Opinion
Bankers Insurance Company (Bankers) appeals from an order denying its motion to set aside the summary judgment entered against it, discharge a forfeiture and exonerate its bail bond. 1 We find no error and affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORIES
On August 15, 2007, Bankers’s agent posted a $17,500 bond for the release of Jaime Villa (Villa) from custody. The bond stated that Villa had been ordered to appear in court on August 27, 2007, on charges under Health and Safety Code sections 11378 and 11379.
2
Bankers specifically undertook “that [Villa] will appear in the above named court on the date above set forth to
The case was called on August 17, 2007, but dropped from the calendar without any action being taken. Minutes of the hearing note that Villa was not in custody and was bonded for August 27, 2007. On August 18, the Fresno County District Attorney filed a criminal complaint against Villa charging him with possession for sale of one ounce or more of methamphetamine (Health & Saf. Code, § 11378 3 (count 1)), transport for sale of one ounce or more of methamphetamine (§ 11379, subd. (a) (count 2)), and false compartment activity (§ 11366.8, subd. (a) (count 3)).
Villa appeared at the August 27, 2007 arraignment and August 29, 2007 pre-preliminary hearing. Bail was not mentioned at either hearing, although the minutes for each hearing note that Villa remained on surety bond. Despite being ordered to attend a hearing on September 12, 2007, Villa failed to appear. The trial court issued a bench warrant, set bail at $230,000 and ordered the bond forfeited. Notice of forfeiture was mailed to Bankers on September 13, 2007.
On March 14, 2008, Bankers filed a motion requesting an extension of time on forfeiture pursuant to Penal Code section 1305.4. The trial court entered summary judgment against Bankers on October 7, 2008, in the principal sum of $17,500 plus costs and interest, after finding that 185 days had elapsed and the forfeiture had not been set aside.
On November 6, 2008, Bankers filed a motion to set aside the summary judgment, discharge the forfeiture, and set aside the bond. It argued the trial court lost jurisdiction over the bond when the jail released Villa on insufficient bail pursuant to the bail schedule. Pointing out that pursuant to Penal Code section 1269b, the superior court adopted a countywide bail schedule which an officer authorized to release a defendant uses to fix bail, Bankers asserted the jail erroneously determined Villa’s bail to be $17,500 when the charges in the complaint warranted bail of $115,000 pursuant to the bail schedule. According to Bankers, the jail’s mistake in improperly setting Villa’s bail pursuant to the bail schedule prevented it from properly evaluating its risk in posting bail, thereby rendering the bond void.
DISCUSSION
Bankers contends that when the state changes the conditions of a bail bond without the surety’s consent, the surety is discharged. In Bankers’s view, the complaint filed against Villa changed the conditions of his bond and it is therefore entitled to have the bond exonerated. We disagree.
Ordinarily we review an order denying a motion to vacate the forfeiture of a bail bond under an abuse of discretion standard of review.
(People v. Legion Ins. Co.
(2002)
When a criminal defendant fails to appear for any occasion where his presence is required, a trial court must declare a bail bond forfeited. (Pen. Code, § 1305, subd. (a).) There are statutory grounds for vacating forfeiture and exonerating a bond. (Pen. Code, § 1305, subds. (c), (d), (f), (g).) At any time, a surety may surrender a defendant and exonerate a bond under Penal Code section 1300, subdivision (a). Here, when Villa failed to appear at the
A bail bond is a contract between the government and the surety.
(People
v.
Amwest Surety Ins. Co.
(1991)
The terms of a bail bond are material facts. Here, the bail bond uses the term “charge” in two ways. First, the bond states that Villa was to appear in court on August 27, 2007, on sections 11378 and 11379 “charge/s.” Then, the subsequent “undertaking provision” in the bond, which we have set out above, includes the statement that Bankers undertook to ensure that Villa would appear “to answer any charge in any accusatory pleading [that is] based upon the acts supporting the complaint filed against him.” The appellate record does not show that any complaint had been filed against Villa when the bail bond issued on August 15, 2007, and does not contain any arrest or booking records, so the complete basis of the arrest is unknown. The charges listed in the bond do not establish that the arrest was made solely based on violations of sections 11378 and 11379, or the amount of drugs involved. Therefore, even though the complaint included charges under sections 11378 and 11379 that would have resulted in a higher bail amount based on the amount of drugs involved and a third charge that was not listed on the bond, under the terms of the “undertaking provision,” it cannot be considered to be a unilateral and material increase in the risk assumed by Bankers. Bankers was free to monitor the case and determine what charges ultimately were made in the original complaint, and free to surrender Villa pursuant to Penal Code section 1300 if it believed the bond was inadequate to cover the flight risk presented by the complaint.
Bankers’s reliance on
People v. Surety Ins. Co.
(1983)
We are not dealing here, however, with the lack of notice under Penal Code section 1303, as there has been only one complaint filed. Moreover, we note the “undertaking provision” in the instant bail bond appears designed to deal with situations where new accusatory pleadings are filed after the original complaint. In that respect, it is different from the language for written undertakings set out in Penal Code section 1278, which states in part that sureties undertake that the criminal defendant “will appear and answer any charge in any accusatory pleading based upon the acts supporting the charge above mentioned,” that is, the charge on which the court ordered the defendant to appear.
Bankers cites to a Colorado case,
People v. Jones
(Colo.Ct.App. 1994)
Citing a long list of federal and out-of-state cases, Bankers argues that a surety is entitled to stand on its contract and increasing the risk to a surety is the gravamen of a unilateral change on the government’s part. We have no quarrel with those arguments; they simply do not apply to this case.
For the first time on appeal, Bankers contends government action rendered its performance impossible and that equitable estoppel should apply. Bankers has not shown, however, how its performance was rendered impossible. While Bankers asserts its performance was rendered impossible because the bail schedule was available only to the jailer, as the People point out, the bail schedule is available on the Fresno County Superior Court’s Web site and therefore equally available to Bankers. Bankers also asserts impossibility of performance from the trial court’s failure to comply with the requirement of Penal Code sections 1305 and 1306 that it announce the change in charges and bail amount, and remand Villa to custody. We can find nothing in those sections, however, that required the trial court to act as Bankers suggests under these circumstances.
Bankers’s equitable estoppel claim also fails because there is nothing in the record to show that the People misrepresented or concealed material facts. (See
People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co.
(2006)
The trial court did not err in denying Bankers’s motion to set aside the summary judgment, vacate the forfeiture and exonerate the bond.
DISPOSITION
The order denying Bankers’s motion to set aside the summary judgment and forfeiture of the bail bond, and to determine that the bond was exonerated, is affirmed.
Vartabedian, Acting P. J., and Wiseman, J., concurred.
Notes
On our own motion, we struck Bankers’s initial opening brief after finding it failed to comply with the California Rules of Court, and granted Bankers 15 days within which to file a new opening brief. Bankers did so. In the respondent’s brief, the People urge us to dismiss the appeal based on continued deficiencies in the second opening brief. Although we acknowledge the second opening brief has deficiencies, we nonetheless deny the People’s request to dismiss and accordingly decide the matter on the merits.
The record does not reveal precisely how the bond amount was determined. According to the Fresno County master bail schedule (bail schedule), of which this court has taken judicial notice at the county’s request, the base bail for violations of Health and Safety Code sections 11378 and 11379 where the amount of drugs involved is less than one ounce is $7,500 and $10,000, respectively. The arrest report is not part of the record. While Bankers attached as an
Subsequent statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code unless otherwise noted.
The People contend it is unclear what order or judgment is being appealed because Bankers’s opening brief does not contain a statement of appealability. The notice of appeal purports to appeal from the forfeiture order, which the People correctly note is a nonappealable order.
(People
v.
Oppenheimer
(1956)
