This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Logan county denying motion to vacate a forfeiture of an appeal bond in a criminal proceeding.
On May 8, 1946, the principal on the bond, Buster Lee Gibson, in a case then pending in the district court of Logan county, was, by the verdict of a jury, found guilty of the crime of burglary in the second degree and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for a term of five years. Thereupon, date for sentence was set for Friday, the 24th day of May, 1946, at 10 o’clock a.m. Motion for new trial was presented and overruled and sentence was pronounced in accordance with the verdict of the jury. Defendant gave notice of intention to appeal to the Criminal Court of Appeals. Appeal bond was set in the sum of $3,500.
May 24, 1946, defendant, Buster Lee Gibson, filed an appeal bond with Ernest West, T. E. Blakely, J. M. Gibson, and R. S. Jones, as sureties. Appeal to the Criminal Court of Appeals was perfected, and on October 14, 1947, the conviction was affirmed. Petition for rehearing was filed and, on November 26, 1947, said petition for rehearing was overruled. The mandate to the district court of Logan county was issued January 27, 1948, and later it was filed in the district court of Logan county. Later defendant, Gibson, was called upon to appear and submit himself to the judgment of the district court and the Criminal Court of Appeals. He failed to appear, and on February 13, 1948, an order was entered declaring the appeal bond forfeited. During the same term of court, and on May 7, 1948, defendant, Buster Lee Gibson, and his bondsmen, Ernest West, filed a motion tO' vacate the order of forfeiture upon the grounds:
“1. That Defendant and Bondsmen had no notice of the receipt of mandate by the Court Clerk of Logan County, Oklahoma, in the appeal of Buster Lee Gibson vs. The State of Oklahoma.
“2. That said defendant and bondsmen had no notice of the application to spread mandate of record in the District Court of Logan County, Oklahoma and from the Criminal Court of Appeals of the State of Oklahoma.
“3. That the said bondsmen of Buster Lee Gibson received no notice from the State of Oklahoma and the Sheriff of said Logan County, Oklahoma, to produce said Buster Lee Gibson and bring him before the Court.
“4. That the order of forfeiture is void and ineffectual for the reason that the Defendant and bondsmen have not had their day in court to protect themselves against said forfeiture.”
Hearing was had on said motion May 14, 1948, at which time movants presented their evidence and rested. The county attorney announced that he had no evidence to present. Thereupon, the movants, in open court, tendered, or offered to pay, all expenses that were incurred in the return of Buster Lee Gibson to the state penitentiary. The matter was then passed by the court to May 28, 1948. When the matter came before the court on May 28, 1948, the county attorney of Logan county asked permission to present evidence. Defendants objected and the court overruled the objection, and the state presented its evidence consisting of the testimony of A. H. Jelsma, the sheriff of Logan county. Thereafter the motion to vacate the order • of forfeiture was overruled and notice was given by movants of intention to appeal to the Supreme Court. Thereafter Buster Lee Gibson, J. M. Gibson, and Ernest West perfected their appeal. T. E. Blakely and R. S. Jones did not appeal and were not made parties in the appeal.
*525There are five assignments of error. The third assignment is that the court erred in refusing and ruling out competent and legal evidence on the part of the plaintiffs in error. The fourth assignment is that the trial court erred in the admission of evidence on the part of the defendant in error. The hird and fourth assignments of error are not urged and are not presented in the briefs of plaintiffs in error, and will, therefore, be treated as abandoned. The first, second and fifth assignments of error all go to the same principal questions, that the court erred in overruling the motion to vacate the order of forfeiture and in not rendering judgment vacating the order of forfeiture.
The evidence relied upon by the plaintiffs in error is the testimony of Ernest West, one of the sureties on the appeal bond, and the testimony of Owen \F. Renegar, the attorney for Buster Lee Gibson in the criminal case in the trial court, and in the Criminal Court of Appeals. Ernest West testified, in substance, that he is one of the sureties on the appeal bond; that after the matter was settled in the Criminal Court of Appeals he did not have any notice of the time of the affirmance in the Criminal Court of Appeals; that he knew nothing about the mandate from the Criminal Court of Appeals going to be spread of record in the district court of Logan county; that the first notice he had of said matter was when he was served with summons in the action on the bond.
Owen F. Renegar testified, in substance, that he is an attorney at law located in Oklahoma City; that he represented Buster Lee Gibson in the appeal to the Criminal Court of Appeals; that the opinion first came down in October, 1947; that immediately thereafter his petition for rehearing was filed; that the petition for rehearing was under consideration for some time and was finally overruled January 27, 1948; that
“. . . For some reason I didn’t get notice of the affirmance on the 27th day of January and received no notice from the Clerk of this Court that the judgment would be spread of record, on the 29th day of January. That the first notice that I had of the final af-firmance of this case was when called to my attention by Mr. West or his associate Mr. Little that he had been sued on the bond. That is my statement.”
On cross-examination he testified that he did not know where his client, Buster Lee Gibson, was at all times but that he was in contact with his father all the time, and the boy would call him about once a week from somewhere and that the boy’s father kept in touch with him, and that he could have been available at any time on a few days notice.
Plaintiffs also relied, to some extent, on the testimony of A. H. Jelsma, the sheriff of Logan county, who on cross-examination by counsel for plaintiffs in error, testified in substance, that the mandate was returned on the 1st day of February, 1948; that he did not make any effort to contact Buster Lee Gibson at his home in Oklahoma county, and did not remember whether he called the attorney in Oklahoma county, or not; that he knew that Buster Lee Gibson lived in Oklahoma county, but did not go to Oklahoma county to get him and did not call his attorney of record and notify him that he was wanting Buster Lee Gibson and did not call any of the bondsmen.
Plaintiff in error J. M. Gibson did not testify.
The testimony of the sheriff as to what he did or did not do toward notifying the defendant, Gibson, his attorney and bondsmen, has no bearing on the case for the reason that the sheriff had nothing to do with, or any duty to perform relative to1 the mandate from the Criminal Court of Appeals until after the order of forfeiture was entered. The mandate is not directed to the *526sheriff and does not come into his hands. It is directed to the judge of the court where the trial was held, and the sheriff has no duty to perform in connection therewith until after a forfeiture is declared and an order for the arrest of the defendant is issued. The testimony of the sheriff relied upon by plaintiffs in error relates wholly to matters occurring after the order of forfeiture was entered.
Plaintiffs in error cite and rely upon White v. State, 82 Okla. 116, 198 P. 843, and Dunn v. State, 65 Okla. 233, 166 P. 193. In White v. State, supra, a showing was made that the defendant, principal on the bond, was sick and unable to attend court when his bond was forfeited. In Dunn v. State, supra, it was shown that the defendant, principal on the bond, had serious illness in his family; that he lived in the country some thirteen miles from the county seat; his wife was seriously ill and had no one but defendant to stay with her; that on the morning of the day his case was set for trial, he went to a neighbor’s house to get someone to stay with his wife while he attended court. On that account he missed the train to the county seat and was some four hours late in appearing; he offered to pay costs and expenses that had been incurred by reason of his default. It was held that the absence was excusable and it was abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court to refuse to vacate the order of forfeiture. The above cases are authority for the principal that where it appears from the facts and circumstances of the case, as reflected by the record, that the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to vacate the forfeiture, the case will be reversed and remanded with instructions to the trial court to vacate the forfeiture. It is the opinion of the court that under the facts and circumstances as shown by the record in this case, the trial court abused its discretion.
The case of Mahaney et al. v. State, 106 Okla. 152, 233 P. 725, is quite similar to the instant case. There the bond was an appearance bond in the trial court and Daniel Roberts was a defendant and principal on the bond. In that case, the cause was set for trial January 8, 1921, and came on for trial January 27, 1921; defendant not appearing, judgment of forfeiture on the bond was entered; bench warrant was issued, and on February. 21, 1921, defendant was brought into court. His explanation for his failure to appear theretofore was because he had received no notice of the assignment of his case for trial and that he had no knowledge thereof. He withdrew his former'plea of not guilty and entered a plea of guilty and was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary. February 23, 1921, during the same term of court, the sureties on his bond filed their verified application to set aside the order of forfeiture. The showing made was that J. H. Hughes was the attorney for Roberts in the criminal case and sometime before the last assignment of the case, Roberts, being employed by an oil company, was living in Graham, Texas; Roberts wrote his attorney and advised as to his post office address, together with his street number, stating that he had moved to Texas; that thereafter the attorney wrote Roberts advising him of the assignment of the case; that Roberts did not receive the letter; that the deputy sheriff who had the bench warrant found Roberts at Graham, Texas, and Roberts stated at the time that he had had no notice of the setting of the case. He waived extradition and returned willingly to Oklahoma; the sureties on the bond had not been notified or indemnified against loss. They offered to pay the expense of the officer serving the warrant and all other sums the court might deem just.
The court entered an order denying the application to vacate the forfeiture. This court, on appeal, said:
“ ... It is the manifest intention of the statute to encourage the giving of bail, in proper cases. The right of *527bail is so fundamental that it is guaranteed in the Bill of Rights with certain qualifications. Gratuitous sureties, generally, are favorities of the law. On the undisputed showing made, the overruling of plaintiffs’ application was error and contrary to sound judicial discretion.”
In the Mahaney case the attorney attempted to notify his client, Roberts, by mail, but through some failure of the mail Roberts did not receive the notice. In the instant case the evidence is that the attorney for Buster Lee Gibson had no notice of the order overuling his petition for rehearing or the issuance of the mandate. In the Mahaney case Roberts, the principal defendant, left the State of Oklahoma without leave of court, at least, no showing of leave of court was made. In the instant case there was evidence, though wholly hearsay, showing that on the day the order of forfeiture of the bond was entered, the principal, Buster Lee Gibson, was in jail in Manhattan, Kansas, and had been some ten or twelve days and was released two days later, and apprehended some two or three days after that at Topeka, Kansas. There was no indication as to why he was in jail at Manhattan, if he really was. There was nothing to indicate he could not have come to Guthrie by or before the bond forfeiture date if he had known anything of the affirmance of his conviction.
It is suggested by the Attorney General, in his brief, that because defendant, Buster Lee Gibson, left the State of Oklahoma without first obtaining the court’s permission, he thereby violated one of the conditions of his appeal bond, and on that account the judgment should be affirmed. It is true, as held by this court in Collins v. State, 169 Okla. 486, 37 P. 2d 827, cited by the Attorney General, that when the principal defendant left the State of Oklahoma without the court’s permission, he thereby violated one of the conditions of his appeal bond. But that could only be an additional reason, if called to the court’s attention for declaring forfeiture of the bond. The same circumstances apparently existed in the Mahaney case, supra.
It would appear that if failure to receive notice of the setting of the ease for trial in the Mahaney case was sufficient to require an order vacating the judgment of forfeiture, the same should apply in the instant case. Unless notice was given to defendant, or at least to his attorney, or his bondsmen, that the petition for rehearing in the Criminal Court of Appeals had been overruled, defendant would have no means of knowing that he was required to appear and submit to the judgment of conviction. How else could he know when he was required to appear?
We, therefore, hold that the order denying the application to vacate the judgment of forfeiture, under the showing made in this case, was error, and contrary to sound judicial discretion.
Reversed.
LUTTRELL, V. C. J., and WELCH, CORN, and DAVISON, JJ., concur. ARNOLD, C.J., and GIBSON, HALLEY, and JOHNSON, JJ., dissent.