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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. No. A-1-CA-35277
5 HUGO MACIAS,
6 Defendant,
7 and
8 A PACHECO BONDING, INC.,
9 Surety-Appellant.
10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
11 Judith K. Nakamura, District Judge
12 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
13 Maris Veidemanis, Assistant Attorney General
14 Santa Fe, NM
15 for Appellee
16 Jason M. Alarid
17 Albuquerque, NM
18 for Appellant
19 MEMORANDUM OPINION
1 FRENCH, Judge.
2 {1} A Pacheco Bonding, Inc. (Surety) appeals a district court order and judgment
3 denying its motion to exonerate a bond and forfeiting the bail bond Surety posted on
4 behalf of Defendant Hugo Macias. Defendant failed to appear before the district court
5 for a status hearing in January 2014. As a result, the district court declared a forfeiture
6 of the bond and issued an order that Surety show cause why a judgment of forfeiture
7 should not be entered. The district court then conducted a series of eleven hearings
8 addressing forfeiture of the bond and ultimately entered the judgment nearly two years
9 later in December 2015. On appeal, Surety argues that the district court’s decision to
10 forfeit the entire bond was an abuse of discretion. Having duly considered Surety’s
11 argument, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion with regard to the
12 bond at issue in this case and, therefore, affirm.
13 {2} New Mexico’s statutory scheme governing the forfeiture of bonds recites that
14 “[w]henever a person fails to appear at the time and place fixed by the terms of his
15 bail bond, the court . . . may declare a forfeiture of the bail.” NMSA 1978, § 31-3-
16 2(B)(2) (1993). Nonetheless, “if it appears that justice does not require the
17 enforcement of the forfeiture[,]” the district court “may direct that a forfeiture be set
18 aside.” Section 31-3-2(C). Given the broadly discretionary language used to authorize
19 both forfeiture and exoneration, this Court reviews the district court’s ruling on
2
1 whether or not to declare a forfeiture for an abuse of discretion. See State v. Pacheco,
2 2008-NMCA-055, ¶ 25, 143 N.M. 851, 182 P.3d 834.
3 {3} In this case, the district court’s order forfeiting the bond included detailed
4 findings laying out the chronology of events below.1 On appeal, Surety does not
5 challenge that chronology. Instead, Surety takes issue with a determination by the
6 district court regarding Surety’s diligence, challenging “the [c]ourt’s finding that
7 [Surety was] not diligent before or after the forfeiture of the bond.” In particular,
8 Surety argues that it acted with due diligence when attempting to bring Defendant
9 back from Mexico, where he appears to have fled. As a result, Surety argues, the
10 interests of justice do not require enforcement of the forfeiture. For support, Surety
11 relies upon State v. Amador, 1982-NMSC-083, 98 N.M. 270, 648 P.2d 309. In that
12 case, our Supreme Court found an abuse of discretion where a forfeiture was ordered
13 in spite of the fact that the bondsman had done everything it could to produce a
14 defendant who was incarcerated in Texas at the time set for trial. Id. ¶¶ 2, 15-16.
15 {4} As noted by the district court, however, the facts of the present case are
16 distinguishable from Amador. In particular, with regard to Surety’s diligence, the
17 district court found that Surety
1
18 As the parties to this appeal are familiar with the facts of this case, the district
19 court’s full chronology of events will not be reiterated in this opinion.
3
1 did not take any steps to confirm Defendant’s citizenship other than
2 taking him at his word that he was a U.S. citizen and did not even meet
3 with Defendant prior to posting his bond. [Surety] did not follow up
4 when Defendant failed to check in as agreed. After Defendant failed to
5 appear, although [Surety’s agent] spoke with Defendant on January 23,
6 2014, he did not attempt in-person contact until January 25, 2014, only
7 returned to Defendant’s residence three times, and did not speak with
8 neighbors until five months late[r]. Although Defendant’s whereabouts
9 in Mexico were reasonably known in February 2014, no efforts were
10 made to send someone associated with the bonding company to Mexico
11 until August 2015. Based on [Surety’s agent’s] invoice, the majority of
12 his efforts to locate Defendant were spent in making phone calls to
13 Defendant’s brother and sister-in-law and conducting internet and
14 database searches.
15 Thus, in finding that Surety was “less than diligent,” the district court in this case was
16 relying upon Surety’s actions both before and after Defendant violated the conditions
17 of his release. As already noted, Surety’s appeal does not challenge the district court’s
18 chronology of events; Surety merely argues that these facts do not establish its lack
19 of diligence.
20 {5} With regard to its actions before Defendant failed to appear for a status hearing,
21 Surety argues that it has “no means to verify [s]ocial [s]ecurity numbers[,]” and was
22 “not required to have known [Defendant’s] immigration status.” Surety does not,
23 however, explain why Defendant was never asked whether he had a passport, why no
24 one met with Defendant before posting bond, or why there was no follow-up when
25 Defendant apparently failed to check in with Surety’s agent.
4
1 {6} With regard to its actions after Defendant’s violation of his conditions of
2 release, Surety claims that the State failed to obtain a federal warrant, thereby
3 preventing Defendant’s return from Mexico. In September 2014 the assistant district
4 attorney in this case told the district court that she was “in contact with the U.S.
5 Marshals and the FBI to get an unlawful flight to avoid prosecution warrant issued.”
6 Similarly, a year later, Surety told the court that “U.S. authorities are on the page to
7 be ready to receive him . . ., but we have to be the ones to sort of facilitate him
8 becoming in custody.” Surety’s subsequent attempt to facilitate Defendant “becoming
9 in custody,” however, was prevented by Mexican police. Based upon the available
10 record, it is unclear whether the State was able to obtain a federal warrant and, if not,
11 why Surety believed otherwise. What can be said, however, is that the district court
12 conducted a hearing on Surety’s motion to exonerate the bond, and Surety offered no
13 evidence at that hearing that might have answered those questions. In the absence of
14 such evidence, Surety has not demonstrated any abuse of discretion in connection with
15 any implied findings or conclusions related to any federal warrant.
16 {7} And, finally, Surety directs our attention to a passage from Amador dealing with
17 the equity of forfeiture “when a bondsman has been diligent in his efforts to
18 apprehend and bring back for trial a defendant but has been thwarted by the actions
19 of another sovereign jurisdiction.” 1982-NMSC-083, ¶ 14. Again, the present case is
5
1 distinguishable from Amador. In Amador the bondsman promptly located the
2 defendant in a Texas jail, assured that a detainer was filed in Texas, and offered to pay
3 extradition and transportation costs associated with bringing the defendant back to
4 New Mexico. Id. ¶ 15. Thus, in Amador, the State was “not unduly prejudiced by the
5 defendant’s failure to appear” since he could be returned for trial upon the completion
6 of his sentence in Texas. Id. Here, Surety can offer no assurance of any sort that
7 Defendant, who remains at large, will ever be returned to New Mexico to face trial.
8 Thus, the district court properly determined that the facts of this case more closely
9 resemble those of Pacheco, 2008-NMCA-055, which involved a defendant who was
10 at large at the time he violated the conditions of his release and remained at large a
11 year later when the district court finally entered a judgment of forfeiture. Id. ¶ 28.
12 {8} The ultimate purpose of a bail bond is to secure a defendant’s attendance at
13 trial. See Amador, 1982-NMSC-083, ¶ 13. Given that purpose, a bond may be
14 forfeited, “not as a punishment to the surety or to enrich the Treasury of the State, but
15 as an incentive to have the accused return or be returned to the jurisdiction of the
16 court.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). As the district court
17 accurately noted, exoneration of the bond in this case “would remove any incentive
18 that [Surety] has for producing Defendant.” See § 31-3-2(F) (“When a judgment has
19 been rendered against the defendant or surety for the whole or part of the penalty of
6
1 a forfeited recognizance, the court rendering such judgment shall remit the amount
2 thereof when, after such rendition, the accused has been arrested and surrendered to
3 the proper court to be tried on such charge or to answer the judgment of the court,
4 provided that the apprehension of the accused in some way was aided by the surety’s
5 efforts or by information supplied by the surety.”).
6 {9} Fundamentally, the district court’s order and judgment leaves in place Surety’s
7 incentive to see that Defendant is ultimately produced for trial. In doing so, the district
8 court is merely enforcing Surety’s contractual agreement with the State, by which
9 Surety became a guarantor of Defendant’s appearance. Under the circumstances of
10 this case, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion by concluding that
11 the interests of justice do not prevent forfeiture of the bond. The order and judgment
12 of the district court is affirmed.
13 {10} IT IS SO ORDERED.
14
15 STEPHEN G. FRENCH, Judge
7
1 WE CONCUR:
2
3 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
4
5 DANIEL J. GALLEGOS, Judge
8