OPINION
Fortner was convicted of resisting arrest and the jury assessed punishment at a fine of $2,000. See TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. sec. 38.03 (Vernon 1974). On appeal, Fort-ner complains the trial court erred in denying his request for appointed counsel. Fortner had requested that the trial court appoint him counsel because of his indigen-cy, but upon the State’s announcement that it would not seek jail confinement as punishment, the trial court refused his request. Fortner’s complaint is that the trial court erred in denying him appointed counsel because (1) the range of punishment for his offense included imprisonment, and (2) if he failed to pay the fine, he might be imprisoned. We overrule Fortner’s points of error, and affirm the judgment of the trial court because Fortner was not entitled to appointment of counsel since the jury-imposed sentence did not include the possibility of actual imprisonment.
In support of his points of error, Fortner relies upon the right to counsel as provided in the sixth and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution as announced in
Argersinger v. Hamlin,
That
Argersinger
does not support Fort-ner’s contentions was made clear by the Supreme Court in a later opinion in which the court expressed its intent to eliminate confusion arising from various interpretations of
Argersinger. Scott v. Illinois,
Empy
and article 26.04 are of no help to Fortner. The majority opinion in
Empy,
which was handed down in the year before the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in
Scott v. Illinois,
quoted the Supreme Court of Illinois opinion in
People v. Scott,
36 Dl.App.8d 304,
With regard to Fortner’s argument that he was entitled to appointment of counsel because if he fails to pay his fine, he faces the possibility of imprisonment, we merely note that similar circumstances existed in
Scott v. Illinois
and
Empy v. State,
as well as any other case in which one convicted of a misdemeanor and assessed a fine faces the possibility that he may later be subject to imprisonment if he refuses to pay the assessed fine. This sort of likelihood is no more than the mere threat of imprisonment addressed by the court in
Scott. Scott,
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
