State v. Baker
Decision Date | 23 February 2000 |
Citation | 998 P.2d 700,165 Or. App. 565 |
Parties | STATE of Oregon, Plaintiff, v. Jacob Don BAKER, Defendant. Jacob Don Baker, Appellant, v. State of Oregon, Respondent. Don A. Carpenter, Guardian Ad Litem for Don A. Carpenter, Jr., and State of Oregon ex rel Tawnya Knight, Third-Party Claimants—Respondents, v. Charlotte Baker and Ronald H. Hoevet, Third-Party Claimants—Appellants. |
Court | Oregon Court of Appeals |
Per C. Olson argued the cause for appellants. With him on the brief were Ronald H. Hoevet, Portland, and Hoevet, Snyder & Boise, P.C.
Nicole Owren-Wiest, Certified Law Student, argued the cause for respondent State of Oregon. On the brief were Hardy Myers, Attorney General, Michael D. Reynolds, Solicitor General, and Christine A. Chute, Assistant Attorney General.
No appearance for respondents Don A. Carpenter and State of Oregon ex rel Tawnya Knight.
Before LANDAU, Presiding Judge, and LINDER and BREWER, Judges.
At issue in this case is whether the trial court properly applied funds posted as security to other court-ordered obligations. We hold that it did and affirm.
Defendant was charged with manslaughter in the first degree. His mother posted $25,000 security. Both defendant and his mother signed a "release order and agreement." That agreement first lists various conditions of release, including:
(Emphasis added.) Following that portion is a place for defendant to sign, and he did so. The agreement then contains a statement of "surety verification of net worth and agreement," which provides:
(Emphasis added.) Following that provision is a place for the person posting the security to sign, and defendant's mother did so. The agreement also contains a provision entitled "Information on Person Posting Bail" followed by a signature line containing the following statement:
(Emphasis added.) Defendant's mother's signature appears on the signature line. On the reverse side is the following statement:
(Boldface, underscoring in original.) Mother subsequently assigned an interest in the $25,000 security to defendant's attorney, Ronald Hoevet.
Defendant entered a plea of no contest and was found guilty of criminally negligent homicide. Meanwhile, defendant had become subject to a civil judgment in another matter. He also had accrued approximately $14,000 in back child support payment obligations. The plaintiffs in the civil case, Don A. Carpenter and Don A. Carpenter, Jr., sought an order of the court to enforce their civil judgment against the security amount and filed writs of garnishment against the security. The state likewise sought an order to show cause why the security should not be applied to the child support arrearage. The trial court entered orders to show cause why the security should not be applied to both obligations. Defendant, his mother, and Hoevet then filed motions to exonerate bail, arguing that the $25,000 security belonged to defendant's mother and, by assignment, to Hoevet, and could not be applied to obligations that they did not incur. The trial court denied the motions to exonerate, ordered that approximately $14,000 of the security deposit be applied to defendant's child support obligations, and ordered that the balance be subject to the writ of garnishment in the Carpenter action.
On appeal, defendant, his mother, and Hoevet—collectively referred to as "appellants"—first argue that the trial court erred in denying their motions to exonerate. They argue that the trial court lacked authority to apply the $25,000 security posted by mother to obligations unrelated to the criminal proceeding against defendant. The state argues that, under ORS 135.265 and the terms of the release order and agreement, the trial court possessed the authority to apply the security to amounts that defendant owed in this or any other case. Appellants reply that the terms of the release order and agreement are unenforceable as "contrary to law and public policy."
ORS 135.265(2) (1997)1 provides, in part:
The text of the statute suggests that at least two requirements must be satisfied before the trial court may return a security deposit either to a defendant or some other person who supplied the funds. First, the defendant must have performed all of the conditions of the release agreement. Second, the defendant must have been discharged from all obligations in the cause. Even then, however, the court is not required to return the security deposit. The statute provides that the money is to be returned, "unless the court orders otherwise."
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