James Stehouwer and Steve Olivares submitted to the district court unrelated pro se
I. The Authority of the District Court to Set Partial Fees
Appellants’ chief contention is that while 28 U.S.C. § 1915 permits district courts to require full fеes or to waive all fees, it does not grant district courts the authority to require a partial filing fee. We take this oppоrtunity to make the apparent explicit: Courts have discretion to impose partial filing fees under the in forma pauperis statute.
Our decision in Alexander v. Carson Adult High School,
Although it is not axiomatic, the greater power to waive аll fees includes the lesser power to set partial fees. Requiring the payment of fees according to a plaintiffs аbility to pay serves the in forma pauperis statute’s goal of granting equal access to the courts regardless of economic status. At the same time, requiring a partial payment within a plaintiffs ability to pay serves the dual aims of defraying some of the judicial costs of litigation and screening out frivolous claims.
To date, at least nine of our sister circuits have ruled on this issuе, and all have concluded that imposing partial fifing fees is an appropriate exercise of authority under 28 U.S.C. § 1915. See, In re Stump,
II. The Propriety of the Partial Fees Imposed
With the authority of the district court to set partial fees settled, we now turn to the propriety of the partial fees imposed in these particular cases.
Stehouwer, who was a prisoner at the time he moved to proceed in forma pauperis, qualified as a pauper. After reviewing Stehouwer’s affidavit and financial records and holding a show cause hearing, thе district court found that Stehouwer earned about $14.61 a month, had a balance of $14.61 in his prison trust fund account, and received $110 dоllars from family members in the six month period preceding the submission of his complaint. The district court imposed a filing fee of $20.00 payable in two installments over a period of 90 days. On these facts, the first installment would leave Stehouwer $4.61 for" the next month’s commissаry shopping and the second installment would leave him another $4.61. After the appeal was commenced but before it was submitted, Stehouwer was paroled and filed an affidavit to the
Turning to the imposition of a $30.00 filing fee in the Olivares case, no abuse of discretion is revealed in this record. It is undisputed that in the six months preceding the submission of his complaint, Olivares received $310.00 from his family. Moreover, throughout the contest over fees in the district court, Olivares had sufficient funds in his prison trust fund account to cover the partial fee. Olivares consistently withdrew $35 a month, more than the partial filing fee required, for such items as name brand toiletries instеad of the generic toiletries furnished by the prison, crackers, potato chips, corn chips, cookies, and candy. The district judge was entitled to consider Olivares’s own economic choices about how to spend his money, as betweеn his filing fee and comforts purchased in the prison commissary, when the court determined the size of the partial filing fee. Alexander,
Contrary to the protest of the appellants, our decision here does not establish a rule that plaintiffs must be utterly penniless in order to qualify for a complete waiver of fees. We merely hоld that on the facts here, the district court neither abused its broad discretion in setting the amount of the fees imposed in Olivares’ case nor in following the weight of authority from this and other jurisdictions in setting a reduced fee in each case.
Finally, appеllants argue that a finding of frivolousness in addition to nonpayment of a filing fee is required to dismiss an indigent’s lawsuit, under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) and our decision in Franklin v. Murphy,
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded. Appellant Stehouwer to recover costs on appeal.
