In this appeal, we consider whether the Commonwealth had standing to assert the constitutional rights of third parties as the sole basis of its challenge to the constitutionality of the 1979 amendment to Code § 19.2-135.
Prior to an amendment adopted in 1979, the pertinent portion of Code § 19.2-135 provided that, in the event of a violation of any condition of recognizance, a court, in addition to remanding the principal to jail, could forfeit “all or any part” of the surety thereon. Acts 1977, c. 287. In 1979, the statute was amended to provide that “if the principal is remanded to jail, the surety is discharged from liability thereon; provided, however, when a cash recognizance is given, the court may forfeit all or any part of such cash recognizance. . . .” Acts 1979, c. 735.
After the amendment became effective, Esper Bonding Company (Esper) executed a $3,500.00 surety bond for Andrew M. Fogel, who had been charged with a narcotics offense. Fogel was remanded to jail after being charged with assault, an offense committed while he was free on bond. Fogel was convicted of assault, and a district court judge forfeited the bond.
Esper appealed to the circuit' court, contending that because Fogel had been remanded to jail, the 1979 amendment to Code § 19.2-135 did not permit the court to forfeit the bond. In response, the Commonwealth argued that the classification created by the 1979 amendment discriminated against those posting cash bonds in violation of the equal protection clause. The trial court agreed with the Commonwealth, declared the bond forfeited, remitted $3,000 of the forfeiture, and ordered Esper “to pay the Clerk the sum of $500.00 and Court costs.”
As a general rule, where a statute is constitutional as applied to a litigant, the litigant has no standing to challenge the statute on the ground that it may be unconstitutional on its face, that is, as applied to a third person in a hypothetical situation.
See, e.g., Ulster County Court
v.
Allen,
As the Commonwealth notes, the rule is not without exception. A litigant may have standing to make a facial challenge invoking the First Amendment rights of third parties.
Schaumburg
v.
Citizens for Better Environ.,
However, the
Craig
exception is conditional; it does not apply and the general standing rule prevails when “the interests of the litigant and the rights of the proposed third parties are in no way mutually interdependent.”
Craig
v.
Boren,
Applying the general rule, we hold that the Commonwealth had no standing to assert the constitutional rights of those posting cash bonds. * Consequently, we will reverse the judgment of the trial court and enter final judgment discharging Esper from liability on the bond.
Reversed and final judgment.
Notes
Our holding is without prejudice to the standing of one who has posted a cash bond, which has been forfeited by a court, to challenge the constitutionality of the 1979 amendment to Code § 19.2-135.
