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South Carolina
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South Carolina Court Administration
South Carolina Supreme Court
Columbia, South Carolina

ROSALYN W. FRIERSON
DIRECTOR

1015 SUMTER STREET, SUITE 200
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA  29201
TELEPHONE:  (803) 734-1800
FAX:  (803) 734-1355

MEMORANDUM

TO: 

Clerks of Courts and Registers of Deeds

FROM: 

Robert L. McCurdy, Assistant Director

RE:  

Statutory provisions for the distribution of revenue generated by the circuit courts, and family courts; fees and related charges of the registers of deeds

DATE:   

June 24, 2010

This past legislative term legislation was passed that will impact the collection, distribution and reporting of court generated revenues. Numbers 1-3 below discuss new legislation which creates changes in last year’s fees and assessments structure.  Numbers 4-9 below address temporary provisos that have been repeated verbatim in previous General Appropriations Acts and are repeated again verbatim in the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act. Those provisos create no changes in the fees and assessments scheme from last year.  Finally, number 10 below provides a correction from last year's Fees and Assessments memoranda.

The entire fees and assessments memorandum for fiscal year 2010 - 2011 will not be distributed in hard copy, but is available on the Judicial Department website at www.sccourts.org under “Court News.”  You may wish to download and print the memoranda for your reference.

1. Effective June 2, 2010, R. 262, S. 1154 (Act No. not yet assigned) amended § 14-1-213(A) so as to increase the drug court surcharge from $100.00 per drug conviction to $150.00 per drug conviction.  The drug court surcharge is in addition to all other assessments and surcharges.  No portion of the surcharge may be waived, reduced, or suspended.  The increased drug court surcharge applies to those convictions where the charges were initiated on or after the effective date of the legislation.  Those funds should be transferred to the State Treasurer on a monthly basis, who shall forward the proceeds to the Prosecution Coordination Commission.

2. Effective June 2, 2010, R. 262, S. 1154 (Act No. not yet assigned) amended § 44-53-450(C) relating to conditional discharges for specified drug offenses, so as to require that before charges may be dismissed against a defendant pursuant to a conditional discharge in the court of general sessions, the defendant must pay a fee of $350.00, unless waived, reduced, or suspended by the trial judge due to indigency.  The conditional discharge fee applies to those conditional discharges where the charges were initiated on or after the effective date of the legislation.  Those funds should be transferred to the State Treasurer on a monthly basis, who shall forward the proceeds to the Prosecution Coordination Commission.

3.  Effective June 11, 2010, R. 325, H. 4239 (Act No. not yet assigned) amends § 8-21-310 relating to the scheduled fees and costs collected by county clerks of court and registers of deeds, so as to waive the recording fee otherwise required for a power of attorney filed by a member of the Armed Forces of the United States preparing to deploy to a combat zone.  The legislation also requires that the recording fee be waived for a revocation of a power of attorney previously filed by or on behalf of a member of the Armed Forces.

4.  Effective July 1, 2010, Section 90.5 of the Temporary Provisions of the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act requires that, in addition to all other assessments and surcharges, a $5.00 surcharge to fund training at the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy is also levied on all fines, forfeitures, escheatments, or other monetary penalties imposed in the General Sessions Court or in magistrate or municipal court for misdemeanor traffic offenses or for non-traffic violations.  No portion of the surcharge may be waived, reduced, or suspended.

5.  Effective July 1, 2009, Section 47.8 of the Temporary Provisions of the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act raises the application fee for public defender services to $40.00. During the last Legislative Session, § 17-3-30(B) similarly raised the previous fee of $25.00 found in § 17-3-30 (B) to $40.00, making this fee permanent.

6.  Effective July 1, 2009, section 47.11 of the Temporary Provisions of the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act provides a procedure for the collection, distribution, and reporting of a $40 application fee for appointed counsel in civil actions. The Proviso requires that any person to whom counsel has been provided in any termination of parental rights, abuse and neglect, or any other civil court action, or the parents or legal guardians of a juvenile brought before any court, file application for court appointed counsel, and such representation creates a claim against the assets and the estate of the person who is provided counsel, or the parents or legal guardians of a juvenile provided counsel. Finally, this Proviso provides that any unpaid representation fees may be reduced to judgment against those individuals, parents, or legal guardians.

7. Effective July 1, 2009, Section 47.9 of the Temporary Provisions of the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act requires that every person placed on probation on or after July 1, 2003, who is represented by a public defender or appointed counsel, shall be assessed a fee of $500.00.  These funds shall be collected by the clerk on a monthly basis and forwarded to the Office of Indigent Defense to be divided between the Conflict Fund and the Defense of Indigents/Per Capita Fund.  Provided, however, in those counties which contract with appointed counsel other than the public defender, one half of the fee collected may be remitted by the clerk to the county which contracts for payment of the services.

8. Effective July 1, 2009, Section 76.10 of the Temporary Provisions of the 2010 - 2011 General Appropriations Act provides that if a municipality fails to submit the audited financial requirements required under § 14-1-208 to the State Treasurer within 13 months of the end of their fiscal year, the State Treasurer must withhold all State payments to that municipality until the required audited financial statement is received.

If the State Treasurer receives an audit report from either a county or a municipality that contains a “significant finding” related to court fine reports or remittances to the State Treasurer’s Office, the requirements of proviso 89.65 shall be followed if an amount due is specified, otherwise the State Treasurer shall withhold 25% of all state payments to the county or municipality until the estimated deficiency has been satisfied.

If a county or municipality is more than 90 days delinquent remitting court fines, the State Treasurer shall withhold 25% of state funding for that county or municipality until all monthly reports are current.

After 90 days, any funds held by the State Treasurer’s Office will be made available to the State Auditor to conduct an audit of the entity for the purpose of determining an amount due to the State Treasurer’s Office, if any.

9. Effective July 1, 2009, Section 89.65 of the temporary provisions of the 2010 – 2011 General Appropriations Act provides that if the State Auditor finds that any county treasurer, municipal treasurer, county clerk of court, magistrate, or municipal court has not properly allocated revenue generated from court fines, fines, and assessments to the crime victim funds or has not properly expended crime victim funds, pursuant to Sections 14-1-206(B)(D), 14-1-207(B)(D), 14-1-208(B)(D), and 14-1-211(B) of the 1976 Code, the State Auditor shall notify the State Office of Victim Assistance. The State Office of Victim Assistance is authorized to conduct programmatic reviews on any entity or non-profit organization receiving victim assistance funding based on the referrals from the State Auditor or complaints of a specific nature received by the State Office of Victim Assistance to ensure that crime victim funds are expended in accordance with the law.  Any local entity or non-profit organization who receives funding from victim assistance is required to submit their budget to the State Office of Victim Assistance within thirty days of the budget being approved by the local governing entity or non-profit organization.  In addition, any entity or non-profit organization receiving victim assistance funding must cooperate and provide expenditure/program data requested by the State Office of Victim Assistance.  If the State Office of Victim Assistance finds an error, the entity or non-profit organization has ninety days to rectify the error.  An error constitutes an entity or non-profit organization spending victim assistance funding on unauthorized items.  If the entity or non-profit organization fails to rectify the error within ninety days, the State Office of Victim Assistance shall assess and collect a penalty of the amount of the unauthorized expenditure plus $1,500 against the entity or non-profit organization for improper expenditures in a fiscal year.  All penalties received by the State Office of Victim Assistance shall be credited to the General Fund of the State.  If the penalty is not received by the State Office of Victim Assistance within ninety days, the political subdivision will deduct the amount of the penalty from the entity or non-profit organization’s subsequent fiscal year appropriation.

10. Finally, in previous fees and assessments memoranda, this Office had advised that the filing of a foreign judgment in circuit and family court pursuant to § 15-39-900 et seq. was $150 ($100 filing fee required by § 8-21-310(22) plus the $50 surcharge required by § 14-1-204(B)(1)).  After further review, this Office has determined that the $50 surcharge does not apply to the filing of a foreign judgment.  Therefore, effective immediately, an individual should be charged only $100 for the filing of a foreign judgment in circuit and family court.  Please see the Family Court section of the attached memorandum for exceptions to the required fee for the filing of a foreign judgment in family court.

Copies of any of the legislation referenced above may be obtained by visiting their website at http://www.scstatehouse.net.

The enclosed memorandum has been updated to reflect these amendments and discusses these changes in more detail. This memorandum supersedes prior memoranda from Court Administration on the collection and distribution of court generated revenue. It attempts to outline and explain the statutory procedures for collecting and distributing revenues in the circuit, family, magistrate, and municipal courts as well as the register of deeds. Examples of several of the distributions covered in the text of the memorandum appear in the attachments.

The actual distribution of revenue generated by the circuit and family is handled by the county treasurer in most cases. The treasurers are required to remit the funds to the State Treasurer monthly on such forms and in such manner as is required by him. The county treasurer can determine which funds should be transmitted to the State Treasurer by referring to the clerks' remittance form which is included as "Attachment D." “Attachment L” includes a list of approved expenditures for victims’ funds.  Also, a judge’s total fine and assessment calculator is included as “Attachment M.”

In this discussion of the distribution of funds, the general rule for each court is stated and followed by an explanation of the statutory exceptions for distribution. The outline which precedes the memorandum summarizes its contents. Please note in the memorandum specific time guidelines pertaining to the transmittal of these revenues. Strict, prompt adherence to the reporting guidelines is required.

Please provide copies of this memorandum to all members of your staff whose duties relate to the collection or distribution of court revenues. If you or your staff has any questions concerning the collection or distribution of revenue, do not hesitate to contact this office.

cc: 

Circuit Judges
Family Court Judges