Odell CAMPBELL, Shawnta Renea Coleman, Thomas Ray Robertson, Diana J. Najera, Scott Wiernik, Tairhonda McAfee and Marybeth Lynn Jewell, Petitioners, v. Thomas A. WILDER, Tarrant County District Clerk, Respondent
NO. 14-0379
Supreme Court of Texas.
April 1, 2016
Opinion delivered: April 1, 2016
Thomas Stutz, Fort Worth TX, for Other interested party/Petitioner.
Amy Warr, Wallace B. Jefferson, Alexander Dubose Jefferson & Townsend LLP, Lee Anne DiFilippo, DiFilippo Limited Partnership, Austin TX, Jason C.N. Smith, Law Offices of Jason Smith, Linda Harvill Gregory, Methodist Justice Ministry, Fort Worth TX, Thomas Fenton Allen Jr., Basheer Youssef Ghorayeb, Jasmine Wynton, Jones Day, Dallas TX, for Petitioner.
Christopher William Ponder, Asst. District Attorney, Joe Shannon Jr., Criminal District Attorney, Fort Worth TX, for Respondent.
CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The trial court temporarily enjoined the District Clerk of Tarrant County from billing court costs to parties who had filed uncontested affidavits of indigency. A divided court of appeals vacated the injunction and dismissed the case because the trial court had not rendered the judgments in the cases in which costs were billed.1 We consider whether the trial court had jurisdiction over a challenge to the District Clerk‘s exercise of his ministerial duties, and if so, whether injunctive relief is appropriate. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
I
Petitioners are six individuals2 who sued for divorce in Tarrant County between 2008 and 2012. Like thousands of other parties to divorce cases in the family district courts of Tarrant County during that period, Petitioners each filed an uncontested affidavit of indigency in lieu of paying costs as permitted by
Between May and August 2012, each of the Petitioners received collection notices from Respondent, the District Clerk of Tarrant County, demanding from each, on average, about $300 in court costs and fees. The notices threatened that the sheriff would seize property to satisfy the debt. Petitioners were understandably upset and frightened by the notices. When the Texas Advocacy Project protested on behalf of some of the Petitioners, the District Clerk responded that he was bound by the decrees allocating costs to the party who incurred them. He encouraged any party wishing not to pay costs to return to the family court that rendered the divorce decree to have costs retaxed.
Petitioners sued for mandamus, injunctive, and declaratory relief in a civil district court that had not rendered any of their divorce decrees. After an evidentiary hearing, the court found that the District Clerk
has a policy, practice, and procedure that his office will seek to collect costs against parties who have filed an affidavit on indigency under
Tex.R. Civ. P. 145 where the affidavit was not contested, where the contest was denied, or where the contest was withdrawn based on judgments or final orders in which there was no specific finding expressly stated in the judgment or final order that the indigent party‘s action resulted in a monetary award, and no specific finding expressly stated in the judgment or final order that there was sufficient monetary award to reimburse costs[.]
The court temporarily enjoined the District Clerk from “continuing his policy of collection of court costs from indigent parties who have filed an affidavit on indigency“.
The District Clerk appealed, contending that
II
We first consider the applicability of
A
We interpreted the 1911 version7 in a 1923 case, Carey v. Looney.8 There, a district court in McLennan County rendered a personal money judgment for Looney and awarded him an order of sale to be executed on a piece of land in Milam County to satisfy the judgment.9 Carey, who was not a party to the judgment and claimed to own the land, sued in a district court in Milam County for an injunction prohibiting Looney and the sheriff from executing the order of sale and writ of possession, and from disturbing her and her tenants’ lawful possession.10 The court dismissed the action for want of jurisdiction on the ground that the statute required the action to be brought in the court in McLennan County.11 We disagreed.
The purposes of the statute, we said, are “to protect the judgments and processes of one court from interference by another by direct attack” and to “prevent[] a defeated party from proceeding from one court to another, after his defeat, or in the hope of avoiding defeat, in an attempt to relitigate the case.”12 The Milam County court‘s exercise of jurisdiction offended neither. We then described the statute‘s applicability as follows:
The test of jurisdiction in such cases is whether the relief sought may be granted independently of the judgment or its mandate sought to be enjoined. If, in order to grant the relief, it is necessary to set aside or modify the judgment, or to regulate the processes issued thereunder, and the attack is made by a party to the judgment, the statue is mandatory and requires that the injunction suit be returnable to and tried in the court rendering the judgment. On the other hand, if the court in which the injunction suit is brought has general jurisdiction over the subject-matter, and the relief may be granted, independently of the matters adjudicated in the suit whose judgment or processes thereunder are sought to be restrained, the statute has no application.14
The District Clerk‘s argument misreads Carey. Carey‘s case fell outside the statute‘s applicability because the relief Carey sought was independent of the matters adjudicated by the judgment in McLennan County. That court had not adjudicated Carey‘s claims; she was not a party. But the court did adjudicate whether the interests of the defendants before it should be sold; indeed, the court issued an order of sale.15 Carey‘s suit to stop the execution process issued to enforce Looney‘s judgment would have been governed by the statute but for the fact that she was not a party to Looney‘s case. If the statute merely prohibited a party to a judgment from asking another court to enjoin its enforcement, it would have been much easier to draw the line there, having noted that a purpose of the statute is to prevent a party from forum-shopping. But another purpose, we said, is to prevent one court from directly attacking another‘s judgment. “The test” is whether relief can be granted independently of the judgment. What followed were merely examples.
We made clear later in the opinion that the applicability of what is now
Where specific property has been levied upon under a general execution, the levy and sale may be enjoined in another court, even by a party to the suit. The ground of such holding is that the injunction of a sale of specific property, on the claim that it is not subject to the levy, is not a stay or interference with the processes of another court.... On the other hand, where the judgment itself orders the sale of specific property, such sale cannot be restrained by another court upon the application of a party to the judgment.16
The applicability of the statute depends on whether injunctive relief can be granted independently of the judgment, not on whether the applicant for injunctive relief was a party to the judgment, or on whether an injunction will disturb process issuing as a result of that judgment.
In other words, under Carey, the fact that the injunction may disturb process issuing as a result of the judgment is but one example of when a court could be unable to grant relief independently of the judgment. But that does not mean that an injunction that disturbs process can never be granted independently of the judgment. Even if a plaintiff seeks an injunction that will regulate the processes issued under a judgment, courts must still consider whether, under the specific circumstances of each case, the injunction may nevertheless be issued independently of the judgment.
The District Clerk‘s misinterpretation of the statute finds some support in our 1982
B
Both parties agree that the District Clerk has a ministerial duty to bill costs as required by a judgment. The District Clerk argues that Petitioners’ divorce decrees require them to pay costs. But the decrees only allocate costs between the parties to each case, requiring each party to bear his or her own costs—whatever they are. For a party who files an affidavit of inability to pay costs, there are no costs to bill; under
“An uncontested affidavit of inability to pay is conclusive as a matter of law.”23 The only exception lies when “the party‘s action results in monetary award, and the court finds sufficient monetary award to reimburse costs“.24 Without a finding by the court, the affidavit wholly supplants any costs.25
The District Clerk argues that because the Family Code provides courts with increased latitude to award costs, it is con-
In any case, the family courts here did not order costs. The language in the judgment merely lays out the division of any costs, not an amount to be charged.29 It is the ministerial duty of the District Clerk to tabulate the costs and apply the affidavit of indigency.30
Petitioners complain that they were billed costs they did not incur. They challenge the District Clerk‘s actions and his policy; they do not challenge a word of the judgments in their cases.
III
Having established that the district court had jurisdiction over the petitions, we now turn to the issue of whether a temporary injunction was proper.
A
First, the District Clerk argues that because Petitioners could have filed a motion to retax costs, they have an adequate remedy at law.
Generally, the existence of an adequate remedy at law will bar equitable relief.31 However, if an otherwise complete and adequate remedy at law will lead to a multiplicity of suits, “that very fact prevents it from being complete and adequate.”32 “[T]he unlawful acts of public officials” are a prime candidate for injunctions “when [those acts] would cause irreparable injury or when such remedy is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of suits.”33
A motion to retax costs confronts the correctness of the clerk‘s ministerial calculations.34 It is the proper method for correcting errors such as miscalculating the cost of an item35 or billing an item that is not statutorily taxable.36 These are
Petitioners are not complaining of a one-off miscalculation or mistake, but of a systematic policy that contravenes the law. It would be wasteful to force each individual Petitioner to file a motion to retax costs when a single injunction will do.37
B
The District Clerk also argues that the injunction is overbroad. The district court enjoined the District Clerk from “continuing his policy of collection of court costs from indigent parties ... unless [the court makes a specific finding in accordance with
An injunction must be broad enough to “prevent repetition of the evil sought to be stopped”38—here, the District Clerk‘s “policy, practice, and procedure” of seeking costs against indigent litigants, as found by the district court. When a policy or procedure is challenged as being in conflict with state law, any injunction that issues will necessarily affect individuals beyond the named parties.
For example, we affirmed an injunction that restrained a state agency from disciplining any employee who refused to take a polygraph test, despite the fact that only a few individuals and the state union raised the constitutional challenge to the polygraph policy.39 We also reversed the dissolution of an injunction preventing a fire department from implementing a fire-fighter fitness assessment that conflicted with state law, even though only a few firefighters brought the action.40
Similarly, the district court found that “because of the nature of this action, a final judgment in this case will affect all persons who are in a position similar to these Petitioners.” The injunction order tracks the language of
At oral argument, there was a brief discussion of whether mandamus might be a more appropriate remedy than an injunction. “There is a well defined difference between injunction and mandamus. One is preventive and the other remedial.”41 When the purpose of the suit is to compel action, then mandamus is
Here, the purpose of the suit was to prevent the District Clerk from billing costs to indigent litigants. To the extent that the District Clerk has already billed costs and must now take some action to rescind the bills, mandamus would be proper. But the true relief lies in enjoining the District Clerk from continuing his policy of collecting these costs from these Petitioners or others similarly situated.44 The temporary injunction is proper.
*
We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Justice Lehrmann did not participate in the decision.
