Ms. Linda Longstreth Executive Director Arkansas Professional Bail Bondsman Licensing Board 101 E. Capitol, Suite 117 Little Rock, AR 72201
Dear Ms. Longstreth:
I am writing in response to your request, on behalf of the Arkansas Professional Bail Bond Company and Professional Bail Bondsman Licensing Board ("Board"), that I reconsider an opinion recently issued in response to the question of whether a licensed bail bondsman could also be a civil process server. I concluded in Attorney General Opinion
No attorney, solicitor, or counselor at law or in equity, clerk, sheriff, chief of police, law enforcement officer, or other person concerned in the execution of any process, shall become a personal guarantor or surety in any criminal proceeding.
A.C.A. §
In asking that I reconsider this opinion, you state:
The Board concluded that civil process servers do not have any contact with defendants who would normally require a bail bond and that the bail bond company, not the bail bondsman, becomes the surety for the appearance of the defendant in court when a bail bond is written.
RESPONSE
It is my opinion upon further review that the Board may be correct, as a general matter, in its conclusion that in the case of a corporate surety, the licensed bail bondsman who writes the bond does not "become [the] surety," for purposes of the proscription in A.C.A. §
Attorney General Opinion
As indicated above, Opinion
This rationale withstands scrutiny if the general denomination of the individual bondsman as the "surety" is decisive for purposes of the proscription in A.C.A. §
No attorney, solicitor, or counselor at law or in equity, clerk, sheriff, or other person concerned in the execution of any process, shall become bail in any criminal case. [Emphasis added.]
The proscription was obviously directed at the person who was, as expressed elsewhere in the statutes at that time, "offered as bail" or "taken as bail." See A.C.A. §
The legislative history, and certain statutory language, may therefore support the Board's conclusion that the licensed bondsman does not "become a . . . surety," as contemplated by A.C.A. §
A necessary caveat attends this conclusion, however. It appears from your correspondence that the Board has reached its conclusion from a general standpoint, under the assumption that the bail bondsman is distinguishable from the bail bond company when identifying the "surety" for purposes of the proscription in A.C.A. §
In conclusion, it is my opinion that if challenged, the Board would likely prevail in concluding as a general matter that a bail bondsman does not become a surety for purposes of the proscription in A.C.A. §
Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:EAW/cyh
