The Honorable Cecil L. Solomon Franklin County Attorney 200 North Kaufman Mount Vernon, Texas 75457
Re: Whether a sheriff in a non-bail bond board county must accept a bail bond signed by an individual surety's attorney-in-fact (RQ-0246-GA)
Dear Mr. Solomon:
You ask whether a sheriff in a non-bail bond board county must accept a bail bond signed by an individual surety's attorney-in-fact.1 You also ask two related questions about the effect of a bail bond signed by an individual surety's attorney-in-fact. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
I. Legal Background: Taking Bail Bonds under Chapter 17 of theCriminal Code of Procedure
Chapter 1704 of the Occupations Code provides for bail bond boards to regulate bail bond sureties in counties with a population of 110,000 or more or counties that have established a board. See Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §§ 1704.051-.052 (Vernon 2004). In non-bail bond board counties, bail bond sureties are not regulated under chapter 1704. Rather, in a county without a bail bond board, the taking of bail bonds is generally governed by chapter 17 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. See id. § 1704.002;see also Castaneda v. Gonzalez,
While chapter 1704 of the Occupations Code provides for the licensing of bail bond sureties and requires a sheriff to accept bail bonds executed by license holders, see Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
Most of the case law and attorney general opinions addressing the authority of officers taking bail bonds under chapter 17 deal with assessing an individual surety's security. Chapter 17 authorizes any "court, judge, magistrate, or other officer" taking a bail bond to "require evidence of the sufficiency of the security offered." Id. art. 17.11, § 1 (Vernon 1977). The sufficiency of the security offered by a surety is governed by articles 17.11 through 17.14. Article 17.11 provides that "one surety shall be sufficient if such surety is worth at least double the amount of the sum for which he is bound, exclusive of all property exempted by law from execution, and of debts or other encumbrances; and that he is a resident of this state, and has property therein liable to execution worth the sum for which he is bound." Id. The officer taking the bail bond may require an affidavit attesting to the surety's worth. See id. art. 17.13. Article 17.14 provides that the officer may require further evidence "if the . . . officer taking the bail bond is not fully satisfied as to the sufficiency of the security offered." Id. art. 17.14.
While articles 17.11 through 17.14 give an officer taking a bail bond broad discretion to determine whether the security offered by a surety is sufficient, see Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
As a result, a court has expressly concluded that these Code of Criminal Procedure provisions do not authorize a sheriff to adopt rules imposing a licensing system for bail bond sureties akin to that set forth under chapter 1704 of the Occupations Code. SeeCastaneda v. Gonzalez,
The Castaneda court concluded that the sheriff's authority to require evidence of the sufficiency of the security offered by bondsmen under articles 17.11 and 17.14 authorized the sheriff to require bondsmen to fill out an application form. See id. at 503. However, the sheriff lacked authority to impose substantive requirements not authorized by articles 17.11 and 17.14. Thus, the sheriff could not require bondsmen "to accept suspension of their authority to write bonds when in litigation concerning forfeitures and [to] agree to indemnify the Sheriff for expenses and attorney fees in any litigation with him," nor could the sheriff require bondsmen to pledge collateral. Id.
Your questions pertain not to a sheriff's authority to ascertain the sufficiency of an individual surety's security but rather to a sheriff's authority with respect to a bond's form. Article 17.08, entitled "Requisites of a Bail Bond," provides that "[a] bail bond must contain the following requisites," including among other things, "[t]hat it be made payable to `The State of Texas,'" that the defendant and sureties "bind themselves that the defendant will appear before the proper court or magistrate to answer the accusation against him," and "[t]hat the bond be signed by name or mark by the principal and sureties, if any, each of whom shall write thereon his mailing address." Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art.
Your first question is:
Must a Texas Sheriff in a non-bail bond board county accept a bond from an attorney-in-fact for an individual surety (as distinguished from a corporate surety) who has demonstrated that the surety has sufficient security, but there has been no such showing for the purported attorney-in-fact?
Article 17.08, which establishes bail bond requisites, provides in pertinent part that a bail bond must be "signed by name or mark by the principal and sureties, if any, each of whom shall write thereon his mailing address." Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art.
Furthermore, as you note, article 17.07 requires "[a]ny corporation authorized by the law of this State to act as a surety" to file with the county clerk a power of attorney designating and authorizing "the named agent, agents, or attorney of such corporation to execute" bail bonds on its behalf. Id. art. 17.07 (Vernon 1977). Because no provision in chapter 17 provides for individual sureties to authorize agents to execute bail bonds on their behalf, individual sureties have no statutory entitlement to have an attorney-in-fact sign bonds on their behalf.
Accordingly, we conclude that a sheriff is not required to accept a bail bond signed by the surety's attorney-in-fact on the surety's behalf and may refuse to do so. This authority is based on article 17.08 and is not affected by the fact that the surety may have demonstrated sufficient security. Moreover, requiring a surety to sign personally a bond would be "authorized by and . . . consistent with statutory authority" and would not "impose additional burdens, conditions, or restrictions." Castaneda,
Next you ask two questions about the effect of a bail bond that has been signed by an attorney-in-fact either in his own name on behalf of the surety or with the name of the surety:
What is the legal effect of a "bond" that an attorney-in-fact signs with his own name under authority of an individual surety who had demonstrated that the surety had sufficient security, but there was not such showing for the purported attorney-in-fact?
What is the legal effect of a "bond" that an attorney-in-fact signs with the name of an individual surety, where the surety has demonstrated that the surety had sufficient security, but the attorney-in-fact has not demonstrated that his own security is sufficient?
Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
These questions relate to a bond's subsequent enforceability against the surety rather than the authority of an officer taking a bond to insist that the surety personally sign it. The article 17.08(4) requirement that a bail bond be "signed by name or mark by the principal and sureties, if any," Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art.
The first line of cases involves bonds signed by an attorney-in-fact in the attorney-in-fact's name. In 1935, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals quashed an appearance bond on which the names of the sureties "were signed by their attorney in fact, who it appears was duly authorized in writing to execute bails bonds generally," Ex Parte Meadows,
In 1988, relying on the 1935 decision, the Austin Court of Appeals construed article 17.08(4) to require "that the surety sign the bond personally, rather than permitting an attorney-in-fact for the surety to sign the bond." Tietz v.State,
The second line of cases, particularly two Texas Court of Criminal Appeals cases subsequent to Ex Parte Meadows, address bail bonds signed with the surety's name by another person. The first case involved an attorney, who also operated a bail bond business, who had authorized his secretary to notarize the signature of his name on three bail bonds, each of which had actually been signed by his employee. See Greer v. State,
Similarly, in the second case, the court considered the validity of a bond bearing "the apparent signature of . . . Zidell, written in ink as the surety." Zidell v. State,
These Texas Court of Criminal Appeals cases subsequent to ExParte Meadows indicate that when a surety authorizes an agent to sign the surety's name to a bond, courts will hold a surety liable on a bond even though the surety did not personally sign it.5
They do not address a bond signed by an attorney-in-fact in the attorney-in-fact's name. However, they suggest that courts now may be less strict about the article 17.08(4) requirement in the bond forfeiture context and could hold an individual liable on a bond signed with an attorney-in-fact's name when the evidence establishes that the individual intended third parties to rely on the attorney-in-fact's authority to bind the individual as a surety. But this will not be the outcome in every fact situation.See, e.g., Tietz,
Thus, in answer to your specific questions, a court may conclude that a surety is liable on a bond "an attorney-in-fact signs with the name of an individual surety" or "an attorney-in-fact signs with his own name under authority of an individual surety." See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. As the case law demonstrates, however, whether any particular bond is valid or binds the surety will depend upon the facts.
Finally, we wish to emphasize that these cases involve bond forfeitures rather than the authority of an officer taking a bail bond. None of these decisions suggests that an officer taking a bail bond lacks authority under article 17.08(4) to require an individual surety to sign the bond or that an individual surety has the right to insist that an officer taking a bail bond permit an attorney-in-fact to sign bonds on the surety's behalf. Moreover, given the potential added level of complexity in enforcing a bond that has been signed by an attorney-in-fact, requiring an individual surety to sign personally a bail bond may be a prudent practice.
In a county that has not established a bail bond board under chapter 1704 of the Occupations Code, the authority of an officer taking a bail bond to assess a surety's qualifications is governed by chapter 17 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. A sheriff is not required to accept a bail bond signed by an individual surety's attorney-in-fact on the surety's behalf. A sheriff's authority to require a surety to sign a bond is based on article17.08 (4) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which establishes the requisites of a bail bond, and is not affected by the fact that the surety may have demonstrated sufficient security.In the bail bond forfeiture context, a court may hold an individual surety liable on a bond even though the surety did not personally sign it, depending on the particular facts. However, no statute or case suggests that an officer taking a bail bond lacks authority under article 17.08(4) to require an individual surety to sign the bond or that an individual surety has the right to insist that an officer taking a bail bond permit an attorney-in-fact to sign bonds on the surety's behalf.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
BARRY McBEE First Assistant Attorney General
DON R. WILLETT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
In 1982, this office considered whether the agent or employee of an individual licensed as a bondsmen under the statutory predecessor to chapter 1704 of the Occupations Code may execute bonds on the licensee's behalf. Relying on Ex Parte Meadows, this office concluded that while the licensing statute did not address the issue, article 17.08(4) prohibited the practice. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
