Lead Opinion
In this habeas proceeding Frazier and other petitioners raise a single question: May a municipal court constitutionally impose a sentence requiring an indigent defendant to pay a fine forthwith or serve a specified number of days in jail? The district court granted the writ on the ground that the sentence discriminates against defendants unable to pay their fines because of their indigency. The state appeals. We affirm.
We approach the present case in light of a trilogy of recent Supreme Court cases dealing with imprisonment imposed upon indigent defendants for non-payment of fines. The groundbreaking case was Williams v. Illinois, 1970,
The companion case to Williams v. Illinois was Morris v. Schoonfield, 1970,
. that the same constitutional defect condemned in Williams also inheres in jailing an indigent for failing to make immediate payment of any fine, whether or not the fine is accompanied by a jail term and whether or not the jail term of the indigent extends beyond the maximum term that may be imposed on a person willing and able to pay a fine. In each case, the Constitution prohibits the State from imposing a fine as a sentence and then automatically converting it into a jail term solely because the defendant is indigent and cannot forthwith pay the fine in full.
The appellant argues that the case at bar is factually distinguishable from Tate v. Short, supra. Unlike the sentencing court in that case, he argues, the municipal courts of Atlanta have authority to levy a fine or imprisonment on a defendant. Here, he says, the trial judge “could have imposed a prison sentence in the first instance.” Consequently, or so we understand the appellant’s argument, the imprisonment visited upon the appellees is not governed by the recent Supreme Court holdings; the imprisonment imposed here is not only a collection device but also a judicial expression that the state’s penal interests will be served only by immediate payment of a fine or by imprisonment.
We see no constitutional significance in the distinction asserted by the appellant. The alternative fine before us creates two disparately treated classes: those who can satisfy a fine immediately upon its levy, and those who can pay only over a period of time, if then. Those with means avoid imprisonment; the indigent cannot escape imprisonment. Since the difference in treatment is one defined by wealth, the alternative fine creates a “suspect” classification which must be tested by the compelling state interest test. Accord, In re Anta-zo, 1970,
There are two broad kinds of interests which default imprisonment of those given alternative sentences might serve.
There remain, then, the set of state penal interests which are arguably bound up with the alternative fine and which lend this case whatever novelty it may possess. As for the state’s interest in rehabilitation, we agree fully with the conclusion of the California Supreme Court that whatever lessons are impressed upon a defendant by imprisonment for failure to pay his fine at once might be equally well impressed upon him during the course of compliance with a schedule of payments established according to an alternative state procedure. In re Antazo, supra,
The appellants’ response, as we see it, is that the alternative sentence should be interpreted as an expression by the imposing judge that the state’s deterrent and punitive interests can be fulfilled only through either immediate payment of the fine or through imprisonment. Alternative methods of fine collection are implicitly declared too “soft” to match the rigors of immediate payment, and, as a result, the jail sentence must be imposed to deter future offenders and punish the defendant who cannot produce funds to pay his fine on the spot. Or so the argument might run.
Yet we refuse to accept the foundation on which this house of cards is built: that the immediate payment of fines serves punitive and deterrent interests not adequately protected through alternative methods of fine collection, such as the installment plan. In his concurring opinion in Williams v. Illinois, supra, Mr. Justice Harlan adverted to this problem when he observed that it is
. a highly doubtful proposition [that deterrence is effective only when a fine is exacted at once after sentence and by lump sum, rather than over a term] .... [A] part from the mere fact of conviction and the humiliation associated with it and the token of punishment evidenced by the forfeiture, the deterrent effect of a fine is apt to derive more from its pinch on the purse than the time of payment.
We repeat a familiar litany: “our holding today does not suggest any constitutional infirmity in imprisonment of a defendant with the means to pay a fine who refuses or neglects to do so. Nor is our decision to be understood as precluding imprisonment as an enforcement method when alternative means are unsuccessful despite the defendant’s reasonable efforts to satisfy the fines by those means; the determination of the constitutionality of imprisonment in that circumstance must await the presentation of a concrete case.” Tate v. Short,
Finally, we note that the sole question before us is the correctness of the district court’s holding that the appellees were unlawfully confined. We agree that the detention imposed according to the alternative sentence was unlawful. Our holding should not be read, though, to discharge or relieve the appellees from the responsibility for satisfying the fines levied against them in such fashion as the authorities may deem appropriate in light of his opinion.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Atlanta Municipal Code § 20-30.
. Atlanta Municipal Code § 12-2.
. Comment, Fines, Imprisonment, and the Poor: “Thirty Dollars or Thirty Days”, 57 Cal.L.Rev. 778 (1969).
. In Tate v. Short, supra, the Supreme Court reasoned that imprisonment of an indigent unable to pay his fine does not serve the State’s interest in augmenting its revenues, because the defendant cannot pay and “his imprisonment, rather than aiding collection of the revenue, saddles the State with the cost of feeding and housing him for the period of his imprisonment.”
. Comment, supra note 3 ; Note, Imprisonment for Nonpayment of Fines and Costs : A New Look at the Law and the Constitution, 22 Vand.L.Rev. 611 (1969).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) :
I acknowledge the duty of following the decisions of the Supreme Court. Of course, those of the Supreme Court of California are not binding on this Court.
The United States Supreme Court has not yet passed on the situation now before us. I would not go beyond what that Court has already decided. Indeed, in this particular field I would hope, with deference, that some prior decisions may yet be reconsidered.
I gather that the practical effect of the instant decision, to which I now dissent, is to establish as a rule of Constitutional law:
“Persons who have funds may be imprisoned until they pay their fines; those without funds may not be so imprisoned, even if the law prescribed an alternative penalty.”
Those with funds are thus denied equal treatment under the law. I would suppose that it is as much a denial of equal protection to discriminate against a person because he has money as it would be to discriminate against one who is poor. I remember the terms of the judicial oath to “do equal right to the poor and to the rich”, 28 U.S.C., § 453.
As a practical matter, collecting fines on the installment plan is a delusion. Ask any experienced installment collector.
My basic objection to this decision is that once again the courts, the instru-mentalities of the law, deliver another solar plexus to law enforcement. No indigent can be convicted of the usual misdemeanor unless it be shown beyond a reasonable doubt that he voluntarily (wilfully) committed it. That being so, I do not read the Constitution to require that any person, I care not who he is, must be given a license to violate the law on the installment plan.
Suppose one acquires the funds but then refuses or neglects to pay. He has the money in the morning but he spends it before night. He is still an indigent. May he then be put in jail for non-payment? If so, upon what kind of procedure?
It is useless to say that the remedy is to prescribe jail sentences for all misdemeanors. Convictions would be almost impossible of attainment under such harsh conditions. Moreover, there are not enough jails to hold them all if they were convicted. In the natural course of current events, I expect soon to see the claim that imprisonment for petty misdemeanors is cruel and unusual punishment. I wonder what the decision will be when that case arises. Would it be cruel and unusual to put a mother in jail for twenty-four hours for running a stop sign or driving at 80 in a 60 mile zone? That would be as reasonable as some other decisions which have been rendered in this area by some courts.
The convicted misdemeanants now before us knew, or were charged with knowing, when they committed the offenses of which they were convicted that the law permitted either fine or imprisonment. That did not deter them. They should be required to keep their voluntary bargain. For them it is a good thing that I do not have the sole power to decide their case. I would unhesitatingly require them to pay the fine or serve the time.
I respectfully dissent.
