Judges: GREG ABBOTT, Attorney General of Texas.
Filed Date: 1/22/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Mr. Adan Munoz, Jr. Executive Director Texas Commission on Jail Standards Post Office Box 12985 Austin, Texas 78711
Re: Observation of county jail inmates while they are confined in courthouse holding cells (RQ-0722-GA)
Dear Mr. Munoz:
On behalf of the Texas Commission on Jail Standards (the "Commission"), you ask whether a bailiff may supervise county jail inmates while they are held in courthouse holding cells or, assuming that the bailiff is not a jailer, whether a sheriff must provide a licensed jailer to supervise a county jail inmate being held in a courthouse holding cell.1 You also ask "[a]t what point during an inmate's time at a courthouse . . . the judge, and thus the bailiff, relinquish[es] supervisory authority to the sheriff and Minimum Jail Standards[.]" Request Letter at 1. Finally, you ask whether a form signed by a bailiff "upon taking control of an inmate" that accepts "responsibility for the inmate's custody, health, and general welfare" sufficiently authorizes a bailiff who does not have a jailer's license "to supervise a courthouse holding cell[.]" Id.
You indicate that no counties require bailiffs to be licensed jailers.2 See id. You suggest that observation of inmates in courthouse holding cells by bailiffs who are not licensed jailers may be inconsistent with minimum jail standards adopted by the Commission under Government Code section
Government Code section
You cite two minimum jail standards as relevant. First, title 37, section 265.3 of the Texas Administrative Code requires that "[i]nmates confined in a holding cell . . . be observed by facility personnel at intervals not to exceed 30 minutes." 37 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 265.3 (2008) (Tex. Comm'n on Jail Standards, Observation During Holding). The regulations define the term "holding cell" as "[a] cell designed for the temporary holding of inmates." Id. § 253.1(13) (Definitions). Second, title 37, section 275.1 requires hourly observation of inmates by "corrections officers" at a "facility":
Facilities shall have an established procedure for visual, face-to-face observation of all inmates by corrections officers at least once every hour. Observation shall be performed at least every 30 minutes in areas where inmates known to be assaultive, potentially suicidal, mentally ill, or who have demonstrated bizarre behavior are confined.
Id. § 275.1 (Regular Observation by Corrections Officers).
The Commission has not defined the terms "facility," "facility personnel" or "corrections officer" in its regulations, and we decline to provide definitions to words or phrases that the Commission, as the enacting authority, has declined to define. See id. § 253.1 (Definitions); cf. id. § 253.1(11) (defining "existing facility" as a type of facility). Absent these definitions, we are unable to state whether the current practice is contrary to any controlling statutory or regulatory authority.
The long-standing policy of this office has been to defer to the administrative agency charged with the administration and enforcement of a statute to interpret its own rules in the first instance. Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. Nos.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
ANDREW WEBER First Assistant Attorney General
JONATHAN K. FRELS Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Virginia K. Hoelscher Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee