Anthony R. MARTIN, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*757 Anthony R. Martin, pro se, Palm Beach, FL, for Petitioner.
No Appearance, for Respondent.
OPINION ON SANCTIONS
PER CURIAM.
Anthony R. Martin[1] filеd a petition for discretionary review in this Court in the instant case. In an order issued previously in this case, we denied review concluding that "the petition presents no basis for jurisdiction." See Martin v. State, No. SC02-511,
FACTS
In 2000, due to Martin's long history of filing procedurally barred and extremely abusive petitions, this Court issuеd a written decision sanctioning Martin. See Martin v. State,
This Court has discretionary review jurisdiction to review several narrow classes of district court decisions. See art. V, § 3(b)(3)-(4), Fla. Const. In the last few years Martin received a number of written decisions from the district courts. Unfortunately, he delayed seeking discretionary review in this Court. Further, when he finally sought review of those decisions, he inappropriately continued filing petitions for writs of habeas or mandamus, not petitions for discretionary review.[3] However, as it does for all petitioners, the clerk's office treated the petitions as they should have been denominatedas petitions for discretionary reviewbut then dismissed them as untimely. After the clerk's office began doing this, Martin "discovered" that such petitions were not barred by the sanction order and he began filing nearly all his pleadings as petitions for discretionary review. Most were not, however, true petitions for discretionary review, and after carefully reviewing each pleading, we rejected them in accordance with the sanction order.
Nevertheless, Martin has twice succeeded in filing a timely petition for discretionary review. In the first one, Martin аlleged that the district court's decision in Martin v. State,
This is Martin's second timely petition for discretionary review. The "decision" under review in this case was a rather long, unpublished order denying five motions Martin had filed in the Fourth District Court of Appeal. After the Fourth District provided Martin no relief in its decision in the earlier case, Martin filed another appeal in that court, attempting to seek review of the same trial court order. In the latter case, the Fourth District dismissed the appeal as untimely. Martin v. State, No. 4D01-1664 (Fla. 4th DCA Oct. 30, 2001). In a routine court order, it also subsequently denied five motions filed by Martin. That routine order did not discuss the underlying subject of Martin's appeal. Nevertheless, Martin filed the instant *759 petition for discretionary review, asserting that this nearly unelaborated order conflicted with a number of decisions from both this Court and the district courts on the subject of res judicata, right to counsel, and other matters. It was immediately clear, however, that the Fourth District's order did not discuss or even mention any of those subjects and that Martin's "jurisdictional" arguments had nothing at all to do with this Court's conflict jurisdiction. He was simply rearguing the merits of his criminal case as well as contesting the Fourth District's October 17, 2001, written decision in Martin v. State,
In Martin's response to that order, he asserts that such a proposed sanction has already been determined to be improper in Procup v. Strickland,
ANALYSIS
We reject Martin's response as completely without merit and decline to address all of his arguments except the contention that this Court cannot sanction Martin in the manner proposed based on Procup v. Strickland,
Some sixteen years ago, in Procup, a federal appellate court concluded that a lower court's order barring all pro se proceedings from an inmate who had "engaged in ridiculously extensive litigation" was too broad because the inmate tendеd to sue his attorneys so it was unlikely he could find an attorney to take his cases.
We do not, however, believe that this 1986 case represents the current state of the law in this area. In 1989, the United States Supreme Court began sanctioning abusive litigants by denying them prospective indigency as a sanction for filing frivolous pleadings. See In re McDonald,
This Court ordered Martin to show cause why he should not be sanctioned for abusing the judicial system by filing pleadings that failed to properly invoke the jurisdiction of this Court. Martin has not done so. Instead, hе has responded with insults, threats of federal litigation, and continued reargument of issues which have already been determined adversely to him. Martin has already had his appeal in the district court. There is simply no right to a second aрpeal to Florida's highest court. Under the Florida Constitution, after the direct appeal, only litigants who receive certain types of district court decisions may seek discretionary review in this Court. See generally art. V, § 3(b), Fla. Const. Martin clearly feеls that despite the fact that he had not received a decision that would provide this Court with discretionary review jurisdiction, he wants this Court to review his case anyway because his rights have allegedly been violated. Martin simply refuses tо conform himself to the jurisdictional requirements necessary for him to attain this Court's jurisdiction. Instead, he endeavors to find ways to avoid this Court's attempts to discourage him from continuing to litigate the issues that have already been resolvеd. In short, we are convinced that any further limitations set by this Court, short of requiring an attorney, will be violated and avoided, as he has violated and avoided the previous limitations this Court imposed on him in Martin v. State,
While we are cognizant of the access to courts implications of refusing to accept any more petitions from [the petitioner] unless they are signed by an attorney, we are also сoncerned that failure to impose this sanction will handicap this Court's ability to timely review the many other petitions filed by inmates and other petitioners who have not abused the system. While on the one hand, we would like to say that the courts should never limit a person's ability to access the courts, on the other hand, there are a handful of petitioners who have so abused the system that failure to restrain them could deny or delay the right of access to cоurts for the rest of the populace. Even the United States Supreme Court has had to face the difficult perspective of putting significant restraints on some of its pro se litigants. Several of the members of the United States Supremе Court did not agree that limits should ever be placed on a litigant; however, a majority of that Court has found [in In re McDonald,489 U.S. 180 , 184,109 S.Ct. 993 ,103 L.Ed.2d 158 (1989),] that in extreme circumstances, it was necessary to do so to ensure free access to the courts in general.
Jackson v. Florida Dep't of Corrections,
We have recognized before that "the resources of our court system are finite and must be reserved for the resolution of genuine disputes." Armstead v. State,
It is so ordered.
ANSTEAD, C.J., SHAW, WELLS, LEWIS, and QUINCE, JJ., and HARDING, Senior Justice, concur.
PARIENTE, J., recused.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Martin is also known as or was previously known аs Anthony R. Martin-Trigona.
[2] Martin has filed literally thousands of lawsuits across the nation and is particularly malicious in his abuse. A Lexis search reveals 135 cases across the nation mentioning him by name. See, e.g., In re Martin-Trigona,
[3] Martin graduated from law school in Illinois but was denied admission by the Illinois Supreme Court due to his abusive behavior. See In re Martin-Trigona,
[4] In this published opinion, the United States Supreme Court denied Attwood's request to proceed in forma pauperis in that case and prospectively as a sanction for filing frivolous petitions.
