Ago

CourtFlorida Attorney General Reports
DecidedJanuary 17, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of Ago (Ago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Florida Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ago, (Fla. 2006).

Opinion

Dear Mr. Ellspermann:

You have asked for my opinion on substantially the following question:

Is the Clerk of Circuit Court authorized to expend funds from the fine and forfeiture fund established by section 142.01, Florida Statutes, for work performed by county prisoners whether pre- or post-sentence?

Section 142.01, Florida Statutes, provides:

"There shall be established by the clerk of the circuit court in each county of this state a separate fund to be known as the fine and forfeiture fund for use by the clerk of the circuit court in performing court-related functions. The fund shall consist of the following:

(1) Fines and penalties. . . .

(2) That portion of civil penalties directed to this fund. . . .

(3) Court costs. . . .

(4) Proceeds from forfeited bail bonds, unclaimed bonds, unclaimed moneys, or recognizances. . . .

(5) Fines and forfeitures. . . .

(6) All other revenues received by the clerk as revenue authorized by law to be retained by the clerk.

Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, all fines and forfeitures arising from operation of the provisions of s.318.1215 shall be disbursed in accordance with that section."

You question whether payment by the clerk for work done by prisoners may be considered a "court-related function" within the scope of this statute. Prior to its amendment in 2003, this statute provided that funds from the fine and forfeiture fund "shall be paid out only for criminal expenses, fees, and costs, where the crime was committed in the county and the fees and costs are a legal claim against the county, in accordance with the provisions of this chapter."1

Section 142.01, Florida Statutes, does not define the term "court-related function." However, the phrase is used extensively in Chapter 28, Florida Statutes, which sets forth the duties and responsibilities of the clerks of the circuit courts. Section28.35(4)(a), Florida Statutes, specifically states:

"The list of court-related functions clerks may fund from filing fees, service charges, court costs, and fines shall be limited to those functions expressly authorized by law or court rule. Those functions must include the following: case maintenance; records management; court preparation and attendance; processing the assignment, reopening, and reassignment of cases; processing of appeals; collection and distribution of fines, fees, service charges, and court costs; processing of bond forfeiture payments; payment of jurors and witnesses; data collection and reporting; processing of jurors; determinations of indigent status; and reasonable administrative support costs to enable the clerk of the court to carry out these court-related functions."

This list is referred to throughout Chapter 28, Florida Statutes, as the "standard list" of court-related functions.2 The statute also includes a list of functions that clerks are prohibited from funding with filing fees, service charges, court costs, and fines:

"1. Those functions not specified within paragraph (a).

2. Functions assigned by administrative orders which are not required for the clerk to perform the functions in paragraph (a).

3. Enhanced levels of service which are not required for the clerk to perform the functions in paragraph (a).

4. Functions identified as local requirements in law or local optional programs."3

You have drawn my attention to two statutory provisions relating to payment of prisoners for work they may perform. Section925.08, Florida Statutes, states that prisoners awaiting trial may be worked on roads and other projects

"[w]hen the county commissioners decide it will be for the benefit of a prisoner and in the public interest, they may employ at labor on the streets or incorporated cities or towns, on the roads, bridges, or other public works in the county, or on other projects for which the governing body of the county could otherwise lawfully expend public funds and which it determines to be necessary for the health, safety, and welfare of the county, a person charged with a misdemeanor and confined in the county jail for failure to give bail."4 (e.s.)

No prisoner shall be employed under this statute without his or her written consent and shall not work more than 10 hours in a 24-hour period.5 Subsection (4) of this statute provides that if a person working under this section is acquitted or discharged from further prosecution, he or she "shall be paid bythe county at the rate of $5 for each day employed." (e.s.) If a prisoner is convicted, the time he or she was actually employed may be credited on any sentence of imprisonment, "and if the person is fined, the value of the labor at $5 per day shall be credited to her or his fine and costs." The county commission is charged with keeping records of employment under section 925.08, Florida Statutes, and furnishing those records to the court.

Chapter 951, Florida Statutes, also contains provisions authorizing prisoners to be worked on roads and bridges of the county or hired out to other counties. Section 951.05, Florida Statutes, states:

"The board of county commissioners of the several counties may require all county prisoners under sentence confined in the jail of their respective counties for any offense to labor upon the public roads, bridges, farms, or other public works owned and operated by the county, or on other projects for which the governing body of the county could otherwise lawfully expend public funds and which it determines to be necessary for the health, safety, and welfare of the county, or in the event the county commissioners of any county deem it to the best interest of their county, they may hire out their prisoners to any other county in the state to be worked upon the public roads, bridges, or other public works of that county, or on other projects for which the governing body of that county could otherwise lawfully expend public funds and which it determines to be necessary for the health, safety, and welfare of that county, or they may, upon such terms as may be agreed upon between themselves and the Department of Transportation, lease or let said prisoners to the department instead of keeping them in the county jail where they are sentenced. The money derived from the hire of such prisoners shall be paid to the county hiring out such prisoners and placed to the credit of the fine and forfeiture fund of the county."6 (e.s.)

Pursuant to section 129.02(3), Florida Statutes, each county budget shall include a county fine and forfeiture fund. Any money derived from the working of prisoners is to be credited to this fund and would appear to be the source of any funding for payment for prisoner labor. As described in section 129.02(3),

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