2 No. 137
County of Nassau,
Appellant,
v.
Michaele K. Canavan,
Respondent.
2003 NY Int. 139
November 24, 2003
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
Dennis J. Saffran, for appellant. Michael A. Montesano, for respondent.
KAYE, CHIEF JUDGE:
We are asked to consider the validity of Nassau County's civil forfeiture
statute, pursuant to which defendant's car was seized.
On September 6, 2000, defendant was arrested and charged with driving while
intoxicated, speeding and failure to signal. The 1995 Saturn automobile she had
been driving, valued at $6,500, was seized incident to her arrest, and defendant
was given notice of the possibility that the car might be forfeited to the
County of Nassau. The car was
impounded, where it remained throughout the pendency of defendant's
criminal case.
In November 2000, defendant pleaded guilty to the traffic infractions of
speeding and driving while impaired by alcohol and was sentenced to a $400 fine,
completion of a drinking-driver program and suspension of her license. The
following month, after defendant demanded the return of her car, the County
commenced a civil forfeiture action under Nassau County Administrative Code §
8-7.0 (g)(3). Supreme Court granted summary judgment to the County and the
Appellate Division reversed, holding that the ordinance under which defendant's
car had been seized was unconstitutionally vague.
We note at the outset that, when implemented pursuant to a carefully drafted
statute, civil forfeiture of automobiles can be an extremely effective tool in
the battle against drunk driving. In the 34-month period following Nassau
County's institution of a program in which the County routinely sought the
forfeiture of automobiles used for intoxicated driving, drunk driving accidents
decreased by 26 percent. Driving while intoxicated poses a grave risk of injury
or death to innocent motorists and pedestrians. Nevertheless, because we
conclude that the ordinance adopted by Nassau County did not satisfy
constitutional requirements, we now affirm the order of the Appellate Division,
which reached the same conclusion, albeit for different reasons.
I.
Administrative Code § 8-7.0 (g)(3) provides:
"The County of Nassau may commence a civil action for forfeiture to the
County of Nassau of the proceeds of a crime, substituted proceeds of a crime
or instrumentality of a crime seized incident to an arrest for a misdemeanor
crime or petty offense or upon a conviction for such misdemeanor crime or
petty offense against any person having an interest in such property."
The ordinance defines an "instrumentality of a crime" as "any property,
other than real property and any buildings, fixtures, appurtenances, and
improvements thereon, whose use contributes directly and materially to the
commission of any offense" (Administrative Code § 8-7.0 [g][1][d]).
The prohibition against vagueness mandates that a criminal statute provide
fair notice of the conduct that is proscribed and that it not permit or
encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement ( seee.g.People v Bright, ,
71 NY2d 376,
382 [1988]). Of primary importance is "the requirement that a legislature
establish minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement" (
Kolender v Lawson,
461 US
352, 358 1983] [citation omitted]).
Since the Nassau County ordinance makes clear what conduct may lead to
forfeiture of an instrumentality of a crime -- the commission of any
misdemeanor or petty offense, including any traffic infraction, all of which
are particularly defined and all of which provide fair notice of
the conduct that is proscribed -- the Appellate Division erred
when it concluded that the statute was unconstitutionally vague. The ordinance
"may be stringent and harsh but it is not vague. * * * The discretion left to
enforcing officers is not one of defining the offense. It is merely that of
matching the measure of the discipline to the specific case” (
Barsky v Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of the State of
New York,
347 US
442, 448 [1954], affg 305 NY 89 [1953]).
Misdemeanors are defined in the Penal Law, and petty offenses, in the
Criminal Procedure Law. Defendant's automobile was seized upon an
arrest for an offense clearly
defined by statute. We therefore hold that the ordinance is not
unconstitutionally vague.
II.
Both the Federal and State Constitutions prohibit the imposition of
excessive fines ( see US Const, 8th Amend; NY Const, art I, § 5). The
Excessive Fines Clause thus “limits the government's power to extract
payments, whether in cash or in kind, as punishment for some offense” (
Austin v United States,
509 US
602, 609-610 [1993] [citation omitted]). Forfeitures -- payments in kind
-- are “fines” if they constitute punishment for an offense ( see
United States v Bajakajian (524
US 321, 328 [1998]). As the County concedes, the civil forfeiture at issue
here serves, at least in part, deterrent and retributive purposes and is thus
punitive and subject to the Excessive Fines Clause ( seeAustin, 509 US at 619-622;
Bajakajian, 524 US at 328-329).
Inasmuch as a punitive forfeiture of an instrumentality of a crime
"violates the Excessive Fines Clause if it is grossly disproportional to the
gravity of a defendant's offense” ( Bajakajian, 524
US at 334), we reject defendant's claim that the forfeiture of her car
constituted an excessive fine. In determining gross disproportionality, we
consider such factors as the seriousness of the offense, the severity of the
harm caused and of the potential harm had the defendant not been caught, the
relative value of the
forfeited property and the maximum punishment to which defendant
could have been subject for the crimes charged, and the economic circumstances
of the defendant.
On the facts of this case, we conclude that the forfeiture of defendant's
car was not at all disproportionate to the gravity of her offense. The offense
with which she was originally charged -- driving while intoxicated -- is a
very serious crime. Grievous harm to innocent victims could have been caused
by defendant's driving with a blood alcohol level of .15% while speeding and
weaving in and out of lanes, had she not been caught and stopped. Given the
gravity of the crime of drunk driving, it is difficult to imagine that
forfeiture of an automobile for such a crime could ever be excessive. Surely
it was not so here.
We note, however, that since, pursuant to the ordinance, every
conceivable offense -- however minor -- may be subject to forfeiture, limited
only by the discretion of County officials in determining whether to invoke
it, the potential for disproportionality is great. Moreover, without clear
notice to the public that a particular punishment may be imposed for a
particular offense, the deterrent effect of the penalty may be lost. In any
event, the forfeiture of an automobile for a minor traffic infraction such as
driving with a broken taillight or failing to signal would surely be
"grossly disproportional to the gravity of a defendant's offense"
( Bajakajian, 524 US at 334).
Although the County has, as a matter of policy, decided to focus its
enforcement efforts on drunk driving arrests, the ordinance by its terms
permits forfeiture for any offense. Moreover, the County advises us
that the challenged Code provision is utilized to seek forfeiture in non-drunk
driving cases as well. The statute itself is thus devoid of standards as to
which petty offenses will result in the implementation of the forfeiture
provision, thereby enhancing the opportunity for disproportionate enforcement.
Indeed, the County's unilateral decision to invoke the ordinance's nearly
limitless application in certain instances and not in others highlights the
infirmity inherent in the statute itself. By encompassing many minor and
technical violations that could not justify forfeiture, the ordinance, as
enacted, risks violation of the Excessive Fines Clause.[2]
III.
Defendant contends that by not affording her a hearing prior to the initial
seizure of her car, the Administrative Code provision deprived her of property
without
due process of law. While we disagree that due process mandates a
hearing prior to the initial seizure, we conclude that a prompt
post-seizure hearing is required in all cases.
As a general rule, "individuals must receive notice and an opportunity to
be heard before the Government deprives them of property" (
United States v James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
510 US 43,
48 [1993]). In limited circumstances, however,
"immediate seizure of a property interest, without an opportunity for
prior hearing, is constitutionally permissible. Such circumstances are those
in which 'the seizure has been directly necessary to secure an important
governmental or general public interest. Second, there has been a special
need for very prompt action. Third, the State has kept strict control over
its monopoly of legitimate force: the person initiating the seizure has been
a government official responsible for determining, under the standards of a
narrowly drawn statute, that it was necessary and justified in the
particular instance'"
( Calero-Toledo v Pearson Yacht Leasing Co.,
416 US
663, 678 [1974], quoting Fuentes v Shevin,
407 US 67,
91 [1972]). When the forfeited property consists of a vehicle, the property's
mobility creates "a special need for very prompt action that justifie[s] the
postponement of notice and hearing until after the seizure" (
James Daniel Good, 510 US at 52 [citations
omitted]).
In the context of lawful arrests for driving while intoxicated, immediate
seizure by the police of a defendant's
car -- the instrumentality of the crime of drunk driving -- helps
to secure important public and governmental interests in ensuring both safety
on the roads and the enforceability of any subsequent forfeiture order. Here,
inasmuch as she had been arrested for driving while intoxicated, defendant was
both legally and physically incapable of driving. No one else was present with
her in the car. In addition, an immediate seizure of the automobile -- which
could easily be removed to another jurisdiction, destroyed or concealed -- was
necessary to enable the County to assert jurisdiction over it in anticipation
of a later forfeiture proceeding. A pre-seizure hearing was therefore not
required.
After the County took initial possession of the vehicle, however, due
process required that a prompt retention hearing be provided. Pursuant to the
Nassau County Administrative Code, a civil action seeking forfeiture need not
be commenced until 120 days have passed after the initial seizure ( see
Administrative Code § 8-7.0 [g][5]). Once commenced, the action may not be
finally resolved for many months or years, particularly because upon motion of
either the defendant or the County, the action must be stayed during the
pendency of the underlying criminal case ( seeid.).
In Mathews v Eldridge (424
US 319, 335 [1976]), the Supreme Court set forth three factors to weigh in
determining whether due process is satisfied when the government seeks to
maintain possession of property before a final judgment is
rendered: (1) the private interest affected; (2) the risk of erroneous
deprivation through the procedures used and the probable value of other
procedural safeguards; and (3) the government's interest. "These factors
should be used to evaluate the adequacy of process offered in post-seizure,
pre- judgment deprivations of property in civil forfeiture proceedings" (
Krimstock v Kelly, 306 F3d 40, 60 [2d Cir 2002]; seealsoMorgenthau v Citisource, Inc., ,
68 NY2d 211,
221 [1986]).
A balancing of these factors mandates that post- seizure hearings be
routinely provided. Especially in light of the potential length of the
deprivation before a final determination on the merits, the private interest
affected by the deprivation of an automobile may be significant. When cars are
owned by others or shared among household members, for example, seizure may
affect not only a culpable defendant, but also other innocent parties.
Moreover, automobiles are often an essential form of transportation and, in
some cases, critical to life necessities, earning a livelihood and obtaining
an education. Nor is the importance of defendants' possessory interest
diminished by the likelihood that they might lose and the County might
eventually prevail in forfeiture proceedings. "Fair procedures are not
confined to the innocent. The question before us is the legality of the
seizure, not the strength of the Government's case" (
James Daniel Good, 510 US at 62).
A prompt post-seizure hearing will minimize the risk of erroneous
deprivation. Of course, it may well be that the County will be able to
establish at such hearings its entitlement to seize and retain the vehicles of
most defendants arrested without a warrant for driving while intoxicated. The
right to be heard, however, "does not depend upon an advance showing that one
will surely prevail at the hearing" ( Fuentes, 407
US at 87). Moreover, greater procedural safeguards are of particular
importance where, as here, "the Government has a direct pecuniary interest in
the outcome of the proceeding" ( James Daniel Good,
510 US at 56).
In addition, even if the County is able to show easily that it had probable
cause to believe that the driver of the seized vehicle had been driving while
intoxicated, the risk of erroneous deprivation is heightened when the driver
is not the owner or sole user of the seized vehicle. Although the Nassau
County Police Department has adopted procedures whereby it attempts to limit
forfeitures to vehicles not subject to a defense of innocent ownership, the
statute itself contains no such limitation. "A statute that authorizes the
police to seize property to which the government has not established a legal
right or claim, and that on its face contains no limitation of forfeiture
liability for innocent
owners, raises substantial constitutional concerns" (
Krimstock, 306 F3d at 57).
The absence of such a limitation in the challenged Code provision therefore
renders the ordinance, as written, unconstitutional on that ground as well (
cf.CPLR
1311 [3][b][iv] [State forfeiture statute applicable to felonies requires
the claiming authority to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that an
owner who is not a criminal defendant either "knew that the instrumentality
was or would be used in the commission of a crime or * * * knowingly obtained
his or her interest in the instrumentality to avoid forfeiture"]). In any
event, even were the statute to limit forfeiture liability to seizures of
automobiles not involving innocent owners, a hearing would be required to
ensure that such innocent owners are not deprived for months or years of cars
ultimately proved not to be subject to forfeiture.
The final factor to consider in determining the process that is due is the
government's interest in retaining cars post-seizure and pre-judgment. Of
course, retention of an intoxicated driver's car pending resolution of the
forfeiture action advances the public interest in preventing the vehicle from
being used for repeated drunk driving. Nevertheless, while retention of a car
indeed prevents a defendant from again driving that particular car drunk, it
does little to prevent the person from driving another car
drunk. The County asserts, though, that -- while not a perfect
solution as to all defendants -- retention of seized vehicles will at least
prevent some defendants, who have no access to other cars, from driving
while intoxicated. We agree that retention is a rational means of protecting
the public from an increased risk of drunk drivers. We hold only that due
process requires that the County establish its right to such justifiable
retention after affording the defendant an opportunity to be heard.
The County also has an interest in preventing the vehicle from being sold
or destroyed before judgment is rendered in a future forfeiture proceeding.
Continued retention of the car throughout the pendency of the forfeiture
action, however, is not the only means available to accomplish this goal. The
County could, for example, require that a defendant post a bond or seek a
preliminary injunction or temporary restraining order prohibiting the sale or
destruction of the property.
We therefore conclude, after balancing these considerations, that due
process requires that a prompt post- seizure retention hearing before a
neutral magistrate be afforded, with adequate notice, to all defendants whose
cars are seized and held for possible forfeiture. At such a hearing, the
County must establish that probable cause existed for the defendant's initial
warrantless arrest, that it is
likely to succeed on the merits of the forfeiture action,[3]
and that retention is necessary to preserve the vehicle from destruction or
sale during the pendency of the proceeding ( seeKrimstock, 306
F3d at 67).
We note that although no provision for post-seizure hearings is contained
in the challenged ordinance, Nassau County has nevertheless been affording
such hearings to defendants who affirmatively request them. In County of
Nassau v Bigler (NYLJ, Nov. 27, 2001, at 20, col 4 [Sup Ct, Nassau County,
Roberto, J.]), Nassau County Supreme Court held, as a matter of due process,
that if a defendant affirmatively challenged the adequacy of a forfeiture
action, the County could not retain a seized vehicle without moving for and
obtaining either summary judgment or a provisional order of attachment pending
the conclusion of the action. The court held, however, that, in the absence of
any such challenge by the owner, the County had no burden to prove entitlement
to the retention of the vehicle. In the wake of Bigler, the County has
been routinely affording prompt judicial review to defendants who challenge
the pre-conviction
seizures of their vehicles.[4]
We hold today that due process requires that prompt post-seizure hearings be
provided to all defendants whose vehicles are seized and held for forfeiture,
not merely those who request them.
Finally, we recognize that the County -- in adding provisions to its
ordinance during the course of this appeal -- has already taken steps to
address some of the issues we identify here today. Nevertheless, because the
statute suffers from a variety of procedural defects, the County would perhaps
be well served by rewriting the ordinance _ originally enacted in 1939 -- in
its entirety.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with
costs.
A petty offense “means a violation or a traffic infraction” (CPL 1.20 [39]).
A traffic infraction, in turn, is defined by
Penal Law §
10.00 (2) as any offense defined as “traffic infraction” by section
155 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law, which includes “[t]he violation of any
provision of [the Vehicle and Traffic Law] * * * except articles forty-seven and
forty-eight [concerning registration of snowmobiles and vessels], or of any law,
ordinance, order, rule or regulation regulating traffic which is not declared by
[the Vehicle and Traffic Law] * * * or other law of this state to be a
misdemeanor or a felony.” A violation “means an offense, other than a 'traffic
infraction,' for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of fifteen
days cannot be imposed” (Penal
Law § 10.00 [3]). A misdemeanor is “an offense, other than a 'traffic
infraction,' for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of fifteen
days may be imposed, but for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in
excess of one year cannot be imposed” (Penal
Law § 10.00 [4]). Finally, an “offense” is “conduct for which a sentence to
a term of imprisonment or to a fine is provided by any law of this state or by
any law, local law or ordinance of a political subdivision of this state, or by
any order, rule or regulation of any governmental instrumentality authorized by
law to adopt the same” (Penal
Law § 10.00 [1]).
Footnotes
2 During the course of
this appeal, the County added a provision to its Administrative Code explicitly
making civil forfeiture available as a sanction for alcohol-related driving
offenses. We do not pass upon the amended statute, which also continues the
provision now under review.
3 "Due process is afforded
only by the kinds of notice and hearing that are aimed at establishing the
validity, or at least the probable validity, of the underlying claim" against
the defendant before he or she can be deprived of property (
Fuentes, 407 US at 97 [citations omitted]).
4 In its recent amendment
to the forfeiture ordinance, the County codified the rule imposed in Bigler.
Specifically, the ordinance now provides that a person from whom property is
seized and subject to forfeiture may, within 15 days after such notice, “request
review of the probable validity of the continued retention of the property
pending the completion of the civil forfeiture proceeding” (Administrative Code
§ 8-7.0 [g][4][a]). Within 15 days after receipt of such a request for review,
the Police Department must either return the property or apply to the court for
a prompt hearing (Administrative Code § 8-7.0 [g][4][b]).