OPINION
Thе question presented by this appeal is whether the trial court must notify an appellant when the court of appeals issues its mandаte. We answer “no” and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Background
On February 12, 2004, a jury convicted Appellant of the felony offense of terroristic threat. The trial court placed Appellant on community supervision for six years. Appellant reported to the community supervision intake office that same day. Her appointed attorney later filed a notice of appeal. On March 24, 2005, this court issued its judgment and оpinion affirming Appellant’s conviction. 1 We issued our mandate on August 2, 2005. Our own records indicate that the mandate was mailed to the trial сourt clerk and the attorneys of record, including Appellant’s counsel of record for that appeal. 2
On November 23, 2005, the Statе filed a motion to revoke Appellant’s community supervision because, among other things, she failed to report to her community supervision officer after this court issued its mandate. At the revocation hearing, Appellant argued that she did not report to the cоmmunity supervision officer because she did not know that our mandate had issued.
Peggy Carr, the assistant director of the Denton County Probation Department, testified that she telephoned Appellant on September 2, 2005, at the number listed in the Department’s database, asked tо speak to Appellant, and told her that the mandate had issued and she needed to report to the Department’s intake offiсe. During *305 the phone call, the person who identified herself as Appellant said she would not comply with the terms of community supervision аnd contested the validity of the trial court’s judgment because it supposedly recited the wrong trial court number— an argument that Appellаnt herself made when she testified at the revocation hearing, suggesting that the person to whom Carr spoke was indeed Appellant. Chris Herod, a Department intake officer, testified that he attempted to telephone Appellant on four occasions in September 2005, but no one answered the phone. He then mailed a letter to Appellant on September 21, but Appellant never rеplied. Appellant denied having received Carr’s phone call or Herod’s letter. She said that by September 2005, she had moved away from the address she had given to the Probation Department at the time of her conviction.
The trial court found that Appellant had viоlated the terms of her community supervision and sentenced her to six years’ imprisonment.
Discussion
In one point, Appellant argues that the trial court erred by finding that she violated the terms of her community supervision without first serving her with a copy of our mandate. Appellant contends that unless and until the trial court notified her of the mandate, she did not have to abide by the conditions of her community supervision. We disagree.
Whеn a defendant is placed on community supervision and appeals the conviction, the terms of community supervision do not cоmmence until the trial court clerk receives the appellate mandate.
Surety Corp. of Am. v. State,
Appellant relies on
Hamilton v. State
for the proposition that community supervision dоes not necessarily begin when the trial court clerk receives the mandate.
See Hamilton v. State,
No. 14-96-00852-CR,
Finally, Appellant argues that by revoking her community supervision without first notifying her of our mandatе, the trial court deprived her of the fundamental fairness necessary to the due administration of justice guaranteed by the federal and Texas constitutions. See U.S. Const. Amend IV; Tex. Const. Art. I, § 3. The record reflects that the trial court clerk discharged the duties imposed by the rules of appellate procedure. Moreover, our own records show that a copy of the mandate was sent to Appellant’s attоrney as required by rule 18. Finally, Carr’s and Appellant’s testimony at the revocation hearing support the conclusion that Carr actually spoke to Appellant and told her that the mandate had issued. Under these circumstances, we decline to hold that the revocation process fell short of fundamental fairness.
We overrule Appellant’s sole point, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
.
Goodson v. State,
No. 02-04-00210-CR,
. An appellate court may judicially notice its own records in the same or related proceeding involving the same or nearly the same parties.
Turner v. State,
