Judges: GREG ABBOTT, Attorney General of Texas.
Filed Date: 3/26/2007
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: Whether a county may deduct from a county-jail inmate's commissary account funds necessary to recover costs for medical expenses incurred during a previous incarceration in the county jail, for which the inmate is obligated to reimburse the county under Code of Criminal Procedure article
Dear Mr. Munoz:
Under Code of Criminal Procedure article
Although you do not explain what you mean by the term "commissary account," we understand you to refer to an account composed of monies taken from the inmate upon intake into the county jail, earned by the inmate during incarceration, or received from others for the inmate's use during the inmate's incarceration. See Request Letter,supra note 1, at I; see also 37 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 265.4(a) (l 1) (2006) (Tex. Comm'n on Jail Standards, Inmate Files) (requiring a county to establish a file on each inmate taken into a county jail, including an "inmate property inventory"); 269.1(2)(D), (G) (Tex. Comm'n on Jail Standards, Record System) (requiring a sheriff or other county-jail operator to maintain a record on each inmate including "property" and "commissary"); cf TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §
Article 104.002 pertains to expenses for county-jail prisoners.See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
A person who is or was a prisoner in a county jail and received medical, dental, or health[-]related services from a county or a hospital district shall be required to pay for such services when they are rendered. If such prisoner is an eligible county resident [under the Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act, Health and Safety Code chapter 61], the county or hospital district providing the services has a right of subrogation to the prisoner's right of recovery from any source, limited to the cost of services provided. A prisoner, unless the prisoner fully pays for the cost of services received, shall remain obligated to reimburse the county or hospital district for any medical, dental, or health services provided, and the county or hospital district may apply for reimbursement in the manner provided by [c]hapter 61, Health and Safety Code. A county or hospital district shall have authority to recover the amount expended in a civil action.
Id. art. 104.002(d) (emphasis added). As this office has stated, "[s]ubarticle (d) makes clear that [an] inmate [who is not eligible for health care under the Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act] is ultimately responsible for the cost of medical services he or she receives while the inmate is incarcerated, whether the services are provided by a county or a hospital district." Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No. DM-413(1996)at 3.
We assume you ask about an inmate who is not eligible for health care under the Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act. See TEX. HEALTH
SAFETY CODE ANN. ch. 61 (Vernon 2001 Supp. 2006); see also TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
Nothing in article 104.002(d), nor in any other law of which we are aware, precludes a county from obtaining reimbursement in the manner you describe. Article 104.002(d) lists two means by which a county may recover the costs of medical, dental, or health-related services from a county-jail inmate — by subrogation to the prisoner's right to recover from any source and by filing a civil *Page 3 action — but nothing in subarticle (d) indicates that these means are intended to be exclusive. See id. Nor does article 104.002(d) set a time limit on the inmate's obligation to reimburse the county. Id. To the contrary, subarticle (d) expressly indicates that a person who was incarcerated at the county jail "remain[s] obligated to reimburse the county" until the debt is paid and does not appear to distinguish between a person who remains incarcerated and a person whose incarceration has ended. Id. In addition, nothing in the rules pertaining to inmate accounts prohibits the county from obtaining reimbursement from an account for medical, dental, and health-related services incurred during the current or a previous incarceration.See 37 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 265.4(11), .10, 269.1(2)(L) (2006) (Tex. Comm'n on Jail Standards, Inmate Files, Inmate Property Checking, Record System); see also TEX. LOC. GOV' T CODE ANN. ch. 351, subch. C (Vernon 2005) ("Operation of County Jails").
Moreover, a county has implied authority to exercise broad discretion in accomplishing its statutory rights. See Anderson v. Wood, 152 S.W.2d 1084,1085 (Tex. 1941); accord Wichita County v. Bonnin,
Assuming compliance with applicable due-process requirements, therefore, a county may deduct from a county-jail inmate's account funds necessary to recover the costs of medical expenses incurred during a previous term of incarceration in the county jail, for which the inmate must reimburse the county under Code of Criminal Procedure article
SUMMARY
A county may deduct from a county-jail inmate's account funds necessary to recover the costs of medical expenses incurred during a previous term of incarceration in the county jail, for which the inmate is required to reimburse the county under Code of Criminal Procedure article
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ELLEN L. WITT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
KYMBERLY K. OLTROGGE Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee