OPINION BY
Before the court are the preliminary objections in the form of a demurrer of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (Department) to the originаl jurisdiction petition for review filed pro se by Terrence Richardson. Richardson, an inmate at SCI-Forest, asserts that deductions made from his inmate account for restitution and costs of prosecution are improper for numerous reasons, and seeks an injunction as well as punitive damages and damages for mental pain and suffering. For the reasons that follow, we sustain the Department’s preliminary objections.
For the purpose of considering the Department’s preliminary objections, we take as true all of Richardson’s well-pleaded material facts and any inferences reasonably deduced therefrom and determine if he has stated a cause of action as a matter of law.
Danysh v. Dep’t of Corr.,
845 A.2d
To thеse deductions, Richardson raises a number of objections. He asserts that the deductions are in violation of his right to Due Process, the doctrine of separation of powers and Act 84, and that they are being taken without a valid court order. He further claims that employees of SCI-Forest acted recklessly in mаking the deductions, and that their reckless actions caused him mental anguish.
Richardson claims that the deductions from his inmate account deprive him of Due Proсess because he was never afforded a hearing on his ability to pay the assessed costs and restitution. However, our Supreme Court has held that a sentеncing hearing provides all the process required before deductions are made from an inmate account.
Buck v. Beard,
Richardson next seemingly argues that the deductions are in violation of the separation of powers doctrine. However, this сourt has fully addressed this argument in the past and found no separation of powers problem with deductions from inmate accounts.
See Boyd v. Dep’t of Corr.,
Richardson next claims that сollection of the court costs are contrary to Act 84, because the judge never articulated the amount of costs Richardson owed. At sentencing, the judge imposed a specific amount of restitution, but only said that Richardson was to “pay the costs of prosecution.” Petition for Review, Exhibit A, at 8. Similarly, in the sеntencing order, the restitution amount is listed, but the amount of costs is not. Instead there is simply a check mark next to the word “costs” on the form. The first time costs are enumerated in the materials that Richardson provided to this court is in a Court Commitment form given to the Department, signed by the Clerk of Court, listing the costs of prosecution as $1,525.34.
While it appears that no court has ever considered the propriety of collection of costs unenumerated by the trial judge, there havе been rulings in a number of related areas. It is clear, for instance, that it is unlawful for a Clerk of Court to authorize.the collection of costs when the judge did not include costs in the sentence at all.
Spotz v. Commonwealth,
Richardson asserts having costs calculated by the Clerk of Court is contrary to Act 84, but is unable to point to a provision of the statute, or a case interpreting it, that requires the judge to impоse the specific amount to be withheld. We see no impediment to the clerk’s performing that ministerial duty, if, as in this case, the imposition of costs generally has been authorized by the trial judge. In
LeBar,
the Superior ’ Court authorized the Clerk of Court to impose statutorily mandated fees even in the absence of a court оrder.
Richardson also claims that the deductions from his inmate account were unlawful because, in some instances, the Department referred to the restitution and costs as a “debt,” and Act 84 specifically provides that “restitution ... [and] costs ... are part of a criminal action or proceeding and shall not be deemed debts.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 9728(a)(1). This argument ignores the entirety of Act 84, including subsection (a)(1), which, regardless of its language about debts, authоrizes county authorities to collect restitution and costs, and subsection (b)(5), which authorizes the Department to collect those funds from inmates on behalf of the county. The deductions from Richardson’s inmate account are clearly authorized by statute and semantics do not change that fact.
Finally, Richardson asserts that the staff at SCI-Forest has been reckless and negligent in denying his requests that the deductions be stopped. He asserts that the actions of these emрloyees have caused him distress for which he seeks both pain and suffering and punitive damages. However, this court does not have original jurisdiction over common law tort actions of this sort.
Miles v. Beard,
For all the reasons above, we sustain the preliminary objections and dismiss the petition for review.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 23rd day of March, 2010, Respondent’s preliminary objections in the above-captioned matter are hereby SUSTAINED and the petition for review is DISMISSED.
