Contested
Bail application
This is where the person who has charged
you is opposing you being released on bail.
Generally bail applications follow this procedure
1. The prosecutor will outline
the reasons bail is opposed
2. The Informant (the person
who charged you) will tell the Magistrate or Judge
the reasons they think you should not get bail.
3. Any other witnesses will be
called by the Prosecutor (the victim, other Police
etc).
Your lawyer will question both these witnesses
and the Informant with the aim of showing that
even given their concerns you should get bail
4. You or witnesses on your behalf
will tell the Magistrate details about you (about
your health, or that you have stable housing and
a good job etc). The prosecutor will question
your witnesses.
5. Your lawyer will then tell
the Magistrate or Judge why you should be released
on bail.
6. The prosecutor will tell the
Magistrate or Judge why you should not be released
7. The Magistrate or Judge will
make a decision to grant bail or not.
Uncontested bail application
An uncontested bail application
is one where the prosecutor and Informant are
not opposing bail being granted. While this puts
you in a much better position it does not mean
that you automatically get bail.
It is for the Magistrate/Judge
to make the decision as to whether you get bail
and the fact that it is uncontested is only one
factor for them to take into account.
On own undertaking
The Court can bail you on your
own undertaking. This means that you sign a promise
to turn back up at Court on a different date.
With conditions
A Bail with conditions is one
where you are granted bail on that basis that
you comply with conditions imposed on you. The
court may impose any number of conditions that
it considers appropriate to you and to the offences
you are charged with.
This may include a curfew, reporting a number
of days a week to a police station, or the requirement
not to contact or interfere with witnesses. The
Court might also decide that you have to stay
at a drug or alcohol rehabilitation centre.
Surety
A Court may decide that you can
only get bail if you agree to arrange a surety.
A surety is a person who agrees
to provide security (money or assets) to the Court
to
ensure that you turn up to Court.
The amount of the security will
be fixed by the Court and the person who provides
the undertaking must satisfy the Court that they
can provide the fixed amount.
This is usually done by providing
money or lodging title documents to prove they
have assets to the value of the security.
If the person charged does not
appear at Court, the person giving the undertaking
may lose their money or have their assets sold
to pay the security to the Court.
If you have bail on a surety
you need the surety to turn up to Court whenever
you intend to vary the bail
Own Deposit
This is where you are granted
bail on the basis that you lodge money or property
with the court.
This is very similar to a Surety,
excepting that the security is provided by you
rather than someone else.
If you do not appear at your
next Court date you may forfeit the amount lodged.
Show Cause
When you are is a show cause
situation you must show the Magistrate or Judge
reasons why your detention in custody is not justified.
A show cause bail application is one where the
Court no longer is presuming that you should bail.
It is not capable of being precisely
defined.
It can be established by showing
that there are a number of factors that make your
detention unjustified (i.e. the strength of the
case against you, your age, work, lack of prior
convictions)
Exceptional circumstances
Exceptional circumstances bail
applications are ones where you have to show that
your detention is not justified because there
are exceptional circumstances about you or the
offence. It is the highest test for a person trying
to get bail and is extremely hard to establish.
It is not precisely defined by
the Courts and your lawyer will be able to tell
you what is not exceptional but not what is.
Examples of offences that may
put you in an exceptional circumstances position
are murder or trafficking in commercial quantity
of drugs.
On a murder charge only the Supreme
Court can grant bail.
Appeal Bail
If a Magistrate imprisons you
it is possible to apply for appeal bail. The decision
is one for the Magistrate who imprisons you and
the important factors are the same as in the original
granting of bail.
Generally if you were on bail
when you arrived at Court and you had been answering
your bail (complying with conditions , reporting
as ordered) and there is some possible merit in
your appeal the Magistrate will grant appeal bail.
If you are given a sentence that will be finished
by the date of the appeal a Magistrate should
give you bail. As with any grant of bail there
are a number of circumstances involved and you
should discuss all the possibilities with your
lawyer.
If you are sentenced to be imprisoned
by the County Court you can apply for appeal bail
if you are appealing to the Court of Appeal.
It is only in exceptional circumstances that the
Court will grant bail and it is very difficult
to establish exceptional circumstances.
It is very rare for bail to be
given on an appeal to the Court of Appeal.
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