Mason v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
Mason v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
Opinion of the Court
OPINION BY
Jonathan Mason (Mason) petitions this Court pro se to review an order of the Department of Corrections (Department) directing him to reimburse the Department $77,723.25 from his inmate account for medical expenses it incurred as a result of prison misconduct.
To recover the cost it incurred as a result of the medical treatment it gave Mason for the controlled substances he took, the Department gave him a written notice of assessment seeking $77,723.25. The Department’s authority to assess damages against an inmate comes from the Prison Medical Services Act (Act), Act of May 16, 1996, P.L. 220, 61 P.S. § 1013(b). Under Section 3(b), 61 P.S. § 1013(b), “an inmate may be required to pay a fee for medical services provided because of injuries the inmate inflicted upon himself or another inmate.” In implementing that provision, 37 Pa.Code § 93.10(a)(2)(iii), provides that inmates found guilty of Class II misconducts (a class that includes possession of contraband, i.e., non-prescribed drugs, and possession or use of a dangerous or controlled substance) may be subjected to the payment of the fair value of property lost or destroyed or for expenses incurred as a result of the misconduct. The Act does not allow deductions from an inmate account. Section 5 of the Act, 61 P.S. § 1015, allows the Department to recover “any amount owed for medical service fees by an inmate upon release from prison through a civil action brought within one year of the inmate’s release ...”
A Departmental hearing was held, but the hearing was not recorded either steno-graphically or electronically. The only evidence as to the amount of the medical bills appears to be from a representative of SCI-Huntington’s business office who computed the figures on Mason’s UPMC medical bills and verified the cost of $77,723.25 for Mason’s medical treatment. As a result, the hearing examiner assessed from Mason’s inmate account $77,723.25. Mason appealed the assessment to final review before the Department’s chief hearing examiner who denied the appeal finding that the hearing examiner considered all the testimony and evidence as to how the total amount was calculated and the hearing examiner’s decision was well-documented.
Mason then filed this petition for review
The Department, however, asserts that Holloway was effectively overruled when the Administrative Code of 1929, Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 177, was amended by Section 11 of the Act of November 26, 1997, P.L. 530. That amendment contained within 71 P.S. § 31CM(a) provides:
(a) When the Department of Corrections determines that there has been a financial loss or cost as a result of a violation of a written rule governing inmate behavior, including, but not limited to, property loss or damage or use of a controlled substance, the department may require the prisoner to pay to the department, or to the person whose property has been lost or damaged, the value of the property or the costs incurred in the investigation and administrative review of the behavior.
(b) The department shall develop written procedures relating to the determination,. assessment and collection of the costs of losses due to inmate misconduct. When the procedures have been adopted by the department, the provisions of 2 Pa.C.S. Ch. 5 Subch. A (relating to practice and procedure of Commonwealth agencies) shall not apply to proceedings conducted by the department under this section.
(c) The department may deduct from an inmate’s institutional account the amount of any judgment, court-ordered costs or .assessments against the inmate under subsection (a). Notice of the deduction shall be provided to the inmate by certified mail or personal notice.
(Emphasis added.) As can be seen, this provision only affects Holloway in those instances where the Department is attempting to impose costs on an inmate’s account relating to the investigation and administrative review of the inmate’s behavior, not medical costs. In other instances where there is an attempt to assess an inmate’s account, though, Hol
Accordingly, because the Department failed to comply with 2 P. C.S. § 504 by not providing all testimony to be steno-graphically recorded in order to create a full and complete record of the proceedings at Mason’s assessment hearing, the Department’s assessment adjudication of Mason is invalid, and the matter is remanded for a hearing in accordance with the provisions of the AAL.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 21st day of November, 2005, the order of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections’ Chief Hearing Examiner dated January, 19, 2005, is hereby vacated, and this case is remanded to the Department of Corrections Hearing Examiner, for an evidentiary hearing, consistent with the attached opinion.
Jurisdiction is relinquished.
. As a result of this conduct and even though he denied that he used any drugs, Mason was given a Class 1 misconduct for violating the Department's Policy DC-ADM 801 for # 36 possession of contraband (non-prescribed drugs) and # 22 possession or use of a dangerous or controlled substance; placed in 90 days disciplinary custody; removed from his job; and his prison account was to be assessed for the medical costs rendered due to his near overdose.
. This Court’s scope of review of an administrative agency’s determination is limited to determining whether any constitutional rights were violated, an error of law was committed, or whether necessary findings of facts are supported by substantial evidence. Brome v.
. 2 Pa.C.S. § 101 defines an adjudication in relevant parts as: “any ... decision ... by-an agency affecting, personal or property rights ..."
. Because of the way we have resolved this matter, we need not address whether the hearing conducted under 71 P.S. § 310-4(a) comports with due process.
. As we do not have a transcript as to what occurred below, we cannot conduct appropriate appellate review of the evidentiary issues that Mason raises, including whether the introduction of the bank records was impermissible hearsay or that he is entitled to non-legal assistance because he is entitled to lay assistance pursuant to DC-ADM 801VI.O.(4) as he is unable to relate simple daily occurrences as well as articulate complex legal precepts. As to his contention that the Department violated his due process right to property by denying him legal counsel and/or assistance at his assessment hearing, we have held that due process does not require the appointment of counsel to an inmate who is appealing an assessment of damages following a Holloway-type hearing because the interest at stake is financial which commands a lower level of due process protection than life or liberty interests. Harris v. Department of Corrections, 714 A.2d 492, 495 (Pa.Cmwlth. 1998).
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