Commonwealth v. Mauk

  • Court: County Court of Common Pleas
  • Latest Update: Feb 20, 2017
Placeholder image

The Cambria County Court of Common Pleas held Mr. Mauk and 53 other individuals in contempt and sentenced them to two weeks of jail for not paying fines, costs, and restitution, without giving any of the individuals an opportunity to explain why they had not been paying. By the time he was sent to jail, Mr. Mauk had paid what he was supposed to, but he was late in the payments because of the irregular nature of his work as a painter and a medical issue that landed him in the hospital.

The Superior Court vacated the trial court’s order, finding that the court violated Mr. Mauk’s rights by not providing him with an individualized hearing and making findings as to why he did not pay. The Court explained that courts must hold ability-to-pay hearings every time an individual comes before them. In addition, the Court found that Mr. Mauk had a right to a lawyer and a right to consult with that lawyer before any court hearing.

Attorney(s):
Andrew Christy (ACLU-PA)

Related Content

Campaign
Jun 2025
MDP
  • Criminal Justice Reform

Modern Debtors’ Prisons: Fines, Costs, and Restitution

Every year, thousands of Pennsylvanians are jailed, have their probation revoked or extended, or lose their driver’s licenses simply because they are too poor to pay the fines and costs arising out of criminal cases, including for minor summary offenses such as speeding or disorderly conduct. In some counties, the courts have become debt-collection agencies and the jails have been transformed into modern debtors’ prisons.