Rome News-Tribune

Court ‘deeply troubled’ by woman’s jailing over unpaid fines

-

ATLANTA — Federal appeals court judges said they were “deeply troubled” that a Georgia municipal court jailed a woman when she couldn’t pay a fine for driving without insurance.

A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the dismissal of Ziahonna Teagan’s claims that her civil rights were violated, but said she could pursue a false imprisonme­nt claim against the city of McDonough, news outlets reported.

“We are deeply troubled by what happened to Ms. Teagan in the McDonough municipal court,” the unsigned opinion says. “She, like all other citizens of that city, deserved better.”

After Teagan pleaded not guilty in December 2013, Judge Donald Patten found her guilty during a bench trial in March 2014. He imposed a $745 fine for driving without insurance and a $50 fine for arriving late to court.

Teagan told the judge she couldn’t immediatel­y pay the fine but would be able to pay just over a week later. Patten sentenced her to serve 60 days in jail, suspending the sentence on the condition that she pay the total amount within nine days.

When she missed that deadline, Patten added $100 charge for contempt and signed a warrant for her arrest. She was arrested on May 18, 2014, and spent 12 days in jail. She was released when her brother paid the $895.

The 11th Circuit ruling said Patten never asked Teagan why she didn’t pay or whether she was able to pay.

In addition to the unsigned opinion Tuesday, Judge Adalberto Jordan wrote a concurring opinion in which he admonished the court in McDonough. Longstandi­ng precedent says municipal courts can’t jail people to compel the payment of a fine, he wrote, calling what happened to Teagan “impossible to defend and difficult to understand.”

“Jailing a defendant for failing to pay a fine — without any determinat­ion that her failure to pay was willful — is a flagrant violation of the U.S. Constituti­on,” he wrote. “A municipal court cannot shirk its duties to protect indigent defendants’ constituti­onal rights in order to line its city’s coffers.”

Noting that the municipal court in McDonough had taken in $7.4 million in fines since 2012, he wrote that “one wonders how much of that sum was secured through unconstitu­tional means.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States