In Junе 1995, appellant Eric Kenyatta Jordan pleaded guilty and judicially confessed to delivering more than one but less than four grams of cocaine. Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112 (West Supp.1998). The district court deferred adjudication and placеd appellant on community supervision. In February 1998, the court held a hearing on the State’s motion to adjudicate. After appellant admitted several of the alleged violations, the court revoked supervision, adjudicated apрellant guilty, and sentenced him to imprisonment for six years. The appeal from this conviction is our cause number 3-98-150-CR. At the same February 1998 proceeding, appellant pleaded guilty and confessed to the unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 31.07 (West 1994). The court found him guilty and assessed punishment at incarceration in a state *77 jail for two years. This сonviction is before us as cause number 3-98-172-CR.
In his only point of error in cause number 3-98-172-CR, appellant contends the district court was required by statute to suspend imposition of his sentence and place him on community supervision, and that it erred by failing to do so. In October 1996 when the offense was committed, article 42.12, section 15(a) provided:
On conviction of a state jail felony punished under Section 12.35(a), Penal Code, the judge shall suspend the imposition of the sentence of confinement and place the defendant on community supervision, unless the defendant has been previously convicted of a felony, in which event the judge may suspend the imposition of the sentence and place the defendant or community supеrvision or may order the sentence to be executed....
Act of May 29,1995, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 318, § 60, 1995 Tex. Gen. Laws 2734, 2754 (Tex. Code Crim. Proe. Ann. art. 42.12, § 15(a), sincе amended). 1 Because adjudication of guilt had been deferred in the cocaine prosecution, and because there is no evidence of another felony, appellant concludes that the district court did not have the option to impose sentence.
The State responds by first contending that appellant by failing to object at trial hаs not preserved error. An unauthorized punishment, however, is void and may be challenged even in the absence of a trial objection.
See Heath v. State,
Addressing the merits of appellant’s complaint, the State points out that the district court adjudged appellant guilty of delivering cocaine and sentenced him to imprisonment before finding him guilty of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Thus, argues the State, appellant had been previously convicted of a felony аnd the court was authorized to impose sentence for the state jail felony.
We find no opinions addressing a court’s аuthority to impose sentence upon conviction of a state jail felony when “the defendant has been previously convicted of a felony.” We note, however, that Penal Code section 12.42, authorizing enhanced punishments for defendants “once before convicted of a felony,” has been construed to apply only if the previous conviction is final.
See Russell v. State,
A conviction from which an appeal is taken is not final until it is affirmed by the appellate court and the mandаte of affir-mance is issued.
Russell,
In cause number 3-98-150-CR, appellant’s court-appointed attorney filed а brief concluding that the appeal is frivolous and without merit. The brief, considered together with the brief counsel filed in the сompanion case, meets the requirements of
Anders v. California,
In number 3-98-150-CR, the judgment is affirmed. In number 3-98-172-CR, the judgment is affirmed as to guilt, but that portion of the judgment imposing sentence is revеrsed and the cause is remanded with the instruction to suspend imposition of sentence and place appellаnt on community supervision.
Notes
. Section 15(a) was amended before appellant’s trial to make imposition of sentence an option in all cases, but this amendment applies only to offenses committed on or after its effective dаte. Act of May 17, 1997, 75th Leg., R.S., ch. 488, §§ 1,6, 1997 Tex. Gen. Laws 1812.
. We decline to reform the judgment to suspend imposition of sentence and place appellant on community supervision as the State suggests. It is for the district court, not this Court, to determine the conditions of supervision.
