Judges: DAN MORALES, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 1/9/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable John T. Montford Chair Finance Committee Texas State Senate P.O. Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711
Re: Whether a county is required to accept warrantless arrestees from a municipal police department, and related questions (RQ-606)
Dear Senator Montford:
In view of a dispute between the City of Odessa (the "city") and Ector County (the "county") as to who is responsible for incarcerating certain persons arrested by the city police for the violation of state criminal provisions, you have asked this office a series of questions.
You ask first whether, if a city police officer arrests a person for violating a state criminal statute and a magistrate issues a commitment order for the person, the county is required to incarcerate the person. In our view, Attorney General Opinion
Article
Your second question concerns whether a municipal judge may issue such a commitment order, particularly when the offense charged is a class A or B misdemeanor. The warrant of commitment is defined by article
"Magistrate" is defined by article 2.09 of the Code to include, inter alia, "the justices of the peace, the mayors and recorders and the judges of the city courts of incorporated cities or towns." Accordingly, a municipal court judge is a magistrate for the purposes of article 16.20.
It has been suggested that municipal court judges, however, are not "proper" magistrates, and therefore lack power to issue enforceable commitment orders, because they cannot try class A and B misdemeanors. The term is not defined in the statute. However, reading article 16.20 in its entirety, we are satisfied that "proper" refers to venue only. One of the requisites of the commitment order is "[w]hen the prisoner is sent out of the county where the prosecution arose, the warrant of commitment shall state that there is no safe jail in the proper county." In our view, reading this requirement together with the reference to a "proper magistrate," a proper magistrate is one who holds office in the proper county. Accordingly, we find no basis for the argument that municipal judges may not issue commitment orders for persons accused of class A or B misdemeanors.
You ask, finally, who is responsible for the cost of incarceration if a municipal court judge issues a commitment order and the sheriff refuses to take custody of the prisoner. We believe that Attorney General Opinion
Attorney General Opinion
Because persons incarcerated for violating municipal traffic ordinances that implement article 6701d are considered state statute violators, the city is relieved of its obligation to provide for the maintenance of such prisoners once they are accepted for incarceration by the sheriff of the county.
In your hypothetical, the sheriff has not accepted the prisoners. However, the refusal to do so is not an exercise of discretion, but is rather, according to the plain language of article 2.18, a violation of duty. The sheriff cannot avoid the cost of his duty by refusal to undertake it. Accordingly, once the commitment order is issued, the responsibility for maintaining these state law prisoners devolves upon the county.
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by James Tourtelott Assistant Attorney General
[1] Attorney General Opinion