50 Ga. App. 777 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
This is a scire facias proceeding for the collection from the principal and surety of the $15,000 penalty in a criminal supersedeas bond. In 1927 Saunders was jointly indicted with Tiffany for selling and offering to sell as “dealer” certain shares of “Class D” stock, without first having obtained a license, in violation of the Georgia securities statutes, pleaded not guilty, and on September 27, 1929, was found guilty by a jury, and his punishment was fixed by the verdict and judgment as three to five years at hard labor in the penitentiary, “to be computed from the date of his delivery.” In carrying his case to the Supreme Court, he filed this supersedeas bond, conditioned, as required by section 1104 of the Penal Code (1910), that he would “be present in person in said Fulton superior court to abide the final judgment, order, and sentence of the court in said cause.” American Surety Company of New York signed the bond as surety. On May 12, 1931, the Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed the judgment. Saunders v. State, 172 Ga. 770 (supra). On June 15, 1931, the
The trial calendar of the criminal division of the superior court shows that the case was assigned thereon for March 30, May 30, and June 10, 1932. The evidence is not clear as to just what happened on or between those dates, and as to whether Saunders was present on those dates in the court-room, or for what purpose he was there. Some of the testimony would have authorized a finding that he was in the court-room during a discussion of his case on one occasion. It appears, however, that his presence and purpose were “to secure an extension of time” in endeavoring to persuade the judge to reduce his sentence to a fine or permit him to make restitution and avoid imprisonment, giving him “time to get up the money and allow him to pay a fine if he did.” But there is nothing to show that the judge was in any way informed that he was present for the purpose of abiding the final judgment or sentence of the court. All that appears is that, “if the judge had not granted the time, then he would have surrendered,” and as stated by counsel for the surety in their brief, “the witnesses all agreed that there was no formal offer by Saunders or his counsel to surrender Saunders into the custody of the court.” No judgment or order of the court was entered pending these negotiations, during which Saunders disappeared and was not rearrested. On September 28, 1933, when the ease was assigned to the trial calendar, Saunders was called, and the surety was called upon to produce the body of the principal in court, in accordance with the condition of the bond that he should “be present to abide the final order, judgment, and sentence,” and on default an order was entered reciting these facts and directing that a scire facias issue. The scire facias now under consideration was issued on the same daté, and was served on the surety. It recited the default and ordered the principal and surety tó show cause at the November term, 1933, why final judgment should not be entered on the recognizance. The surety filed a motion to quash and dismiss the scire
One contention of the surety, under its motion to quash the scire facias issued on the supersedeas bond in question, is that the sentence of the defendant principal was void because it imposed imprisonment for a felony instead of punishment for a misdemeanor, as required by section 36 of the Georgia securities law of 1920. Ga. L. 1920, pp. 250, 270. The surety contends that it is the law of the ease, under the decision of the Supreme Court in affirming the judgment of conviction against Saunders, the principal (Saunders v. State, supra), that the indictment was under the law of 1920 making thé offense a misdemeanor, and not under the act of 1922 amending section 36 of the original law. Ga. L. 1922, pp. 156, 172. This contention is based on the following language in that decision: “ Other grounds of demurrer contend that because the ‘issuers’ of securities, included in the class legislated against are not included in the caption of the act of 1922, amending the Georgia securities law, section 36 thereof discriminates in favor of ‘issuers’ in that they are not subjected to the penalties prescribed for dealers, brokers, solicitors, and agents, and that it therefore deprives defendant of the equal protection of law guaranteed by the Federal constitution. Held: Conceding that the act of 1922 is unconstitutional as contended by plaintiff in error, the indictment would not be affected. The indictment is based on the securities law previously enacted, and the case is not dependent on the validity of the said act of 1922 in the respect as- contended. Under the Smith case, supra [161 Ga. 103, 129 S. E. 766], ‘issuers’ are not subject to the penalties imposed under the ‘blue-sky’ law. This does not render the act, as applied to plaintiff in error, void because in conflict with the due-process clause of the Federal constitution. The State may constitutionally make reasonable classifications, and a classification which exempts owners but penalizes dealers in the sale of securities would be reasonable and not arbitrary.” (Italics ours.) It is strenuously argued that the italicized clause amounts to a holding that the defendant was indicted for a misdemeanor under the 1920 act, and that, the judgment imposing a felony sentence under the amendatory act of 1922 being a nullity, there was no breach of the bail bond by failure of the defendant to appear or of the surety to produce him to abide this void judgment and
But even if the decision of the Supreme Court could properly be construed, as contended, as a holding that the defendant was in-dieted only under the act of 1920 for a misdemeanor, so that his sentence for a felony was a nullity, this would not result in a discharge of the defendant or the surety. Although it is the general rule that trial courts have no power, after the end of the term at which a sentence is imposed, to “modify and change the sentence formerly imposed,” and that such a new judgment is a nullity (Porter v. Garmony, 148 Ga. 261, 262, 96 S. E. 426; Auldridge v. Womble, 157 Ga. 64, 120 S. E. 620), nevertheless a defendant, after a plea or verdict of guilty, may, when a void sentence has been imposed, be returned before the proper court “in order that a legal sentence may be imposed upon him in accordance” with law. Morris v. Clark, 156 Ga. 489 (2) (119 S. E. 303); Oliver v. Lowry, 173 Ga. 892, 893 (161 S. E. 828); Hollins v. State, 48 Ga. App. 672 (173 S. E. 179). The condition of the instant bond requiring the defendant to be personally present in the trial court “to abide the final judgment, order, and sentence of the court,” and the defendant after the verdict of guilty still remaining subject to lawful sentence, it was the duty of himself and his surety, after the United States Supreme Court had dismissed his appeal from his conviction, following the affirmance of the judgment of conviction by the Supreme Court of Georgia, that he appear in the trial court to “abide” such final sentence as would then be rendered. If the original sentence was a nullity, on motion of the defendant, the State, or the court itself, a lawful sentence could then have been imposed, since the court would not have lacked the powers which the Supreme Court has held it could be directed to exercise after habeas corpus proceedings. Both the original order of forfeiture and the scire facias issued thereon in September, 1933, recite merely that the defendant was called and his surety was' called to'
The second ground of the motion to quash is also without merit. It is contended that, even if the offense charged was under the amendatory act of 1922, the verdict and judgment were void, because the act is unconstitutional in discriminating against “dealers” and in favor of “issuers” of securities,- since issuers are not subjected to the penalties imposed on dealers such as the defendant in this case. While, under the decision in Smith v. State, supra, it was held that so much of the amended section 36 of the securities law of 1922 as made it a felony for an “issuer” of Class D securities to sell or offer the same without a license was unconstitutional and void by reason of the title of the statute, and the Supreme Court in passing upon the judgment of conviction in the present case therefore held that “the statute in question must be construed as if the word ‘issuer’ were not contained in section 36” (172 Ga. 771), the court nevertheless determined the constitutional question here raised, which was also before it in that case, adversely to the defendant. On page 772 it was said: “This does not render the act, as applied to plaintiff in error, void because in conflict with the due process clause of the Federal constitution.” Then, with manifest reference to the grounds of demurrer stated at the beginning of the same paragraph of its decision, that the statute “discriminates in favor of issuers in that they are not subjected to the penalties prescribed for dealers” and others mentioned, and “therefore deprives defendant of the equal protection of law guaranteed by the Federal constitution,” the court added: “The State may constitutionally make reasonable classifications, and a classification which exempts owners but penalizes dealers in the sale of securities would be reasonable and not arbitrary.” Had the Supreme Court not already decided this constitutional question contrary to the contentions of the plaintiff in error, and were the
The contentions of the demurrer that, after the Georgia Supreme Court had affirmed the judgment of conviction, and the United States Supreme Court dismissed the defendant's writ of error on December 14, 1931, leaving the original judgment in force, the State must have proceeded to forfeit the bond either at the first term thereafter, during the November term, or at the January term, 1932, and within a reasonable time, and that the State is debarred by its failure or laches from proceeding in the present forfeiture proceedings, begun at the September term, 1933, are unsupported by any provision of statute or any principle of law of which we are aware. The original judgment provided that the three to five year sentence should begin “from the date of [the defendant's] delivery.” After the final disposal of the case by the United States Supreme Court and pending such “delivery,” no statute of limitations or other prohibition of law intervened to prevent the State from proceeding as it has done.
The court did not err in denying on the general grounds the surety's motion for a new trial from the verdict directed in favor of the State on the scire facias forfeiting the defendant’s bond. Nor was the direction of the verdict error under the record and evidence, upon the contention that there was evidence which would have authorized the jury to find that the defendant had' appeared in court and satisfied the condition of the bond, and that the liability of the surety was therefore discharged. The bond was a recognizance to obtain a supersedeas while the cause was pending in the appellate courts. It was conditioned, as required by the Penal Code, § 1104, that the “defendant shall be present in person in said Fulton superior court to abide the final judgment, order, and sentence of the court.” (Italics ours.) The surety insists that there was evidence from which the jury could have found that on one occasion the defendant was physically “present” somewhere in the court-room, when his criminal case was set on the trial calendar on one of the dates, March 30, May 30, or June 10, 1932, at which time consideration was given to his counsel's application to permit him to undertake to raise money to remunerate those suffering from his offense, so that if he succeeded, he might be permitted to pay a fine; and that the presence of the defendant
This court held, in Perkins v. Terrell, 1 Ga. App. 250 (58 S. E. 133) : “Producing or presenting a principal in court is not all that is required to discharge the obligation and relieve securities from their liability under a criminal bond. In order for a surrender of the principal in open court to be effective, the attention of the court must be called to the presence of the defendant principal, and the intention to surrender him must be definitely expressed and understood. The highest evidence of surrender is an exoneretur entered upon the minutes.” In an ordinary criminal appearance bond, “the bail is not bound for the appearance of the principal at a term of the court subsequent to that at which he was tried, convicted, and sentenced” for, after the sentence, the sentence itself operates as an exoneretur, without any entry thereof on the minutes, to discharge the bail. Roberts v. Gordon, 86 Ga. 386 (12 S. E. 648); Governor v. Kemp, 12 Ga. 466. But before sentence is passed, as was held in Dennard v. State, 2 Ga. 137, 138, such a bond “binds the principal not onlyto be and appear at the term to which it is returnable, but to continue to appear until acquitted, or in some legal way discharged, or if tried and found guilty, until the sentence of
In the instant case, unlike an ordinary bail bond, the supersedeas bond did not require merely an appearance to meet the criminal charge, but the bond was for the purpose of suspending the serving of the sentence of imprisonment until the cause should be ripe for a final judgment and sentence, if and after the appellate courts should affirm the judgment. This bond necessitated the defendant’s appearance “to abide” the final sentence. This express condition in the supersedeas bond was thus even more stringent in terms than that of an ordinary appearance bond, given before conviction. The decisions of our courts as to what would constitute a compliance with such an appearance bond, or a surrender thereunder, would therefore be applicable to the bond now in question. It follows that, under the orders and entries shown in the record and the oral testimony, the obligation of the principal and the surety that the principal should appear to “abide” the final sentence continued until such sentence was imposed, or at least until the principal’s readiness to “ abide” such sentence was indicated to the court, and that no discharge of the principal was shown either by any final sentence or by any indication to the court of the principal’s readiness; the evidence failing to show any formal surrender either to the court or any proper officer, any offer to surrender, any statement to the court that the principal was present to “abide” its final sentence, but showing merely a conditional purpose on the part of the principal and his counsel that a surrender would be later made if they were unsuccessful in obtaining a modification of the original sentence; and no entry on the minutes appearing to show either any discharge of the principal or surety, or any surrender of the principal, or any exoneretur, or any leave to the defendant to depart the court. Whether or not a statement to the court by the principal or his counsel or by the surety, while the principal was present in court, that he was ready for the final sentence to be imposed, would amount to a surrender or otherwise effect a discharge of the bond, in the absence of any such state
Since, under the preceding rulings, it was irrelevant as to what the purpose of the defendant and his counsel may have been in having the defendant “come to Atlanta,” or as to their purpose to deliver him to the court if their negotiations seeking a reduction in his sentence should fail, where such purpose was never expressed to the court, there was no error, under the special grounds of the motion for a new trial, in excluding this evidence. Moreover, it appears from the brief of evidence that the witness was allowed to testify elsewhere as to all essential portions of the excluded testimony.
Judgment affirmed.