Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

July 9, 1987 Honorable Gary Garrison opinion No. J&743 Ector County Attorney Courthouse, Room 218 Re: Liability for medical costs Odessa, Texas 79761 of an individual in a county jail awaiting a hearing for violation of parole conditions Dear Mr. Garrison: You ask whether the Texas Department of Corrections OK the county of incarceration is responsible for the payment of medical care for a parole violator held in county jail pending a parole violation hearing. The Adult Parole and Mandatory Supervision Law defines parole and mandatory supervision as the release of a prisoner from imprisonment but not from the legal authority of the state. Code Grim. Proc. art. 42.18, 02. Every prisoner on parole OK mandatory supervision remains in the legal custody of the institution from which he was released but is subject to the orders of the Board of Pardons and Paroles. Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.12, 515(f)(3). If there is reason to believe that a parolee has violated a condition of his parole, the Board of Pardons and Paroles may issue a warrant authorizing the officers named in the warrant to take the parolee into "actual custody." Code Grim. Proc. art. 42.12, §21(a). The due process requirements of Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471 (1972). require that the parolee be given a revocation hearing at OK near the location of the alleged violation. Pending the hearing on a charge of parole violation or violation of conditions of mandatory supervision, Va prisoner returned to custody shall remain incarcerated." Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.12, 521(a); art. 42.18, 514(a); 37 Texas Administrative Code §145.45(g). The Board of Pardons and Paroles may require a county sheriff to accept a prisoner of the board pending a parole revocation hearing. Representatives of a county where a parolee is detained on the basis of a prerevocation warrant issued by the Board of Pardons and Paroles may not transfer the parolee to the Texas Department of Corrections before completion or waiver of the required hearing. Attorney General Opinion JM-615 (1987). Counties are liable for medical expenses of prisoners "confined in OK kept under guard in the county jail." Code Crim. Proc. art. 104.002. Although there is an exception in article 104.002 for p. 3458 Honorable Gary GaKKiSOn - Page 2 (JM-743) prisoners transferred from another County "on a change of venue, fOK safekeeping, OK for a habeas corpus hearing." there is no eXCeptiOn for prisoners awaiting hearings on parole KeVOCatiOKi. The Texas Department of Corrections is responsible fOK the medical care of pKisoneKs "confined therein." V.T.C.S. art. 6166g. See generally Attorney General Opinion JM-730. You suggest that because a parolee is in the legal custody of the Department of Corrections. he should be considered to be "confined" in the Department of Corrections KatheK than county jail for purposes of determining liability for medical care. AKtiCla 61666 makes the Texas Department of Corrections respon- sible for the medical care "of prisoners confined therein." Cf. Attorney General Opinion Jt+580 (1986) (authority of TDC to aSS= medical cost of hospitalization of infant born to an inmate). Even though a prisoner incarcerated in a county jail pending a parole violation hearing is in the legal custody of the Department of Corrections he is in the actual custody of the county jail. We find no basis for construing the term "confined therein" in article 61661: to be synonymous with legal custody. Absent any indication of contrary legislative intent. we most read "confined therein" in its OKdinaKy meaning. Gov't. Code 5311.011(a) (words shall be construed according to common usage). The ordinary meaning of "confine" is "to restrain within limits." Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed.). See Attorney General Opinion JM-730. A prisoner InCaKCeKated in a county jail is not confined in the department of corrections. We conclude, therefore, that a county is responsible for medical care for a parole violator incarcerated in a county jail pending a parole revocation hearing pUKSUant to article 104.002. SUMMARY Medical care fOK a parole violator incarcerated in a county jail pending a parole revocation hearing is the responsibility of the county under the provisions of article 104.002 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. / "eKyz& JIM MATTOX Attorney General of Texas MARY KELLER Executive Assistant Attorney General JUDGE ZOLLIE STEAKLEY Special Assistant Attorney General p. 3459 Honorable Gary GaKKiSOn - Page 3 (~~-743) RICK GILPIN Chairman, Opinion Conrmittee Prepared by Nancy Sutton and Sarah Woelk Assistant Attorney General p. 3460