Baker v. State

158 P.3d 836, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 95, 2007 WL 1168445
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 20, 2007
DocketA-9791
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 158 P.3d 836 (Baker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. State, 158 P.3d 836, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 95, 2007 WL 1168445 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Fred A. Baker is pursuing a petition for post-conviction relief in the superior court, and he has lodged a petition for review. In his petition, Baker challenges the superior court's failure to enter summary judgement in his favor.

Baker's petition has not yet gone forward because a preliminary problem has arisen: the parties disagree on how to calculate the filing fee that Baker must pay to pursue this appellate litigation.

Baker is indigent and, thus, he would normally qualify for an exemption from this Court's normal filing fee of $150.00. However, Baker is currently a prisoner, and his petition for post-conviction relief constitutes "litigation against the state" as defined in AS 09.19.100(1). Because of this, Baker must pay the mandatory minimum filing fee specified in AS 09.19.010.

Baker and the State agree that Baker's mandatory minimum filing fee must be caleu-lated using the formula specified in AS 09.19.010(d), but they disagree concerning how this formula should be interpreted. The pertinent portion of AS 09.19.010(d) states:

In setting the [mandatory minimum] fee, the court ... shall require the prisoner to pay filing fees equal to 20 percent of the larger of the average monthly deposits made to the prisoner's account described in (b)(2) of this section, or the average balance in that account, not to exceed the amount of the full filing fee required under applicable court rules.

As can be seen, this subsection requires the filing fee calculation to be based on the average monthly deposits to, and the average balance in, "the prisoner's account described in [subsection] (b)(2) of this [statute]".

Subsection (b)(2) of the statute declares that "a prisoner shall submit to the court ... a certified copy of the prisoner's account statement from the correctional facility in which the prisoner is being ... held for the six-month period preceding the submission of the [prisoner's pleadings]". Thus, the reference in both subsections (b)(2) and (d) is to "the prisoner's account [in] the correctional facility in which the prisoner is being ... held".

The problem is that, following the enactment of AS 38.30.201(d) in 2006, prisoners have two separate accounts: their normal prisoner account (what the Department calls the "funds available" account) which contains money that the prisoner can spend for every *838 day purposes, and a "forced savings" account to which the prisoner has no direct access. This forced savings account contains money whose primary purpose is to provide funds for the prisoner when the prisoner is eventually released from custody.

The question presented here is whether the money in a prisoner's forced savings account should be considered when a court calculates the prisoner's mandatory minimum filing fee under AS 09.19.010(d).

The statutory background

In the past, the State of Alaska apparently provided "discharge payments" (colloquially known as "gate money") to prisoners upon their release. This "gate money" was part of the financial assistance package intended to help prisoners re-establish themselves in the community.

However, under 22 AAC 05.590, 1 Alaska prisoners now receive no discharge payment or "gate money" upon their release. This regulation reads:

Upon release of a prisoner, the department will not provide a discharge payment or gate money to the prisoner. Each prisoner is [only] entitled to receive any work program compensation and prisoner fund account money due [the prisoner] at the time of release.

Thus, when prisoners are released from prison, they receive only the money remaining in their "prisoner fund account" (as well as any wages that have already been earned but that have not yet been deposited into the prisoner's account).

This account was the only prisoner account that existed in 1995 when the Alaska Legislature enacted AS 09.19.010 et seq, the chapter of the statutes that establishes the mandatory minimum filing fee for prisoners pursuing civil litigation against the State. Thus, when the legislature established the rules for calculating a prisoner's mandatory minimum fee, these fee-caleulation rules unambiguously referred to the average monthly deposits to, and the average balance of, this one prisoner account.

But in 2006, 2 the legislature enacted AS 33.30.201(d), a law that requires the Commissioner of Corrections to withhold a portion of a prisoner's wages and place this money into a special "forced savings" account whose primary purpose is to ensure that the prisoner will have some minimal amount of money at the time of their release.

Under AS 33.30.201(d), a prisoner's forced savings account is funded by mandatory transfers of a portion of the prisoner's wages. Subsection (c) of AS 38.30.201 declares that various portions of the prisoner's wages must be disbursed for child support, restitution, utility fees, and the prisoner's normal account (the account that the prisoner can use to make discretionary purchases of clothing, commissary items, etc.). Then, under subsection (d), the remaining money

[shall] be credited to the prisoner and ... must be retained by the department for the primary purpose of being available to the prisoner at the time of release. The commissioner shall maintain individual prisoner accounts for those earnings. The commissioner may, however, permit the prisoner to draw on a portion of that money for other purposes that the commissioner considers appropriate.

That is, the money in a prisoner's forced savings account is restricted. Its primary purpose is to provide funds for the prisoner to use when the prisoner is eventually released from custody. Before that time, the money in the forced savings account can be spent only with the approval of the Commissioner of Corrections. The only money to which a prisoner has ready, discretionary access is the money in the prisoner's normal account.

When the legislature created the forced savings accounts in 2006, the legislature did not amend the fee-calculation rule specified *839 in AS 09.19.010, nor did the legislature amend any other portion of AS 09.19 to indicate how they wished to handle the new foreed savings accounts. Indeed, even today, the administrative regulations of the Department of Corrections contain no reference to a "forced" or "mandatory" savings account. Instead, these regulations continue to refer to a single "prisoner fund account". See 22 AAC 05.105, 22 AAC 05.106, 22 AAC 05.331, and 22 AAC 05.590. 3

But although there are no administrative regulations governing these forced savings accounts, the Commissioner of Corrections has issued a "policy" that addresses these accounts. In December 2005, apparently anticipating the legislature's passage of AS 33.30.201(d) the following spring, the Commissioner adopted Policy No. 804.01, "Prisoner Wage Disbursal". (A copy of this Policy is appended to this opinion.)

Under Policy No.

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158 P.3d 836, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 95, 2007 WL 1168445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-state-alaskactapp-2007.