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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
STATE OF WASHINGTON,
NO. 89390-0
Respondent,
v. ENBANC
PETER RICHARD BARTON,
Filed July 31, 2014
Petitioner.
STEPHENS, J.-This case centers on article I, section 20 of the Washington
State Constitution and its mandate that criminal defendants "shall be bailable by
sufficient sureties." Peter Barton's bail was set at $500,000; invoking Criminal Rule
(CrR) 3.2(b)(4), the trial court ordered that Barton post 10 percent of that amount
with the registry of the court in cash or other security. Barton claims this order
violates his guaranty to bail by sufficient sureties.
We hold that article I, section 20 means a defendant must be allowed the
option to secure bail via a surety, as distinct from cash or other security. To the
extent the trial court's order disallowed this possibility, we vacate the order and
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
At his arraignment on August 13 20 12, Barton pleaded not guilty to a charge
of rape of a child in the first degree. The court set bail at $250,000. The prosecutor
asked for a condition requiring 10 percent of the amount to be deposited in cash with
the registry of the court. Barton objected to the cash-only bail, and the trial court
delayed consideration of the request.
At a hearing the next day, the State asked the court to increase Barton's bail
to $1,000,000 and direct that if Barton "should post bond that 10 percent of that be
in cash." Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Aug. 14, 2012) at 3. The judge
entered an order setting bail at $500,000 and stating that Barton was required to
execute a "bond with [sic] depositing 10% cash in the registry of the court." Clerk's
Papers (CP) at 11 (Order on Release/Det. ofDef. (Aug. 15, 2012)). The judge's bail
order made headlines. Diana Hefley, Judge requires unusual bail in child rape case,
THE HERALDNET, Aug. 16, 2012, http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20120816/
NEWS01/708169921. Barton moved to strike the cash-only provision. At a hearing
held on September 7, 2012, the trial court explained that it had intended its August
15,2012 order to track the language ofCrR 3.2(b)(4). 1 Accordingly, the trial court
1
That subsection reads:
(b) ... If the court determines that the accused is not likely to appear
if released on personal recognizance, the court shall impose the least
restrictive of the following conditions that will reasonably assure that the
accused will be present for later hearings, or, if no single condition gives that
assurance, any combination of the following conditions:
(4) Require the execution of a bond in a specified amount and the
deposit in the registry of the court in cash or other security as directed, of a
sum not to exceed 10 percent of the amount of the bond, such deposit to be
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
clarified that Barton could post 10 percent of the bail amount "'in cash or other
security."' VRP (Sept. 7, 2012) at 25, 27-28 (court quoting language of the rule).
However, the court did not enter its ruling that day because defense counsel asked
to brief the matter further. !d. at 26-27. On October 18, 2012, after additional
briefing, the court explained it was denying the defense motion to strike the cash-
only provision "as formulated." VRP (Oct. 18, 2012) at 26. The court reiterated its
intention to track the language of CrR 3 .2(b)(4) and require Barton to post 10 percent
of the bond with the court "in cash or other security." !d. at 27. The court modified
its August 15, 2012 order to read, "Defendant shall execute a bond in the amount of
$500,000 and deposit in the registry of the court in [sic] $50,000 cash or other
security.... " CP at 13 (Order (Oct. 18, 2012)).
Barton appealed the bail order, and the parties stipulated that the order was
reviewable under Rule of Appellate Procedure (RAP) 2.3(b)(4). The commissioner
of the Court of Appeals accepted the stipulation and granted review, explaining that
even if the case became moot the court would still review the question. Barton
moved to transfer the case to this court, which the acting commissioner granted. In
doing so, our acting commissioner noted that "the proper form of bail is a matter of
continuing and substantial public interest," overcoming any claim of mootness.
Ruling Granting Mot. To Transfer (Nov. 21, 2013) at 3.
returned upon the performance of the conditions of release or forfeited for
violation of any condition of release.
CrR 3.2.
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
ANALYSIS
Article I, section 20 reads:
All persons charged with crime shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, except
for capital offenses when the proof is evident, or the presumption great. Bail
may be denied for offenses punishable by the possibility of life in prison upon
a showing by clear and convincing evidence of a propensity for violence that
creates a substantial likelihood of danger to the community or any persons,
subject to such limitations as shall be determined by the legislature.
WASH. CONST. art. I, § 20 (emphasis added).
This provision became the focus of attention m 2009, when Maurice
Clemmons shot and killed four police officers in Lakewood. Clemmons committed
his murders while out on bail for felony charges that could have resulted in life
imprisonment. In response to this tragedy, the legislature proposed a constitutional
amendment to article I, section 20 that would make bail more difficult to obtain for
a person awaiting trial for a crime that would be punishable by life in prison. The
amendment read, "Bail may be denied for offenses punishable by the possibility of
life in prison upon a showing by clear and convincing evidence of a propensity for
violence that creates a substantial likelihood of danger to the community or any
persons, subject to such limitations as shall be determined by the legislature."
ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTEH.J. Res. 4220, 61st Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2010). Voters
approved the constitutional amendment on November 2, 2010. WASH. CONST. art.
I, sec. 20.
A further result of the Lakewood tragedy was that the legislature convened a
bail practices work group "to study bail practices and procedures" in a
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
"comprehensive and well-considered manner," and "report its findings and
recommendations to the Washington state supreme court, the governor, and
appropriate committees of the legislature." LAWS OF 2010, ch. 256, §§ 1, 2(6).
During the legislature's review of a bill introduced as a result of the group's work,
an amendment was proposed that would have required five percent of the bond
amount be collected by a bail bondsman before the accused could be released. See
Amend. 2668-S AMS PADD GORR 672 to SUBSTITUTE H.B. 2668, 62d Leg., Reg.
Sess. (Wash. 2012). 2 The motivation for this amendment was apparently the belief
that it was becoming too easy for persons accused of a crime to make bail. See S.B.
REP. on Substitute H. B. 2668, at 2-3, 62d Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 20 12) (explaining
the view of some individuals that the bill as written did not do enough to address a
premium rate for bail).
Against this backdrop, Barton's bail order was entered. As noted, the State
initially asked for the court to impose a condition that Barton deposit 10 percent of
his bond amount in cash before being released on bail. The deputy prosecutor
explained,
The problem that I think my office is concerned about is the fact that it is
possible that Mr. Barton is-- the way that the rules currently are, Mr. Barton
could post bond without having any money put up at all. That's the concern
for the State .
. . . [J]ust yesterday when I was driving around the county campus,
there was somebody who was waving a sign that said something like "you
sign, you walk" with respect to bail. So the requirement of cash is really a
fiction because there isn't cash that's required.
2
Available at http:/Iapps .leg.wa.gov/documents/billdocs/20 11-12/Pdf/Amend-
ments/Senate/2668-S%20AMS%20PADD%20GORR%20672.pdf.
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
VRP (Aug. 15, 2012) at 7. The deputy prosecutor asked the court to impose bail that
"mean[t] something." Jd. at 8. The trial court did impose a condition that Barton
deposit, in cash, 10 percent of the bond amount before release. See CP at 11 (Order
on Release/Det. ofDef. (Aug. 15, 2012)). But as noted, it later amended its order to
require, consistent with the language of CrR 3 .4(b)(4), that Barton deposit 10 percent
of the bond amount in cash or other security with the registry of the court. CP at 13.
This case mainly concerns the meaning of article I, section 20 of the
Washington State Constitution. In order to determine if the bail order here is proper,
we must first understand the import of the phrase "bailable by sufficient sureties."
Because the federal constitution contains no clause requiring that defendants be
bailable by sufficient sureties, this is purely a question of state constitutional law.
1. Article I, section 20 of the Washington State Constitution guarantees a
criminal defendant who is bailable the opportunity to make bail via a surety
The meaning of the phrase "bailable by sufficient sureties" presents a question
of first impression. 3 "When interpreting a constitutional provision, we seek to
ascertain and give effect to the manifest purpose for which it was adopted."
Westerman v. Cary, 125 Wn.2d 277, 288, 892 P.2d 1067 (1994). In doing so, we
look first to the plain language of the text "and will accord it its reasonable
3
City ofYakima v. Mollett, 115 Wn. App. 604, 605, 63 P.3d 177 (2003), cited by
both parties, considered the propriety of an order that limited a defendant's bail to '"cash
only'" under CrR 3.2(b)(5). The court concluded that the language of the criminal court
rule required a judge to allow a defendant to elect between a bond or cash in lieu thereof
to post bail, but could not order one option to the exclusion of the other. !d. at 609-10. It
did not reach the question of whether the order would have been constitutionally
permissible under article I, section 20. !d. at 611.
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
interpretation." Wash. Water Jet Workers Ass 'n v. Yarbrough, 151 Wn.2d 470,477,
90 P.3d 42 (2004) (Water Jet). "The words of the text will be given their common
and ordinary meaning, as determined at the time they were drafted." Id. We should
look to the historical context of the provision for guidance. Id.
The parties seem to agree that the constitutional framers had in mind more
than one purpose in adopting article I, section 20. They disagree on which purpose
should take prominence. Barton argues that, more than ensuring a defendant's
appearance, the provision is intended to protect the accused's presumption of
innocence. Pet'r's Opening Br. at 16. In contrast, the State emphasizes the court's
interest over the defendant's. See, e.g., Br. ofResp't at 6-7 (explaining its view that
"Washington courts have recognized that the court's interest is the main reason for
bail in modem times" (citing State v. Paul, 95 Wn. App. 775, 778, 976 P.2d 1272
(1999); State v. Banuelos, 91 Wn. App. 860, 863, 960 P.2d 952 (1998); State v.
Kramer, 167 Wn.2d 548,561,219 P.3d 700 (2009))). "Of course, there can be more
than one purpose motivating a provision of the state constitution." Water Jet, 151
Wn.2d at 484. Thus, we must examine article I, section 20 with both of these
purposes in mind.
The key word at issue in article I, section 20 is "sureties." Black's Law
Dictionary defines "surety" as "[a] person who is primarily liable for the payment
of another's debt or the performance of another's obligation." BLACK'S LAW
DICTIONARY 1579 (9th ed. 2009). This modem definition is not markedly different
from the definition of "surety" at the time the provision in question was adopted,
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
which the State acknowledges. An 1891 edition of Black's Law Dictionary defined
"surety" as "one who at the request of another, and for the purpose of securing to
him a benefit, becomes responsible for the performance by the latter of some act in
favor of a third person, or hypothecates[4l property as security therefor." BLACK's
DICTIONARY OF LAW 1142 (1891); Br. of Resp't at 8. The 1897 edition of the
Bouvier's Law Dictionary defined "surety" as "[a] person who binds himself for the
payment of a sum of money, or for the performance of something else, for another."
2 BOUVIER'S LAW DICTIONARY 1073 (1897); Br. ofResp't at 8.
"The underlying legal theories behind bail bonds and cash bail are
different; in bail bonds the law looks to the surety to guarantee the
defendant's appearance, while in cash bail the law looks to the money already
in the hands of the state to insure defendant's appearance."
In reMarriage ofBralley, 70 Wn. App. 646, 653, 855 P/2d 1174 (1993) (quoting 8
C.J.S. Bail § 88, at 109 (1988)). 5 In other words, a cash deposit renders a surety
unnecessary and vice versa. One cannot stand in for the other.
For this reason, we cannot conclude that a surety arrangement is simply the
putting up of cash or property. It involves a third-party promise to fulfill a financial
burden in the event of nonperformance or to compel that performance. As a matter
of plain language, "bailable by sufficient sureties" means a defendant must have the
option to utilize a surety in making bail. Several other jurisdictions to consider
4
"Hypothecate" means "[t]opledge." BLACK'S DICTIONARY OF LAW 585 (1891).
5
The State complains that Bralley is not on point because it is not a criminal case.
But whether criminal or civil, its citation to the C.J.S. section on bail is well taken.
Bralley's discussion of the difference among cash bail, bail bonds, and sureties plainly
concerns the criminal context.
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
identical phrasing in their state constitutions have reached the same conclusion. See,
e.g., State v. Parker, 546 So. 2d 186, 186 (La. 1989); State v. Golden, 546 So. 2d
501, 503 (La. Ct. App 1989); State v. Brooks, 604 N.W.2d 345, 352-53 (Minn. 2000);
State ex rel. Jones v. Hendon, 66 Ohio St. 3d 115, 609 N.E.2d 541, 544 (1993).
The historical context behind article I, section 20's adoption also provides
support for the conclusion that "sufficient sureties" contemplates a surety
arrangement as a method distinct from requiring cash or property to secure bail. 6 As
the Minnesota State Supreme Court explained in its decision in Brooks, the practice
of bail surety arose in England at a time when magistrates traveled from town to
town, potentially detaining the accused for long periods of time awaiting trial. 604
N.W.2d at 349. "The bail system and its reliance on personal surety emerged to
prevent excessive pretrial detention." !d. "Personal surety" meant that a person of
good repute agreed to be responsible for ensuring the accused's appearance in court,
or would pay a monetary penalty otherwise. !d. At that time, crimes were generally
punished with a monetary fine. !d. But when corporal punishment began to replace
monetary fines, "[b]ail availability was increasingly restricted, in part because
corporal punishment afforded an accused greater incentive to flee." !d. The "Statute
of Westminster," adopted in 1275, attempted to create a uniform system of bail
6
Reports from the Washington State constitutional convention itself do not lend
support to either Barton or the State's position. An alternate proposal to the provision as
adopted was submitted to the convention. THE JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON STATE
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION 1889 509 (Beverly Paulik Rosenow ed., 1962). This
alternate provision would have made all offenses except murder and treason bailable, but
would not have included the "by sufficient sureties" language. Although this provision
was not adopted, there is no indication that the presence or absence of the "sufficient
sureties" language tipped the balance for the framers.
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
administration, but it was confusing and complicated. !d. Nevertheless it governed
English bail law for the next five centuries. !d. at 349-50.
Against this backdrop, explained the Brooks court, the phrase "bailable by
sufficient sureties" was first adopted in colonial Pennsylvania's "Great Law of
1682." !d. at 350. The Quakers who founded Pennsylvania "had an aversion to the
inefficient bail system that had evolved" in England. !d. "Having been persecuted
in England, they had greater sympathy for detained defendants than for a powerful
judiciary." !d. Hence, they took care to draft language that made almost all offenses
bailable by sufficient sureties. !d. This language was eventually incorporated into
the Pennsylvania Constitution. Two-thirds of state constitutions today-including
ours-borrow this phrasing. !d. at 350-52.
The Brooks court explained,
Because our bail system, with some modification, is largely patterned
after the English system, American courts-at least until the nineteenth
century-utilized the personal surety system. But, as modem society
evolved, it became increasingly difficult to fmd reliable persons known by
both the courts and the accused. As a result, the personal surety system
evolved into the commercial bondsman system that exists today.
!d. at 350 (citation omitted). As noted, the personal surety system utilized by
American courts "until the nineteenth century," id., contemplated that a surety made
a promise to secure the accused's appearance-not that he or she provided cash or
property for this purpose. Id. at 349. But see Fragoso v. Fell, 210 Ariz. 427, 111
P .3d 1027, 1032-33 (2005) (reasoning that "it is conceivable that bail by cash (or
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
personal property of value such as a horse or a firearm) might have been the only
practical form of bail in Arizona when our constitution was adopted").
The State argues that the phrase "bailable by sufficient sureties" means simply
sufficient to ensure the defendant's appearance. Br. of Resp 't at 13. "Throughout
history the interest served by bail has always been to ensure the defendant appears
for trial or other hearings as required by the court. Thus, a surety that is not sufficient
to achieve that goal is not guaranteed by the State constitution." Id. The State cites
at least one other court that came to the same conclusion when interpreting its state
constitutional provision regarding bail by sufficient sureties. Br. ofResp't at 11-12
(citing People ex rel. Gendron v. Ingram, 34 Ill. 2d 623, 217 N.E.2d 803, 805-06
(1966)). The defendant in Gendron attempted to execute a bond in the amount of
$5,000 through a commercial surety, but the bond was refused by the court because
no cash, stocks, or bonds for real estate were deposited to secure the bond as required
by an Illinois statute. Id. at 805.
The Gendron court found no constitutional infirmity in this scenario. It
reasoned that a bond with sufficient sureties is "premised on the assumption that
economic loss to the accused, his family or friends, will assure his appearance for
trial." Id. But, lamented the court, in actual practice a commercial surety often took
on the burden for a fee, which the defendant lost whether he appeared or not.
"Hence, the economic loss deterrent loses force when an accused is admitted to bail
with professional sureties, and the purpose of admitting persons to bail is frustrated."
Id. The court explained:
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
Experience has shown that the method of allowing a person to make
bond with a professional surety does not accomplish the purpose of bail. The
legislature in section 110-8 has determined more is needed than the mere
ability to pay bail bond forfeitures on a business basis .... Sufficient, as used
in the constitution, means sufficient to accomplish the purpose of bail, not
just the ability to pay in the event of a "skip". The State is not primarily
interested in collecting bond forfeitures, but is more concerned with granting
liberty to an accused pending trial while obtaining the greatest possible
assurance that he will appear.
I d. at 805-06 (citations omitted).
We decline to follow this line of reasoning, as it rests on a categorical rejection
of commercial sureties. The Illinois State Supreme Court's decision suggests that it
would have interpreted the phrase "bailable by sufficient sureties" differently had
the surety at issue been a personal surety. It read the provision at issue to exclude
the ability to bail by commercial bail bondsmen. Nothing in the language of the
provision allows an interpretation that picks and chooses among surety
arrangements, only that a surety be guaranteed. Certainly the order the Gendron
court reviewed unequivocally denied the defendant the ability to utilize any surety.
See Bralley, 70 Wn. App. at 653-54. It therefore negated the coequal purpose of bail
to protect the defendant from detention before conviction, which the Gendron court
itself recognized was a goal ofbail. 217 N.E.2d at 806.
Other courts have expressed a different line of reasoning in holding that
"bailable by sufficient sureties" does not guarantee a defendant the ability to bail via
surety. In Burton v. Tomlinson, 19 Or. App. 247, 527 P.2d 123, 126 (1974), the
Oregon Court of Appeals concluded that the "sufficient sureties" provision nowhere
says the "lawful release of a defendant may be accomplished only through the
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
medium of sureties." The court reasoned that"[ w]ere this contention sound, release
of a defendant on his own recognizance or by any other means would be
constitutionally prohibited-an obvious absurdity." Id. We do not find this
persuasive. Personal recognizance does not contemplate the imposition of bail at
all. See CrR 3.2(a), (b) (if court concludes personal recognizance will not assure
defendant's presence, then it will set bail). There is no absurdity in concluding that
our constitution means that when bail is required, the accused may access it by
surety.
Still other courts have held that cash itself is a surety, i.e., a method available
to the defendant of securing release. Fragoso, 111 P.3d at 1032 (reasoning that
"sufficient sureties" creates a right to access surety in some form, but that cash can
function as a surety). As explained above, a surety has consistently been defined
both historically and in modern times as a third-party promise to either incur a
financial burden or force performance. It has not been defined as the deposit of cash.
See Bralley, 70 Wn. App. at 653.
Finally, the State relies on State v. Briggs, 666 N.W.2d 573 (Iowa 2003),
mostly for citations to historical background it claims supports its position. Br. of
Resp't at 6-7, 15, 18-19. But the recitation of the applicable history in Briggs is not
substantially different from that in Brooks, quoted above. Compare Briggs, 666
N.W.2d at 578-80, with Brooks, 604 N.W.2d at 349-50. Briggs suggests that
"sufficient sureties" means a "defendant was given the right to be bailed, subject to
the state's analysis of a surety's sufficiency to provide adequate recompense if the
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
prisoner did not show for his judicial proceedings." 666 N.W.2d at 582. As
explained above, this is a dubious proposition.
Perhaps more problematically for the State, the Briggs court "[u]ltimately"
believed that "the core purpose of the clause was to guarantee a bailable individual
access to a surety of some form." Id. at 581. It concluded that a cash-only bail "is
permissible under the sufficient sureties clause of the Iowa Constitution so long as
the accused is permitted access to a surety in some form." Id. at 583. Thus, the
Briggs court seemed to recognize that cash and surety are separate options. The
court explained that the defendant had
presented no evidence to show she was absolutely precluded from accessing
a surety of some form. Instead, her allegations appear to center on the denial
of access to a commercial bail bond .... [T]here is no absolute right to such
access. Briggs has made no claim that she could not otherwise find a
sufficient surety. Under other circumstances, we would, perhaps, remand
this issue to the district court to determine whether Briggs' access to a surety
was completely precluded.
Id. at 584. In the end, the Briggs court was equivocal about what the constitutional
provision actually required. To the extent it suggested a surety option is required,
we agree.
Admittedly, it is challenging to sort through the cases relied on by Barton and
the State because many involve slightly different questions than are presented here.
For example, Barton cites several cases that reject cash-only bail but do not
specifically address whether allowing for "cash or other security" would satisfy their
state constitutions' bail provisions. See, e.g., Two Jinn, Inc. v. District Court, 150
Idaho 647, 249 P.3d 840, 847 (2011) (explaining that "the Idaho Constitution
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
prevents cash-only bail" under its sufficient sureties clause); State v. Hance, 2006
VT 97, 180 Vt. 357, 910 A.2d 874, 876 (holding that an all-cash bail violates
Vermont's sufficient sureties clause); Smith v. Leis, 106 Ohio St. 3d 309, 2005-0hio-
5125, 835 N.E.2d 5, 18 (2005) (holding an all-cash bail violated Ohio's sufficient
sureties clause); Brooks, 604 N.W.2d at 354 (holding that an all-cash bail violates
Minnesota's sufficient sureties clause); Golden, 546 So. 2d at 502-03 (holding all-
cash bail violates Louisiana's sufficient sureties clause). Nonetheless, the discussion
in these cases is helpful to Barton to the extent there is a clear contrast between cash
deposited with the court and a third-party surety arrangement. At a minimum, they
support the notion that a defendant must be allowed the option of accessing a third
party surety-regardless of whether it is a commercial surety.
As for some of the cases relied on by the State, they seem to hold that a
defendant is not entitled to use a commercial bail bondsman. See Gendron, 217
N.E.2d at 805; Fragoso, 111 P.3d at 1032-33; State v. Jackson, 384 S.W.3d 208,215
(Mo. 2012). But, this does not answer the question of whether disallowing any
surety arrangement meets the constitutional guaranty to bail by sufficient sureties.
Focusing on the plain language of article I, section 20, and reviewing the historical
understanding of a surety at the time this language was adopted, we conclude the
better view is that a defendant must be allowed the option of a surety arrangement
in addition to the option of depositing cash or property in the registry of the court.
While this does not mean that a defendant has the right to actually make bail, article
I, section 20 guarantees the option of seeking to make bail via a surety, which
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
involves a third-party promise and not merely the deposit of cash or equivalent
property with the court.
2. The trial court's October 18, 2012 order limited Barton's access to a surety
arrangement in violation of article I, section 20
Because Barton claims the trial court's October 18, 2012 order violated a
constitutional provision, our review is de novo. See State v. Jorgenson, 179 Wn.2d
145, 150, 312 P.3d 960 (2013); cf Banuelos, 91 Wn. App. at 861-62 (noting abuse
of discretion standard applied in review of the terms of a particular bail order). As
noted, the order here tracked the language of CrR 3.2(b)(4). CrR 3.2 as a whole
deals with the release of the accused. The rule first requires a presumption that the
accused will be released on his or her personal recognizance, unless the court
determines that the accused is unlikely to appear when required or that that he or she
poses a danger to the public or is likely to interfere with witnesses. CrR 3.2(a). If
the court determines the defendant is unlikely to appear, it can turn to the options
listed in CrR 3.2(b) and "impose the least restrictive of [those] conditions [or a
combination thereof] that will reasonably assure that the accused will be present for
later hearings." CrR 3.2(b). If the court determines that the accused is likely to
present a danger to others or tamper with witnesses, it may impose any of the
(nonexclusive) conditions listed in CrR 3 .2(d).
Here, the trial court explained that it was conditioning bail under CrR 3.2(b),
which applies where there is a showing of a likely failure to appear. CrR 3.2(b) sets
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State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
forth the following conditions of release in the event of a showing of a likely failure
to appear:
(1) Place the accused in the custody of a designated person or
organization agreeing to supervise the accused;
(2) Place restrictions on the travel, association, or place of abode of
the accused during the period of release;
(3) Require the execution of an unsecured bond in a specified
amount;
(4) Require the execution of a bond in a specified amount and the
deposit in the registry of the court in cash or other security as directed, of a
sum not to exceed 10 percent of the amount of the bond, such deposit to be
returned upon the performance of the conditions of release or forfeited for
violation of any condition of release;
(5) Require the execution of a bond with sufficient solvent sureties,
or the deposit of cash in lieu thereof;
(6) Require the accused to return to custody during specified hours
or to be placed on electronic monitoring, if available; or
(7) Impose any condition other than detention deemed reasonably
necessary to assure appearance as required.
If the court determines that the accused must post a secured or
unsecured bond, the court shall consider, on the available information, the
accused's financial resources for the purposes of setting a bond that will
reasonably assure the accused's appearance.
As noted, the court "shall" impose the least restrictive condition or
combination of conditions. Subsection (b)(4) appears to differ from the other
subsections dealing with bonds in that it requires a deposit of cash or other security
directly with the court. 7
7
The State seems to argue that CrR 3 .2(b)(4) is unique in a different respect because
it allows courts to impose a financial incentive to follow conditions of release other than
appearance. See, e.g., Br. ofResp't at 32. This argument is hard to square with the text of
CrR 3.2. CrR 3.2(b)(4) is contained in the prong of CrR 3.2 dealing with measures to
secure a defendant's appearance. Conditions of release are addressed later in CrR 3.2(d).
The Snohomish County prosecutor's form dealing with orders on release does not clearly
distinguish these inquiries. CP at 11. This is not to fault the form, but to explain that our
inquiry reads CrR 3.2(b)(4) in the context in which it appears.
-17-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
Barton explains that he is not challenging the constitutionality of the rule.
Pet'r's Reply Br. at 16-17. He argues that the phrase "other security" in the rule can
be read to mean a surety bond for 10 percent of the bail amount and an unsecured
bond for the remaining 90 percent of the bail amount. Pet'r' s Reply Br. at 17. He
maintains that the October 18, 2012 order is more restrictive than CrR 3.2(b)(4)
because it requires he deposit 10 percent of the bond amount in cash or property
without allowing a surety bond. See, e.g., Pet'r's Opening Br. at 3, 23-26. The
court's description of its order seems to support Barton's characterization insofar as
it required "$50,000 in cash or other security, but that is in addition to the bond of
$500,000." VRP (Sept. 7, 2012) at 28. And the court's August 15, 2012 order was
accomplished by interlineating the standard court form to specifically exclude the
execution of a bond with "sufficient sureties." CP at 11 (Order on Release/Det. of
Def. (Aug. 15, 2012)). Indeed, the standard court form does not appear to
incorporate the language of CrR 3.2(b)(4) at all, but rather the language of CrR
3.2(b)(5), which allows execution of a bond with sufficient solvent sureties or the
deposit of cash in lieu thereof. See id. Here, the trial court accomplished its order
by striking the language tracking CrR 3.2(b)(5) and writing in its own language
tracking CrR 3.2(b)(4); it later modified the order to be sure that the language did
track CrR 3.2(b)(4). But its modification cut out the (b)(5) option under CrR 3.2. It
appears that Barton is therefore correct that the trial court's order in fact excluded
execution of a bond via "sufficient sureties."
-18-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
Accepting Barton's argument that the October 18, 2012 order restricts his
access to a surety, we disagree that CrR 3.2(b)(4) can be read in isolation to allow a
surety under the provision of "other security." The language of CrR 3.2(b)(4)
contemplates that the relationship securing the defendant's appearance will be
between the defendant and the court; there is no third-party surety involved. 8 The
trial court understood this, explaining that
Courts contemplate that when bail is set, that that [sic] defendant will have
to go to a surety and post some security in order to get the bond, but that is
not the case....
[W]hat this provision does, this rule, what this rule does is it requires
the security to be posted with the Court. It takes that choice away and that's
why the language is [sic] of the rule is important . . . . So that allows the
defendant to go out and secure an unsecured bond where he can make a
promissory note or some kind of promise to pay or a payment plan and that
- - this provision ensures that the Court will have security for that posted, and
that I think is the rationale for that provision, and I think that that makes it
constitutional.
VRP (Oct. 18, 2012) at 26-27. The court therefore explained that the import of the
rule, and what distinguishes the rule from the other subsections of CrR 3 .2(b), is that
it requires some money or other security to be posted by the defendant with the court.
Under the rule, the money or other security itself secures the defendant's bond and
his appearance, even if he obtains the money or security through some kind of loan
(such as the trial court here suggested, a promissory note). For this reason, CrR
3.2(b)(4) does not appear to contemplate that a third party will assume the
defendant's burden and obligation, which is the definition of a surety. Under a
8
Even if Barton convinced a family member or friend to put up some kind of
collateral worth $50,000, that collateral-not a third-party promise-would secure
Barton's appearance.
-19-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
traditional surety arrangement, a third party stands in the shoes of the defendant.
Under CrR 3.2(b)(4), it appears the defendant must stand in his own shoes.
The history of CrR 3 .2 supports our determination that subsection (b)(4) does
not itself contemplate a surety arrangement. Adoption of the rule followed a national
trend to limit the role of commercial bail bondsmen, who frequently charged a 10
percent "'premium'" on bail, which the defendant forfeited regardless of whether he
appeared. Schilb v. Kuebel, 404 U.S. 357, 359-60, 92 S. Ct. 479, 30 L. Ed. 2d 502
(1971) (interpreting similarly worded Illinois statute). The drafters of CrR 3.2
explained that the Bail Reform Act of1966, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3146-3152, was "the major
source of the wording" of the rule. CRIMINAL RULES TASK FORCE TO WASH.
JUDICIAL COUNCIL, WASHINGTON PROPOSED RULES OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE 22
(1971). "The purpose of the rule," explained the drafters, "is to make money bail
the trial court's last resort in setting conditions for ensuring the accused's appearance
at trial." Id.
This history of the rule suggests that the drafters contemplated subsection
(b)(4) would function separately from the surety arrangement addressed in
subsection (b )(5). The distinction was important at the time the rule was drafted
because the bail bondsmen system had grown into "full and odorous bloom." Schlib,
404 U.S. at 359. But now, using a commercial bail bondsman is often less expensive
than paying a deposit to the court. 9 Also of note is the fact that the federal
9We note that the Schilb Court was of the opinion that the Bail Reform Act of 1966
was not directed against professional bail bondsmen. 404 U.S. at 371.
-20-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
constitution does not guarantee the right to access bail via a sufficient surety.
Subsection (b)(4) was therefore modeled after a federal scheme that may not have
appreciated Washington's unique constitutional framework.
Nonetheless, it is possible to read CrR 3 .2(b) consistent with our surety
guaranty. Even though CrR 3 .2(b)(4) does not satisfy article I, section 20 on its own,
the rule as a whole requires the court to impose the least restrictive alternative that
reasonably assures the accused's appearance. As noted, CrR 3 .2(b)( 5) allows a court
to "[r]equire the execution of a bond with sufficient solvent sureties, or the deposit
of cash in lieu thereof." This provision safeguards a defendant's right to a surety
bond as an alternative to putting up cash or collateral, thus providing an option that
will often be less restrictive than the scenario contemplated in CrR 3.2(b)(4). A
court setting bail is obligated to allow the option listed under CrR 3.2(b)(5) unless it
finds such a surety arrangement will not adequately secure the defendant's
appearance. Other than general discussion about whether the current state of the
commercial bail bonding system adequately ensures appearance, this record contains
no particularized findings about Barton's likelihood of appearance.
To the extent that the trial court's October 18, 2012 order excluded a surety
bond under CrR 3.2(b)(5) from the list of options available to Barton, it was more
restrictive than CrR 3.2(b) as a whole allows and contrary to article I, section 20.
We hold that the October 18, 2012 order entered in this case improperly prohibited
Barton's access to a surety as guaranteed by article I, section 20.
-21-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
CONCLUSION
Article I, section 20 of the Washington State Constitution guarantees those
accused ofbailable offenses the right to access bail by sufficient sureties. Consistent
with both its historical and ordinary meaning, we hold that surety contemplates a
third-party arrangement, as distinguished from the accused depositing cash or
property directly with the court. Barton was ordered to secure his bail with a 10
percent deposit in the amount of the bond "in cash or other security." We hold that
this order, insofar as it disallowed use of a surety, violates the constitutional mandate
of article I, section 20. We vacate the order and remand for proceedings consistent
with this opinion. 10
10
In light of our resolution of this case, we do not address Barton's additional claims
that the bail order violates his constitutional right to equal protection and offends the
constitutional bar against excessive bail.
-22-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), 89390-0
WE CONCUR:
.
Q
.
-
-23-
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), No. 89390-0
(Gordon McCloud, J., Concurrence)
No. 89390-0
GORDON McCLOUD, J. (concurring)-The Washington Constitution,
article I, section 20, states that criminal defendants "shall be bailable by sufficient
sureties." I agree with the majority that this means that criminal defendants have the
right to make bail not just by posting cash but alternatively by using a surety, that is,
a third party guarantor. I agree with the majority's analysis of the meaning and
importance of this constitutional provision. And I agree with the majority that the
trial court's October 18, 2012, order in this case violated that constitutional
provision: it required the defendant to post cash with the court and prohibited him
from using a surety. Majority at 21 ("We hold that the October 18, 2012 order
entered in this case improperly prohibited Barton's access to a surety as guaranteed
by article I, section 20.").
But, as the majority acknowledges, the trial court's October 18, 2012, order
"tracked the language of [Criminal Rule] CrR 3.2(b)(4)." Majority at 16. And as
the majority further acknowledges, even the portion ofthe trial court's October 18,
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), No. 89390-0
(Gordon McCloud, J., Concurrence)
2012, order barring the defendant from using a surety to post cash with the court
tracked CrR 3 .2(b)(4), when read in context with the rest of that rule. Majority at
18-19. A fortiori, CrR 3.2(b)(4) itself-and not just the trial court's order which
relied on that rule and tracked its language-violates article I, section 20.
The majority, however, makes a complicated argument about why CrR
3 .2(b)(4) nevertheless remains constitutional. Majority at 21 ("CrR 3 .2(b)(4) ...
remains constitutional when read in the context of the other provisions of subsection
(b)."). It reasons that the rule was fine, but the trial court erred in following that
rule to the letter.
I disagree. The trial court did follow the rule. The trial court's order was
unconstitutional in this case. The subsection of CrR 3 .2(b) that the trial court tracked
was unconstitutional as applied in this case. I don't understand how one can fault
the trial court for applying the literal language of the rule but not fault the rule.
For that reason, I respectfully concur in the vast bulk of the majority's analysis
and in its conclusion. I disagree, however, with its assertion that CrR 3 .2(b )(4)-
the statutory subsection that formed the basis for the unconstitutional bail order-
survives constitutional scrutiny.
2
State v. Barton (Peter Richard), No. 89390-0
(Gordon McCloud, J., Concurrence)
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