Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

TEE ATTO-Y GENERAL OF XAS June 6, 1962 Honorable Henry Wade Opinion No. WW-1352 District Attorney Dallas County Re: Whether it is necessary for a Dallas, Texas prisoner who receives a three- day jail sentence to serve a Dear Mr. Wade: full 72 hours. In your request for an opinion you ask the follow- ing questions: "Is it necessary for a prisoner who receives a 3-day jail sentence to serve a full 72 hours, or is the time computed by days alone; that Is, Is each part of a day served to be considered a full day?" One of the cardinal rules of statutory construction is that words employed by the Legislature are to be taken in their ordinary and popular acceptance, unless technical terms are used, or unless it clearly appears from the con- text that the words used were not intended to be understood in their ordinary and popular significance. We have found ample authority for the proposition that the use of the word "day" in a statute should be considered in its ordinary sense as a "calendar day". Booker v. Chief Engineer of Fire Department of Woburn, 324 Mass. 2b4 85 N E (66 (1949). Long v. City of Wichita Falls, 142 !Cex.2i2i2f76 S.W.2d 916 (1944); Jones v. State,,25 S.W. 124 (Tex.Crim. 1893); Speer v. State, 2 Tex.App. 30. In Dallas County v. Reynolds, 199 S.W. 702 (1918)the court quotes the Speer case: "We know no rule of law or legal mode of computing time by which we would be warranted in holding that parts of two days make a day." The Court in the Reynolds case, also quoted with approval the following language from Cosgriff v. Commissioners, 151 Cal. 407, 91 Pac. 98 (1907): Hon. Henry Wade Page 2 Opinion No. WW-1352 "The fractions of the days are no more taken into consideration than are fractions of the seconds. The consequence is that every day and every part of that day is, by the rule, one day before every part of the succeeding day. The last moment of any day is, in contemplation of law in such cases, one day before the first mo- ment of the next day, although the elapsed time is infinitesimal . . . .ll Therefore, it is our opinion that the word r,days" was not intended to be taken in its restrictive or tech- nical sense;.that such word was intended to denote a calendar day and a day as a unit of time, not an aggrega- tion of a certain number of hours, minutes, or seconds. This opinion is in accordance with Attorney General's Opinion No. WW-1204. SUMMARY It is not necessary for a prisoner who receives a 3-day jail sentence to serve a full 72 hours, since each part of a day served is considered a complete day. Yours very truly, WILL WILSON Attorney General of Texas BY Charles R. Lind Assistant Attorney General CRL:sh APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE: W. V. Geppert, Chairman Riley Eugene Fletcher Elmer McVey Frank Booth REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: Leonard Passmore