People
v. Property Listed in Exhibit One (1991) 227 Cal.App.3d 1, 277 Cal.Rptr. 672
[No.
F013379. Fifth Dist. Jan 28, 1991.]
THE
PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. PROPERTY LISTED IN EXHIBIT ONE, Defendant; ROBERT GRUBB, Defendant and
Respondent.
[No.
F013805. Fifth Dist. Jan 28, 1991.]
THE
PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. $4,703.02 UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant; KENNETH WAYNE REED, Defendant
and Respondent.
(Superior
Courts of Madera and Kern Counties, Nos. 40609 and 207224, Edward P. Moffat II and Lewis E. King, Judges.)
(Opinion
by Best, P. J., with Stone (W. A.), and Harris, JJ., concurring.)
COUNSEL
John
K. Van de Kamp, Attorney General, Gary W. Schons, Deputy Attorney General, David D. Minier and Edward R. Jagels,
District Attorneys, William F. Mar and Robin M. Walters, Deputy District Attorneys, for Plaintiffs and
Appellants.
David
E. Roberts, Frank Butler, Chain, Younger, Lemucchi, Cohn & Stiles and Frank Butkiewicz for Defendants and
Respondents.
OPINION
BEST,
P. J.
Introduction
These
consolidated appeals present the novel issue of whether a forfeiture proceeding must be dismissed when the
People fail to file a petition of forfeiture within 30 days after a claim is filed as required by Health and
Safety Code section 11488.4, subdivision (j).fn.
1 We conclude the People's failure to comply with section 11488.4, subdivision (j)'s 30-day
limitation does not invalidate the subsequent proceedings so long as the petition of forfeiture is filed within
the 1-year statute of limitations of section 11448.4, subdivision (a).
Procedural
History
Defendants
Reed and Grubb had property connected with alleged drug violations seized by law enforcement officers.
Defendants were served with a notice of nonjudicial forfeiture pursuant to section 11488.4, subdivision (j). In
response, they filed claims pursuant to section 11488.5, subdivision (a)(1). The district attorneys of the
respective counties filed petitions of forfeiture. The petition of forfeiture for Reed's property was filed 37
days after he filed his claim; the petition of forfeiture for Grubb's property was [227 Cal.App.3d 5]
filed 65 days after he filed his claim. Defendants moved to have the petitions dismissed on the ground the
People failed to comply with the 30-day time limitation of section 11488.4, subdivision (j). Neither defendant
claimed prejudice as a result of the delay; however, the trial courts granted the motions and dismissed the
petitions. The People appeal the dismissals.
Discussion
The
Forfeiture Statutes
Sections
11470-11489 set forth a detailed procedure for the seizure of property connected with and proceeds traceable to
unlawful drug transactions. Under the statutory scheme, title to the forfeited property vests in the state from
the time of the illegal conduct (§ 11470, subd. (h)), subject to the proviso that any person claiming an
interest in the property may file a verified claim in superior court within the time provided. (§ 11488.5.)
(People v. Fifteen Thousand Two Hundred Seventeen Dollars (1990)
218 Cal.App.3d 720,
723 [268 Cal.Rptr. 450].)
Section
11488 permits a peace officer, incident or subsequent to making an arrest for specified controlled substance
offenses, to seize any item subject to forfeiture.
Section
11488.4 governs the commencement of forfeiture proceedings for moneys or other things of value not automatically
made forfeitable under another provision. Subdivisions of that section at issue here provide in pertinent part:
"(a)
Except as provided in subdivision (j), if the Department of Justice or the local governmental entity determines
that the factual circumstances do warrant that the moneys, ... or other things of value seized or subject to
forfeiture come within the provisions of subdivisions (a) to (g), inclusive, of Section 11470, and are not
automatically made forfeitable or subject to court order of forfeiture or destruction by another provision of
this chapter, the Attorney General or district attorney shall file a petition of forfeiture with the superior
court ....
"A
petition of forfeiture under this subdivision shall be filed within one year of the seizure of the property
which is subject to forfeiture ....
"
* * *
"(g)(1)
No sooner than 10 days after a petition is filed pursuant to Section 11488.4, a claimant, who alleges standing
based on an interest in the property [227 Cal.App.3d 6] which arose prior to the seizure or filing of the
petition for forfeiture, whichever occurs first, may move the court for the return of the property named in the
claim on the grounds that there is not probable cause to believe that the property is subject to forfeiture
pursuant to Section 11470 .... * * *
"(j)
The Attorney General or the district attorney of the county in which the property is subject to forfeiture under
Section 11470 may, pursuant to this subdivision, order forfeiture of personal property not exceeding one hundred
thousand dollars ($100,000) in value. The Attorney General or district attorney shall provide notice of
proceedings under this subdivision ... including: ... [¶] (5) The instructions for filing a claim with the
superior court pursuant to Section 11488.5 and the time limits for filing a claim. If no claims are timely
filed, the Attorney General or the district attorney shall prepare a written declaration of forfeiture of the
subject property to the state and dispose of the property in accordance with Section 11489. ...
"If
a claim is timely filed and served, then the Attorney General or district attorney shall file a petition of
forfeiture pursuant to this section within 30 days of the receipt of the claim. The petition of forfeiture shall
then proceed pursuant to other provisions of this chapter, except that no additional notice need be given and no
additional claim need be filed." (Italics added.)
Judicial
Versus Nonjudicial Forfeiture
Under
section 11488.4, subdivision (j), if the property is within the jurisdictional amount, the district attorney may
declare the property forfeit without a judicial proceeding. [1] This procedure is known as nonjudicial or
administrative forfeiture and was enacted to provide forfeiture without court involvement. (Rep. on Assem. Bill
No. 4145, Assem. Com. on Pub. Safety (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) p. 3.) There is a comparable federal procedure. (See
e.g., United States v. United States Currency etc. (7th Cir. 1985) 754 F.2d 208, 211-212.)fn.
2
With
nonjudicial forfeiture, if the district attorney provides the requisite notice and no claim is filed, the
district attorney prepares a written declaration of forfeiture of the subject property to the state and disposes
of the property in accordance with section 11489. (§ 11488.4, subd. (j).) The purpose of nonjudicial forfeiture
is to save the government the time and expense of a judicial proceeding in cases where the value of the property
[227 Cal.App.3d 7] seized is small. (United States v. United States Currency etc., supra, 754 F.2d at p.
211.)
The
nonjudicial forfeiture proceeding is terminated, however, if anyone duly submits a claim to the seized property
in response to the notice of nonjudicial forfeiture. If a claim is filed, the district attorney cannot pursue
nonjudicial forfeiture but must initiate a judicial forfeiture proceeding. (Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 4145,
Aug. 20, 1986, p. 2; Rep. to Sen. Com. on Judiciary on Assem. Bill No. 4145 as amended Aug. 11, 1986, pp. 3-4;
and cf. United States v. United States Currency etc., supra, 754 F.2d at p. 212.)
Section
11488.4, subdivision (j) requires the district attorney to file the petition of forfeiture with the court within
30 days of the receipt of the claim. In the cases at bar, the district attorney did not file within the 30-day
period.
Effect
of Failure to Comply with Section 1488.4, Subdivision (j)'s Time Limits
[2a]
In determining the consequences of failure to comply with section 11488.4, subdivision (j)'s time limit, we
follow the framework set out by the Supreme Court in People v. McGee (1977)
19 Cal.3d 948 [140
Cal.Rptr. 657, 568 P.2d 382].
[3]
"Traditionally, the question of whether a public official's failure to comply with a statutory procedure should
have the effect of invalidating a subsequent governmental action has been characterized as a question of whether
the statute should be accorded 'mandatory' or 'directory' effect. If the failure is determined to have an
invalidating effect, the statute is said to be mandatory; if the failure is determined not to invalidate
subsequent action, the statute is said to be directory .... [I]n evaluating whether a provision is to be
accorded mandatory or directory effect, courts look to the purpose of the procedural requirement to determine
whether invalidation is necessary to promote the statutory design." (19 Cal.3d at p. 958.)
In
making the determination, we distinguish between the mandatory versus permissive language analysis and the
mandatory versus directive effect analysis. [4] In the former, the term "mandatory" refers to an obligatory
procedure which a governmental entity is required to follow as opposed to a permissive procedure which the
entity may follow or not as it chooses. By contrast, the "mandatory" or "directory" designation does not refer
to whether a particular statutory requirement is "permissive" or "obligatory," but simply denotes whether the
failure to comply with the particular procedural step will invalidate the governmental action at issue. [227
Cal.App.3d 8] (People v. McGee, supra, 19 Cal.3d at pp. 958-959.) In this regard, many statutory provisions
which are mandatory in the obligatory sense are accorded only directory effect. (Id. at p. 959.)
[2b]
Thus, the question is not whether the term "shall" in section 11488.4, subdivision (j) is mandatory or
permissive, but whether the term "shall" is to be given mandatory or directory effect. If it is directory, the
fact that the petition was not filed within 30 days does not invalidate the petition or require dismissal.
[5]
With respect to time limit statutes, the general rule is that "requirements relating to the time within which an
act must be done are directory rather than mandatory or jurisdictional, unless a contrary intent is clearly
expressed." (Edwards v. Steele (1979)
25 Cal.3d 406,
410 [158 Cal.Rptr. 662, 599 P.2d 1365].) Further, an intent to divest the court of jurisdiction by time
requirements is not read into a statute unless that result is expressly provided or otherwise clearly intended.
(Garrison v. Rourke (1948)
32 Cal.2d 430,
435 [196 P.2d 884].) In making the determination, the court focuses on the likely consequences of holding a
particular time limit mandatory, with an eye to whether those consequences would promote or defeat the purpose of
the enactment. (People v. Curtis (1986)
177 Cal.App.3d 982,
988 [223 Cal.Rptr. 397].)
[6]
There is no mechanical test for determining whether a provision should be given directory or mandatory effect.
However, to make the determination, the court must ascertain the legislative intent. In the absence of express
language, the intent is gathered from the terms of the statute construed as a whole, from the nature and
character of the act to be done, and from the consequences which would follow the doing or failure to do the
particular act at the required time. When the object is to subserve a public purpose, the provision may be held
directory or mandatory as will best accomplish the purpose. (Morris v. County of Marin (1977)
18 Cal.3d 901,
909-910 [136 Cal.Rptr. 251, 559 P.2d 606].)
Section
11488.4, subdivision (j) is silent on the remedy for violation of its time limits. [2c] However, nothing in that
subdivision can be read to require, or even suggest, that a timing error must result in the dismissal of a
forfeiture proceeding.
An
analogous forfeiture statute, section 11488.2, which imposes another filing time limit, provides that the seized
property is to be returned to the [227 Cal.App.3d 9] owner if a petition of forfeiture is not filed
within 15 days.fn.
3 In People v. Superior Court (Drummer) (1988)
200 Cal.App.3d 105 [245
Cal.Rptr. 825], the court rejected an argument, similar to the one made in this case, that failure to file a
petition for forfeiture within 15 days of seizure barred the action under section 11488.2. The court noted the
statute requires only that the police take prompt steps toward forfeiture if they intend to hold property not
needed as evidence. The 15-day period was not a statute of limitations. Rather, the statute of limitations was one
year as specified in Code of Civil Procedure section 340, subdivision (2) (to enforce a statute prescribing a
forfeiture to the state). (People v. Superior Court (Drummer), supra, 200 Cal.App.3d at p. 107.) The one-year
statute of limitations for filing forfeiture proceedings is now specified in section 11488.4, subdivision (a).
The
conclusion that section 11488.4, subdivision (j) imposes a 30-day jurisdictional limitation on the filing of a
judicial forfeiture proceeding conflicts with section 11488.4, subdivision (a)'s 1-year-after-seizure-of-
the-property filing period. [7] In construing a statute, "the various parts of a statutory enactment must be
harmonized by considering the particular clause or section in the context of the statutory framework as a
whole." (Moyer v. Workmen's Comp. Appeals Bd. (1973)
10 Cal.3d 222,
230 [110 Cal.Rptr. 144, 514 P.2d 1224].) The sections "must be harmonized, both internally and with each other, to
the extent possible." (Dyna-Med, Inc. v. Fair Employment & Housing Com. (1987)
43 Cal.3d 1379,
1387 [241 Cal.Rptr. 67, 743 P.2d 1323].) Therefore, if possible, we must harmonize the one-year and thirty-day time
prescriptions of section 11488.4, subdivisions (a) and (j).
[2d]
A conclusion that section 11488.4, subdivision (a)'s one-year filing period provides the jurisdictional time
limit does not render section 11488.4, subdivision (j)'s thirty-day period meaningless. The effect of the 30-day
direction is: if 30 days pass after the filing of a claim and no petition is filed, the nonjudicial forfeiture
proceeding terminates. At that time, the owner of the property is entitled to its return because the property is
not being held pursuant to a forfeiture proceeding.fn.
4 Further, the time limit can be looked to as providing a starting point for a possible due
process inquiry based on delay. (People v. Echols (1982)
138 Cal.App.3d 838,
842 [188 Cal.Rptr. 328].)
The
legislative history of section 11488.4, subdivision (j) does not reveal the purpose for the 30-day period. The
Attorney General suggests the [227 Cal.App.3d 10] 30-day interval creates a period during which the
prosecutor can review the claim and determine whether to proceed with a judicial forfeiture while the property
remains in official custody. In this respect, section 11488.4, subdivision (j) is the prosecutor's counterpart
to section 11488.2 which gives the seizing agency 15 days to refer the matter to the prosecutor for the
initiation of forfeiture proceedings. By analogy to the reasoning in People v. Superior Court (Drummer),
supra,
200 Cal.App.3d 105,
section 11488.4, subdivision (j) requires only that the prosecutor take prompt steps toward forfeiture if he or she
intends to file a judicial forfeiture proceeding after a claim is filed. That construction protects the claimant's
due process rights to an expeditious determination of entitlement to the seized property but does not unduly
penalize the People for a delay which does not prejudice the claimant.
Both
the government and the claimant have an interest in a rule that allows the government some time to investigate
the situation to determine whether the facts entitle the government to forfeiture so that, if not, the
government can return the property without formal proceedings. (United States v. $8,850 (1983) 461 U.S. 555, 565
[76 L.Ed.2d 143, 152-153, 103 S.Ct. 2005].) Pending criminal proceedings present a similar justification for
delay in instituting forfeiture proceedings. A prior or contemporaneous forfeiture proceeding could
substantially hamper the criminal proceeding. (Id. at p. 567 [76 L.Ed.2d at p. 154]; and see § 11488.5, subd.
(e) which provides for the continuance of a forfeiture hearing until the related criminal proceeding is
resolved.)
[8]
Moreover, to construe the 30-day limitation as a mandatory statute of limitations would defeat the legislative
intent of the forfeiture statutes which is to strip drug dealers of the tools and profits of their illicit
trade. (People v. Superior Court (Clements) (1988)
200 Cal.App.3d 491,
499 [246 Cal.Rptr. 122].) The "mandatory" interpretation would permit a drug trafficker to retain his economic base
because a prosecutor missed a filing deadline without regard to any prejudice to the trafficker.
In
construing another statutory time limitation, the United States Supreme Court recently said:
"There
is no presumption or general rule that for every duty imposed upon the court or the government and its
prosecutors there must exist some corollary punitive sanction for departures or omissions, even if negligent.
[Citation] ('[M]any statutory requisitions intended for the guide of officers in the conduct of business
devolved upon them ... do not limit their power or render its exercise in disregard of the requisitions
ineffectual'). In our view, construction of the Act must conform to the ' "great principle of public policy,
applicable to all governments alike, which forbids that the [227 Cal.App.3d 11] public interests should
be prejudiced by the negligence of the officers or agents to whose care they are confided." ' [Citations.]"
(U.S. v. Montalvo-Murillo (1990) 495 U.S. ___, ___ [109 L.Ed.2d 720, 730, 110 S.Ct. 2072].)
Dwyer
v. U.S. (S.D.Cal. 1989) 716 F.Supp. 1337, cited by Reed, does not compel a different result. There a car owner
moved for return of her vehicle which was seized after her friend used it to transport materials for
manufacturing methamphetamine. The applicable statute, entitled "Expedited Procedures For Seized Conveyances,"
required the head of the department or agency that seized the car to furnish written notice to the owner of the
legal and factual basis of the seizure "[a]t the earliest practical opportunity after determining ownership." It
also required that the government file its forfeiture complaint within 60 days after a claimant has filed his
claim and cost bond. If the government does not file its complaint within the specified time, the conveyance
must be returned to the owner and "forfeiture may not take place." (21 U.S.C. § 881-1(c); Dwyer v. U.S., supra,
716 F.Supp. at p. 1339.) The court concluded that it should permanently return the claimant's vehicle in light
of the government's unnecessary 62-day delay in sending the seizure notice. (Id. at pp. 1339- 1340.) Dwyer is
distinguishable from this case because 21 United States Code section 881-1 specifies that forfeiture is barred
if the time limitations are not met; section 11488.4, subdivision (j) does not.
[2e]
In summary, since nothing in the statute suggests a mandatory effect intent and the likely consequence of
holding the time limitation mandatory would defeat rather than promote the purpose of the enactment, section
11488.4, subdivision (j) should be accorded directory rather than mandatory effect. Given this conclusion, the
judgments must be reversed.
Disposition
The
judgments are reversed.
Stone
(W. A.), J., and Harris, J., concurred.
FN 1. All
statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code unless otherwise indicated.
FN 2. Because
the California forfeiture statute is patterned after the federal statute (21 U.S.C. § 881), federal case law is
instructive. (People v. Fifteen Thousand Two Hundred Seventeen Dollars, supra,
218 Cal.App.3d 720,
724.)
FN 3. The
section provides that within 15 days after the seizure, if the peace officer does not hold the property seized
pursuant to section 11488 for evidence or the law enforcement agency which employs the person does not initiate
forfeiture proceedings, the officer shall return the property to the owner.
FN 4. The
fact that an owner is entitled to return of property does not foreclose the initiation of a forfeiture proceeding,
however. (People v. Superior Court (Drummer), supra, 200 Cal.App.3d at pp. 107-108.)
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