Court Opinion

ID: 9757718
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-28 22:56:38.608644+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:28:42.989744
License: Public Domain

JIM SHARP, Justice,
dissenting and concurring.
Appellant, Guillermo Montalvo, surrendered to Houston Police Department officers on October 17, 2009. The following day, pursuant to the District Court Bail Schedule of the Harris County District Courts, the Magistrate set bail at $50,000.1 On November 20, 2009, Montalvo filed an original application for a writ of habeas corpus seeking to reduce the bond to $5,000. On December 10, 2009, the trial court held a hearing on the writ during which counsel for the State requested that the bond be increased to $200,000 and Montalvo asked the court to reduce the bond to $20,000. The trial court increased the amount of the bond to $100,000.
When the Magistrate initially set the bond at $50,000, the following facts were all of record: (1) Montalvo was a lifelong Houstonian with ties to the city that included parents, siblings, and children; (2) Montalvo previously had a Harris County bond revoked for failure to appear at a court setting for a prior misdemeanor; (3) immediately subsequent to the alleged commission of the current offense, Montal-vo visited two small towns south of the Rio Grande River on the Texas border; and (5) very soon thereafter he made arrangements with two different Houston Police officers to return to Houston and voluntarily surrender himself.
Article 17.09(3) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides the parameters by which a defendant’s bond may be changed and, in pertinent part, states that the judge or magistrate may set a new bond “[w]hen the bond is defective, excessive or insufficient in amount, ... or for any other good and sufficient cause.... ” Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 17.09(3) (Vernon Supp.2009). The purpose of a *598bond being the assurance of the defendant’s presence in court, the original $50,000 bond could not be considered insufficient inasmuch as Montalvo had not and testified that he could not raise such a sum. As the bond is now set at $100,000, the excessiveness of the original bond is not before us. Moreover, the only new information gleaned from the hearing on the habeas writ was Montalvo’s inability to make the original $50,000 bond and that the police knew that he was not the one who stabbed the decedent. As such, the record is devoid of “any other good and sufficient cause ” to increase the bond and I would hold that the trial court abused its discretion in doubling the bond amount absent of such cause.
I join the portion of the majority’s opinion regarding Montalvo’s second point of error, which pertains to the appointment/withdrawal of appointed counsel. However, for the reasons set forth above, I dissent to the portion of the majority’s opinion regarding Montalvo’s first point of error.

. See http://www.justex.net/BailBond Schedule.aspx.