Beatty v. Lamont

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00380
StatusUnknown

This text of Beatty v. Lamont (Beatty v. Lamont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty v. Lamont, (D. Conn. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

TERESA BEATTY et al., Plaintiffs,

v. No. 3:22-cv-380 (JAM)

WILLIAM TONG, Attorney General, Defendant.

ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS

Connecticut is one of many States that have what is known as a prisoner “pay to stay” law. The law creates a claim that the State may enforce against a prisoner for some or all of the costs of imprisonment. See Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 18-85a to -85c.1 Pay-to-stay laws have proved controversial. On the one hand, proponents argue that they appropriately shift the costs of imprisonment to criminals who have chosen to violate the law and who have chosen to make their costly incarceration necessary.2 On the other hand, critics argue that such laws unfairly burden prisoners with crushing debt that disproportionately falls on minorities and that makes it even harder for prisoners to rejoin the community without committing a crime again.3

1 See Kristen M. Haight, Note, Paying for the Privilege of Punishment: Reinterpreting Excessive Fines Clause Doctrine to Allow State Prisoners to Seek Relief from Pay-to-Stay Fees, 62 WM. & MARY L. REV. 287, 290–95 (2020); Lauren-Brooke Eisen, Paying for Your Time: How Charging Inmates Fees Behind Bars May Violate the Excessive Fines Clause, 15 LOY. J. PUB. INT’L L. 319, 321–23 (2014). 2 See Doc. #31-2 at 36–38 (excerpts of statements by Connecticut State Senators in support of Connecticut’s pay-to- stay law at the time of passage in 1995 that it is “fundamental fairness … to get people who are incarcerated in our corrections facilities to help pay some of the way for their own freight” and “[i]t also helps [prisoners] to make them more responsible citizens and learn[] that they have to pay for what – their keep and pay for the crimes that they commit”). 3 See, e.g., Mila Reed-Guevara, Ryanne Bamieh & Jenny E. Carroll of the Arthur Liman Center for Public Interest Law, Testimony submitted for the Record in Support of H.B. 5390 (March 24, 2021), https://www.cga.ct.gov/2022/JUDdata/Tmy/2022HB-05390-R000325-Reed-Guevera,%20Mila,%20Professor- Yale%20Law%20School-TMY.PDF [https://perma.cc/EW8D-2GW3] (last accessed Mar. 2, 2023); Nicholas Scarlett, Robert Silver, Kylee Verrill & Sarah Russell, Testimony of the Civil Justice Clinic, Quinnipiac University School of Law In Support of Connecticut General Assembly H.B. 5390 (March 25, 2022), https://www.cga.ct.gov/2022/JUDdata/Tmy/2022HB-05390-R000325-Scarlett,%20Nicholas- Quinnipiac%20University%20School%20of%20Law-TMY.PDF [https://perma.cc/UD3M-YBQE] (last accessed But this case is not about whether pay-to-stay laws are good policy. It is about whether Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law is unconstitutional because it violates the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment as applied to the plaintiffs in this case. And—most significantly for present purposes—there are threshold issues of standing. The three named plaintiffs have filed this lawsuit against the Attorney General of Connecticut.

But do the plaintiffs allege enough facts to plausibly show that the Attorney General has sought to enforce the pay-to-stay law against them or that there is a meaningful threat he will do so? The answer is no. Therefore, the plaintiffs have no standing to sue the Attorney General. So I will dismiss the complaint without prejudice to the filing of an amended complaint. BACKGROUND I start by reviewing the particulars of Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law and then reviewing how each of the three plaintiffs allege that this law has been unconstitutionally applied to them. Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law endows the State with “a claim” against current and

former state prisoners for the costs of their incarceration. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85a(b); Conn. Agencies Regs. § 18-85a-1(b). A prisoner’s “assessed cost of incarceration” is based on “the average per capita cost, per diem, of all component facilities within the Department of Correction” for the duration of the prisoner’s incarceration. Conn. Agencies Regs. § 18-85a-1(a). According to the complaint, Connecticut’s current per diem cost is $249 per day—which means that the State may have an eye-popping claim of more than $90,000 per year against current prisoners for the costs of their imprisonment.4

Mar. 2, 2023). 4 Doc. #11 at 1 (¶ 1). But Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law does not automatically require every prisoner to pay for all the costs of their imprisonment. It is not as if every prisoner receives a bill on the day that they “check out” of a prison and that the State deploys an army of debt collectors to chase down every prisoner for payment. Instead, the law prescribes particular procedures by which the State may seek to enforce its claim if it chooses to do so. An understanding of these procedures is vital

to deciding if the three plaintiffs in this case have standing to maintain their claim against the Attorney General. First, the law provides that the Attorney General “may” file a court action “to enforce such claim” for the costs of incarceration. See § 18-85a(b).5 But the law does not require the Attorney General to file a lawsuit against every prisoner. And if the Attorney General chooses to file a lawsuit, then he ordinarily must do so while the prisoner is still incarcerated or within two years of the prisoner’s release. Ibid.; Williams v. Marinelli, 987 F.3d 188, 199 (2d Cir. 2021). According to the plaintiffs, the Attorney General filed just 65 court actions over the course of more than five years from January 2015 to August 2020.6 This is only about a dozen

lawsuits per year that have been filed by the Attorney General to enforce a claim under Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law. But the plaintiffs also allege that “since 2017, about 25,000 people have cycled out of Connecticut’s prisons.”7 Thus, according to the plaintiffs’ own numbers, the probability that the Attorney General will file a court action against any particular prisoner is near vanishingly small.8

5 The law states: “In addition to other remedies available at law, the Attorney General, on request of the Commissioner of Correction, may bring an action in the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford to enforce such claim, provided no such action shall be brought but within two years from the date the inmate is released from incarceration or, if the inmate dies while in the custody of the commissioner, within two years from the date of the inmate’s death, except that such limitation period shall not apply if such property was fraudulently concealed from the state.” § 18-85a(b). 6 Docs. #31 at 17, #31-7 at 2 (list of cases). 7 Doc. #11 at 18 (¶ 111). 8 The Connecticut Office of Policy and Management maintains a website with reports of monthly prison numbers. Apart from the general two-year limitation on the Attorney General’s filing of a court action, the law describes two more circumstances when the State has up to 20 years after a prisoner’s release to enforce its claim for the costs of imprisonment.9 Most significantly for present purposes, neither of the law’s provisions governing these two circumstances assigns a role for the Attorney General to enforce any such claim.

The first circumstance is if the prisoner has filed a civil lawsuit and stands to gain a settlement or award of damages. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85b

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Beatty v. Lamont, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-lamont-ctd-2023.