CYNTHIA A. NORTON, Bankruptcy Judge.
Michael Miller filed this Chapter 7 case pro se, as an inmate under the custody of the Missouri Department of Corrections ("MDOC"). He scheduled the MDOC as an unsecured creditor to whom he owed $831.25 for what he described as "Inmate Revolving Fund Debt," or for certain fees the MDOC and the Missouri Board of Probation and Parole (the "Board") had assessed against him before he filed bankruptcy. Mr. Miller subsequently received his discharge. He now reopens the case, asserting that the MDOC violated the discharge injunction by deducting those fees from his "inmate fund account." The MDOC does not dispute that it imposed fees against Mr. Miller prepetition, or that it collected the fees from Mr. Miller after
This matter comes before the Court on Mr. Miller's amended motion for summary judgment, based on undisputed facts. The Court has jurisdiction over this matter, which is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334, 157(b)(2)(I). Having reviewed the motion and response, the Court finds the "intervention fees" the MDOC collected from Mr. Miller constitute dischargeable fees for services, and are not nondischargeable fines, penalties or forfeitures under § 523(a)(7). The MDOC therefore violated the discharge injunction as a matter of law. The Court's reasoning follows.
At the time Mr. Miller filed bankruptcy, he was incarcerated and under the custody of the MDOC. He owed the MDOC for three types of fees: (1) "electronic monitoring fees"
The MDOC now admits that the electronic monitoring fees were imposed in error, and represents that the $210.00 has been restored to Mr. Miller's account. Likewise, the MDOC says it has returned the $510.06 in housing maintenance fees; although not waiving the issue for future cases, the MDOC concedes the argument in this case "given the length of time since impositions of the fees."
A motion to determine whether a creditor has violated the discharge injunction is a contested matter. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9014. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, governing summary judgment, is incorporated in Fed. R.Bankr.P. 7056, and is applicable to contested matters. Rule 9014(c). Rule 56 authorizes the Court to grant summary judgment "if there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(7) provides that the discharge under § 727 does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt "to the extent such debt is for a fine, penalty, or forfeiture payable to and for the benefit of a governmental unit, and is not compensation for actual pecuniary loss," with the exception of certain tax penalties (not relevant here). The "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" exception to discharge is automatic, meaning that the governmental unit to whom the debt is owed need not object to the bankruptcy proceeding in order to preserve the nondischargeability of the debt. Cf. 11 U.S.C. § 523(c)(1).
In this case, Mr. Miller argues that the intervention, housing and related fees were not imposed as part of his criminal sentence, and therefore that such fees are not penal in nature. Pointing to a Missouri Supreme Court case that describes such fees as for "current and future services rendered,"
Thus, before delving into the language of § 523(a)(7), the Court needs to examine the nature of intervention fees under Missouri law.
The parties do not dispute the State's authority to impose fees against offenders, and agree that the State may use the fees to provide community services to assist offenders in, among other uses, completing probation, parole, or conditional release.
The so-called "intervention fees" are imposed under the authority of § 217.690 RSMo 1995. This statute is part of the provisions regarding the powers and duties of Missouri's Probation and Parole Board. Subsection 217.690.1 authorizes
Subsection 217.690.3 provides the authority for imposing the fees in this case. That subsection provides:
This subsection goes on to specify that the fees may be used for various programs and services to assist the offender:
Finally, § 217.690.4 RSMo 1995 also authorizes the Board to adopt rules with respect to the eligibility of offenders for parole, the conduct of parole hearings, and the conditions to be imposed upon parole offenders. The rule that has been promulgated pursuant to this authority is 14 CSR § 80-5.020.
14 CSR § 80-5.020 of the Mo.Code of State Regulations, provides that, "[e]xcept as provided in subsections (1)(E), (F), (G), and (H), all offenders placed under probation, parole or conditional release supervision of the Board of Probation and Parole are required to pay an intervention fee...[.]" Offenders are not charged intervention fees during the first 90 days of release [(1)(E).1]; if the case is pre-trial, or a drug court, or deferred prosecution case [(1)(E).2]; if the offender has been transferred outside of Missouri [(F)]; or if they have insufficient income [H]. 14 CSR § 80-5.020(1).
14 CSR § 80-5.020 also addresses consequences for nonpayment of the fees. If the offender fails to pay the intervention fees, an escalating scale of punishment is prescribed. First, the offender's supervising officer is to remind the offender of the unpaid fees at the next contact. 14 CSR § 80-5.020(I).1. Next, the supervising officer is to "direct the offender to specific programs or services that will assist him/ her in addressing their [sic] inability to pay (i.e., financial management program, employment counseling and/or job seeking classes, substance abuse counseling, mental health counseling, etc.)." 14 CSR § 80-5.020(I).2. When a willful nonpayment has occurred for more than 90 days, the supervising officer "shall submit a notice of citation or violation report." 14 CSR § 80-5.020(I).3. Sanctions for willful nonpayment include a written reprimand, travel restriction, community service, increased level of supervision, and shock detention. 14 CSR § 80-5.020(I).6.
Very few cases address the nature of intervention fees under Missouri law. The Supreme Court of Missouri has, however, examined whether imposing intervention fees against an offender already punished
In Jackson v. Members of the Missouri Board of Probation & Parole,
After the plaintiff in Jackson lost before the Missouri Supreme Court, he filed an action before the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, asserting that imposition of the intervention fees was a violation of the United States Constitution. The District Court, in a thorough, albeit unpublished opinion, noted that the Missouri legislature had not stated its specific intent when authorizing the fee, nor had it provided any comprehensive legislative history, given that the legislature does not generally publish its committee reports or transcribe hearings.
The District Court in Jackson agreed that the intervention fees were not penal and thus did not constitute unconstitutional retroactive punishment under the United States Constitution. Rather,
The parties in this case do not address when the Board imposed the $90.00 in intervention fees against Mr. Miller. Obviously, Mr. Miller must have been released on probation or parole sometime
Whether "intervention fees" assessed by a state parole and probation board against an offender are nondischargeable within the meaning of § 523(a)(7) is an issue of first impression. The parties cite no authorities on point, and the Court finds none.
As always, then, the Court must begin with an analysis of the pertinent statutory language in § 523(a)(7) — language that has been described as admittedly "subject to interpretation."
The Code does not define the terms "fine," "penalty," or "forfeiture." Courts approach the interpretation of these terms in varying ways. Some courts do not bother to define the terms "fine," "penalty," or "forfeiture" at all. When the obligation at issue has been imposed as part of a criminal sentence, courts uniformly find the obligation to be penal in nature and thus without question a "fine, penalty, or forfeiture." The best example is the seminal case of Kelly v. Robinson.
In Kelly, the Unites States Supreme Court examined whether restitution was nondischargeable. The Court explained that § 523(a)(7) codified a "judicially created exception" protecting against the discharge of what it termed "traditional criminal fines."
Observing that § 523(a)(7) on its face creates a broad exception for all penal sanctions, whether denominated a fine, penalty, or forfeiture, the Supreme Court in Kelly held that § 523(a)(7) "preserves from discharge any condition a state criminal court imposes as part of a criminal sentence."
The Court did not decide that question, however. Given the strong interests of the states in formulating and enforcing penal sanctions, allowing a bankruptcy court to discharge criminal obligations could "lead to federal remission of judgments imposed by state criminal judges..." and in turn "hamper the flexibility of state criminal judges in choosing the combination of imprisonment, fines, and restitution most likely to further the rehabilitation and deterrent goals of state criminal justice systems."
Courts interpreting § 523(a)(7) since Kelly have expanded its holding. The Eighth Circuit, in line with many other courts, applied Kelly, not just to restitution orders entered by state courts as part of a criminal sentence, but also to federal court sentences.
Thus, if the intervention fees had been imposed as part of Mr. Miller's criminal sentence, the analysis would stop here, since, under Kelly, such obligations always constitute a "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" within the meaning of § 523(a)(7). In this case, however, the parties agree that the intervention fees were not imposed as part of Mr. Miller's criminal sentence. This Court must then parse more carefully what a "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" is.
At the threshold, this Court observes that there is little discussion in the cases as to what law controls the definitions of the terms "fine, penalty, or forfeiture." The Supreme Court did not address the issue in Kelly or in its subsequent decision in Pennsylvania Dept. of Public Welfare v. Davenport.
Courts approach this thorny issue in various ways. The first approach, exemplified by In re Thompson,
Other courts, while noting that federal law determines whether a debt is a "fine, penalty or forfeiture," conversely look to state law to decide whether the obligation at issue possesses the requisite attributes.
Surprisingly few cases resort to dictionary definitions of "fine," "penalty," and "forfeiture."
In In re Soileau, the Fifth Circuit examined whether a bail bondsman could discharge obligations on forfeited bonds owed to the state when various criminal defendants absconded. Under a dictionary definition of "forfeiture," the Fifth Circuit said, the bondsman's obligation to the state
By contrast, the Third Circuit eschewed the synonymization approach. In the same context as the Fifth Circuit addressed in Soileau — whether a bail bondsman could discharge debts owed to the state for forfeited bonds — the Court in In re Gi Nam
In sum, courts interpreting § 523(a)(7) reach no consensus about when and whether to defer to state law or when and whether the terms "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" are read independently or construed as a whole. So, leaving the nature of "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" aside, does addressing the second prong of § 523(a)(7) — the "not compensation for pecuniary loss" — aid in our understanding?
The MDOC points out that, pursuant to the express provisions of § 217.690.3 RSMo 1995, intervention fees are paid into a fund maintained by the Missouri State Treasurer, and that use of the funds are governed by legislative appropriation. Since this is not a direct reimbursement from the offender to the Department of Corrections, the MDOC argues that the fees cannot be "compensation for actual pecuniary loss." In the alternative, the MDOC notes that even if the fees in part reimburse the state for its costs, the fact of reimbursement should not "bar the Department from the relief it seeks."
Courts' discussion of this second element of § 523(a)(7) can be similarly as muddled as the discussion of whether an obligation is a "fine, penalty, or forfeiture." In its discussion of restitution, for example, the Supreme Court in Kelly, reasoned that "[b]ecause criminal proceedings focus on the State's interests in rehabilitation and punishment, rather than the victim's desire for compensation, we conclude that restitution orders imposed in such proceedings operate `for the benefit of' the State."
Cases following Kelly also proclaim "that so long as the government's interest in enforcing a debt is penal, it makes no difference that injured persons may thereby receive compensation for pecuniary loss."
The majority of cases seem to suggest that the qualifiers "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" and "not compensation for pecuniary loss" are read together, such that both require an obligation to be penal for the obligation in order to be nondischargeable under § 523(a)(7). Indeed, this Court did not find a case where a "fine, penalty, or forfeiture" that was determined to be penal in nature was not otherwise considered to be "not compensation for pecuniary loss" and vice versa. That being so, it suggests to this Court that the focus on any given obligation considered under § 523(a)(7) should be, primarily, whether it is intended to be penal. Nonetheless, such a focus does not aid this Court in determining when and whether to apply state law in assessing whether a particular obligation is "penal," particularly where, as here, the Missouri state courts have emphatically declared the obligation to be civil and not penal in nature.
In the absence of consensus, this Court feels constrained to follow the interpretive lead of analogous cases in this Circuit. In In re Wilson,
With these principles in mind, this Court agrees with those cases that focus on the nature of fines, penalties, and forfeitures as in essence "takings grounded in wrongful acts and effectuating a punishment therefor."
By contrast, it is undisputed here that the MDOC imposed intervention fees on Mr. Miller not to punish him but for services to assist his transition from prison to civil society. And, this is not a case in which an offender seeks to discharge a victim's reparation rights. This is not a case in which there is danger of a federal court remitting a state court criminal sentence. This is a case where the Board exercised its discretion and imposed intervention fees — fees that neither fit within the definition of fine, penalty, or forfeiture, nor serve the same penal purpose.
Yes, under the theory of the Thompson case, it is true that only offenders will ever have to pay an intervention fee. Nonetheless, Thompson involved an obligation imposed as part of a criminal sentence that the State, for whatever reason, determined not to be penal. The State's determination, the Thompson court held, was not controlling because it was developed outside of bankruptcy law and "addresses issues completely different from the issue of dischargeability."
Even if, as the MDOC urges, this Court should apply Thompson and ignore the fact that the State of Missouri deems the intervention fees as civil, the Court is not persuaded that it leads to the same result. Here, the State of Missouri — for whatever reason — denominates the fees as "civil" and intended for compensation of the State's costs. The State's determination
Nor does the mere fact that Mr. Miller could be punished civilly or criminally for failing to pay the intervention fee transform the fee into something "penal." If that were the test, many civil judgments could be construed as "fines, penalties or forfeitures," since, under certain circumstances, civil judgment debtors may also be subject to civil and criminal punishments relating to judgments.
The Court holds that the intervention fees imposed on Mr. Miller do not constitute a "fine, penalty or forfeiture" since the purpose of imposing the fees is not penal in nature. In addition, the intervention fees are intended by the State of Missouri to compensate the State for its actual pecuniary losses in providing services to assist Mr. Miller. Mr. Miller has therefore met his burden of establishing that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Based on the undisputed material facts, the intervention fees that had accrued prior to Mr. Miller's bankruptcy filing on December 4, 2012 were discharged by his discharge order entered on April 9, 2013. The MDOC's admitted collection of those discharged fees after the discharge order violates 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(2). However, Mr. Miller has presented no evidence of any damages, other than an offset of his inmate account in the amount of $90.00. And, Mr. Miller has not presented any evidence that the MDOC's actions were malicious in nature. The Court therefore grants Mr. Miller's Amended Motion for Summary Judgment, and orders that the MDOC restore the $90.00 to Mr. Miller's account forthwith, but declines to impose any other sanction against the MDOC. A separate judgment shall issue.