11 We granted certiorari to address the first-impression question whether a bail
12 The defendant's bail was set at $6,500.00 and the bondsman posted a surety bond for that amount on June 1, 2009. 1 On January 25, 2010, the defendant failed to appear at a scheduled preliminary hearing and the trial judge ordered the surety bond forfeited and a warrant issued for the defendant's arrest. 2 The bail bondsman received a copy of the order and judgment of forfeiture on February 22, 2010. The statute provides that the bondsman shall have ninety (90) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture to return the defendant to custody, and if so returned, the forfeiture shall be vacated and the bond exonerated. 59 0.8. § 18332(0)(1)(2).
T3 If the defendant is not returned to custody within ninety (90) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture and if the forfeiture has not been stayed, § 1832(D)(1) provides that the bondsman shall deposit cash or other valuable securities in the face amount of the bond with the court clerk ninety-one (91) days after receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture. 3 The defendant was not returned to custody within ninety days, and the bondsman did not deposit cash or other securities with the court clerk on or before the ninety-first day. The bondsman posted the face amount of the bond with the court clerk ninety-two (92) days after receiving notice of forfeiture.
T4 When the bondsman does not deposit cash or securities with the court clerk on or before the ninety-first day, the procedure to be followed is set out at § 18382(D)(8) and (4), which provides, in pertinent part:
3. If the additional cash or securities are not deposited with the court clerk on or before the ninety-first day after the date of service of the order and judgment of forfeiture ... then the court clerk shall notify the Insurance Commissioner by sending a certified copy of the order and judgment of forfeiture and proof that the bondsman and, if applicable, the insurer have been notified by mail with return receipt requested.
4. The Insurance Commissioner shall: a. in the case of a surety bondsman, immediately cancel the license privilege and authorization of the insurer to do business within the State of Oklahoma and cancel the appointment of all surety bondsman agents of the insurer who are licensed by Section 1801 et seq. of this title, and
b. in the case of a professional bondsman, withdraw the face amount of the forfeiture from the deposit provided in Section 1306 of this title. The Commissioner shall then immediately direct the professional bondsman ... to make additional deposits to bring the original deposits to the required level. Should the professional bondsman, after being notified, fail to make an additional deposit within ten (10) days from the receipt of notice ... the license shall be revoked and all sums presently on deposit shall be held by the Commissioner to secure the face amounts of bonds outstanding. Upon release of the bonds, any amount of deposit in excess of the bonds shall be returned to the bondsman....
The docket reflects that on May 25, 2010, the court clerk sent notice to the Insurance Commissioner that the bond forfeiture was not timely paid. Tr. p. 37.
16 On July 18, 2010, the trial judge conducted a hearing at which she granted the bondsman's motion for remitter, ordered return of the money deposited and vacated the order and judgment of forfeiture. The State appealed and the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the trial court. We granted the State's petition for certiorari to determine whether deposit of the face amount of the bond by the ninety-first day after notice of forfeiture, as required by 59 O.S8. § 1882(D)(1), is a condition precedent to seeking the relief of remitter provided by 59 O.S. Supp.2008 § 1332(D)(2). We answer in the affirmative.
T7 The issue presented is one of statutory construction, which is a question of law. Questions of law are reviewed de novo. State ex rel. Okla. State Dept. of Health v. Robertson, 2006 OK. 99 ¶ 5,
T8 In State v. Van Lear,
T9 Bond forfeiture is a statutory procedure established by the Oklahoma legislature. Since the Constitution requires that certain people charged with crimes be released on bail, it is within the powers granted the legislature to enact laws both procedural and substantive that protect, facilitate, regulate and promote appropriate enforcement of the people's right to bail. State v. Brown,
{10 The State argues that the Court of Civil Appeals has strictly interpreted subsection (D)(2) of § 1832 to require timely filing of the motion for remitter in order to obtain remitter, and that subsection (D)(1) should likewise be interpreted to require compliance with the time limit of ninety-one days. In State v. Wallace,
111 In State v. Eubanks,
112 In State v. Anderson,
[ 13 We are required to give meaning to a statute as a whole and interpret it so that one section does not defeat the purpose of the another. The bond forfeiture statute has been amended many times. The present alignment or arrangement of subsections 1 through 3 of § 1832(D) occurred in 1998 and 1994. 7 Previously, the bondsman's remedy of remitter was placed in an entirely different subsection, (E)(8). Thus, it was placed separately from subsection D, which required payment within ninety-one days from receipt of the judgment and notification of the Insurance Commissioner in the event of bondsman's failure to so pay. 8
{15 Under the current forfeiture statute, unless the bondsman complies with (D)(1), he may not may seek the remitter provided in (D)(2). Integral to the statutory procedure applicable to this case is deposit of the face amount of the bond with the court clerk by the ninety-first day. If not so deposited, the Insurance Commissioner is notified and the matter proceeds according to § 1832(D)(8). The trial court erred in granting the bondsman's motion for remitter.
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OPINION VACATED; JUDGMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Safety National Casualty Corporation was the surety.
. Title 59 O.S. § 1332 is the statutory forfeiture procedure. -It provides, in pertinent part:
A. If there is a breach of an undertaking, the court ... shall issue an arrest warrant for the defendant and declare the undertaking ... deposited as bail, forfeited on the day the defendant failed to appear. In the event of ... forfeiture ... the clerk of the trial court shall, within thirty (30) days after the forfeiture ... mail a true and correct copy of the order and judgment of forfeiture to the bondsman.
. 59 O.S. § 1332(D)(1) provides, in pertinent part:
If, within ninety (90) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture ... the defendant is not returned to custody ... the bondsman ... shall deposit cash or other valuable securities in the fact amount of the bond with the court clerk ninety-one (91) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture. ...
. 59 O.S. Supp.2008 § 1332(D)(2) provides in pertinent part:
After the order and judgment has been paid, the bondsman ... shall have one year from the date payment is due to return the defendant to custody ... In the event the defendant is returned to custody and all expenses for the defendant's return have been paid by the bondsman, ... the bondman's ... property shall be returned; provided, the request for remitter be made by motion filed within one year from the date payment is due. Laws 2007, c. 97, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2007.
. Because of our disposition of this case, we do not address State's second argument.
. 59 O.S.1971 § 1332. Notice of forfeiture Motion to set aside.-In the event of the forfeiture of a bail bond the clerk of the trial court shall notify the bondsman on said bond who may, within thirty (30) days from the date of such notice, file with the court a motion to set aside the order of forfeiture which motion shall contain the grounds on which it relies. If the bondsman fails to file said motion within the thirty (30) days, the forfeiture shall become a final judgment and the clerk shall immediately issue execution upon the undertaking in accordance with law.
. Laws 1993, Ch. 170, § 7, eff. Sept. 1, 1993; Laws 1994, Ch. 331, § 4, eff. Sept. 1, 1994.
. The 1991 statute provided, in pertinent part:
D. If the defendant is not returned to custody within ninety (90) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture ...... the bondsman ... shall deposit cash or other valuable securities in the face amount of the bond with the court clerk ninety-one (91) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture
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If the additional cash or securities are not deposited with the court clerk on or before the ninety-first day after the date of service of the order and judgment of forfeiture ... then the court clerk shall notify the Insurance Commissioner by sending a certified copy of the order and judgment of forfeiture and proof that the bondsman and, if applicable the insurer have been notified by mail with return receipt requested. The Insurance Commissioner shall:
1. In the case of a surety bondsman immediately cancel the license privilege and authorization of the insurer to do business within the State of Oklahoma and cancel the appointment of all surety bondsman agents of the insurer who are licenced by Section 1301 et seq. of this title.
2. In the case of a professional bondsman, withdraw the face amount of the forfeiture from the deposit provided in Section 1306 of this title. The Commissioner shall then immediately direct the professional bondsman ... to make additional deposits to bring the original deposits to the required level. Should the professional bondsman, after being notified, fail to make an additional deposit within ten (10) days from the receipt of notice ....the license shall be revoked and all sums presently on deposit shall be held by the Commissioner to secure the face amounts of bonds outstanding. Upon release of the bonds, any amount of deposit in excess of the bonds shall be returned to the bondsman....
E. 1. If the defendant's failure to appear was the result of being in the custody of a court other than the court in which is appearance was scheduled, forfeiture shall not lie.
2. Where the defendant is in the custody of another court, the district attorney ... shall direct a hold order to the official ... wherein the defendant is in custody ...
3. After the order and judgment has been paid, the bondsman may file a motion for remitter within one hundred eighty (180) days from receipt of the order and judgment of forfeiture ... and, upon the event the defendant is returned to custody within ninety (90) days after payment is due, or upon proof to the court that the defendant is still in the custody in the other jurisdiction and that all expenses have been paid by the bondsman, the bondsman's property shall be returned. The court shall hear the motion for remitter within thirty (30) days from the filing of the motion.
