Beatty v. Lamont

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 27, 2024
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. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

TERESA BEATTY et al., Plaintiffs,

v. No. 3:22-cv-00380 (JAM)

MICHELLE GILMAN et al., Defendants.

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION TO DISMISS

Does requiring a convicted prisoner to pay for their costs of imprisonment violate the prisoner’s right to be free from an excessive fine under the Eighth Amendment? That is the main question in this case. The case involves Connecticut’s “pay-to-stay” law—a law that allows the State of Connecticut to seek reimbursement from convicted state prisoners for the costs of their imprisonment.1 According to the plaintiffs, Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law violates the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment on its face and as applied to them. I do not agree. Although the plaintiffs raise important public policy concerns about the purpose and operation of Connecticut’s law, they fail to show for purposes of their facial challenge that requiring a convicted prisoner to pay the costs of imprisonment amounts to a per se violation of the Excessive Fines Clause. Nor do they show for purposes of their as-applied challenge that the pay-to-stay law authorizes the State to collect amounts from them that are no less than grossly disproportional to the gravity of their crimes. In short, they fail to show that Connecticut’s pay- to-stay law violates the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment.

1 See, e.g., Sarah McClure, Comment, Get Out of Jail Free? A Survey of Pay-to-Stay Statutes Through a Constitutional Lens, 16 EST. PLANNING & CMTY. PROP. J. 219, 221 (2023); Patrick McGlasson, Note, Paying for the Privilege: Pay-to-Stay Incarceration After the Incorporation of the Excessive Fines Clause, 2021 U. ILL. L. REV. 1135, 1137 (2021). On the other hand, to the extent that two of the plaintiffs allege that the defendants seek to make them pay even more than what the pay-to-stay law itself allows, these two plaintiffs have plausibly alleged a violation of the Excessive Fines Clause to this limited extent. Accordingly, I will grant in part and deny in part the defendants’ motion to dismiss. BACKGROUND

I have previously issued a ruling that describes at length the operation of Connecticut’s pay-to-stay law. See Beatty v. Tong, 659 F. Supp. 3d 219 (D. Conn. 2023). The law endows the State of Connecticut with “a claim” against current and former state convicted prisoners for the costs of their incarceration. See id. at 224 (citing Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85a(b); Conn. Agencies Regs. § 18-85a-1(b)). As I explained in my prior ruling: “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.” Ibid. As relevant here, the law allows the State to seek to enforce a claim for the costs of imprisonment against a current or former prisoner who is about to receive an inheritance. See id. at 225-26 (citing Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85b(b)).2 When an estate is in probate proceedings and a

2 The law also allows for enforcement of claims in multiple contexts other than when a current or former prisoner has received an inheritance, such as if a prisoner stands to win money from a lawsuit. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18- 85b(a). Although the amended complaint purports in sweeping terms to challenge all of the law’s potential applications, the three plaintiffs in this action seek to challenge the law solely in the context of the defendants’ efforts to enforce the law against their inheritances, and their class allegations state an intent to proceed only as to “probate beneficiaries that are affected by one of the provisions of the statute.” Doc. #49 at 23 (¶ 149). The plaintiffs lack standing to challenge the operation of the law outside the inheritance context. See Brokamp v. James, 66 F.4th 374, 389 (2d Cir. 2023) (plaintiff who had standing “to challenge New York’s requirement that mental health counselors be licensed to practice in that state” did not also have standing to challenge parts of the licensing law that did not injure her). current or former prisoner is in line to benefit from the estate, the Department of Correction (DOC) through its designee the Department of Administrative Services (DAS) may file a notice of lien against the inheritance with the probate court. The lien may be for the lesser of the prisoner’s costs of imprisonment or half of the assets of the estate that are payable to the prisoner. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85b(b).

According to the amended complaint, “the Connecticut Probate Court notifies DAS whenever an estate beneficiary has served, or is serving, time in a Connecticut prison,” and “the DOC supplies DAS with records showing what the DOC contends that the person owes.”3 When DAS “determines that a … beneficiary to an estate owes prison debt, it files a notice of lien in Probate Court,” which “dictate[s] a person ‘is liable’ to Connecticut and demand[s] that the executor or administrator of the estate pay.”4 This litigation began nearly two years ago when three former state prisoners—Teresa Beatty, Karl Weissinger, and Michael Llorens—filed a class action suit for injunctive relief against the Governor of Connecticut and the Attorney General of Connecticut. See Beatty, 659 F.

Supp. 3d at 227-29. In response to the defendants’ motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs abandoned their claim against the Governor and sought to proceed solely against the Attorney General. Id. at 229. I dismissed the action against the Attorney General on multiple grounds: (1) that the plaintiffs lacked standing to pursue their claims against the Attorney General, (2) that Beatty and Weissinger’s claims against the Attorney General were foreclosed by the Eleventh Amendment, and (3) that Llorens’ claim was not ripe for resolution. See id. at 232-34.

3 Doc. #49 at 3-4 (¶¶ 13, 16). 4 Id. at 20 (¶ 136); see also Conn. Gen. Stat. § 18-85b(b) (directing probate court to “accept any such lien notice” and “to the extent of such inheritance not already distributed, the court shall order distribution in accordance therewith”). Much of my ruling was devoted to explaining how—in essence—the named plaintiffs had sued the wrong defendants. They had sued the Governor and the Attorney General despite those defendants’ lack of any apparent involvement in enforcing the law against them. But they had not sued the Commissioner of the DOC or the DAS, who were directly responsible under the law for enforcing any claims against the named plaintiffs.

My ruling, however, granted the plaintiffs’ request for leave to file a second amended complaint. See id. at 236. And they have now done so. They no longer name the Governor or the Attorney General as defendants. Instead, they name as defendants the DAS Commissioner (Michelle Gilman) and the DOC Commissioner (Angel Quiros). The second amended complaint also involves a change in the named plaintiffs. Beatty has stayed on as a plaintiff, but Weissinger and Llorens have dropped out. And two more plaintiffs— Natasha Tosado and Douglas Johnson—have been added.

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Bluebook (online)
Beatty v. Lamont, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-lamont-ctd-2024.