Court Opinion

ID: 7104268
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:19:06.067768+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:31.194746
License: Public Domain

Beck, J.
I. The defendants are the sureties on a bail bond given by one indicted after his arrest. It is in the form prescribed by the statute (Code, sec. 4585), and is conditioned to become void if the principal therein shall appear and answer the indictment, “and abide the orders and the judgment of the court.” The principal in the bond was tried and convicted on the indictment, and two years afterwards a default upon the bond was taken, whereupon this action was brought to recover the penalty of the bond.
II. A default may be taken upon a bail bond, if the principal fail to appear, at any time when his personal appearance may be lawfully required. Code, sec. 4596. The court may at any time require one convicted to appear and surrender himself, or perform the judgment. Having been required to appear, and having failed to do so, the default was entered against the defendants’ principal.
III. The principal in the bail bond may be required to appear at any term subsequent to the term at which he is required by the language of the bond to appear, without notice to him or his sureties, and his former appearance to answer to the charge does not discharge the sureties. State v. Brown, 16 Iowa, 314.
IV. It will be presumed, if the forfeiture was taken at a subsequent term, that the cause was continued by operation of law to the term when default was taken. State v. Merrihew, 47 Iowa, 112.
V. The order of forfeiture is conclusive, and the sureties cannot call in question the facts upon which it is based. State v. Bryant, 55 Iowa, 451.
*739VI. It cannot be doubted that, after conviction, the person indicted may be ordered by the court to surrender himself upon the judgment; and upon nonperformance of such order default may be taken upon his bond, which is conditioned that the principal “shall abide the order” of the court.
VII. Counsel for defendants insist that default of a bail bond cannot be taken after conviction, and there-' fore the record of the default and other evidence in connection therewith was erroneously admitted in evidence in the case. This objection, and others based upon the same view of the law, is sufficiently answered by the consideration of the statutes and decisions above referred to.
VIII. It is objected that the petition is based upon an alleged failure of the principal to appear before his trial. But the abstract shows the fact differently.
IX. It is insisted that the district court was deprived of jurisdiction by the taking of an appeal in the case and the filing of a supersedeas bond. But the abstract before us fails to show that an appeal was taken and perfected.
These considerations dispose of all objections made to the judgment of the district court. It is
Affirmed.