Opinion
SUMMARY
Bankers Insurance Company appeals from the denial of its motion to vacate a judgment ordering the forfeiture of an $80,000 bail bond. Bankers asserts the court had no jurisdiction to enter summary judgment against the surety on the bond, because the court (at Bankers’s request) extended the statutory time for setting aside the forfeiture beyond the time authorized by statute. As a result, summary judgment was granted after the time within *1380 which the court was authorized to do so had expired. We affirm the court’s order refusing to vacate its grant of summary judgment. Although the court acted in excess of its jurisdiction when it acceded to Bankers’s request to extend the time for setting aside the forfeiture, Bankers is estopped from challenging both that order and the summary judgment premised upon it.
FACTUAL, LEGAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Bankers posted a surety bond of $80,000 to secure the appearance of defendant Karen Cholakian on a complaint alleging several felonies. Cholakian did not appear on January 29, 2007, for the setting of a preliminary hearing, and the trial court (Judge Patrick Hegarty) ordered bail forfeited. Notice of forfeiture was mailed to the surety on the same date.
Under the statutes governing bail bonds, if a defendant appears, either voluntarily or in custody, within 180 days of the date of mailing the notice of forfeiture, the court must vacate the order of forfeiture and exonerate the bond. (Pen. Code, § 1305, subd. (c)(1).)
1
At any time within this period— referred to variously as the appearance period or the exoneration period, which is extended to 185 days to account for mailing of the notice of forfeiture—the surety may seek an order extending the 185-day period. The court may, if good cause is shown for doing so, order the period extended “to a time not exceeding 180 days from its order.” (§ 1305.4; see § 1305, subd. (i).) Where several shorter extensions are granted, the courts have held that section 1305.4 allows “an extension of no more than 180 days past the 180-day [(effectively the 185-day)] period set forth in section 1305.”
(People
v.
Taylor Billingslea Bail Bonds
(1999)
In this case, Bankers filed a motion on July 18, 2007, to extend the 185-day period, which was to expire on August 2, 2007. A hearing on the *1381 motion was held on August 20, 2007, 2 and the court (Judge Michelle R. Rosenblatt) extended the appearance period to November 20, 2007. 3
On November 19, 2007, the day before the extended appearance period was to expire, Bankers filed another motion to extend the period for an additional three months. The motion was heard on December 6, 2007, and the court (Judge Hegarty) found good cause to extend the statutory time to January 22, 2008.
On January 22, 2008, Bankers filed a third motion to extend the appearance period—according to the notice of motion, “for 6 months.” 4 The accompanying affidavit from B ankers’s agent requested that the court “grant me another 30 days extension,” which he stated “should fall within the jurisdictional statutory period of 180 days . . . .” The memorandum of points and authorities also concluded by stating that “an order for extension of the statutory time for a period of thirty (30) days should be granted.”
The trial court (Judge Hegarty) found good cause and granted Bankers’s motion, extending the statutory time period for almost six additional months, to July 15, 2008.
The defendant was never produced, and on July 21, 2008, the court (Judge Richard S. Kemalyan) entered summary judgment against Bankers on the bond, in the total amount of $80,320 ($80,000 plus $320 in court costs). The clerk mailed notice of entry of judgment on July 22, 2008. Bankers took no appeal from the judgment.
On October 10, 2008, after the time to appeal from the judgment expired, Bankers filed a motion to vacate the order of forfeiture and the judgment. According to the docket report in the underlying criminal case, the trial court (Judge Hegarty) denied the motion on October 27, 2008, and Bankers filed a notice of appeal from Judge Hegarty’s order on December 24, 2008. 5
*1382 DISCUSSION
Bankers argues, as it did in its motion to the trial court to vacate the judgment, that the court lost jurisdiction to enter summary judgment because it failed to do so within the time required by statute. We conclude that, while the trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction when it extended the appearance period to July 15, 2008, Bankers is precluded from challenging the court’s action under the rule that a litigant who stipulates to a procedure in excess of jurisdiction may be estopped from contesting the trial court’s authority.
As we have seen, the statute allows an extension of the appearance period “of no more than 180 days” past the 185-day period provided by section 1305. (See Taylor Billingslea, supra, 1A Cal.App.4th at p. 1199.) This means, in this case, that the maximum time Bankers could properly have been granted (absent circumstances requiring a tolling of the statute) 6 within which to justify vacating the forfeiture and exonerating the bond was 365 days— from January 29, 2007, to January 29, 2008. And section 1306 tells us that, if summary judgment is not entered “within 90 days after the date upon which it may first be entered”—here, 90 days after January 29, 2008—“the right to do so expires and the bail is exonerated.” (§ 1306, subd. (c).) Consequently, because summary judgment was not entered until several months later, on July 21, 2008, the trial court was without authority to enter summary judgment.
That, however, is not the end of the matter. “When a court has fundamental jurisdiction, but acts in excess of its jurisdiction, its act or judgment is merely voidable. [Citations.] That is, its act or judgment is valid until it is set aside, and a party may be precluded from setting it aside by ‘principles of estoppel, disfavor of collateral attack or res judicata.’ ”
(People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co.
(2004)
The question in this case is thus whether the trial court had jurisdiction in the fundamental sense—over the subject matter—when it extended the appearance period beyond the time permitted by statute and when, as a consequence, it entered summary judgment on July 21, 2008, more than 90
*1384
days after the time permitted by statute. If it had fundamental jurisdiction, then its action in excess of that jurisdiction is merely voidable, not void, and Bankers, having failed to appeal the judgment, may be precluded from challenging it either on grounds of estoppel or on grounds of improper collateral attack on a judgment. But if the court did not have fundamental jurisdiction—that is, “jurisdiction over the subject matter of the bail bond forfeiture”
(American Contractors, supra,
We conclude the trial court acted in excess of jurisdiction, and not outside the court’s fundamental jurisdiction over the bail bond forfeiture. In short, we agree with those cases—none of which are addressed by Bankers in its briefs—which have found that a surety may be estopped from challenging a summary judgment as untimely. Thus:
—In
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ranger Ins. Co.
(1999)
*1385
—In
National Automobile, supra,
In short, we see no reason not to apply the rule that a litigant who has stipulated or otherwise consented to a procedure in excess of jurisdiction may be estopped to question it. As
National Automobile
observed, the rule has been applied in circumstances “materially indistinguishable from those before us.”
(National Automobile, supra,
We do not intend by this opinion to create a broad estoppel rule applicable to any misstep made by the surety. We recognize that the statutory provisions are replete with technicalities, and the trial courts must be vigilant in following the statutory strictures. In the circumstances here, however, the surety’s affirmative conduct makes it appropriate to estop it from challenging the trial court’s erroneous extension of the appearance period. To rule otherwise on this record would create a wholly unacceptable precedent, encouraging sureties to request multiple extensions from busy judges and, when their requests are honored and they nevertheless cannot produce the defendant, claim that they were wrong to have asked for further time and the judge should not have listened to their entreaties. To permit the surety to have it both ways—to obtain more time to avoid forfeiture of the bond, and then to have the bond exonerated because the judge gave them more time—would be to allow an intolerable manipulation of the trial courts. This we cannot and will not condone.
*1387 DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed. The County of Los Angeles is to recover its costs on appeal.
Bigelow, P. J., and Rubin, J., concurred.
Notes
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
A motion timely filed within the 180-day period may be heard within 30 days of the expiration of the 180-day period. (§ 1305, subd. (i).)
The court’s order extending the time to November 20 was signed and entered some two months later, on October 29, 2007.
The People waived the 10-day notice that the court may require as a condition precedent for granting a motion to extend the 180-day statutory period. (§ 1305, subd. (i).)
The appellate record does not contain any order signed by Judge Hegarty denying Bankers’s motion to vacate the judgment. In response to this court’s request for a copy of the order from which the appeal was taken, Bankers submitted a certified copy of the docket report in the underlying criminal case, which contains an entry showing that Bankers’s motion was denied on October 27, 2008.
Under section 1305, the court “shall order the tolling of the 180-day period” during a period of temporary disability—where the defendant is unable to appear in court during the remainder of the 180-day period because he or she is temporarily disabled by reason of illness, insanity, or detention by military or civil authorities (and absence of the defendant “is without the connivance of the bail”). (§ 1305, subd. (e).)
American Contractors
explained that in ordinary usage “ ‘the phrase “lack of jurisdiction” is not limited to these fundamental situations.’ [Citation.] It may also ‘be applied to a case where, though the court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties in the fundamental sense, it has no “jurisdiction” (or power) to act except in a particular manner, or to give certain kinds of relief, or to act without the occurrence of certain procedural prerequisites.’ [Citation.] ‘ “[W]hen a statute authorizes [a] prescribed procedure, and the court acts contrary to the authority thus conferred, it has exceeded its jurisdiction.” ’ [Citation.]”
(American Contractors, supra,
In re Griffin
involved a defendant who had violated the terms of his probation and sought a continuance to obtain private counsel; the continuance was granted, and as a result the hearing (at which the court revoked probation) occurred after the defendant’s probation had expired.
(In re Griffin, supra,
The court found its conclusion “even more compelling” than in
Ranger. (National Automobile, supra,
The circumstances here are materially different from those in
People v. Amwest Surety Ins. Co.
(2004)
We note as well that errors in excess of jurisdiction “are generally not subject to collateral attack once the judgment is final” unless unusual circumstances prevented an earlier and more appropriate attack.
(American Contractors, supra,
