Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Office of ti)e JZIttornep@eneral &date of Zexae DAN MORALES January IS,1992 ATTORNEY GENERAL Honorable Mike Driscoll Opinion No. DM-73 HarrisCounty Attorney 1001 Preston, Suite 634 Re: Whether a county pre-trial services Houston, Texas 77092-1891 agency is authorized under chapter 17 of the Code of Cmninal Procedure to hold personal property as additional security for personal bond if additional security is ordered by the district court, and, if so, where such personal property should be held (RQ-193) Dear Mr. Driscolh You ask whether the Harris County Rre-Trial Services Agency1 (the “pre-trial services agency”) is author&d under chapter 17 of the Code of 0iminal Procedure to hold personal property as security for a personal bond when the security is ordered by the district court. If the pre-trial services agency is permitted to do so, you also ask us to address how the pre-trial services agency should handle such P~Operty~ Chapter 17 of the Code of Criminal Procedure sets forth various procedures and requirements for setting bail to allow the pre-trial release of criminal defendants while ensuring their presence at trial. Although the bail bond is the traditional vehicle for achieving this goal, article 17.03 of the Code of Crimi~I Procedure provides that “a magistrate may, in the magistrate’s discretion, release the defendant on his personal bond without sureties or other security.” Article 17.04 sets forth the requisites of a personal bond. “A personal bond is sufficient if it includes the requisites of a bail bond as set out in Article 17.08, except that no ‘We o&e that the Harris Couuty Pre-Trial Se+ Agency has been the subject of pmtracted liti@oo and numerous orders in a federal distrkt court proeccdina Albai v. Shenff ofHo& Gnqv, Civil Action No. 72-H-1094, United States Distrkt Court for the Southern District of Texas Houston Divisioo.IOthisopinion,weaddra the suthorityof the Harris thmty Prc-Trial Services Agency only in terms of chapter 17 of the Code of Crimhal Procedure. We do not address any additional duties that may be. imposed upon it by federal court order. p. 368 Honorable Mike Driscoll - Page 2 (DM-73) sureties are required.” Code Crim. Proc. art. 17.04. In addition, a personal bond must include detailed information about the defendant, and an oath sworn and signed by the defendant that he or she will appear at trial or pay the court a predetermined sum and reasonable expenses incurred in his or her arrest for failure to appear. Id. The brief submitted with your request suggests that on occasion magistrates in Harris County release defendants on personal bond but impose conditions in addition to those set forth in article 17.04, requiring defendants to surrender personal property such as jewelry, motor vehicle titles and license plates, and stock certificates in closely-held corporations as security.* As a result of this practice, you ask whether the pre-trial services agency is permitted by law to hold such personal property. Upon examination of the code provisions establishing the pre-trial services agency, we conclude that it is not permitted to do so. The pre-trial services agency was established pursuant to article 17.42 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Section 1 of that article provides that “[a]ny county.. . may establish a personal bond office to gather and review information about an accused that may have a bearing on whether, he will comply with the conditions of a personal bond and report its findings to the court before which the case is pending.” Code Crim. Proc. art. 17.42, 0 1. It is evident from this provision that the purpose of the pre-trial services agency, like any personal bond office, is to gather information about defendants and to present that information to the court. We are not aware of any provision authorizing personal bond offices to hold or store personal property, nor is this authority implied from personal bond offices’express statutory authority in section 1 of article 17.42.3 Therefore, we must conclude that %e brief submitted with your request implies that magistrates are not authorized to require such security when releasing a defendant on personal bond. You have not asked us to address this question, however. We assume for purposes of this opinion tbat magistrates are authorized to require security when releasing defendants on personal bond. *he brief submitted w&your request quotes language in former artide 2372~.1, V.T.C.S., which it contends is the predecessor statute to article 17.42 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, charging certain entities with “assur[ing] the judge of the court that such entity will assist in securing the presence of tbe accused at bis trial,” V.T.C.S. art. 2372~1, $3, and suggests that this language is relevant to the authority of personal bond offices. The foregoing provision, however, is not the predecessor statute to article 17.42, and does not deal with personal bond offices. Rather, it deals with non-public entities established to provide counsel to indigent defendants. Furthermore, the actual predecessor statute, V.T.C.S. art. 2372~.2, like article 17.42, merely states that the purpose of personal bond ofices is “to gather and review information about an accused that may have a bearing on whether he will comply with the conditions of a personal bond and report its findings to the court before which p. 369 Honorable Mike Driscoll - Page 3 (DM-73) chapter 17 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not authorize personal bond offices, including the pre-trial services agency, to hold or store personal property.4 SUMMARY Chapter 17 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not authorize the Harris County Pre-Trial Services Agency, a personal bond office created pursuant to article 17.42 of the code, to hold or store personal property required by a magistrate as security on a personal bond. DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas (footnote continued) tbe case is pending.” Acts 1!273,63d Leg., ch. 352, B 1, at 788. The brief also asserts, without citation, that “[fJroma review of the applicable statutes, it would appear that the personal bond ofice continues to monitor the defendant, who is released on a personal bond, during the pendency of hi court proceedings.” Assuming that this is indeed the case, we do not believe that the responsibility of monitoring defendants impliedly authorizes personal bond o&es to store defendants’ personal property. 4Because we have answered your frst question in the negative, we do not address your second question regarding how the pre-trial services agency should handle personal property surrendered as security for release on personal bond. p. 370 Honorable Mike Driscoll - Page 4 (DM-73) WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General MARY KELLER Deputy Assistant Attorney General JUDGE ZOLLIE STEAKLEY (Ret.) Special Assistant Attorney General RENEA HICKS Special Assistant Attorney General MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee Prepared by Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General p. 371