benefit of the erroneous judgment to make restitution to the other party. Well, it creates an obligation, doesn't say may. Respectfully, Justice Breyer, some courts use that specific formulation. This court used that. This court likewise in two cases. In 1832, in two cases, Justice Breyer, Atlantic Coastline Railroad, which is a Justice Cardozo case from 1935, the United States versus Morgan, which is a case from 1939, the court overturned an order from the district court and yet declined to provide a refund because what the court said is that it had to remand for a hearing on the merits of the substantive dispute. One of Petitioner's own sources, a deep question. And what does the Colorado, did the Colorado Supreme Court say this is his money, but we don't have a remedy? Did it say this is our money and we don't have to have a remedy? What did it say? It said that these amounts are considered public funds, such that a statute is required providing that courts may draw on public funds to award these amounts. So what the Colorado Supreme Court necessarily decided was that this is not under state law property of the criminal defendant. But that's a question. It seems to me that you keep talking about compensation, the issue's restitution. And under normal, equitable principles of restitution, it in fact still is the property of the person from whom the money has been taken away. And I wonder if your analysis has to be adjusted when you appreciate that it's not compensation, that's not sort of the normal state, give us some money. Under equitable principles, it's state, give me my money back. Yes, Justice or Mr. Chief Justice, that is the question. Is under the historical treatment of this issue. Is this property properly considered a return of money? The courts do say restitution. They also say that it is a claim of unjust enrichment that depends on factors, including the merits of the case. One of Petitioners' own sources, a tainture article. As we go by what this Court said in 1832, which seems like historical tradition, suppose I take that, unless you give me a reason not to, as stating what the law is. That's what it says. So what's your response to that? My response to that, Justice Breyer, is I respectfully, I don't think that's exactly what the law says. If the law says it, if Petitioners establish a substantive due process right to this money back, we agree with them. Caller out a law doesn't vindicate that particular substantive interest, and we're not arguing that that. I know the issue, I've never known us to wonder or call it a substantive due process right to own money. Money is property. We all have a right to own our property, correct? Yes, Justice Sommaiorin. So I'm a little confused by what you're asking for. They're saying it's my money. We either agree with that or don't. If it is their money, then you need to do a procedure that comports with due process, correct? That's correct. And you don't deny that. I don't deny that, no. And so the question is whether under either state law, this is properly considered How about we borrow from double jeopardy? Once the, once the judgment is void, you no longer have a basis to that property. It's theirs. They had, it was their money to begin with. The only basis you had to collect it or keep it was a constitutional conviction. Once it's voided, you have no basis to keep the money. And Justice Sommaiorin, I think that that wouldn't necessarily explain cases like Getinger from 1980s, 1927 when this Court denied that kind of a remedy or X Part A Morris is another example where the Court ordered that certain forfeited property be returned. But the Court said the Court has no authority to order the United States property that had been placed in the United States to refund. So that's the question is- Kagan, can I go back to what, I'm sorry, I interrupt you, midstream. That's the, you said that's the question, is there something big was coming up? I think Justice Kagan probably said it before. It's just a question of whether this is treated as a return of property or a claim on compensation. Okay. So you said to Justice Sommaiorin, you said we agree that if this were their money, we would have to refund it in normal ways consistent with procedural due process. Yes, Justice Kagan. Okay. So it really all does depend on whether we think it's their money or it's your money. That's correct. So if this were your money, on this, on the simple theory of, there once was a conviction, it once was valid, we collected the money at that time, and that makes it our money going forward forever and ever, no matter what happens to the conviction. If that's your theory, it's not only true, as the Chief Justice said, that you wouldn't have to provide any remedy or any process for getting that money back, right? You could just keep it and say, doesn't you can prove your innocence? You can not prove your innocence too bad. It's our money. You agree with that. I think you said that to the Chief. That's correct, Justice Kagan. And it would also be true, I would think, that even if that conviction were improperly gained, not just in the sense that it was later vacated, but let's say it was the state's fault that that conviction occurred. In other words, let's say, oh, I don't know. There was a Brady violation or something like that. It would still be your money. Justice Kagan, in that, that actually neatly illustrates the decisions that states like Colorado have to make before the Exoneration Act, for example. Criminal defendants whose convictions were overturned for error and they were actually innocent had no remedy, except if they proved some sort of a wrong, such as the one you're describing, then they could sue for a constitutional tort. In fact, a significant case from Colorado had exactly that. A criminal defendant sued for a Brady violation and received millions of dollars in compensation. But what the state is not required to do is merely because the conviction is overturned, provide compensation for losses that occur attendant to a conviction that is overturned. And is your analysis why doesn't it apply to criminal fines? In other words, the fine for whatever the offense is is what being owed to $10,000. In other words, it's not money that they paid fees along with the process. It's the end of the process. You're convicted. You pay a $10,000 fine. Why don't when the conviction is overturned, why don't you say, well, you know, this is our money now. It's in the state treasury. You can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. But Mr. Chief Justice, two points, these amounts here are not purely punitive. So that precise question isn't presented, but our line does not depend on the difference between punitive fines and payments such as these and neither have passed. You say your line doesn't depend. Does that mean you could apply this rule to fines? Yes, Justice. Are you? Are fines in Colorado unredeemable once you put them in the treasury? As we understand the Colorado Supreme Court's decision, yes, just as this Court held and get injured, that was a fine, that was that the Court did not repay even though the conviction was invalidated for constitutional reasons, and the reason the Court didn't order the fine repaid was because of sovereign immunity. So what happens then? I mean, I grant you you have a tough side of this argument. It doesn't seem very fair, but you're doing. But the, the, the, you have a corporate criminal defendant. You can't put him in jail. And, and so what they do is they find the corporation $15 million. And then the States is, by the way, why appeal? If you win, we're not going to give you the money back, as the Chief Justice said, but we'll, we'll, uh, search sovereign immunity. Now there's something wrong with that. I'm trying to put my finger on. Justice prior, I, if there's something wrong with that, then there was something wrong with those long, uh, the, the cases decided previously. And this is, maybe they were right in 1832, and then they went off on a wrong track. You're not, it doesn't, maybe those cases were wrong. I, I don't know. I have to go read them and figure it out, but, but it can't be that there's no point to an appeal because we're not going to give you back the fine. Well, now that, that, I stopped right there, and then I'm asking, I don't know what, I have to ask him, and that's why his brief has several different arguments. Because it's hard to figure out, but there's, okay, you want to say anything in response to this question? Just as Breyer, I understand what you're struggling with. We, we struggle with it as well. But the, the, the long Colorado supported by decisions of this Court and others, uh, in the 1800s and early 1900s, suggests that this is a question of whether the State has decided to provide this kind of compensation. And if the Court rules that this is a matter of substantive procedural, or excuse me, substantive right under the Constitution, I think you do encounter very significant problems about why compensation is an awarded for the serious deprivation of liberty that occurs. Why does it, why does it matter who owns this money at this time under Colorado law? This was the defendant's money, and it was taken away from them. So if it, you say that at some point it ceased to be their money and it became the State's money. But then you have to show that it was taken away, a pursuant to due process, a consistent with due process. Yes, and the due process is, as, as petitioners admit, and they did so below in their petitions for a year into the Colorado Supreme Court. They said that the, the deprivations of their liberty and their property, uh, support of the imposition of cost fees and restitution. I believe my friend, Mr. Banner, said it again today. So that is the due process that led to the depraved. Well, how come the conviction, how come the conviction have been reversed if they were convicted, uh, consistent with due process? Uh, you're on a, there were errors, there were errors in these trials, but the question is, um, whether there was process sufficient to allow the conviction to attach, and certainly petitioners don't argue otherwise, if there were defects sufficient enough that this was a wrongful deprivation of liberty. For example, um, like the manual versus the city of Jolietk case, this Court encountered, there would be a claim for compensation due to a wrongful defect in the due process, in the procedures that led to that deprivation. But the question here, there was no wrongful conduct that occurred. There was an error that occurred. And the way that this course precedents have treated that is not as a return for property, but as a claim for compensation. Why is it an violation of the taking clause? For the same so- I have a property shall not be taken without just compensation. Can I ask you any procedure or process, just give me just compensation? Chief Justice, or, or, Mr. Chief Justice, um, that's why the, the tax cases that petitioner cite don't apply here, either. That's the precise issue there where there is simply no process given before, um, the taking occurs. Here, the criminal process supported the conviction, and that was an appropriate conviction at the time it was entered. And again, if that were true, uh, Mr. Chief Justice, it wouldn't explain why there's no constitutional requirement to provide compensation for the deprivation of liberty that occurs. Well, that's, I mean, what are you going to do? I mean, you can't, you can't give them back, uh, whatever, uh, time they've spent in jail. You just can't do it, but you can give them the money back. That's true, but, but you can compensate them for it, and certainly for a very long time, the common law and other principles of, of jurisprudence have supported the notion that you can, you can, or either order restitution or some other compensation to account for a deprivation such as a deprivation of liberty. And so if the rule were that this is petitioner's property, and it was, it certainly was petitioner's liberty before it was, uh, properly, although, or not wrongfully although erroneously taken, its unclear why petitioner's principle wouldn't apply to that same question. One source of the difficulty we're having, it seems to me, is that the Exoneration Act was addressed to some, a situation very different than what we have here. It was addressed to, you know, someone's, uh, wrongfully imprisoned for 20 years, and the State felt some obligation to, uh, remedy that, at least in a symbolic way, uh, but in order to qualify for that, you do need to show all these other things. And, I mean, is it completely settled? I guess we have the decision from the Colorado Supreme Court that that same act applies, and this strikes me as a very different situation. Well, Mr. Chief Justice, I agree with you that the substantive right encompassed by the Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it doesn't cover the claimed right that's an issue in this case. And what the Colorado Supreme Court told us is that there is no other statutory mechanism for the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case. So, I agree with you. The Exoneration Act is very narrow, and it is not addressed to- Well, thanks for agreeing with me. I don't think that's what I said. Okay. I guess what I said is that by its, its, its, as I understand the background, at least, the act was not addressed to this specific situation. It was addressed to a different situation. And yet, the Court, below, has interpreted it far more broadly, not narrowly, but broadly, to cover a very different situation. I don't, Mr. Chief Justice, I don't think that's necessarily a fair understanding of what the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of. What the Colorado Supreme Court was thinking of was, where is the statutory authority to order this type of refund? The Court hadn't really encountered this situation before, and so it looked, and it found only the Exoneration Act. So, what it concluded is that as a matter of substance, compensation like the kind of compensation that petitioners are seeking in this case is available only on a claim of actual innocence. So, I'm agreeing with you because, yes, the statute is that narrow, but the Colorado Supreme Court determined that as a matter of law, this is public property, and there must be a proper claim for compensation against state funds, and there wasn't one in this case. So, General, you said a couple of times that if we were to look at this as this is not public property once the conviction is vacated, then instead it once again becomes the criminal defendant's property, the acquitted defendant's property. If that were true, what kind of procedure would you have to set up to return the property, do you think? Just as Kagan, I think it would be fairly minimal. I think it would involve perhaps a motion filed in the district court. I think the only burden that could perhaps be placed on a criminal defendant would be proving the amounts that were in fact taken from the defendant, and then there would have, there could be, for example, time limits put in place, but if this truly is petitioner's property, they would have to be minimal requirements. This is what they did, they made a motion. That's correct. So, it would be similar to the route that they attempted to take, but the courts below held that they did not have authority, except in the case of Madden just for the fee. I thought you told me that it was not their property. In other words, even, but even if it was, once it's in your treasury, they can't get it back because of sovereign immunity. Chief Justice Roberts, or excuse me, Mr. Chief Justice, if this is their property, if they have a present entitlement to it, it is their property. Their property then do process requires them some procedure to get it back. And that's the question, is this as a matter of substantive law, their property, or is it public funds as the Colorado Spring Court held, and therefore there can only be a mechanism for compensation from public funds for those losses? And so that is the key question in this case. There are no further questions. Thank you, Mr. Yarger. Mr. Banner, you have four minutes. Okay, just a couple of quick things. First of all, I believe that this argument is the first time in this litigation that the State has come out and said this is, this money belongs to the State. The Colorado Supreme Court did not say that. The Court doesn't say the opposite either. It doesn't say the opposite. So what do we do about that? But the, but the, but the Colorado Supreme Court did was to skip over that question and proceed straight to the next logical question that would occur if it was how the money was our property, which is, is the Exoneration Act an adequate procedure for returning it? Because that could be consistent with the money's their property, but they have an obligation to give it back. Not really, because if the, if the, if the, if the money is the State's property, then it doesn't matter. They don't have to provide any procedure to give it back, right? So the question that the, that the, the Colorado Supreme Court actually decided to one thing, the issue that, I mean, the, the, the part of the decision that we're attacking is that this is an adequate procedure for the return of the property. Okay, that's my first point. The only reason to use the word return. I mean, I'm looking for something here that, I mean, you see what's, I'm looking for something here in the opinion that will, that I could just say, okay, see, they concede that it is this man's property. They concede it, but I haven't found that sentence. That's my. No, unfortunately, they don't explicitly concede it. They assume it is what, is what we would say. Okay. I know that's not helpful to you. All right, the other, the other, the other, the other, the other quick point I want to make is, I just want to explain very briefly why sovereign immunity has never been thought to be, provide any bar to these refunds. And that is, we're not asking for the right to bring a new lawsuit against the State. The State already brought these suits against us when it charged Nelson and Madden with crimes, right? We're not, we're not seeking a new judgment against the State. We already have judgments in these cases. Judgments in our favor. We won, and yet the State is holding on to our money as if we lost. We're not seeking compensation. We're just seeking a refund of the money that we paid pursuant to judgments that no longer exist. Well, wait, as long as you have a minute. Can you, I mean, that's the way we are. I'm not going anywhere. There are cases that you like, the Bank of Washington versus the United States, 1832, and it says the law, what law? The common law. I believe the common law. I believe all those cases are about the common law. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Thank you. Thank you, Council. The case is submitted