ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
GREG ABBOTT
October 24,2011
The Honorable Brett W. Ligon Opinion No. GA-0888
Montgomery County District Attorney
9th Judicial District Re: Whether a prosecutor must obtain the approval of
207 West Phillips, Second Floor the presiding judge before advancing funds for travel
Conroe, Texas 77301 expenses to a nonresident witness (RQ-0969-GA)
Dear Mr. Ligon:
You ask whether a county prosecutor in a criminal case must obtain the presiding judge's
approval before advancing county funds for travel expenses to a nonresident witness.! You inform
us that the county has provided you with a credit card to facilitate the advance payment of travel
expenses for nonresident witnesses who are subpoenaed to testify in the county's criminal cases.
Request Letter at 1. In these instances, you inform us, the county pays the credit card bill with funds
from the county's budget for "court operations." /d. You further state that the judges serving on the
county's office of court administration committee have questioned the propriety of the district
attorney's advance payment of witnesses' travel expenses without prior approval from the judge
presiding over the case. [d. at 1-2.
You first ask whether "article 35.27 ofthe Texas Code of Criminal Procedure require[s] that
a district attorney obtain the approval of the judge presiding over a case in a county or district court
before advancing funds to a nonresident witness for the travel expenses ofthe witness[.]" [d. at 1.
When construing a statute, courts initially focus on a statute's text, "so as to give effect to the
Legislature's intent as expressed in its plain language." R.R. Comm'n of Tex. v. Tex. Citizens for a
Safe Future & Clean Water, 336 S.W.3d 619,628 (Tex. 2011). Under article 35.27, section (l)(a)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, a person who does not reside in the county and who has been
subpoenaed "or otherwise required or requested in writing by the prosecuting attorney or the court"
to give testimony in a criminal proceeding "shall be reimbursed by the state for the reasonable and
necessary transportation, meal, and lodging expenses he incurs by reason of his attendance as a
witness at such proceeding." TEX. CODECRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 35.27, § l(a) (West 2006). Further,
the Code requires that persons seeking reimbursement must submit a sworn application to the
ISee Letter from Honorable Brett W. Ligon, Montgomery County District Attorney, 9th Judicial District, to
Honorable Greg Abbott, Attorney General of Texas at 1 (May 3, 2011), https:llwww.oag.state.tx.us/opin/index_rq.shtml
("Request Letter").
The Honorable Brett W. Ligon - Page 2 (GA-0888)
Comptroller of Public Accounts detailing the expenses necessitated by the travel. Id. §§ 2,4. The
amount of reimbursement must not exceed the maximum rates provided for by law for state
employees. Id. § 2. The application must "be presented for approval by the judge who presided over
... the criminal proceeding." Id. § 4. The Comptroller is required to examine a claim for
reimbursement approved by the judge and pay it if the Comptroller "deems the claim in compliance
with and authorized by" article 35.27. Id. § 5.
Article 35.27, section 7 authorizes a county to pay witness expenses in advance:
The county in which a criminal proceeding is pending, upon request
of the district attorney or other prosecutor charged with the duty of
prosecution in the proceeding, may advance funds from its treasury
to any witness who will be entitled to reimbursement under this
article. The amount advanced may not exceed the amount that is
reasonably necessary to enable the witness to attend as required or
requested. However, the amount advanced may include sums in
excess of the reimbursement provided for by this article if the excess
is required for compliance with Section 4 of Article 24.28 in securing
the attendance of a witness from another state under the Uniform
Act. 2 A county that advances funds to a witness under this section is
entitled to reimbursement by the state as an assignee of the witness.
!d. § 7 (footnote added). The plain language of the statute gives a county the discretion, upon the
prosecutor's request, to advance funds in an amount that does not exceed the amount "reasonably
necessary to enable the witness to attend as required or requested." Id. The statute does not
expressly or implicitly require judicial authorization of these travel-related advances for nonresident
witnesses. While article 35.27 authorizes advances for a "witness who will be entitled to
reimbursement under this article," whether a witness is entitled to reimbursement must ultimately
be determined by the presiding judge and the Comptroller. As explained above, the determination
made by these officials is made after the witness submits a sworn application detailing the expenses
incurred, not before the payment is advanced. Id. § 4-5. Thus, we conclude that article 35.27 ofthe
Code of Criminal Procedure does not require a county to obtain the presiding judge's preapproval
before advancing funds to a nonresident witness for travel expenses. Although the Code generally
2Article 24.28 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is the "Uniform Act to ~ecure the Attendance of Witnesses
from Without the State in Criminal Proceedings." TEX. CODECRIM. PROe. ANN. art. 24.28, § 1 (West 2009). The article
provides in part that "[i]f the witness is summoned to attend and testify in this State he shall be tendered the
compensation for nonresident witnesses authorized by Article 35.27 of this Code, together with such additional
compensation, if any, required by the other State for compliance." [d. § 4(b). We do not address any proceedings under
article 24.28.
The Honorable Brett W. Ligon - Page 3 (GA-0888)
authorizes a county to prepay travel expenses, a district attorney's authority to advance funds for that
purpose is ultimately a matter of policy for the county to determine. 3
You also ask whether a court may refuse to approve a nonresident witness's travel expense
reimbursement request solely because the court did not preapprove the advance payment of travel
costs. As we have explained, article 35.27 does not require the presiding judge to approve a county's
advancement of witness expenses. Article 35.27 does require, however, that a nonresident witness
who is either subpoenaed or requested to testify-and who files the sworn application required by
article 35.27-shall be reimbursed by the state for necessary travel expenses. TEX. CODE CRIM.
PROC. ANN. art. 35.27, § 1(a) (West 2006). When the county advances the witness's travel expenses,
the witness's reimbursement rights are assigned to the county. Id. § 7. Accordingly, when a county
properly advances travel expenses to a witness, that county is entitled to reimbursement from the
state as the witness's assignee, regardless of whether the advance of travel expenses was judicially
preapproved.
3While judicial preapproval is not expressly required by article 35 .27 of the Code, reimbursement to the county
of advanced travel expenditures depends on judicial approval ofthe sworn application to the Comptroller. Id. art. 35.27,
§ § 4, 7 (West 2006). Nothing in the article precludes a county from requiring its prosecutors to seek the court's tentative
approval before advancing funds.
The Honorable Brett W. Ligon - Page 4 (GA-0888)
SUMMARY
Article 35.27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not
require a county to obtain judicial preapproval before advancing
funds to a nonresident witness for travel expenses. Whether a district
attorney may advance such funds is a matter of policy for the county
to determine.
A nonresident witness who is subpoenaed or requested to
testify and who files the sworn application required by article 35.27
is entitled to reimbursement for these travel expenses. To the extent
that a witness is eligible for reimbursement, and a county properly
advances funds to that witness, the county is entitled to
reimbursement from the state as the witness's assignee.
DANIEL T. HODGE
First Assistant Attorney General
DAVID J. SCHENCK
Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
JASON BOATRIGHT
Chair, Opinion Committee
William A. Hill
Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee