DocketNumber: 96,726
Citation Numbers: 2002 OK 39, 50 P.3d 1128, 2002 WL 1020654
Judges: Winchester, Hargrave, Watt, Hodges, Lavender, Summers, Boudreau, Opala, Kauger, Writing
Filed Date: 7/8/2002
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
T1 The appellant, John H. Mahorney, a prisoner, filed four petitions in the district court against four different prison officials working at the Diamondback Correctional Facility, in which he is incarcerated. He alleged a constitutional right to smoke, and claimed that the correctional officers violated that right. When Mahorney petitioned for pauper status so that court costs would be waived, the trial court ordered certain information to verify his alleged status. After Mahorney provided the requested documents from the correctional facility concerning his trust account, the trial court issued an order for each case finding that Mahorney was receiving $24.00 per month payment during his incarceration, and that he was therefore able to pay a partial filing fee of $10.00 in each case. The court assessed those costs against him, and imposed a lien on his pay to secure the payment.
12 Mahorney filed one appeal with the intention that all four cases on the docket of the District Court of Blaine County, Causes CJ-01-69, 71, 72, and 78, be determined by that appeal. We must initially determine two procedural issues. First, we must determine whether the district court's orders are appealable. Second, we must decide whether Mahorney may use one appeal to decide four cases. The final issue to be resolved is whether the trial court's specific rulings regarding partial payment of filing fees exceeded the court's authority.
13 The district court ordered Mahorney to present documents to support his alleged pauper status.
{4 This Court has appellate jurisdiction to review final orders, interlocutory orders appealable by right, and certified interlocutory orders. 12 0.9.2001, §§ 952, 953. The four orders being appealed were identi
115 Because the four orders have no effect on the continuation of the four district court cases, the orders are interlocutory judicial actions that are unreviewable in advance of judgment. LCR, Inc. v. Linwood Properties, 1996 OK 73, ¶ 16, 918 P.2d 1388, 1394. In addition, even if these four orders were treated as appealable, Mahorney improperly filed them as one appeal. Where separate judgments are rendered and the appellant attempts to appeal by filing one petition in error, the Court will dismiss the attempted appeal for duplicity. Curtis v. Mason & Hopkins, 1932 OK 145, ¶ 11, 8 P.2d 747, 749.
16 Although these cases are not appealable, and this Court may properly dismiss them, they do present the issue of the constitutional right of access to the courts. The finding that an order is not appealable does not necessarily preclude review. We look to the content and substance of an instrument filed in this Court rather than its title. First Nat. Bank and Trust Co. of Ada v. Arles, 1991 OK 78, ¶ 5, 816 P.2d 537, 539. This Court has addressed the issue of whether a prisoner's savings and draw accounts are subject to assessment for filing fees in court cases. Foust v. Pearman, 1992 OK 135, 850 P.2d 1047. That case came before this Court when the prisoner sought writs of prohibition and mandamus by an original action to permit him to file his suit in forma pauperis. Accordingly, we recast this cause as an original proceeding for a prerogative writ.
T7 Foust also held that in the exercise of a court's discretion when determining a proper partial filing fee, a court may consider present account balances of the prisoner, monthly income, other assets, and whether any funds are withdrawn to avoid payment of a statutory fee or partial fee. Foust, 1992 OK 135, ¶ 8, 850 P.2d at 1049-1050. This Court issued writs of mandamus and prohibition in Foust to the district court forbidding the assessment of a filing fee equal to all of the prisoner's funds. Foust, 1992 OK 135, ¶ 9, 850 P.2d at 1050.
¶ 8 Mahorney contends that the trial court must either grant or deny eligibility to proceed with no costs. The exhibits attached by Mahorney indicated that as of June 7, 2001, Mahorney had a balance of $0.01 in his Trust Account #1. The trial court's response to Mahorney's "Petition in Error" advises that Mahorney has filed twelve other actions in the District Court of Blaine County, and that the court's order required Mahorney to pay less than one-eighth of the court costs of the four cases now before this Court. We have previously held that the district courts have the authority to require partial payment,. Foust, 1992 OK 135, ¶ 6, 850 P.2d at 1049. Foust did not limit the trial court to whatever amount is in the prisoner's trust account at the time of filing. Because the trial court can examine present account balances of the prisoner, monthly income, other assets, and whether any funds are withdrawn to avoid payment of a statutory fee or partial fee, leaves an implication that the trial court may assess future balances until the partial fees are paid. Requiring partial payment was a response to a flood of pro se claims by prisoners. The partial payment would require a prisoner to weigh the validity of a lawsuit against the cost of pursuing it. Cumbey v. State, 1985 OK 36, ¶ 5, 699 P.2d 1094, 1096.
¶ 9 The general rule for a prerogative writ to issue is that the party seeking the writ must have a clear legal right to the relief sought and the respondent must have a plain legal duty in which the exercise of
¶ 10 We issue the writs of mandamus and prohibition to the extent that the district court shall not require a filing fee equal to all of Mahorney's funds. The district court shall determine the amount of the filing fee consistent with the guidelines found in Foust and the instructions in this opinion. That court shall also allow Mahorney an opportunity to object to the filing fee as so determined.
WRITS OF PROHIBITION AND MANDAMUS GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART, WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
. Title 12 0.$.2001, § 2003.1(D) provides: "In all cases in which the petitioner, movant, or plaintiff is an inmate of a penal institution and desires to proceed in forma pauperis, in addition to the proof of poverty required by subsection C of Section 152 of Title 28 of the Oklahoma Statutes, the inmate shall submit a certificate executed by an authorized officer of the institution in which the inmate is confined stating the amount of money or securities on deposit to the inmate's credit in any account in the institution. The certificate may be considered by the court in acting on the motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis. In the absence of exceptional circumstances, leave to proceed in forma pauper-is may be denied if the value of the money and securities in petitioner's, movant's, or plaintiff's institutional account exceeds Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00)."
. Although there is no specific statutory authority for describing the trial court's orders as liens on Mahorney's account, a court has the inherent authority to issue orders to assure compliance with a previous order of the court.