State v. Jimas

7 P.2d 15, 166 Wash. 356, 84 A.L.R. 416, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 541
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1932
DocketNo. 23435. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 15 (State v. Jimas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jimas, 7 P.2d 15, 166 Wash. 356, 84 A.L.R. 416, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 541 (Wash. 1932).

Opinions

Mitchell, J.

Christ Jimas was charged by an information filed in the superior court for Spokane county with the crime of being a jointist. He caused to be filed in the case a bail bond or recognizance executed by the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland. He was found guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted, and was notified to appear for sentence on November 30,1929, but failed to do so, having fled from the state. An order was entered by the court on December 10, 1929, declaring the bond or recognizance forfeited, and on February 10, 1930, the surety paid into court $1,515, the amount of the penalty of the bond with accrued interest.

*357 • On December 10, 1930, one year after tbe order of forfeiture of the recognizance, the surety company filed a petition to vacate the order of forfeiture, and that the penalty thereof, theretofore paid to Spokane county and the state of Washington, be refunded to the surety. An answer was filed to the petition. Trial, without a jury, resulted in findings and conclusions' upon which judgment was entered against the surety company denying its petition, from which judgment this appeal has been taken.

The testimony has not been brought up, appellant being satisfied with the findings entered by the trial court. There appears to have been a business arrangement between what is spoken of in the record as the’ Spokane Bonding Company and the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, by which the Spokane Bonding Company procured business of providing bail bonds in criminal cases in the courts, the bonds to be written by and in the name of the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, with the understanding that the compensation received was to be divided between the two companies, and that the appellant company should defend and prosecute in the courts all actions with reference to such business. The finding upon this subject is as follows:

“That an agreement existed between the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland and said Spokane Bonding Company, wherein and whereby the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland actually executed and filed in the courts bail bonds for business procured by said Spokane Bonding Company; and the compensation for writing said bonds being divided upon some basis between the two said companies; and it was further agreed that the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland was required to defend and prosecute in the courts any actions with reference to any of said busi-, ness; and that, in furtherance of said agreement, the *358 Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland has brought this proceeding as a trustee for said Spokane Bonding Company.”

Further findings were to the effect that neither the. court nor- prosecuting attorney knew that the Spokane Bonding Company was the true principal or in any manner connected with the bail bond in this case, that the order declaring the bond forfeited was entered on December 10,1929, and that on February 10,1930, the appellant paid to the clerk $1,515 as penalty and interest under the judgment of forfeiture. That there was no collusion between the appellant and the defendant in the criminal case; that the Spokane Bonding Company proceeded to find the defendant, upon learning of his leaving the state, and that the two companies located him in Tonopah, Nevada, in. November, 1930, and returned him to the Spokane county jail with the assistance of a deputy sheriff acting in his official capacity, but whose traveling expenses to and from Tonopah were paid by the bonding companies, and that $410 were spent in the apprehension and the return of the defendant to the county jail. Intermingled in the court’s conclusions is a finding of fact, stated to be a fact, that both companies were compensated, and that the appellant had been fully repaid by the Spokane Bonding Company the $1,515 appellant had paid on the judgment of forfeiture of the bond; also, the further fact that the money forfeited had already been distributed to public funds, one of which was a state fund. The conclusion was that the appellant was not entitled to any relief.

We have no special statute covering the precise situation presented in this case. Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 2232 and 2233, provide for a stay of execution on a judgment forfeiting a recognizance for sixty days; and that, if the defendant for whom the recognizance was *359 given shall be produced in court before the expiration of the sixty days, the judgment of forfeiture may be vacated on such terms as may be just and equitable.

In State v. Johnson, 69 Wash. 612, 126 Pac. 56, where the defendant surrendered herself to her bondsmen, evidently uncompensated bondsmen, who delivered her into court within the sixty days, it was held on appeal that the bail money theretofore ordered forfeited by the trial court should have been returned to the bondsmen; and it was further held to be the policy of this statute to encourage the giving of bail in proper cases.

In State v. Jackschitz, 76 Wash. 253, 136 Pac. 132, it was held that the sixty day statute requires, almost as a matter of right, that a judgment shall be vacated within the sixty day period, without limiting the common law power of the court in proper cases; and it was further held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering money returned to the bondsmen, manifestly uncompensated, where the defendant voluntarily surrendered more than sixty days after judgment of forfeiture; that is, the sixty day statute did not limit the trial court’s power to exercise discretion in the matter, and therefore the trial court was sustained in its discretional judgment.

State v. Olson, 127 Wash. 300, 220 Pac. 776, was a case of a private uncompensated surety and a prompt voluntary surrender of the defendant. There the trial court ordered one-half of the bail money, which was all that remained in the county treasury, to be returned to the bondsman. That order was affirmed upon the ground of its being a discretional judgment. That case declares the rule applicable in cases of this sort to be as follows:

“The return of the bail is made to rest, in the code, upon such terms as shall be just and equitable, and this court in State v. Johnson, 69 Wash. 612, 126 Pac. 56, *360 and State v. Jackschitz, 76 Wash. 253, 136 Pac. 132, has said that the order of the court ‘will not be reversed on appeal except for a manifest abuse of discretion,’ following the general rule as announced in 3 R. C. L. 63, to the effect that in ‘the absence of evidence ■of flagrant abuse the appellate court will not interfere.’ While it might have been entirely proper and even more appropriate to have set aside the entire forfeiture, still, this court cannot say that there was a ‘manifest’ or ‘flagrant’ abuse of discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 15, 166 Wash. 356, 84 A.L.R. 416, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jimas-wash-1932.