BEDSWORTH, J.
In July 2010, Alireza Al Sazefari was arrested on felony domestic violence charges, and appellant Continental Heritage Insurance Company issued him a bail bond for $150,000. Al Sazefari was personally present for his arraignment on those charges on Monday, November 15, 2010, but his retained defense counsel was not present. At that hearing Al Sazefari was specifically ordered by the trial judge to surrender his Iranian and American passports to the prosecutor for safekeeping within 48 hours, but because his counsel was absent, the arraignment itself was continued to December 20, 2010.
Al Sazefari failed to surrender his passports, so the prosecutor's office notified the trial judge's staff about it. Upon receiving this message the judge decided he was not going to take "unilateral" action, but rather scheduled a hearing for the afternoon of Thursday, November 18, 2010, so that Al Sazefari's lawyer could have notice and be present. No one, however, appears to have notified Al Sazefari.
At the Thursday afternoon hearing, the prosecutor asked the trial judge to revoke Al Sazefari's bail in light of his noncompliance with the order to surrender the passports. The trial judge, however, declined, "because the defendant was not ordered by the court to be here." The judge also kept the December 20 arraignment date.
But when Al Sazefari did not show up at the December 20 arraignment, the court ordered the bail bond forfeited. More than 16 months later, in April 2012, Continental Heritage filed a motion to vacate that forfeiture. The court denied the motion and this appeal ensued.
Continental Heritage makes this argument: Under Penal Code section 977, subdivision (b)(1),
In response, the County of Orange, respondent in this appeal,
But there is no need in this appeal to choose sides in the Sacramento Bail versus Classified Insurance split over the proper scope of section 977. Even assuming, for sake of argument, that under section 977 the defendant in this case was lawfully required to have been physically present at the November 18, 2010 hearing, the trial court did not err in denying Continental Heritage's motion to vacate.
The core bail forfeiture statute is section 1305. Subdivision (a) of section 1305 lists five categories of proceedings or events which require bail forfeiture, including the catch-all: "Any other occasion prior to the pronouncement of judgment if the defendant's presence in court is lawfully required." (§ 1305, subd. (a)(4).) It is the phrase "lawfully required" in subdivision (a)(4) of section 1305 that is the ultimate origin of the disagreement between the Sacramento Bail and the Classified Insurance courts over the applicability of section 977 to bail cases.
However, there is no disagreement anywhere about the trial court's discretion to decline to declare a forfeiture of bail. In 1993, the Legislature added section 1305.1 to the Penal Code, which explicitly adopted "rational basis" language contained in United Bonding. (See People v. Ranger Ins. Co. (2003) 108 Cal.App.4th 945, 951, fn. 6 ("Ranger 108").)
In the case before us, a rational basis for the trial court to conclude the defendant had a sufficient excuse not to show up at the November 18 hearing readily presents itself. The November 18 hearing was ad hoc, set in response to the district attorney's ex parte request the trial court to do something about the defendant's disobedience to a court order he surrender his two passports. Defendant himself received no notice of the hearing. We conclude that constitutes a rational basis for not forfeiting bail. Declaring bail forfeiture for failure to appear at a hearing about which the defendant has received no notice probably violates due process. It certainly provides a basis for the belief there exists a sufficient excuse for the defendant's nonappearance.
We therefore conclude there was a rational basis for the trial court's order, and its discretion was properly exercised. The order denying the request to vacate the forfeiture order is affirmed. Respondent County of Orange will recover its costs on appeal.
O'LEARY, P. J. and IKOLA, J., concurs.
In this case there is no dispute that Al Sazefari had not obtained leave of court pursuant to section 977, subdivision (b)(1) to execute the waiver of his "right" to be personally present.