State v. Scherer

671 N.E.2d 545, 108 Ohio App. 3d 586
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1995
DocketNo. 95 CA 54.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 671 N.E.2d 545 (State v. Scherer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Scherer, 671 N.E.2d 545, 108 Ohio App. 3d 586 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Grady, Judge.

American Bankers Insurance Company and its agents, Thomas and Vicki Short, appeal from a judgment forfeiting a surety bond appellants had posted to *589 secure the pretrial release of their principal, Anthony Scherer, when he failed to appear in court.

Anthony Scherer was indicted on one count of passing bad checks, R.C. 2913.11(A). His bond was set at $5,000, pursuant to Crim.R. 46(C)(4). Scherer’s release from jail was secured by a bond posted by Thomas and Vicki Short on behalf of American Bankers Insurance Company.

As a condition of his release on bond, Scherer was ordered by the court to maintain his residence in Buffalo, Kentucky, and to not move from there without giving prior notice to the court’s Probation Department. Scherer was also required to report weekly to the Probation Department by telephone.

On February 1, 1995, Scherer entered a plea of guilty to the passing bad checks charge. The court set sentencing for March 24, 1995. Scherer’s bond was continued and he returned to Kentucky.

On February 17,1995, the sureties learned that Scherer had failed to appear in Kettering Municipal Court on unrelated misdemeanor charges. The sureties called Scherer’s probation officer in Kentucky, who told them that Scherer had apparently moved and that his whereabouts were unknown. The sureties then advised Scherer’s Greene County probation officer that Scherer appeared to have violated the conditions of his release by moving without giving prior notice. The sureties requested a felony arrest warrant so that Scherer could be arrested in Kentucky and returned to Ohio.

Based on the actions of the sureties, the trial court determined that Scherer had violated the terms of his release and issued a warrant for his arrest. Scherer was arrested on the warrant in Kentucky. However, he was detained by Kentucky to face probation revocation charges based on his passing bad checks conviction in Ohio. Kentucky revoked his probation, and also filed new charges for other offenses Scherer had committed there. Scherer was convicted of these new charges. He was incarcerated by Kentucky, which has refused to release him for return to Ohio.

When Scherer failed to appear for his sentencing on the bad check charge, the state moved for forfeiture of the $5,000 bond which the appellants had filed on Scherer’s behalf. Pursuant to R.C. 2937.36(C), the trial court ordered the bond forfeited, and set a date for the sureties to show good cause why a judgment of forfeiture should not be entered against them.

A bond forfeiture hearing was held, at which the sureties asserted the defense of impossibility of performance as good cause for being excused from their obligation on the bond. On July 13, 1995, the trial court issued its judgment entry ordering forfeiture of Scherer’s $5,000 bond. The trial court held that the impossibility of performance defense asserted by the sureties was negated by the *590 fact that Scherer’s present incarceration in Kentucky was the result of Scherer’s own misdeeds, and that the sureties should not benefit from defendant’s misbehavior.

The sureties have timely appealed from the trial court’s order forfeiting Scherer’s $5,000 bond. The forfeiture has been stayed pending this appeal.

Assignment of Error

“The intervention of Kentucky authorities incarcerating defendant for a previously ordered sentence made surety’s plan to return defendant impossible of performance.”

“The purpose of bail is to ensure that the defendant appears at all stages of the criminal proceedings.” Crim.R. 46(A). If the court determines that the defendant’s release on a personal recognizance or an unsecured appearance bond is insufficient to that purpose, the court may “[rjequire the execution of a bail bond with sufficient solvent sureties.” Crim.R. 46(C)(4). A surety who has posted a bond is discharged when the defendant makes a final appearance in the proceeding, or the accused is surrendered or delivered to the court or is arrested on the request of the surety, or the surety pays the sum entered in any order of forfeiture after the defendant has failed to appear. R.C. 2937.40(A).

The court may order the bail posted by the defendant forfeited for failure to appear as ordered. R.C. 2937.35. If the bail is in the form of a surety bond, forfeiture is governed by R.C. 2937.36(C), which states:

“Upon declaration of forfeiture, the magistrate or clerk of the court adjudging forfeiture shall * * * notify accused and each surety by ordinary mail at the address shown by them in their affidavits of qualification or on the record of the case, of the default of the accused and the adjudication of forfeiture and require each of them to show cause on or before a date certain to be stated in the notice, and which shall be not less than twenty nor more than thirty days from date of mailing notice, why judgment should not be entered against each of them for the penalty stated in the recognizance. If good cause by production of the body of the accused or otherwise is not shoim, the court or magistrate shall thereupon enter judgment against the sureties or either of them, so notified, in such amount, not exceeding the penalty of the bond, as has been set in the adjudication of forfeiture, and shall award execution therefor as in civil cases.” (Emphasis added.)

A surety bond is a contract in which the surety promises the court that it will pay a monetary penalty if the accused who is released on the bond posted by the surety fails to appear in court when ordered. The nonappearance operates as a condition precedent to the surety’s duty to perform. The surety *591 may be excused from its duty to pay the penalty by demonstrating good cause why judgment should not be entered against the surety in the amount of its bond. That showing may consist of producing the “body” of the accused, or “otherwise.” R.C. 2937.36(C).

Because a surety bond is a contract, it is subject to the rules governing performance of contracts. According to the rule concerning impossibility of performance, a promisor may be excused from an obligation to the promisee when the performance promised is rendered impossible by operation of law, if that impossibility was not foreseeable to the promisor. The rule is founded on the theory that when the object of an agreement is forbidden by law, the promisor is excused from undertaking its accomplishment. Where the performance promised is only temporarily prohibited, the contract remains in force, though dormant, and when the legal impediment is removed the surety must perform on its undertaking.

A criminal defendant who has been incarcerated by one jurisdiction cannot appear in the courts of another while that incarceration continues, absent extradition by the latter jurisdiction. While the defendant remains incarcerated, a surety who is obligated on. a bail bond that obtained the defendant’s release by the latter’s jurisdiction may be excused from paying the penalty the bond requires because the object of the surety’s promise, the defendant’s appearance, is forbidden by law. However, the surety must demonstrate that the condition which rendered the defendant’s appearance impossible was also unforeseeable prior to its occurrence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
671 N.E.2d 545, 108 Ohio App. 3d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scherer-ohioctapp-1995.