This is an effort by the appellant Neeley to avoid paying a filing fee for appealing to the circuit court from a misdemeanor conviction in the municipal court. We agree with the circuit judge’s ruling that a fee must be paid.
Neeley was convicted of a misdemeanor by the Pope County municipal court. When he tried to appeal to the circuit court, the circuit clerk demanded a filing fee. Neeley first sought a writ of mandamus to compel the clerk to accept the appeal without a filing fee. When that petition was resisted, Neeley, who does not assert indigency, paid the fee and asked the circuit court for a declaratory judgment sustaining his contention that no filing fee was due. Neeley’s appeal from a declaration that the fee must be paid comes to us under Rule 29(1)(a) and (c).
Neeley first argues that the applicable statute, Act 333 of 1977, does not require the fee. When, however, the statute is read as a whole and in the light of its predecessor, it is almost too clear for argument that the filing fee is required.
Before the 1977 act was passed, the pertinent statute enumerated about 60 different fees to be charged by the circuit clerk, some as small as ten or fifteen cents. See the compiler’s note *386to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 12-1710 (Repl. 1979). Section 2 of the 1977 act reduced that long list to 14 larger and more generalized fees. § 12-1710.
Section 1 of the 1977 act established a uniform advance fee to be charged by circuit clerks for “initiating a cause of action” in the circuit court, no part of the fee being refundable. §12-1710.2. Section 1 goes on to provide that if “a cause of action” in the circuit court becomes unusually lengthy and the filings become so voluminous that the advance fee proves inadequate, an additional fee may be assessed for each additional filing, in accordance with the new schedule. One of the 14 enumerated fees is “[f]or entering each appeal from inferior court, $15.00.” § 12-1710(h).
Neeley argues that filing an appeal from municipal court is not “initiating a cause of action” in the circuit court, but the statute clearly indicates otherwise. That is, the same section of the statute states that if “a cause of action” becomes so lengthy as to require more fees than are covered by the advance fee, then additional charges may be made. The legislature evidently used “cause of action” to mean a case. Furthermore, one of the specific fees now covered by the advance fee is that for an appeal from an inferior court. Hence the judge was right in holding that the advance fee must be paid in this instance.
Neeley also argues that even if he can be charged with court costs if convicted, the fee should be refunded if he is acquitted. That objection is premature, for Neeley may not in fact be acquitted. It is not our practice to explore academic questions or render advisory opinions.
Neeley’s final argument is that since he is entitled under the Constitution to a jury trial, he cannot be charged a fee for demanding that constitutional protection. The fee is not being imposed because Neeley wants a jury trial. It is simply a filing fee that is collected no matter whether he is tried by a jury or by the judge or even if the prosecution ends without any trial at all. Neeley is admittedly not an indigent and therefore has no claim to an exemption from the payment of filing fees for services rendered by the circuit clerk. His undoubted right to a jury trial is totally irrelevant to his refusal to pay the fee imposed by law for the circuit clerk’s services.
*387Affirmed.
Purtle, J., not participating.
Newbern, J., dissents.