OPINION
Opinion by
This is an appeal from a bail bond forfeiture. Appellant Ross A. Rodriguez, attorney for Joe Zaragoza Garza, executed a $100,000 bail bond for his client. When Garza failed to appear, the State sought and obtained a bond forfeiture. Rodriguez, as surety, appeals. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
BACKGROUND
Garza and Hector Rodriguez Del Rio were arrested. Garza was charged with “Possession of Controlled Substance PG1 over 400 Grams.” Del Rio was charged with “Possession of CS w/int Del PG1 over 400 grams.” The night magistrate set bond in the amount of one million dollars for each man. Roland Esparza, one of the attorneys for Garza and the original attorney for Del Rio 2 , sought a bond reduction for each man. The trial court granted the bond reduction and ordered the magistrate to reduce the bonds to one hundred thousand dollars.
Rodriguez, co-counsel for Garza 3 , signed as surety on a $100,000 bail bond for Garza. That same day, Taffi Roberts doing business as Advantage Bail Bonds executed a $100,000 surety bond for Del Rio. Garza and Del Rio were released. Howev *467 er, at a subsequent hearing, another judge increased the bonds to the original amount of one million dollars. Warrants were issued for both men.
Roberts and Rodriguez separately filed affidavits of surety to surrender pursuant to article 17.19 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 17.19 (Vernon Supp.2008). The trial court ordered a capias to issue for Del Rio based on Roberts’s affidavit, but failed to immediately issue a capias for Garza based on Rodriguez’s affidavit. The court stated, “I’m going to do a little research on it because there appears to be a lot of confusion about whether or not a Night Magistrate] case can be forfeited. Because [the bonds] were increased, if I forfeit it, is it a hundred thousand or a million?” Seven days later a Bexar County Deputy District Clerk notified Rodriguez that his original affidavit could not be located and it would be necessary for him to file a new one. Rodriguez filed a new affidavit and presented it to a visiting-judge, who was sitting by assignment in the 379th District Court. The visiting judge signed the affidavit and ordered a capias issued, one week after Rodriguez originally presented the affidavit.
Garza and Del Rio were later indicted for possession of cocaine in an amount over 400 grams and possession with intent to distribute cocaine in an amount over 400 grams. Both charges appear to be based on the same incident that led to the initial arrest. When the eases were called for trial, neither Garza nor Del Rio appeared and their surety bonds were declared forfeited. The trial court signed a judgment nisi against Garza and his surety, Rodriguez, and one against Del Rio and his surety, Taffi Roberts doing business as Advantage Bail Bonds. The State subsequently moved to dismiss the bond forfeiture suit against Del Rio and Roberts. The trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss and ordered the judgment nisi against Del Rio and Roberts withdrawn and dismissed.
The State proceeded with its bond forfeiture suit against Garza and Rodriguez. After a hearing, at which the court accepted stipulated evidence, live testimony, and took judicial notice of the court’s file in both the Garza and Del Rio cases, the court entered a final judgment against Garza and Rodriguez, jointly and severally, for the full amount of the one hundred thousand dollar bond. Rodriguez requested findings of fact and conclusions of law, which the trial court entered.
Analysis
On appeal, Rodriguez raises four points of error. In the first three he contends the trial court erred in granting a final judgment against him because (1) he had an affirmative defense to liability on the surety bond pursuant to section 17.19 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, (2) the State improperly modified the terms of his surety bond by adding more serious charges without his consent, and (3) there is a fatal and material variance between the bond, the indictment, and the judgment nisi. In his fourth point, he argues that dismissing the bond forfeiture against Del Rio and his surety while proceeding with his violated his rights to due process and equal protection as well as the basic concepts of equity and fairness.
Affirmative Defense — AHicle 17.19 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
Article 17.19 provides, in relevant part:
(a) Any surety, desiring to surrender his principal and after notifying the principal’s attorney, if the principal is represented by an attorney, in a manner provided by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, of the surety’s intention *468 to surrender the principal, may file an affidavit of such intention before the court or magistrate before which the prosecution is pending....
(b) In prosecution pending before a court, if the court finds that there is cause for the surety to surrender the surety’s principal, the court shall issue a capias for the principal.... It is an affirmative defense to any liability on the bond that:
(1) the court ... refused to issue the capias ...; and
(2) after the refusal to issue the capi-as ... the principal failed to appear.
Tex.Code Crim. Prog. Ann. art. 17.19(a), (b) (Vernon Supp.2008). Accordingly, to invoke the affirmative defense to liability, Rodriguez must show the trial court refused to issue a capias in response to his affidavit, and thereafter Garza failed to appear. Because Garza failed to appear, Rodriguez’s argument centers on whether the trial court refused to issue the capias.
Rodriguez argues there was a refusal because the trial court did not immediately sign an order issuing a capias— particularly given that it had already signed an order issuing a capias for Del Rio based on an affidavit filed by surety Roberts for Advantage Bail Bonds. In support of his position, Rodriguez cites eases holding a trial court has no authority to refuse to issue a capias for a principal after a surety has properly presented an affidavit pursuant to article 17.19.
See, e.g., McConathy v. State,
Rodriguez suggests the issuance of a capias is a ministerial duty triggered upon presentation of an article 17.19 affidavit and any delay in issuance after presentment constitutes a refusal. We disagree. As noted in the trial court’s conclusions of law, nothing in article 17.19 mandates the trial court immediately sign an order issuing a capias. Rodriguez would have this court write an immediacy requirement into the statute that does not currently exist. We decline to do so.
We hold there was no refusal to issue the capias. The record shows the judge initially presented with the affidavit did not refuse to sign it nor refused to issue the capias. Rather, and as stated in the findings of fact, the judge expressly told Rodriguez he was going to do a little research on the matter given that the bond had been increased to one million dollars. A week later, a visiting judge granted Rodriguez’s request and ordered the clerk to issue a capias for Garza. Because there was no refusal to issue a capias for Garza and a capias actually issued based on the affidavit, Rodriguez was not entitled to the *469 affirmative defense set forth in article 17.19. Accordingly, we overrule Rodriguez’s first point of error.
Variance Between Bond, Indictment, and Judgment Nisi
Rodriguez claims the trial court erred in granting final judgment because there is a “fatal and material variance” in the bail bond, judgment nisi, and the indictment.
The bond reflects the criminal charge as “possession of controlled substance PG 1 over 400 grams.” The indictment contains two counts alleged to have been committed on the same date — possession with intent to deliver over 400 grams of a “controlled substance, namely: cocaine” and possession of over 400 grams a “controlled substance, namely: cocaine.” The judgment nisi reflects a felony charge of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance (penalty group one) over four hundred grams. 4 In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court found “[tjhere is no credible evidence that the initial charge for which the defendants [names omitted] were arrested for and the charge for which they were indicted, was sufficiently different to invalidate the bond.” The trial court also concluded that the difference in charges did not “void the bond.”
Article 17.09 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure states:
Sec. 1. Where a defendant, in the course of a criminal action, gives bail .before any court or person authorized by law to take same, for his personal appearance before a court or magistrate, to answer a charge against him, the said bond shall be valid and binding upon the defendant and his sureties, if any, thereon, for the defendant’s personal appearance before the court or magistrate designated therein, as well as before any other court to which same may be transferred, and for any and all subsequent proceedings had relative to the charge, and each such bond shall be so conditioned except as hereinafter provided.
Sec. 2. When a defendant has once given bail for his appearance in answer to a criminal charge, he shall not be required to give another bond in the course of the same criminal action except as herein provided.
Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 17.09 §§ 1, 2 (Vernon Supp.2008).
In
Shropshire v. State,
the court of criminal appeals considered whether a summary judgment granted in favor of the State was proper where the original bond recited the offense was for theft by false pretext but the defendant was indicted for two offenses — forgery and uttering and passing as true a forged instrument.
In this case, the record establishes that the possession with intent to deliver charge arose from the original charge for which the surety undertook his obligation. Accordingly, article 17.09, as interpreted by the court of criminal appeals in Shropshire and Deekard, controls this issue, and Rodriguez’s point of error is overruled.
Modification of Surety Bond Terms
Rodriguez claims that by indicting Garza for possession of a controlled substance and possession with intent to deliver, the State increased the risk he undertook as surety without his consent. Rodriguez argues that because the original bond was for possession only, the State, by increasing the charges, unilaterally and without his consent increased his risk, and therefore cannot recover on the bond forfeiture. Rodriguez cites to several federal and out-of-state decisions to support his argument.
See Reese v. U.S.,
Rodriguez does not cite any Texas cases in which the cited provisions of the Restatement have been adopted. 5 Rodriguez also fails to reconcile any of the cited *471 authorities with article 17.09 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See Tex. Code Ciiim. Proc. Ann. art. 17.09 §§ 1, 2 (Vernon Supp.2008). Moreover, Shropshire and Deckard strongly suggest Texas law does not comport with Rodriguez’s position. Although Shropshire and Deck-ard analyze the issue in light of whether there was a variance between the judgment nisi and the final judgment, the reasoning in those decisions demonstrates Rodriguez’s argument must fail in light of article 17.09. As noted above, it is clear from the record that Garza’s indictment for possession with intent to distribute cocaine in an amount over four hundred grams was a subsequent proceeding related to the original charge of possession of cocaine over four hundred grams. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 17.09 §§ 1, 2 (Vernon Supp.2008). Accordingly, the bond for the original charge was valid and binding for the subsequent indictment, and the case law authorities cited by Rodriguez are distinguishable based on the statutory scheme in article 17.09. Id.
Even if Texas were to adopt the Third Restatement of Law of Suretyship and Guaranty Rodriguez would not be entitled to relief. In this case, the original charge carried a possible punishment of from 10 to 99 years, or life, in prison and a fine not to exceed $100,000. See Tex. Health & Safety Code. Ann. § 481.115(f) (Vernon 2003). The subsequent charge of possession with intent to deliver carried a possible punishment of from 15 to 99 years, or life, in prison and a fine not to exceed $250,000. See id. § 481.112(f). While the minimum punishment increased by five years, this change can hardly be considered a “fundamentally different and greater” risk than the risk undertaken by the surety in the original bond. This slight difference in potential punishment also distinguishes the out-of-state cases cited by Rodriguez because in those cases the potential punishments faced by the principals based on the subsequent charges were far greater than the risk faced by Rodriguez in this case.
Equal Protection, Due Process, Fairness, and Equity
In his final point of error, Rodriguez claims the trial court denied him equal protection, due process, equity, and fairness when it dismissed a virtually identical bond forfeiture case against Del Rio and his surety but did not do the same for him. He argues the Bexar County District Attorney’s decision to proceed against him as an attorney-surety was unfair given the decision not to proceed against the non-attorney licensed surety in an identical case. 6
Rodriguez’s contention is similar to a claim of selective prosecution in the criminal context.
See U.S. v. Armstrong,
Rodriguez asserts that as an attorney-surety, he was treated unequally and unfairly compared to a non-attorney surety and thei’e was no basis for the distinction. The only evidence relied upon by Rodriguez is the State’s decision to dismiss the forfeiture proceedings against Del Rio and his surety, a non-attorney, while declining to do the same in his case. The State, however, presented evidence establishing a basis for its decision not to proceed against Del Rio and his surety. Dawn McCraw, the section chief for the District Attorney’s bond forfeiture division, testified at the hearing that she decided to dismiss the forfeiture against Del Rio and his surety because she had received information that Del Rio’s surety was misled about the circumstances surrounding Del Rio’s arrest and the one-hundred-thousand-dollar bond. Specifically, Roberts claimed she was not aware the original bond was set at one million dollars, of the large amount of drugs involved, or that the drugs were found in a specially designed hidden compartment. According to McCraw’s information, Roberts only learned of this information later when the case was reported in the press. When Roberts learned of this, she immediately began making contact with Judge Richardson regarding her concerns about the bond, claiming Esparza never gave her these details when he asked her if she wanted to execute Del Rio’s bond. McCraw also testified she knew that once Roberts learned of this information, she hired a bounty hunter to locate Del Rio and from this learned his contact information was worthless. Roberts had relayed this infonnation to the court. In contrast, McCraw testified Rodriguez took none of the steps taken by Roberts.
McCraw testified that after looking at all the information she had obtained, she concluded Roberts had been “outright” and “totally” misled and “defrauded.” With respect to Rodriguez, McCraw concluded that as one of Garza’s attorneys, he would have known the facts of the case— facts not made known to Roberts. Rodriguez knew the bond had been reduced from one million to one hundred thousand because Esparza, his co-counsel, had obtained the reduction. He knew this was a first degree felony involving a large amount of drugs and would have been aware that this was a serious state charge, and that the State does not even normally prosecute a case this large, but refers it to the federal government. McCraw stated Rodriguez, unlike Roberts, never once claimed he was misled about the facts, even in response to a direct inquiry.
In support of his claims Rodriguez cites a case from this court,
Gramercy Ins. Co. v. State,
Gramercy is distinguishable. In Gram-ercy, the only distinction between the bond dismissed and the one pursued was the nature of the bond — personal recognizance versus commercial surety. Here, as detailed above, the State’s decision to pursue forfeiture against Rodriguez and not Roberts was based on the information each surety had about the case and the State’s belief that Roberts, unlike Rodriguez, has been misled or defrauded into executing the bond.
Rodriguez presented no evidence that the State made an unconstitutionally selective decision to proceed against Rodriguez, an attorney-surety, while dismissing a forfeiture suit against his nonattorney counterpart. The evidence shows the State made a decision, based on facts within its knowledge, not to proceed with a particular forfeiture case because the surety lacked necessary information when she executed the bond or was misled about the underlying facts. There were no such facts in existence when the State looked at the forfeiture case against Rodriguez. Because the State articulated a rational basis for its decision that does not involve constitutional prohibitions, we cannot say the trial court treated Rodriguez inequitably, unfairly, or denied him equal protection or due process. Accordingly, we overrule his final point of error.
Conclusion
We overrule Rodriguez’s points of error and affirm the trial court’s forfeiture judgment.
Notes
. Attorney Edward Cano ultimately became the attorney for Del Rio.
.Rodriguez shares an office with Esparza and Cano.
. The judgment actually slates "POSS W/I DEL CS PG1 OVER400G.” Cocaine is a penalty group one controlled substance. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.102(3)(D) (Vernon Supp.2008).
. The Restatement has only been cited twice in this state,
See Byrd v. Estate of Nelms,
. Rodriguez cites to article 22.13 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure for the proposition that no grounds existed for exoneration of the bond executed on behalf of Del Rio. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 22.13 (Vernon Supp.2008) (stating causes that will exonerate defendant and sureties, if any, from liability on bond forfeiture). We agree. However, we fail to see the relevance of this portion of the argument because there was no exoneration pursuant to article 22.13. See id. Rather, the trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss the forfeiture proceeding.
