Court Opinion

ID: 9965715
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-05-03 14:02:19.032518+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:38.991132
License: Public Domain

Rel: May 3, 2024

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter.
Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue,
Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections
may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

                   Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
                               OCTOBER TERM, 2023-2024
                                _________________________

                                         CR-2023-0495
                                   _________________________

                                 Ex parte State of Alabama

                    PETITION FOR A WRIT OF MANDAMUS

                                   (In re: State of Alabama

                                                      v.

                                   Shekelia Katrice Wilson)

                   Montgomery Circuit Court No. CC-2014-295

COLE, Judge.

        The District Attorney for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit filed this

petition for a writ of mandamus requesting that this Court direct Judge

Cleophus "J. R." Gaines, Jr., to set aside that portion of his July 10, 2023,
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order waiving the 30 percent collection fee imposed on Shekelia Katrice

Wilson pursuant to § 12-17-225.4, Ala. Code 1975.

     According to the petition, on March 3, 2014, a Montgomery County

Grand Jury indicted Wilson for first-degree assault, see § 13A-6-20, Ala.

Code 1975. On April 4, 2014, Wilson pleaded guilty to second-degree

assault, a violation of § 13A-6-21, Ala. Code 1975, and was sentenced to

15 years in prison; that sentence was split and Wilson was ordered to

serve 3 years in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised probation. As

part of the sentence imposed upon Wilson, she was ordered to pay

restitution. The State alleges that Wilson failed to make restitution

payments between October 2016 and February 2021.           The case was

therefore turned over to the District Attorney's Restitution Recovery

Division pursuant to § 12-17-225.2, Ala. Code 1975, for the collection of

the unpaid restitution and imposition of the 30 percent collection fee

imposed pursuant to § 12-17-225.4.

     After a hearing was held regarding the fee, the circuit court entered

the following order in Wilson's case: "Defendant ordered to pay

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Restitution first. The D999 collection fee is waived." 1 (State's petition,

Ex. A.) The State then filed this mandamus petition requesting that this

Court direct the circuit court to reinstate the collection fee.

     This Court has held on many occasions that

     " '[m]andamus is an extraordinary remedy and will be granted
     only where there is "(1) a clear legal right in the petitioner to
     the order sought; (2) an imperative duty upon the respondent
     to perform, accompanied by a refusal to do so; (3) the lack of
     another adequate remedy; and (4) the properly invoked
     jurisdiction of the court." Ex parte Alfab, Inc., 586 So. 2d 889,
     891 (Ala. 1991).' "

Ex parte Reno, 360 So. 3d 1112, 1114 (Ala. Crim. App. 2022) (quoting Ex

parte Ocwen Fed. Bank, FSB, 872 So. 2d 810, 813 (Ala. 2003)). To prove

these factors, it is imperative that the petitioner provide this Court with

a complete record of the proceedings below and the documents that the

circuit court may have considered in reaching the ruling that is being

contested. Wilson's answer to the State's petition correctly argues that a

petitioner " 'has the burden of presenting a record containing sufficient

evidence to show error by the circuit court.' Mims v. First Citizens Bank,

913 So. 2d 1098, 1102 (Ala. Civ. App. 2005)." (Wilson's answer, p. 5.)

     1 The "D999 collection fee" is the "collection fee of 30 percent of the

funds due" imposed pursuant to § 12-17-225.4.
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Wilson further asserts that the State failed to include an appendix

containing all the matters relevant to the circuit court's decision, as

required by the Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure, so that this Court

can determine whether all prerequisites for obtaining mandamus relief

have been met.

     The State's petition includes a brief with arguments and citations

to authorities.   The State makes several arguments regarding the

mandatory nature of the collection fee, rules of statutory construction

that support the State's argument, and why a circuit court is not,

according to the State, authorized to waive the restitution recovery fee.

But this Court must first determine whether the petition contains

sufficient information to allow this Court to determine the merits of the

petition. Rule 21(a)(1)(F), Ala. R. App. P., states, in part, that a "petition

shall contain":

           "An appendix including copies of all parts of the record
     that are essential to understanding the matters set forth in
     the petition, such as the order or orders of which the petitioner
     seeks review, all court filings (by any party) directly connected
     to the order or orders, and any transcripts of proceedings that
     resulted in the order or orders."

As noted in the petitioner's "Index to Exhibits," the petitioner's appendix

includes only two documents: (1) the circuit court's "order waiving

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collection fee," and (2) the "Attorney General Opinion No 2023-018."

(State's petition, p. ii.)

      The documents that a petitioner is required to include in the

appendix to a petition for a writ of mandamus are affected by the nature

of the issue or issues raised in the petition. The State correctly asserts

that the assessment of the collection fee pursuant to § 12-17-225.4, Ala.

Code 1975, is mandatory, but certain prerequisites must be met before

imposition of that fee can be enforced. Section 12-17-225.4, Ala. Code

1975, states that, "[a]fter a matter has been transferred to a district

attorney under Section 12-17-225.2, a court shall assess a collection fee

of 30 percent of the funds due which shall be added to the amount of funds

due." The State requests that this Court order the circuit court to set

aside the part of its order waiving the 30 percent fee required by § 12-17-

225.4, but the State does not consider the effect that the statute's

reference to § 12-17-225.2, Ala. Code 1975, has on the disposition of this

petition.

      Section 12-17-225.2 includes the following requirements:

            "The court or the clerk of the court shall notify the
      district attorney in writing when any bail bond forfeitures,
      court costs, fines, penalty payments, crime victims'
      restitution, or victims' compensation assessments or like

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     payments in any civil or criminal proceeding ordered by the
     court to be paid to the state or to crime victims have not been
     paid or are in default and the default has not been vacated.
     Upon written notification to the district attorney, the
     restitution recovery division of the office of the district
     attorney may collect or enforce the collection of any funds that
     have not been paid or that are in default which, under the
     direction of the district attorney, are appropriate to be
     processed. In no event shall a court or court clerk notify the
     district attorney in less than 90 days from the date the
     payments are due."

If the factors outlined in § 12-17-225.2 are not considered, the prosecuting

authority would be able to impose additional fees against a criminal

defendant unfettered by any judicial restraint.       Section 12-17-225.2

limits imposition of the 30 percent restitution-recovery fee to situations

in which the "court [that imposed the unpaid fees, costs or restitution] or

the clerk of the court" has notified "the district attorney in writing" that

there is a deficiency. The district attorney is only allowed to collect

"funds that have not been paid" and the appropriate fees that result from

the failure to make payments as ordered by the court. Furthermore,

notice cannot be given, and fees cannot be assessed, on payments that

are "less than 90 days from the date the payments are due to be paid in

full." § 12-17-225.2, Ala. Code 1975. If contested, these prerequisites are

to be determined by the judge who presided over the individual's case,

                                     6
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not by the "restitution-recovery division" of the district attorney's office.

If any of the factors required by § 12-17-225.2 are not established, then

the imposition of a restitution-recovery fee would be inappropriate, and

a circuit court would not be in error if it decided to waive or set aside the

restitution-recovery fee.

     For this Court to determine whether the State is entitled to relief,

the record before this Court would need to reflect that the requirements

of § 12-17-225.2 have been met. Yet, the record before this Court does

not include an order stating the amount of money that Wilson was

instructed to pay or the frequency of the ordered payments; it does not

include any of Wilson's payment history; and it does not include the

written notice that must be sent to the district attorney before the

restitution-recovery process can begin. These documents "are essential

to understanding the matters set forth in the petition." Rule 21(a)(1)(F),

Ala. R. App. P. The petition also asserts that a "payment-review" hearing

was held and that the State objected to the circuit court's ruling "on the

record." (State's petition, p. 5.) As previously noted, Rule 21(a)(1)(F),

Ala. R. App. P., specifically requires that the appendix to a petition for a

writ of mandamus include "any transcripts of proceedings that resulted

                                     7
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in the order or orders," but a transcript of the "payment-review" hearing

is not included in the appendix to the petition.

     In what appears to be an attempt to establish a factual basis to

prove that the restitution-recovery fee was properly imposed, the State's

petition alleges as follows:

           "On March 3, 2016, the defendant pleaded guilty to one
     count of Assault in the Second Degree, a Class C felony, in
     violation of Ala. Code § 13A-6-20. As part of her sentence, the
     defendant was ordered to pay court costs, attorneys fees, and
     restitution totaling $25,736.00. The defendant was instructed
     to make payments to the circuit clerk's office every month.
     The defendant never made a payment towards the amount
     owed. In 2021, the case was turned over to the District
     Attorney's Office for collection and a 30% collection fee of
     $7,645.80 was assessed to the balance owed pursuant to Ala.
     Code § 12-17-225.4.

           "On July 6, 2023, the defendant appeared before the
     trial court, Circuit Judge J.R. Gaines, for a payment review.
     At that hearing, the court waived the collection fee assessed
     under section 12-17-225.4. The State objected on the record
     but the trial court still waived the collection fee."

(State's petition, pp. 5-6.) Yet, neither the petition nor the appendix to

the petition provide evidence that any of these assertions by counsel for

the petitioner are correct. It is well established that, in the circuit court

and before this Court, "the assertions of counsel are not evidence."

Calhoun v. State, 261 So. 3d 457, 477 (Ala. Crim. App. 2016). The need

                                     8
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for evidence to support a mandamus petition, rather than the mere

assertions of counsel, is highlighted by one difference between the

petition for writ of mandamus filed by the Montgomery County District

Attorney and the amicus curiae brief filed by the Alabama District

Attorney's Association in support of the petition. The mandamus petition

asserts that Wilson "never made a payment towards the amount owed,"

but the amicus curiae brief asserts that Wilson made five payments.

(Compare State's petition, p. 5, with Amicus Curiae brief, p. 4.) Without

an accurate payment history, this Court cannot determine whether the

circuit court erred in waiving the restitution-recovery fee.

     The amicus curiae brief accepted by this Court attempts to

supplement the factual assertions included in the State's petition by

referencing information contained in Alacourt, the computer system that

maintains the records of the Alabama trial courts. Yet, when counsel in

previous cases have attempted to establish an evidentiary basis for an

assertion before this Court by referencing Alacourt, this Court has

refused to accept those assertions when "the records from Alacourt are

not in the record on appeal. ' "This Court is bound by the record on appeal

and cannot consider facts not contained in the record." ' " Iervolino v.

                                     9
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State, [Ms. CR-21-0283, Aug. 18, 2023] ___ So. 3d ___, ___ (Ala. Crim.

App. 2023) (quoting McCary v. State, 93 So. 3d 1002, 1008 (Ala. Crim.

App. 2011), quoting in turn Morrow v. State, 928 So. 2d 315, 320 n.5 (Ala.

Crim. App. 2004)).

     " 'An appellate court is "bound by what appears in the record
     before [it]. The [petitioner] ' "bears the burden of bringing the
     record before an appellate court. [The petitioner has] the duty
     of checking the record before submitting the [petition]. It is
     their duty to file a corrected record." ' Welch v. State, 455 So.
     2d 299, 300 (Ala. Cr. App. 1984) (quoting Harris v. State, 420
     So. 2d 812, 816 (Ala. Cr. App. 1982))." Jordan v. State, 607
     So. 2d 333, 335 (Ala. Cr. App. 1992). In this case, the
     [petitioner] has not filed a motion to correct or to supplement
     the record.' "

Allison v. State, 645 So. 2d 358, 360 (Ala. Crim. App. 1994) (quoting

Ingram v. State 629 So. 2d 800, 804 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993)). Therefore,

this Court will not consider the references to Alacourt in the amicus brief

as evidence indicating that the petition is due to be granted.

     Because the petition and its appendix do not include sufficient

information to allow this Court to determine whether the petitioner has

a "clear legal right" to the relief sought or whether the circuit court had

an "imperative duty" to allow the restitution recovery fee, the State's

petition for writ of mandamus is due to be, and is hereby, denied.

     PETITION DENIED.

                                    10
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     Kellum, J., concurs. McCool, J., concurs in the result, with opinion,

which Windom, P.J., joins. Minor, J., concurs in the result.

                                   11
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McCOOL, Judge, concurring in the result.

     The district attorney for the Fifteenth Judicial District (hereinafter

referred to as "the State") has filed a petition for a writ of mandamus

requesting that this Court direct Judge J.R. Gaines, Jr., to vacate an

order waiving the 30 percent collection fee that, pursuant to § 12-17-

225.4, Ala. Code 1975, should have been imposed on the restitution and

other fees owed by Shekelia Katrice Wilson. The main opinion explains

that this Court has chosen to deny the State's petition based on its failure

to comply with Rule 21, Ala. R. App. P. I agree with the decision to deny

the State's petition, but I do not agree with all of the main opinion's

reasons for doing so, and I write to explain why I believe some of the main

opinion's reasoning is flawed. I also take this opportunity to explain why

I believe the circuit and district courts do not have the discretion to waive

the 30 percent collection fee at issue in this case.

     The State's petition contends that in 2016 Wilson pleaded guilty to

second-degree assault, see § 13A-6-21, Ala. Code 1975, and that, as part

of her sentence, she was ordered to pay restitution. However, according

to the State, Wilson "never made a payment towards the amount owed,"

and, as a result, in 2021 "the case was turned over to the District

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Attorney's Office for collection and a 30 percent collection fee of $7,645.80

was assessed to the balance owed pursuant to § 12-17-225.4." (Petition,

p. 5.) The State further contends that, on July 6, 2023, Wilson appeared

before Judge Gaines "for a payment review"; that, at that hearing, Judge

Gaines "waived the collection fee assessed under § 12-17-225.4"; that the

State "objected on the record but [Judge Gaines] still waived the

collection fee"; and that, on July 10, 2023, Judge Gaines "issued a written

order waiving the collection fee." (Petition, pp. 5-6.) The State included

with its petition two exhibits: (1) an opinion from the Attorney General

stating that a court does not have the authority to waive the 30 percent

collection fee required by § 12-17-225.4 and (2) Judge Gaines's July 10,

2023, order, which states: "Defendant ordered to pay restitution first.

The D999 collection fee is waived." (Petition, Exhibit A.)

     The sole issue raised by the State's petition is whether Judge

Gaines had the authority to waive the 30 percent collection fee required

by § 12-17-225.4. The State argues that Judge Gaines did not have that

authority and that, as a result, it is entitled to a writ of mandamus

directing him to vacate his July 10, 2023, order waiving that fee. Thus,

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before going any further with my analysis, it is important to understand

the two statutes that are at issue.

     Section 12-17-225.2, Ala. Code 1975, states:

           "The court or the clerk of the court shall notify the
     district attorney in writing when any bail bond forfeitures,
     court costs, fines, penalty payments, crime victims'
     restitution, or victims' compensation assessments or like
     payments in any civil or criminal proceeding ordered by the
     court to be paid to the state or to crime victims have not been
     paid or are in default and the default has not been vacated.
     Upon written notification to the district attorney, the
     restitution recovery division of the office of the district
     attorney may collect or enforce the collection of any funds that
     have not been paid or that are in default which, under the
     direction of the district attorney, are appropriate to be
     processed. In no event shall a court or court clerk notify the
     district attorney in less than 90 days from the date the
     payments are due to be paid in full."

Section 12-17-225.4 states, in relevant part: "After a matter has been

transferred to a district attorney under Section 12-17-225.2, a court shall

assess a collection fee of 30 percent of the funds due which shall be added

to the amount of funds due."

     In denying the State's petition, the main opinion correctly notes

that Rule 21(a)(1)(F), Ala. R. App. P., requires a petitioner seeking a writ

of mandamus to provide this Court with

     "[a]n appendix including copies of all parts of the record that
     are essential to understanding the matters set forth in the

                                      14
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     petition, such as the order or orders of which the petitioner
     seeks review, all court filings (by any party) directly connected
     to the order or orders, and any transcripts of proceedings that
     resulted in the order or orders."

The main opinion then goes on to deny the State's petition on the basis

that the State has failed to comply with Rule 21(a)(1)(F). In support of

its decision, the main opinion states:

     "Section 12-17-225.2 limits imposition of the 30 percent
     restitution-recovery fee to situations in which the 'court [that
     imposed the unpaid fees, costs or restitution] or the clerk of
     the court' has notified 'the district attorney in writing' that
     there is a deficiency. The district attorney is only allowed to
     collect 'funds that have not been paid' and the appropriate
     fees that result from the failure to make payments as ordered
     by the court. Furthermore, notice cannot be given, and fees
     cannot be assessed, on payments that are 'less than 90 days
     from the date the payments are due to be paid in full.' § 12-
     17-225.2, Ala. Code 1975. If contested, these prerequisites are
     to be determined by the judge who presided over the
     individual's case, not by the 'restitution-recovery division' of
     the district attorney's office. If any of the factors required by
     § 12-17-225.2 are not established, then the imposition of a
     restitution-recovery fee would be inappropriate, and a circuit
     court would not be in error if it decided to waive or set aside
     the restitution-recovery fee.

           "For this Court to determine whether the State is
     entitled to relief, the record before this Court would need to
     reflect that the requirements of § 12-17-225.2 have been met.
     Yet, the record before this Court does not include an order
     stating the amount of money that Wilson was instructed to
     pay or the frequency of the ordered payments; it does not
     include any of Wilson's payment history; and it does not
     include the written notice that must be sent to the district

                                    15
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     attorney before the restitution-recovery process can begin.
     These documents 'are essential to understanding the matters
     set forth in the petition.' Rule 21(a)(1)(F), Ala. R. App. P. The
     petition also asserts that a 'payment-review' hearing was held
     and that the State objected to the circuit court's ruling 'on the
     record.' (State's petition, p. 5.) As previously noted, Rule
     21(a)(1)(F), Ala. R. App. P., specifically requires that the
     appendix to a petition for a writ of mandamus include 'any
     transcripts of proceedings that resulted in the order or orders,'
     but a transcript of the 'payment-review' hearing is not
     included in the appendix to the petition."

___ So. 3d at ___ (emphasis added).

     I disagree with the main opinion's conclusion that, in order to grant

the State relief in this case, the materials presented to this Court "would

need to reflect that the requirements of § 12-17-225.2 have been met."

Section 12-17-225.2 sets forth requirements that must be met before a

matter regarding court-ordered payments -- in this case, restitution -- is

transferred to the district attorney. Section 12-17-225.4, on the other

hand, provides that a 30 percent collection fee shall be imposed after such

a matter has been transferred to the district attorney. In this case,

whether the matter of Wilson's restitution was transferred to the district

attorney, or whether it was properly transferred, is not at issue. Indeed,

nowhere in her answer to the State's petition does Wilson allege that the

matter was not transferred to the district attorney or that it was not

                                    16
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properly transferred, and the fact that Judge Gaines waived the 30

percent collection fee is evidence that the transfer occurred, as it would

be have been nonsensical for him to "waive" a fee that could not have

been assessed in the first place unless the transfer had occurred.2

Instead, the only issue before this Court is whether Judge Gaines had the

discretion to waive that fee once the transfer occurred. Thus, contrary to

the main opinion's conclusion, this Court does not need materials

"reflect[ing] that the requirements of § 12-17-225.2 have been met" in

order to grant the State relief in this case. Rule 21(a)(1)(F) requires that

a petition for a writ of mandamus include materials "that are essential

to understanding the matters set forth in the petition," not materials that

have no bearing on the issue at hand. (Emphasis added.)

     I do agree, however, with the main opinion's conclusion that the

State's failure to provide a transcript of the July 6, 2023, hearing is fatal

to its petition. It is well settled that, to obtain mandamus relief, a

     2Wilson notes in her petition that the State failed to provide this

Court with materials showing that the requirements for transfer set forth
in § 12-17-225.2 were met, but she does not allege that those
requirements were, in fact, not met. Instead, Wilson's argument is
clearly nothing more than an attempt to urge this Court to invoke Rule
21(a)(1)(F) as a basis for denying the State's petition.
                                     17
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petitioner must demonstrate that there was " ' "an imperative duty upon

the respondent to perform, accompanied by a refusal to do so." ' " Ex parte

Reno, 360 So. 3d 1112, 1114 (Ala. Crim. App. 2022) (quoting Ex parte

Ocwen Fed. Bank, FSB, 872 So. 2d 801, 813 (Ala. 2003), quoting in turn

Ex parte Alfab, Inc., 586 So. 2d 889, 891 (Ala. 1991)). Thus, to obtain

relief in this case, the State would need to show not only that Judge

Gaines did not have the authority to waive the 30 percent collection fee

but also that the State made that argument to him and that he refused

to vacate his order waiving that fee. However, because the State did not

provide this Court with a transcript of the July 6, 2023, hearing, there is

no evidence indicating that the State ever objected to Judge Gaines's

action. The only indication that the State raised such an objection is the

State's allegation to that effect in its petition, but that allegation is not

evidence. Calhoun v. State, 261 So. 3d 457, 477 (Ala. Crim. App. 2016).

I assume, of course, that the State raised such an objection because

otherwise we would not be here. However, our appellate jurisdiction is

clear that we cannot "assume" evidence that is not contained in the

materials presented to us. Thus, given the lack of a transcript of the July

6, 2023, hearing, this Court cannot say that Judge Gaines had "an

                                     18
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imperative duty … to perform, accompanied by a refusal to do so." Ex

parte Reno, 360 So. 3d at 1114 (emphasis added; citations omitted).

     In short, I agree with the main opinion's denial of the State's

petition, but, unlike the main opinion, I would deny the petition based

solely on the State's failure to provide this Court with a transcript of the

July 6, 2023, hearing. Although it is always best to attach as much

information as possible to a mandamus petition, the fact that the State

did not provide this Court with any materials "reflect[ing] that the

requirements of § 12-17-225.2 have been met" is of no significance in this

case and, contrary to the main opinion's conclusion, does not provide a

basis for denying the State's petition. Thus, I concur in the result only.

     Although I believe that the State's petition is due to be denied in

this case on procedural grounds, I take this opportunity to point out that

the circuit and district courts do not have the authority to waive the 30

percent collection fee required by § 12-17-225.4. As noted, § 12-17-225.4

states, in relevant part: "After a matter has been transferred to a district

attorney under Section 12-17-225.2, a court shall assess a collection fee

of 30 percent of the funds due which shall be added to the amount of funds

due." (Emphasis added.) "The word 'shall' is considered presumptively

                                    19
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mandatory unless something in the character of the provision being

construed requires that it be considered differently."          Hornsby v.

Sessions, 703 So. 2d 932, 939 (Ala. 1997). Nothing in § 12-17-225.4

indicates that the Alabama Legislature intended for the phrase "shall

assess," as used in that statute, to have any effect other than making the

imposition of the 30 percent collection fee a mandatory duty to be

performed by the court. In fact, § 12-17-225, Ala. Code 1975, states, in

relevant part:

           "It is the purpose of this legislation to ensure that court-
     ordered restitution to crime victims, victim compensation
     assessments, bail bond forfeitures, court costs required by
     law, fines levied against criminals for wrongful conduct, and
     other court-ordered sums payable to the state or to the crime
     victims be paid in full and that cost of collection be borne by
     the person who is responsible for payment."

(Emphasis added.) Thus, to conclude that a court has the discretion to

waive the 30 percent collection fee required by § 12-17-225.4 would

require this Court to ignore not only the legislature's use of the phrase

"shall assess" in that statute but also the legislature's express intent in

enacting that statute.

     I acknowledge Wilson's argument that Rule 26.11(h)(5), Ala. R.

Crim. P., provides that, "[i]f the defendant fails to pay a fine and/or

                                    20
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restitution, the court may … [r]elease the defendant from obligation to

pay the fine." Thus, Judge Gaines had the authority to release Wilson

from paying the restitution she owes, but that is not what he did. To the

contrary, Judge Gaines's July 10, 2023, order expressly "ordered [Wilson]

to pay restitution" and, instead of waiving her restitution, waived the 30

percent collection fee that should have been imposed on top of the

restitution. However, although Rule 26.11(h)(5) authorizes a court to

release a defendant from the obligation to pay "a fine and/or restitution,"

it does not authorize a court to waive the 30 percent collection fee that,

pursuant to § 12-17-225.4, must be imposed on a defendant who still owes

restitution, as Wilson does.

     For the foregoing reasons, should the issue ever be properly

presented to this Court, I would hold that a court is obligated to impose

the 30 percent collection fee required by § 12-17-225.4 and that it has no

discretion to waive that fee. Thus, if the State had presented this Court

with the transcript of the hearing, or any other evidence, indicating that

it objected to Judge Gaines's order waiving the 30 percent collection fee

in this case, I would grant the State's petition and order Judge Gaines to

vacate that order and to reinstate the fee. Because the State failed to

                                    21
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provide this Court with such evidence, however, I agree with the main

opinion's conclusion that the State's petition is due to be denied, though,

as I have already explained, not all of the analysis that supports the main

opinion's conclusion.

     Windom, P.J., concurs.

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