Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

The Attorney General of Texas JIM MAl-rOX Nmember 13. 1985 Attorney General Supreme Court Building Mr. Don R. Stiles Opinion No. m-377 P. 0. Box 12549 Executive Director *“s!ln. TX. 79711.2549 Texas Adult Probat:Lon Commission Re: Whether a felony probationer 5121475-2501 8100 Cameron Road who has been placed on deferred Telex 9101974-1387 Telecopier 512f4750286 Suite 600, Buildiuli B adjudication is eligible for Austin, Texas 78:'53 placement in a restitution canter 714 Jackson, Suite 700 Dear Mr. Stiles: Dallas. TX. 752024508 21417428944 You ask whethm: a defendant who is accused of a felony and who is placed on deferred adjudication under section 3d of article 42.12 of 4824 Alberta Ave.. Suite 180 the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure may be placed in a restitution El Paso. TX. 799052793 center pursuant tm) section 6c of article 42.12 as a condlcion of 91515333404 deferred adjudicat:ton "probation." 1001 Texas. suite 7w Section 3d provides. in part: Houston. TX. 77002-3111 71312255SS8 (a) :brcept as provided by Subsection (d) of this sec::lon [exception for defendant charged with certain offenses], when in its opinion the best SW Broadway. Suite 312 Lubbock. TX. 79401-3479 interest of society and the defendant will be 9061747.5238 served, the court may, after receiving a plea of guilty (11 plea .of nolo contendere, hearing the evidence, and finding that it substantiates the 4309 N. Tenth, Suite B McAllen, TX. 78501.1685 defendanc's guilt, defer further proceedings 5121882.45d7 without entering an adjudication of guilt, and place the defendant ou probation for a period as the court may Drescribe, not to exceed 10 vears. 200 Main Plaza. Suite 4M) The COUIYJa&'impose ; fine applicable io the offense San Antonio, TX. 78205-2797 512/225-4191 and require any reasonable terms and conditio& L of probation, including any of the conditiozs enumerated in Sections 6 and 6a of this An Equal OppOtiUnitYl Article. However, upon written motion of the Affirmative Action Employer defendant requesting final adjudication filed within 30 days after entering such plea and the deferment of adjudication. the court shall proceed to final adjudication as in all other cases. (Emphasis added). Your request turns on whether the legislature intended section 3d to authorize a court to place a defendant who is on deferred p. 1722 Mr. Don R. Stiles - Page 2 (:JM-377) adiudication in a restitutim center. As a general rule. courts have wide discretion in granting; probation and in imposing the conditions of probation. See Macias v . State, 649 S.W.2d 150, 152 (Tex. App. - Rl Paso 1983, noet.).vertheless, this discretion must be viewed in light of the fact that deferred adjudication “probation” differs from “probation” as used el;;ewhere in article 42.12. The Texas Court of Crisinal Appeals in Ex parte Shillings, 641 S.W.2d 538 (Tex. Grim. App. ‘L982), addressed whether subsection (a) of section 3d was intended to ,Lnclude conditions of probation set forth in section 6b of article 42.12. At that time, section 3d(a) simply stated that the court may “place the defendant on probation on reason- able terms and conditions.” Id. at 539. In Shillings, the defendant challenged a condition of ‘urrpsobation which appeared in two orders deferring adjudication of guilt. The conditions, imposed pursuant to section 6b, required that the defendant be incarcerated for 30 days in one cause and for 18 days in another cause. The court determined that deferred adjudication “protation” in section 3d(a) is not the equiva- lent of the traditional cmcept of probation as defined and applied generally in article 42.1;.. -Rx parte Shillings, 641 S.W.2d at 539 (citing McNew v. State, 608 S.W.2d 166, 172 (Tex. Grim. App. 1978)). The court reasoned that sel:tion 2(b) defines probation as the release of a “convicted” defendant and expressly recognizes that the context of a particular section way require a different definition. In deferred adjudication “prota,tion” under section 3d(a), the court makes no adjudication of guilt and imposes no sentence; therefore, no conviction occurs, Id. - Acc.ordingly, the court stated that Art. 42.12, Sec. 15b(a), *, allowing imprison- ment as a condition of probation has no applica- tion to the conditions of probation which may be imposed following an order deferring an adjudice- tion of guilt. Such a condition may be imposed only after ‘proba,tion’ is granted as that tern is defined in Art. ii:!. 12, Sec. 2(b), supra. 641 S.W.2d at 540. A similar analysis must be applied to section 3d(a) of article 42.12 in 8:onjunction with section 6~. The language of secticmn 6c itself supports the view that it was not intended to apply to defendants on deferred adjudication. The section provides, in part: (a) If a judSa sentences a defendant to a term of imprisonment in the Texas Department of Corrections and the defendant is eligible for probation, the judge may suspend imposition of the sentence of imprisonment and require as a con- dition of probation, in addition to the conditions p. 1723 Mr. Don R. Stiles - Page 3 ,(.JM-377) imposed under Section 6 of this article. that the defendant sewe B'R alternate probationary sentence of not less than s,ix months or more than 12 months in a restitution clcnter if [certain conditions are met]. (Emphasis asided). (Text of section 6c as added by Acts 1983, 68th Leg., ch. 237, 52, st 1057.) The term “senteaf:e” cannot logically Include deferred adjudication "probationers" because a defendant cannot be sentenced until he is adjudicated guilty. Moreover, the present wording of section 3d(a) of article 42.12 compels the result reached in Shillings even more conclusively than the version at issue in Shillin 8 The language considered in Shillings authorized the court+ to 'place the defendant on probation on reasonable terms and conditions." 641 S.W.2d at 539. Section 3d(a) was amended in 1981 to provide that [t]he court may impose a fine applicable to the offense and requ!.re any reasonable terms and con- ditions of probation, including any of the condi- tions enumerated in Sections 6 and 6a of this Article. Acts 1981, 67th Leg., ch. 544, PL, at 2263. You suggest that the r.se of the term "including" implies that the court is not limited to the conditions set forth in sections 6 and 6a but may also impose the conditions of 6c. Clearly, the court is not limited to the conditions expressly set forth in sections 6 and 6a. The language of section 6 itself emphasizes that the terms and conditions of probation z.re not limited to enumerated conditions. Given that the legislature included an express reference to both sections 6 and 6a. however: it would also have included a reference to section 6c if section 6c were intended to apply. See, e.g., Acts 1981, 67th Leg., ch. 544, 92, at 2263 (amending section 3d(a) of article 42.13 to include section 6~). Consequently, we believe that the court is limited to conditions of the general nature and severity of those specified in sect:.ons 6 and 6a. We are aware that the court in Gardner v. State, 632 S.W.2d 851, 854-55 (Tex. App. - Roust,on 114th Dist.1 1982, no pet.) held that section 6b was intended to become part of "section 6" as used in an early version of section 3a (dealing with regular probation) which stated that "the court may impose only those conditions which are set forth in Section 6 hereof-" At the time this version of section 3a was originally enacted, section 6 was the only provision which described probation condkions. Thus, the legislative intent upon which the court relied in _-- Gardner is inapplicable to the case at hand. p. 1724 Mr. Don R. Stiles - Page 4 (JM-377) Moreover, section 3a covered probation conditions applicable to a wide variety of convicted defendants, but not probation conditions applicable to a defendant cn, deferred adjudication under section 3d. The legislature included an express reference to sections 6 and 6a in section 3d; ve believe that :Lt would also have included section 6c if it intended section 6c to aIply to deferred adjudication "probation." SUMMARY A defendant who is placed on deferred adjudi- cation pursuant tcl subsection (a) of section 3d of article 42.12 oi' the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure may nat be placed in a restitution center pursuant to section 6c of article 42.12 as a condition of deferred adjudication "probation." Very truly you J /t-iaG -JIM A MATTOX Attorney General of Texas MARYKELLER Executive Assistant Attorney7 General ROBERTGRAY Special Assistant Attorney General RICR GILPIN Chairman, Opinion Comaittee Prepared by Jennifer Riggs Assistant Attorney General APPROW: OPINIONCOMMITTEE Rick Gilpin, Chairman Susan Garrison Jim Hoellinger Jennifer Riggs Nancy Sutton Sarah Woelk 'p. 1725