Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1991 )


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    DAN MORALES
    Al-KmNEY
    GENERAL
    September 241991
    Honorable Allen Hightower                   Opinion No. DM- 45
    Chnmittee on Corrections                    Re: Whether the amendment ‘to article
    Texas House of Representatives              42.18 of the Code of Criminal Proce-
    P.O. Box 2910                               dure regarding the mandatory time that
    Austin, Texas 78768-2910                    inmates must serve prior to eligibility
    for parole is retroactive (RQ-65)
    Dear Representative Hightower:
    Your question references amendments to the Code of Criminal Procedure
    adopted by the 70th Legislature. Specifically, section 8(b) of article 42.18 of the
    Code of Criminal Procedure was amended to reduce the time necessary to be served
    before parole eligibility for certain prisoners. Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 384, 0 5, at
    1889. You ask whether this change applies only to inmates convicted after the
    effective date of the amendment. We conclude it does not.
    We first consider whether any constitutional provision bars the retroactive
    application ~of article 42.18, section 8(b). The federal Constitution forbids the
    enactment of a law which imposes a punishment for an act which was not punishable
    at the time it was committed or imposes additional punishment to that previously
    prescribed. U.S. Const. art. I, 8 9, cl. 3; id 9 10, cl. 1. Laws affecting eligibility for
    early release are subject to’the er post fhcro prohibition of the federal constitution.
    Weaverv. Gmham, 
    450 U.S. 24
    (1981). A law is impermissible if it
    substantially alters the consequences attached to a crime
    already completed, and therefore changes ‘the quantum of
    punishment.’
    Id at 33, citing Dobbert v. Floridu, 432 U.S. 282,293-94 (1977). Under the federal er
    postfact   doctrine, a retrospective penal law can only be constitutionally applied to
    p. 227
    Honorable Allen Hightower - Page 2              (DM-45)
    a prisoner if it is not to his detriment. 
    Id. The Texas
    Constitution also prohibits erpostfucto laws. Article I, section 16,
    of the Texas Constitution reads as follows:
    No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, retroactive law, or
    any law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall be made.
    This provision goes further than the federal Constitution in that its prohibition is not
    limited to retroactive penal laws, but extends to any retroactive law. In an early case
    interpreting the meaning of the prohibition against retroactive laws in article I,
    section 16, the Texas Supreme Court stated:
    The making of it evidences an intention to place a further
    restriction on the power of the legislature; and it must be held
    to protect every right, although not strictly a right to property,
    which may accrue under existing laws prior to the passage of
    any, which, if permitted a retroactive effect, would take away
    the right. A right has been well defined to be a well-founded
    claim, and a well-founded claim means nothing more nor less
    than a claim recognized or secured by law.
    Mellinger v. City of Houston, 3 S.W. 249,253 (Tex. 1887). In Turbeville v. Gowdy, 272
    S.W. 559,561 (Tex. Civ. App.-- Fort Worth 1925, no writ), the court stated:
    A statute is retroactive which takes away or impairs vested
    rights acquired under existing laws, or creates a new obligation,
    imposes a new duty, or adopts a new disability in respect to
    transactions or considerations already passed.
    We do not think the restriction on the power of the legislature found in
    article I, section 16, of the Texas Constitution is intended to limit the application of
    legislation where no detriment or impairment of a right ensues. Thus, we conclude
    that neither the Constitution of the United States nor that of Texas prohibits the
    application of section 8(b) to inmates convicted of offenses committed before its
    effective date.
    P- 228
    Honorable Allen Hightower - Page 3            (DM-45)
    This conclusion tkds support in the amendments to the Code of Criminal
    Procedure enacted by the 70th Legislature. Certain provisions of the 1987
    amendments to the Code of Criminal Procedure, which may operate to increase
    punishment to prisoners, are expressly limited to prisoners convicted of crimes
    committed after the effective date of the amendment. See Acts 1987,7Oth Leg., ch.
    384, 89 7 - 9, at 189-91; Acts 1987,7Oth Leg., ch. 1101, $5 18, 19, at 3767-68. These
    .
    limitations are necessary to avotd impermissible ex post facto effects. No such
    limitation was made to the effect of the amendments to section 8(b)(l) of article
    42.18 which reduce the time a prisoner must serve before becoming eligible for
    parole.
    In an article published in the South Texas Law Review, Professor John M.
    S&mole&y of St. Mary’s University School of Law discussed the application of the
    amendments to section 8(b):
    It appears that only one of the major amendments by the
    Seventieth Legislature discussed in this article would apply
    retroactively: the change in parole eligibility from one-third oft
    the sentence imposed or twenty years to one-fourth of the
    sentence imposed or fifteen years. Because this enactment is
    beneficial to inmates, it is not subject to the ex post facto
    doctrine. Furthermore, the legislature apparently intended
    retroactive application because the statute contains no
    provision that the earlier parole eligibility date should only
    apply to inmates after the effective date of the Act, and several
    other amendments are expressly designated~ for prospective
    application. Thus, it appears that the immediate impact of the
    amendments of the Seventieth Legislature discussed in this
    article will be the availability of an earlier release from custody
    for many members of the present prison population despite the
    apparently more punitive thrust of much of the legislation.
    S&mole&y, Time Changes: Growing Complerity in Texas Sentencing Law, 30 S.
    TEX. L. REV. 283,299-300 (1989) (Ex Post Facto Doctrine).
    We agree with Professor Schmolesky’s conclusion with respect to the change
    in the time required to be served before parole eligibility. Because its effect is not
    P-   229
    Honorable Allen Hightower - Page 4            (DM-45)
    detrimental to the affected prisoners, it runs afoul of neither the ex post facto
    doctrine nor the restriction against retroactive laws found in article I, section 16, of
    the Texas Constitution. This change applies to prisoners without respect to the time
    of the commission of the crime or the date of conviction.
    SUMMqBY
    The effect of the 1987 amendments to article
    42.18, section 8(b), of the Code of Criminal Procedure
    reducing the time prisoners must serve before becoming
    eligible for parole is not limited with respect to the time
    the crime was committed or the date of conviction.
    Very truly yours,
    DAN      MORALES
    Attorney General of Texas
    WILL PRYOR
    First Assistant Attorney General
    MARY KELLER
    Executive 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 John Steiner
    Assistant Attorney General
    p.   230
    

Document Info

Docket Number: DM-45

Judges: Dan Morales

Filed Date: 7/2/1991

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017