Mumin v. Frakes ( 2017 )


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    02/02/2018 01:12 AM CST
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    MUMIN v. FRAKES
    Cite as 
    298 Neb. 381
    Dukhan Mumin, appellant, v. Scott Frakes, director,
    Nebraska Department of Correctional Services,
    and Brian Gage, warden, Tecumseh State
    Correctional Institution, appellees,
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed December 15, 2017.   No. S-16-327.
    1.	 Affidavits: Appeal and Error. A district court’s denial of in forma pau-
    peris status is reviewed de novo on the record based on the transcript of
    the hearing or written statement of the court.
    2.	 Statutes: Affidavits. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2301.02 (Reissue 2016) con-
    templates only two circumstances under which a court may deny leave
    to proceed in forma pauperis, assuming the application and affidavit
    is proper: (1) when the evidentiary hearing shows the applicant has
    sufficient funds to pay costs, fees, or security and (2) when the court
    concludes the applicant is asserting legal positions which are frivolous
    or malicious.
    3.	 Affidavits. If the basis for denial of in forma pauperis status is frivo-
    lousness, the court must provide a written statement of its reasons, find-
    ings, and conclusions.
    4.	 Constitutional Law: Statutes: Affidavits: Appeal and Error. The in
    forma pauperis statutes contemplate two circumstances under which
    a court has no authority to deny a proper application and affidavit to
    proceed in forma pauperis. The first circumstance is expressly laid out
    in statute: A court shall not deny an in forma pauperis application on the
    basis that the applicant’s legal positions are frivolous or malicious if to
    do so would deny the applicant his or her constitutional right to appeal
    in a felony case. The second circumstance is one which this court has
    found to be implicit in the statutory scheme: Because an applicant has a
    statutory right to interlocutory appellate review of an order denying an
    in forma pauperis application, a court may not deny an application to
    proceed in forma pauperis when the applicant is seeking to appeal from
    an order denying an earlier in forma pauperis application.
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    MUMIN v. FRAKES
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    5.	 Statutes: Affidavits: Appeal and Error. Although the in forma pau-
    peris statutes give a trial court the authority to deny an application
    requested to commence, prosecute, defend, or appeal a case in forma
    pauperis if the court finds the applicant has sufficient funds or the legal
    positions being asserted therein are frivolous or malicious, a trial court
    does not have the same authority once an in forma pauperis applica-
    tion is denied and the applicant seeks interlocutory appellate review of
    that denial.
    6.	 Affidavits: Appeal and Error. When an application to proceed in forma
    pauperis is denied by the trial court and the applicant seeks leave to pro-
    ceed in forma pauperis to obtain appellate review of that denial, a trial
    court does not have the authority to issue an order that would interfere
    with such appellate review.
    Petition for further review from the Court of Appeals,
    R iedmann, Bishop, and A rterburn, Judges, on appeal thereto
    from the District Court for Johnson County, Daniel E. Bryan,
    Jr., Judge. Judgment of Court of Appeals reversed, and cause
    remanded with directions.
    Dukhan Mumin, pro se.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and James D. Smith
    for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Wright, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy,
    K elch, and Funke, JJ.
    Stacy, J.
    Dukhan Mumin seeks further review of a Nebraska Court
    of Appeals opinion addressing his successive appeals from
    district court orders denying successive applications to pro-
    ceed in forma pauperis (IFP). On further review, we clarify
    the procedure trial courts should follow in ruling on succes-
    sive applications to proceed IFP, as well as the procedure
    appellate courts should follow in reviewing successive appeals
    from the denial of IFP applications. We ultimately reverse the
    decision of the Court of Appeals and remand the matter with
    specific directions.
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    MUMIN v. FRAKES
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    298 Neb. 381
    I. BACKGROUND
    In 2013, Mumin was convicted of possession of cocaine.
    He was found to be a habitual criminal and was sentenced
    to imprisonment for a term of 10 to 20 years. His conviction
    and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal to the Court of
    Appeals in an unpublished memorandum opinion in case No.
    A-13-783 filed on June 6, 2014.
    1. IFP A pplications
    In March 2016, Mumin filed a pro se petition for writ
    of habeas corpus in the district court for Johnson County,
    Nebraska. Along with the petition, he filed an affidavit and
    application for leave to proceed IFP. The district court denied
    the IFP application, finding the legal positions Mumin advanced
    in his habeas petition were frivolous.
    Mumin filed a timely notice of appeal from the order deny-
    ing his IFP application (first appeal). In lieu of the statutory
    docket fee on appeal,1 he filed an application and affidavit
    to proceed IFP on appeal. The district court denied Mumin’s
    application to proceed IFP on appeal, reasoning again that his
    habeas petition was frivolous.
    Mumin then timely appealed from the district court’s order
    denying his application to proceed IFP on appeal (second
    appeal). The Clerk of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals
    docketed both the first and second appeals under the same
    case number.
    2. Court of A ppeals’ Opinion
    In a memorandum opinion,2 the Court of Appeals addressed
    Mumin’s successive IFP appeals using the procedure we out-
    lined in State v. Carter.3 First, the Court of Appeals addressed
    the second appeal and concluded it had jurisdiction over that
    1
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 25-1912 and 25-1916 (Reissue 2016).
    2
    Mumin v. Frakes, No. A-16-327, 
    2017 WL 672286
    (Neb. App. Feb. 21,
    2017) (selected for posting to court website).
    3
    State v. Carter, 
    292 Neb. 16
    , 
    870 N.W.2d 641
    (2015).
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    appeal, because Mumin had filed a timely notice of appeal
    from the order denying IFP on appeal, accompanied by a
    proper poverty affidavit and IFP application. On the merits of
    the second appeal, the Court of Appeals analyzed, de novo on
    the record, whether the district court correctly concluded the
    underlying habeas petition was frivolous. It concluded Mumin
    was asserting a frivolous legal position in his habeas peti-
    tion and, thus, affirmed the district court’s order denying IFP
    on appeal.
    The Court of Appeals then held the first appeal under
    submission to give Mumin an opportunity to pay the statu-
    tory docket fee on appeal, reasoning that “pursuant to [Neb.
    Rev. Stat.] § 25-2301.02(1) [(Reissue 2016)], we will not
    have jurisdiction of the first appeal unless Mumin pays the
    statutory docket fee within 30 days of the date of release of
    this opinion.”4
    Mumin timely filed a petition for further review, which
    we granted.
    II. ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Mumin assigns it was error to conclude his habeas petition
    was frivolous.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] A district court’s denial of IFP status is reviewed de
    novo on the record based on the transcript of the hearing or
    written statement of the court.5
    IV. ANALYSIS
    We granted further review to address the proper procedure
    for trial and appellate courts to follow when considering suc-
    cessive applications to proceed IFP and successive appeals
    from orders denying IFP. Mumin’s appeal involves what has
    4
    Mumin v. Frakes, supra note 2, 
    2017 WL 672286
    at *3.
    5
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2301.02(2) (Reissue 2016); State v. Carter, supra
    note 3.
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    become a relatively common factual scenario: (1) A trial court
    denies an IFP application to commence a case; (2) the appli-
    cant appeals the denial of IFP and, in lieu of the statutory
    docket fee on appeal, asks to proceed IFP on appeal; (3) the
    trial court denies the application to proceed IFP on appeal; and
    (4) the applicant then appeals the second IFP denial.6 In this
    common example, the potential cycle of successive IFP denials
    and appeals is seemingly endless.
    Because successive IFP denials, and appeals therefrom,
    strain the limited resources of our judicial system and delay
    final resolution of matters brought before the court, we take
    this opportunity to clarify certain aspects of the IFP process
    which appear to have generated confusion in both the trial
    and appellate courts. We consider two questions on further
    review: (1) When does a trial court have authority to deny
    an application to proceed IFP on appeal? (2) When presented
    with successive IFP appeals, should an appellate court follow
    the procedure articulated in Glass v. Kenney7 or the procedure
    articulated in State v. Carter?8
    To answer these questions, we begin with an overview of
    the statutory IFP scheme. We then explain and contrast our
    holdings in Glass and Carter, after which we analyze Mumin’s
    successive IFP appeals under the Glass procedure. Finally, we
    highlight an additional consideration for trial courts presented
    with IFP applications in cases such as Mumin’s, where no pre-
    payment of fees or costs was required.9
    1. IFP Statutes
    Nebraska’s IFP statutes are codified at Neb. Rev. Stat.
    §§ 25-2301 to 25-2310 (Reissue 2016). Those statutes define
    IFP as “the permission given by the court for a party to
    6
    See Glass v. Kenney, 
    268 Neb. 704
    , 
    687 N.W.2d 907
    (2004).
    7
    Id.
    8
    State v. Carter, supra note 3.
    9
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-2824 (Reissue 2016).
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    proceed without prepayment of fees and costs or security.”10
    The IFP statutes authorize any county or state court, except
    the Workers’ Compensation Court, to authorize “the com-
    mencement, prosecution, defense, or appeal therein, of a civil
    or criminal case in forma pauperis.”11 The IFP statutes define
    “[c]ase” to include “any suit, action, or proceeding.”12
    The requirements of an IFP application are set out in stat-
    ute. An application to proceed IFP “shall include an affidavit
    stating that the affiant is unable to pay the fees and costs or
    give security required to proceed with the case, the nature of
    the action, defense, or appeal, and the affiant’s belief that he
    or she is entitled to redress.”13 We have not construed this
    language to mandate separate poverty affidavits and IFP appli-
    cations; instead, we hold that as long as the poverty affidavit
    itself includes an indication that the party is applying for IFP
    status, § 25-2301.01 does not require that a separate IFP appli-
    cation be filed in addition to the poverty affidavit.14
    Assuming a proper IFP application and affidavit is filed,
    the IFP statutes mandate that leave to proceed IFP “shall be
    granted unless there is an objection that the party filing the
    application (a) has sufficient funds to pay costs, fees, or secu-
    rity or (b) is asserting legal positions which are frivolous or
    malicious.”15 An objection may be raised by “any interested
    person” or by the court on its own motion.16 An objection
    claiming that an applicant has sufficient funds or is asserting
    frivolous or malicious legal positions must be made within 30
    days after the IFP application is filed, but an objection claim-
    ing that the IFP application was fraudulent may be made at any
    10
    § 25-2301(2).
    11
    § 25-2301.01.
    12
    § 25-2301(1).
    13
    § 25-2301.01.
    14
    State v. Campbell, 
    260 Neb. 1021
    , 
    620 N.W.2d 750
    (2001).
    15
    § 25-2301.02(1).
    16
    
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    time.17 When an objection is filed, the court must conduct an
    evidentiary hearing on the objection, except when the objection
    is on the court’s own motion on grounds the applicant is assert-
    ing legal positions which are frivolous or malicious.18
    [2,3] Section 25-2301.02 contemplates only two circum-
    stances under which a court may deny leave to proceed IFP,
    assuming the application and affidavit is proper: (1) when the
    evidentiary hearing shows the applicant has sufficient funds to
    pay costs, fees, or security and (2) when the court concludes
    the applicant is asserting legal positions which are frivolous or
    malicious.19 If the basis for denying IFP is frivolousness, the
    court must provide a written statement of its reasons, findings,
    and conclusions.20
    [4] Additionally, the IFP statutory scheme contemplates
    two circumstances under which a court has no authority to
    deny a proper application and affidavit to proceed IFP. The
    first circumstance is expressly laid out in § 25-2301.02(1):
    A court “shall not deny” an IFP application on the basis that
    the applicant’s legal positions are frivolous or malicious if
    to do so would deny the applicant his or her constitutional
    right to appeal in a felony case. The second circumstance
    is one which this court has found to be implicit in the IFP
    statutory scheme: Because an applicant has a statutory right
    to interlocutory appellate review of an order denying an IFP
    application,21 a court does not have authority to interfere with
    such appellate review by denying a request to proceed IFP in
    order to obtain appellate review of an order denying an earlier
    IFP application.22
    17
    
    Id. 18 Id.
    19
    
    Id. 20 Id.
    21
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6; Jacob v. Schlichtman, 
    261 Neb. 169
    , 
    622 N.W.2d 852
    (2001).
    22
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
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    Finally, under the IFP statutory scheme, when an IFP appli-
    cation is denied, the applicant has two choices: (1) to proceed
    with the matter upon payment of fees, costs, or security23 or
    (2) to appeal the order denying IFP.24 If the applicant elects to
    appeal from the denial of IFP, he or she may ask the court for a
    transcript of the IFP hearing and the court is required by statute
    to “order the transcript to be prepared and the cost shall be paid
    by the county in the same manner as other claims are paid.”25
    For the sake of completeness, we also note that IFP applica-
    tions filed by prisoners seeking IFP status to file a civil action
    are subject to an additional statute, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-3401
    (Reissue 2016), but that statute does not apply to habeas corpus
    relief 26 and is not relevant to the instant appeal.
    2. Successive IFP A ppeals
    Our modern IFP jurisprudence has articulated two different
    procedures for appellate courts to follow when reviewing suc-
    cessive appeals involving the denial of IFP. Generally speak-
    ing, when the first appeal is from an order denying a request
    to proceed IFP, the procedure on appeal is set out in Glass
    v. Kenney.27 But when the first appeal is not from an order
    denying IFP, but instead is from a judgment or final order, the
    proper appellate review procedure is set out in State v. Carter.28
    We discuss both cases, and procedures, below.
    (a) Glass v. Kenney
    Glass v. Kenney,29 decided in 2004, involved the same
    factual situation present in the instant appeals. An inmate
    23
    § 25-2301.02(1).
    24
    § 25-2301.02(2); Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
    25
    § 25-2301.02(2).
    26
    § 25-3401(1)(a).
    27
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
    28
    State v. Carter, supra note 3.
    29
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
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    filed an application and affidavit to proceed IFP in connec-
    tion with filing a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus.
    The trial court denied the IFP application finding the allega-
    tions in the habeas petition were frivolous. The inmate filed
    a notice of appeal from the order denying IFP (first appeal)
    and filed therewith an application and affidavit to proceed IFP
    on appeal. The trial court denied the application to proceed
    IFP on appeal, reasoning again that the habeas petition was
    frivolous. The inmate then filed a notice of appeal from the
    second IFP denial (second appeal), along with another appli-
    cation and affidavit to proceed IFP on appeal. The first appeal
    and second appeal were docketed separately, but eventually
    were consolidated.
    The State argued there was no appellate jurisdiction over the
    inmate’s second appeal, because he had not paid the statutory
    docket fee.30 We rejected this argument based on the language
    of the IFP statutes and our prior case law. Specifically, we
    found that when an application to proceed IFP is denied, the
    applicant may “either proceed with the trial action or appeal
    the ruling denying [IFP] status.”31 We emphasized that under
    § 25-2301.02, there is a “statutory right of interlocutory appel-
    late review of a decision denying [IFP] eligibility.”32 Thus,
    we held that the appeal from the denial of the application to
    proceed IFP on appeal was a “statutorily authorized inter-
    locutory appeal which we will entertain if other jurisdictional
    requirements are met.”33 We explained that in an appeal from
    a denial of IFP status on appeal, a poverty affidavit serves as
    a substitute for the docket fee otherwise required on appeal, so
    an appellate court obtains jurisdiction over the appeal “‘upon
    the timely filing of a notice of appeal and a proper [IFP]
    30
    See § 25-1912.
    31
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 
    6, 268 Neb. at 709
    , 687 N.W.2d at 911, citing
    Martin v. McGinn, 
    265 Neb. 403
    , 
    657 N.W.2d 217
    (2003).
    32
    
    Id., citing Jacob
    v. Schlichtman, supra note 21.
    33
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
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    application and affidavit.’”34 We concluded we had jurisdiction
    over the second appeal, because the inmate had filed a timely
    notice of appeal, a proper application to proceed IFP, and a
    poverty affidavit.
    After concluding we had jurisdiction over the second
    appeal, we addressed the merits of that appeal. We ultimately
    concluded the trial court erred in denying the inmate’s appli-
    cation to proceed IFP on appeal, because doing so effectively
    denied his statutory right to interlocutory appellate review of
    an order denying IFP. Because the trial court was “without
    authority” to issue an order interfering with that right,35 we
    resolved the second appeal by reversing and vacating the
    trial court’s order denying the application to proceed IFP
    on appeal.
    After resolving the second appeal, Glass addressed the mer-
    its of the first appeal. In the first appeal, the inmate challenged
    the trial court’s denial of his original application to proceed
    IFP filed along with his habeas petition. Glass reviewed the
    legal positions asserted in the habeas petition, found they were
    frivolous, and concluded the trial court had not erred in deny-
    ing the inmate’s first IFP application on that basis. Ultimately,
    the resolution of Glass was that the second appeal was reversed
    and vacated in order to reach the first appeal, and the first
    appeal was affirmed.
    (b) State v. Carter
    In State v. Carter,36 decided in 2015, we applied the basic
    rationale of Glass to slightly different procedural facts. In
    Carter, the inmate filed a pro se motion for postconviction
    relief, which the trial court denied without conducting an
    evidentiary hearing. The inmate then filed an appeal from the
    order denying postconviction relief (first appeal) and, in lieu
    34
    Id. at 
    709, 687 N.W.2d at 911
    , quoting State v. Jones, 
    264 Neb. 671
    , 
    650 N.W.2d 798
    (2002).
    35
    
    Id. at 710,
    687 N.W.2d at 912.
    36
    State v. Carter, supra note 3.
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    of the statutory docket fee, filed an application and affidavit
    to proceed IFP on appeal. The trial court denied the IFP appli-
    cation, reasoning the underlying postconviction motion was
    frivolous. At that point, the inmate had 30 days to either pay
    the statutory docket fee and proceed with the appeal or appeal
    the denial of IFP.37 The inmate chose to file a notice of appeal
    from the order denying IFP on appeal (second appeal), accom-
    panied by another application and affidavit to proceed IFP on
    appeal. The record on appeal did not contain a ruling on the
    second IFP application.
    Carter recognized that the procedural posture of the case
    differed slightly from that considered in Glass.38 However, on
    the threshold question whether the appellate court had juris-
    diction over the second appeal despite the inmate’s failure to
    pay the statutory docket fee, the court in Carter concluded
    the “same principles” as were discussed in Glass generally
    applied.39 Consequently, in Carter, just as in Glass, we con-
    cluded we had jurisdiction over the second appeal, because the
    inmate had filed a proper application and affidavit to proceed
    IFP along with his timely notice of appeal.
    Carter then proceeded to consider the merits of the inmate’s
    second appeal, which challenged the denial of his “application
    to proceed IFP on appeal.”40 In doing so, Carter observed the
    general rule that a trial court has the authority to deny an IFP
    application (whether IFP is initially requested to commence
    an action or to take an appeal) if it determines the applicant
    is asserting legal positions that are frivolous or malicious.41
    We then reviewed de novo the trial court’s conclusion that the
    inmate should not be granted leave to appeal IFP because his
    postconviction motion was frivolous. We agreed the inmate
    37
    See Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6, citing Martin v. McGinn, supra note 31.
    38
    State v. Carter, supra note 3.
    39
    
    Id. at 20,
    870 N.W.2d at 644.
    40
    
    Id. at 21,
    870 N.W.2d at 644.
    41
    See § 25-2301.02(1)
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    was asserting “only frivolous legal positions” in his post-
    conviction motion, and thus resolved the second appeal (the
    inmate’s appeal from the denial of IFP on appeal) by affirming
    the district court’s order.42 As to the inmate’s first appeal (from
    the final order denying postconviction relief without a hear-
    ing), we reasoned:
    [P]ursuant to § 25-2301.02(1), we will not have juris-
    diction of the first appeal unless [the inmate] pays
    the statutory docket fee within 30 days of the date of
    release of this opinion. We therefore hold the first appeal
    under submission for payment of the statutory docket
    fee. If [the inmate] fails to timely pay the statutory
    docket fee, his first appeal will be dismissed for lack
    of jurisdiction.43
    The inmate subsequently paid the statutory docket fee, and in
    a brief per curiam supplemental opinion, we considered the
    merits of his first appeal from the order denying postconvic-
    tion relief. We affirmed the denial of postconviction relief,
    explaining: “As was foreshadowed in [our earlier opinion],
    we find [the inmate’s] motion for postconviction relief to
    be meritless.”44
    (c) Contrasting Glass and Carter
    We have not previously explained the rationale behind the
    different appellate procedures followed in Glass and Carter,
    but emphasize now that the appellate procedure was driven by
    the nature of the first appeal and the differing points at which
    the applicants sought interlocutory appellate review of the
    trial court’s order denying IFP.
    In Glass, the first appeal was from the denial of a request
    to proceed IFP to commence a case, and the second appeal
    42
    State v. Carter, supra note 
    3, 292 Neb. at 23
    , 870 N.W.2d at 645.
    43
    
    Id. at 23,
    870 N.W.2d at 646.
    44
    State v. Carter, 
    292 Neb. 481
    , 481, 
    877 N.W.2d 211
    , 211 (2016)
    (supplemental opinion), cert. denied ___ U.S. ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 151
    , 196 L.
    Ed. 2d 115.
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    was from the denial of IFP to seek interlocutory appellate
    review of the first IFP denial. But in Carter, the first appeal
    was from a final order denying postconviction relief, and the
    second appeal was from the denial of the request to proceed
    IFP on appeal.
    [5,6] This variation in the factual posture of Glass and
    Carter significantly affects the procedural analysis on appeal.
    This is so, because although the IFP statutory scheme gives a
    trial court the authority to deny an IFP application requested
    to commence, prosecute, defend, or appeal a case if the court
    finds the applicant has sufficient funds or the legal positions
    being asserted therein are frivolous or malicious,45 a trial court
    does not have the same authority once an IFP application is
    denied and the applicant wishes to seek interlocutory appellate
    review of the denial.46 When an IFP application is denied and
    the applicant seeks leave to proceed IFP to obtain appellate
    review of that denial, the trial court does not have author-
    ity to issue an order that would interfere with such appellate
    review.47 Otherwise, the IFP applicant would be denied his or
    her statutory right to appellate review of the order denying
    IFP status.
    (d) Mumin’s Appeals Are Governed
    by Glass, Not Carter
    In the present case, the Court of Appeals followed the appel-
    late procedure outlined in Carter when considering Mumin’s
    successive IFP appeals. But given the procedural posture of
    Mumin’s first appeal (which was from an order denying IFP to
    commence a case), the proper procedure was that outlined in
    Glass, not Carter.
    Mumin does not directly challenge the appellate proce-
    dure applied in this case; rather, his sole assignment is that
    the court erred in finding his habeas petition was frivolous.
    45
    § 25-2301.02(1)(a) and (b).
    46
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6, citing Jacob v. Schlichtman, supra note 21.
    47
    
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    Reviewing the matter de novo on the record and apply-
    ing the appellate procedure from Glass, we find no merit to
    Mumin’s assignment.
    An appellate court’s threshold consideration, whether ana-
    lyzing successive IFP appeals under Glass or Carter, is to
    decide whether it has jurisdiction over the second appeal.
    Here, the Court of Appeals correctly concluded it had jurisdic-
    tion over the second appeal. An appellate court obtains juris-
    diction over an appeal “‘upon the timely filing of a notice of
    appeal and a proper [IFP] application and affidavit.’”48 Mumin
    timely filed his second notice of appeal, along with a proper
    application and affidavit to proceed IFP on appeal. Similarly,
    we conclude this court has jurisdiction on further review,
    because Mumin timely filed his petition for further review and
    his poverty affidavit serves as a substitute for the statutory
    docket fee otherwise required.49
    (i) Merits of Second Appeal
    Having confirmed jurisdiction, we consider the substance
    of the second appeal, in which Mumin seeks appellate review
    of the district court’s order denying his application to pro-
    ceed IFP on appeal. As we explained in Glass, under the
    statutory IFP scheme, Mumin has a right to interlocutory
    appellate review of an order denying IFP status to commence
    a case.50 Because the district court’s second order denying
    IFP interfered with Mumin’s statutory right to appeal the
    first IFP denial, the district court was without authority to
    issue the second denial.51 Therefore, we conclude the district
    court erred in denying Mumin’s application to proceed IFP
    48
    Id. at 
    709, 687 N.W.2d at 911
    , quoting State v. Jones, supra note 34.
    49
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 33-103.01 (Reissue 2016) and Neb. Ct. R. App. P.
    §§ 2-101(G)(1)(b) and 2-102(F)(1) (rev. 2015). Accord Glass v. Kenney,
    supra note 6, citing In re Interest of Noelle F. & Sarah F., 
    249 Neb. 628
    ,
    
    544 N.W.2d 509
    (1996).
    50
    Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6; Jacob v. Schlichtman, supra note 21.
    51
    
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    on appeal. To the extent the Court of Appeals affirmed the
    district court’s order denying Mumin’s request to proceed IFP
    on appeal, we reverse the decision and, consistent with Glass,
    remand this matter to the Court of Appeals with directions to
    reverse and vacate that order of the district court.52
    (ii) Merits of First Appeal
    With respect to Mumin’s first appeal, in which he seeks
    review of the district court’s order denying his IFP applica-
    tion to commence his petition for writ of habeas corpus,
    Mumin presents the same argument on further review that he
    advanced to the Court of Appeals—that his sentence is void
    because there was insufficient evidence presented at his sen-
    tencing to support habitual criminal enhancement. Both the
    district court and the Court of Appeals correctly concluded
    that because any insufficiency of the evidence presented at
    the sentencing proceedings would not render Mumin’s convic-
    tion or sentence void, his habeas petition asserts a frivolous
    legal position.53
    On further review, Mumin argues that under the holding
    in Berumen v. Casady,54 his sentence should be considered
    void. In Berumen, we found that a habeas petitioner had
    shown his enhanced sentence for second-offense driving while
    intoxicated was void by offering a record showing the State
    failed to offer any evidence of a first offense. The holding in
    Berumen was based in part on the proposition that a collat-
    eral attack may be made on the validity of a conviction used
    for enhancement, a proposition we have since rejected.55 But
    more important, unlike Berumen, Mumin’s habeas petition
    and the documents attached thereto show the State offered
    documentary evidence of Mumin’s prior convictions, and the
    52
    See Glass v. Kenney, supra note 6.
    53
    See Sanders v. Frakes, 
    295 Neb. 374
    , 
    888 N.W.2d 514
    (2016).
    54
    Berumen v. Casady, 
    245 Neb. 936
    , 
    515 N.W.2d 816
    (1994).
    55
    See 
    id., citing State
    v. Wiltshire, 
    241 Neb. 817
    , 
    491 N.W.2d 324
    (1992),
    overruled, State v. Louthan, 
    257 Neb. 174
    , 
    595 N.W.2d 917
    (1999).
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    court specifically found the evidence supported his sentence
    enhancement. We therefore find that both the district court and
    the Court of Appeals correctly concluded that Mumin’s habeas
    petition asserts a frivolous legal position.
    But because the Court of Appeals was following the pro-
    cedural framework of Carter rather than Glass, it reached
    this correct conclusion in the context of analyzing the second
    appeal rather than the first, and it then held the first appeal
    under submission for payment of the statutory docket fee.
    Under the Glass procedure, it should instead have reached the
    merits of the first appeal and concluded the district court cor-
    rectly denied Mumin’s original IFP application filed with his
    habeas petition.56
    We thus reverse the decision and remand the matter to the
    Court of Appeals with directions to affirm the district court’s
    denial of Mumin’s first IFP application. Before doing so, we
    take this opportunity to mention another consideration when
    ruling on IFP applications, which we did not squarely address
    in either Glass or Carter.
    (e) Additional IFP Considerations
    Some appeals involving successive denials of IFP arise
    in cases where no prepayment of fees or costs is required
    to commence the case in the trial court. This appeal is one
    such example. Mumin sought leave to proceed IFP in con-
    nection with filing a petition for writ of habeas corpus. But
    pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-2824 (Reissue 2016), “no
    person or officer shall have the right to demand the pay-
    ment in advance of any fees” in proceedings on habeas
    corpus in a criminal case.57 As a result, Mumin was able to
    file his habeas petition with the clerk of the Johnson County
    District Court without the need to prepay the filing fee. A
    56
    See § 25-2301.02(1)(b).
    57
    Accord § 2-101(G)(1)(c) (providing appellate docket fees in habeas corpus
    proceedings are not required in advance and will be collected at conclusion
    of proceeding).
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    similar rule applies to filing motions for postconviction relief
    in criminal cases.58
    Consequently, while it was not improper for the district
    court to rule on the IFP application as a threshold matter, doing
    so was not necessary to allow Mumin to file or proceed with
    his habeas petition. And once the district court concluded—in
    the context of its IFP review—that the legal positions asserted
    in the habeas petition were frivolous, it would have been more
    efficient for the district court to rule directly on the merits of
    the habeas petition at the same time it ruled on the IFP applica-
    tion. Instead, because the district court ruled only on the IFP
    applications and not on the habeas petition, Mumin’s habeas
    petition has remained unresolved awaiting resolution of the IFP
    denials that were appealed.
    Where, as here, there is no statutory requirement for prepay-
    ment of fees or costs to file or proceed with a matter, a trial
    court should consider whether it may be appropriate to defer
    ruling on an IFP application either until such time as it appears
    that some payment of fees, costs, or security may be neces-
    sary to proceed or until a judgment or final order is entered.
    In cases where no prepayment of fees or costs is required,
    deferring the ruling on an IFP application would permit the
    court to reach the merits of the case more quickly and without
    potentially lengthy delays caused by interlocutory appeals from
    orders denying IFP.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we reverse the decision of
    the Court of Appeals and remand the matter with directions to
    reverse and vacate the order of the district court in the second
    appeal and, in the first appeal, to affirm the district court’s
    denial of Mumin’s original IFP application.
    R eversed and remanded with directions.
    Wright, J., not participating in the decision.
    58
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-3001(2) (Reissue 2016) (providing “[c]osts shall
    be taxed as in habeas corpus cases”).