             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                         OF TEXAS
                                           NO. AP-76,062



                     EX PARTE JOHN BENNY JOHNSON Applicant



               ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
                CAUSE NO. 525945 IN THE 185 TH DISTRICT COURT
                           FROM HARRIS COUNTY



        Per curiam.

                                           OPINION

        Pursuant to the provisions of Article 11.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, the

clerk of the trial court transmitted to this Court this application for a writ of habeas corpus. Ex parte

Young, 418 S.W.2d 824, 826 (Tex. Crim. App. 1967). Applicant was convicted of theft of an

automobile and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment. He did not appeal his conviction.

        Applicant contends that he was not credited with approximately six years and four months

he spent released on mandatory supervision. According to affidavits submitted by the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice–Parole Division and Classification and Records, Applicant was

released on mandatory supervision on December 8, 1999, and his mandatory supervision was
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revoked on May 26, 2006, based on a pre-revocation warrant issued on April 11, 2006.1 Shortly after

being revoked but before being returned to prison, he was convicted of aggravated assault and

sentenced to two years’ imprisonment.

       We remanded this application and directed the trial court to make findings of fact and

conclusions of law as to whether Applicant was a person described by Section 508.149(a) of the

Government Code when his mandatory supervision was revoked on May 26. On remand, based on

the Parole Division’s affidavit, the trial court found that Applicant was not. Accordingly, Applicant

should have been credited with the time he spent released on mandatory supervision, so long as he

reached the mid-point. See TEX . GOV ’T CODE § 508.283(c); Ex parte Spann, 132 S.W.3d 390 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2004).

       In its affidavit, the Parole Division, while conceding that Applicant was not a person

described by Section 508.149(a) on the date of his revocation and that he had reached the mid-point,

stated that he was not entitled to the time he spent released on mandatory supervision:

       Technically, however, Johnson was serving a sentence for a mandatory supervision
       ineligible offense on the date of his revocation, because his sentence begin date for
       aggravated assault predates the date of his revocation. Furthermore, at the time he
       was received into TDCJ, Johnson was serving a sentence for an offense described by
       Texas Government Code [Section] 508.149(a) with a sentence begin date of April 10,
       2006.

       The Parole Division’s position is not consistent with the plain language of Section 508.283

of the Government Code, the controlling statute, or with this Court’s decisions interpreting this


       1
         The affidavit from Classification and Records also stated that Applicant filed claims
with the time credit resolution system on November 30, 2006 and December 20, 2006. His
application was file-stamped in Harris County on June 25, 2007. As of that date, he had not
received a response from the time credit resolution system. His application is properly before this
Court because it was filed 180 days after he had submitted his claim. See TEX . GOV ’T CODE §
501.0081(b)(2).
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statute. When Applicant’s mandatory supervision was revoked, Section 508.283(b) of the

Government Code read:

       If the parole, mandatory supervision, or conditional pardon of a person described by
       Section 508.149(a) is revoked, the person may be required to serve the remaining
       portion of the sentence on which the person was released. The remaining portion is
       computed without credit for the time from the date of the person’s release to the date
       of revocation.

Section 508.283(c) read:

       If the parole, mandatory supervision, or conditional pardon of a person other than a
       person described by Section 508.149(a) is revoked, the person may be required to
       serve the remaining portion of the sentence on which the person was released. For a
       person who on the date of issuance of a warrant or summons initiating the revocation
       process is subject to a sentence the remaining portion of which is greater than the
       amount of time from the date of the person’s release to the date of issuance of the
       warrant or summons, the remaining portion is to be served without credit for the time
       from the date of the person’s release to the date of revocation. For a person who on
       the date of issuance of the warrant or summons is subject to a sentence the remaining
       portion of which is less than the amount of time from the date of the person’s release
       to the date of issuance of the warrant or summons, the remaining portion is to be
       served without credit for an amount of time equal to the remaining portion of the
       sentence on the date of issuance of the warrant or citation.

       When trying to determine the legislative intent or purpose of a statute, we focus on “the

literal text of the statute in question and attempt to discern the fair, objective meaning of that text

at the time of its enactment.” Boykin v. State, 818 S.W.2d 782, 785 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991). “[I]f

the meaning of the statutory text, when read using the established canons of construction relating to

such text, should have been plain to the legislators who voted on it, we ordinarily give effect to that

plain meaning.” Id. We should not, however, apply this plain language rule when the “application

of a statute’s plain language would lead to absurd consequences that the Legislature could not

possibly have intended[.]” Id. (emphasis in the original).

       Sections 508.283(b) and 508.283(c) both begin with subordinate clauses in the simple present
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tense (“If . . . is revoked”) that focus on a person’s status (“a person described by Section

508.149(a)”). Accordingly, whether a person is entitled to time credits while he is released on parole

or mandatory supervision depends on his status on the date of his revocation.2 This meaning is

consistent with this Court’s holdings in past cases. See Ex parte Noyola, 215 S.W.3d 862, 867 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2007)(“So, the relevant inquiry is whether Noyola was ‘serving a sentence for’ a first-

or second-degree-felony offense of aggravated assault under Section 22.02, Penal Code, when his

parole was revoked”); Ex parte Byrd, 162 S.W.3d 250, 253 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)(holding that “at

the time of his revocation,” applicant’s prior conviction for aggravated assault on a peace officer was

not an offense described by Section 508.149(a)).

       Were we to adopt the Parole Division’s position, we would be reading beyond the plain

language of Sections 508.283(b) and 508.283(c) and would be rendering the statute meaningless.

Indeed, according to the Parole Division, it is of no moment whether a person is described by Section

508.149(a) on the date of his revocation. He is not entitled to time credits so long as his sentence

begin date for a Section 508.149(a) offense, based on pre-sentence jail credits, is before the date of

his revocation, or he is serving a sentence for a Section 508.149(a) offense when he is returned to

prison. Neither of these positions is legally tenable. A person begins serving a sentence the day it is

pronounced, TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 42.09, § 1; he does not begin serving a sentence before

pronouncement, as the Parole Division argues, just because he receives pre-sentence jail credits.


       2
          Of course, even if a person is not described by Section 508.149(a) on the date of his
revocation, he is not entitled to time he spent released on parole or mandatory supervision if he
fails to reach the mid-point. See TEX . GOV ’T CODE § 508.283(c); Ex parte Spann, 132 S.W.3d
390 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
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Sections 508.283(b) and 508.283(c), to repeat, focus on the date of a person’s revocation. That a

person is serving a sentence for a Section 508.149(a) offense when he is returned to prison does not,

by itself, mean that he is not entitled to time credits.

        We find that Applicant is entitled to relief. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice shall

credit Applicant with the time he spent released on mandatory supervision, from the date of his

release on December 8,1999, to the issuance of the pre-revocation warrant on April 11, 2006, in Case

No. 525945 from the 185th Judicial District Court of Harris County.

        Copies of this opinion shall be sent to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice–Correctional

Institutions Division and Parole Division.




Delivered: December 17, 2008
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