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Connecticut bail laws
- Applicable Statutes.
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CONNECTICUT
GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE
POLICE CHAPTER 533A. BAIL ENFORCEMENT AGENTS.
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CONNECTICUT
GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED TITLE 54. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
CHAPTER 960. INFORMATION, PROCEDURE AND BAIL.
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CONNECTICUT
GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE
POLICE CHAPTER 533. PROFESSIONAL BONDSMEN.
Licensing
Requirements for Agents.
*** Connecticut Statutes provide for the
recovery of persons failing to appear on bonds by those licensed
as "professional bondsmen," "surety bail bond
agents" and "bail enforcement agents." Therefore,
while some of the licensing requirements are similar, the
licensing provisions for all three positions are given below. As
described in the Connecticut statutes, the role of "bail
enforcement agent" seems most akin to that of a bounty
hunter, while the other two seem more similar to sureites.
*** Throughout the sections below,
"Commissioner" means the Insurance Commissioner of
Public Safety.
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CONNECTICUT
GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE
POLICE
CHAPTER
533A. BAIL ENFORCEMENT AGENTS
§ 29-152e. License required
- No person shall, as a surety on a bond
in a criminal proceeding or an agent of such surety, engage
in the business of taking or attempting to take into custody
the principal on the bond who has failed to appear in court
and for whom a rearrest warrant or a capias has been issued
pursuant to section 54-65a unless such person is licensed as
a professional bondsman under chapter 533, a surety bail
bond agent under chapter 700f or a bail enforcement agent
under sections 29-152f to 29-152i, inclusive.
§ 29-152f. Application for license
- Any person desiring to engage in the
business of a bail enforcement agent shall apply to the
Commissioner of Public Safety for a license therefor. Such
application shall set forth under oath the full name, age,
date and place of birth, residence and occupation of the
applicant. It shall also set forth under oath a statement of
whether the applicant has been charged with or convicted of
crime, and such other information, including fingerprints
and photographs, as required by the commissioner. The
commissioner shall submit the applicant's fingerprints to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation for a national criminal
history record check. Within five years prior to the date of
application, the applicant shall have successfully completed
a course in the criminal justice system consisting of not
less than twenty hours of study approved by the
commissioner. No person who has been convicted of a felony
or any misdemeanor under section 21a-279, 53a-58, 53a-61,
53a-61a, 53a-62, 53a-63, 53a-96, 53a-173, 53a-175, 53a-176,
53a-178 or 53a-181d, shall be licensed to do business as a
bail enforcement agent in this state. No person engaged in
law enforcement or vested with police powers shall be
licensed to do business as a bail enforcement agent.
§ 29-152g. Issuance of license
- Upon being satisfied, after
investigation, that the applicant is a suitable person to
receive a license as a bail enforcement agent, and that the
applicant meets the licensing requirements of section
29-152f, the Commissioner of Public Safety may issue a
license to such applicant to do business in this state as a
bail enforcement agent. The fee for such license shall be
one hundred dollars. Each such license shall be for such
term not exceeding one year as said commissioner determines.
Any bail enforcement agent holding a license issued pursuant
to this section or section 29-152h shall notify the
commissioner within two business days of any change of
address. The notification shall include the bail enforcement
agent's old address and new address.
§ 29-152h. Renewal of license
- Each person licensed as a bail
enforcement agent under the provisions of sections 29-152f
to 29-152i, inclusive, may apply for a renewal of such
license upon renewal application forms provided by the
Commissioner of Public Safety and requiring the disclosure
of such information as said commissioner requires in
determining whether or not such agent's suitability to
continue in such business has changed since the issuance of
any prior license. The fee for renewal of a bail enforcement
agent's license shall be one hundred dollars.
§ 29-152i. Suspension or revocation of
license
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The
Commissioner of Public Safety may suspend, revoke or refuse
to renew the license of any bail enforcement agent, provided
notice shall have been given to the licensee to appear
before the commissioner to show cause why the license should
not be suspended, revoked or refused renewal, upon a finding
by the commissioner that: (1) The licensee has violated any
of the terms or provisions of sections 29-152e to 29-152m,
or section 38a-660a or any of the regulations adopted under
section 29-152o; (2) the licensee has practiced fraud,
deceit or misrepresentation; (3) the licensee has made a
material misstatement in the application for issuance or
renewal of such license; (4) the licensee has demonstrated
incompetence or untrustworthiness in the conduct of the
licensee's business; (5) the licensee has been convicted of
a felony, a misdemeanor specified in section 29-152f or
other crime affecting the licensee's honesty, integrity or
moral fitness; or (6) the licensee is unsuitable. The
suspension or revocation of, or the refusal to renew, any
bail enforcement agent's license shall also constitute the
revocation of the bail enforcement agent's firearms permit
issued pursuant to section 29-152m. Any bail enforcement
agent who fails to surrender such license within five days
of notification in writing of the suspension or revocation
of, or refusal to renew, such license shall be guilty of a
class C misdemeanor. Any party aggrieved by an order of the
commissioner under this section may appeal therefrom in
accordance with the provisions of section 4- 183, except
venue for such appeal shall be in the judicial district of
Hartford.
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CONNECTICUT
GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE
POLICE
CHAPTER 533.
PROFESSIONAL BONDSMEN
§ 29-144. Definition
- Any person who makes a business of
furnishing bail in criminal cases or who furnishes bail in
five or more criminal cases in any one year, whether for
compensation or otherwise, shall be deemed a professional
bondsman and shall be subject to the provisions of this
chapter. Any resident elector of the state of Connecticut
who is of good moral character and of sound financial
responsibility may, upon obtaining a license therefor in
accordance with the provisions of this chapter, engage in
the business of professional bondsman within this state.
§ 29-145. Bondsmen to be licensed
- Any person desiring to engage in the
business of a professional bondsman shall apply to the
Commissioner of Public Safety for a license therefor. Such
application shall set forth under oath the full name, age,
residence and occupation of the applicant, whether the
applicant intends to engage in the business of a
professional bondsman individually or in partnership or
association with another or others, and, if so, the identity
of each. It shall also set forth under oath a statement of
the assets and liabilities of the applicant, and whether he
has been charged with or convicted of crime, and such other
information, including fingerprints and photographs, as said
commissioner from time to time may require. No person who
has been convicted of a felony shall be licensed to do
business as a professional bondsman in this state. No person
engaged in law enforcement or vested with police powers
shall be licensed to do business as a professional bondsman.
§ 29-146. Investigation of applicant
for license. Fee. Term of license
- The Commissioner of Public Safety
shall, upon receipt of such application, cause an
investigation to be made of the character and financial
responsibility of the applicant and, if he finds that such
applicant is a resident elector of good moral character and
of sound financial responsibility, he shall, upon payment by
such applicant to the state of a license fee of one hundred
dollars, issue a license to such applicant to do business in
this state as a professional bondsman. Each such license
shall be for such term not exceeding one year as said
commissioner determines.
§ 29-147. Renewal, revocation or
suspension of license
- Each professional bondsman licensed
under the provisions of this chapter may apply for a renewal
of his license upon renewal application forms provided by
the Commissioner of Public Safety and requiring the
disclosure of such information as said commissioner requires
in determining whether or not such professional bondsman's
financial responsibility remains unimpaired or whether for
any other reason such bondsman's fitness to continue in such
business has been otherwise altered since the issuance of
any prior license. Said commissioner may suspend for a
definite term or revoke any license issued under the
provisions of this chapter if it appears to said
commissioner that such licensee has been convicted of a
felony in this state or elsewhere or is engaged in any
unlawful activity affecting his fitness to continue in the
business of professional bondsman or that his financial
responsibility has been substantially impaired.
§ 29-147a. Suspension of license for
failure to pay forfeited bond
- The Commissioner of Public Safety may
suspend any license issued under the provisions of this
chapter of any professional bondsman when he finds that such
surety has failed to pay a forfeited bond. Such license
shall remain so suspended and shall not be reinstated nor
shall any such license be issued to such surety until such
person pays such forfeited bond.
§ 29-148. Statement of assets and
liabilities
- Each professional bondsman licensed
under the provisions of this chapter shall forthwith inform
the Commissioner of Public Safety in writing of any material
change in his assets or liabilities affecting his
responsibility as a bondsman and shall at any time, upon
request of said commissioner, furnish him with a statement
under oath of his assets and liabilities, including all
bonds on which such bondsman is obligated.
§ 29-152. Penalty
- Any person who violates any provision
of this chapter shall be fined not more than one thousand
dollars or imprisoned not more than two years or both and
his right to engage in the business of a professional
bondsman in this state shall thereupon be permanently
forfeited.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 38A. INSURANCE CHAPTER 700F. BAIL BOND INSURANCE §
38a-660. Bail bond insurance and agents. Licensing.
Examinations. Fees
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"Surety
bail bond agent" means any person who has been approved
by the commissioner and appointed by an insurer by power of
attorney to execute or countersign bail bonds for the
insurer in connection with judicial proceedings;
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"Disqualifying
offense" means: (A) A felony; or (B) a misdemeanor if
an element of the offense involves dishonesty or
misappropriation of money or property.
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Any person
desiring to act within this state as a surety bail bond
agent shall make a written application to the commissioner
for a license in such form and having such supporting
documents as the commissioner prescribes. Each application
shall be signed by the applicant and shall be accompanied by
a nonrefundable filing fee as determined by the
commissioner. The applicant must also submit with the
application a complete set of the applicant's fingerprints,
certified by an authorized law enforcement officer, and two
recent credential-sized full-face photographs of the
applicant. At the time of application, each applicant for a
license shall forward a copy of the applicant's complete
application and supporting documents to the bond forfeiture
unit of the Office of the Chief State's Attorney.
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Every
applicant for a license must file with the commissioner a
notice of appointment executed by an insurer or its
authorized representative authorizing such applicant to
execute undertakings of bail and to solicit and negotiate
such undertakings on its behalf. Each appointment shall, by
its terms, continue in force until: (1) Termination of the
surety bail bond agent's license; or (2) the filing of a
notice of termination by the insurer or its representative
or by such surety bail bond agent.
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An
applicant for a license shall be required to appear in
person and take a written examination testing the
applicant's competency and qualifications to act as a surety
bail bond agent. The commissioner may designate an
independent testing service to prepare and administer such
examination, provided any examination fees charged by such
service shall be paid by the applicant. The commissioner
shall collect the appropriate examination fee, which shall
entitle the applicant to take the examination for the
license, except when a testing service is used, the testing
service shall pay such fee to the commissioner. In either
case, such examination shall be as the commissioner
prescribes and shall be of sufficient scope to test the
applicant's knowledge of subjects pertinent to the duties
and responsibilities of a surety bail bond agent, including
all laws and regulations of this state applicable thereto.
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In
addition to all other requirements prescribed in this
section, each applicant for a license shall furnish
satisfactory evidence to the commissioner that: (1) The
applicant is at least eighteen years of age; (2) the
applicant is a citizen of the United States; and (3) the
applicant has never been convicted of a felony or any
misdemeanor under section 21a-279, 53a-58, 53a-61, 53a-61a,
53a-62, 53a-63, 53a-96, 53a-173, 53a-175, 53a-176, 53a-178
or 53a- 181d. Such applicant shall also submit to a
background investigation, including an investigation of any
prior criminal activity, to be conducted by the Division of
Criminal Justice utilizing the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and other law enforcement agencies. All
processing fees incurred as a result of such investigation
shall be paid by the applicant.
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Upon
satisfying himself that an applicant meets the licensing
requirements of this state and is in all respects properly
qualified and trustworthy and that the granting of such
license is not against the public interest, the commissioner
may issue to such applicant the license applied for.
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A license
may, in the discretion of the commissioner, be renewed or
continued upon payment of the appropriate fee as the
commissioner deems necessary without the resubmittal of the
detailed information required in the original application.
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Any
individual aggrieved by the action of the commissioner in
revoking, suspending or refusing to reissue a license or in
imposing a fine or penalty may appeal therefrom, in
accordance with the provisions of section 4-183, except
venue for such appeal shall be in the judicial district of
Hartford. Appeals under this section shall be privileged in
respect to the order of trial assignment.
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Nothing in
this section shall be construed as limiting an individual's
ability to operate as a professional bondsman in this state
pursuant to chapter 533 provided such individual is in
compliance with all requirements of said chapter.
- Notice of Forfeiture
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 54. CRIMINALPROCEDURE CHAPTER 960. INFORMATION,
PROCEDURE AND BAIL § 54-65a. Forfeiture of bond for failure
to appear. Rebate to surety.
- Whenever an arrested person is released
upon the execution of a bond with surety in an amount of
five hundred dollars or more and such bond is ordered
forfeited because the principal failed to appear in court as
conditioned in such bond, the court shall, at the time of
ordering the bond forfeited:
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provide
written notice to the surety on the bond that the
principal has failed to appear in court as conditioned
in such bond, and
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order
a stay of execution upon the forfeiture for six months.
When the principal whose bond has been forfeited is
returned to custody pursuant to the rearrest warrant or
a capias within six months of the date such bond was
ordered forfeited, the bond shall be automatically
terminated and the surety released and the court shall
order new conditions of release for the defendant in
accordance with this section.
- Allotted Time between Forfeiture
Declaration and Payment Due Date.
- Forfeiture Defenses.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 54. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CHAPTER 960. INFORMATION,
PROCEDURE AND BAIL § 54-65a. Forfeiture of bond for failure
to appear. Rebate to surety.
- When the principal whose bond has been
forfeited returns to court voluntarily within five business
days of the date such bond was ordered forfeited, the court
may, in its discretion, and after finding that the
defendant's failure to appear was not willful, vacate the
forfeiture order and reinstate the bond. Such stay of
execution shall not prevent the issuance of a rearrest
warrant or a capias.
- Whenever an arrested person, whose bond
has been forfeited, is returned to the jurisdiction of the
court within one year of the date such bond was ordered
forfeited, the surety on such bond shall be entitled to a
rebate of that portion of the forfeited amount as may be
fixed by the court or as may be established by a schedule
adopted by rule of the judges of the court.
- Remission.
- (There do not appear to be any specific
provisions in the CT statutes which allow for remission. The
provisions most similar to allowing for remission are those
which allow for a "rebate" on forfeited bonds. See
item two above).
- Bail Agent’s Arrest Authority.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE POLICE CHAPTER 533A. BAIL
ENFORCEMENT AGENTS § 29-152k. Notice to law
enforcement agency prior to apprehension of principal
- Prior to taking or attempting to
take into custody the
principal on a bond, a professional bondsman licensed under
chapter 533, a surety bail bond agent licensed under chapter
700f or a bail enforcement agent licensed under sections
29-152f to 29-152i, inclusive, shall notify the police
department or resident state trooper for, or state police
troop having jurisdiction over, the municipality in which
the principal is believed to be located of such bondsman's
or agent's intentions.
- (The underlined portion above implies
that professional bondsmen, surety bail bond agents, and
bail enforcement agents all have the authority to apprehend
principals on bonds).
- Court decisions
The court said: "When bail is
given, the principal is regarded as delivered to the custody
of his sureties. Their dominion is a continuance of the
original imprisonment. Whenever they choose to do so, they may
seize him and deliver him up in their discharge; and if that
cannot be done at once, they may imprison him until it can be
done. They may exercise their rights in person or by agent.
They may pursue him into another State: may arrest him on the
Sabbath; and, if necessary, may break and enter his house for
that purpose."
Bail bondsman had the same common-law
right to seize the principal on the bond even if he acted as
an agent for an insurance bonding company, a corporation,
rather than as an individual bail bondsman.
- Other Noteworthy Provisions.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE POLICE CHAPTER 533A. BAIL
ENFORCEMENT AGENTS § 29-152l. Wearing, carrying or display
of uniform, badge or other insignia of governmental official
or employee prohibited
- No professional bondsman licensed under
chapter 533, surety bail bond agent licensed under chapter
700f or bail enforcement agent licensed under sections
29-152f to 29-152i, inclusive, shall wear, carry or display
any uniform, badge, shield or other insignia or emblems that
purport to indicate that such bondsman or agent is an
employee, officer or agent of the state or any political
subdivision of the state or of the federal government.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE POLICE CHAPTER 533A. BAIL
ENFORCEMENT AGENTS § 29-152m. Permit to carry firearm
required
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No
professional bondsman licensed under chapter 533, surety
bail bond agent licensed under chapter 700f or bail
enforcement agent licensed under sections 29-152f to
29-152i, inclusive, shall carry a pistol, revolver or other
firearm while engaging in the business of a professional
bondsman, surety bail bond agent or bail enforcement agent,
as the case may be, or while traveling to or from such
business unless such bondsman or agent obtains a special
permit from the Commissioner of Public Safety in accordance
with the provisions of subsection (b) of this section. The
permit required under this section shall be in addition to
the permit requirement imposed under section 29-28.
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The
Commissioner of Public Safety may grant to any professional
bondsman licensed under chapter 533, surety bail bond agent
licensed under chapter 700f or bail enforcement agent
licensed under sections 29-152f to 29-152i, inclusive, a
permit to carry a pistol or revolver or other firearm while
engaging in the business of professional bondsman, surety
bail bond agent or bail enforcement agent, as the case may
be, or while traveling to or from such business, provided
that such bondsman or agent has proven to the satisfaction
of the commissioner that such bondsman or agent has
successfully completed a course, approved by the
commissioner, of training in the safety and use of firearms.
The commissioner shall adopt regulations in accordance with
the provisions of chapter 54 concerning the approval of
schools, institutions or organizations offering such
courses, requirements for instructors and the required
number of hours and content of such courses.
- Application for a permit issued
pursuant to this section shall be made on forms provided by
the commissioner and shall be accompanied by a thirty-one-
dollar fee. Such permit shall have an expiration date that
coincides with that of the state permit to carry a pistol or
revolver issued pursuant to section 29-28. A permit issued
pursuant to this section shall be renewable every five years
with a renewal fee of thirty-one dollars.
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The
commissioner shall send, by first class mail, a notice
of expiration of the bail enforcement agent firearms
permit issued pursuant to this section, together with a
notice of expiration of the permit to carry a pistol or
revolver issued pursuant to section 29-28, in one
combined form. The commissioner shall send such combined
notice to the holder of the permits not later than
ninety days before the date of the expiration of both
permits, and shall enclose a form for renewal of the
permits.
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A bail
enforcement agent firearms permit issued pursuant to
this section shall be valid for a period of ninety days
after the expiration date, except this provision shall
not apply if the permit to carry a pistol or revolver
has been revoked or revocation is pending pursuant to
section 29-32, in which case the bail enforcement agent
firearms permit shall also be revoked.
§ 29-152n. Penalty
- Any person who violates any provision
of sections 29-152e to 29-152m, inclusive, and 38a-660a
shall be guilty of a class D felony.
- CONNECTICUT GENERAL STATUTES ANNOTATED
TITLE 29. PUBLIC SAFETY AND STATE POLICE CHAPTER 533.
PROFESSIONAL BONDSMEN § 29-150. Oath of bondsmen. Form
- Each professional bondsman shall, when
furnishing surety for recognizances of any person charged
with crime, take oath to the sufficiency of his security
upon a uniform form furnished for such purpose by the clerk
of the superior court and approved by the Commissioner of
Public Safety. No person who offers himself as surety on
bail in any criminal case shall falsely represent that he is
the legal or equitable owner of any stated property.
- Noteworthy State Appellate
Decisions.
State v. Salmon
250 Conn. 147, 735 A.2d 333
Conn.
Aug 10, 1999
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The record
discloses the following factual and procedural history. The
defendant in the underlying criminal case, Ralston Salmon,
was arrested and charged with violating General Statutes
§§ 21a-279 (a) and (c), and 21a-277 (a). He posted a
surety bond of $150,000 and *150 was released. B & B
Bail Bonds Agency, Inc. (bondsman), was the surety that
furnished the bond. When the defendant later failed to
appear for a court date, the trial court, on January 7,
1997, ordered the forfeiture of the bond. The court,
pursuant to General Statutes § 54-65a, simultaneously
ordered the rearrest of the defendant and a stay of
execution on the forfeiture for six months. The bondsman
located the defendant in Jamaica, but was not permitted to
remove him without *151 extradition authorization from
Connecticut. Accordingly, the bondsman requested that the
state's attorney's office extradite the defendant to
Connecticut, which it refused to do. The stay of execution
subsequently lapsed, and the forfeiture of the bond became
due. After the state settled its claim with the bondsman for
$75,000, the bondsman moved in the trial court for both a
rebate of the bond forfeiture and a release from the bond.
The trial court denied these motions, and the bondsman
appealed from the denial of the motion for release to the
Appellate Court.
The Appellate Court dismissed appeal. Bondsman filed
petition for certification.
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The
Supreme Court, Norcott, J., held that: (1) bondsman, as a
nonparty to underlying action, had no right to appeal,
overruling CFM, 239 Conn. 375, 685 A.2d 1108, Lougee, 216
Conn. 483, 582 A.2d 456, and In re Mongillo, 190 Conn. 686,
461 A.2d 1387, but (2) bondsman could seek relief through
writ of error.
State v. Nugent
199 Conn. 537, 508 A.2d 728
Conn.
May 06, 1986
- Defendant was convicted in the Superior
Court in the Judicial District of New Haven, McKeever, J.,
of kidnapping in the second degree, and he appealed. The
Supreme Court, Callahan, J., held that the defendant, as a
professional bail bondsman who had posted a bond in amount
of $500 on behalf of principal, had the common-law right to
apprehend and deliver the principal in discharge of the bond
at any time and, absent a statute abrogating that right or
requiring the defendant to rely on a mittimus or a rearrest
warrant, did not act unlawfully in apprehending the
principal after latter failed to appear in court as
scheduled and, by doing so, was not guilty of the crime of
kidnapping in the second degree.
Error, judgment set aside, and case remanded with direction.
Biestek v. Varricchio
34 Conn.Supp. 620, 380 A.2d 1351
Conn.Super.App.
Feb 04, 1977
- Licensed professional bondsman brought
action to recover damages which resulted when defendant
allegedly refused to indemnify the bondsman for losses
incurred when defendant's son failed to appear for his court
hearing. The Circuit Court, Seventh Circuit, Falsey, J.,
rendered judgment for the bondsman, and defendant appealed.
The Superior Court, Appellate Session, held that: (1)
evidence established that defendant's promise was an
original rather than a collateral undertaking and, thus, was
not subject to the statute of frauds, and (2) the fact that
the bondsman did not rely solely on defendant's agreement to
indemnify but also charged a fee of defendant's son was not
relevant. No error.
- Bounty Hunter Provisions.
At this time, there appear to be no
specific regulations for "Bounty Hunters" in the
Connecticut statutes
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