EX PARTE Eric Michael HEILMAN, Appellee
NO. PD-1591-13
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
DELIVERED: March 18, 2015
*160Stanley G. Schneider, Schneider & McKinney, P.C., Houston, for Eric Michael Heilman.
John R. Messinger, Assistant State Prosecuting Attorney, Lisa C. McMinn, State’s Attorney, Austin, for State of Texas.
OPINION
KEASLER, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
KELLER, P.J., and HERVEY, RICHARDSON, YEARY, and NEWELL, JJ., joined.
Eric Heilman pleaded guilty to misdemeanor tampering with a governmental record after the relevant two-year statute of limitations had expired. In return for Heilman’s plea, the State agreed not to pursue indictment for state-jail felony tampering with a governmental record. In an application for a writ of habeas corpus, Heilman challenged the trial court’s jurisdiction to accept his plea to the time-barred offense, arguing that his “pure law” limitations defense is a category-one abso*161lute right under Marin v. State.
The habeas court granted relief, and the court of appeals affirmed. We hold that the right at issue is a category-three forfeita-ble right and reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
I. Facts and Procedural History
In October 2008, Heilman was serving as an officer with the Beaumont Police Department. Along with another officer and a confidential informant, Heilman took part in a failed undercover narcotics sting targeting a suspected drug dealer. Although no transaction occurred, when the suspect began to leave, Heilman pursued and arrested him, seizing cash and a large amount of cocaine. But when Heilman drafted his probable-cause affidavit on October 13, 2008, he failed to mention either the undercover operation or his confidential informant.
. When that affidavit’s veracity was later challenged, a district attorney pro tem began a grand-jury investigation of Heilman. During the entire investigation, no indictment, information, or criminal complaint was ever filed against Heilman. Nevertheless, on December 22, 2010, Heilman pleaded guilty on a misdemeanor information of tampering with a governmental record in return for the State agreeing to (1) forgo indictment on the state-jail felony offense and (2) not oppose early termination of his one-year deferred-adjudication sentence after six months. Because Heilman’s offense of tampering with a governmental record — a Class A misdemean- or — carried only a two-year statute of limitations, Heilman also signed a written waiver stating: “I hereby waive all statute of limitations.” Heilman also signed a Deferred Adjudication Order stating: “DEFENSE WAIVES STATUTE LIMITATIONS PER JUDGE FLORES.” On June 24, 2011, after the agreed-upon six months, the trial court terminated Heil-man’s deferred adjudication and dismissed the information.
Heilman subsequently filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus, citing as a collateral consequence his inability to obtain a peace officer’s license and alleging an involuntary plea and ineffective assistance of counsel. He also sought findings of fact and conclusions of law that the original trial court lacked jurisdiction under Phillips v. State both to accept his December 2010 plea and to sentence him to deferred adjudication after the two-year statute of limitations’ expiration in October 2010. The habeas judge vacated the trial court’s proceedings against Heilman, concluding it lacked jurisdiction. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the “charging instrument on its face established that the statute of limitations prohibited the State from prosecuting the defendant.”
II. Analysis
The circumstances of this case force us to reconsider the nature of a statute-of-limitations defense and exactly what right it protects. And although “[ojften it is better to be consistent than right,” we overrule precedent when the reasons for doing so are “weighty enough,” including when the precedent was “flawed from the outset” and produces “unjust” results “that place unnecessary burdens on the sys*162tem.” Heilman’s reliance on Phillips v. State presents us with such a situation.
A. Marin ⅛ Three Categories
In Mann v. State, we constructed a three-part framework to categorize the rights of our criminal-justice system:
1. “absolute requirements and prohibitions”;
2. “rights of litigants which must be implemented by the system unless expressly waived”; and
3. “rights of litigants which are to be implemented upon request.”
We explained that category-one rights “are to be observed even without partisan request” and cannot “lawfully be avoided even with partisan consent.” Category-two rights, however, can be waived by right, but a litigant “is never deemed to have done so in fact unless he says so plainly, freely, and intelligently, sometimes in writing and always on the record.” Finally, a category-three right can be forfeited by a litigant “for failure to insist upon it by objection, request, motion, or some other behavior calculated to exercise the right in a manner comprehensible to the system’s impartial representative, usually the trial judge.”
B. Phillips v. State ’s distinction between factual and pure-law limitations defenses
Under Proctor v. State, we originally held that a statute-of-limitations defense “is forfeited if not asserted at or before the guilt/innocence stage of trial,” thereby placing it in Marin's third category. Yet more recently in Phillips v. State, we distinguished between two types of limitations defenses: (1) those that are “based on facts” and (2) those that are “pure law.” Whereas the first type merely “gives rise to a limitations factual defense” because it requires factual development beyond the charging instrument, the second appears on the face of the instrument and therefore “gives rise to a statute-of-limitations bar” that constitutes a jurisdictional defect. We held that, while Proctor — and therefore Marin ⅛ third category — continued to apply to factual limitations defenses, it did not apply to those that are pure law. Therefore, a defendant could forfeit only a factual limitations defense by failing to assert it at trial. But a pure-law limitations defense, as a jurisdictional defect, could not be forfeited and could be raised for the first time on appeal or in a collateral proceeding.
C.Bases of Phillips’s distinction
In making that distinction, we relied primarily on the constitutional prohibitions against ex post facto laws — found in both the federal and Texas constitutions — and *163our reasoning in Ieppert v. State.
In that case, we clarified that the prohibition against ex post facto laws is not actually an individual right, but instead “a categorical prohibition directed by the people to their government” that cannot be waived “either individually or collectively.” Citing that language, we held in Phillips that the “right to be free from ex post facto laws or the ex post facto application of a law” is a Marin category-one absolute right.
Our analysis in Phillips then cited the Supreme Court’s Stogner v. California decision to resolve the collision between the constitutional ex post facto prohibition (a category-one absolute right under Iep-pert) and a statute-of-limitations defense (originally a category-three forfeitable right under Proctor).
In Stogner, the Supreme Court held that a state statute allowing time-barred prosecutions for sex-related child abuse if “begun within one year of the victim’s report” violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. We noted the Supreme Court’s invocation of the assurances the State provides through a statute of limitations; namely that one “has become safe from its pursuit,” and that the State will “play by its own rules” and give “fair warning” to preserve exculpatory evidence. Citing those assurances, we held in Phillips that a “facially retroactive law that revived a previously time-barred offense violated the Ex Post Facto Clause,” thus making a pure-law limitations defense a category-one right through application of the Ex Post Facto Clause. Therefore, once the statute of limitations on Phillips’s offenses expired, “from that day forward, prosecution of all twelve counts was forever and absolutely barred.”
D. Our decision to overrule Phillips v. State
We now conclude that Phillips’s distinction between factual and pure-law limitations defenses was in error, at least in circumstances lacking any legislative ex post facto violation. Only the legislature can violate either the federal or state Ex Post Facto Clause because — as we held in Ortiz v. State and now reaffirm — both are “directed at the Legislature, not the courts.” Indeed, as the seminal case on the Ex Post Facto Clause — Calder v. Bull — declared, the “plain and obvious meaning and intention of the prohibition” is that “the Legislatures of the several states, shall not pass laws, after a fact done by a subject, or citizen, which shall have relation to such fact, and shall punish him for having done it.”
Our Ortiz holding also sought to limit the effect of Ieppert, the case on which so *164much of Phillips ’s reasoning relied. We explained that in Ieppert “we did not appear to appreciate the distinction” between the legislature and the courts due to Bouie v. City of Columbia ⅛ due process prohibition against the judiciary “achieving, through construction of a statute, the exact same consequence that would be prohibited by the ex post facto clause if the Legislature had so acted.” We noted that the Supreme Court in Rogers v. Tennessee had since declared that reasoning dicta — clarifying that Bouie turned only on a due process violation — and held the federal Ex Post Facto Clause inapplicable to the courts, citing the “important institutional and contextual differences between legislating, on the one hand, and common law decisionmaking, on the other.”
In concluding its analysis in Stogner, the Supreme Court struck down California’s statute because it “retroactively withdraws a complete defense to prosecution after it has already attached, and it does so in a manner that allows the State to withdraw this defense at will and with respect to individuals already identified.” But here, the State could not pursue the time-barred offense “at will.” There was no statute like California’s enabling it to do so. Because there was no legislative act, there was no ex post facto violation. And although Stogner clarified the nature of a statute-of-limitations defense operating in conjunction with a violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause, it provided no guidance as to whether , a statute-of-limitations defense standing alone must be forfeitable, waiva-ble, or absolute that would direct our Marin analysis and require us to stray from Proctor.
But we need not hold that the legislature acting only by and through itself can violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. In Peugh v. United States, a recent Supreme Court decision that we did not have the benefit of reviewing when we decided Phillips, the Court held that a trial judge’s application of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines in effect at the time of a defendant’s trial instead of those in effect at the time of the defendant’s offenses violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. In rejecting the government’s argument that the guidelines were just one among a number of sources that a district court could use during sentencing, no different than a “policy paper,” the Supreme Court noted the statutory consequences from either following or deviating from the guidelines. A district court had to consult the guidelines to avoid “reversible procedural error” and risked an abuse-of-discretion finding on appeal if it deviated too far. But if a district court followed the guidelines, a *165court of appeals could presume the sentence reasonable. The Court also cited Gamer v. Jones, which recognized that a state parole board could — but refused to find that it did — violate the Ex Post Facto Clause by changing its rules.
But at no point in Peugh did the Supreme Court overturn — or even reference — its earlier refusal to extend the scope of the Ex Post Facto Clause to the courts in Rogers v. Tennessee, which solidifies our holding that, while the clause’s scope can extend to executive agencies exercising delegated legislative power, it still does not extend to courts exercising their inherent power to accept a plea bargain. Thus the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Peugh reaffirms our holding in Ortiz that the Ex Post Facto Clause is “directed at the Legislature, not the courts.”
Therefore, in assessing a claim based on the Ex Post Facto Clause, we look beyond the actor that is directly committing the alleged violation for some legislative origin of the alleged violation— such as the enabling statutes of either the United States Sentencing Commission in Peugh or the state parole board in Garner.
A legislature cannot escape the strictures of either the Texas or federal Ex Post Facto Clause by mere delegation. But a defendant must be able to point to a legislative origin of the alleged violation, and here there was none. Instead, the trial judge’s acceptance of Heilman’s time-barred plea originated from Heilman’s plea negotiations with the State, along with his multiple waivers of any limitations defense.
And for Heilman’s plea agreement to stand, we must first overturn Phillips v. State. In Phillips, we reasoned that once the charging instrument showed that the statute of limitations on the twelve counts of sexual offenses leveled against Phillips had expired, “from that day forward, prosecution of all twelve counts was forever and absolutely barred.” Phillips’s reliance on a legally significant distinction between pure-law and factual limitations defenses determined that result and caused us to stray from Proctor.
It was not dicta. It was an analytical step to reach the result. Therefore, because the information against Heilman showed that the statute of limitations on the misdemeanor offense to which he pleaded had run two months before his plea, prosecution on that offense was already “forever and absolutely barred” under Phillips.
Although prosecution of the state-jail felony offense would still have been possible at that point, under Phillips that would not have revived prosecution of the misdemeanor offense. When we analyze rights *166under our Marin framework, we focus on the nature of the right at issue — not the circumstances under which it was raised. Therefore, our analysis here must turn on the nature of the statute-of-limitations defense itself, not on the claim that in hindsight the record just happens to show that a hypothetical prosecutor in these particular circumstances could have charged Heil-man with the non-barred state-jail felony offense at the time of his plea. It would be easy to misinterpret a statute-of-limitations defense as a uniquely fundamental right, given that when it is properly raised, it leads to only one result: dismissal. But its true nature — a mere legislative “act of grace” — is modest, especially when compared to weightier, constitutionally based rights that we have nonetheless deemed forfeitable.
This opinion, however, should not be read to grant unfettered powers to the judicial branch. Courts can still violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment through an “unforeseeable judicial enlargement of a criminal statute, applied retroactively.” Although this limitation is often regarded as the judicial cognate of the ex post facto prohibition, the Supreme Court has made clear that the two are not co-extensive. Instead, the due process limitation — rooted in the “basic principle that a criminal statute must give fair warning of the conduct that it makes a crime” — protects against a “judicial enlargement” of a statute, which is hot alleged here.
E. The importance of protecting good-faith, arm’s length plea agreements
Our decision today is further bolstered by the unintended effect that the distinction between factual and pure-law limitations defenses has had on the sanctity and finality of plea agreements. In Proctor, we advanced several practical reasons for treating a limitations defense as forfeita-ble, arguing that the defense has “little to do with the truth-finding function” of our criminal-justice system and that a defendant might waive the defense “to gain time for plea bargaining” or “to vindicate his good name.” But most significantly, the Phillips dissent warned of the exact circumstance we now address, adding to *167
Proctor’s list “the possibility that foregoing a limitations defense could be part of a plea agreement involving multiple charges.”
It is this unintended consequence of our Phillips holding that so concerns us and spurs our decision to overrule it. Courts have long recognized the important role plea agreements play in our criminal-justice system. The agreement itself “may contain a wide variety of stipulations and conditions that allow the state to tailor conditions in order to reach agreement with the defendant.” Allowing for such wide-ranging plea agreements benefits not only the defendant and the State, who are free to explore a full array of stipulations and conditions in plea negotiations, but also the courts, whose dockets are thinned by parties ready and willing to settle.
But if we adhere to Phillips, we invite the very set of circumstances that we now address. Generally, a defendant who accepts the benefits of a plea agreement is estopped from challenging its validity. Yet estoppel does not apply when the trial court lacked jurisdiction. Therefore, because Phillips held that a pure-law limitations defense is an attack on a court’s jurisdiction, a defendant could “reap the benefits of an illegal sentence, which is lighter than what the legal sentence would have been, and then turn around and attack the legality of the illegal, lighter sentence when it serves his interest to do so,” as Heilman now tries to do. As part of an arm’s length plea agreement made in good faith, Heilman expressly waived his limitations defense to a time-barred misdemeanor offense in two written and signed documents so as to plead guilty and avoid facing a state-jail felony indictment. But now, after serving the six months of his deferred-adjudication sentence, he seeks the judiciary’s assistance in reneging. Our decision today addresses this inequity.
And if we addressed this inequity by merely focusing on Heilman’s multiple waivers without first overturning Phillips, we would unnecessarily complicate how we analyze the statute-of-limitations defense under Marin.
Indeed, doing so would again allow for the categorization of the defense to depend not on its nature, as Marin requires, but on the circumstances under which it was raised.
F. Heilman’s Complicity in the Circumstances Raising His Limitations Defense
Courts also often bar an otherwise valid limitations defense when, as here, the de*168fendant attempts to present it with unclean hands by creating the very circumstances for it's application. For example, in Spaziano v. Florida, the Supreme Court upheld a judge’s rejection of a defendant’s requested lesser-included instruction when the defendant refused to also waive his limitations defense to the lesser-included offense. The Court explained that to hold otherwise would require “that the jury be tricked into believing that it has a choice of crimes for which to find the defendant guilty, [when] in reality there is no choice.” The Court instead gave Spa-•ziano the “choice between having the benefit of the lesser included offense instruction or asserting the statute of limitations on the lesser included offenses.”
Citing Spaziano, in State v. Yount, we found a defendant estopped from attacking his conviction for a time-barred lesser-included offense when the defendant himself requested the lesser-included instruction. When the jury convicted him of only the lesser-included offense, Yount raised his limitations defense and moved to set aside the judgment. We reversed the trial court’s granting of that motion, concluding that Yount could not both request the benefits of the instruction and then attack his conviction based on the instruction.
Heilman faced a similar choice. He could retain his limitations defense to the misdemeanor offense and risk a state-jail felony indictment, or forfeit (or in this case waive) his limitations defense and plead to the misdemeanor offense. Heilman chose the latter and cannot now use that choice to attack the trial court’s acceptance of his plea and imposition of sentence. He may regret the choice he made, but he must accept its consequences.
Furthermore, Spaziano and Yount make one thing clear: a statute-of-limitations defense lacking any ex post fac-to component does not attack the jurisdiction of the trial court. If it did, Spaziano would have retained the right to attack the trial court’s jurisdiction if he were found guilty of only the time-barred lesser-included offense. Similarly, if it did, once the jury had found Yount guilty of only the lesser-included offense, it in effect would have found that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and no conviction would have been possible, regardless of who requested the lesser-included instruction. Instead, a limitations defense standing alone is merely a procedural “act of grace” by the legislature that can be forfeited.
III. Conclusion
Heilman’s attempt to renege on his guilty plea after accepting its benefits exposes the unintended consequences of our prior holding in Phillips v. State. To ensure the sanctity and finality of plea agreements reached in good faith and at *169arm’s length, we will no longer unquestioningly distinguish between factual and pure-law limitations defenses. Instead, in circumstances lacking any legislative ex post facto violation — and especially when that occurs in the context of a good-faith, arm’s length plea agreement — both are Marin category-three forfeitable rights, as under Proctor v. State. Therefore, because there was no ex post facto violation, the trial court properly exercised its jurisdiction to accept Heilman’s plea and Heilman had every right to forfeit (or in this case waive) his limitations defense as part of that plea. We reverse the holdings of the habeas court and the court of appeals, and we remand the case to the court of appeals to assess Heilman’s other claims.
NEWELL, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which KELLER, P.J., and HERVEY, J., joined. MEYERS, J., filed a dissenting opinion. JOHNSON, J., filed a dissenting opinion. ALCALA, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
NEWELL, J.,
filed a concurring opinion in which
KELLER, P.J. and HERVEY, J., joined.
I agree that applicant forfeited his right to complain about the limitations bar on his misdemeanor conviction for tampering with a governmental record when he pleaded guilty to the untimely charge in exchange for the State’s agreement to forgo indictment on a timely state jail felony charge. I join the majority opinion be- cause I believe the majority is exactly right that this case is in irreconcilable conflict with Phillips v. State and that Phillips should be overruled. I write separately to explain why I believe the attempts to harmonize this case with Phillips fail.
One argument to save Phillips hinges on the word “reparable.” In Phillips, the majority drew a distinction between statute of limitations defenses based upon facts and those based upon “pure law.” Phillips v. State, 362 S.W.3d 606, 617 (Tex.Crim.App.2011). According to the Court, the reason for this distinction was that a pleading that gives rise to a limitations factual defense is “reparable,” while a pleading that gives rise to a statute-of-limitations bar is not. Id.
“Reparable” means capable of being mended or put into sound condition or capable of being remedied or made good. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1923 (2002). But the pleading in this case was not capable of being put into sound condition or made good. The misdemeanor information in this case alleged that the offense was committed on October 13, .2008. It was filed on December 22, 2010. There is no tolling language. There is no intervening charging instrument. Under Article 12.02 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, the statute of limitations for this offense is two years. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 12.02 (West 2008). Appellant had an absolute right to quash the information in this case.
Applying Phillips v. State, this misdemeanor information was absolutely barred by 100% pure law with no additives or preservatives. Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 617. As this Court held in Phillips:
But Proctor governs statute-of-limitations defenses that are based on facts (challenging a pleading that includes a “tolling paragraph,” “explanatory aver-ments,” or even “innuendo allegations,” that suffice to show that the charged offense is not, at least on- the face of the indictment, barred by limitations), not pure law (challenging an indictment that shows on its face that prosecution is absolutely barred by the statute of limitations).
*170
Id. And in this case, the State’s ability to proceed with another offense in another court did nothing to mend the misdemean- or case; the trial judge had to resurrect it.
I also disagree that Phillips can be limited to only address claims of ex post facto violations primarily because there was no ex post facto legislation at issue in Phillips. The Court reached its holding in response to the State’s argument that this case did not involve ex post facto legislation because the statute was written prospectively. Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 617; see also Acts 1997, 75th Leg., Ch. 740, § 3 (“The change in the law made by this Act does not apply to an offense if the prosecution of the offense became barred by limitation before the effective date of this Act. The prosecution of that offense remains barred as though this Act had not taken effect.”). In essence, the State argued that the statute, by its own terms, did not apply, so there was only a “plain vanilla limitations claim” rather than an issue of ex post facto legislation. Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 624 (Keller, P.J., dissenting). This Court’s response was telling:
This distinction is irrelevant because the ex post facto result is the same — the retroactive application here “revived” a previously barred prosecution.
Id. at 617. That “irrelevant” distinction is now the centerpiece of the argument to keep Phillips on life support.
The Court relied upon Carmell v. Texas to argue that a judicial application of a statute that was not expressly and facially retroactive violated the prohibition against ex post facto laws, but the statute at issue in Carmell changed the quantum of proof in pending cases. Carmell v. Texas, 529 U.S. 513, 530-31, 120 S.Ct. 1620, 146 L.Ed.2d 577 (2000). Contrary to the Phillips majority’s reading of Carmell, it was the legislative act in Carmell that opened the door to the ex post facto violation, not the erroneous judicial application of that act. If there had been only a retrospective judicial application at issue in Carmell, then the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson — two weeks after Car-mell was decided — would make no sense. In Johnson, the United States Supreme Court held that there was no ex post facto question where a statute by its own terms did not apply retroactively; the only question in that situation was whether .the old statute authorized the trial court’s action. Johnson v. United States, 529 U.S. 694, *171702-03, 120 S.Ct. 1795, 146 L.Ed.2d 727 (2000); see also Ortiz v. State, 93 S.W.3d 79, 91 (Tex.Crim.App.2002). Contrary to the majority’s reasoning in Phillips, the Supreme Court was always concerned with ex post facto legislation, not ex post facto results.
To be clear, I do not understand .the majority to hold that a defendant must object to preserve a claim that a retrospective statute violates the constitutional prohibitions against ex post facto legislation. Nor do I read the majority’s holding in this case to say that an ex post facto violation is anything but fundamental error. But I join the majority opinion because Phillips did not involve ex post facto legislation; it involved a “plain-vanilla limitations claim.” Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 624 (Keller, P.J., dissenting). This Court held in Proctor that such claims are forfeitable, and I do not believe the limitations on the scope of Proctor to “fact-based” limitations defenses was warranted.
This Court should not frivolously overrule established precedent. Paulson v. State, 28 S.W.3d 570, 571 (Tex.Crim.App.2000). But stare decisis is not an inexorable command. While there is a strong presumption in favor of established law, this Court may reconsider its precedent when: (1) the original rule or decision was flawed from the outset; (2) the rule’s application produces inconsistent results; (3) the rule conflicts with other precedent, especially when the other precedent is newer and more soundly reasoned; (4) the rule regularly produces results that are unjust, that are unanticipated by the principle underlying the rule, or that place unnecessary burdens on the system; and (5) the reasons that support the rule have been undercut with the passage of time. Ex parte Lewis, 219 S.W.3d 335, 338 (Tex.Crim.App.2007). Adhering to such precedent does not promote judicial efficiency and consistency, encourage reliance upon judicial decisions, or contribute to the integrity of the judicial process. Paulson, 28 S.W.3d at 571.
I join the majority because I believe Phillips qualifies as that type of precedent. That almost every member of this Court agrees to a result in contravention of the one Phillips clearly requires further demonstrates the unworkability of Phillips.
The majority is correct; either this case goes or Phillips does. Like the majority, I vote that it’s Phillips.
MEYERS, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion.
Today the majority overrules our prior decision in Phillips v. State, 362 S.W.3d *172606 (Tex.Crim.App.2011), and determines that Appellant is not entitled to relief on his statute of limitations claim. With today’s decision we are continuing down an unreasonable path of placing the entire burden on the defendant to complain of statute of limitations issues. The statute of limitations should not be a defensive issue, and I believe that the case we should actually be overruling today is Proctor v. State, 967 S.W.2d 840 (Tex.Crim.App.1998).
In Proctor we changed the law concerning the statute of limitations and held, for the first time, that limitations is a rule that must be implemented only upon the request of the defendant, rather than it being an absolute requirement that must be proved by the State in every criminal prosecution. Id. at 844. However, making the statute of limitations a defensive issue was problematic then, and it is problematic now. Defensive issues should be those that require a defendant to show that he is not guilty of a crime. The statute of limitations has nothing to do with a defendant’s guilt — it relates only to the State’s timely filing of a case — and therefore, the defendant should not bear the heavy burden of invoking it. The statute of limitations is meant to be something the State must prove in order to prosecute, much like it must prove that a crime took place in a particular county. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 13.17. Further, the State is allowed to allege in the indictment that the crime took place “on or about” a certain date, so long as that date is “anterior to the presentment of the indictment, and not so remote that the prosecution of the offense is barred by limitation.” Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 21.02. Requiring that the dates the State alleges not be barred by limitation is at odds with holding that the State must actually prove that the offense occurred within the statute of limitations only if the defendant raises the issue. See Proctor v. State, 967 S.W.2d at 847 (Meyers, J., dissenting).
The present problems surrounding the statute of limitations arose when this court decided to change the law and make limitations a defensive issue. Proctor is a not a well-reasoned or substantiated opinion, and was decided the way it was only in order to keep the convictions in the case from being overturned. Today, rather than overruling Phillips, we should be correcting the mistake made in Proctor and return to considering the statute of limitations an absolute requirement that is the State’s burden to prove. Therefore, I would overrule Proctor and remand this case to the court of appeals to be examined in light of State v. Yount, 853 S.W.2d 6 (Tex.Crim.App.1993), in which we held that a defendant who requested a jury instruction on a lesser-included offense could not later complain' that his conviction of that offense was barred by limitations. For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
JOHNSON, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion.
While I agree that Eric Heilman is not entitled to relief on his “statute of limitations” claim, I cannot join the majority’s opinion or its judgment because it is neither necessary nor appropriate to overrule our prior decision in Phillips v. State.
Here, the defendant explicitly traded his right to make any “statute of limitations” claim to the misdemeanor charge of tampering with a governmental record in exchange for avoiding indictment for the corresponding state-jail felony offense that was not time barred. Just as a defendant who requests a jury charge on a time-barred lesser-included offense waives his *173right to later claim that his conviction on the lesser offense was barred by limitations, so too a defendant who expressly trades his right to a limitations claim on a misdemeanor to avoid being charged with a felony waives his right to later claim that his conviction was barred by limitations. Heilman might have chutzpah, but he does not have a valid limitations claim.
I.
Heilman, a member of the Beaumont Police Department, was investigating a drug-trafficking operation in October 2008. He, Officer Brad Beaulieu, and a confidential informant set up a sting operation with a suspected drug dealer, but their target left the scene without completing the transaction. Heilman and Beaulieu chased the suspect and arrested him. They seized cash and a large cache of cocaine from him. But, in drafting his probable-cause affidavit, Heilman omitted any reference to the confidential informant or the sting operation. The suspect eventually disclosed the existence and participation of the confidential informant.
A special prosecutor was appointed, and a grand jury investigation began. According to the habeas court’s findings, Heil-man’s depiction of the events was as follows:
The investigation of Applicant [Heilman] continued through the fall [of 2010]. On November 23, 2010, Applicant is advised that the file of the Beaumont Police Department Internal Affairs Investigation was being subpoenaed to the Jefferson County Grand Jury. On December 13 or 14, Applicant was advised that the grand jury had met and that he had an opportunity to plead guilty to a misdemeanor or proceed to trial after indictment on felony charges. On December 17, 2010, Applicant was advised that he had until December 22, 2010, to decide whether to enter a plea and accept the misdemeanor offer.
The Special Prosecutor filled in the events from his perspective:
On December 14, 2010 [applicant’s original trial counsel] was advised that the grand jury voted unanimously to indict both Eric Heilman and Brad Beaulieu for the felony offenses of tampering with governmental records and, in the case of Brad Beaulieu, aggravated perjury. At the request of and with the consent of the grand jury, an offer was extended to Heilman and Beaulieu through their attorney ... to plead guilty to [the] misdemeanor offense of tampering with a governmental record for deferred adjudication in lieu of being formally indicted on felony charges. The plea offer was conditioned on their express waiver of any statute of limitations claim that they may have regarding the misdemeanor charges to which they would plead. The grand jury adjourned until December 22 to allow Officers Heilman and Beaulieu to consider the offer.
On December 22, Officers Heilman and Beaulieu appeared before the Court with new attorneys, were properly admonished, waived their rights, expressly waived the statute of limitations, and pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor charge of tampering with a governmental record. In light of the pleas, the grand jury’s term expired on December *17431, 2010, without formally indicting either officer.
An information charging Heilman with the misdemeanor offense was filed in the county court on December 22, 2010. At the guilty-plea hearing on that day, Heil-man and his attorney, along with the special prosecutor and the trial judge, signed the standard written documents, admonishments, and waivers. A handwritten sentence at the bottom of the page read, “I hereby waive all statute of limitations.” Directly above that sentence are applicant’s initials, as well as those of his attorney. On the official Deferred Adjudication Order, next to three of the probation conditions, is the following statement:
No State opposition to early termination after six months[.] Defense will not file for early termination before six months[.] Defense waives statute [of] limitations per Judge Flores[.]
Heilman had no right of appeal and did not attempt to appeal. He followed his end of the bargain and did not file for early termination for six months. The state followed its part of the bargain and did not oppose early termination. However, four months after discharging his probation and obtaining a Deferred Adjudication Order of Dismissal, Heilman filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus claiming, inter alia, that he had entered an involuntary plea.
The habeas judge, on his own, raised the issue of whether Heilman’s prosecution was barred by the two-year statute of limitations for the misdemeanor offense of tampering with a governmental record. Relying in part on this Court’s decision in Phillips v. State,
he held that the two-year statute of limitations barred applicant’s prosecution and that the agreement to waive the statute of limitations was itself “void and a nullity.” He concluded that he did not have authority to enter a deferred-adjudication order as a matter of law. The judge dismissed the information and vacated the deferred adjudication order.
The state appealed, and the court of appeals affirmed the habeas judge.
II.
The problem with the lower courts’ reliance on Phillips is that, in Phillips, we explained that a “matter of law” statute-of-limitations claim is one in which the charging instrument shows on its face that the prosecution is time-barred and that the defect is not “reparable.” There is absolutely nothing that the state can do to save its prosecution; it is irreparably barred. For example, in Phillips, the defendant was charged with twelve counts of sexual offenses committed in 1982 and 1983, but no indictment was filed until 2007. The statute of limitations for all twelve counts had run in 1993 under the then-existing ten-year statute of limitations, and there was no other offense that had arisen from the same conduct with which to charge him. There was nothing the state could do to resurrect those charges, which had been time-barred for fourteen years. The problem was incurable. Phillips was therefore entitled to prevail on his ex post facto claim as a matter of law.
But if the pleading is “reparable,” then the statute of limitations is a factual affirmative defense on which the defendant *175bears the burden of proof. As we explained in Phillips,
The pleading that gives rise to a limitations factual defense is reparable. The pleading that gives rise to a statute-of-limitations bar is not. The first is forfeited unless raised before or during the trial and cannot be raised in a pretrial writ. The second — a true ex post facto violation — is not forfeitable under Iep-pert.
In this case, unlike Phillips, another offense that arose from the same conduct was not time-barred. Had Heilman said that he did not want to waive his statute-of-limitations claim to the misdemeanor, the prosecutor could say, “Fine. The grand jury will return a felony indictment this afternoon.” This misdemeanor information was easily “reparable” by charging the state-jail felony offense of tampering with a governmental record, which has a three-year statute of limitations and was not time-barred. Although the face of the indictment looks as if the charge were time-barred, a glance at the plea papers and deferred-adjudication judgment and conditions of probation shows that, unlike Phillips, Heilman explicitly waived his right to complain about the statute of limitations concerning the misdemeanor in return for the prosecutor’s act of not ob-taming a felony indictment for which the statute of limitations had not run. As the state has consistently argued, Heilman “ ‘benefited handsomely from his bargain,’ ” and he cannot complain now. In comparison, Phillips went to trial and benefitted not at all. And, before this Court, the state, represented by the State Prosecuting Attorney, conceded that the state was mistaken at trial and on direct appeal and that the statute of limitations had run in 1993, four years before the Legislature passed the extension of the statute of limitations on which the state had relied.
‘ This situation is the converse of that addressed by the Supreme Court in Spazi-ano v. Florida.
In that ease, the defendant was being tried on capital-murder charges, but, at the jury-charge conference, the trial judge refused to charge the jury on the lesser-included offenses of murder and manslaughter because the defendant refused to waive the statute of limitations, which had already run on those offenses. On appeal, the defendant com- - plained that he should not be required to waive one substantive right — reliance on the statute of limitations — to obtain the benefit of another substantive right — instructions on lesser-included offenses. The Supreme Court held that the defen*176dant could not have his cake and eat it, too. The defendant was entitled to make his choice: instructions on the lesser-included offenses if he waived the statute of. limitations on those lesser offenses or no lesser-included instructions if he did not waive the limitations claim. We held the same in State v. Yount; the defendant may either waive the statute of limitations and obtain instructions on lesser-included offenses or insist upon the statute of limitations and forego lesser-included instruction on offenses that are otherwise time-barred.
The bottom line in those cases is that the statute of limitations may be expressly waived in special circumstances when the limitations statute does not protect the defendant’s or society’s interests. As a public-policy matter, when the defendant may still be prosecuted for acts that are not barred by a statute of limitations and arose from the same criminal episode, the limitations statute does not provide full protection to the defendant, and the rationale for the rule does not apply.
There is no question that, if the special prosecutor had indicted Heilman for the state-jail felony offense of tampering with a governmental record (an .offense that was not time-barred), Heilman could and would have waived the statute of limitation's if he pled guilty to the lesser-included misdemeanor offense even though it was technically time-barred. The re*177verse is also true: If an indictment or information charging the misdemeanor offense of tampering with a governmental record is time-barred, but the state-jail felony offense of tampering with a governmental record is not, then a defendant may expressly waive reliance on the statute of limitations and plead to the misdemeanor offense to avoid indictment and trial on the corresponding felony offense.
In sum, Heilman could, and did, expressly waive his right to rely upon the statute of limitations in pleading guilty to the misdemeanor offense of tampering with a governmental record in exchange for the state’s agreement not to indict him on the state-jail felony tampering offense for which the statute of limitations had not run. But because the Court goes too far and overrules the easily distinguishable Phillips, I must dissent.
ALCALA, J.,
filed a dissenting opinion.
Because it unnecessarily overrules this Court’s recent precedent in Phillips v. State, I respectfully dissent from this Court’s judgment reversing the court of appeals’ affirmance of the order granting post-conviction habeas corpus relief to Eric Michael Heilman. See Phillips v. State, 362 S.W.3d 606, 608-10 (Tex.Crim.App.2011); State v. Heilman, 413 S.W.3d 503, 508 (Tex.App.-Beaumont 2013). The majority opinion determines that it is necessary to entirely overrule Phillips, a distinguishable case involving an ex post facto claim, in order to resolve this relatively simple appeal involving an ordinary statute-of-limitations claim, but I disagree. I would reverse the court of appeals’ holding that the trial court lacked jurisdiction and instead remand the case to that court for further consideration of Heilman’s claim on the merits. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08. Because it goes too far in delving into the ex post facto issues that were at the heart of this Court’s holding in Phillips, but which are not implicated in the present appeal, I cannot join this Court’s majority opinion, nor can I agree with its decision to resolve the merits of Heilman’s claim on that basis.
I. Background
The facts of this case involve a simple claim, raised for the first time in an application for a writ of habeas corpus, that a conviction was absolutely barred by the running of the statute'of limitations. Heil-man had agreed to plead guilty to the misdemeanor offense of tampering with a governmental record in exchange for the State’s agreement not to pursue felony charges against him, and he was placed on deferred adjudication. Although the two-year statute of limitations had already run at the time of his guilty plea, Heilman waived his limitations defense, as indicated by his signature on the Deferred Adjudication Order, which states, “Defense waives statute [of] limitation per Judge Flores.”
After his successful completion of deferred adjudication, Heilman filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus. In response to Heilman’s application, the ha-beas court determined that “the prosecution for the misdemeanor offense was, in the words and plain sense of the charging document ‘on its facet,]’ barred by the applicable statute of limitations.” Id. at 506. The habeas court dismissed the in*178formation and vacated the deferred adjudication order. Id. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed the habeas court’s order granting relief. Id. at 508. Relying on this Court’s opinion in Phillips, it determined that, although generally a statute-of-limitations bar is not jurisdictional, that rule does not apply to “ ‘pure law’ challenges, where the charging instrument shows on its face that the prosecution is absolutely barred by the statute of limitations.” Id. at 507 (citing Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 617-18). It further cited this Court’s opinion in Ex parte Smith for the proposition that, “ ‘[wjhen the face of the pleading shows that the offense charged is barred by limitations, that pleading is so fundamentally defective that the trial court does not have jurisdiction and habeas relief should be granted.’ ” Id. at 508 (quoting Ex parte Smith, 178 S.W.3d 797, 802 (Tex.Crim.App.2005) (citations and quotation marks omitted)). Applying these principles to Heilman’s case, the court of appeals determined that, given that the statute of limitations had already run at the time of his plea of guilty, “the information, on its face, charged an offense the State could no longer prosecute, and one over which the trial court did not have jurisdiction.” Id.
II. It Is Unnecessary to Overrule Phillips In Its Entiréty
Contrary to the majority opinion’s determination that it cannot resolve Heilman’s appeal without overruling Phillips in its entirety, I conclude that it is unnecessary and unadvisable for this Court to overrule Phillips’s core holding that an ex post facto violation occurred in that case. See Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616. Heilman’s claim does not involve the application of retroactive legislation, nor does it implicate the Ex Post Facto Clause in any way, and, therefore, it is beyond the proper scope of our review to revisit Phillips’s holding with respect to those matters in the course of resolving this appeal. I would, therefore, more narrowly address only the “pure law” language from Phillips, and I would reserve judgment as to the correctness of Phillips ⅛ ex post facto analysis until that issue is properly presented by the facts of a future case.
A. Unnecessary to Disturb Phillips Court’s Analysis of Ex Post Facto Claim
As the first step in its analysis in Phillips, the Court addressed the merits of Phillips’s claim that his 2007 convictions for sexual offenses committed in 1982 and 1983 violated the Ex Post Facto clauses of the state and federal constitutions. See id. at 610-16 (discussing “absolute” right to be free from ex post facto laws, and holding that Phillips’s ex post facto claim was “valid”). The basis for Phillips’s complaint was that, by applying a 1997 amendment to the statute of limitations in such a way as to resurrect his prosecution for otherwise time-barred offenses, his convictions violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. Id. at 607-08. Because his offenses had been “extinguished by the running of limitations” in 1993, those offenses, he contended, “could not be revived by the 1997 version of the statute of limitations” without violating that constitutional prohibition. Id. at 609-10. After the court of appeals rejected his argument, this Court granted Phillips’s petition for discretionary review to determine whether the “appellate court improperly applied] the decision in Stogner v. California, 539 U.S. 607, 123 S.Ct. 2446, 156 L.Ed.2d 544 (2003)[J allowing convictions for offenses which had been extinguished by the running of limitations and thereby violat[ing] the ex post facto provisions of the Texas and Federal Constitutions[.]”
Addressing the merits of Phillips’s ex post facto complaint, the Court held that *179the application of the amended statute of limitations to Phillips’s conduct violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616. It stated that “prosecution under the 2007 indictment ... was absolutely barred by the statute of limitations in 1993. These charges could not be resurrected by a 1997 statute extending the statute of limitations for sexual offenses.” Id. at 607; see also id. at 613 (explaining principle that, to comply with Ex Post Facto Clause, “a statute of limitations may be extended by the [Legislature, but a prosecution within the new time period will be permitted only if the limitations period had not already run before the law was changed”). Although the Court in Phillips observed that the 1997 amendment contained a standard savings clause and thus was “not an ex post facto law on its face,” the Court nevertheless held that the statute’s “application to a situation in which the statute of limitations had already run before its enactment violates that constitutional provision.” Id. at 616; see also id. at 610 (determining that the Ex Post Facto Clause applies “not only to laws that are facially retroactive, but also to laws that are applied retroactively”) (citations omitted).
As the court of appeals in this case indicated, unlike the complaint in Phillips, Heilman’s claim does not implicate or rely upon the Ex Post Facto Clause in any way, and the court of appeals did not address that aspect of Phillips in reaching its holding. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507 n.l (distinguishing Phillips because it “dealt with an ex post facto claim. Court action, not an ex post facto law, was under consideration in the habeas proceeding in this case.”). The core holding in Phillips— that application of an amended statute of limitations to conduct for which the prior limitations period had already run results in an ex post facto violation — is irrelevant to our resolution of Heilman’s claim, which, by contrast, involves a relatively straightforward argument that prosecution was absolutely barred by the running of the statute of limitations. Compare Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 616, with Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08. This Court should accordingly limit its reevaluation of Phillips to those matters that are called into question by the facts of this case.
Judicial restraint and stare decisis counsel against the majority opinion’s approach in revisiting matters that are beyond the scope of the issue presently before us. In Rangel v. State, this Court cautioned that “[jjudicial restraint and prudence prevent us from reaching out and grabbing issues simply because they are interesting and important. We will exercise our discretionary review authority only where the issues are properly presented for our consideration.” 250 S.W.3d 96, 98 (Tex.Crim.App.2008). And “stare decisis should generally be followed, because it promotes judicial efficiency and consistency, it fosters reliance on judicial decisions, and contributes to the actual and perceived integrity of the judicial process.” Hammock v. State, 46 S.W.3d 889, 892-93 (Tex.Crim.App.2001) (citing Proctor v. State, 967 S.W.2d 840, 844 (Tex.Crim.App.1998)). These principles all counsel against the majority opinion’s decision to overrule the ex post facto holding in Phillips, which involved a discrete claim that application of an amended statute of limitations had resulted in an ex post facto violation, and which is not properly presented for our review because it was neither addressed by the court of appeals nor called into question by the facts of this case.
B. Phillips ’s “Pure Law” Discussion Must Be Overruled
Although I disagree with this Court’s majority opinion’s decision to overrule Phillips ⅛ holding as to the merits of the *180
ex post facto claim in that case, I agree with its determination that it is necessary to reevaluate, and ultimately overrule, some problematic language in Phillips indicating that a “pure law” statute-of-limitations claim, even one that does not implicate ex post facto concerns, constitutes a category-one, non-forfeitable right. See Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 608, 616-19; Marin v. State, 851 S.W.2d 275, 279 (Tex.Crim.App.1993).
In Phillips, after initially concluding that Phillips had presented a meritorious ex post facto claim, the Court then addressed the State’s argument that Phillips had nevertheless forfeited his complaint by failing to raise it in the trial court. 362 S.W.3d at 617. In the course of rejecting that argument, the Phillips Court initially explained that the right to be free from ex post facto laws is a category-one, non-waivable right. Id. at 611-12 (describing claims based on Ex Post Facto Clause as implicating an “absolute right — a first category Marin right,” which “cannot be waived or forfeited”) (citing Marin, 851 S.W.2d at 279; Ieppert v. State, 908 S.W.2d 217, 220 (Tex.Crim.App.1995)). That rationale, standing alone, would have constituted an adequate basis upon which to hold that Phillips had not forfeited his ex post facto complaint. . Phillips should have stopped there, but instead, in dicta, it went on to discuss law that was unnecessary to its holding and that has become problematic in its broader application to this case.
In response to the State’s argument that relief should be foreclosed by this Court’s precedent in Proctor, the Court in Phillips broadly indicated that the Proctor rule was inapplicable to all situations where the indictment shows on its face that prosecution is barred by the running of the statute of limitations. See id. at 616-18; Proctor, 967 S.W.2d at 844. Specifically, to address the State’s argument that Proctor had held that a defendant forfeits a statute-of-limitations defense if he does not assert it at or before the guilt stage of trial, Phillips stated,
Proctor governs statute-of-limitations defenses that are based on facts (challenging a pleading that includes a “tolling paragraph,” “explanatory aver-ments,” or even “innuendo allegations,” that suffice to show that the charged offense is not, at least on the face of the indictment, barred by limitations), not [to those based on] pure law (challenging an indictment that shows on its face that prosecution is absolutely barred by the statute of limitations). The pleading that gives rise to a limitations factual defense is reparable. The pleading that gives rise to a statute-of-limitations bar is not. The first is forfeited unless raised before or during the trial and cannot be raised in a pretrial writ. The second — a true ex post facto violation— is not forfeitable under Ieppert.
Phillips, 362 S.W.3d at 617-18 (citations omitted). It is this passage from Phillips that the court of appeals relied upon in concluding that, even in situations lacking any suggestion of an ex post facto violation, a “pure law” limitations claim implicates a categorical right that cannot be waived or forfeited'and constitutes an absolute bar to prosecution. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08. And it is this aspect of Phillips that must now be overruled. In suggesting that a “pure law” situation would always result in a non-forfeitable, categorical bar to prosecution, this portion of the discussion in Phillips was unnecessary to its holding with respect to what it had characterized as the category-one Marin right that was at issue there, namely, the ex post facto violation based on the application of new legislation affecting the limitations period. See Phil
*181
lips, 362 S.W.3d at 611-12. By including, in dicta, broader language that would apply even to category-three Marin rights that were not at issue in Phillips, this portion of Phillips was inconsistent with Proctor. See id. at 617-18; Proctor, 967 S.W.2d at 844. I disagree that this broader language necessarily should be interpreted as constituting part of the Court’s holding in Phillips given that the facts of that case did not involve an ordinary statute-of-limitations claim. But because this erroneous principle from Phillips was the basis for the court of appeals’ holding that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Heilman’s case, I would overrule this broader language and hold that Proctor applies to claims involving an ordinary lapse of a limitations period where there is no argument that any legislation has extended a limitations period, such as the claim presented here by Heilman. See Heilman, 413 S.W.3d at 507-08; Proctor, 967 S.W.2d at 844.
III. Conclusion
Because I am unpersuaded by the majority opinion’s determination that it is necessary to overrule Phillips’s ex post facto analysis in order to resolve the present appeal, I would adhere to stare decisis with respect to that holding until this Court is properly called upon to consider it in a future case. I would more narrowly limit the holding in this case to overrule only the “pure law” discussion in Phillips, and I would accordingly reverse the court of appeals’ determination that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Heilman’s case. Because the majority opinion addresses matters that are beyond the scope of proper review and resolves Heilman’s claim on the basis of an unwarranted rehashing of ex post facto principles, I respectfully dissent.