Kevin J. COLLINS v. DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS.
Docket No. Ken-14-236.
Supreme Judicial Court of Maine.
Decided: Aug. 13, 2015.
2015 ME 112
Submitted on Briefs: July 1, 2015.
Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Diane E. Sleek, Asst. Atty. Gen., Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee Department of Corrections.
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
[¶1] Kevin J. Collins appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court (Kennebec County, Marden, J.) dismissing, as untimely filed, his petition for judicial review of a final agency action pursuant to
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
[¶2] Collins is an inmate at the Maine State Prison. He filed three grievances against the Department of Corrections relating to food services and the prison‘s telephone system. On November 5, 2012, the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections denied all three grievances. Collins received notice of the Commissioner‘s decision on that date.
[¶3] On December 5, 2012, thirty days later, Collins filed a petition for judicial review of a final agency action against the Department.1 See
[¶4] Section 1058 specifies that no prisoner may obtain a waiver of a filing fee in an action that challenges “a condition of that person‘s confinement or the effect of an action or inaction by a government official on the life of that person,” id., but the prisoner may be relieved of the obligation to prepay the filing fee if the prisoner can demonstrate “that the action or appeal is not frivolous and has been brought in good faith and that the person is without sufficient funds to pay the filing fee,”
[¶6] Upon being served with the complaint several months later, the Department moved to stay the proceedings pending Collins‘s payment of the full $150 filing fee, arguing that Collins was required to pay the fee in installments pursuant to
[¶7] Shortly after Collins paid the filing fee, the Department moved to dismiss Collins‘s petition as untimely filed due to his failure to file his certified general client account statement within thirty days after receiving notice of the final agency action. See
[¶8] On May 14, 2014, the trial court dismissed Collins‘s petition as untimely. Collins filed a notice of appeal on June 2, 2014, accompanied by an application to proceed without payment of fees and an indigency affidavit. Collins did not file a certified copy of his account statement for the six months preceding the appeal, as required by section 1058. The trial court waived the appellate filing fee, again despite the prohibition in section 1058.
[¶9] The Department filed a timely notice of appeal from the order waiving the filing fee, and it filed a motion to dismiss Collins‘s appeal for failure to file a new account statement for the six months preceding the appeal to us, arguing that he had thus failed to perfect his appeal. See
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
[¶10] Appeals in civil actions, including appeals from judgments arising pursuant to
[¶11] A Rule 80C petition to the Superior Court is untimely filed if any statutorily mandated document is not filed within the time limit prescribed by
[¶12] Because Collins‘s action related to “a condition of [his] confinement or the effect of an action or inaction by a government official on [his] life,” Collins, if he sought waiver of prepayment of the filing fee, was required to file a certified copy of his account statement for the six months preceding his appeal to us.
[¶14] Finally, we note that best practice in such prisoner appeals would be for the State to file a motion to dismiss an apparently untimely petition at the outset of the proceedings, rather than cause the petitioner to pay the $150 fee and then move to dismiss the action.3
The entry is:
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
1. Prepayment of filing fee and certified copies required. A person who is confined in a federal, state, county or local correctional or detention facility may not bring a civil action arising under federal or state law in any court in this State with respect to a condition of that person‘s confinement or the effect of an action or inaction by a government official on the life of that person confined and may not appeal a judgment in such a civil action without prepayment of the filing fee unless, in addition to the in forma pauperis application and affidavit required by the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 91, that person submits a certified copy of the general client account statement for that person for the 6-month period immediately preceding the filing of the action or appeal, obtained from the appropriate official of each facility at which that person is or was confined.
2. Waiver of prepayment of filing fee. If the court finds that the action or appeal is not frivolous and has been brought in good faith and that the person is without sufficient funds to pay the filing fee, it shall order that prepayment of the full amount of the filing fee be waived. If the court denies the in forma pauperis application, the action or appeal must be dismissed without prejudice, unless within 7 days after the denial the person pays the filing fee to the clerk of the court.
3. Full payment of filing fee required; initial partial filing fee. Notwithstanding subsection 2, the person shall pay the full amount of the filing fee. The court shall assess the person‘s financial status and, when funds exist, collect as a partial payment of the filing fee an initial partial filing fee of 20% of the greater of:
A. The average monthly deposits to the general client account credited to the person for the 6-month period immediately preceding the filing of the action or appeal; or
B. The average monthly balance in the general client account for the person for the 6-month period immediately preceding the filing of the action or appeal.
