State v. Agron , 323 Conn. 629 ( 2016 )


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    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. ANGEL AGRON
    (SC 19499)
    Rogers, C. J., and Palmer, Zarella, Eveleigh, McDonald, Espinosa and
    Robinson, Js.
    Argued September 20—officially released November 22, 2016
    Paul A. Catalano, for the plaintiff in error (3-D Bail
    Bonds, Inc.).
    Timothy F. Costello, assistant state’s attorney, with
    whom, on the brief, were Kevin T. Kane, chief state’s
    attorney, Michael Dearington, former state’s attorney,
    and Leah Hawley, supervisory assistant state’s attor-
    ney, for the defendant in error (state).
    Opinion
    EVELEIGH, J. This case is before us on a writ of
    error brought by the plaintiff in error, 3-D Bail Bonds,
    Inc. (plaintiff), who claims that the trial court improp-
    erly denied its motion seeking relief from its obligation
    on a surety bail bond (bond) pursuant to General Stat-
    utes § 54-65c, which the trial court had ordered forfeited
    after the principal on that bond, Angel Agron, who is
    the criminal defendant in the underlying case, failed to
    appear for a scheduled court date. The defendant in
    error, the state of Connecticut, responds that the trial
    court properly denied the motion, claiming that the
    plaintiff had not satisfied the requirements of § 54-65c
    because Agron was not ‘‘detained’’ for purposes of § 54-
    65c when he was personally confronted by fugitive
    recovery bail enforcement agents in Puerto Rico, and
    the state refused to extradite him to Connecticut. We
    conclude that the trial court properly denied the plain-
    tiff’s motion and, therefore, dismiss the writ of error.
    The record reveals the following relevant facts. In
    2006, Agron was arrested and charged with several
    offenses.1 The trial court set bail on these charges in
    an amount totaling $20,000. The plaintiff executed a
    bond in that amount and Agron was subsequently
    released from custody.
    Agron failed to appear for a scheduled court date on
    June 23, 2014, and the trial court ordered the total
    amount of the bond forfeited. Pursuant to General Stat-
    utes (Rev. to 2013) § 54-65a (a), the court ordered a six
    month stay of execution of the forfeiture. Upon being
    notified of Agron’s failure to appear, the plaintiff initi-
    ated an investigation that revealed that Agron fled to
    Puerto Rico and remained there. On December 17, 2014,
    Agron was personally confronted by bail enforcement
    agents in Puerto Rico. The state’s attorney, however,
    declined to initiate extradition proceedings.
    On December 21, 2014, the plaintiff filed a motion
    with the trial court to release the plaintiff from its obli-
    gation on the bond pursuant to § 54-65c. In support of
    its motion, the plaintiff filed an affidavit from one of
    its employees, Andrew J. Bloom, who attested that he
    spoke with the State’s Attorney’s Office and informed it
    that bail enforcement agents had personally confronted
    Agron. Bloom further averred that, although he
    requested an authorization for extradition, a representa-
    tive of the state’s attorney had declined his request.
    The plaintiff also submitted an affidavit in which Agron
    attested that he was ‘‘detained’’ in Puerto Rico by bail
    enforcement agents and made aware of his warrants for
    failure to appear in Connecticut. Agron further attested
    that he was told that the state was not authorizing
    extradition and that he was free to go. A photocopy of
    Agron’s identification card and a photograph of him
    holding a Puerto Rican newspaper dated December 17,
    2014, were also attached to the motion.
    The trial court denied the motion and the plaintiff
    sought reconsideration. After considering briefs from
    both parties and conducting a hearing, the trial court
    denied the plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration. In its
    memorandum of decision, the trial court reasoned as
    follows: ‘‘[Agron] has not been proven to be in custody
    of the authorities in Puerto Rico; rather, bail enforce-
    ment agents made contact with him and he refused to
    consent to return. The [plaintiff] has not met the burden
    placed upon it by the statute, namely that [Agron] be
    detained or incarcerated.’’ (Emphasis added.) The plain-
    tiff thereafter filed a writ of error.
    The plaintiff claims that the trial court improperly
    denied its motion for relief from bond under § 54-65c
    because the trial court incorrectly interpreted the term
    ‘‘detained’’ as used in the statute. Specifically, the plain-
    tiff asserts that the legislature intended the term
    ‘‘detained’’ to include action by a bail enforcement agent
    to capture the principal.2 In response, the state asserts
    that for the purposes of § 54-65c, the term ‘‘detained’’
    requires state action. Specifically, the state asserts that,
    to satisfy the ‘‘detained’’ requirements of § 54-65c, a
    surety holder must show that the principal is detained
    by the government of another state, territory or country,
    not simply the personal contact made by a bail enforce-
    ment agent. We agree with the state and conclude that
    the trial court properly concluded that the plaintiff had
    not met the requirements of § 54-65c.
    At the outset, we set forth the standard of review
    that applies to the plaintiff’s claim. The question of
    whether § 54-65c affords relief for a surety holder upon
    demonstrating that the principal has been located and
    personally confronted by a bail enforcement agent pre-
    sents a question of statutory construction.
    ‘‘When construing a statute, [o]ur fundamental objec-
    tive is to ascertain and give effect to the apparent intent
    of the legislature. . . . In seeking to determine that
    meaning, General Statutes § 1-2z directs us first to con-
    sider the text of the statute itself and its relationship
    to other statutes. If, after examining such text and con-
    sidering such relationship, the meaning of such text is
    plain and unambiguous and does not yield absurd or
    unworkable results, extratextual evidence of the mean-
    ing of the statute shall not be considered. . . . The test
    to determine ambiguity is whether the statute, when
    read in context, is susceptible to more than one reason-
    able interpretation. . . . When a statute is not plain and
    unambiguous, we also look for interpretive guidance to
    the legislative history and circumstances surrounding
    its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to
    implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation
    and common law principles governing the same general
    subject matter . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Chairperson, Connecticut Medical Examining
    Board v. Freedom of Information Commission, 
    310 Conn. 276
    , 283, 
    77 A.3d 121
    (2013). The issue of statutory
    interpretation presented in this case is a question of
    law subject to plenary review. See 
    id., 282–83. We
    begin with the text of the statute. Section 54-
    65c provides as follows: ‘‘A court shall vacate an order
    forfeiting a bail bond and release the professional
    bondsman, as defined in section 29-144, or the surety
    bail bond agent and the insurer, as both terms are
    defined in section 38a-660, if (1) the principal on the
    bail bond (A) is detained or incarcerated (i) in another
    state, territory or country, or (ii) by a federal agency,
    or (B) has been removed by United States Immigration
    and Customs Enforcement, and (2) the professional
    bondsman, the surety bail bond agent or the insurer
    provides satisfactory proof of such detention, incarcer-
    ation or removal to the court and the state’s attorney
    prosecuting the case, and (3) the state’s attorney prose-
    cuting the case declines to seek extradition of the
    principal.’’
    Resolution of the plaintiff’s claim requires us to deter-
    mine whether Agron was ‘‘detained’’ for purposes of
    § 54-65c when the bail enforcement agents personally
    located him and confronted him in Puerto Rico.
    ‘‘Detained’’ is not defined in § 54-65c. In accordance
    with General Statutes § 1-1 (a), we, therefore, look to
    the common usage of the word ‘‘detain’’ to discern the
    definition intended by the legislature in § 54-65c. See,
    e.g., Potvin v. Lincoln Service & Equipment Co., 
    298 Conn. 620
    , 633, 
    6 A.3d 60
    (2010). ‘‘In the absence of a
    definition of terms in the statute itself, [w]e may pre-
    sume . . . that the legislature intended [a word] to
    have its ordinary meaning in the English language, as
    gleaned from the context of its use. . . . Under such
    circumstances, it is appropriate to look to the common
    understanding of the term as expressed in a dictionary.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Saturno,
    
    322 Conn. 80
    , 90, 
    139 A.3d 629
    (2016).
    The term ‘‘detain’’ is defined with substantial similar-
    ity in a number of dictionaries. Webster’s Third New
    International Dictionary (2002) defines ‘‘detain’’ as,
    inter alia, ‘‘to hold or keep in or as if in custody . . . .’’
    The American Heritage College Dictionary (4th Ed.
    2007) similarly defines ‘‘detain’’ as, inter alia, ‘‘[t]o keep
    in custody or temporary confinement.’’ Finally, the
    American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
    (5th Ed. 2011) also defines ‘‘detain’’ as, inter alia, ‘‘[t]o
    keep in custody or confinement . . . .’’ Applying the
    dictionary definition of ‘‘detain’’ supports that the legis-
    lature intended § 54-65c to require governmental action.
    ‘‘When determining the legislature’s intended mean-
    ing of a statutory word, it also is appropriate to consider
    the surrounding words pursuant to the canon of con-
    struction noscitur a sociis.3 McCoy v. Commissioner of
    Public Safety, 
    300 Conn. 144
    , 159, 
    12 A.3d 948
    (2011).
    By using this interpretive aid, the meaning of a statutory
    word may be indicated, controlled or made clear by
    the words with which it is associated in the statute.
    State v. Roque, 
    190 Conn. 143
    , 152, 
    460 A.2d 26
    (1983).’’
    (Footnote in original.) State v. LaFleur, 
    307 Conn. 115
    ,
    133, 
    51 A.3d 1048
    (2012). In § 54-65c, the legislature
    chose to use the word ‘‘detained’’ in association with
    the term ‘‘incarcerated.’’ ‘‘Incarcerated’’ necessarily
    indicates confinement by government. See The Ameri-
    can Heritage College 
    Dictionary, supra
    (defining ‘‘incar-
    cerate’’ as ‘‘[t]o put into jail’’); Webster’s Third New
    International 
    Dictionary, supra
    (defining ‘‘incarcerate’’
    as ‘‘to put in prison: imprison’’). A review of other stat-
    utes in which the legislature has used the term
    ‘‘detained’’ in connection with the term ‘‘incarcerated’’
    demonstrates that in using the two words together, the
    legislature intended to refer to custody by a government
    agent. See General Statutes § 54-142g (d) (4) (all per-
    sons ‘‘detained or incarcerated in any correctional facil-
    ity in this state’’); General Statutes (Supp. 2016) § 18-
    81cc (a) (‘‘[a]ny agency of the state or any political
    subdivision of the state that incarcerates or detains
    adult or juvenile offenders, including persons detained
    for immigration violations, shall, within available appro-
    priations, adopt and comply with the applicable stan-
    dards recommended by the National Prison Rape
    Elimination Commission for the prevention, detection
    and monitoring of, and response to, sexual abuse in
    adult prisons and jails, community correction facilities,
    juvenile facilities and lockups’’). Therefore, the legisla-
    ture’s use of the term ‘‘incarcerated’’ in connection with
    ‘‘detained’’ in § 54-65c is further indication that the legis-
    lature intended ‘‘detained’’ to require governmental
    action.
    Furthermore, a review of other statutes reveals that
    the legislature has repeatedly used the term ‘‘detained’’
    to refer to governmental action. For instance, in General
    Statutes § 46b-133, the term ‘‘detain’’ or ‘‘detained’’ is
    used throughout the statute to refer to the process by
    which a governmental authority may hold a child in
    custody when a child is arrested. See General Statutes
    § 46b-133 (c) (‘‘[u]pon the arrest of any child by an
    officer, such officer may [1] release the child to the
    custody of the child’s parent or parents, guardian or
    some other suitable person or agency, [2] at the discre-
    tion of the officer, release the child to the child’s own
    custody, or [3] seek a court order to detain the child
    in a juvenile detention center’’). In General Statutes
    § 54-108d, the term ‘‘detain’’ is used to describe the
    process by which a probation officer may hold a person
    in custody. See General Statutes § 54-108d (a) (‘‘[a] pro-
    bation officer may, in the performance of his or her
    official duties, detain for a reasonable period of time
    and until a police officer arrives to make an arrest [1]
    any person who has one or more unexecuted state or
    federal arrest warrants lodged against him or her, and
    [2] any person who such officer has probable cause to
    believe has violated a condition of probation and is the
    subject of a probation officer’s authorization to arrest
    pursuant to subsection [a] of section 53a-32’’). In Gen-
    eral Statutes § 14-12h, the legislature used the term
    ‘‘detain’’ to describe the process by which a police offi-
    cer may address an unregistered motor vehicle being
    driven on the highway. See General Statutes § 14-12h
    (b) (1) (‘‘[i]f any police officer observes a motor vehicle
    being operated upon the public highway, and such
    motor vehicle is displaying registration number plates
    identified as suspended . . . such police officer may
    . . . stop or detain such vehicle and its occupants’’);
    see also General Statutes § 54-126 (‘‘the [Chairman of
    the Board of Pardons and Paroles] may detain any con-
    vict or inmate pending approval by the panel of such
    retaking or reimprisonment’’); General Statutes § 54-
    192h (b) (addressing requirements for law enforcement
    officer to detain individual pursuant to civil immigration
    detainer); General Statutes § 54-53a (addressing deten-
    tion of individuals accused of crimes who have not
    made bail in community correction centers); General
    Statutes § 7-135a (addressing reimbursement for town
    operating lockup ‘‘wherein prisoners are detained for
    arraignment before, or trial by, the Superior Court’’).
    An examination of these statutes demonstrates that the
    legislature has consistently used the term ‘‘detain’’ to
    require governmental action.4
    It is axiomatic that, when interpreting the terms of
    one statute, ‘‘we are guided by the principle that the
    legislature is always presumed to have created a harmo-
    nious and consistent body of law . . . . Legislation
    never is written on a clean slate, nor is it ever read in
    isolation or applied in a vacuum. Every new act takes
    its place as a component of an extensive and elaborate
    system of written laws. . . . Construing statutes by ref-
    erence to others advances [the values of harmony and
    consistency within the law]. In fact, courts have been
    said to be under a duty to construe statutes harmoni-
    ously where that can reasonably be done. . . . More-
    over, statutes must be construed, if possible, such that
    no clause, sentence or word shall be superfluous, void
    or insignificant . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Standard Oil of Connecticut, Inc. v. Administra-
    tor, Unemployment Compensation Act, 
    320 Conn. 611
    ,
    645, 
    134 A.3d 581
    (2016). Applying this principle to the
    terms of § 54-65c, we conclude that the plain language
    of § 54-65c, as read in connection with other statutes,
    demonstrates that the legislature intended the word
    ‘‘detained’’ as used in that statute to require custody by
    a governmental entity.
    The plaintiff seems to assert, however, that reading
    § 54-65c so as to require custody by a governmental
    entity leads to absurd or unworkable results. Specifi-
    cally, the plaintiff claims that such an interpretation of
    the statute prevents a surety from obtaining recourse
    under § 54-65c based on the state’s decision not to extra-
    dite the principal. We disagree. First, the plaintiff’s bail
    contract was between itself and Agron. The state was
    not a party to that contract and has no responsibilities
    under that contract. The plaintiff does not assert that
    the state or any other governmental entity promised
    that it would extradite Agron in the event that he fled
    to another country. As we explained in State v. Sheriff,
    
    301 Conn. 617
    , 628, 
    21 A.3d 808
    (2011), ‘‘even if we
    assume that the chief state’s attorney could have extra-
    dited [the principal] from Jamaica, in the absence of
    any promise by the chief state’s attorney that he would
    seek extradition of [the principal] in the event that he
    fled, the chief state’s attorney had no obligation to [the
    surety] to extradite [the principal] from Jamaica in
    order to fulfill the obligations that [the surety] willingly
    undertook. As one court has observed, ‘[t]he state is
    not the surety’s surety.’ Umatilla County v. Resolute
    Ins. Co., 
    8 Or. App. 318
    , 322, 
    493 P.2d 731
    (1972). . . .
    The fact that [the surety] cannot compel [the principal]
    to return to this state so that [the surety] can fulfill its
    obligation is primarily the result of [the principal’s]
    decision to flee to Jamaica, and [the surety] must accept
    the consequences of that decision.’’ Similarly, in the
    present case, we are not persuaded that our interpreta-
    tion of § 54-65c leads to absurd or unworkable results
    merely because the plaintiff is required to forfeit the
    bond when Agron fled to a United States territory and
    the state decided not to extradite him. Instead, we con-
    clude that our interpretation of § 54-65c requires the
    plaintiff to abide by the terms of the bond agreement,
    namely, to forfeit the bond if Agron did not appear
    in court.
    On the basis of our conclusion that § 54-65c requires
    that Agron be incarcerated or detained by a governmen-
    tal entity, we conclude that the trial court properly
    denied the plaintiff’s motion for relief from bond in
    the present case. It is undisputed that Agron was not
    incarcerated or detained by any governmental entity in
    the present case, accordingly, the plaintiff did not meet
    the requirements of § 54-65c.
    The writ of error is dismissed.
    In this opinion the other justices concurred.
    1
    Agron was charged with sexual assault in the fourth degree in violation
    of General Statutes (Rev. to 2005) § 53a-73a and risk of injury to a child in
    violation of General Statutes (Rev. to 2005) § 53-21.
    2
    The plaintiff also asserts that the trial court incorrectly failed to afford
    it relief under General Statutes § 54-65 (b). Section 54-65 (b) provides that
    ‘‘[i]f the principal of a surety in a recognizance in criminal proceedings
    absconds, such surety may apply, prior to six months after the date the
    bond is ordered forfeited, to a judge of the Superior Court to be released
    from such bond. The judge may release such surety from such bond for
    good cause shown.’’ A careful review of the record demonstrates that the
    plaintiff did not assert a claim under § 54-65 (b) before the trial court and,
    therefore, the trial court did not decide the issue of whether relief was
    proper under § 54-65 (b) in the present case. ‘‘Our appellate courts, as a
    general practice, will not review claims made for the first time on appeal.
    We repeatedly have held that [a] party cannot present a case to the trial
    court on one theory and then seek appellate relief on a different one . . . .
    [A]n appellate court is under no obligation to consider a claim that is not
    distinctly raised at the trial level. . . . [B]ecause our review is limited to
    matters in the record, we [also] will not address issues not decided by the
    trial court.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) White v.
    Mazda Motor of America, Inc., 
    313 Conn. 610
    , 619–20, 
    99 A.3d 1079
    (2014).
    Accordingly, we do not reach the plaintiff’s claim under § 54-65 (b).
    3
    Noscitur a sociis translates from Latin, ‘‘it is known by its associates
    . . . .’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Graham
    County Soil & Water Conservation District v. United States ex rel. Wilson,
    
    559 U.S. 280
    , 287, 
    130 S. Ct. 1396
    , 
    176 L. Ed. 2d 225
    (2010).
    4
    The plaintiff cites to General Statutes §§ 17a-484 and 53a-119a without
    analysis. To the extent that the plaintiff is asserting that these statutes
    demonstrate that the word ‘‘detained’’ does not require state action or that
    a bail enforcement agent is authorized to ‘‘detain’’ an individual for purposes
    of § 54-65c, we are not persuaded. First, § 17a-484, which addresses regional
    mental health boards, does not contain the word ‘‘detain’’ at all. Second,
    although § 53a-119a (a) and (b) does grant shopkeepers and library agents
    the authority to ‘‘detain’’ suspected shoplifters and vandals, it only allows
    that detention ‘‘for a time sufficient to summon a police officer to the
    premises.’’ Nothing in these statutes supports the plaintiff’s reading of
    § 54-65c.