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Newell, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., Keasler, Hervey and Richardson, JJ., joined. Richardson, J., filed a concurring opinion. Yeary, J., filed a concurring and dissenting opinion. Alcala, J., filed a dissenting opinion. Keel, J., filed a dissenting opinion. Walker, J., filed a dissenting opinion.This case is about whether a trial court can pay an appointed prosecutor at an hourly rate even though the fee schedule approved by the judges of the county only allows for payment of a fixed fee. Relators (the attorneys appointed to prosecute the defendant) argue that upholding the trial court’s order for payment is appropriate because the trial court’s determination of a reasonable fee for their services is a discretionary call, not a ministerial one. The primary Real Party in Interest (the Collin County Commissioners Court) responds that vacating the trial court’s order for payment is appropriate because the trial court lacked authority to set a fee outside of the fixed rate in the fee schedule approved by the local judges. According to the Commissioners Court, the local rule authorizing the trial court to “opt out” of its own fee schedule conflicts with a statute that requires payment according to that fee schedule.The Commissioners Court is correct that we are not called upon to determine whether the payment ordered in this case is reasonable. We are only asked to determine whether the applicable statute limits the trial court’s ability to approve an hourly rate when the fee schedule approved by the local judges prescribes a fixed rate. This is the business we’ve chosen. We agree with the Commissioners Court that the statute in question limits the trial court’s authority, and we agree with the court of appeals that the second order for payment should be vacated.I. FactsIn 2015, the Public Integrity Unit of the Texas Rangers forwarded a formal complaint against Kenneth Paxton to the Collin County District Attorney’s Office based upon alleged conduct that occurred before he took office as Attorney General. The Collin County Criminal District Attorney recused his office from all matters involving the cases, which were assigned to the 416th Judicial District Court.[1] The Local Administrative Judge of Collin County appointed three experienced criminal defense attorneys, Kent A. Schaffer, Brian W. Wice, and Nichole DeBorde, to serve as attorneys pro tem in those cases.[2] The judge agreed to pay each attorney a fee of $300 per hour for his or her professional services.[3]   The trial court has twice ordered interim payment for the pre-trial legal services provided by the appointed prosecutors. On January 11, 2016, the Collin County Commissioners Court considered a trial court’s order for interim payment of fees and expenses to the appointed prosecutors. The Commissioners Court was made aware, at the time, that the bill was significantly greater than the fee schedule allowed.[4]Nevertheless, the Commissioners Court voted to pay Relators $242,025 in attorneys fees for the pre-trial services already performed based upon the $300 per hour rate.[5] This payment is not at issue in this case.Later, the other Real Party in Interest, Kenneth Paxton, filed a pre­trial motion challenging the interim fees for the appointed prosecutors. On January 4, 2017, the trial judge overruled the defendant’s motion and issued a second order for payment of attorneys fees in the amount of $199,575.[6] This time, however, the Commissioners Court rejected the request for compensation, choosing instead to file a petition for writ of mandamus to compel the trial court to vacate the second payment order.[7]The Fifth Court of Appeals in Dallas agreed with the Commissioners Court, granting mandamus relief and holding that the trial court lacked the authority to order the payment.[8] The appointed prosecutors have petitioned us to determine who got it right: the trial court or the court of appeals.II. Operative Statutes and RulesArticle 2.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure sets out how attorneys pro tem are to be appointed and compensated. The statute provides for the appointment of either private attorneys or prosecutors from other jurisdictions within the state to take over for the recused or disqualified District or County Attorney.[9] If the trial court appoints a prosecutor from another jurisdiction, that prosecutor gets paid for his or her regular prosecutorial job without any additional compensation.[10] But, if the trial court appoints a private attorney, that person (or team as in this case) is paid “in the same amount and manner” as an attorney representing an indigent defendant.[11]Compensation for an attorney representing an indigent defendant is governed by Article 26.05 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. This statute provides in relevant part:(a) A counsel, other than an attorney with a public defender’s office or an attorney employed by the office of capital and forensic writs, appointed to represent a defendant in a criminal proceeding, including a habeas corpus hearing, shall be paid a reasonable attorney’s fee for performing the following services, based on the time and labor required, the complexity of the case, and the experience and ability of the appointed counsel: . . . [under subsection (a) the statute lists four subsections that detail the types of work that qualify for compensation under the statute]. All payments made under this article shall be paid in accordance with a schedule of fees adopted by formal action of the judges of the county courts, statutory county courts, and district courts trying criminal cases in each county. On adoption of a schedule of fees as provided by this subsection, a copy of the schedule shall be sent to the commissioners court of the county. Each fee schedule adopted shall state reasonable fixed rates or minimum and maximum hourly rates, taking into consideration reasonable and necessary overhead costs and the availability of qualified attorneys willing to accept the stated rates . . . .[12] This statute states that the trial court “shall” authorize payment for appointed counsel (assuming that the trial court has not appointed a member of a public defender’s office) according to a fee schedule adopted by formal action of the judges in a particular county.[13] While the statute allows for an appeal process when the trial court either fails to approve or affirmatively disapproves a payment, the statute commands that a   commissioners court pay fees that are “in accordance with the fee schedule for that county.”[14]This statutory framework created by Article 2.07 and 26.05 can be summarized fairly succinctly. Appointed prosecutors are entitled to compensation in the same amount and manner as appointed defense attorneys if the appointed prosecutors are not already prosecutors serving in another office. Appointed defense attorneys are entitled to compensation according to a schedule of fees adopted by formal action of the district courts trying criminal cases within a particular county. The fee schedule adopted by the district courts trying criminal cases within a particular county must state reasonable fixed rates or minimum and maximum hourly rates. At the time the appointed prosecutors sought payment in this case, the judges of the district courts trying criminal cases in Collin County had adopted local rules relating to the appointment and compensation of appointed counsel in felony cases.[15] Rule 4.01 of the local rules stated in relevant part:A. The District Judges adopt, pursant to Article 26.05 Tex. Code of Crim. Proc., a fee schedule for appointed attorneys, attached hereto as “Fee Schedule for Appointed Attorneys.”B. The judge presiding over a case may authorize payment to appointed counsel that varies from the fee schedule in unusual circumstances or where the fee would be manifestly inappropriate because of circumstances beyond the control of the appointed counsel.[16]The local rules included a fee schedule in Rule 4.01(A) setting out, relevant to this case, a fixed fee of $1,000 for pre-trial preparation in a non-capital felony case along with discretionary adjustment categories that allow additional fees not to exceed $1,000.[17] After the Commissioners Court approved the first order for interim payment and before the trial court entered the second, the local district judges amended the fee schedule to include the directive, “In all felony cases, except as hereafter provided, counsel shall be paid according to the following fee schedule, without exception, except as provided for in Section 4.01(B).”[18]The heart of the dispute in this case is whether the local provision in Rule 4.01(B), which allows an individual judge to “opt out” of the fee schedule and is expressly incorporated into the fee schedule itself, exceeds the trial court’s authority to set fees for appointed counsel, and by extension, appointed prosecutors. It does.III. Standard of ReviewMandamus is intended to be an extraordinary remedy, available only in limited circumstances.[19] Even though this mandamus action is brought by the appointed prosecutors to overturn the court of appeals opinion granting mandamus relief to the Commissioners Court, we do not undertake an appellate review of the court of appeals’ opinion.[20] Rather, we review the propriety of the trial court’s conduct itself by undertaking a de novo application of the two pronged test for mandamus relief.[21] In this case, that means we determine if the trial court’s order should be vacated.For the Commissioners Court to be entitled to mandamus relief in this case, it must establish two things.[22] First, the Commissioners Court must show that it has no adequate remedy at law to redress the alleged harm.[23] Regarding this requirement, we have held that even if a relator has a remedy at law, that relator can show that no adequate legal remedy exists at law if the remedy is “so uncertain, tedious, burdensome, slow, inconvenient, inappropriate, or ineffective as to be deemed inadequate.”[24]The court of appeals held that the Commissioners Court did not need to show that it had “no adequate remedy at law” because the order at issue was void.[25] We have previously held that an appeal from a void proceeding does not constitute an adequate remedy at law for purposes of a mandamus proceeding.[26] Yet we need not go that far here because we agree with the parties that neither have an adequate remedy at law in this case. The first prong of the standard has been met.Second, and more importantly, mandamus will only lie if the trial court exceeded its authority by signing the applicable order awarding attorneys fees.[27] The Commissioners Court must show that it has a clear right to the relief sought.[28] A clear right to relief is shown when the facts and circumstances dictate but one rational decision under unequivocal, well-settled (i.e., from extant statutory, constitutional, or case law sources), and clearly controlling legal principles.[29]   Mandamus relief is inappropriate if the law surrounding the court’s action is unclear.[30] But even an issue of first impression can qualify for mandamus relief when the principle of law is so plainly prescribed as to be free from doubt.[31] And while this Court generally does not undertake issues of statutory construction on mandamus review, if the terms of a statute are clear, the Court can address its application. When the statutory terms at issue are ambiguous, mandamus relief is inappropriate. [32]Indeed, as the court of appeals noted in this case, we have previously concluded that granting mandamus relief was appropriate in a different context because the terms of Article 26.05-the statute at issue in this case-are clear.[33] Though Article 26.05 has been amended since that case, those amendments did not render the relevant statutory provisions ambiguous.IV. Article 26.05 Clearly Limits a Trial Court’s AuthorityAs discussed above, the relevant statutes at issue envision that a trial court has the authority to appoint counsel for the defense and, in the case of a recused or disqualified prosecutor’s office, attorneys pro tem for the state.[34] If the trial court is called upon to appoint an attorney pro tem for the state and the trial court does not appoint a neighboring district or county attorney, the trial court has a ministerial duty to compensate that attorney in the same way that an attorney representing a criminal defendant is compensated.[35] A trial court still has discretion to set a fee in each case, but compensation must fall within a fee schedule adopted by formal action of the judges of the county courts, statutory county courts, and district courts trying criminal cases in each county.[36]That fee schedule must have either a reasonable fixed rate or minimum and maximum hourly rates that take into consideration reasonable and necessary overhead costs and the availability of qualified attorneys willing to accept the stated rates.[37] The “opt-out” provision in this case runs afoul of the statutory limitation that the fee be either fixed or cabined by minimum and maximum rates. As the court of appeals noted, “By requiring the judges to set both minimum and maximum hourly rates, it is clear the legislature was concerned not only with attorneys receiving a fair rate of payment, but also with counties not being forced to pay excessive fees.”[38]Specifically, with regard to the reasonableness of the fees, the statute allows for two different reasonableness determinations. First, the judges trying criminal cases in the county courts, statutory county courts, and district courts decide collectively on reasonable fixed rates or minimum and maximum hourly rates as part of a fee schedule that they adopt through formal action.[39] Second, the individual judge in a particular case decides on a reasonable fee in accordance with the schedule of fees that the judges trying criminal cases in the county adopted.[40] Though the individual judge has discretion to award fees within the adopted schedule, the statute does not allow the judge to award fees outside of that schedule. Otherwise, the statutory requirement that adopted fees or rates be either fixed or subject to minimums and maximums becomes meaningless. Despite arguments to the contrary, we are not holding that the fixed pre-trial preparation fee at issue in this case was “reasonable.” Rather, we are deciding whether mandamus relief is appropriate based upon a statute that sets out how the reasonableness of the particular fee at issue must be determined.   This understanding is also borne out by our Legislature’s response to our decision in Smith v. Flack. In Smith, several defense attorneys sought payment for their services, but the Commissioners Court of Harris County only awarded payment of a reduced amount.[41] The Commissioners Court relied upon a fee schedule that had been set by the local judges to cap the requested fees based upon the maximum amount set out in that schedule.[42] We held that Article 26.05 did not authorize the limitation set out by the adopted fee schedule because, at the time of the case, the statute only limited the trial court’s authority to set a minimum fee.[43] As we noted of the statute in effect at the time, “the Legislature has expressly avoided setting specific maximum limits on the size of the court-appointed attorney fees.”[44] Consequently, we determined that the statute at issue granted the trial court sole authority to set a “reasonable fee.”[45]   Smith was decided in April of 1987, which happened to be a legislative-session year. During that legislative session, our Legislature amended Article 26.05 to include the requirement that fee schedules include both a minimum and a maximum limit on court-appointed attorney fees.[46] In response to our decision in Smith, our Legislature made a maximum limit on appointed attorney fees a requirement.[47]Commissioners courts lost the battle in court to rely upon limits to a trial court’s authority to set fees, but they won the war in the Legislature.[48]The appointed prosecutors in this case argue that the statutory limits on payments in accordance with a fee schedule conflict with the statutory provision that allows an individual trial court to set a reasonable fee.[49] But this contention is also belied by the text of the statute itself. Article 26.05(c) sets out an appeal process whereby appointed attorneys can appeal a trial court’s refusal to pay their requested fees.[50] Under the text of that provision, even if the attorney is victorious in his or her appeal, the presiding judge may still only award a payment “in accordance with the fee schedule for that county.”[51] A trial court may still set a reasonable fee, but that authority is limited to the fee schedule set by formal action of the judges of the county courts, statutory county courts, and district courts trying criminal cases in each county.[52]Further, incorporating the open-ended “opt out” provision of Rule 4.01(B) into the fee schedule itself did not bring the local rules into compliance with the statute. Subsection (a) of Article 26.05 recognizes a trial court’s authority to set a reasonable fee for attorney services. But subsection (b) of Article 26.05 limits that authority by requiring any reasonable fee to be paid in accordance with an adopted fee schedule. And subsection (c) of Article 26.05 sets out the requirements for that fee schedule, including the limitation that the fee schedule set out either a reasonable fixed rate or minimum and maximum hourly rates.[53]When reading statutes, courts are not prohibited from using logic and common sense. We presume that every word has been used for a purpose and that each word, phrase, clause, and sentence should be given effect if reasonably possible.[54] We read the statute as a whole.[55]Allowing the incorporation of an “opt out” provision without fixed rates or set limits into the adopted fee schedule fails to give effect to the entire statute. It renders meaningless the statutory requirements that payment be made in accordance with an approved fee schedule and that the approved fee schedule contain either “reasonable fixed rates or minimum and maximum hourly rates.” Giving effect to the entire statute, it plainly requires placement of limitations on fees for appointed attorneys and it prohibits payment outside of those limitations. The statute is notreasonably susceptible to any other interpretation.[56]Here, the local judges set out a fee schedule with fixed rates and minimum and maximum limits that they determined to be reasonable. But they also adopted an open-ended “opt-out” provision in Rule 4.01B. This provision ran afoul of the plain language of Article 26.05, which limits a trial court’s authority to order payment within a fixed fee schedule. We agree with the court of appeals that Article 26.05 does not permit judges to expand that authority by individually setting a fee outside the range of what has been collectively agreed upon as reasonable.[57]V. Arguments of Amici CuriaeThe appointed prosecutors in this case argue, along with the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers as amicus curiae supporting their position, that vacating the trial court’s order of payment in this case will have a negative impact on adequate compensation for attorneys representing indigent defendants in complex criminal cases. But even though the compensation for appointed prosecutors is calibrated to the compensation for attorneys representing indigent criminal defendants, that is not the application of the statute we are faced with here. The statutory terms at issue are clear; but applying the statutory limitations to compensation for indigent defense without exception may conflict with constitutional guarantees.We acknowledge that the lack of adequate compensation for appointed counsel can pose a serious threat to a fundamentally fair trial.[58]The outcome of a criminal case should not depend upon how much money a defendant has. But that is not the application of the statute we are dealing with here; any possible constitutional concerns present in an indigent defense case are not present in this case.[59] Here, we are only faced with an application of an unambiguous statute.A group of elected district attorneys and the former State Prosecuting Attorney also argue on behalf of the appointed prosecutors in this case. In their amicus curiae brief, they contend that, as a matter of policy, interpreting Article 26.05 as limiting a trial court’s ability to set fees will result in fewer competent attorneys agreeing to sign on for high profile cases such as this one. But our Legislature appears to have already weighed this concern and set course in a different direction. Article 2.07 already allows for counties to avoid this issue altogether by appointing district or county attorneys to step in where a local prosecutor is either disqualified or recused. If the county chooses this path, additional compensation is not required at all.Relatedly, we are not called upon, in this case, to address limitations upon the discretion of commissioners courts.[60] Article 5, Section 18 of the Texas Constitution provides that a commissioners court “shall exercise such powers and jurisdiction over all county business, as is conferred by this Constitution and the laws of the State . . . .”[61] It is well-settled that a commissioners court has the power to hire outside counsel to assist other elected officials in carrying out their responsibilities as long as it does not infringe on the statutory duties of other officials.[62] Nothing in this Court’s opinion should be read to interfere with a commissioners court’s authority to approve funding necessary to assist a trial court in carrying out its responsibilities independent of the statutory limitations placed upon the trial court’s authority by Articles 2.07 and 26.05.[63]Ultimately, what amounts to good or bad policy is not up to this Court to decide.[64] As we noted in In re Allen, “Public-policy arguments quickly pile up on both sides of the debate . . . . But they find utility only in the Legislature and should be directed there.”[65] Mandamus is an inappropriate vehicle for weighing competing policy arguments. If the application of the statute at issue seems too harsh in this case, it is up to our Legislature to decide if and how to address it.VI. ConclusionIn its amicus curiae brief in support of the Commissioners Court, the County Judges and Commissioners Association of Texas observed:The fee schedule established by Local Rule 4.01(a) is valid, even if it may [be] inadequate to address the particular issues that arose in this case. If the schedule is inadequate, it may be amended to provide for extraordinary cases without vesting an unfettered discretion in each individual trial judge in violation of the parameters of the statute.By finding that 4.01(b) is invalid, the Court of Appeals left in place 4.01(a) and the specific fee schedule that provides for attorney’s fees. Should the Collin County judges determine that the fee schedule under 4.01(a) is inadequate, they may create a new fee schedule that is both specific and contains a broader range of attorney’s fees. What the judges may not do is create a limitless range of fees, as was done in 4.01(b).[66]We agree. Here, the trial court exceeded its authority by issuing an orderfor payment of fees that is not in accordance with an approved fee schedule containing reasonable fixed rates or minimum and maximum hourly rates.[67] We, therefore, agree with the court of appeals that the Commissioners Court of Collin County is entitled to mandamus relief. We vacate the trial court’s second order for interim payment and order the trial court to issue a new order for payment of fees in accordance with a fee schedule that complies with Article 26.05(c) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.Filed: November 21, 2018Publish

 
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