Riles, Tawona Sharmin , 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 135 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. PD-1757-13
    TAWONA SHARMIN RILES, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    FROM THE SEVENTH COURT OF APPEALS
    POTTER COUNTY
    M EYERS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K ELLER, P.J.,
    and K EASLER, H ERVEY, A LCALA, R ICHARDSON, Y EARY, and N EWELL, JJ., joined.
    K ELLER, P.J., filed a concurring opinion in which H ERVEY, J., joined. A LCALA, J.,
    filed a concurring opinion. J OHNSON, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    OPINION
    Appellant pled guilty to possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.
    Adjudication was deferred, and Appellant was granted community supervision. After a
    year and a half, her community supervision was revoked, and she was sentenced to seven
    years in prison and ordered to pay all of the court costs, including her court appointed
    attorney fees. Appellant then appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in ordering her to
    Riles - Page 2
    pay the attorney fees because there was no evidence of her ability to pay. The court of
    appeals held that this claim was forfeited because she did not raise it in an appeal from
    the original Order of Deferred Adjudication. Riles v. State, 
    417 S.W.3d 606
    (Tex.
    App.–Amarillo 2013). We granted Appellant’s petition for discretionary review to
    determine whether Appellant forfeited her claim even though the amount and certainty of
    the attorney fee was unknown to her at the time community supervision was imposed.
    FACTS
    Appellant was charged with possession of a controlled substance and appointed
    counsel after the trial court found her to be indigent. On March 3, 2010, she pled guilty to
    the offense with no agreed recommendation on punishment. The signed plea papers
    admonished Appellant that:
    The defendant understands that in addition to any sentence imposed by
    the Court there are mandatory costs of Community Supervision, including but
    not limited to: Costs of Court, Community Supervision fees (up to $60 per
    month), restitution to the victim(s), payments for DPS Lab ($140), fees for
    court appointed attorney, fees related to testing and treatment, payments to
    Crime Victims Compensation Fund (up to $100), payment to Crime Stoppers
    ($50), payments to The Bridge Children Advocacy Center, electronic
    monitoring, and class/instruction related to their specific needs as may be
    ordered by their probation officer or the Court.
    By entering this Plea and Disposition Agreement the defendant
    affirmative states to the Court that he/she has the financial resources to pay the
    costs associated with Community Supervision in the specific case and that
    their personal financial situation is expected to be stable through out the term
    of Community Supervision. The defendant understands that it is the obligation
    of the defendant to notify his/her probation officer of any significant change
    in his/her financial situation that would impact his/her ability to pay the fees
    and costs associated with Community Supervision.
    Riles - Page 3
    Appellant also signed an application for community supervision that stated that if she were
    granted community supervision, she would “reimburse the county in which the prosecution
    was instituted for compensation paid to appointed counsel for defending [her] in the case.”
    Finally, Appellant’s Order of Deferred Adjudication, which she signed that same day, stated
    that she was ordered to pay a five-hundred-dollar fine and “all court costs including Court
    Appointed Attorney Fee.” It also stated, “Court Costs: see attached.”
    The judge granted Appellant deferred adjudication and placed her on community
    supervision for eight and one half years. The following day, Appellant’s attorney submitted
    an “Attorney Fee Voucher” for $1,000, which was approved. This voucher was filed by the
    district clerk on March 9, 2010. The district clerk’s bill of costs, which lists the $1,000 for
    the court appointed attorney fee, was issued on March 19, 2010.
    No additional filings were made in Appellant’s case until August 25, 2011, when the
    State moved to proceed with adjudication and revoke her community supervision. One year
    later, on August 23, 2012, a judgment adjudicating guilt against Appellant was signed which
    included an order for Appellant to pay all fines, court costs, and restitution “as indicated on
    the attached Bill of Costs.” The next day, the district clerk issued the updated bill of costs
    which cited the $1,000 assessment for “Attorney Fee(s) - Original Plea Agreement.”
    COURT OF APPEALS
    Appellant filed a notice of appeal from the judgment adjudicating guilt, arguing
    that the trial court erred in ordering her to pay the attorney fee without any evidence that
    Riles - Page 4
    she had the ability to pay it. The court of appeals held that she had forfeited this claim by
    not raising it in an appeal to the order of deferred adjudication. 
    Riles, 417 S.W.3d at 607
    .
    In coming to this conclusion, the court of appeals relied on two of our decisions,
    Wiley v. State, 
    410 S.W.3d 313
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2013), and Manuel v. State, 
    994 S.W.2d 658
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1999). 
    Id. at 607-09.
    In Wiley, the court of appeals explained, the
    appellant also objected to the order that he pay his court appointed attorney fees upon
    revocation of his community supervision because the evidence was insufficient to show
    that he had the ability to pay them. This Court rejected the appellant’s claim, stating that,
    because he was aware of the requirement that he pay the court costs, he would have
    known to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence at the time and, therefore, forfeited the
    claim by choosing to not appeal. 
    Wiley, 410 S.W.3d at 320-21
    . In Manuel, the appellant
    pled guilty, his adjudication was deferred, and he was granted community supervision.
    After this community supervision was revoked, the appellant appealed, arguing that the
    evidence at the original plea proceeding was insufficient to prove his guilt. 
    Manuel, 994 S.W.2d at 660
    . We held that, exactly like “regular community supervision,” a defendant
    given deferred adjudication community supervision may raise issues related to the plea
    proceeding only in an appeal taken when the supervision is first imposed. 
    Id. at 662.
    The court of appeals concluded that these two cases left it no choice but to hold
    that Appellant forfeited her claim by not making it until her community supervision was
    revoked. 
    Riles, 417 S.W.3d at 609
    . Although we discussed that the appellant in Wiley had
    Riles - Page 5
    notice of the obligation to pay attorney’s fees, the court of appeals declined to interpret
    that to mean that the issue could have been appealed had the appellant not been aware of
    the obligation. 
    Id. Without an
    express overruling of Manuel, the court of appeals chose to
    apply it as written. 
    Id. Justice Pirtle
    dissented, asserting that the procedural default consideration present
    in Wiley and Manuel is not present in this case because Appellant did not know the
    amount of her attorney fee at the time she was placed on deferred adjudication. 
    Id. at 612.
    He argued that it was determined only that Appellant would make some monthly
    payments and that, expecting to be able to meet this obligation, she would not have
    needed to appeal this determination. 
    Id. at 611.
    Further, because there was no evidence to
    support the imposition of the fees, Justice Pirtle would have reformed the judgment
    against Appellant to specify that “court costs” did not include attorney fees. 
    Id. at 612.
    Two weeks after this opinion, another bill of costs was issued that reflected an
    additional $3,185 for attorney fees for the revocation hearing. Appellant filed a motion
    for rehearing on this issue and others, each relating to fees. The court of appeals denied
    rehearing because new issues may not be raised through a motion for rehearing. Riles v.
    State, 
    417 S.W.3d 606
    (Tex. App.–Amarillo 2013) (op. on reh’g.). Justice Pirtle again
    dissented on the issue of attorney’s fees, arguing that Appellant should not be barred from
    raising the issue because the $3,185 did not appear in the original bill of costs. 
    Id. at 614.
    Subsequently, Appellant filed a petition for discretionary review challenging the
    Riles - Page 6
    original imposition of the attorney fees. We granted Appellant’s petition to determine
    whether Wiley v. State applies where the amount and certainty of the attorney fee are
    unknown at the time that community supervision is imposed.
    ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES
    Appellant agrees that Wiley v. State requires that challenges to attorney fees that
    are assessed as a condition of community supervision be brought up on an appeal from
    the original imposition of the community supervision. However, Appellant argues, this
    requirement is conditioned on the defendant having knowledge of both the existence and
    amount of the attorney fee, neither of which the appellant in this case had. Appellant
    points out that, unlike in Wiley, her bill of costs was not issued until 16 days after she was
    placed on deferred adjudication. Therefore, at the time her community supervision was
    imposed, she not only did not know the amount of the fee, she also could not be certain
    that such a fee would even be assessed.
    Appellant also points to Landers v. State, 
    402 S.W.3d 252
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2013),
    in which we held that a defendant who was assessed a fee for an appointed prosecutor pro
    tem after the proceedings had adjourned, was able to complain about the fee on appeal
    because she never had an original opportunity to object. Appellant asserts that Landers
    was based on the premise that the fee was not imposed in open court, and the appellant
    and her attorney could not have been assumed to have seen the bill of costs in time to
    object to it, so no procedural default occurred. Appellant contends that the court of
    Riles - Page 7
    appeals’s decision in her case does not follow the holdings of Landers and Wiley.
    The State, however, argues that Appellant was required to challenge the attorney
    fee on a direct appeal from the judgment imposing it and that by not doing so, she waived
    the issue. The State also asserts that Appellant assented to liability for the fee and
    represented on her plea papers that she had the resources to pay the fees that were made
    conditions of her community supervision. The fact she did not know the exact monetary
    amount at the time is of no significance.
    The State goes on to point out that the cases that Appellant relies on are
    distinguishable from her own and do not support her position. Landers, for example, did
    not involve a plea proceeding, there was no discussion of imposing court costs on the
    appellant at the trial or sentencing, and the appellant was granted a direct appeal. 
    402 S.W.3d 252
    . In Wiley, the court held that the appellant had procedurally defaulted by
    failing to appeal at the time he was placed on community 
    supervision. 410 S.W.3d at 320
    .
    Further, the State argues, Wiley allows Appellant to be charged with the knowledge of the
    requirement that she pay her attorney fee because she signed documents related to her
    plea and application for community supervision that discussed the obligation to pay. 
    Id. at 320-21.
    ANALYSIS
    We agree with the State’s position that we can conclude that Appellant had
    knowledge of the attorney fee and, therefore, could have challenged the sufficiency of the
    Riles - Page 8
    evidence supporting payment of the fee in a direct appeal from the initial order for
    deferred adjudication. Because Manuel requires that any issue related to the original plea
    proceeding be taken only in an appeal to the original order of deferred adjudication, we
    hold that Appellant procedurally defaulted this claim by failing to 
    so. 994 S.W.2d at 661
    -
    62.
    Contrary to the court of appeals’s interpretation, Wiley does, in fact, premise
    procedural default on an appellant’s knowledge of, and failure to challenge, an issue. The
    record in this case reflects multiple points where Appellant acknowledged the obligation
    to pay the attorney fee. In Appellant’s written plea, she signed the section entitled “Court
    Costs and Fees” which admonished her that there were mandatory costs of community
    supervision, that could include the fee for her court appointed attorney. Appellant also
    signed her Application for Community Supervision which stated that she would
    reimburse the county for the compensation of appointed counsel. Finally, Appellant’s
    Order for Deferred Adjudication, which she signed, specifically indicated that she would
    be required to pay all court costs including the “Court Appointed Attorney Fee.” It also
    noted on the first page, directly next to where her five-hundred-dollar fine was listed, that
    for “court costs: see attached.” It does not seem to be disputed that the bill of costs was
    not attached to the order at that time, and Appellant should have taken pause at this.
    However, she did not. And with her signatures, Appellant expressly acknowledged having
    read and understood the stipulations of her deferred adjudication community supervision.
    Riles - Page 9
    With this direct evidence of Appellant’s acknowledgment of the existence of the
    attorney fee, we hold that the lack of knowledge of the exact amount of the fee does not
    make Appellant’s case. The issue brought in her appeal was that there was no evidence of
    her ability to pay the fee. This is an argument against the assignment of the fee as a
    whole, not against a portion of it or against a determination that it should be paid as a
    lump sum versus paid on a payment plan. Because Appellant asserted that there was not
    sufficient evidence to support the requirement that she pay an attorney fee at all, the
    dollar amount of the fee would be inconsequential. With the knowledge that she was
    being directed to pay some attorney fee, she would have known to appeal, regardless of
    the amount of that fee. Therefore, she did have enough information to have known to
    challenge the assignment of the fee with a direct appeal to the deferred adjudication order,
    but failed to do so, and subsequently forfeited her sufficiency claim.
    However, even if the specific dollar amount (and not just the existence) of the fee
    did matter to an appeal, which would require the appellant to wait to see the bill of costs
    before appealing, the appellant would not simply be left with no options if it were filed
    late. If the appellant was somehow unable to appeal in time after receiving the bill of
    costs, the appellant could file for an extension of time. The only requirements to receive
    an extension are that the notice of appeal be filed within fifteen days of the expiration of
    the deadline for filing notice and that the party explain the facts that show the need for the
    extension. T EX. R. A PP. P. 26.3. If a bill of costs were filed so late as to cause the
    Riles - Page 10
    appellant to not be able to appeal it within the specified time period, an extension of time
    to appeal should be granted.
    Here, however, Appellant filed no appeal until her community supervision was
    revoked two years later. We made clear in Manuel and Wiley that those issues that an
    appellant can raise in a direct appeal from the initial judgment must be raised, and that
    failing to do so results in procedural default. 
    Manuel, 994 S.W.2d at 661-62
    ; 
    Wiley, 410 S.W.3d at 320-21
    . Appellant had knowledge that she was to be charged for her appointed
    attorney fee, as evidenced by the multiple admonishments that she signed, but she
    forfeited her claim by foregoing her initial appeal.
    Our decision today applies only to the $1,000 attorney fee originally imposed when
    Appellant was placed on deferred adjudication. We make no decision regarding the
    $3,185 in attorney fees assigned for Appellant’s revocation hearing because that amount
    is not encompassed within the ground upon which we granted review, which addresses
    only the attorney fee for representation “at the time community supervision is imposed.”
    CONCLUSION
    Because of Appellant’s knowledge of the issue of the attorney fee and her failure
    to appeal it from the original imposition of her deferred adjudication, she procedurally
    defaulted the issue and cannot now revive it. Therefore, although the court of appeals
    misinterpreted Wiley, it correctly concluded that Appellant’s claim was forfeited and its
    judgment is affirmed.
    Riles - Page 11
    Delivered: February 4, 2015
    Publish
    

Document Info

Docket Number: NO. PD-1757-13

Citation Numbers: 452 S.W.3d 333, 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 135

Judges: Meyers, Keller, Keasler, Hervey, Alcala, Richardson, Yeary, Newell, Johnson

Filed Date: 2/4/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2024