Lawrence Higgins v. Randall County Sheriff's Office
This text of Lawrence Higgins v. Randall County Sheriff's Office (Lawrence Higgins v. Randall County Sheriff's Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
════════════
No. 06-0917
Lawrence Higgins, Petitioner,
v.
Randall County Sheriff’s Office, Respondent
════════════════════════════════════════════════════
On Petition for Review from the
Court of Appeals for the Seventh District of Texas
Justice Green, joined by Justice Wainwright and Justice Willett, dissenting.
The Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure require a party filing an appeal to pay a filing fee with the appellate court. Tex. R. App. P. 5. Failure to pay the filing fee may result in dismissal of the appeal. Id. (“The appellate court may enforce this rule by any order that is just.”); see also id. 25.1(b), 42.3. But the rules also provide that an indigent appellant may be excused from paying the filing fee if he demonstrates by affidavit his inability to pay costs. See id. 20.1. Rule 20.1(b) states that the affidavit “must” contain “complete information” concerning eleven specific categories of information regarding the affiant’s financial condition. Id. 20.1(b). The question presented here is whether, in the case of an affidavit violating Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 20.1(b), Rule 20.1(f)[1] strips courts of appeals of their general sua sponte dismissal power.
The Court today concludes that it does, holding that when no contest is filed, any affidavit purporting to invoke indigent status is sufficient to avoid dismissal, no matter how deficient. I respectfully dissent because Rule 20.1 properly places the burden of proving indigence entirely on the party seeking that status and makes clear what that party must do to establish his inability to pay costs.[2] An affidavit that fails to comply with Rule 20.1(b) fails to establish indigence, whether or not a contest is filed.
Rule 20.1(f) does not create an exception to the court’s power to dismiss an appeal when the affidavit violates Rule 20.1(b). Rule 20.1 contains three equally mandatory requirements, none less compulsory than another:
(a) Establishing Indigence. A party who cannot pay the costs in an appellate court may proceed without advance payment of costs if:
(1) the party files an affidavit of indigence in compliance with this rule;
(2) the claim of indigence is not contested or, if contested, the contest is not sustained by written order; and
(3) the party timely files a notice of appeal.
Id. 20.1(a). The absence of an authorized contest alleviates only the (a)(2) burden of proving the affidavit’s allegation that the affiant lacks the actual ability to pay. Id. 20.1(a)(2), (f). Because the (a)(1) and (a)(3) requirements stand independently, affiants must always “file in compliance” with each component of Rule 20.1 and must always meet the deadline for filing a notice of appeal. Unlike (a)(2), neither (a)(1) nor (a)(3) contain any recognition of (f), and that difference must be given meaning. The absence of any language recognizing (f) in (a)(1) and (a)(3) means that (f) cannot dispense with those two requirements. It is unimaginable that the lack of a contest would absolve a petitioner’s failure to comply with appellate deadlines, as required by (a)(3), yet—without any basis in the language of the Rule—the Court somehow concludes that (a)(1) is subject to different treatment.
Rule 20.1(f) has nothing to do with an appellate court’s power to dismiss; it is about proof. Rule 20.1(g) provides that “[i]f a contest is filed, the party who filed the affidavit of indigence must prove the affidavit’s allegations.” Id. 20.1(g) (emphasis added); see also id. 20.1(h)–(i) (hearing procedures). Rule 20.1(f) “deem[s]” allegations “true” if no contest is filed. Id. 20.1(f). But an incomplete affidavit constitutes a defect regardless of whether its allegations are proven in a hearing under (g) or “deemed true” by operation of (f). Id. Because missing allegations cannot be deemed true, an incomplete affidavit violates the “complete information” requirement, id. 20.1(b), and the requirement of filing “in compliance with this rule,” id. 20.1(a)(1), justifying dismissal of the appeal.[3]
We recognized this in Higgins v. Randall County Sheriff’s Office, 193 S.W.3d 898 (Tex. 2006) (per curiam), concluding that the court of appeals could dismiss Higgins’s appeal if his affidavit’s defects remained after a reasonable opportunity to correct. Id. at 899–900 (citing Tex. R. App. P. 44.3 and In re J.W., 52 S.W.3d 730, 733 (Tex. 2001) (per curiam)). We later affirmed Higgins’s construction in Hood v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 216 S.W.3d 829 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam): “[U]nder Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.3, a court of appeals may not dismiss an action due to a formal defect or irregularity without first allowing the petitioner reasonable time to cure the error.” Id. at 830 (emphasis added). We have never held, as the Court today does, that Rule 20.1(f) prevents courts from dismissing a case no matter how deficient the affidavit. Higgins concluded that if a reasonable opportunity to correct were provided, this court of appeals could dismiss Higgins’s appeal because of this affidavit’s defects. 193 S.W.3d at 899–900. The Court’s citation to the Higgins opinion in support of today’s decision is inexplicable.
The Court says that “[t]he method of ensuring fairness, permitting interested parties to contest the claim of indigence, has also been in place for more than a century,” implying that the Court’s holding is in accord with our historical practice. ___ S.W.3d at ___. Even if true, this historical premise is not a license to ignore the text of the rule that governs today. Before 1997, Rule 40(a)(3) governed affidavits of indigence and required only that an affiant “state he is unable to pay the costs of appeal or any part thereof, or to give security therefor.” Tex. R. App. P. 40(a)(3) (Tex. & Tex. Crim. App. 1986, amended 1990). If that were the rule we were still applying, the Court’s analysis would be more persuasive. But the 1997 promulgation of Rule 20.1 created two new requirements that we cannot ignore: Rule 20.1(a)(1), a new requirement
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Lawrence Higgins v. Randall County Sheriff's Office, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-higgins-v-randall-county-sheriffs-office-tex-2008.