State v. Aguilera

This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date. IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 1 STATE OF NEW MEXICO, 2 Plaintiff-Appellee, 3 v. No. 34,754 4 SERINA AGUILERA, 5 Defendant, 6 and 7 TIMOTHY YOUNG, 8 Surety-Appellant. 9 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LUNA COUNTY 10 Jennifer E. Delaney, District Judge 11 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General 12 Santa Fe, NM 13 John Kloss, Assistant Attorney General 14 Albuquerque, NM 15 for Appellee 16 Kennedy Kennedy & Ives, LLC 17 Joseph P. Kennedy 18 Albuquerque, NM 1 for Appellant 2 MEMORANDUM OPINION 3 HANISEE, Judge. 4 {1} Timothy Young (Surety) appeals the forfeiture of $25,000 he had posted as a 5 cash bond on behalf of Defendant Serina Aguilera. When released, Aguilera 6 absconded to Mexico, and while there violated a condition of release that required her 7 to attend an August 18, 2014 hearing in district court. The district court issued a 8 default judgment on April 21, 2015, ordering that the bond be forfeited. 9 {2} On appeal, Surety challenges only whether the district court properly forfeited 10 the $25,000 cash bond that Surety posted. Following the completion of briefing, this 11 Court issued an order of limited remand sua sponte on October 3, 2016. The order 12 stated that the parties’ “interpretation[s] of the underlying facts in the case [are] 13 starkly different,” and instructed the district court to enter “detailed findings of fact” 14 based on only “the existing record[.]” On October 24, 2016, the district court filed its 15 findings of fact on bail forfeiture [and] default judgment. We now affirm. 16 FACTS AND BACKGROUND 17 {3} Aguilera was initially arrested pursuant to a warrant stemming from a criminal 18 information that charged her with aggravated battery, aggravated assault, and 19 possession of a firearm or destructive device by a felon. Surety posted the $25,000 20 cash bond for her release. Thereafter, Aguilera apparently “fled” to Mexico. While in 2 1 Mexico, Aguilera failed to appear for a scheduled court hearing on August 18, 2014, 2 which resulted in the issuance of a bench warrant for her arrest. Thereafter, Surety 3 apparently traveled to Mexico to convince Aguilera to return to the United States. On 4 September 24, 2014, upon reentry to the United States, authorities detained both 5 Aguilera and Surety at the Columbus, New Mexico, port of entry for reasons unrelated 6 to her case in district court. Afterward, Aguilera remained in custody, and as a result 7 missed additional court hearings. 8 {4} On December 5, 2014, on the State’s motion, but possibly then without 9 knowledge of Aguilera’s detainment, the district court entered a notice of forfeiture 10 and order to show cause, which stated that should Aguilera fail to appear at a January 11 22, 2015 hearing, a default judgment would be entered ordering that the bond be 12 forfeited. On January 29, 2015, the district court entered another notice of forfeiture 13 and order to show cause, this time serving both Surety and Aguilera, stating that in 14 order to avoid a default judgment Surety and Aguilera were required to attend a 15 rescheduled hearing on February 9, 2015. Shortly thereafter, Surety, through counsel, 16 filed a motion to release the bond, explaining that Aguilera had been arrested and in 17 custody since September 24, 2014. The bond forfeiture hearing was nonetheless held 18 on February 9, 2015. On April 21, 2015, default judgment on the cash bond was 19 entered, stating that Aguilera had “failed to appear” in violation of her signed 3 1 condition of release agreeing that she “would appear at such times and places as may 2 be required by [the district] court.” The district court also concluded that Aguilera was 3 not “surrendered into custody[,] and good cause [was] not . . . shown [as to] why 4 default judgment should not be entered.” Ultimately, Aguilera was returned to the 5 jurisdiction of the district court where she entered into a repeat offender plea and 6 disposition agreement on March 4, 2015, and an amended plea and disposition 7 agreement on May 4, 2015. 8 {5} Briefing by Surety and the State painst two completely different pictures of 9 Aguilera’s return from Mexico. While Surety concedes that he and Aguilera were both 10 detained upon their reentry into the United States at the Columbus, New Mexico, port 11 of entry, and that Aguilera was discovered to be “traveling with false documents[,]” 12 he maintains that “by traveling back from Mexico into New Mexico [Surety] 13 effectively surrendered Aguilera into custody.” The State, on the other hand, cites to 14 the record from the February 9, 2015 show cause hearing, and accuses Surety of being 15 complicit in Aguilera’s then-ongoing effort not to be taken into custody. Specifically, 16 the State maintains that Surety first “crossed into Mexico alone with a stolen I.D.” and 17 then “accompanied Aguilera the next day when authorities caught Aguilera using the 18 same stolen I.D. to re-enter from Mexico through the port of entry.” Indeed, the Luna 19 County Sheriff’s Department Criminal Investigator Michael Brown participated in the 4 1 investigation of Surety and Aguilera, and “charged . . . Aguilera with concealing 2 identity and identity theft and charged [Surety] . . . with identity theft[,] and aiding or 3 harboring a felon.” Additionally, the State argues that whatever happened or did not 4 happen regarding Aguilera’s return, based upon her prior “undisputed breach of the 5 bond condition, the district court did not improperly declare that the bail had been 6 forfeited.” 7 {6} On limited remand, the district court provided factual findings that both explain 8 the basis for its bond revocation and support the State’s version of the facts. Initially, 9 the court observed that Surety “provide[d no] evidence at the hearing; for example, 10 he did not testify or provide any witnesses.” Regarding the State’s evidence, the 11 district court found that Mr. Brown’s uncontradicted testimony established that 12 “[w]hen [Surety] entered Mexico, [he] had a New Mexico [d]river’s [l]icense 13 belonging to [another woman, which] had previously been reported as stolen.” The 14 district court also found that when Aguilera “attempted to cross into the United States 15 from Mexico[,] . . . [she] tried to use [the other woman’s stolen] driver’s license[.]” 16 Following the bond forfeiture hearing, the district court reiterated: “If [Surety’s] real 17 intent was to turn [Aguilera] over to authorities, then that’s what would have been 18 done . . . at the port of entry.” The court found instead that Aguilera “attempt[ed] to 19 enter as opposed to surrender[] herself[.]” 5 1 DISCUSSION 2 {7} Surety appeals, primarily claiming that the district court misapplied the law of 3 bond forfeiture because “Aguilera was placed in custody prior to the [district] court’s 4 default judgment” forfeiting Surety’s bond. Disputing the contention that he was 5 helping Aguilera elude authorities, Surety argues that the “more likely explanation for 6 [Surety’s] presence at the border” was that he was “accompanying Aguilera back to 7 New Mexico to fulfill his duties as a bondsman.” He contends that Aguilera’s arrest 8 was due to the fact that he surrendered her into custody. Surety secondarily contends 9 that the State “failed to produce any evidence regarding the bail contract between 10 [Surety] and the State.” 11 {8} In the context of a district court’s order revoking bond, our Supreme Court has 12 employed an abuse of discretion standard of review. See State v. Amador, 1982- 13 NMSC-083, ¶ 16, 98 N.M. 270, 648 P.2d 309 (concluding under the circumstances 14 before it that “it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to order the total 15 forfeiture of the bond”). “A [district] court abuses its discretion when a ruling is 16 clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances, or when the ruling 17 is contrary to the reasonable, probable, and actual deductions that may be drawn from 18 the facts and circumstances.” State v. Pacheco, 2008-NMCA-055, ¶ 25, 143 N.M. 19 851, 182 P.3d 834 (concluding that the “word ‘may’ indicates that the district court 6 1 has discretion, but is not required, to declare a bond forfeiture”). A district court’s 2 findings of fact are generally reviewed for substantial evidence. See State v. Urioste, 3 2002-NMSC-023, ¶ 6, 132 N.M. 592, 52 P.3d 964. 4 {9} Rule 5-406(C) NMRA states that “[i]f there is a breach of condition of a bond, 5 the court may declare a forfeiture of the bail.” (Emphasis added.) Similarly, NMSA 6 1978, Section 31-3-2(B)(2) (1993), states that, if a person “fails to appear at the time 7 and place fixed by the terms of his bail bond, the court . . . may declare a forfeiture of 8 the bail.” (Emphasis added.) Not dissimilar to the discretionary language regarding 9 forfeiture of bonds in circumstances of breach, Rule 5-406(D) similarly states that the 10 court may set aside the forfeiture upon a showing of good cause or if the defendant is 11 surrendered by the surety into custody prior to the entry of a judgment of default on 12 the bond. However, Section 31-3-2(F) rids the court of discretion in one specific 13 circumstance, requiring that, 14 [w]hen a judgment has been rendered against the defendant or surety for 15 the whole or part of the penalty of a forfeited recognizance, the court 16 rendering such judgment shall remit the amount thereof when, after such 17 rendition, the accused has been arrested and surrendered to the proper 18 court to be tried on such charge or to answer the judgment of the court, 19 provided that the apprehension of the accused in some way was aided by 20 the surety’s efforts or by information supplied by the surety. 21 (Emphases added.) 7 1 {10} Surety relies heavily on Amador, a 1982 case in which our Supreme Court 2 declared that “[c]onsidering the purposes of bail and the policy to encourage 3 bondsmen to enter into bail contracts, it is unjust to enrich the state treasury when a 4 bondsman has been diligent in his efforts to apprehend and bring back for trial a 5 defendant but has been thwarted by the actions of another sovereign jurisdiction.” 6 1982-NMSC-083, ¶ 14. The court in Amador held that because “[t]he bondsman did 7 all he could to secure the defendant’s presence and insure the state against its 8 monetary loss” and because “[t]he [s]tate [was] not unduly prejudiced by the 9 defendant’s failure to appear because he [could have been] returned to New Mexico 10 for trial once he [was] released[,] . . . justice [did] not require the forfeiture of the 11 entire amount of the bond [and] . . . it was an abuse of discretion for the [district] court 12 to order the total forfeiture of the bond.” Id. ¶¶ 15-16. Thus, although Rule 5-406 13 utilizes language that is discretionary, Amador limits the district court’s discretion in 14 circumstances where a bondsman exerts sufficient efforts, but the defendant is unable 15 to appear for court due to the defendant being held by another jurisdiction, in which 16 case the bond should be returned. See 1982-NMSC-083, ¶ 14. This language is not 17 dissimilar to the guiding inquiry set forth in the mandatorily worded Section 31-3- 18 2(F), which in this instance would operate to foreclose forfeiture if Aguilera’s 8 1 apprehension was “aided by [Surety’s] efforts or by information supplied by 2 [Surety].” Id. 3 {11} Unlike the defendant in Amador, Aguilera was not already in custody when she 4 missed the first hearing—she was, apparently, by then in Mexico. Indeed, Amador 5 was addressed by this Court in Pacheco, where we stated that, “[u]nlike the situation 6 in Amador, in the present case [the d]efendant is not in custody in another jurisdiction, 7 nor was he in custody at the time he was scheduled for trial.” Pacheco, 2008-NMCA- 8 055, ¶ 28. We explained: 9 [the defendant] failed to appear for trial . . . and [was] still at large. It was 10 not until one year later, . . . after six hearings, at the last three of which 11 [the surety] itself was present, that the district court entered a judgment 12 ordering forfeiture. The district court entertained [the surety]’s motion 13 to reconsider forfeiture[,] . . . giving [the surety] two more months to 14 locate and apprehend [the d]efendant. We fail to see how the district 15 court, in considering [the surety]’s motion to reconsider and giving [the 16 surety] one year from the failure to appear, abused its discretion in 17 entering judgment on forfeiture of the bond. 18 Id. Although dissimilar in some factual respects, like in Pacheco Aguilera was not yet 19 arrested and could be deemed to have been “at large” when she missed her first court 20 appearance. 21 {12} But our inquiry here is guided by facts quite different from those in Amador and 22 Pacheco. That is because other than being present with Aguilera when she was 23 arrested, Surety was more an impediment to her surrender than a facilitator of it. 9 1 Uncontradicted evidence in the record—presented by the State and which supported 2 the default judgment issued by the district court and formed the basis of its ensuing 3 findings of fact—was that Surety carried a stolen New Mexico driver’s license to 4 Aguilera in Mexico. The district court found on remand that Aguilera then falsely 5 presented that method of identification when attempting to return, alongside Surety, 6 to the United States. By Aguilera doing so, border officials were therefore uninformed 7 (by her or Surety) of Aguilera’s true identity, or of the outstanding warrant for her 8 arrest. In other words, her effort at the time of her arrest, embraced by Surety from the 9 standpoint of facts available to the district court, was directed toward remaining free 10 from custody, not surrendering to it. As to Surety, rather than turning Aguilera into 11 authorities at the port of entry when he had an opportunity to do so, he too was 12 detained and charged with criminal acts when Aguilera’s plan failed and she was 13 arrested for crimes stemming from her possession and misuse of the stolen driver’s 14 license supplied by Surety. The inescapable conclusion is that not only did Surety’s 15 efforts not aid Aguilera’s apprehension, they appear to have been directed toward her 16 failed effort to avoid apprehension. Likewise, prior to Aguilera’s arrest, Surety 17 provided no information regarding the circumstances Surety then knew to exist on 18 which the arresting officer could have arguably relied in detecting that Aguilera was 19 not whom she was pretending to be, the very fact (wholly unrelated to the pending 10 1 case with which Surety claims to have assisted) that led to her being arrested and 2 ultimately returned to Luna County for prosecution. 3 {13} Under these circumstances, applying the applicable rule and statute is a 4 straightforward proposition. On the record before it, the district court was not only 5 within its discretion to conclude that Aguilera was not “surrendered [by Surety] into 6 custody,” see Rule 5-406(D), it was not afoul of Section 31-3-2(F). Thus, under Rule 7 5-406(C), the district court was permitted to “declare a forfeiture of the bail.” We 8 observe also that Amador contains an additionally instructive sentence: “Here the 9 bondsman did not connive with the defendant to avoid justice.” 1982-NMSC-083, 10 ¶ 15. Such cannot be said about Surety on the record before us despite what may have 11 begun as a well-intentioned effort by Surety to effectuate Aguilera’s return to the 12 United States. 13 {14} Surety lastly argues that the State failed to present the contract between itself 14 and Surety, and that therefore the district court was precluded from forfeiting the bond 15 posted by Surety. Our review of the record, however, indicates that this argument was 16 not preserved. See Rule 12-216(A) NMRA (recompiled and amended as 12-321(A) 17 NMRA, effective Dec. 31, 2016) (“To preserve an issue for review, it must appear that 18 a ruling or decision by the [district] court was fairly invoked.”). “In order to preserve 19 an issue for appeal, a defendant must make a timely objection that specifically 11 1 apprises the trial court of the nature of the claimed error and invokes an intelligent 2 ruling thereon.” State v. Montoya, 2015-NMSC-010, ¶ 45, 345 P.3d 1056 (internal 3 quotation marks and citation omitted). “We generally do not consider issues on appeal 4 that are not preserved below.” State v. Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 33, 292 P.3d 493 5 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Consequently, we will not consider 6 the merit of Surety’s assertion that the bond contract must have been made a part of 7 the record proper. 8 {15} Based on the reasons set forth above, we affirm. 9 {16} IT IS SO ORDERED. 10 _________________________________ 11 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge 12 WE CONCUR: 13 _________________________________ 14 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge 15 _________________________________ 16 M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge 12