If those are the only bends, and they are horizontal, and the total trap arm length is less than 5 feet, then yes. Trap arms can go thru no more than 90 degrees of bends without a clean out. Not including the vertical bends at the trap and at the drain/vent connection.
No, there should not ever be two traps on a single drain line.
The point of the trap is to create a water barrier which prevents sewer gasses from coming up the empty pipe and into the house.
When you have two traps on the same line, you end up creating a kind of vapor block in the line which prevents it from draining properly.
What do you do?
Get yourself some 1 1/2" PVC (not CPVC, which is yellow, PVC which is white) with a 90 deg elbow, and also get two Fernco couplings (black plastic couplings with straps on each end that can be tightened) that will fit the pvc and iron drain pipe.
Use a metal blade on a sawz-all and cut out the p-trap in your basement. (Have a bucket handy!) Leave room to connect the Fernco coupling on both sides. I'd cut the right hand side out just past the coupling.
Measure and cut the PVC so that with the 90 elbow the ends line up with the newly cut drain lines. Glue the PVC together and confirm the fit, then connect to the old drains with the Fernco.
Viola - a proper drain line that will drain smoothly w/ no vapor lock.
Best Answer
No. That will likely not pass inspection. Most codes require a trap seal of 2-4", which you will not get with a 45.
Trap seal is measured from the top of the trap bend, to the trap weir.