Affirmеd in part and reversed in part by published opinion. Judge TRAXLER wrote the opinion, in which Judge DUNCAN and Judge AGEE joined.
OPINION
Anthony Eubanks appeals a district court order granting summary judgment against him in his ex post facto challenge to a South Carolina law requiring that certain prisoners provide DNA samples for South Carolina’s DNA bank and pay a $250 processing fee before being paroled or released. We affirm the district court’s ruling regarding the constitutionality of the requirements that a sample be provided and that the processing fee be paid. We hold, however, that the provision requiring payment of the fеe before the prisoner is paroled or released from confinement may not be enforced against Eu-banks.
I.
Eubanks was convicted in state court of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree and sentenced on April 6, 1995, to 28 years’ imprisonment in the South Carolina Department of Corrections (“SCDC”). The South Carolina General Assembly enacted the State Deoxyribonucleic Acid Identification Record Database Act, see S.C.Code Ann. §§ 23-3-600 et seq. (2008) (“the Act”), to become effective on July 1, 1995. The Act provided, as is relevant here, that “[a]t such time as possible and before parole or release from confinement, a suitable sample from which DNA may be obtained for inclusion in the State DNA Database must be provided by ... a person who is convicted or adjudicated delinquent before July 1, 1995, and who was sentenced to and is serving a term of confinеment on July 1, 1995, for ... criminal sexual conduct in the first degree.” S.C.Code Ann. § 23-2-620(B) (1999).
(A) A person who is required to provide a sample pursuant to this article must pay a two hundred and fifty dollar processing fee which may not be waived by the court. If the person is incarcerated, the fee must be paid before the person is paroled or released from confinement and may be garnished from wages the person earns while incarcerated. If the person is not sentenced to a term of confinement, рayment of the fee must be a condition of the person’s sentence and may be paid in installments if so ordered by the court.
S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-670 (2007). The processing fees are the primary source of funding for South Carolina’s DNA database.
In 1999 Eubanks filed suit in federal district court under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (West 2003) against SCDC, the State Law Enforcement Division (“SLED”), and former SCDC Director William D. Catoе (collectively, “the State”). Eubanks alleged that the requirements that each inmate provide a DNA sample to be included in the DNA database and that each pay a $250 processing fee violate the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution.
Eubanks’ suit was consolidated with the pending suits of several other inmates in an order that limited plaintiffs to raising the ex post facto challenges discussed above. All other constitutional claims or challenges to the Act that were asserted in any of the consolidated suits were dismissed without prejudice. Eubanks did not subsequently file a separate action.
Reviewing cross-motions for summаry judgment, the district court denied the plaintiffs’ motion and granted summary judgment against them. The court ruled that the DNA-sample and processing-fee requirements were not ex post facto because they were not punitive. The court further concluded that the Act did not prohibit the parole or release оf prisoners who had not paid their required fees.
II.
Eubanks now argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment against him.
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo. See Emmett v. Johnson,
We apply a two-part test in determining whether a law imposes punishment for ex post facto purposes:
The Court first asks whether the legislature’s intent, as discerned from the structure and design of the statute along with any declared legislative intent, was to impose a punishment or merely to enact a сivil or regulatory law.
Second, even if the legislature did not intend to impose a punishment, a law still may be said to do so if the sanction or disability that it imposes is “so punitive in fact” that the law “may not legitimately be viewed as civil in nature.” A defendant faces a “heavy burden” in making a showing of such а punitive effect and can succeed only on the “clearest proof.”
Id. (citations omitted) (quoting United States v. Ursery,
We note that two South Carolina Court of Appeals decisions have already held that the DNA-sample requirement is not penal in nature. See Sanders v. South Carolina Dep’t of Corr.,
We agree with these decisions — the correctness of which Eubanks does not challenge. The Act provides that its purpose is to allow SLED to build up the state DNA dаtabase by “developing] DNA profiles on samples for law enforcement purposes and for humanitarian and nonlaw enforcement purposes, as provided for in Section 23-3-640(B).” S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-610 (2009). Section 23-3-640(B) provides that DNA profiles may be used
(1) to develop a convicted offеnder database to identify suspects in otherwise nonsuspect cases;
(2) to develop a population database when personal identifying information is removed;
(3) to support identification research and protocol development of forensic DNA analysis mеthods;
(4) to generate investigative leads in criminal investigations;
(5) for quality control or quality assurance purposes, or both;
(6) to assist in the recovery and identification of human remains from mass disasters;
(7) for other humanitarian purposes including identification of missing persons.
S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-640(B) (2009). These purposes are not punitive. See Jones v. Murray,
The requirement that those providing the samples pay a $250 processing fee also
Further, Eubanks has not shown by the “clearеst proof’ that the fee requirement is “so punitive in fact that the law may not legitimately be viewed as civil in nature.” O’Neal,
Apart from the penal or civil nature оf the requirement that he pay the processing fee, Eubanks argues that the statute is ex post facto because it prohibits the parole or release of any prisoner who is required to pay the fee but has not yet done so. That such a requirement is ex post facto is established by Jones, wherein we struck down a portion of a Virginia statute that applied to some inmates whose criminal conduct predated the enactment of the statute. See Jones,
In this case, as we have explained, the district court construed S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-670 not to authorize suсh a deferral. Eubanks contends that that construction was erroneous. We agree.
In interpreting a state law, we apply the statutory construction rules applied by the state’s highest court. See Carolina Trucks & Equip., Inc. v. Volvo Trucks of N. Am., Inc.,
The State argues that, because Jones was decided several years before the Act was enacted, we must presume that the General Assembly was aware that it would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause to delay the parole or releаse of an inmate who committed his crime prior to the statute’s enactment. The State maintains that, especially in light of this presumption, the statute may plausibly be read merely to set the time by which the $250 must be paid rather than to provide an enforcement mechanism to ensure payment of the funds. The State argues that we should adopt this construction under the doctrine of constitutional avoidance and in deference to the interpretations of SCDC and SLED, the agencies charged with administering the statute.
We conclude that the language of § 23-3-670(A) stating that “the fee must be paid before the person is paroled or released from confinement” unambiguously prohibits the parole or release of a prisoner required to pay the fee until the fee is paid. Since the statute is reasonably susceptible to only this reading, the doctrine of constitutional avoidance does not apply, and we need not defer tо any contrary agency construction. And, because the requirement that an inmate not be paroled or released until he has paid his $250 fee, that requirement is unenforceable against him. See Jones,
Our holding that this provision is unenforceable against Eubanks requires us to determine whether it is severаble from the remainder of the statute. Under South Carolina law,
[t]he test for severability is whether the constitutional portion of the statute remains complete in itself, wholly independent of that which is rejected, and is of such a character that it may fairly be presumed that the legislaturе would have passed it independent of that which conflicts with the constitution. When the residue of an Act, sans that portion found to be unconstitutional, is capable of being executed in accordance with the Legislative intent, independent of the rejected portion, the Act as a whole should not be stricken as being in violation of a Constitutional Provision.
Joytime Distribs. & Amusement Co. v. South Carolina,
III.
In sum, we reverse the grant of summary judgment against Eubanks and hold that the statutory requirement that the $250 fee must be paid before a prisоner is paroled or released from confinement is unenforceable against him. Otherwise, we affirm.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART
Notes
. Section 23-3-620 has since been amended. See S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-620 (2009).
. Eubanks argues that SCDC violated his constitutional rights in removing funds to pay the $250 fee from his prison account without a court order or garnishment proceeding. The argument Eubanks appears tо advance is that he was deprived of his property without due process of law, but since no such claim is included in Eubanks’ complaint, no such claim is before us. And, to the extent that Eubanks contends that the way in which the SCDC collected the $250 fee from him demonstrates that the statutory fee requirement is ex post facto, he is incorrect. See Seling v. Young,
. The district court stated in its summary judgment order that "[biased upon the briefs of both counsel, it appears to be undisputed that [SCDC and SLED] interpret the Act as not requiring a non-paying inmate to be held beyond any parole or release date.” J.A. 272 (internal quotation marks omitted).
