HOLCOMB, J., dissents. Upon filing in the superior court of Thurston county an information charging Jack Seibert with a minor offense, bail was fixed at five hundred dollars. He furnished a bond in that amount with private sureties, which was duly approved and filed January 15, 1932. He was a non-resident of the county.
The prosecuting attorney attempted to arrange, and supposed he had arranged, by telephone conversation with Mr. O.M. Nelson, thought at that time to be the *Page 81 defendant's attorney and who later appeared in the case as such, to have the arraignment and trial at the same time during the first succeeding jury term. The case was assigned to be tried February 3, 1932, which, on application of the prosecuting attorney, was re-assigned for trial February 23, 1932. The defendant not appearing at that time, the prosecuting attorney procured in open court an entry in the minutes to that effect.
On that date, February 23, 1932, an amended information against the defendant was filed, covering, among others, the crime set out in the original information. The defendant, being brought into court, was arraigned on the amended information on February 27, 1932, and, as the record shows:
"Defendant's bond fixed at five hundred dollars. With the understanding that the defendant would not be released from the custody of the sheriff until the matter of the forfeiture of his former bond, now pending in this court, is disposed of."
The court ordered that a new bond be filed in the sum of five hundred dollars, which was promptly given on that day and approved by the trial judge.
In the meantime, an order was entered on February 26, 1932, directing the bondsmen in the first bond to show cause on March 14, 1932, why the bond should not be forfeited. The hearing was continued on the show cause order to March 21, 1932, at which time all the parties appeared; and upon a hearing, the court declared the bond of January 15, 1932, forfeited. The defendant and his bondsmen have appealed.
[1] There is some controversy in the record relative to a misunderstanding concerning the fixing of the date for the trial of the defendant, at which he did not appear. That controversy, in our opinion, is not very important now. The theory or policy of our *Page 82 statute is to encourage the giving of bail in proper cases. We so declared in State v. Johnson, 69 Wash. 612, 126 P. 56. And inState v. Jackschitz, 76 Wash. 253, 136 P. 132, we approved the statement in the case of United States v. Feely, 1 Brock. (U.S.) 255-259, that:
"The object of a recognizance is, not to enrich the treasury, but to combine the administration of criminal justice with the convenience of a person accused, but not proved to be guilty."
In the present case, while proceedings to forfeit the bond were pending, and prior to the date fixed for the hearing of the application for forfeiture, the defendant was arraigned on an amended information, and at that time required to give a new bond in the same sum of five hundred dollars. Such a bond with sureties, approved by the trial judge, was promptly executed and filed on that same day. Under the circumstances, the order of the court thereafter declaring a forfeiture of the first bond against the defendant and his sureties, was not warranted, in our opinion, and constitutes reversible error.
The record shows that, at the close of the hearing, something was said about expenses the county had sustained because the defendant failed to appear for trial of the criminal case against him. However, no such issue was presented, nor any testimony introduced upon that subject. We, of course, express no opinion concerning such an issue. The only question presented was the forfeiture of the bond.
Reversed.
TOLMAN, C.J., PARKER, and MILLARD, JJ., concur.