MOHN v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
Docket2:23-cv-02653
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
MOHN v. United States, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JUSTIN MOHN : CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 23-2653 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, USS. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, ATTORNEY : GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES _ :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. July 20, 2023 A 2014 college graduate has now filed his fourth Complaint essentially claiming the United States or its officers negligently managed student loan programs by failing to disclose they anticipated an impaired job market for over-educated white men over a decade later. We dismissed his previous cases including those against immune persons. His most recent Complaint seeks over ten million dollars in damages from the United States. He moves to proceed without paying the filing fees claiming he is now a pauper. Congress requires we screen motions to proceed without paying filing fees. The college graduate most recently swears he has over $2,000 in his bank account and his only monthly expense is less than $150 to buy marijuana. He does not claim disability. He pays no rent, utilities, or other expenses. He has no income this month. We rigorously review these requests to ensure persons able to pay the filing fees do not use public funds as their bank account. We have no basis to find this college graduate is today unable to pay the filing fee. He has money to buy marijuana every month with no expenses. He has money in the bank and just left a paying job. We deny his application to proceed without paying the filing fees. We grant him leave to pay the filing fees if he wishes to proceed on his fourth attempt to sue apparently immune prosecutors and the United States for negligence relating to college student loans.

1. Sworn facts and public record. Pennsylvania resident Justin Mohn borrowed federal student loans from the United States to finance his college education at Pennsylvania State University in 2010.'! Mr. Mohn graduated with a degree in Agribusiness Management in May 2014.” Mr. Mohn could not obtain full-time employment and instead worked part-time while beginning to pay his monthly student loan payments.’ Mr. Mohn alleged his unemployment prohibited him from saving money and “caused a snowball effect of debt.”4 Mr. Mohn attributed his inability to the fact he is an “overeducated, white male.”> Mr. Mohn now lives with his parents and holds “thousands of dollars” in student loan debt.® Mr. Mohn first sued United States Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona and the United States Department of Education on March 1, 2022.” Mr. Mohn then alleged the Department fraudulently imposed “a financial burden on [him]” knowing he would be unable to pay back his student loans.’ Mr. Mohn moved to proceed in forma pauperis.” Mr. Mohn swore he held $239.29 in a checking account, $113.52 in a PayPal account, $27.70 in a second checking account in his application to proceed in forma pauperis.'® He also declared three dollars in cash.'!! Mr. Mohn swore he owed $150 on a credit card and seventy dollars on a personal line of credit.'* Mr. Mohn also swore having $415 in total monthly expenses, $150 of which is attributed to credit card debt." We then found good cause based on limited assets and his expenses and to grant Mr. Mohn’s motion to proceed in forma pauperis.'* We later dismissed Mr. Mohn’s tort claims for failing to exhaust his administrative remedies and because Secretary Cardona and the Department are immune from suit as Mr. Mohn pleaded them.!° We granted Mr. Mohn leave to file a second amended complaint no later than April 28, 2022 to seek relief after exhausting his claims.'° We ordered the Clerk of Court close Mr. Mohn’s case after he failed to timely amend his Complaint.!”

Mr. Mohn filed a new complaint against Secretary Cardona and the United States Department of Education instead of filing a second amended complaint compliant with our April 14, 2022 and April 18, 2022 Orders in Mohn I.!8 Mr. Mohn pleaded similar facts as Mohn 1.'? But Mr. Mohn paid the $402 filing fee. The United States moved to substitute itself as the proper defendant and to dismiss Mr. Mohn’s complaint for lack of jurisdiction.?? We granted the United States’s motion, substituting it for Secretary Cardona and the Department of Education and dismissing the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the United States is immune from such claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act.2! Mr. Mohn appealed and again paid the filing fee in the Court of Appeals.” Our Court of Appeals affirmed our dismissal approximately three weeks ago but modified our dismissal to be without prejudice.”? One week later, Mr. Mohn returned to sue the United States, the United States Attorney’s Office, and the Attorney General of the United States again asserting a claim for negligence under the Federal Tort Claims Act already dismissed by our Court of Appeals and asserting claims for vicarious liability against all defendants, presumably the United States Attorney and the Attorney General.”4 Mr. Mohn now moves to proceed in forma pauperis.?> He first swore he held $2,161 in a checking account.”° He also swore he received approximately $2,100 in gross monthly pay during his three recent months of employment at Enliven Planters.?” He swore to having $300 in monthly expenses, all of which he categorized as recreational.2® We denied this first motion to proceed without paying the fee.?? Mr. Mohn now swears he holds $2,057.68 in a checking account and five dollars in a savings account.?° Mr. Mohn still swears he received $2,100 in gross monthly pay from his three-month employment at Enliven Planters.?! He now also swears he has approximately $150

in monthly expenses he categorizes as his monthly marijuana expenses for both medical and recreational purposes.*” Mr. Mohn swears he is a registered Pennsylvania medical marijuana patient.?? Mr. Mohn swears he purchases monthly medical marijuana or “a cheaper, non-prescription substitute to mitigate the added stress of pro se litigation” which “may worsen” his scoliosis.*4* Mr. Mohn “hopes to bring his expenses as close to $0 as possible” until he finds employment but continues to purchase medical marijuana monthly.*> II. Analysis Congress allows us to “authorize the commencement, prosecution or defense of any suit, action or proceeding .. . without prepayment of fees ... .”*® Congress enacted the in forma pauperis statute “to ensure that indigent litigants have meaningful access to the federal courts.”?” We may waive the prepayment of fees if the litigant “submits an affidavit that includes a statement of all assets [and] . . . that the person is unable to pay such fees or give security.”?® Congress requires we deny leave to proceed without paying the filing fees if we determine “the allegation of poverty is untrue.’*? We evaluate the petitioner’s financial statement for a showing of indigence. *? We may consider factors including “(1) possible aid from friends or relatives; (2) possible aid from charities; (3) regular employment; (4) earning power; (5) unencumbered assets; (6) retention of counsel; and (7) the particular cost relative to the applicant’s financial means.”*! We may also “consider the resources that the applicant has or ‘can get’ from those who ordinarily provide the applicant with the ‘necessities of life,’ such as ‘from a spouse, parent, adult sibling or other next friend.’””4? Approving a motion to proceed without paying fees is within our discretion.*? When exercising our discretion, we “must be rigorous ... to ensure that the treasury is not unduly imposed

upon.”“4 It is Mr. Mohn’s burden to prove a basis to proceed without paying filing fees.*° We are guided by our colleagues denying motions to proceed without paying fees when the person holds assets and limited expenses. For example, our Court of Appeals in Johnson v.

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Bluebook (online)
MOHN v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohn-v-united-states-paed-2023.