Rainwater filed a petition for pre-conviction habeas corpus relief, see OCGA § 9-14-1 (a), asserting he was being unlawfully restrained because he was denied bail. The habeas corpus court denied relief and Rainwater appealed.
Via two Douglas County warrants, Rainwater was arrested for theft by receiving stolen property and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Shortly thereafter, Rainwater was released on bond.
Rainwater sought bond for the new charges; however, bond was denied on that occasion because it was determined that Rainwater
In the meantime, Rainwater found himself incarcerated in Carroll County, not Douglas County, pursuant to a prisoner care and housing agreement. Accordingly, Rainwater filed a petition for habeas corpus in Carroll County, naming Terry Langley, the Carroll County Sheriff, as the defendant, and alleging that he was being unlawfully restrained because (1) he had already posted bond for predicate acts underlying the RICO charges and (2) bond should have been set in connection with warrants for which Rainwater was incarcerated without being indicted for more than 90 days. Sheriff Langley answered the petition and asserted, inter alia, that the Douglas County Sheriff was an indispensable party.
Following a hearing, the habeas court determined that venue was proper in Carroll County.
1. On its face, the habeas court’s order purports to do no more than deny Rainwater’s “motion for bond.” However, the function and effect of the order are to deny Rainwater’s petition for habeas corpus; and the parties and habeas corpus court have treated it as such. Accordingly, we will construe and classify the order as a final judgment denying habeas corpus relief. See Thomas v. RGL Assoc.,
2. Habeas corpus will lie to determine whether bail is so excessive as to amount to a refusal to grant bail. Jones v. Grimes,
3. Rainwater asserts he is being illegally restrained because he already posted bond for two of the predicate RICO offenses, and those offenses are subsumed in the RICO indictment. We disagree.
The law is clear:
When a person posts bail bond prior to a preliminary or commitment hearing and is later bound over to another court for trial, the original bail bond shall not terminate but shall be*129 valid to provide for the person’s appearance at the trial of the case unless the amount of the bail is set higher by lawful authority, in which case new bail bond shall be posted.
(Emphasis supplied.) OCGA § 17-6-14 (a). Here Rainwater posted bond following his arrest for theft by receiving stolen property and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. That bond sufficed to provide for Rainwater’s appearance upon the trial of those charges; but it cannot be said that it sufficed for a subsequent RICO charge. See OCGA § 17-6-14 (a).
Wells v. Terrell,
4. Relying upon OCGA § 17-7-50, Rainwater asserts that he is entitled to habeas corpus relief because he was incarcerated upon the underlying RICO charges without having bond set. This assertion is without merit.
Under OCGA § 17-7-50, bail must be set by the trial judge if a person is arrested and incarcerated for more than 90 days without bail and without indictment. Burke v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Bond was set in the amount of $250,000.
The court did not rule expressly upon the indispensable party issue.
