State v. Sandoz

246 So. 2d 21, 258 La. 297, 1971 La. LEXIS 4531
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 29, 1971
Docket50805
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 246 So. 2d 21 (State v. Sandoz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sandoz, 246 So. 2d 21, 258 La. 297, 1971 La. LEXIS 4531 (La. 1971).

Opinion

*301 BARHAM, Justice.

The State has appealed from a ruling of the district court setting aside and annulling a judgment of forfeiture of a bail bond posted for Elmo Sandoz under an indictment for felony theft. Appellate jurisdiction of this matter is vested in this court by authority of Louisiana Constitution Article 7, Section lO(S). 1

There is no dispute as to the factual circumstances of the case. On October 2, 1969, Elmo Sandoz was indicted by the Avoyelles Parish grand jury for the theft of $620.00. A $5000.00 bail bond was posted, with Wilton Sandoz and Beulah S. Viator as sureties. Neither Elmo Sandoz nor his sureties appeared on October 14, 1969, the day of arraignment, and upon a motion of the district attorney the court ordered defendant’s bond forfeited. On October 17 a formal judgment of forfeiture was rendered, read, and signed in open court.

On November 7, Wilton Sandoz, one of the sureties, filed an affidavit asking that a warrant issiIS for the arrest of the defendant Elmo Sandoz to answer the charge of “jumping bail”, and a warrant was issued. On the same day a second affidavit by the same surety averred that the defendant had been charged with felony theft, was charged with “jumping bail”, had fled the State of Louisiana, and was a fugitive from justice. This affidavit then particularized the whereabouts of the defendant at Waverly Street, Houston, Texas. The district attorney forwarded these affidavits and a copy of the indictment to the United States district attorney in Shreveport, requesting the office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation to obtain a warrant against the defendant and apprehend him. The last sentence of the letter is: “If it is necessary for you or the FBI to get in touch with Mr. Wilton J. Sandoz [the surety], his address is 944 W. Main Street, New Iberia, Louisiana.”

Acting upon the affidavits and information supplied by the surety, the United States marshal apprehended the defendant in Houston and delivered him there to the *303 sheriff of Avoyelles Parish, who returned him to the parish jail. The district attorney and counsel for the sureties stipulated that if the district attorney testified, he would state that he had personally mailed the letter and affidavits, and that the information furnished by the surety’s affidavits was the basis for the arrest by the United States marshal of the defendant in Houston. The defendant after being lodged in the parish jail did not post a new bail bond. He remained in jail for approximately two weeks and then escaped. At the time of the trial of this rule he was jailed in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and Avoyelles Parish had a detainer for his return to that jurisdiction upon his release in Lake Charles.

On April 15, 1970, within six months of the date of the judgment of forfeiture, the sureties filed a rule to show cause why that judgment forfeiting the bail bond should not be set aside. The trial court rendered judgment cancelling the bond forfeiture, and the State has appealed to this court. 2

It is the State’s contention on appeal that a surrender must be followed by trial and conviction or acquittal before a judgment of bond forfeiture can be set aside. It is the contention of the sureties that the prior law and the jurisprudence relied upon by the State have been significantly changed, and that now a timely surrender, as opposed to an appearance under other circumstances, gives a right for cancellation of a bond forfeiture without the necessity for trial and conviction or acquittal of the accused.

Prior to the adoption of the present Code of Criminal Procedure and the concurrent amendment to Title 15 of the Revised Statutes of 1950, the law pertinent to the issue under consideration was found in former R.S. 15:108 and 110. These former laws and their sources contained restrictive and now archaic provisions. A surety could make a “surrender” of an accused only prior to a bond forfeiture and then only for the purpose of being relieved from future responsibility. Further, the surrender had to be “in open court, or within the four walls of the prison”. By amendments (Act No. 411 of 1962, Secs. 6(4) and 8, and Act No. 220 of 1964, Sec. 1) to these laws and *305 the adoption of the present Code of Criminal Procedure (Arts. 338 and 339) and the present Title 15 (R.S. 15:85B), these restrictive provisions have been done away with.

R.S. 15:85, which is former R.S. 15:108 without change, reads in part:

“B. Any judgment forfeiting an appearance bond rendered under the provisions of this Section- shall, at any time within six months after rendition, be set aside upon the surrender or the appearance and trial and conviction or acquittal of the defendant, or upon a continuance granted upon motion of the district attorney after such appearance.” (Emphasis here and elsewhere supplied.)

This provision has remained stable since its inception except for changes in the length of the delay allowed after a bond forfeiture judgment, the change from the permissive to the mandatory for cancellation of the judgment when warranted, and the change which is so essential to our decision here: The introduction into that provision of “surrender” in addition to “appearance”. Before the 1962 amendment the pertinent phrase read: “ * * * be set aside upon the appearance, and trial -and conviction or acquittal of the defendant * * It is apparent that in 1962 the Legislature intended to differentiate, for the purpose of determining when bond forfeitures could be annulled, between a '“surrender” made by the accused or his surety and an “appearance” brought about under any other circumstances. Simultaneously former R.S. 15:110 was amended by the same act to read:

“Formal surrender by the surety of the accused within the four walls of the prison of the parish or to the sheriff or his deputy, in open court, at any time prior to forfeiture or within sixty days of judgment of forfeiture, shall operate as a discharge or release of the surety from his responsibility and when such formal surrender is made the responsibility of the surety shall cease, and any judgment of forfeiture shall be set aside, whether or not the acmsed has been brought to final trial and conviction or acquittal. However, unless formal surrender of the accused has been made as provided in this paragraph, the appearance and answer of the accused, upon call made as provided for in the preceding Sections, shall not operate as a discharge or release of any surety from his responsibility until the final trial and conviction or acquittal of such accused.”

For the first time “surrender” was defined by our law to include not only a surrender made prior to a bond forfeiture but also a surrender within the time provided after a bond forfeiture.

The Code of Criminal Procedure incorporated former R.S. 15 :110 in the following articles:

“Art. 338. Surrender of defendant

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Bluebook (online)
246 So. 2d 21, 258 La. 297, 1971 La. LEXIS 4531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sandoz-la-1971.