TALLAHASSEE BAIL FUND v. MARSHALL

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 20, 2024
Docket4:22-cv-00297
StatusUnknown

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

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TALLAHASSEE BAIL FUND v. MARSHALL, (N.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TALLAHASSEE DIVISION

TALLAHASSEE BAIL FUND, Plaintiff, v. Case No.: 4:22cv297-MW/MAF GWENDOLYN MARSHALL, Defendant, and ATTORNEY GENERAL OF FLORIDA,

Intervenor-Defendant. __________________________/ FINAL ORDER FOLLOWING NONJURY TRIAL

This case proceeded to a nonjury trial on February 15, 2024. The proceeding was initially set as an evidentiary hearing on the issue of standing at the parties’ request. See ECF Nos. 102 & 103. But on the record at the hearing, the parties agreed that only the question of standing required a presentation of live testimony, and the

remaining issues in the case should be settled on the papers previously filed in this case. At the nonjury trial, all parties had an opportunity to submit evidence relating to Plaintiff’s standing to bring an Eighth Amendment excessive bail claim on behalf

of its future clients—the only claim remaining in this case. At the conclusion of the nonjury trial, this Court asked the parties if they wished to file briefs or any additional written argument. They declined.

This Court has considered the testimony, documentary evidence, and argument presented at the nonjury trial on February 15, 2024, as well as the Attorney General’s filing of state court records, ECF No. 106. This Court also considered all

previous filings and motions submitted in this case. Ultimately, this case turns on whether this Court will accept the Attorney General and Defendant’s invitation to overrule Supreme Court precedent on standing and Eleventh Circuit precedent on the merits. This Court cannot—and will not—

accept this invitation. For this reason and the ones that follow, this Court finds that Plaintiff should be awarded judgment in its favor and that Defendant should be enjoined from enforcing section 903.286(1), Florida Statutes against Plaintiff.1

I Before this Court resolves the balance of this case, it pauses to clarify the claim that remains after resolving the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss and the cross motions for summary judgment. In its order on the motion to dismiss, this

Court dismissed Plaintiff’s excessive bail claim on behalf of its current clients for

1 At no point in this case has either party suggested that Plaintiff seeks facial relief. This Court understands Plaintiff’s claim as an as-applied challenge to section 903.286(1). Accordingly, as the text of the injunction will make clear, this Court’s ruling only applies to Defendant’s enforcement of section 903.286(1) against Plaintiff. 2 lack of standing. Further, this Court dismissed Plaintiff’s excessive fine and procedural due process claims, brought on behalf of itself as an organization, on

qualified immunity grounds and for failure to state a claim. Thus, Plaintiff’s only remaining claim is its official capacity claim against Defendant for a violation of its future clients’ Eighth Amendment rights to be free from excessive bail. The only

remedy available for this claim is prospective declaratory and injunctive relief. II With the remaining claim identified, this Court makes the following factual findings. Plaintiff is a Leon County, Florida, nonprofit entity established in May

2020 and incorporated on August 1, 2022. ECF No. 9-1 ¶¶ 3, 5–6; ECF No. 68-2 at 1–2; ECF No. 68-3 at 25. Plaintiff provides an alternative to traditional bail bond services. ECF No. 61-1 at 19. Unlike bail bond agents, Plaintiff uses a revolving

cash fund to post bail for its indigent clients and it does not charge them a fee. Once a criminal case concludes, the bond amount is returned to Plaintiff, which Plaintiff then uses to pay the bonds of other pretrial detainees. See id.; ECF No. 61-3. Thus, Plaintiff makes pretrial release a possibility for those who can afford neither a cash

bond nor a professional bond service. ECF 61-1 at 13. Plaintiff also differs from professional bail bond services in its financial exposure under section 903.286(1), Florida Statutes. That provision directs clerks of

court to “withhold from the return of a cash bond posted on behalf of a criminal 3 defendant by a person other than a bail bond agent . . . to pay any unpaid costs of prosecution, costs of representation . . . , court fees, court costs, and criminal

penalties.” § 903.286(1), Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). Consistent with section 903.286(2), the standard cash appearance bond forms issued by the Leon County Sheriff require depositors to acknowledge that Defendant may withhold from the

bond’s return any unpaid court costs, fines, and fees (also known as legal financial obligations, or LFOs) owed in the county. ECF No. 37-2 at 1. Specifically, the cash appearance bond forms states that, if Plaintiff’s client appears as required, the bond “shall be returned to the depositor, less any unpaid

fees, court costs and criminal penalties owed by the defendant to the Leon County Clerk of Court on this or any other criminal or civil case in Leon County per section 903.286, Florida Statutes . . . .” Id. (emphasis in original). Plaintiff’s

directors must sign the cash appearance bond form when bailing out clients. ECF 61-1 at 34; ECF 61-3 at 2. If they do not, the Leon County Sherriff’s Office will not release Plaintiff’s clients. ECF 61-1 at 34; ECF 61-3 at 2. The Leon County Sherriff’s Office refuses to permit Plaintiff’s directors to list “Tallahassee Bail Fund” as the

depositor on the bond form. ECF No. 61-3 at 2. Once the Sherriff’s Office acquires the cash bond, it transfers the funds to an account controlled by Defendant. ECF 69-2 at 29. When Defendant returns funds to

Plaintiff, it uses the funds to post bonds for other individuals. ECF No. 9-1. 4 At the nonjury trial, Malia Bruker’s testimony fleshed out the details on Plaintiff’s mission and the effect that Defendant’s enforcement of section 903.286(1)

has on its operations. This Court found Ms. Bruker’s testimony credible. Ms. Bruker is one of the cofounders of the Tallahassee Bail Fund, and she has been volunteering with the organization since its inception. From its founding through the present, Ms.

Bruker helps manage Plaintiff’s finances, posts bail for Plaintiff’s clients on its behalf, and communicates with individuals that refer potential clients to the organization. Ms. Bruker affirmed that Plaintiff’s purpose is to bail people out of jail that cannot afford to do so on their own.

Ms. Bruker explained that Plaintiff uses a referral system to develop a pool of individuals that it may bail out. At the time Plaintiff filed its complaint, it received about ten referrals a month, and the referrals have continued at about that pace since

then. From this pool of referrals, Ms. Bruker and other members of the bail fund use various criteria to determine who it can use its limited funds to help. Plaintiff prioritizes individuals that are most likely to be negatively affected by incarceration, like LGBTQ people, people of color, women, and people with disabilities or medical

conditions. Plaintiff is less likely to help people that are charged with or have been convicted of a violent crime or crimes against children. Ms. Bruker also explains that a critical factor Plaintiff considers is a potential

client’s outstanding LFOs. The higher the amount of outstanding LFOs, the less 5 likely that Plaintiff will decide to bail them out because Defendant will withhold those LFOs from the cash bail returned to Plaintiff if the case ends with a conviction.

Plaintiff’s accounting of its expenditures shows that Defendant withheld almost one third of the cash bail Plaintiff posted on behalf of clients between the organization’s inception and the time the complaint was filed. See ECF No. 107-1 at 2. From 2021

to the present, Ms.

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