Court Opinion

ID: 4136593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-02-18 02:15:24.871392+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:36:28.035674
License: Public Domain

March 11, 1958

Honorable Jack Ross, Chairman    Opinion No. ii!~i-386
Hoard of Pardons and Paroles
State of Texas'                  Re:   Constitutionality and
Austin, Texas                          Construction of Portions
                                       of the Adult Probation
Dear Mr. Ross:                         and Parole Law of 1957.
          We have your request for an opinion in which you pro-
pound ten questions concerning provisions of the current Adult
Probation and Parole.Law pf 1957. You have since withdrawn your
request for answers to Questions No, 6 and 7: We shall below
set out these questions (with the exception of said Questions
No. 6 and 7), and In connection with each question will make our
answer to the same.
          Question No. 1:
          "Is a warrant issued by the Hoard upon order of
     the Governor prior to actual revocation of parole by
     the Governor sufficient authorqty to return a parolee
     to the Texas Department of Corrections pending the
     Hoard's final recommendation to the Governor for re-
     vocation or continuance on parole?"
          In our opinion, the answer to this question is "yes".
          The matter inquired about in this question is covered
by the provisions of Vernon's Annotated C.C.P., Article 781d,
Section 21, first paragraph.
          Question No. 2:
          "Is the Texas Department of Corrections author-
     ized by such warrant to assume actual physical custo-
     dy of a parolee prior to revocation of parole by the
     Governor?"
          Our answer to this question is in the affirmative.
          The assumption of the actual physical custody of the
parolee is by virtue of the Governor's order. The effect of
that order is to put in motion the constitutional power to re-
                                                                   ..
                                                                        ,.

Hon. Jack Ross, Chairman, Page 2   (WW-386)

voke paroles. The lesser power of assuming this custody is nec-
essarily included In the greater power of parole revocation
which the Constitution of Texas vests in the Governor. (Consti-
tution of Texas, Article IV, Section ll).' This procedure may
also sometimes be included in the parole as one of its condi-
tions. Such condition, If embodied In the parole, would be a
condition which Is neither immoral, 'illegalnor impossible of
performance, and, therefore, would not come under the prohibi-
tion set out in Rx Parte Redwine, 236 S.W. 96. Rather, it
would be a condition of the parole, which, when the parole was
accepted by the parolee, would constitute a term of the contract
under which he is released and for that reason would be binding
u on the parolee'as was held in such cases as Rx Parte Ferdin,
183, S.W. 2d 466, and Ex Parte Frazier, 239 S.W. 972.
          Question No. 3:
          "Does the fact that It is Ia stipulated condition
     of parole' authorize a parole officer to arrest a pa-
     rolee without a warrant, prior to revocation of parole
     by the Governor and cause him to be detained, pending
     a report to the Hoard?"
          Our answer to this question is In the negative.
          Since the parolee is at liberty by virtue of a parole
whioh, under the provisions of the Constitution of Texas,
Article IV, Section 11, may only be revoked by the Governor's
authority, It would be Illegal to deprive him of that liberty
so granted him by the parole other than by a warrant of arrest
issued by authority of the Governor. Hy virtue of the consti-
tutional provision, the power to revoke paroles has been de-
posited in the Governor and there it resides. This power may
not be deposited by legislative act In any other officer of
the government. In the case of State v. E.'L'T.Moore, 57 Tex.
307, the Supreme Court of Texas ‘inpart said:

          "It must be presumed that the Constitution, in
     selecting the depositories of a given power, unless
     It be otherwise expressed, intended that the deposi-
     tory should exercise an exclusive power In which the
     Legislature could not interfere by appointment of
     some other officer to the exercise of the power."
          The condition "that the parolee may be arrested by
the peace officer or parole officer, without a warrant, when
the parolee has, in the judgment of such officer, violated
the conditions of his parole," is an Illegal one and cannot
Hon. Jack Ross, Chairman, Page 3   (w-386)

be enforced. Such condition is a violation of the constitu-
tional prohibition against "unreasonable seizures". (Consti-
tution of Texas, Article I, Section 8). Being an illegal con-
dition, it could not be enforced. (See Rx Parte Redwine, 236
S.W. 96.)
          However, a parolee may be arrested before his parole
has been revoked If the warrant for his arrest mentioned above
in answer to your Question No. 1, has been issued.
          Question No.   4:

          "Because of the punctuation of the first two lines
     of the second paragraph of Section 21, Senate Bill
     154, 55th Legislature, Regular Session 1957, does
     the phrase 'when so authorized by a stipulated condi-
     tion of parole' apply to a peace officer (as distin-
     guished from a parole officer) and limit a peace of-
     ficer's authority to arrest a parolee for alleged vio-
     lation of parole without a warrant pending a report to
     the Board?'
          We think that since we have answered your Question
No. 3 in the negative, no answer Is necessary to Question No. ii.
          Question No. 5:
          "Does a peace officer or any other person have
     the authority under Section 21 of Senate Bill 154,
     55th Legislature, Regular Session 1957, to arrest
     and detain a parolee for alleged parole violation
     witk or without a warrant, prior to revocation of
     parole by the Governor?"
          In our opinion, no person or officer has the authori-
ty to arrest a parolee for alleged violations of the parolee"s
conditions without a warrant.
          Question No. 8:
          "In the event a parolee is arrested and charged
     with an offense (other than the offense and sentence
     upon which he was granted parole) and as a result
     thereof his parole is revoked by the Governor and a
     proper detalner has previously been placed against
     him with the detaining authorities by the Texas De-
     partment of Corrections, do the detaining authorl-
     ties have the authority to release the parolee from
Hon. Jack Ross, Chairman, Page 4 (~~-386)

     custody prior to delivery to the Texas Department
     of Corrections?"
          Limiting our answer to situations where the detention
referred to is by Texas officers in Texas, we answer in the
negative. When the parole has been revoked, and by reason
of such revoking, the parolee is in the custody of Texas officers,
it is the duty of these officers to turn the custody over to the
Texas Department of Corrections.
          If the parolee be in custody in jurisdictions other
than the jurisdiction of the State of Texas, whether the of-
ficers having the custody of parolee must hold him for surrender
to Texas authorities after the expiration of parolee's new sen-
tence in the foreign jurisdiction, is a question of law which
may differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and we, therefore,
cannot make a general answer to this question.
          Question No. 9:
          "Can a parolee being held in jail, whose parole
     has been revoked by the Governor, be released on bond?"
          The answer to this question IB "no".
          The parolee, when his parole has been legally revoked,
has the same legal,status as that of a person finally convicted
of a felony offense and sentenced to be confined therefor in
the state penitentiary by reason of a valid judgment rendered
by a court of competent jurisdiction. Such persons cannot, by
the device of giving bond, be released from such confinement.
          Question No. 10:
          "Does the chairman or any member of a Voluntary
     Parole Board, when acting as a Voluntary Parole Of-
     ficer under the provision of Section 30, Senate Bill
     154, have the same authority to make arrests of *
     parolees as that given to regularly employed parole
     officers by said Senate Bill 154?"
          Our answer to this question is “no”.
          The only powers attached to the officers named in your
question are supervisory powers. We find nothing in the Adult
Probation and Parole Law of 1957 which places the powers to
Hon. Jack Ross, Chairman, Page 5    (~~-386)

arrest in the chairman or members of the Voluntary Parole
Board. The powers mentioned not being granted, they do not
exist.
                           Respectfully yours,

GPB:nh
APPROVED:
OPINION COMMITTEE:
C. K. Richards, Chairman
Marietta McGregor Payne
John H. Minton, Jr.
REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY:   W. V. Geppert