Lamar Johnson, an inmate at Rivers Correctional Institution in Hardwick, Georgia, appeals pro se from the order of the district court requiring that he pay a partial filing fee of $20.00 (the full fee being $60.00) to proceed with his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action. He argues that the district court abused its discretion in setting a fee as high as $20.00. Considering the factors upon which the district court relied in making its fee determination, we agree that the court abused its discretion.
Reviewing Johnson’s petition to proceed in forma pauperis, the district court found that Johnson’s prison account balance averaged $13.00 per month. The court also noted that Johnson had earlier filed another lawsuit in a different federal district court complaining of the same conditions that are the subject of the present suit. Because of Johnson’s prison balance and litigation history, the court ordered that Johnson’s complaint would be docketed only upon payment of $20.00 of the $60.00 filing fee. 1
District courts enjoy wide discretion in deciding whether a partial fee is fair and appropriate in a particular case.
Collier v. Tatum,
The purpose of imposing a partial filing fee rather than permitting the indigent plaintiff to proceed at no expense is to weed out those actions brought by plaintiffs who have some financial resources but lack the good faith in their actions to contribute to filing costs.
Collier,
It also appears that $20.00 is an unreasonable amount to require of Johnson. As the district court found, Johnson’s prison account has averaged only $13.00 per month and Johnson claims that he needs this money to purchase personal grooming items such as toothpaste and soap. We also know that Johnson claimed to have only $5.00 at the time he applied for in forma pauperis status. Without more information or explanation than was given in the district court’s order, it is difficult to understand how the court arrived at $20.00 or how that amount could be fair. To demand $20.00 from Johnson would appear to work considerable hardship on him and may foreclose his access to the courts in this action. While agreeing with the
Collier
panel that percentages cannot be determinative, we note that this fee is much higher (in proportion to income and assets) than the fees surveyed in
Collier,
Johnson does not argue that no partial fee could be appropriate; he may yet be required to pay a partial fee. On remand, the district court may consider Johnson’s current financial status and inquire into the good faith of this and prior litigation in setting a partial fee. The court should take into account Johnson’s good faith expenses, and Johnson should be given an opportunity to show why he cannot pay the amount required if he again asserts he is unable to pay.
See Collier,
The order of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court originally ordered Johnson to pay the full $60.00 fee. The amount was a clerical error, which the court subsequently corrected to require prepayment of only $20.00 of the $60.00 fee.
. The Collier opinion mistakenly refers to the plaintiff in that case as "defendant" in its last few paragraphs. We assume that the panel meant to list as a factor the litigation history of the in forma pauperis petitioner (plaintiff), not of the defendant.
