GREEN, MAXIE D. D/B/A a TO Z BAIL BONDS v. the State of Texas ( 2023 )


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  •        In the Court of Criminal
    Appeals of Texas
    ══════════
    No. PD-0008-22
    ══════════
    MAXIE D. GREEN D/B/A A TO Z BAIL BONDS,
    Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    On State’s Petition for Discretionary Review
    From the Second Court of Appeals
    Wichita County
    ═══════════════════════════════════════
    YEARY, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    The Court decides that “conclusive proof” that the defendant’s
    name was distinctly called at the door of the courtroom door establishes
    “conclusively” the statutory element that his name “shall be called
    GREEN – 2
    distinctly at the courthouse door[.]” Majority Opinion at 1 & 15; TEX.
    CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 22.02 (emphasis added). 1 This is true, the Court
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    decides, not only as a matter of proof at the trial of a bond forfeiture
    case, but even for purposes of a summary judgment proceeding. But the
    Court’s premise is flawed. The cases upon which it relies do not even
    stand for the proposition that evidence that the name was called at the
    courtroom door will categorically prove (even as a matter of “substantial
    compliance”) that it was called at the courthouse door for purposes of
    trial, much less for purposes of a summary judgment proceeding. I
    respectfully dissent.
    Typically, the judgment nisi will serve to establish at least a
    prima facie case in a bond forfeiture proceeding, including evidence of
    the necessary element that the defendant’s name was “called distinctly
    at the courthouse door[.]” Tocher v. State, 
    517 S.W.2d 299
    , 300−01 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1975). It is then up to the defendant or surety to rebut that
    prima facie case with evidence that the defendant’s name was not, in
    1 Substantively unchanged since its appearance as Article 408 of the
    1856 “Old Code,” present Article 22.02 reads:
    Bail bonds and personal bonds are forfeited in the
    following manner: The name of the defendant shall be called
    distinctly at the courthouse door, and if the defendant does not
    appear within a reasonable time after such call is made,
    judgment shall be entered that the State of Texas recover of the
    defendant the amount of money in which he is bound, and of his
    sureties, if any, the amount of money in which they are
    respectively bound, which judgment shall state that the same
    will be made final, unless good cause be shown why the
    defendant did not appear.
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 22.02 (emphasis added).
    GREEN – 3
    fact, called at the courthouse door. 
    Id. at 301
    . If he cannot, then the trial
    court does not err to grant a State’s motion for summary judgment.
    But that assumes that a judgment nisi actually recites that the
    defendant’s name was called at the courthouse door, as in Tocher itself.
    
    Id. at 300
    ; see Swaim v. State, 
    498 S.W.2d 188
    , 191 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1973) (uncontested judgment nisi recital that the defendant’s name was
    called at the “courthouse door” served as conclusive proof). Here, the
    judgment nisi does not. Instead, it recites that the defendant’s name was
    called out at the courtroom door. And that is functionally the only
    evidence the State had to offer relating to this element of its bond
    forfeiture case—or, at least, it was all that the State did offer for
    purposes of its motion for summary judgment. 2       1F
    In my view, such a recitation in a judgment nisi may only serve
    to shift the burden of proof to the defendant with respect to the statutory
    element requiring proof of calling a name at the “courthouse” door if the
    words “courtroom” and “courthouse” are synonymous, or if evidence of
    “courtroom” will always, without more, prove “courthouse.” The Court
    today does not declare the two terms to be synonymous—presumably
    because, manifestly, they are not. 3 But it does effectively declare that
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    2The two unanswered requests for admissions, to the extent they prove
    anything at all, also refer to whether Appellant’s name was called at the
    “courtroom door,” not the courthouse door. Majority Opinion at 3.
    3 Given the statute’s long lineage, see note 1, ante, it might be thought
    that for this Court to construe the word “courthouse” in Article 22.02 to mean
    courtroom door would make it more functional in the modern age of multistory
    courthouses. After all, it seems even to me that a defendant is more likely to
    be found waiting in the common area outside the courtroom door than in the
    common area (if any) outside the main door of a large modern courthouse. But
    that is not a choice for this Court to make, consistent with separation of powers,
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    calling a defendant’s name at the courtroom door will always suffice to
    prove his name has been called at the courthouse door—categorically—
    as a matter of “substantial compliance.” 4 And from this premise the
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    TEX. CONST. art. II, § 1, and I am gratified that the Court today does not take
    such an approach to construing the statute.
    4  I am somewhat troubled by the ease with which some courts—in this
    case and in others—decide that “substantial compliance” with a statutory
    mandate is all that is necessary to show what a legislative enactment
    manifestly requires. When the Legislature permits “substantial compliance”
    with a procedural mandate to be sufficient, it knows how to say so. E.g., TEX.
    CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 26.13(c) (“In admonishing the defendant [during a
    guilty plea proceeding], substantial compliance by the court is sufficient[.]”)
    (emphasis added). It has not explicitly said so in Article 22.02. The Court also
    points to “numerous decisions from the intermediate appellate courts
    upholding grants of summary judgment when the facts conclusively
    demonstrated substantial compliance with the pertinent statute.” Majority
    Opinion at 11, n.9. But at least some of the intermediate court opinions pointed
    to by the Court address statutes that themselves appear to contain legislative
    authorization to apply at least the equivalent of a substantial compliance
    standard. See, e.g., United Fire & Cas. Co. v. Boring & Tunnelling Co. of Am.,
    
    321 S.W.3d 24
     (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, pet. denied) (applying
    TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2253.041, which in part provides: “(c) The notice must be
    accompanied by a sworn statement of account that states in substance: . . .”)
    (emphasis added); Richardson v. Mid-Cities Drywall, Inc., 
    968 S.W.2d 512
    (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1998, no pet.) (applying TEX. PROP. Code § 53.054,
    which in part provides: “(a) The affidavit must be signed by the person claiming
    the lien or by another person on the claimant’s behalf and must contain
    substantially: . . .”) (emphasis added). Again, the statute at issue here contains
    no such language. And all of this leads me to question whether a court may
    properly, consistent with the constitutional mandate of separated powers,
    declare “substantial compliance” with a law sufficient when the Legislature
    itself has not authorized it to do so.
    I agree that there may be some ineluctable wiggle room within which
    courts must determine what it means to conduct a required procedure “at” the
    courthouse door. See note 5, post. Must the defendant’s name be called out
    literally on the threshold of the courthouse door, or will two feet in front of or
    behind the threshold suffice? In any event, here, even assuming the
    applicability of the cases that the Court says permit substantial compliance,
    the State’s summary judgment evidence was deficient, for the reasons
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    Court reasons that a judgment nisi that recites “courtroom door,” if not
    refuted by the defendant, will always serve “conclusively” to prove
    “courthouse door,” even for purposes of a summary judgment
    proceeding.
    But still, the cases that the Court cites in support of its premise
    do not say what the Court suggests they do. Majority Opinion at 8−10.
    They do not hold that proof of calling the defendant at the “courtroom
    door” will categorically constitute at least substantial compliance with
    the State’s burden to show calling the defendant at the “courthouse
    door.” Instead, each of those cases looks to the specific facts presented to
    determine, circumstantially, whether what the State showed to have
    happened constituted the functional equivalent of calling the
    defendant’s name “at the courthouse door[.]” TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art.
    22.02 (emphasis added). The cases do not hold that proof of calling at
    the “courtroom door” will always serve as proof of calling “at the
    courthouse door,” no matter the circumstances—even for purposes of a
    bond forfeiture trial, much less of a summary judgment proceeding.
    In Deem v. State, 
    342 S.W.2d 758
    , 759 (Tex. Crim. App. 1961), the
    earliest case cited by the Court today, the judgment nisi recited that the
    defendant’s name “was called distinctly at the door of the court house.”
    The defendant’s sureties argued that the judgment nisi was incorrect in
    this regard, and testimony was adduced from a deputy district clerk that
    the defendant’s name “was called . . . outside the court room door, but
    that he did not know if it was also called at the main door of the court
    developed in the text post. For the present, therefore, I will say no more about
    the propriety of a “substantial compliance” construction of Art. 22.02.
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    house.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). In rejecting the sureties’ claim, the Court
    simply stated: “It is concluded that there was a substantial compliance
    with the requirement that the name of the principal be called distinctly
    at the court house door. Caldwell et al. v. State, 
    136 Tex.Cr.R. 524
    , 
    126 S.W.2d 654
    .” 
    Id.
     The opinion in Deem does not say exactly how far
    “outside the court room door” the defendant’s name was called, but its
    reliance upon Caldwell suggests that this would have been a relevant
    consideration.
    In Caldwell, the judgment nisi recited that the defendant’s name
    was called “at the door of the court house[,]” but facts adduced at the
    trial to determine whether the judgment nisi should be made final made
    it clear that this recitation was not literally accurate. 
    136 Tex.Cr.R. 524
    ,
    525, 
    126 S.W.2d 654
    , 655 (1939). The facts in Caldwell did not show that
    the defendant’s name was called at the door of the courtroom either.
    Instead, the deputy sheriff stood at a cigar stand in the large lobby
    (“seventy-five feet long and twenty or thirty feet wide”) outside of the
    courtroom, but “within four steps (12 feet) of the outer door of the court
    house[,]” and called the defendant’s name from there. 
    Id.
     In determining
    whether this would satisfy the statutory mandate that the name be
    called “at the court house door[,]” the Court invoked an even earlier case
    from the Texas Supreme Court construing the word “at” in the context
    of the phrase “at the door of the court house[.]” 
    Id.
     
    136 Tex.Cr.R. at
    526−27, 
    126 S.W.2d at
    655−56 (quoting Howard v. Fulton, 
    79 Tex. 231
    ,
    236, 
    14 S.W. 1061
    , 1062 (1891)). 5 The Caldwell Court concluded: “The
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    5 The question in Howard was whether a notice of trustee sale of land,
    which by the terms of the mortgage instrument was to be posted “at the court-
    house door,” was properly situated when it was literally posted on a bulletin
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    place from which appellant’s name was called when the forfeiture was
    taken on his bond was within such reasonable distance of the court
    house door as under the circumstances to be in substantial compliance
    with the law requiring that his name be called at the door.” 
    Id.
     
    136 Tex.Cr.R. at 656
    , 
    126 S.W.2d at 527
    . 6   5F
    In Bennett v. State, 
    394 S.W.2d 804
    , 807 (Tex. Crim. App. 1965),
    the judgment nisi recited, as in Deem, that the defendant’s name was
    called at the courthouse door. Testimony at trial showed that the bailiff
    had been directed to call the name “outside in the hallway of the
    courtroom on the fourth floor of the courthouse[.]” 
    Id.
     Because the
    judgment nisi recited that the defendant’s name had in fact been called
    at the courthouse door, and no evidence showed that the bailiff did not
    also do that, the Court suggested that the defendant and sureties failed
    to rebut the State’s prima facie case. 
    Id.
     The Court then remarked: “Be
    that as it may, under the recent decision of this court in Deem, et al., v.
    State, the record shows substantial compliance with the requirement of
    board in the courthouse some forty feet away, but “in open view from the
    door[.]” The Supreme Court determined that the word “at” was less precise in
    terms of designating spatial relationships than the words “in” or “on” would be,
    and opined that “[w]e do not think that the legislature meant, nor do we think
    the parties to the mortgage under consideration intended, that the notice
    should be posted on or in the door.” 
    79 Tex. at 236
    , 14 S.W. at 1062.
    6Who is to say whether the Court would have concluded in Caldwell
    that the place from which the name was called would have been within a
    “reasonable distance” of the courthouse door had the evidence been that the
    deputy sheriff stood at the courtroom door? That door could have been as much
    as seventy-five feet away from the courthouse door, and it is hard to imagine
    the Court would so readily have found that distance to be “reasonable . . . under
    the circumstances” so as “to be in substantial compliance with the law
    requiring that [the defendant’s] name be called at the [courthouse] door.”
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    Art. 425 [now Article 22.02], that the name of the principal be called,
    distinctly, at the courthouse door.” Id. As in Deem, however, there was
    no evidence that the name was called precisely “at the courtroom door.”
    Neither Deem nor Bennett may be read fairly to stand for the
    proposition that calling the name merely from the courtroom door will
    invariably constitute “substantial compliance” with Article 22.02, since
    neither presents those facts, and both may have been resolved
    alternatively on the basis that the prima facie showing from the
    judgment nisi (reciting that the defendant’s name was called from the
    “courthouse door”) was, in any event, unrebutted. 7 The judgment nisi in
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    this case simply recites that the defendant’s name was called at the
    courtroom door. Not in the hallway outside the courtroom door, and
    certainly not within twelve feet (or some other “reasonable distance”) of
    the courthouse door.
    The Court reads its precedents for the proposition that a
    judgment nisi that recites the bare fact that the name was called at the
    courtroom door will always constitute prima facie proof, at least by
    substantial compliance, that the name was called at the courthouse door,
    and reasons from that premise that when that prima facie proof goes
    7 The Court also cites Tocher for its observation that Bennett stands for
    the proposition that the calling of the principal’s name outside in the hallway
    of the fourth floor of the courthouse is in substantial compliance with the
    requirement in Art. 22.02, V.A.C.C.P., that the name be called distinctly at the
    courthouse door. Majority Opinion at 9. But substantial compliance was “not
    an issue” in Tocher, as the Court there expressly recognized. Tocher, 
    517 S.W.2d at 300
    . Instead, the Court upheld the forfeiture because the judgment
    nisi recited that the defendant’s name had been called out literally at the
    courthouse door, and no evidence at the bond forfeiture hearing suggested
    otherwise.
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    unrebutted, then summary judgment is appropriate. But the cases do
    not support the premise that proof of “courtroom door,” without more,
    will invariably constitute proof of “courthouse door.” 8 It seems to me
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    that a judgment nisi that recites no more than this bare fact fails to
    satisfy the State’s burden of proof in the first place, and it does not
    trigger any duty of rebuttal from a defendant or his sureties in order to
    avoid summary judgment.
    By no means do I attempt here to resolve whether the statute at
    issue in this case was complied with, substantially or otherwise. I only
    object to the Court’s decision that this case was properly resolved by
    summary judgment. I am persuaded that the Court misreads our
    precedents. Moreover, whatever the Court may conclude about the
    wisdom of our precedents (those that the Court reads today to invariably
    allow calling a name at the courtroom door instead of the courthouse
    door), I consider it my duty to apply deference to the legislative
    determination to require calling that name at the courthouse door. To
    the degree that the Court assumes that calling a name at a courtroom
    door is the functional equivalent, always, of calling a name at a
    courthouse door, its decision fails to defer to our Legislature’s own policy
    decisions, as reflected in our statutory law.
    I respectfully dissent.
    8 I am not the only judge on this Court to have ever understood the cases
    in essentially this way. As former Judge Overstreet observed: “When the
    argument against the practice of calling the name at the courtroom door is
    raised, this Court’s opinions have construed substantial compliance to mean
    either: (1) reasonable distance to the courthouse door, as opposed to the
    courtroom door; or (2) lack of evidence to show otherwise.” Alvarez v. State, 
    861 S.W.2d 878
    , 885 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) (Overstreet, J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part).
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    FILED:    June 28, 2023
    PUBLISH