OPINION ON REMAND
This appeal arises from appellant Orlando Salinas’s conviction for injury to an elderly person and comes to us on remand from the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas. See Salinas v. State,
BACKGROUND
A jury found appellant guilty of the offense of injury to an elderly person, and the trial court sentenced appellant to five years in prison. Salinas v. State,
In the original appeal to this court, appellant challenged his conviction, contending that the trial court erred by (1) permitting expert testimony on victim recantation; (2) admitting hearsay testimony under the excited utterancé excep-tiqn; and (3) assessing a “consolidated court cost” against him pursuant to section 103.102(a)(1) of the Texas Local
As pertinent to this remand, we rejected appellant’s argument that (1) the uses specified in section 133.102(e) for the court cost collected under section 133.102(a)(1) include uses that are not properly characterized as “costs of court;” and (2) the imposition of fees that do not represent “costs of court” impermissibly requires the judicial bránch to perform an executive function by collecting a tax. Id. at 325-26.
Appellant petitioned and obtained discretionary review before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which reversed this court’s judgment and remanded this case to this court to “address the question of whether, based upon the statute as it is written, Section 133.102 is unconstitutional oh its face, without regard to severability principles or to evidence of what the funds designated in the statute actually do.”
Analysis
I. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
The burden rests upon the party who challenges a statute to establish its unconstitutionality. Peraza v. State,
“A facial challenge is an attack on a statute itself as opposed to a particular application.” City of Los Angeles v. Patel, — U.S. —,
Section Í33.102(a)(l) of the Texas Local Government Code mandates that a person convicted of a felony must.pay $133 “as a court cost, in addition to all other costs.” See Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 133.102(a)(1) (Vernon Supp.2015). The Local Government Code requires the comptroller to allocate the proceeds collected among the following fourteen “accounts and funds”:
(1) abused children’s counseling
(2) crime stoppers assistance
(3) breath alcohol testing
(4) Bill Blackwood Law Enforcement Management Institute
(5) law enforcement officers standards and education
(6) comprehensive rehabilitation
(7) law enforcement and custodial officer supplemental retirement fund
(8) criminal justice plánning
(9) an account in the state treasury to be used only for the establishment and operation of the Center for the Study and Prevention of Juvenile Crime- and Delinquency" at Prairie View A & M University
(10) compensation to victims of crime fund '
(11) emergency radio' infrastructure account
(12) judicial and court personnel training fund
(13) an account in the state treasury to be used for the establishment andoperation of the Correctional Management Institute of Texas and Criminal Justice Center Account1
(14) fair defense account.
See id. §§ 133.102(b), (e) (Vernon Supp. 2015). Subsection (e) provides that the designated funds “may not receive less than” certain specified percentages of the collected amounts. Id. § 133.102(e).
II. Constitutionality of Local Government Code Section 133.102
Appellant primarily relied on Ex parte Carson,
In Ex parte Carson, the Court of Criminal Appeals invalidated a statute requiring the collection of $1 in costs in civil and criminal cases in pertain counties to fund law libraries in those counties because (1) the $1' cost was “neither necessary nor incidental to the trial of a criminal case [and thus was] not a legitimate item to be So taxed” against a criminal defendant; (2) the statute was a local or special law, which the state législature was not authorized to enact; and (3) collection of this cost only from defendants in certain counties was discriminatory.
After we issued our. opinion in appellant’s original appeal, the Court of Criminal Appeals rejected a Carson-based facial constitutional challenge in Peraza v. State,
In light of Peraza, the issue we consider on remand is- not whether the funds enumerated in section-■133.102(e) are necessary or incidental to the trial of a criminal case. Rather, the issue is whether those funds relate to the administration of the criminal justice system. See id. at 517-18.
Applying Peraza, we conclude that allocation to the funds for “abused children’s counseling,” “law enforcement officers standards and education,” and “comprehensive rehabilitation” is constitutional. See Penright v. State,
Section 133.102(e)(5) directs the comptroller to allocate 5.0034% of the proceeds received to “law enforcement officers standards and education.” Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 133.102(e)(5). Two-thirds of these proceeds may be used “only to pay expenses related to continuing education” for law enforcement officers licensed under Chapter 1701 of the Occupations Code, and the remaining third may be used only to pay related administrative expenses. See id. § 133.102(f) (Vernon Supp.2015).
Section 133.102(e)(6) directs the comptroller to allocate 9.8218% of the proceeds received to “comprehensive rehabilitation.” Id. § 133.102(e)(6). These proceeds, may be used only to provide rehabilitation services directly or through public resources to individuals determined by the department to be eligible for the services under a vocational rehabilitation program or other program established to provide rehabilitation services, as described in Human Resources Code section 111.052. Tex. Hum. Res.Code Ann. §§ 111.052, 111.060 (Vernon Supp.2015).
These interconnected statutes direct.the comptroller to allocate the proceeds collected under section 133.102(e)(5) and (6) to uses that relate to the administration of our criminal justice system and are thus legitimate criminal justice purposes under Peraza. See Penright,
Appellant has failed to establish that it is not possible for subsections 133.102(e)(1), (5), and (6) to operate constitutionally in any circumstance. See id.; see also Peraza,
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. This court’s determinations regarding appellant’s two evidentiary issues were not disturbed. See Salinas,
