Frazier v. Jordan

Decision Date03 April 1972
Docket NumberNo. 71-2061.,71-2061.
PartiesCarleton FRAZIER et al., Petitioners-Appellees, v. Captain R. F. JORDAN, Superintendent of the City of Atlanta Prison Farm, Respondent-Appellant.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Henry L. Bowden, John E. Dougherty, Atlanta, Ga., for respondent-appellant.

Richard Roesel, Larry Woods, Atlanta Legal Aid Soc., Michael Terry, Atlanta, Ga., for petitioners-appellees.

Before WISDOM, COLEMAN and SIMPSON, Circuit Judges.

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

In this habeas proceeding Frazier and other petitioners raise a single question: May a municipal court constitutionally impose a sentence requiring an indigent defendant to pay a fine forthwith or serve a specified number of days in jail? The district court granted the writ on the ground that the sentence discriminates against defendants unable to pay their fines because of their indigency. The state appeals. We affirm.

The petitioners-appellees were arrested for violations of the Atlanta Noise Ordinance1 and the Atlanta Fire Ordinance.2 They pleaded not guilty, but after a short trial before the Municipal Court for the City of Atlanta, General Division, each was found guilty of both violations. On March 12, 1971, each appellee received two alternative sentences of a $17 fine or 13 days in jail for each violation, the jail terms to be served consecutively, if at all. The appellees were unable to pay the fine because of their indigency, and served the first of their thirteen day terms. After exhausting state remedies, they sought and, on March 29, 1971, were granted the writ of habeas corpus in federal district court, while serving the second of the thirteen day sentences.

We approach the present case in light of a trilogy of recent Supreme Court cases dealing with imprisonment imposed upon indigent defendants for non-payment of fines. The ground-breaking case was Williams v. Illinois, 1970, 399 U.S. 235, 90 S.Ct. 2018, 26 L. Ed.2d 586. In Williams, an acknowledged indigent defendant received a sentence of a year in prison and a five hundred dollar fine, plus a five dollar assessment for court costs. The judgment against Williams provided that, should Williams default, he must remain in jail beyond one year to work off his debt at the rate of five dollars per day. Williams could not pay his fine and the court costs charged him, and he was ordered to remain in jail for 101 days beyond the expiration of his one year term, despite the uncontested allegation that a job awaited him outside the prison walls which would enable him to pay off his debt in installments. The Supreme Court held that Williams could not be kept in prison longer than the statutory maximum simply for failing to pay his fine and court costs immediately. The scheme violated the Equal Protection clause because "the State has visited different consequences on two categories of persons . . . . The result is to make incarceration in excess of the statutory maximum applicable only to those without the requisite resources to satisfy the money portion of the judgment." 399 U.S. at 242, 90 S. Ct. at 2023. The Court stressed that Illinois could have no penal interest in incarcerating Williams beyond the statutory maximum for failure to pay his fine at once; rather "the sovereign's purpose in confining an indigent beyond the statutory maximum is to provide a coercive means of collecting or `working out' a fine." 399 U.S. at 243, 90 S.Ct. at 2023. But the state's interest in collecting its fines was not enough to justify the disparate treatment of indigent defendants, since there are "numerous alternatives" available to the state for effective collection of its fines.

The companion case to Williams v. Illinois was Morris v. Schoonfield, 1970, 399 U.S. 508, 90 S.Ct. 2232, 26 L.Ed.2d 773. In a per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court remanded the Morris case to the district court for reconsideration in light of Williams. Four Justices concurred specially, with Mr. Justice White expressing their view

. . . that the same constitutional defect condemned in Williams also inheres in jailing an indigent for failing to make immediate payment of any fine, whether or not the fine is accompanied by a jail term and whether or not the jail term of the indigent extends beyond the maximum term that may be imposed on a person willing and able to pay a fine. In each case, the Constitution prohibits the State from imposing a fine as a sentence and then automatically converting it into a jail term solely because the defendant is indigent and cannot forthwith pay the fine in full.

399 U.S. at 509, 90 S.Ct. at 2233, 26 L. Ed.2d at 773-774. Last term, the Court explicitly adopted the view of the concurring Justices in Morris v. Schoonfield. Tate v. Short, 1971, 401 U.S. 395, 91 S.Ct. 668, 28 L.Ed.2d 130, extended Williams and prohibited the incarceration of an indigent unable to pay the fine which was the only punishment authorized to be imposed under Texas law. The Court held that the same unconstitutional discrimination was present in Tate v. Short that existed in Williams; "like Williams, petitioner was subjected to imprisonment solely because of his indigency." Again the Court explained that imprisonment served no penal purpose, for Texas had legislated a "fines only" policy for Tate's offense; Tate's imprisonment was a means of collecting fines, but was ill-suited to that purpose and ignored alternative means of accomplishing the same objective. 401 U.S. at 399, 91 S.Ct. at 671, 28 L.Ed.2d at 133-134.

The appellant argues that the case at bar is factually distinguishable from Tate v. Short, supra. Unlike the sentencing court in that case, he argues, the municipal courts of Atlanta have authority to levy a fine or imprisonment on a defendant. Here, he says, the trial judge "could have imposed a prison sentence in the first instance." Consequently, or so we understand the appellant's argument, the imprisonment visited upon the appellees is not governed by the recent Supreme Court holdings; the imprisonment imposed here is not only a collection device but also a judicial expression that the state's penal interests will be served only by immediate payment of a fine or by imprisonment.

We see no constitutional significance in the distinction asserted by the appellant. The alternative fine before us creates two disparately treated classes: those who can satisfy a fine immediately upon its levy, and those who can pay only over a period of time, if then. Those with means avoid imprisonment; the indigent cannot escape imprisonment. Since the difference in treatment is one defined by wealth, the alternative fine creates a "suspect" classification which must be tested by the compelling state interest test. Accord, In re Antazo, 1970, 3 Cal.3d 100, 89 Cal.Rptr. 255, 473 P.2d 999. We must therefore decide whether imprisonment of an indigent defendant who cannot immediately avail himself of the fine option in an "alternative sentence" is "necessary to promote a compelling governmental interest . . . ." Shapiro v. Thompson, 1969, 394 U.S. 618, 634, 89 S.Ct. 1322, 1331, 22 L.Ed.2d 600.

There are two broad kinds of interests which default imprisonment of those given alternative sentences might serve.3 The first is the state's interest in collecting its fine revenues. Imprisonment of those who cannot pay their fines at once, whatever the cost to the state of each individual incarceration,4 plainly serves to coerce defendants with marginal or concealable assets to use those assets to satisfy a fine and stave off imprisonment. But far less onerous alternatives will do this job in an effective manner.5 Williams v. Illinois, supra; Tate v. Short, supra. As a result, however compelling the state's interest in collecting its fines, imprisonment of those who do not have the assets to pay immediately is not "necessary" to achieving the state's objection. Accord In re Antazo, supra. The state's financial interest, then, cannot provide constitutional justification for the practice we consider today. All this, we think, has been settled by the Supreme Court.

There remain, then, the set of state penal interests which are arguably bound up with the alternative fine and which lend this case whatever novelty it may possess. As for the state's interest in rehabilitation, we agree fully with the conclusion of the California Supreme Court that whatever lessons are impressed upon a defendant by imprisonment for failure to pay his fine at once might be equally well impressed upon him during the course of compliance with a schedule of payments established according to an alternative state procedure. In re Antazo, supra, 473 P.2d at 1008. Nor is imprisonment of those who cannot immediately pay a fine alternative to imprisonment necessary to promote the state's punitive and deterrent penological interests. When a municipal judge imposes an alternative sentence of fine or imprisonment, he proclaims, for the state, that its punitive and deterrent interests can be served by requiring the defendant to pay a fine— just as the state so indicates when by statute it establishes a "fines only" penalty and by statute provides the collection device of imprisonment for inability to pay the fine at once. Tate v. Short, supra. There is a particularized determination of the state's penal interests in the one case, and a general legislative determination in the other, but the determination itself, is the same: that the state's penal needs can be met through payment of a fine.

The appellants' response, as we see it, is that the alternative sentence should be interpreted as an expression by the imposing judge that the state's deterrent and punitive interests can be fulfilled only through either immediate payment of the fine or through imprisonment. Alternative methods of fine collection are implicitly declared too "soft" to match the rigors of...

To continue reading

Request your trial
33 cases
  • Abbit v. Bernier
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Connecticut
    • December 24, 1974
    ...And the Fifth Circuit has invoked the Tate-Williams doctrine to strike down the "$30 or 30 days" type sentence.8 Frazier v. Jordan, 457 F.2d 726 (5th Cir. 1972); Burton v. Goodlett, 480 F.2d 983 (5th Cir. Under Conn.Gen.Stat.Ann. § 52-369, the sheriff may levy the execution on the judgment ......
  • Schultz v. State
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Northern District of Alabama
    • September 4, 2018
    ...imprisonment" and "the indigent cannot escape imprisonment," the jurisdiction violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Frazier v. Jordan , 457 F.2d 726, 726, 728 (5th Cir. 1972).15 The majority in Walker v. City of Calhoun described the confluence of equal protection and due process concepts in t......
  • Russell v. Harris Cnty.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of Texas
    • November 10, 2020
    ...ODonnell I , 892 F.3d at 163 ; ODonnell II , 900 F.3d at 225 ).30 The plaintiffs point to three cases, but the third, Frazier v. Jordan , 457 F.2d 726, 727 (5th Cir. 1972), is an equal-protection case that does not discuss due process.31 See Rasmussen , 489 F.Supp.3d at 1163 ("A state, ther......
  • Walker v. City of Calhoun
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Eleventh Circuit
    • August 22, 2018
    ...because the defendant is indigent and cannot forthwith pay the fine in full." (internal quotation marks omitted)); Frazier v. Jordan , 457 F.2d 726, 726, 728 (5th Cir. 1972) (municipal court may not "constitutionally impose a sentence requiring an indigent defendant to pay a fine forthwith ......
  • Request a trial to view additional results
1 books & journal articles
  • WEALTH, EQUAL PROTECTION, AND DUE PROCESS.
    • United States
    • William and Mary Law Review Vol. 61 No. 2, November 2019
    • November 1, 2019
    ...case was "quasi criminal in nature." Mayer v. City of Chicago, 404 U.S. 189, 196 (1971). (156.) M.L.B., 519 U.S. at 127. (157.) Id. (158.) 457 F.2d 726, 726, 728 (5th Cir. (159.) 572 F.2d 1053, 1056 (5th Cir. 1978) (en banc). (160.) Id. (161.) Id. (162.) Id. at 1057. (163.) See, e.g., Walke......

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT