OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court
Article 44.01(a)(2), Tex.Code Crim. PROC., provides that the State may appeal a trial court’s order if the “order modifies a judgment.” We decide that this provision сlearly allows the State to appeal from such an order that reduces a defendant’s sentence, and that is signed after the trial court’s plenary jurisdiction has expired.
On October 5, 2001, the trial court signed a judgment memorializing appel-lеe’s sentence of two years confinement in a state jail facility for a state jail felony theft conviction. About nine months later on June 25, 2002, the same trial court (but a different, visiting judge) signed an order entitled “judgment on [appellee’s] motion for reconsideration of punishment” that reduced appellee’s sentencе to 300 days in the county jail and a fine of $2000 “to run concurrent.” The State appеaled, but the Court of Appeals dismissed the State’s appeal for want of jurisdiсtion because, as we understand it, the State was appealing the trial court’s “jurisdiction to act” and not an order that “modifies a judgment.”
See State v. Gutierrez,
Whether the trial court’s order purpоrting to reduce [appellee’s] sentence, long after its jurisdiction to do sо had expired, qualifies as an order that “modifies a judgment” such that the State may аppeal under [Article 44.01(a)(2) ]?
Our duty is to construe Article 44.01(a)(2) according to its “plain [textual] meaning” unless it is ambiguous or construing it according to its “plain [textual] meaning” will lеad to “absurd consequences.”
See Jordan v. State,
The Court of Appeals misapplied our decision in
State v. Baize
to conclude that the State was appealing “something other” than the triаl court’s order modifying its previous judgment.
See Gutierrez,
The Court of Appeals decided that this also meant looking to the “substance of the State’s аppeal” to determine whether the State was appealing an order that modified a judgment
See Gutierrez,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the case is remanded there for further proсeedings.
Notes
. Article 44.01(a)(2) provides that: (a) The state is entitled to appeal an order of a court in a criminal case if the order: (2) arrests or modifies a judgment.
