Hawkeye Bail Bonds is the surety on two bonds posted by Juan Jose Rojas-Cardona (the defendant) in two separate appeals from criminal convictions. After the convictions were affirmed on appeal, the defendant requested and obtained delays in the issuance of the mittimus in each case. When the extended time expired and the defendant did not appear, the court forfeited his bonds. The surety appealed, and we affirm.
Following the defendant’s first conviction, the district court sentenced him to an indeterminate sentence not to exceed five years and placed him on probation for two years. In the second case, the court sentenced him to an indeterminate sentence not to exceed five years. The defendant appealed and posted two separate appeal bonds of $1000 and $32,500. Hawkeye was the surety on both bonds. On July 21, 1993, we affirmed the defendant’s conviction of the first crime, and on June 28, 1994, the court of appeals affirmed his conviction of the second crime. After each affirmance, the clerk of our court issued a procedendo to the district court. The district court received the first proce-dendo on August 13, 1993, and the second on August 5,1994.
In the meantime, the defendant was arrested and tried in New Mexico. A federal district court there convicted him of a drug offense. Because this conviction constituted a violation of probation under the defendant’s first Iowa conviction, the State filed an application for probation revocation on April 1, 1994. The court eventually set a hearing on this matter for August 5,1994.
The defendant knew that the second Iowa conviction had been affirmed and that he would therefore soon be subject to the issuance of the mittimus in Iowa. However, because this mittimus would interfere with the sentencing then pending in federal court in New Mexico, set for August 1994, he applied for a stay of mittimus on both of his Iowa convictions. On August 5, 1994, the court extended the issuance of the mittimus until
Hawkeye raises three issues on appeal: (1)whether the court’s delays in the issuance of the mittimus were illegal, thus relieving the surety of its obligation; (2) whether extending the mittimus improperly modified Hawkeye’s obligation; and (3) whether the defendant’s appearance at the August 5,1994 probation revocation hearing constituted an appearance that would satisfy Hawkeye’s obligation.
The State raises issues regarding ripeness, Hawkeye’s standing to object to the forfeiture, and Hawkeye’s failure to preserve error on some of the issues. We summarily reject these objections, finding no merit in them, and therefore proceed to the merits of the appeal.
I. Authority to Delay Mittimus.
We have described a mittimus as
similar to an execution after judgment in a civil case. It is the means by which the judgment of the court is carried out.... The purpose of the mittimus is to tell the sheriff, who was not a party to the suit that produced the judgment, who he is to take into custody, why he is to take him, where he is to take him, and for how long.
State v. Orte,
Following disposition on appeal, the district court is vested with jurisdiction when procedendo is issued. Iowa Code § 814.25 (1993). When a defendant’s conviction is affirmed, “the original judgment shall be carried into execution as the appellate court shall direct.” Iowa Code § 814.23.
A procedendo is said to be an order by the appellate court requiring a lower court to proceed to judgment.
State ex rel. Garnett v. Lyons,
Iowa Code section 814.26 provides:
Unless some proceeding in the district court is directed, copies of the judgment of the district court and of the decision on appeal ... shall be delivered to the sheriff or the proper officer as an execution. The sheriff or proper officer shall be authorized to execute the judgment of the court or take any legal measures required to bring the action to a conclusion.
Hawkeye reads this section to require the district court to immediately order mittimus against a defendant whose conviction has been affirmed. However, we read it as simply setting forth the procedure for execution, not time limitations for it.
In this case, each procedendo directed the court “to proceed with diligence and according to law in the same manner as if there had been no appeal.” (Emphasis added.) If there had been no appeal, the district court could have delayed issuance of the mittimus because Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 24(l)(a), which provides for the order of confinement, does not limit the time for doing so. Thus, if the district court were to proceed “in the same manner as if there had been no appeal,” it could clearly order issuance of the mittimus on its own timetable.
Courts in other jurisdictions have found that a delay in the execution of a sentence is allowable when it is incident to the administration of justice.
See Gillespie v. Walker,
We conclude that nothing in- the statutes prohibited the extension of the time for issuance of the mittimus.
II. Modification of the Bonds.
Hawkeye argues that, even if the court had authority to delay mittimus, Hawk-eye would still not be liable because with such delay, the court in effect modified the bond and relieved Hawkeye of liability. In
State v. Costello,
A court admits a defendant to bail in order to assure his appearance in court. In assuming the position of bail the surety becomes obligated to produce the accused in open court when his presence is required. Stated otherwise, when the State releases a defendant from confinement it commits him to the exclusive custody of his surety, who becomes “the jailer of his own choosing.”
If the surety fails to produce its principal at the appointed time, a judgment shall be entered by the court. These proceedings for forfeiture of bail and judgment therein are civil actions, which may only be enforced in strict compliance with the statute.
(Quoting
State v. Zylstra,
According to the terms of these appeal bonds, Hawkeye agreed that defendant would “surrender himself in execution of the judgment and the direction of the Supreme Court.” Hawkeye argues that by delaying mittimus, the district court modified the terms of this bond. In support of this modification argument, Hawkeye cites
State v. Vendrell,
a bail-bond surety is released from his undertaking as a matter of law if there is a modification of its agreement of which he has no notice and to which he does not consent, provided the modification materially increases his risk.
Vendrell,
The bonds in the present case clearly required the surety to surrender the defendant in execution of the supreme court’s judgment; they did not require the surrender by a certain date.
See
Lee R. Russ, Annotation,
Bail: Duration of Surety’s Liability on Posttrial Bail Bond,
III. The Appearance at the Revocation Hearing.
Hawkeye argues that it should have been relieved from payment under the bonds because the defendant appeared for the August 5, 1994 hearing on the revocation of his probation.
According to the appeal bonds in this case, Hawkeye agreed that the defendant would “surrender himself in execution of the judgment and the direction of the Supreme Court.” The defendant appeared in court on August 5, 1994, for his revocation hearing, and the court revoked his probation but delayed mittimus for the second time. The court continued to hold mittimus until it was finally set for November 15, 1994. The defendant did not appear at that time.
The case on which Hawkeye relies,
State v. Zimmerman,
In the present case, however, the bond required that the defendant surrender himself in execution of the judgment. This never occurred. Although the defendant was in the presence of the court after the appeal on August 5, 1994, the actual execution of his judgment was not set until November 15, 1994. The defendant did not appear, and the terms of the bond were not fulfilled.
We agree with the district court that Hawkeye remains liable under these appeal bonds and therefore affirm.
AFFIRMED.
