MacKINNON, Circuit Judge:
Both appellants in this consolidated appeal petitioned
in forma pauperis
under D.C.Code § 15-712
to be relieved from the payment of costs with respect to their actions for absolute divorce on the grounds of “voluntary separation from bed and board for one year without cohabitation * * D.C.Code § 16-904(a).
Each petition
in forma pauperis
was denied by the Domestic Relations Branch of the Court of General Sessions and such decisions were affirmed by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. The Circuit Court has jurisdiction under D.C.Code § 11-321 (1967) pursuant to which we granted discretionary review.
I
Appellant Yvonne Parks was married early in 1961, separated the same year, and has lived separate and apart without cohabitation for what is now in excess of eight years. In her affidavit of in-digency she states in effect that she and her five dependent children are living on
$220 per month ($36.66 per person) received from the Department of Public Welfare.
Notwithstanding her affidavit of indigency, the Domestic Relations Branch without a written opinion ordered that she be “not permitted to bring said proceeding to conclusion without prepayment of fees or costs or security therefor.” A motion for
en banc
consideration by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals was denied.
II
Helen Harris was married in 1952 and has been separated since 1955. In support of her petition that she be allowed to proceed
in forma pauperis
she filed an affidavit alleging her belief in the merits of her claim for divorce; that she had been separated from her husband for over fourteen years; that because of her poverty she was unable to pay the costs of the divorce proceeding or to give security therefor and generally alleged her inability to pay the costs of the divorce action and still support her family.
In denying her right to proceed
in forma pauperis,
the Court of General Sessions in a written opinion stated,
inter alia,
that her lack of poverty is belied by her own statement and that prosecution of her divorce claim
in forma pau-peris
would involve the responsibilities of other members of the bar as well as District of Columbia taxpayers. The opinion also referred to the probability that because the defendant is a non-resident the court would be asked to appoint counsel to represent him,
and that this would cause the court to be faced with the inability to compensate appointed counsel. The court’s memorandum stated further:
“Here the parties have created a situation by their own act. They separated voluntarily. The taxpayers of the District of Columbia did not ask these two people to get married. They did not ask them to separate. They should not be made to underwrite the legal procedures to terminate the relationship.”
The court also viewed a “deeper problem” alleging that members of the bar
were deviating from their proper role as counsel in matrimonial disputes and instead of attempting to reconcile families were stirring up matrimonial litigation. Reference was made to the fact that the Legal Aid Society has consistently refused to ask for leave to proceed
in forma pawperis
in other than support and custody matters, and asserted that it was demeaning to the legal profession to attempt to break up the family and to stir up litigation for that purpose. Such conduct, the court noted, was contrary to public policy which encourages the preservation of the institution of marriage and the permanency of the family relationship. Finally it concluded that because of the foregoing and other reasons it would “not exercise its discretion to allow this
or similar
[divorce]
cases
to be brought
in forma pauperis’’
and that it would not allow the appeal to proceed
in forma pauperis.
(Emphasis added).
Ill
There is no question that Mrs. Parks is, in fact, indigent and unable to make deposit of costs. Mrs. Harris’ case is more marginal and merits further comment. One of the reasons given by the lower court in denying Mrs. Harris’ petition to proceed
in forma pauperis
was that “Her allegation of poverty is belied by her own statement.” Assuming for the moment that this was the sole reason for denying appellant’s petition, we feel that such summary denial was improper under these facts.
The test to be applied here is that laid down in Adkins v. E. I. Dupont de Nemours & Co., 335 U.S. 331, 69 S.Ct. 85, 93 L.Ed. 43, 11 A.L.R.2d 599 (1948), where Mr. Justice Black, delivering the opinion of the Court with respect to the federal
in forma pauperis
statute
stated:
“We cannot agree with the court below that one must be absolutely destitute to enjoy the benefit of the statute. We think an affidavit is sufficient which states that .one cannot because of his poverty ‘pay or give security for the costs * * * and still be able to provide’ himself and dependents ‘with the necessities of life.’ ” 335 U.S. at 339, 69 S.Ct. at 89.
In
Harris,
the trial judge was concerned with the $70 per week take home pay. Under the circumstances, seventy dollars per week is not, in and of itself, so substantial a figure as would disqualify a person with pressing debts and two minor children to support from proceeding
in forma pauperis.'
Thus under the District of Columbia Code, as under the federal statute,
in forma pauperis
relief is not limited to those who are public charges or absolutely destitute.
The present state of affairs then is that Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Parks are indigent within the meaning of D.C.Code § 15-712. Because the trial courts denied their petitions to proceed
in forma pauperis,
they had been effectively barred from proceeding with their respective divorces despite the fact that both cases in question are, under the statute, strong divorce cases with substantial periods of separation and children involved. We feel that this has been brought about by the trial court’s failure to construe the applicable statutes properly.
The obvious intent of the indigency statute is to make available to
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MacKINNON, Circuit Judge:
Both appellants in this consolidated appeal petitioned
in forma pauperis
under D.C.Code § 15-712
to be relieved from the payment of costs with respect to their actions for absolute divorce on the grounds of “voluntary separation from bed and board for one year without cohabitation * * D.C.Code § 16-904(a).
Each petition
in forma pauperis
was denied by the Domestic Relations Branch of the Court of General Sessions and such decisions were affirmed by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. The Circuit Court has jurisdiction under D.C.Code § 11-321 (1967) pursuant to which we granted discretionary review.
I
Appellant Yvonne Parks was married early in 1961, separated the same year, and has lived separate and apart without cohabitation for what is now in excess of eight years. In her affidavit of in-digency she states in effect that she and her five dependent children are living on
$220 per month ($36.66 per person) received from the Department of Public Welfare.
Notwithstanding her affidavit of indigency, the Domestic Relations Branch without a written opinion ordered that she be “not permitted to bring said proceeding to conclusion without prepayment of fees or costs or security therefor.” A motion for
en banc
consideration by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals was denied.
II
Helen Harris was married in 1952 and has been separated since 1955. In support of her petition that she be allowed to proceed
in forma pauperis
she filed an affidavit alleging her belief in the merits of her claim for divorce; that she had been separated from her husband for over fourteen years; that because of her poverty she was unable to pay the costs of the divorce proceeding or to give security therefor and generally alleged her inability to pay the costs of the divorce action and still support her family.
In denying her right to proceed
in forma pauperis,
the Court of General Sessions in a written opinion stated,
inter alia,
that her lack of poverty is belied by her own statement and that prosecution of her divorce claim
in forma pau-peris
would involve the responsibilities of other members of the bar as well as District of Columbia taxpayers. The opinion also referred to the probability that because the defendant is a non-resident the court would be asked to appoint counsel to represent him,
and that this would cause the court to be faced with the inability to compensate appointed counsel. The court’s memorandum stated further:
“Here the parties have created a situation by their own act. They separated voluntarily. The taxpayers of the District of Columbia did not ask these two people to get married. They did not ask them to separate. They should not be made to underwrite the legal procedures to terminate the relationship.”
The court also viewed a “deeper problem” alleging that members of the bar
were deviating from their proper role as counsel in matrimonial disputes and instead of attempting to reconcile families were stirring up matrimonial litigation. Reference was made to the fact that the Legal Aid Society has consistently refused to ask for leave to proceed
in forma pawperis
in other than support and custody matters, and asserted that it was demeaning to the legal profession to attempt to break up the family and to stir up litigation for that purpose. Such conduct, the court noted, was contrary to public policy which encourages the preservation of the institution of marriage and the permanency of the family relationship. Finally it concluded that because of the foregoing and other reasons it would “not exercise its discretion to allow this
or similar
[divorce]
cases
to be brought
in forma pauperis’’
and that it would not allow the appeal to proceed
in forma pauperis.
(Emphasis added).
Ill
There is no question that Mrs. Parks is, in fact, indigent and unable to make deposit of costs. Mrs. Harris’ case is more marginal and merits further comment. One of the reasons given by the lower court in denying Mrs. Harris’ petition to proceed
in forma pauperis
was that “Her allegation of poverty is belied by her own statement.” Assuming for the moment that this was the sole reason for denying appellant’s petition, we feel that such summary denial was improper under these facts.
The test to be applied here is that laid down in Adkins v. E. I. Dupont de Nemours & Co., 335 U.S. 331, 69 S.Ct. 85, 93 L.Ed. 43, 11 A.L.R.2d 599 (1948), where Mr. Justice Black, delivering the opinion of the Court with respect to the federal
in forma pauperis
statute
stated:
“We cannot agree with the court below that one must be absolutely destitute to enjoy the benefit of the statute. We think an affidavit is sufficient which states that .one cannot because of his poverty ‘pay or give security for the costs * * * and still be able to provide’ himself and dependents ‘with the necessities of life.’ ” 335 U.S. at 339, 69 S.Ct. at 89.
In
Harris,
the trial judge was concerned with the $70 per week take home pay. Under the circumstances, seventy dollars per week is not, in and of itself, so substantial a figure as would disqualify a person with pressing debts and two minor children to support from proceeding
in forma pauperis.'
Thus under the District of Columbia Code, as under the federal statute,
in forma pauperis
relief is not limited to those who are public charges or absolutely destitute.
The present state of affairs then is that Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Parks are indigent within the meaning of D.C.Code § 15-712. Because the trial courts denied their petitions to proceed
in forma pauperis,
they had been effectively barred from proceeding with their respective divorces despite the fact that both cases in question are, under the statute, strong divorce cases with substantial periods of separation and children involved. We feel that this has been brought about by the trial court’s failure to construe the applicable statutes properly.
The obvious intent of the indigency statute is to make available to
the indigent, in common with his fellow citizen, the full range of civil remedies contrived by court or legislature including what appear to be meritorious cases for divorce. We fully appreciate the lower court’s concern that courts and lawyers should not be put in a position where it would appear that they are encouraging divorce. However, Congress has enacted a statute authorizing divorce on prescribed grounds and, where the facts indicate that a party is entitled to a divorce on the basis of one of these grounds, additional inquiries are not warranted. Despite differing views of some, there are strong sociological, humanitarian and legal reasons why divorce may be of value to society. This is the reason Congress enacted the divorce statute. It is also the reason why the
in forma pauperis
statute should be construed to permit indigents to proceed in good faith with nonfrivolous claims for divorce. There are a number of situations where the court would be perfectly justified in denying
in forma pauperis
applications in divorce cases but these are not such cases.
IV
The
amicus curiae
appointed by the court states one of the issues here presented to be:
In applying the
In Forma Pauperis
statute to indigent plaintiffs in divorce actions is it proper for the trial judge to give consideration to the public policy of the District of Columbia against divorce and in favor of the continuation of marriage?
If such were the full statement of the public policy applicable, no indigent plaintiff could obtain a divorce, but fortunately such is not the public policy of the District of Columbia with respect to divorce applications by indigent plaintiffs. Rather, the public policy in such matters is set forth in the two statutes enacted by Congress,
i. e.,
the divorce statute and the
in forma pauperis
act, and together these statutes authorize divorces in such situations. The public policy on such matters is for Congress and not the judicial branch of government.
See
Friend v. Northern Trust Co., 314 Ill.App. 596, 42 N.E.2d 330, 334 (1942); Grossman v. Grossman, 315 Ill. App. 345, 43 N.E.2d 216, 219 (1942). The public policy on any matter is primarily for the lawmakers and is to be ascertained by reference to the Constitution, statutes and court decisions and not from general considerations of supposed public interest. If a policy exists it may be used to resolve an uncertainty of law but it cannot override a statute. Muschany v. United States, 324 U.S. 49, 65 S.Ct. 442, 89 L.Ed. 744 (1945); Twin City Pipe Line Co. v. Harding Glass Co., 283 U.S. 353, 51 S.Ct. 476, 75 L.Ed. 1112, 83 A.L.R. 1168 (1931); Fullinwider v. Southern Pac. R. R. Co., 248 U.S. 409, 39 S.Ct. 130, 63 L.Ed. 331 (1919). Since Congress has prescribed certain statutory grounds for divorce it is beyond the authority of any court to impose additional grounds thereto. More specifically, it is not proper to use a divorce applicant’s inability to pay the costs of a divorce action as a ground for denying any such person access to a fair trial with that objective since under the statute one’s ability to pay the costs of a divorce action is not a condition precedent to obtaining a divorce. Congress intended that rich and poor alike should have equal right to a divorce and this was one of its objectives in enacting D. C.Code § 15-712 providing for the prosecution of all suits by indigents without prepayment or deposit of costs upon presentation of satisfactory evidence that the plaintiff is indigent and unable to make deposit of costs. The in
forma pauperis
statute does not exclude divorce actions. It would be unthinkable that Congress would, by statute, permit well-to-do persons to obtain divorces and withhold that right from indigent persons.
And it is
an abuse of discretion for trial courts to use criteria in passing on
in forma pau-peris
applications that in effect set up more restrictive divorce grounds than are prescribed by statute. For instance, non-indigent applicants for divorce are not required to prove in their divorce action in addition to the statutory grounds that some
useful social reason
will be served by a severance of the marital relationship. This would be a non-statutory ground that is not applicable to non-indigent persons and cannot be imposed on indigent petitioners as an additional requirement. Compliance with the statutory grounds is all that is required.
V
Lurking in the background is another question only slightly alluded to in the
Harris
case. D.C.Code § 16-918 requires the assignment of an attorney to represent the defendant in each uncontested divorce case
and Rule 5(a)
of the District of Columbia Court of General Sessions, Domestic Relations Branch Rules provides for payment of such fees as the court may determine to be proper, to be paid as the court may direct; and that, upon application for the assignment of an attorney, the minimum fee (which at the present time is $100) must be deposited with the application.
Although
the Rule and the
in forma pauperis
statute appear to be contradictory, they are actually reconcilable. The $100 minimum fee requirement is only a guideline set forth in a memorandum by the court for its own use in cases where attorneys’ fees are deemed by the court to be proper and was not promulgated by the court to deny indigents equal protection under the laws. Obviously, indigents cannot pay such attorneys’ fees and they are not to be required to do so. In indigent cases the court should request members of the bar of the court to represent such persons on an uncompensated basis. This was the practice in the United States District Court before the divorce jurisdiction was transferred to the General Sessions Court and we know of no good reason why it should not be revived for
in forma pauperis
cases in the Court of General Sessions.
VI
Counsel for appellants further requests this court to rule that appellants be permitted to prosecute their actions to completion “without prepayment of filing fees, counsel fees for the absent defendant, or publication costs.”
We limit our decision here to the disposition we have indicated with respect to counsel fees for the absent defendant and to those costs which are encompassed by the
in forma pauperis
statute, D.C.Code § 15-712, which we construe to encompass all court costs. More precisely, we do not deal with the auxiliary expense of publication costs which may be an issue only in
Parks.
These costs of publication are paid to newspapers and not to an arm of the court. They are not fixed by the court and are not one of the “costs” covered by the
in forma pauperis
statute here considered. Actually, in some cases, publication is used where a more diligent search would locate the defendant and permit personal service as authorized by D.C.Code § 13-337. Because of the close personal relationship of the parties, this should be possible in most cases. Where publication is required, the court, unless the situation otherwise dictates, should order publication only for the minimum number of times fixed by statute and in the most economical form of suitable publication. The publication statute does not specify in what kind of newspapers the notice must appear, in fact it only states the order shall be “published.” Heretofore, court orders have required publication in at least one newspaper of general circulation in the District and General Sessions Rule 4(d)
requires publication as well in the Washington Law Reporter. If the most economical form of publication was used in in-digency cases, the publication cost would be materially reduced. We see no reason why the court should not do so in the ordinary
in forma pauperis
case.
Thus the way is open to the court to reduce the publication costs materially.
With respect to the request of appellant Harris that this court “order that appellant be allowed to prosecute her application for a divorce without prepayment of * * * publication costs as may arise,” we do not consider that there is any certainty that this cost will arise or, if it does, what the cost will be, or that funds cannot be found by appellant to pay the reduced cost that would result from our prior suggestion. A decision on publication costs will have to await a record presenting concrete facts.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that both appellants should have been allowed to prosecute their divorces without the prepayment or deposit of costs referred to in D.C. Code § 15-712 and that it was an abuse of discretion to refuse both appellants the authority to so proceed. It is accordingly ordered that both cases be reversed and remanded for trial and that both appellants be permitted to proceed
in forma pauperis
under D.C.Code § 15-712 as interpreted by this opinion.