People v. Financial Casualty & Surety, Inc. ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 9/17/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                       D073948
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                       (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-00011275-
    CU-EN-CTL)
    FINANCIAL CASUALTY & SURETY,
    INC.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Maureen
    F. Hallahan and Lorna Alksne, Judges. Affirmed.
    Law Office of John Rorabaugh, John Mark Rorabaugh and Crystal L. Rorabaugh
    for Defendant and Appellant.
    Thomas E. Montgomery, County Counsel and Walter J. de Lorrell, III, Senior
    Deputy, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Financial Casualty & Surety, Inc. (Surety), which posted a bail bond on behalf of
    criminal defendant Abdul Karim Juma, appeals following the trial court's denial of its
    motion to vacate the trial court's forfeiture of the bail bond and to exonerate the bail bond
    following Juma's failure to appear. Surety contends that the trial court lacked jurisdiction
    to forfeit the bond because (1) it failed to enter an order forfeiting the bond at an earlier
    hearing at which Juma may not have been present; and (2) on several grounds, the bail
    agreement was rendered void and was exonerated when the trial court required that Juma
    waive his Fourth Amendment right against warrantless searches. We conclude that
    Surety's arguments lack merit, and we accordingly affirm the judgment.
    I.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On June 23, 2016, Juma was arraigned on charges of mayhem (Pen. Code,
    § 203),1 assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)), and assault likely to produce
    great bodily injury (§ 245, subd. (a)(4)). Bail was set in the amount of $100,000. On
    June 26, 2016, Surety posted a $100,000 bail bond for Juma's release from custody. The
    bond set forth an undertaking from Surety that Juma would appear in court on a specific
    date, and "will at all times hold him/herself amenable to the orders and process of the
    court, and if convicted, will appear for pronouncement of judgment or grant of
    probation." The bond provided that if Juma failed to perform the conditions, the court
    could enter summary judgment against Surety in the amount of $100,000.
    After Juma was released on bail, the trial court twice identified specific additional
    conditions of bail. First, a minute order from July 15, 2016, states that the court ordered
    1      Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    that Juma have no contact with the victim of the crime. Second, the minute order for the
    August 24, 2016 hearing stated that a "previously ordered" condition of bail requiring
    Juma to waive his Fourth Amendment rights against warrantless searches (the Fourth
    Waiver) "continues."2
    According to the minute orders in the appellate record, Juma appeared for hearings
    on July 1 and 15 and August 24, 2016. However, for a hearing held on August 5, 2016,
    the clerk who filled out the minute order neglected to check the box indicating whether
    Juma was present, and no reporter's transcript exists for that hearing. The only indication
    that Juma may, in fact, have been present in court on August 5, 2016, is the minute
    order's statement that "distribution" of the order to defense counsel and Juma took place
    on the date of the hearing.
    After having appeared on August 24, 2016, Juma failed to appear for a September
    29, 2016 hearing, and the trial court entered an order forfeiting bail. The notice to Surety
    of the order stated that the forfeiture would become final in 180 days unless Surety
    obtained a court order setting aside the forfeiture or tolling the forfeiture statute.
    2      The minute order states that the "previously ordered" Fourth Waiver "continues,"
    but no earlier minute order in the record indicates that the Fourth Waiver condition was
    previously imposed. The terms of the Fourth Waiver are described in the minute order as
    an agreement to "submit person, vehicle, place of residence, property, personal effects to
    search at any time with or without a warrant, and with or without reasonable cause, when
    required by a Probation Officer or other law enforcement officer."
    3
    (§ 1305).3 The trial court subsequently entered an order extending Surety's deadline to
    appear to set aside the forfeiture to November 6, 2017.
    On September 26, 2017, Surety filed a motion to set aside the forfeiture and
    exonerate the bail bond, or in the alternative to further extend the period to seek such
    relief based on the fact that Surety's investigator had located Juma in Kenya and the
    District Attorney was in the process of deciding whether to extradite Juma. The District
    Attorney filed an opposition, in which it argued that Surety had not fulfilled all of the
    requirements for exonerating bail by merely locating Juma in Kenya. Among other
    things, the applicable statute authorizes exoneration of the forfeiture only if the
    prosecuting agency has already made an election not to extradite the defendant. (§ 1305,
    subd. (g).)4 On October 23, 2017, the trial court denied the motion without prejudice.
    3       The period in which a surety must seek to vacate a bail forfeiture is often referred
    to as "the appearance period." (People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co. (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 653
    , 658.)
    4      Section 1305, subdivision (g) states, "In all cases of forfeiture where a defendant is
    not in custody and is beyond the jurisdiction of the state, is temporarily detained, by the
    bail agent, in the presence of a local law enforcement officer of the jurisdiction in which
    the defendant is located, and is positively identified by that law enforcement officer as
    the wanted defendant in an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury, and the prosecuting
    agency elects not to seek extradition after being informed of the location of the
    defendant, the court shall vacate the forfeiture and exonerate the bond on terms that are
    just and do not exceed the terms imposed in similar situations with respect to other forms
    of pretrial release." (Italics added.) In February 2018 the District Attorney eventually
    decided that it would pursue extradition of Juma. Based on that decision, section 1305,
    subdivision (g) no longer provided a possible ground for Surety to obtain an order
    vacating forfeiture and exonerating the bond.
    4
    On November 6, 2017, Surety filed a second motion to vacate the forfeiture and to
    exonerate the bond, or in the alternative to toll the period for it to seek to vacate the
    forfeiture. The motion was based on substantially the same facts as the previous motion,
    but it updated the facts concerning the District Attorney's continued consideration of
    whether to seek extradition of Juma and Surety's efforts to provide information to the
    District Attorney relating to that issue. The District Attorney opposed the motion on the
    same grounds as earlier and also pointed out that an order tolling Surety's period to vacate
    the forfeiture was not available because the District Attorney would not agree to it.5
    On January 9, 2018, prior to the hearing on the motion (but after the appearance
    period expired on November 6, 2017) Surety filed a "Supplemental Memorandum of
    Points and Authorities" in support of its motion. The supplemental briefing argued
    (1) the trial court lost jurisdiction over the bail bond because a minute order indicates that
    Juma may have failed to appear at an August 5, 2016 hearing, but the trial court did not
    order bail forfeited for the nonappearance; and (2) the trial court materially and
    unconstitutionally altered the terms of the bail contract when it imposed the Fourth
    Waiver as a condition of bail and failed to notify Surety of the additional condition,
    which had the effect of voiding the bail agreement. The District Attorney filed a
    supplemental opposition, in which it argued, among other things, that Surety was barred
    5       Section 1305, subdivision (h) provides that in cases where the defendant is located
    outside the jurisdiction, tolling is available only if "the prosecuting agency agrees to the
    tolling."
    5
    from raising additional grounds for its motion after the expiration of the appearance
    period.
    At a hearing held on February 21, 2018, the trial court denied the motion to vacate
    the forfeiture and to exonerate the bond. The trial court considered and rejected the two
    arguments set forth in Surety's supplement briefing. On the first issue, the trial court
    explained that Surety, which had the burden to set forth competent evidence in support of
    its motion, had not established that Juma failed to appear on August 5, 2016, and thus had
    not established that the trial court lost jurisdiction over the bail bond by failing to order
    bail forfeited on that date. On the second issue, the trial court stated that the addition of
    the Fourth Waiver as a condition of bail did not materially affect the bail contract with
    Surety and did not "in any way further expose[] [Surety]."
    On March 5, 2018, the trial court ordered summary judgment on the bail bond
    forfeiture, ordering that Surety pay $100,000, along with costs and interest. Surety
    appeals from the judgment.
    II.
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Surety Did Not Establish That the Trial Court Lost Jurisdiction by Improperly
    Failing to Order Bail Forfeited on August 5, 2016
    We first consider Surety's argument that the trial court lost jurisdiction over the
    bail bond when it failed to order bail forfeited on August 5, 2016.6
    6      The People reassert the argument made in the trial court that Surety is barred from
    raising the issues set forth in its supplemental briefing filed in the trial court on January 9,
    6
    1.     Standard of Review
    "We normally review an order denying a motion to set aside the forfeiture of a bail
    bond for abuse of discretion. . . . When, however, the issue is one of statutory
    construction or contract interpretation, and the evidence is undisputed, we review the
    order de novo." (People v. International Fidelity Ins. Co. (2017) 
    11 Cal.App.5th 456
    ,
    461 (International Fidelity 2017), citation omitted.)
    2.     Applicable Legal Standards
    Under section 1305, subdivision (a)(1), "[w]hen a defendant facing criminal
    charges is released on bail and fails to appear as ordered or as otherwise required and
    does not have a sufficient excuse, a trial court must declare the bail bond forfeited."7
    2018, because those issues were raised after the November 6, 2017 deadline to seek to
    vacate the forfeiture had passed (although they were raised in supplemental briefing in a
    motion filed within the appearance period). Surety disagrees, arguing that its challenges
    are based on the trial court's lack of jurisdiction to order a forfeiture of bail, and that a
    jurisdictional argument, or an argument based on the contention that the trial court's
    summary judgement is void, may be raised at any time. Case law supports Surety's
    position, and we will accordingly proceed to consider the merits of Surety's argument.
    (People v. Amwest Surety Ins. Co. (2004) 
    125 Cal.App.4th 547
    , 550, fn. omitted
    (Amwest) ["We conclude the trial court's failure to declare a forfeiture in open court, as
    mandated by section 1305, subdivision (a), resulted in the court's loss of jurisdiction over
    the bail bond. Because the court did not have fundamental jurisdiction when it entered
    the summary judgment, the judgment was necessarily void, and subject to collateral
    attack at any time"]; People v. International Fidelity Ins. Co. (2012) 
    204 Cal.App.4th 588
    , 595-596 [surety's claim that a bail bond was void because of unlawful consideration
    was a jurisdictional argument that could be raised at any time] (International Fidelity
    2012).)
    7       Section 1305, subdivision (a)(1) provides: "A court shall in open court declare
    forfeited the undertaking of bail or the money or property deposited as bail if, without
    sufficient excuse, a defendant fails to appear for any of the following: [¶]
    (A) Arraignment. [¶] (B) Trial. [¶] (C) Judgment. [¶] (D) Any other occasion prior to the
    7
    (People v. Safety National Casualty Corp. (2016) 
    62 Cal.4th 703
    , 707 (Safety National).)
    Further, when, as here, the amount of the bond or money or property deposited exceeds
    $400, the clerk of the court must also mail notice of the forfeiture to the surety. (§ 1305,
    subd. (b)(1).) "When [a] trial court fail[s] to declare bail forfeited in open court, no
    forfeiture occur[s], the bond [is] exonerated, and the court no longer ha[s] jurisdiction to
    declare a forfeiture" on a later date. (Amwest, supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at p. 553; see also
    People v. Ranger Ins. Co. (1998) 
    66 Cal.App.4th 1549
    , 1555 [the trial court "erred in not
    forfeiting the bail when defendant failed to appear for trial without sufficient excuse. It
    follows that the court was without jurisdiction to forfeit the bail several days later . . . ."].)
    Put simply, "[i]f the court fails to declare a forfeiture at the time of the defendant's
    unexcused absence, it is without jurisdiction to do so later." (Safety National, at p. 710.)
    As the party seeking to set aside an order forfeiting bail, Surety "has the burden to
    'establish by competent evidence that its case falls within the four corners of these
    statutory requirements.' " (County of Los Angeles v. Fairmont Specialty Group (2008)
    
    164 Cal.App.4th 1018
    , 1027 (Fairmont).)
    3.      Surety Did Not Establish the Trial Court Failed to Forfeit the Bond When It
    Was Required to Do so
    Here, as we have explained, there is no reporter's transcript for the August 5, 2016
    hearing and, due to an apparent oversight in filling out the minute order form, the clerk
    failed to check any box on the line near the top of the form to indicate whether Juma was
    pronouncement of judgment if the defendant's presence in court is lawfully required. [¶]
    (E) To surrender himself or herself in execution of the judgment after appeal." There is
    no dispute that Juma was lawfully required to be present at the August 5, 2016 hearing.
    8
    "present," "not present," or "failed to appear." Thus, the record of the August 5, 2016
    hearing does not indicate conclusively one way or another whether Juma was present.
    Surety contends that because the trial court failed to create a record as to whether
    Juma was present at the August 5, 2016 hearing, we should presume that he was not
    present. Further, Surety argues that if we presume that Juma failed to appear as required
    at the August 5, 2016 hearing, it follows that we should also presume that the trial court
    was required to order a bail forfeiture based on Juma's nonappearance. To support its
    contention that Juma's nonappearance should be presumed in the face of a silent record,
    Surety relies on case law discussing the effect of a record that is silent on the issue of
    whether a trial court found a sufficient excuse to continue a hearing, rather than order bail
    forfeited, when a defendant failed to appear. In that circumstance, when the record is
    silent "[a] failure to appear is presumed to be without excuse and the burden to prove
    otherwise is on the party seeking to enforce a later forfeiture." (People v. Harco National
    Ins. Co. (2005) 
    135 Cal.App.4th 931
    , 934; see also People v. United Bonding Ins.
    Co. (1971) 
    5 Cal.3d 898
    , 907 ["Court minutes which fail to disclose that the court has
    expressly excused a nonappearance on a record which is silent as to a defendant's reasons
    therefor, will require a reviewing court to conclude that a nonappearance was without
    sufficient excuse and that the right to declare a forfeiture not having been exercised was
    foreclosed."].) Surety contends that, similarly, a presumption in its favor should apply
    here. As we will explain, we reject the argument.
    Our Supreme Court has established that although a presumption arises on a silent
    record that no sufficient excuse existed for a defendant's nonappearance, that presumption
    9
    does not extend to other circumstances concerning bail forfeiture. Specifically, in People
    v. Allegheny Casualty Co. (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 704
     (Allegheny), the Supreme Court
    addressed the statutory requirement that a trial court declare bail forfeited "in open
    court." (§ 1305, subd. (a).) The surety argued that because the record was silent as to
    whether the order was made in open court, it should be presumed that it was not, and that
    the bail forfeiture order was therefore void. (Allegheny, at p. 707.) Our Supreme Court
    rejected the argument. Citing Evidence Code sections 664 and 666, it pointed out "the
    well-established presumptions that 'official duty has been regularly performed' and that a
    court (or judge) is 'presumed to have acted in the lawful exercise of its jurisdiction.' "
    (Allegheny, at p. 706.) It also explained that the presumption that " 'a defendant's failure
    to appear without explanation is presumptively without sufficient excuse' " applied solely
    to cases where the trial court continues a hearing instead of declaring a forfeiture. (Id. at
    p. 717.) Therefore, our Supreme Court concluded that it "perceive[d] no reason to extend
    [that] special rule beyond the context it was designed to address or to supplant the general
    rule, articulated in Evidence Code sections 664 and 666 . . . that a trial court is presumed
    to have regularly performed its official duty and acted in the lawful exercise of its
    jurisdiction." (Id. at p. 718, citations omitted.)
    In this case, as in Allegheny, because the silent record does not concern whether a
    sufficient excuse existed for a defendant's nonappearance, we do not apply any
    interpretive presumption in favor of Surety. Instead, as in Allegheny, the generally
    applicable rule applies: In the face of a silent record, a trial court "is presumed to have
    regularly performed its official duty and acted in the lawful exercise of its jurisdiction."
    10
    (Allegheny, 
    supra,
     41 Cal.4th at p. 718.) Accordingly, we presume that Juma was present
    in court on August 5, 2016, and that the trial court was therefore not required to declare a
    forfeiture. Surety accordingly has not met its burden to establish that Juma failed to
    appear on August 5, 2016, and that the trial court was required to declare a bail forfeiture
    on that basis. (See Fairmont, supra, 164 Cal.App.4th at p. 1027 [when the record did not
    reflect whether the defendant appeared at a specific hearing, the surety "failed to satisfy
    its burden of establishing that [the defendant] did not appear at his first required
    appearance, and, as a result, that the trial court lost jurisdiction to later declare bail
    forfeited"].)
    B.     The Condition of Bail Requiring Juma to Agree to a Fourth Waiver Did Not Void
    the Bail Agreement
    In its attempt to establish that the bail agreement was void and therefore
    unenforceable, Surety makes a series of arguments that focus on the fact that the trial
    court required Juma to agree to a waiver of his Fourth Amendment rights as a condition
    of bail. Surety contends (1) the trial court did not have the authority to add bail
    conditions after the bail bond was posted; (2) the requirement that Juma agree to the
    Fourth Waiver voided the bail agreement because it was an unconstitutional condition;
    and (3) the addition of the Fourth Waiver materially altered the terms of the bail
    agreement, rendering it void. We consider those arguments in turn.
    11
    1.     Surety Has Failed to Establish That the Trial Court Lacked Authority to
    Add Conditions of Bail After the Bail Bond Was Posted
    Surety first argues that the bail agreement is void because the trial court lacked
    authority to add conditions of bail after the bail bond was originally posted. We reject
    the argument for two reasons.8
    First, Surety has not met its burden to establish that the Fourth Waiver was
    ordered on a date after the bail bond was posted. In arguing that the Fourth Waiver was
    ordered after the bond was posted, Surety relies on an August 24, 2016 minute order
    stating that the "previously ordered" Fourth Waiver will "continue[]." Because the
    August 24, 2016 minute order states that a Fourth Waiver was "previously ordered," it is
    possible that the Fourth Waiver was originally ordered at the arraignment on June 23,
    2016, when bail was set at $100,000.9 No reporter's transcript for the June 23 or the
    August 24, 2016 hearing appears in the record, and thus Surety has not established that
    the Fourth Waiver was ordered for the first time on August 24, 2016 rather than on June
    23, 2016, before the bail bond was posted.
    8      Our Supreme Court recently held in In re Webb (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 270
     (Webb) that
    even in the absence of a directly applicable statutory provision, a court may impose
    reasonable bail conditions. However, Webb does not address whether a court may order
    bail conditions after a bail bond has been posted.
    9      We note that the minute order for the June 23, 2016 arraignment states that bail
    was "increased" to $100,000. However the record contains no indication of bail being
    previously ordered or posted. Thus, the reference to "increased" bail may be a reference
    to amount indicated in the bail schedule.
    12
    Second, even if Surety were able to establish that the Fourth Waiver was added
    after the bond was posted, it has not cited relevant legal authority for its contention that a
    court may not add bail conditions after a bond is posted. Surety cites Penal Code section
    1289, which provides that "[a]fter a defendant has been admitted to bail upon an
    indictment or information, the Court in which the charge is pending may, upon good
    cause shown, either increase or reduce the amount of bail." (§ 1289.) Surety argues that
    based on this provision, the trial court was permitted to order bail conditions only "upon
    good cause." (Ibid.) However, section 1289 is inapposite because it pertains to "the
    amount of bail," and says nothing about a limitation on the trial court's authority to order
    additional bail conditions, such as the Fourth Amendment waiver at issue here. (Ibid.) In
    the absence of any relevant authority, we reject Surety's contention that the trial court was
    not authorized to order bail conditions after the bond was posted.
    2.     Surety Has Not Established that the Addition of an Unconstitutional Bail
    Condition Renders the Bail Agreement Void
    Surety's next contention is based on its claim that Juma's constitutional rights were
    violated when the trial court required a Fourth Amendment waiver as a bail condition.
    Surety contends that the presence of an unconstitutional condition of bail renders a bail
    agreement void as to all parties, including the surety.10
    10      The People contend that Surety lacks standing to assert a violation of Juma's
    constitutional rights to establish that the bail agreement was void. We disagree based on
    the recent analysis in People v. Accredited Surety & Casualty Co. (2019) 
    34 Cal.App.5th 891
     (Accredited), which we find to be persuasive. Accredited rejected a similar challenge
    to a surety's standing to challenge an unconstitutional condition of bail. Specifically, the
    issue was whether the trial court violated the defendant's "constitutional rights to due
    13
    As background to Surety's contention that the Fourth Waiver was an
    unconstitutional condition of bail, we note that after the briefing of this appeal was
    completed our Supreme Court decided Webb, supra, 
    7 Cal.5th 270
    .11 The issue
    presented in Webb was whether " 'trial courts possess inherent authority to impose
    reasonable bail conditions related to public safety on felony defendants who are released
    on monetary bail?' " (Id. at p. 273.) Webb held that "trial courts have authority to impose
    reasonable conditions related to public safety on persons released on bail." (Id. at
    p. 278.) Because the issue had become moot in the case before it, Webb did not "consider
    in detail the exact contours of this authority." (Ibid.) It stressed, however, that "this
    authority is 'fairly narrow,' " and that "[a]ny condition must be reasonable, and there
    must be a sufficient nexus between the condition and the protection of public safety."
    process by failing to consider his ability to pay before setting the bail amount," rendering
    the bail agreement void. (Id. at p. 896.) Accredited explained, "We agree [the surety]
    would lack standing to assert a violation of [defendant's] constitutional rights at
    the bail setting hearing. [The surety], however, is not appealing the order setting bond.
    In this case, [the surety] is arguing that as a consequence of the potential violation of
    [defendant's] constitutional rights, the bond contract, to which [the surety] is a named
    party, is invalid. 'At its core, standing concerns a specific party's interest in the outcome
    of a lawsuit. [Citations.] We therefore require a party to show that he or she is
    sufficiently interested as a prerequisite to deciding, on the merits,' the claims presented by
    the litigation. (Weatherford v. City of San Rafael (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 1241
    , 1247.) As a
    party to the bond contract, [the surety] has standing to raise claims involving its validity.
    (See People v. Jenkins (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 900
    , 965-966; People v. Badgett (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 330
    , 353.) [The surety] has standing because its claim is based on a theory that
    the constitutional violation rendered the contract itself void. (See Badgett, 
    supra, at p. 353
    .)" (Accredited, at pp. 896-897.)
    11     We afforded the parties the opportunity to provide supplemental briefing on the
    relevance, if any, of Webb, supra, 
    7 Cal.5th 270
    , and Accredited, supra, 
    34 Cal.App.5th 891
     to the issues presented in this appeal.
    14
    (Ibid.) Although the trial court in Webb required "as an additional condition of release,
    that [the defendant] waive her Fourth Amendment right to be free of warrantless or
    unreasonable searches" (id. at p. 271), Webb did not reach the issue of whether that
    condition of bail was reasonable in the specific case before it or whether such a condition
    could ever be reasonable.
    Although the issue of whether a Fourth Waiver is a reasonable and constitutionally
    permissible condition of bail has not been decided by our Supreme Court, we need not,
    and do not, decide the issue to resolve this appeal.12 Instead, as we will explain, even
    assuming for the sake of our analysis that such a condition is unconstitutional, Surety has
    not established that a trial court's imposition of an unconstitutional bail condition would
    have the legal effect of rendering the bail agreement void and vitiate the surety's
    obligation to comply with the terms of the undertaking.
    Our analysis of Surety's argument necessarily begins with an examination of the
    nature of a bail bond contract. "A [b]ail bond is characterized as a contract between the
    government and the surety. . . . ' "In general the state and surety agree that if the state
    will release the defendant from custody, the surety will undertake that the defendant will
    appear personally and at a specified time and place. . . . If the defendant fails to appear
    12      Because we do not reach the issue of whether a Fourth Amendment waiver can
    ever be a constitutionally permissible condition of bail, we do not address the authorities
    that Surety cites on the merits of that issue, including the Ninth Circuit's opinion in U.S.
    v. Scott (9th Cir. 2006) 
    450 F.3d 863
    , which suppressed evidence that was obtained as the
    result of a warrantless drug test performed on a defendant who was required to agree to
    waive his Fourth Amendment rights and agree to drug testing as a condition of bail in
    Nevada state court.
    15
    at the proper time and place, the surety becomes the absolute debtor of the state for the
    amount of the bond." . . .' . . . The contractual nature of the relationship between the
    government and the surety leads to the conclusion that the bail order is the offer, and the
    posting of a bond is the acceptance of that offer." (International Fidelity 2012, supra,
    204 Cal.App.4th at pp. 594-595, citations omitted.)13
    Surety contends that a requirement of "an unconstitutional condition renders the
    consideration of the bail contract invalid and the contract void." The sole support that
    Surety cites for this proposition is International Fidelity 2012, supra, 
    204 Cal.App.4th 588
    . According to Surety, International Fidelity 2012 holds that "[w]hen a court requires
    an unlawful term as a condition of a bail bond[,] the entire contract is void." However,
    International Fidelity 2012 does not advance Surety's argument because it does not hold
    that an unconstitutional bail condition renders a bail agreement void and exonerates the
    surety from any obligation under the agreement. Specifically, in International Fidelity
    2012, the defendant was originally released on a $35,000 bail bond. (Id. at p. 590.) The
    defendant was later remanded into custody due to outstanding warrants, but the trial court
    ordered that the defendant would be released if he posted bail in the amount of $100,000.
    13      A bail bond agreement has also been described as "a contract involving three
    parties," as it also involves the defendant, who enters into an agreement with the surety
    that he will be " 'in the theory of the law, committed to the custody of the sureties as to
    jailers of his own choosing, not that he is, in point of fact, in this country at least,
    subjected or can be subjected by them to constant imprisonment; but he is so far placed in
    their power that they may at any time arrest him upon the recognizance and surrender
    him to the court, and, to the extent necessary to accomplish this, may restrain him of his
    liberty.' " (People v. Western Ins. Co. (2013) 
    213 Cal.App.4th 316
    , 322 (Western).)
    16
    (Ibid.) The defendant posted the bail amount of $100,000 by using the already-posted
    $35,000 bond, and then adding a $65,000 bond from a different surety. (Id. at pp. 590-
    591.) When the defendant later failed to appear and bail was forfeited, the surety who
    issued the $65,000 bond unsuccessfully sought to vacate the forfeiture and exonerate the
    bond. International Fidelity 2012 concluded that the $65,000 bond was void and the trial
    court should have exonerated it. (Id. at pp. 595-596.) As International Fidelity 2012
    explained, when the defendant was initially taken into custody for the outstanding
    warrants, the $35,000 bond was exonerated by operation of law. (Id. at p. 594.) Because
    the $35,000 bond was no longer in force, some of the consideration that the government
    gave to the surety for the $65,000 bail bond failed. As the court stated, "In this case, the
    offer (bail order) contained two items of consideration in exchange for the posting of the
    $65,000 bond. The first was the release of [defendant] from the sheriff's custody and the
    second was the extension of the original $35,000 bail bond. In other words, International
    Fidelity agreed to issue the $65,000 bond in exchange for the release of [defendant] with
    the reduction of its risk that came from having the $35,000 bail bond in place. . . . In our
    view, International Fidelity agreed to post an additional $65,000 of a total of $100,000
    bail, and it did not receive the benefit of the additional $35,000 of bail being in place."
    (Id. at p. 595, italics added.) Relying on the rule in Civil Code section 1608 that "if any
    part of several considerations for a single object is unlawful, 'the entire contract is void' "
    International Fidelity 2012 explained that "[i]n this case, part of the consideration for the
    issuance of the bond was unlawful—the $35,000 could not stay in place while
    [defendant] was remanded to the custody of the sheriff. As a result, we conclude that the
    17
    contract between the state and International Fidelity concerning the $65,000 bond was
    void." (Ibid.)
    Based on the foregoing, International Fidelity 2012 does not stand for the
    expansive principle for which Surety cites it. Instead of holding, as Surety claims, that
    "[w]hen a court requires an unlawful term as a condition of a bail bond[,] the entire
    contract is void," International Fidelity 2012 simply holds that when there is a failure of
    some of the consideration that the surety understood to have been given by the
    government for the bail agreement, the agreement is void.
    International Fidelity 2012 does not apply here because the addition of the Fourth
    Waiver does not constitute a failure of any of the consideration that the government gave
    to Surety for the bail agreement. Surety was not promised, as consideration for the bail
    agreement, that Juma would be released without any bail conditions, or even that he
    would be released without any unconstitutional bail conditions. Thus, the presence of the
    Fourth Waiver does not serve to void Surety's obligation under the bail agreement based
    on a failure of consideration.
    Thus, in the absence of any authority stating that a surety's obligation under a bail
    agreement is rendered void when an unconstitutional bail condition is imposed on a
    defendant, Surety has not met its burden to establish that, were the Fourth Waiver
    determined to be unconstitutional, it would operate to void the bail agreement.
    18
    3.     The Addition of the Fourth Waiver Did Not Materially Alter the Bail
    Agreement Without the Consent of Surety
    Surety's final contention is that the bail bond was exonerated because the trial
    court materially altered its terms, without Surety's consent, when it required Juma to
    agree to the Fourth Waiver as a condition of bail.
    In the context of a bail bond, case law establishes that " '[i]f the government
    materially increases the risk to the surety beyond the express terms of the bond without
    notice to the surety or the surety's consent, the government violates its contract with the
    surety, and the surety is entitled to vacation of the forfeiture and exoneration of the
    bond.' " (International Fidelity 2017, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 461.) "When the
    recognizance of bail is accepted, an implied covenant on the part of the government
    exists that it will not 'take any proceedings with the principal which will increase the risks
    of the sureties or affect their remedy against him.' " (Id. at p. 463.) "Accordingly, a
    surety is discharged from its liability under the bail bond agreement if the government,
    without the surety's consent or knowledge, materially increases the surety's risks."
    (Western, supra, 213 Cal.App.4th at p. 322; see also People v. Bankers Ins. Co. (2016)
    
    247 Cal.App.4th 1004
    , 1011 (Bankers) ["We agree . . . that, if the government materially
    increases the risk to the surety beyond the express terms of the bond without notice to the
    surety or the surety's consent, the government violates its contract with the surety, and the
    surety is entitled to vacation of the forfeiture and exoneration of the bond."].)14
    14    In arguing that the addition of the Fourth Waiver was a material alteration that
    exonerates the bond, Surety cites case law arising under Civil Code section 2819, which
    19
    "[T]he surety has the burden of showing that the bail conditions materially
    increased its risks." (International Fidelity 2017, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 461.)
    The question of whether the government materially increased a surety's risk beyond what
    it accepted in the bond is an issue of contract interpretation that we review de novo.
    (Bankers, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 1011.)
    The undertaking set forth in the bail bond was that Surety would guarantee Juma's
    appearance in court. Accordingly, our inquiry in assessing whether the Fourth Waiver
    materially increased Surety's risk is whether the "changed conditions significantly
    increased defendant's risk of flight." (International Fidelity 2017, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 463; see also Safety National, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 709 [" 'The object of bail and
    its forfeiture is to insure the attendance of the accused and his obedience to the orders and
    judgment of the court.' "].) Applying this standard, case law has held that when a court
    changes the conditions of bail to allow a defendant to travel outside the country, that
    change materially alters a surety's risk that the defendant will not appear in court.
    applies in general to sureties and guarantors, and states that a surety "is exonerated . . . if
    by any act of the creditor, without the consent of the surety the original obligation of the
    principal is altered in any respect, or the remedies or rights of the creditor against the
    principal, in respect thereto, in any way impaired or suspended." (Civ. Code, § 2819.)
    Surety relies on case law holding that when there is a " ' "material alteration of the terms
    of the guaranty" ' " the court is not required to decide " ' "whether the alteration benefits
    or injures the guarantor." ' " (ITT Diversified Credit Corp. v. Highlands Ins. Co. (1987)
    
    191 Cal.App.3d 301
    , 306.) According to Surety, we accordingly should not require it to
    establish that the Fourth Waiver materially increased its risks, only that the Fourth
    Waiver materially altered Juma's obligations under the bail bond agreement. We reject
    the argument. Case law developed specifically in the bail bond context, which we have
    cited above, requires that to exonerate a bond based on a change in bail conditions, the
    surety must establish that the change materially increased its risk under the bond.
    20
    (Western, supra, 213 Cal.App.4th at p. 325 ["permitting [defendant] to leave the United
    States materially increased [surety's] risk under the bail bond agreement"].) In contrast,
    in International Fidelity 2017, the court concluded that the addition of alcohol-related
    bail conditions did not "undermine[] the primary object of bail—defendant's continuing
    appearance." (International Fidelity 2017, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 464.)15
    International Fidelity 2017 is the more comparable authority on the issue of
    whether the Fourth Waiver materially increased Surety's risk. Although the Fourth
    Waiver may have to some extent impacted Juma while he was released on bail, just as the
    alcohol-related conditions in International Fidelity 2017 impacted the defendant there,
    nothing about the Fourth Waiver made it more likely that Juma would fail to appear for
    future court hearings. Surety has presented no persuasive authority or argument to the
    contrary. Accordingly, we conclude that the Fourth Waiver did not serve to exonerate the
    bond by materially increasing Surety's risk.
    15     The bail conditions imposed in International Fidelity 2017, which did not
    materially alter the surety's risk, required that the defendant (1) not drive during the
    pendency of the case, (2) attend three Alcoholics Anonymous meetings per week;
    (3) abstain from alcohol; and (4) and wear a transdermal alcohol monitoring device.
    (International Fidelity 2017, supra, 11 Cal.App.5th at p. 459.)
    21
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    IRION, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    DATO, J.
    22