OPINION ON ABATEMENT
On February 25, 2010, in each referenced cause, pursuant to § 501.014(e) of the Texas Government Code, the trial court signed and entered an Order to Withdraw Inmate Funds 1 By the withdrawal notifications entered in each cause, the trial court directed the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Institutional Division to withhold the following amounts: (1) $1,810.31 in cause number 18,223-B; (2) $616.50 in cause number 18,368-B; and (3) $616.50 in cause number 18,369-B. Appellant filed pro se notices of appeal on May 5, 2010, challenging the withdrawal notifications. While each withdrawal notification contained the statement that “court costs, fines and fees have been incurred as *306 represented in the certified Bill of Cost/Judgment attached hereto,” none contained an attachment of any kind. Furthermore, while the judgment entered in each case provides that “the State of Texas do have and recover of said [Appellant] all court costs in this prosecution expended ...,” the summary portion of each judgment leaves costs blank.
In
Harrell v. State,
The three
Eldridge
factors considered in
Harrell
are: (1) the private interest affected by the official action, (2) the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interests through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards, and (3) the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that additional or substitute procedural requirements would entail. The Court found the private interest to be easily ascertainable — “the amount identified in a prior court document,” i.e., “the costs assessed when the convicting court sentenced him.”
Harrell,
Harrell had been convicted of drug charges in 1997 and 2003. In 2006, the convicting trial court signed an order authorizing the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Institutional Division to withdraw funds from his inmate trust account to pay for court costs and fees for appointed counsel. Harrell was provided with copies of the withdrawal notifications. He then moved to rescind the withdrawal notifications alleging denial of due process. His motion was denied, and his direct appeal to this Court was dismissed for want of jurisdiction on the ground that no statutory mechanism was available for appeal
*307
ing a 'withdrawal notification.
See Harrell v. State,
Nos. 07-06-0469-CR and 07-06-0470-CR,
In reversing this Court and rendering judgment affirming the trial court’s
order denying Harrell’s motion to rescind,
the Supreme Court held that due process entitles an inmate to receive notice
3
and an opportunity to be heard, even though those requirements might be accorded the inmate after funds are withdrawn.
Harrell,
On the limited record before this Court, we are unable to determine if Appellant has been given all that due process requires. Specifically, we are unable to determine whether Appellant has been (1) provided with the necessary underlying documentation and (2) afforded an adequate opportunity “to compare the amounts assessed by the trial court [in the underlying criminal proceedings] to the amount[s] withdrawn and alert the court of any alleged errors.”
Id.
Because the trial court has not entered an appealable order either granting or denying a motion to confirm, modify, correct, or rescind the prior withdrawal notification, we find Appellant’s
notices of appeal
to be premature.
See Williams v. State,
Accordingly, this Court
sua sponte
abates this appeal for 180 days from the date of this order to allow Appellant time to take such action as is necessary to (1) obtain the necessary documentation of the underlying court order; (2) compare the underlying court order to the withdrawal notification; (3) file an appropriate motion to modify, correct, or rescind the withdrawal notification; (4) present that mo
*308
tion to the trial court; (5) schedule any necessary hearing; and (6) obtain from the trial court a final, appealable order addressing that motion.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 27.2.
See also Iacono v. Lyons,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. This document is not an "order” in the traditional sense of a court order, judgment, or decree issued after notice and hearing in either a civil or criminal proceeding. The controlling statute, Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 501.014(e) (Vernon Supp.2009), describes the process as a "notification by a court” directing prison officials to withdraw sums from an inmate’s trust account, in accordance with a schedule of priorities set by the statute, for the payment of "any amount the inmate is ordered to pay by order of the court.”
See id.
at § 501.014(e)( 1 )-(6).
See also Harrell v. State,
.
See Johnson v. Tenth Judicial District Court of Appeals at Waco,
.In assessing the risk of erroneous deprivation of property, the Supreme Court in
Harrell
considered the risk to be “modest” because notice under the statute is "based on an
amount
identified in a prior
court document.” Harrell,
.While the court of appeals’s opinion is silent on whether a hearing was held on Harrell’s motion to rescind,
Harrell v. State,
Nos. 07-06-0469-CR, 07-06-0470-CR,
