Monte Rodney Scales Jr. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket13-21-00250-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Monte Rodney Scales Jr. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-21-00250-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

MONTE RODNEY SCALES JR., Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 36th District Court of San Patricio County, Texas.

OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Tijerina Opinion by Justice Benavides

Appellant Monte Rodney Scales Jr. appeals the revocation of his community

supervision for a failure to pay a court-ordered fine and fees.

By five issues, Scales argues: (1) there was insufficient evidence to show that he

failed to pay the court-ordered fine; (2) there was insufficient evidence to show that he

failed to pay the court-ordered fees and that he both had the ability to pay and willfully refused to pay those fees; (3) his constitutional right to due process was violated by the

trial court revoking his community supervision without first assessing whether Scales had

the ability to pay; (4) his constitutional right to due process was violated by the trial court’s

failure to consider suitable alternatives to imprisonment; and (5) the trial court improperly

assessed attorney’s fees as a condition of Scales’s community supervision. Because we

conclude the evidence was insufficient to support the trial court’s findings, we reverse and

render.

I. BACKGROUND

On January 1, 2017, Scales was indicted on two counts of violating a protective

order with two or more prior convictions, a third-degree felony, and one count of invasive

visual recording, a state jail felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 21.15, 25.07(g)(2). On

June 26, 2017, Scales pleaded guilty to all three counts, was adjudicated guilty, and the

trial court sentenced him to five years’ confinement and a $750 fine for counts one and

two, and two years’ confinement for count three. The trial court suspended all three

sentences and placed Scales on community supervision for five years.

On August 19, 2020, the State filed motions to revoke for all three counts. On

January 25, 2021, the State filed amended motions to revoke for all three counts. As to

count one, the count from which Scales now appeals, the motion to revoke alleged that

Scales failed to comply with the following terms of his community supervision:

1. Pay to the Supervision Officer of San[ ]Patricio County, Texas a Statutory Supervisory Fee of $60.00 per month . . . which is due within the first ten days of each month, beginning thirty (30) days after discharge from the State of Texas Intermediate Sanction Facility-Cognitive Track;

2 2. Pay to the Supervision Officer of San Patricio County, Texas, an Application Fee of $100.00 for each interstate or intrastate transfer of community supervision, which is due within the first thirty days of community supervision, any transfers thereafter will require the fee to be paid on the date of application;

3. Pay to the San Patricio County District Clerk, the amount of $300, Instanter, to be applied to the Court Costs and/or Attorney Fees (if applicable) in the amount of $2,108.00 and a Fine in the amount of $750.00;

4. Pay to the San Patricio County District Clerk, the amount of $375.00 of which is probated and the remaining balance of $375.00 shall be paid at a rate of $____ per month, beginning __________, 2018, and the same day of each month thereafter until the [f]ine has been paid in full;

5. Do not have contact or communicate directly or indirectly with the victim or victims in this cause by any means including written, internet, telecommunication[,] or third-party communication.

6. Abstain from the possession and consumption of alcohol in any form during the term of community supervision.

At a hearing on July 6, 2021, Scales pleaded “not true” to each of the State’s

allegations. Mallory Gardner, the deputy director for the 36th, 156th, and 343rd Judicial

District Community Supervision and Corrections Department, testified to some of the

alleged violations. According to Gardner, on or about January 13, 2021, she was at Twin

Peaks and noticed Scales went “to the bar and was served a beer in a cold mug.”

However, Gardner also testified that the following day, Scales took a urinalysis test that

yielded a negative result for alcohol. Gardner agreed that alcohol stays in an individual’s

system for “[a]pproximately three [days], depending on the amount of consumption.”

Additionally, Gardner discussed Scales’s financial obligations. Gardner testified

that Scales was delinquent in the amount of $640 for “probation fees” and $100 for “a

3 transfer fee.” Gardner also explained that Scales had $2,083 in “total arrears” for failing

to pay $60 per month for “the fines, fees[,] and court costs.” Gardner testified to the

specific months that Scales failed to make these required payments. However, Gardner

agreed that Scales had made several large payments, including a $500 payment made

on April 20, 2021, another “large payment” around the time the COVID-19 pandemic

started, and one other payment of an unspecified amount at an unknown time.

Scales testified that he was sober because his mom used to be an alcoholic, and

he “made her a promise that [he] wouldn’t drink.” According to Scales, Gardner observed

him with a non-alcoholic beer. Scales also denied having inappropriate communications

with the victim’s daughter. Scales testified, “Well, last May, I almost died. I was in the

hospital. My appendix had burst and when she found out that I was in the hospital, [the

victim’s daughter] reached out and asked me if I was doing okay and that’s how it started.”

Scales testified that he and the victim’s daughter had merely rekindled a friendship. He

denied ever attempting to directly or indirectly communicate with the victim.

Scales discussed his unemployment history. Initially, Scales testified that he was

laid off in “like March” of 2020. Scales later testified that he was actually laid off in either

“April or May of 2020.” According to Scales, the day before he was laid off, he purchased

a 2020 Toyota Tundra that had a sticker price of $51,000. Scales traded in his old vehicle,

and the dealership gave him a $25,000 credit towards the purchase price. Scales

acquired a loan for the remaining balance. However, Scales testified that he had since

“missed a few” payments on the car note.

Scales explained that “during the times [he] was laid off, [he] was unable to” make

4 his required community supervision payments. He also testified that he found a “good

job” at the “end of March, beginning of April” 2021, and that he planned to become current

on his community supervision obligations. No evidence was presented, either by the State

or by Scales, concerning his income.

At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court revoked Scales’s community

supervision for count one and sentenced him to four years’ imprisonment. 1 In its written

judgment, the court found true the State’s allegations that Scales violated provisions of

his community supervision relating to: (1) paying a statutory supervisory fee of $60.00 per

month, (2) paying an application fee of $100.00 for each interstate or intrastate transfer

of community supervision within thirty days of the imposition of his community

supervision, and (3) paying the non-probated amount of his fine “at a rate of $____ per

month, beginning __________, 2018, and the same day of each month thereafter until

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