OPINION
Opinion by
Ubaldo Hernandez Pino pled guilty to aggravated assault and, pursuant to a plea agreement, the trial court deferred adjudication of guilt and placed him on community supervision for five years. The State filed a motion to revoke his supervision and to proceed with adjudication of guilt. Pino pled true to the State’s alleged violations of supervision. The trial court revoked supervision, adjudged Pino guilty, assessed his punishment at two years’ imprisonment, and sentenced him accordingly-
Pino appeals, contending the trial court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his supervision and to proceed to adjudication because his term of community supervision had expired. We agree and vacate the trial court’s judgment.
Pino was placed on deferred adjudication community supervision for five years November 13, 1997. On November 13, 2002, the State filed its motion to revoke his supervision and to proceed with adjudication of guilt. The issue thus presented in this appeal is straightforward: Did Pino’s community supervision expire on the fifth anniversary date of the order placing him on such supervision, or did it expire on the day before such anniversary date? We hold that it expired the day before thé anniversary date.
It is clear that, under Article 42.12, Section 21(e) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, a trial court retains jurisdiction to revoke community supervision even after *913 that supervision has expired if the State files its motion for such action before the expiration and a capias is issued for the arrest of the defendant. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 42.12, § 21(e) (Vernon Supp.2005). This provision is not applicable here because the State filed its motion after Pino’s community supervision expired.
In support of its position that the motion to revoke was timely filed, the State urges us to apply the computation of time provisions set out in Section 311.014 of the Government Code. 1 That statute contains provisions for computing a period of days and a number of months, but no provision for computing a period of years. By the State’s application of this statute in this case, it would presumably have us count the five years of Pino’s community supervision in days and exclude the day he was placed on supervision in computing the day on which his supervision expired. Or, the State would have us count the five years in months and hold that Pino’s community supervision ended on the same numerical day in the concluding month as the day of the month that his supervision began. Either way, Pino would be deprived of at least one day that he served on community supervision, and for this reason, we decline the State’s invitation. 2
The State also cites cases decided by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and by three intermediate appellate courts wherein those respective courts generally refer to the anniversary date of the judgment or order placing a defendant on community supervision as the expiration date for a period of community supervision.
See Ex parte Donaldson,
To the State’s credit, it acknowledges that, in
Ex parte Fulce,
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals indicated that a two-year probationary period imposed February 18, 1994, “was scheduled to expire on February 17, 1996.”
See Ex parte Fulce,
Pino urges us to follow the holding of the Fifth District Court of Appeals in
Nesbit v. State,
The Dallas court agreed, analogizing a period of community supervision to a term of imprisonment which expires on the day before the anniversary date of the sentencing. Id. at 567. The court reasoned that, had Nesbit’s ten-year sentence been imposed April 29, 1994, rather than, suspended, the sentence would have ended April 28, 2004. The court could see no reason to require Nesbit to spend one more day on community supervision than he would have been required to serve had his sentence been imposed. Id. Accordingly, the court found Nesbit’s community supervision expired the day before the State filed its motion to revoke. Id. at 568.
The State in the instant case takes issue with the Dallas court’s treating community supervision as if it were a sentence, noting that, absent a statutory exception such as the filing of a motion for new trial, the imposition of a sentence divests the trial court of jurisdiction over a defendant. But, the State argues, “[b]y deferring adjudication or suspending imposition of a sentence, the trial court retains jurisdiction over the defendant.” The State fails to clearly articulate the significance of this difference in the context of the issue in this case and merely falls back on its previously cited cases containing general statements that a period of community supervision expires on the anniversary date of the judgment or order placing a defendant on community supervision.
The Dallas court agreed in Nesbit that, “[Cjommunity supervision is not a sentence; it is an arrangement in lieu of a sentence. Nevertheless, a defendant on community supervision is subject to court-imposed restrictions on his or her freedom during the period of the supervision.” Id. at 567 (citations omitted). Thus, the court concluded that, for purposes of the issue at hand, community supervision is analogous to a sentence and concluded that there is no reason to require a person to spend one more day on community supervision than he or she would have been required to serve had the sentence been imposed. Id.
A person on deferred adjudication community supervision “is subject to court- *915 imposed restrictions on his or her freedom during the period of the supervision” the same as a person on “regular” community supervision. We, therefore, believe that the analysis of the Dallas court in Nesbit is equally applicable in this case.
We sustain Pino’s single point of error because the State filed its motion to revoke community supervision and to proceed to adjudication of guilt one day after Pino’s term of supervision had expired. Accordingly, we vacate the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Tex Gov’t Code Ann. §311.014 (Vernon 2005) states:
(a) In computing a period of days, the first day is excluded and the last day is included.
(b) If the last day of any period is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the period is extended to include the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
(c) If a number of months is to be computed by counting the months from a particular day, the period ends on the same numerical day in the concluding month as the day of the month from which the computation is begun, unless there are not that many days in the concluding month, in which case the period ends on the last day of that month.
. The State correctly points out that the predecessor statute to this section of the Texas Government Code was applied in
Scott v. State,
