OPINION
Opinion by
Robert Lynn McCarver, charged with sexual assault, has filed an attempted direct appeal from an order setting bail. A motion was filed on his behalf wherein bail was requested to be set at $10,000.00; after a hearing on this request, the bail was set by the trial court at $200,000.00, twenty times the requested amount. A second order was also signed by the trial court which reiterated the $200,000.00 bail, but also mandated further requirements for the posting of bail: the bond as posted must be approved by the trial judge, and M. Mark Lesher was specifically prohibited from acting as surety on McCarver’s bond.
The first question before this Court is to determine whether we have jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. See
State v. Roberts,
However, this is not an appeal of a request for habeas corpus relief and is, therefore, somewhat different. Rather, this is an attempt to directly appeal from the order setting bail itself; McCarver’s notice of appeal makes reference to Tex. RApp. P. 31.1 as the authority which permits such an appeal to be brought and to be entertained by the courts of appeals.
There is considerable disagreement in the caselaw concerning whether a pretrial ruling in a bail proceeding is immediately appealable. Appellate jurisdiction in such *514 matters appears to be recognized in Rule 31 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. 1
The right to appeal is conferred by the Legislature; generally, a party may appeal only those kinds of cases for which the Legislature has made authorization.
See Marin v. State,
There is considerable disagreement in the caselaw over whether an appeal such as this is within the jurisdiction of a court of appeals, a disagreement discussed at length in an opinion authored by Chief Justice Phil Johnson of the Amarillo Court of Appeals in
Vargas v. State,
The courts which have allowed such appeals rely on the language of the rule addressing appeals from bail proceedings, and on a footnote in
Primrose v. State,
We initially recognize that there is no statutory grant of jurisdiction over this type of appeal.
See Benford,
994 S.W.2d
*515
at 409. We further recognize that although Tex.R.App. P. 31 contains language concerning (among other things) appeals from bail proceedings, the grant of our jurisdiction is made solely by the Legislature and not by the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.
See Chavez v. State,
We concur with the conclusions reached by the Vargas, Benford, and Shumake courts and conclude that the Legislature has not provided this Court with jurisdiction over this direct appeal from interlocutory pretrial orders involving bail.
We dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. Specifically, Tex.R.App. P. 31.1 makes reference to "written notice of appeal from a judgment or order in a habeas corpus or bail proceeding.”
. Phil Johnson is currently a sitting justice on the Texas Supreme Court.
.Similarly,
see McKown v. State,
