KENDRA O'CONNELL, Plaintiff
and Appellant, v. THE CITY OF STOCKTON et
al., Defendants
and Respondents.
C044400
COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA,
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
128 Cal. App.
4th 831; 27 Cal. Rptr. 3d
696; 2005 Cal.
App. LEXIS 639; 2005 Cal.
Daily Op. Service 3410; 2005
Daily Journal DAR 4814
April 22, 2005, Filed
SUMMARY: CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL REPORTS SUMMARY
The trial court sustained,
with leave to
amend, a demurrer to a taxpayer's first
amended complaint, which sought to
enjoin defendants, a city and its
city attorney, from enforcing Stockton Mun.
Code, § 5-1000
et seq.,
dealing with seizure and forfeiture of motor
vehicles. The ordinance allowed the city to seize and hold for forfeiture
any motor vehicle used to solicit
an act of prostitution or
to attempt to consummate
a drug transaction. The vehicle could be seized upon a peace officer's
probable cause determination that the
ordinance had been violated. As worded, the
ordinance did not provide for any
judicial determination of probable cause on the
validity of the
seizure until the
forfeiture trial,
which in practical effect, would not
occur for a minimum of several weeks.
(Superior Court of San Joaquin
County,
No. CV019275, Elizabeth Humphreys, Judge.)
The Court of Appeal
reversed the judgment and remanded the
cause to the
trial court. The court
held that
the ordinance violated the
procedural due process guarantees of
U.S. Const.,
amends. V and XIV and Cal.
Const.,
art.
I, § 7 because it contained
no provision for a reasonably prompt
post-seizure
probable cause hearing on the validity of the
city's right
to detain
the vehicle.
The fact that an owner could institute a
judicial proceeding for the return of the
property was no substitute. In
addition, the
drug-related
vehicle forfeitures authorized by the
ordinance were impliedly preempted
by the state's comprehensive scheme regulating the
same subject, as set forth
in the California Uniform Controlled Substances
Act (UCSA), Health & Saf.
Code, § 11000 et
seq. (Opinion by Butz, J.,
with Blease, Acting P. J., and Morrison, J.,
concurring.) [*832]
HEADNOTES: CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL REPORTS HEADNOTES
Classified to California
Digest of Official Reports
(1) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 1--Statute of
Limitations.--Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 340, subd.
(b), pertains to an action
by a party to
recover damages based on a forfeiture
of a penalty provision imposed by statute. Where
no action for a forfeiture is required to
be brought, § 340 is inapplicable.
[7 Witkin,
Summary of Cal.
Law (9th ed.
1988) Constitutional Law, §
56.]
(2) Criminal
Law § 519.2--Punishment--Cruel and Unusual--Excessive Fines Clause.--The excessive fines clause of U.S. Const., 8th Amend.,
limits the
government's power to extract payments,
whether in cash or in kind, as
punishment for some offense. A civil forfeiture
levied in connection with the
commission of a criminal offense, even though
in rem in character, constitutes a form of punishment
and therefore falls within the
prohibition on excessive fines.
(3) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 1--Proportionality to
Gravity of Offense.--A reviewing court must compare the
amount of the
forfeiture to
the gravity
of the defendant's offense.
If the amount
of the forfeiture
is grossly disproportional to the
gravity of the
defendant's offense, it is unconstitutional.
(4) Constitutional Law §
109--Procedural
Due Process--Hearing.--Even where summary action is
justified, due process still requires a reasonably prompt post-seizure hearing to
test
the probable merit of the
government's case.
(5) Constitutional Law §
107--Due
Process--Procedural
Due Process--Flexibility of Concept.--Due process, unlike some legal rules, is not
a technical conception with
a fixed content
unrelated to
time, place and circumstances.
Due process is flexible and calls for such procedural protections as the
particular situation demands.
(6) Constitutional Law §
107--Procedural
Due Process--Factors.--The constitutional
sufficiency of a governmental scheme
that
affects property
interests
should be resolved by considering three
factors: first,
the private
interest
that
will be affected by the official action;
second, the risk of an erroneous
deprivation of such interest through the
procedures [*833] used, and the
probable value, if any, of additional
or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the government's
interest,
including the function involved and the
fiscal and administrative burdens that the
additional or substitute procedural requirement
would entail.
The Mathews test requires the
court to
strike the
appropriate due process balance
among these factors.
(7) Constitutional Law §
107--Procedural
Due Process--Factors.--Application
of the Mathews
factors demonstrates that Stockton Mun.
Code, § 5-1000
et seq.,
fails to meet
minimum due process standards
because it contains
no provision for a prompt postseizure hearing, to
test
whether the
city has probable cause to hold the
vehicle. This conclusion is
especially informed by the fact that, as structured, the
ordinance fails to offer any
assurance that
the forfeiture
trial will take
place within a reasonably prompt period of time.
(8) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 1--Necessity
of Prompt Post-deprivation
Review.--Any procedural scheme that permits
the city
to seize a vehicle off the street without a prior hearing must
contain its
own provisions for prompt postseizure review.
The fact that an owner may institute a
judicial proceeding for the return of the
property is simply no substitute for the
requirement that an owner be accorded a fair hearing on the merits
of the seizure.
(9) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 1--Necessity
of Prompt Post-deprivation
Review.--At least where irreparable injury may result from a deprivation
of property pending final adjudication of the
rights of the
parties, the
due process clause requires that the party whose property
is taken be given an opportunity
for some kind of predeprivation or
prompt post-deprivation
hearing at which some showing of the probable validity
of the deprivation
must be made.
(10)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--Local legislation that
conflicts with
the provisions of general laws is
unconstitutional as it
is in violation of Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7. The fact
that
the state has legislated
on the same subject does not
necessarily exclude the municipal
power. The municipality may make additional
regulations, different from those
established by the state and not
inconsistent
with the
purpose of the general law. It is only
where the [*834] Legislature
has manifested an intention,
expressly or by implication, wholly to occupy the
field, so that
any local regulations will
necessarily be inconsistent with state law,
that
municipal power is lost.
[8 Witkin,
Summary of Cal.
Law (9th ed.
1988) Constitutional Law, §
794.]
(11)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--A conflict exists if local legislation
duplicates, contradicts,
or enters an area fully occupied by
general law, either expressly or by
legislative implication.
Local legislation is duplicative of general law when it
is coextensive therewith;
it is contradictory to
general law when it is inimical thereto;
it enters
an area that
is fully occupied by general law when the
Legislature has expressly manifested its
intent
to fully occupy the area, or when it
has done so impliedly measured against
certain indicia of legislative intent.
(12) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses.--The California
Uniform Controlled Substances Act
(UCSA), Health & Saf. Code, §
11000 et seq., is a comprehensive regulation of controlled
substances that includes their
definition (chapter 2), and lawful (chapters
4 and 5) and unlawful uses (chapter
7). Health
& Saf. Code, § § 11469-11495
of the UCSA contains stringent substantive and procedural conditions
for the civil forfeiture of a vehicle used in the
commission of a specified controlled
substance offense. Health
& Saf. Code, § § 11469, 11488.4
delegates authority to a
local agency to forfeit a vehicle only if these
conditions are met. The
forfeiture portion
of the UCSA is introduced by a statement of
purpose in Health & Saf. Code, §
11469, subds. (a), (c),
that
the principal objective of forfeiture
is law enforcement and that
local prosecutors are directed whenever appropriate
to seek criminal sanctions as to
the underlying criminal acts which give rise to
the forfeiture
action.
Under Health & Saf. Code, §
11470, subds. (g) & (h),
criminal sanction is "appropriate" (i.e., required) when real or personal property is sought
to be forfeited.
(13) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses.--The commission of a controlled
substance offense is the primary condition
justifying forfeiture.
Under Health & Saf. Code, §
11470, subd. (e), the interest of the [*835] registered
owner of a vehicle may be forfeited
only where it is used as an
"instrument to
facilitate"
the crimes of "manufacture of, or possession for sale or sale" of
identified controlled
substances (in specified amounts). Health & Saf.
Code, § 11470, subd. (h), provides that the
registered owner's interest
vests in the
State
only upon commission of the criminal
act giving rise to forfeiture
and then only if the state or local governmental
entity
proves a violation of the specified offense.
Under Health & Saf. Code, §
11488.4, subd. (i)(3), a judgment
of forfeiture requires a conviction in the
underlying or related criminal action. A
contested
issue of forfeiture must be tried
in conjunction with the trial of the
offense, Health & Saf. Code, §
11488.4, subd. (i)(5), and the
prosecution bears the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the
vehicle was used, or intended to be used, to
facilitate
a violation of one of the enumerated
underlying offenses, Health &
Saf. Code, § 11488.4,
subd. (i)(1). Further,
the interests of encumbrancers, bona fide purchasers and certain community
property interests are protected against
forfeiture under Health & Saf.
Code, § 11470, subds. (e) & (h).
The California
Uniform Controlled Substances Act,
Health & Saf. Code, §
11000 et seq., is implemented
by extensive procedures for compliance
with its
substantive
provisions. Health & Saf.
Code, § 11488.4.
(14)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption--Preemption by Implication.--There are three tests of
preemption by implication: (1) The subject
matter
has been so fully and completely
covered by general law as to clearly
indicate that it has
become exclusively a matter of state concern; (2) the
subject matter has been partially
covered by general law couched in such terms
as to indicate
clearly that
a paramount state concern will not
tolerate
further or additional local action;
or (3) the subject matter has been partially
covered by general law, and the
subject is of such a nature that the
adverse effect of a local ordinance
on the transient citizens
of the State outweighs
the possible benefit to the municipality.
(15)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--Where the Legislature has adopted
statutes governing a particular
subject matter, its
intent
with regard to
occupying the field to the
exclusion of all local regulation is
not to
be measured alone by the language
used but by the
whole purpose and scope of the
legislative scheme.
[*836]
(16) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses.--The state, through
the California Uniform Controlled Substances
Act (UCSA), Health & Saf.
Code, § 11000 et
seq., has legislatively occupied an area of statewide importance:
the civil forfeiture of vehicles when used in connection with
the drug trade. The Legislature
has also made the UCSA binding on
local governmental agencies in Health & Saf.
Code, § § 11469, 11488.4. It has delegated
to local authorities the
power to forfeit a vehicle only as permitted by its
express provisions. These provisions
include the requirement of a criminal conviction,
proof beyond a reasonable doubt of the conditions
justifying forfeiture, and the
protection
of innocent parties who hold an interest in the
vehicle.
(17) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses.--The state has enacted
specific and detailed legislation, binding on local authorities, in the
area of forfeiture of vehicles used
in transactions
involving a controlled substance. Stockton Mun. Code, § 5-1000 et
seq., intrudes
into this
area in significant and contradictory
ways: Stockton
Mun. Code § § 5-1000,
5-1001 subjects
a vehicle to forfeiture as a nuisance if it
is used to acquire or attempt to
acquire any controlled substance. To
acquire or attempt to
acquire a controlled substance means to
purchase or attempt to
purchase a controlled substance.
However, a mere purchaser of a controlled
substance is not liable as a principal in the
sale of a controlled substance and cannot
be prosecuted for the same offense as the
seller: One who merely purchases drugs is not
guilty of furnishing as an aider and
abettor
of the seller.
Thus, Stockton Mun. Code, § 5-1000 et
seq., authorizes
forfeiture under certain conditions
which would not even constitute the
commission of a criminal offense.
(18) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses--Validity of Local Legislation.--The Legislature's express
delegation of the
power of forfeiture to local agencies, its
scrupulous attention to
conditions necessary for forfeiture, and its
protection
of due process rights of those impacted
by forfeiture, manifests a clear intent to
occupy the area of forfeiture of vehicles when used as instrumentalities of the
drug trade.
There is no room, under this scheme,
for local legislation in the same field which, as Stockton Mun.
Code, § 5-1000
et seq.,
does, expands the conditions triggering
forfeiture of vehicles used in drug transactions,
loosens the requisite standard
of proof, omits due process protections
for innocent [*837] parties,
and divides up the net proceeds among local law enforcement agencies.
Accordingly, the trial court
erred in sustaining the demurrer of a city
and its attorney to
a taxpayer's complaint, which sought
to enjoin enforcement of Stockton Mun.
Code, § 5-1000
et seq.
(19) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Controlled
Substance Offenses--Validity of Local Legislation.--The Legislature has
scrupulously set forth the
conditions for forfeiture of vehicles used as instrumentalities
for controlled substances while omitting others. This occupation
of the field preempts local regulation,
even on subjects not specifically addressed by the
state
statutes. The
State's
decision to authorize
vehicle forfeiture in some aspects of the
drug trade but
not others
is not an invitation for municipal regulation.
(20)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--Just as a statute giving cities
general authority to
legislate on a given subject (e.g., Gov.
Code, § 38771) would not validate
a city ordinance if it in fact
conflicted with
a state
statute, the
result should be no different where a city's
ordinance runs afoul of the doctrine of implied preemption.
(21)
Municipalities § 15--Legislative
Control--Control
of Municipal Affairs--Home Rule Cities.--Under the home rule doctrine, California's Constitution
reserves to charter cities
the right
to adopt
and enforce ordinances that conflict
with general state laws, provided the
subject of the
regulation is a municipal affair rather than
one of statewide
concern. To determine
whether the
doctrine applies, a court first
determines whether
there is a genuine conflict between
a state
statute and a municipal ordinance.
If there is, the
court proceeds with the
second half of the inquiry; i.e., does
the local legislation impact
a municipal or statewide concern?
(22)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--If the subject matter is one of general or statewide concern, the
Legislature has paramount authority; and if the
Legislature has enacted general legislation
covering that
matter,
in whole or in part, there must
be a presumption that the matter has been preempted.
[*838]
(23)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption--Matters of
State
Concern.--The prohibition, dispensation and regulation
of controlled substances are uniquely within
the province of state statutes, e.g., Bus.
& Prof. Code, § § 2237 et
seq., 4006; Health & Saf.
Code, § 11000 et
seq.
(24)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--In view of the intent of the Legislature
as expressed in Veh. Code, § 21, the
delegation of authority to local authorities will be strictly construed--such authority
must be expressly (not impliedly) declared by the
Legislature.
(25)
Municipalities § 56--Ordinances, Bylaws, and Resolutions--Validity--Conflict with Statutes or Charter--Test for Preemption.--By virtue of Veh. Code, § 21,
if the Vehicle Code covers the subject,
preemption of local regulation is presumed unless the
Legislature declares otherwise.
(26) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Pimping, Pandering, or Solicitation of Prostitution.--Veh. Code, §
22659.5, subd. (a), delegates
authority
to a city
or county to
adopt a five-year
pilot program that implements
procedures for declaring any motor
vehicle a public nuisance when the
vehicle is used in the commission of
an act in violation of Penal Code sections
prohibiting pimping, pandering, or
solicitation
of prostitution. The
defendant must
be convicted of the specified offense or plead to a lesser included offense under § 22659.5,
subd. (a).
Under § 22659.5,
subds. (b) & (c), the remedies provided are limited
to those
stated
in Veh. Code, § 22651--temporary
impoundment not
to exceed 48 hours and ordering the defendant
to not
use the vehicle again in the commission of the
offense.
(27) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Pimping, Pandering, or Solicitation of Prostitution--Validity of Local Legislation.--Stockton Mun.
Code, § 5-1000
et seq.,
runs afoul of the preemptive effect
of Veh. Code, § 21, by authorizing
the seizure and forfeiture of vehicles used in connection with
the prostitution trade.
[*839]
(28) Forfeitures and Penalties
§ 7--Property
Involved in Criminal Offenses--Pimping, Pandering, or Solicitation of Prostitution--Validity of Local Legislation.--The fact that Veh. Code, §
22659.5, is cast as a delegation
of authority
to local governments clearly implies that authority over the
subject matter is limited
to that authorized.
COUNSEL: Mark T. Clausen for Plaintiff
and Appellant.
Meyers, Nave, Riback, Silver
& Wilson, Joseph M. Quinn; and
Lori S. Whittaker, Deputy
City Attorney, for Defendants
and Respondents.
JUDGES: Butz, J.,
with Blease, Acting P. J., and Morrison, J.,
concurring.
OPINIONBY: BUTZ [**701]
OPINION:
BUTZ, J.--In California,
a motor vehicle is practically a necessity
of life. Millions of our citizens depend on their
cars, trucks or motorcycles to
transport
them to
and from employment, school, medical
facilities and childcare centers. In this case, we resolve a facial constitutional challenge to
a municipal ordinance permitting the
City of Stockton to
seize and hold for forfeiture any motor vehicle used to
solicit an act
of prostitution or to
attempt to
consummate a drug transaction. The vehicle may be seized upon a peace officer's
probable cause determination that the
ordinance has been violated. As worded, the
ordinance does not provide for any
judicial determination of probable cause on the
validity of the
seizure until the
forfeiture trial, [***2] which in practical
effect, will not occur for a minimum of several weeks.
The trial court sustained,
with leave to
amend, a demurrer to plaintiff's first
amended complaint as a city taxpayer,
seeking to enjoin enforcement of the
ordinance. Plaintiff did not
amend her complaint following the court's
order and judgment [**702] was entered
on May 28, 2003. This appeal
followed.
While rejecting other constitutional
challenges, we shall conclude that the
ordinance fails to pass muster under procedural due process guarantees of the
federal and state Constitutions
because it contains
no provision for a reasonably prompt
postseizure probable cause hearing
on the validity
of the City
of Stockton's right to detain the
vehicle.
At our request, the
parties have filed supplemental briefing on the
question whether
state
statutes governing drug-asset related
forfeiture of vehicles and pertinent
sections of the
Vehicle Code preempt Stockton's municipal ordinance
as to the
forfeiture of vehicles used to acquire or attempt to acquire any controlled
substance, and those used to
solicit an act
of prostitution. [*840]
After reviewing the supplemental
briefing and other materials submitted by the
parties, n1 we conclude, [***3]
disagreeing with Horton v. City of Oakland (2000)
82 Cal.App.4th 580 [98 Cal. Rptr. 2d 371] (Horton),
that
both aspects
of the ordinance are preempted by state law.
We, therefore, shall reverse the judgment
and remand to the
trial court
with directions.
n1 Each party has requested
judicial notice of statutes, legislative
materials, and other authorities in connection
with the
preemption issue. (Plaintiff's
Second Supplemental Request for Judicial Notice
[exhibits A through
H], plaintiff's Third Supplemental Request
for Judicial Notice [Mar. 17, 1998 letter from Legislative
Counsel--preemption issue], and the
City's Request
for Judicial Notice [exhibits A through
Q].) We now grant these
unopposed requests, without
making any determination of relevancy or materiality. (See Horton, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 584,
fn. 2.)
We shall refer to those submitted materials
that
we find are pertinent to our
decision.
PROCEDURAL
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Kendra
O'Connell filed this taxpayer action
[***4] (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 526a) for declaratory and injunctive
relief against the City
of Stockton
and its City
Attorney
(collectively, the City),
seeking to enjoin enforcement of chapter
5, part XXV--Seizure and Forfeiture
of Nuisance Vehicles (hereafter Part XXV), section
5-1000 et
seq., of the
Stockton
Municipal Code n2 dealing with
seizure and forfeiture of motor vehicles.
Plaintiff's first amended complaint
alleges that
the ordinance, on its face, is unconstitutional
on a number of grounds, including (1) substantive due process (first
cause of action), (2) procedural due
process (second cause of action),
(3) violation of the excessive fines prohibition
(third and fifth
causes of action), (4) vagueness and
(5) violation of the separation
of powers doctrine (sixth cause of action). Plaintiff
also seeks declaratory relief based
on her contention
that
Part XXV is preempted by state law (eighth
cause of action). n3
n2 Undesignated code sections
are to the
Stockton
Municipal Code (identified by the prefix "5-").
n3 The first amended complaint
contained additional
causes of action based on other alleged infirmities
with the
ordinance (fourth and seventh causes of action). These challenges have not
been briefed and therefore are not before us on this
appeal.
[***5]
The trial court sustained
the City's
demurrer with 15 days' leave to amend, finding that Part
XXV was constitutional on its
face and that
the action
was barred by the statute of limitations.
Plaintiff acknowledges she did not avail herself of the
opportunity
to amend her complaint. She timely appealed from the
judgment. [*841]
DISCUSSION
I. Statute of
Limitations
Before reaching the
substantive
constitutional questions,
we must first
address [**703] the
City's argument
that
this action
is barred by the statute of limitations.
The City asserts, without a citation to the record or request
for judicial notice, that Part XXV was adopted
by the City
Council on June 12, 2001, and made effective
July 12, 2001. Relying on Code of
Civil Procedure section 340,
subdivision (b), which imposes a one-year
time limit
for bringing "[a]n action upon
a statute for a forfeiture
or penalty to
the people of this
state,"
the City
concludes that
the last
day to bring a facial constitutional attack on the
ordinance was June 11, 2002, more than
five months before plaintiff's action
was filed. We disagree.
(1) Code of Civil Procedure section
340, subdivision [***6] (b) pertains to
an action by a party to
recover damages based on a forfeiture
of a penalty provision imposed by statute. (E.g., Douglas v.
Klopper (1930) 107 Cal.App. Supp.
765, 767 [288 P. 36] [treble damages for usury], disapproved on other grounds in Taylor
v. Budd (1933) 217 Cal.
262, 267 [18 P.2d 333].) Where no action
for a forfeiture is required to be brought,
section 340 is inapplicable. (People v.
Grant (1942) 52 Cal. App. 2d
794, 799 [127 P.2d 19].)
This is a taxpayer
action under Code of Civil
Procedure section 526a, seeking to enjoin the
expenditure of public funds resulting from the
enforcement of an unconstitutional law.
Plaintiff's interest as a taxpayer
is sufficient to
confer standing to maintain
this action
and bring it to
final judgment, permanently enjoining unlawful expenditures. (Blair v.
Pitchess (1971) 5 Cal.3d 258, 267-270
[96 Cal. Rptr. 42, 486 P.2d
1242].)
Moreover, the complaint alleges a "presently
existing actual
controversy" between plaintiff
and the City
over the validity of Part
XXV, which she seeks to resolve by
declaratory judgment. (Howard
Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. v. City of
La Habra (2001) 25 Cal.4th 809, 821 [107 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 369, 23 P.3d 601].) [***7]
The continued illegal expenditure of public funds is an ongoing wrong. (Id.
at pp.
822-824.)
Plaintiff's action
is not untimely.
Acceptance of the City's
argument would mean that a statute, facially unconstitutional
when enacted, would acquire immunity from judicial review by the
mere passage of time. Such an interpretation of
Code of Civil Procedure section
340, subdivision (b) would clearly run afoul of the
separation of powers doctrine, for a legislative
body may not circumscribe the [*842] inherent
power of the courts to
review a statute's constitutional
validity.
(See Marbury v. Madison (1803) 5
U.S.
(1 Cranch) 137, 176-180 [2 L. Ed. 60,
73-74]; 7 Witkin, Summary of Cal.
Law (9th ed.
1988) Constitutional Law, §
56, pp. 97-98.)
II. Viability
of an "As-Applied" Constitutional Challenge
Although the lion's share of plaintiff's
arguments pertain
to the
facial constitutional validity
of Part XXV, the
first amended complaint contains
sporadic references to extrinsic facts
relating to
the enforcement
of the ordinance, and plaintiff suggests
at various points in the
briefing that
she has [***8] asserted, or could if granted
leave to amend assert, a successful as-applied
constitutional attack on Part
XXV. On this
point, we agree with the City that the
only challenge cognizable here is to
the ordinance on its face.
Unlike plaintiff's
original complaint, which contained an "as-applied"
claim for relief, each cause of action
of the first
amended complaint asserts that Part
XXV is facially invalid on various constitutional
grounds. The amended complaint, despite
occasional references to enforcement, proffers only a facial attack on the
ordinance. Having so limited her complaint
in the trial
court, plaintiff
may not expand her [**704] theories
of relief on appeal. (See Uhrich
v. State Farm Fire & Casualty
Co. (2003) 109 Cal.App.4th 598, 616-617
[135 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 131].) n4
n4 We
decline plaintiff's request to
consider as an "undisputed fact," one that does not
appear in her amended complaint--that Part XXV is enforced only in conjunction with
"reverse sting" operations.
In any event, plaintiff has failed to
perfect [***9] an as-applied
challenge to Part XXV. As
stated
in Tobe v. City of Santa
Ana (1995) 9 Cal.4th 1069 [40 Cal. Rptr. 2d 402, 892 P.2d
1145] (Tobe), a constitutional
challenge to a statute as applied "may not
be made on demurrer to a complaint which does not
describe the allegedly unlawful
conduct or the
circumstances in which it occurred."
(Id. at
p. 1083.)
Plaintiff brought this
lawsuit solely as a taxpayer action. She has not
described any specific application
of the statute
resulting in injury to her or others. Consequently,
we consider only the text of the ordinance itself,
not its
application to
the facts
of any particular case. (Zuckerman v.
State
Bd. of Chiropractic Examiners (2002) 29 Cal.4th 32, 39 [124 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 701, 53 P.3d 119] (Zuckerman);
Tobe, supra, at p. 1084.)
III. Overview of Part
XXV
Part XXV of the City's
municipal code is captioned
"Seizure and Forfeiture of
Nuisance Vehicles." The
ordinance provides that any vehicle used to [*843]
solicit an act of prostitution,
or to acquire or attempt to
acquire a controlled substance, "is declared a nuisance, ... and abated
as provided in this chapter."
(§ 5-1000.) Upon proof that the
vehicle was so used, the court "shall [***10] declare the
property a nuisance" and order that it be sold and the
proceeds distributed as provided in section
5-1008.
(§ 5-1001.)
Vehicles subject to forfeiture
may be seized (1) upon process issued by the
court, (2) where the seizure is incident
to an arrest
or search under a search warrant, or
(3) wherever "[t]here is
probable cause to believe that the property
was used in violation of this chapter." (§ 5-1003.)
Whenever a peace officer seizes a vehicle he or she shall deliver a receipt to the person from whom it
was seized. (§ 5-1004.)
Either the city
attorney
or the district attorney shall file a petition for forfeiture
with the
court upon a determination
that
the circumstances
so warrant.
(§ 5-1006,
subd. (a).)
The petition
"shall be filed as soon as practicable,
but in any case within one year" of the
seizure. (§ 5-1006,
subd. (b).)
The city [**705] attorney or district attorney shall cause notice
of seizure and of intended forfeiture proceedings to
be served on all persons who have an interest in the
seized vehicle, but there are no time
limits on giving such notice.
Persons who receive the notice must
also be given a claim form which may be filed with
the court. (§ [***11] 5-1006,
subd. (c).)
Any person who claims an interest in the
vehicle must file a claim within 10 days of the
date of the
notice of seizure. If a verified claim is filed, the forfeiture
action shall be set for a court
hearing not less than 30 days later. (§ 5-1007, subds.
(a), (b).)
Section 5-1008 provides that when seized vehicles are ordered forfeited they
shall be sold, or the City may accept
a cash settlement in lieu of forfeiture. The proceeds shall be used first to pay
off bona fide or innocent
purchasers, lienholders, vendors and the
like, then to
recover expenses incurred in connection
with the
vehicle's seizure. (§ 5-1008,
subds. (a) & (b).) Any remaining funds shall be distributed
50 percent to
the participating law enforcement
agency and 50 percent to the city attorney or district attorney.
(§ 5-1008,
subd. (c).)
IV. Substantive Due Process
Plaintiff's first challenge to
Part XXV stems
from section 5-1008,
subdivision (c), which allocates
half the net
proceeds of the forfeiture to Stockton's
District
Attorney
or City Attorney and half to
the police department or
other participating law enforcement
agency. She argues that the pecuniary interest in the
proceeds [***12] of forfeiture held by these
agencies constitutes a
built-in [*844]
conflict of interest
which transgresses state and
federal due process guarantees. Specifically, the
scheme provides too great a monetary
incentive to
seize and forfeit vehicles, which
impermissibly skews impartial
enforcement and exercise of prosecutorial discretion.
In Marshall v.
Jerrico, Inc. (1980) 446 U.S. 238
[64 L. Ed.
2d 182, 100 S. Ct. 1610]
(Marshall) the United States Supreme Court
considered a due process challenge to
a provision of the federal Fair
Labor Standards Act (the Act) (29 U.S.C.
§ 212), which directed that sums collected
as civil penalties for violation of child labor laws go toward
reimbursing the United States Department of Labor's Employment
Standards Administration
(ESA) for the costs of determining
violations and assessing penalties. (Marshall,
at p.
239 [64 L. Ed.
2d at p.
186].) The challenger asserted that the
ESA's pecuniary interest in the
penalty proceeds "created an impermissible risk and appearance of bias by
encouraging the assistant
regional administrator to
make unduly numerous and large assessments
of civil penalties." (Id.
at p.
241 [64 L. Ed.
2d at p.
187].) [***13]
While recognizing that the
appearance of neutrality is an essential
aspect of due process in both civil and criminal proceedings (Marshall,
supra, 446 U.S.
at p.
242 [64 L. Ed.
2d at p.
188]), the high court held that the
pecuniary interest of the
administrator
"whose functions resemble those of a prosecutor
more closely than those of a judge," was too
remote and insubstantial to violate
constitutional restraints. (Id. at p. 243 [64 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 189].)
The high court noted that the
amount of funds earned in this manner amounted
to less than
1 percent of the
ESA's budget and that
"[n]o governmental official stands to
profit economically from vigorous
enforcement of the child labor provisions of the
Act."
(Id. at
p. 250 [64 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 193].)
Marshall dictates
rejection of plaintiff's argument
on this point. (Marshall, supra, 446 U.S. 238 [64 L. Ed. 2d
182].) Like the ESA in Marshall,
the functions
of the city
attorney
and police department are prosecutorial
rather than
adjudicatory in nature. (Id. at p. 247 [64 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 191].)
It is undisputed
that
no individual [***14] employee of
the City
is enriched by the proceeds of vehicle
forfeiture.
The excess funds, if any, simply go into
the budget
of the participating agencies.
Because this case arises as a facial
challenge, we are not at liberty
to speculate
whether the
City's interest in the
net proceeds of forfeited vehicles is so significant
as to raise the
specter of bias or is merely
"remote" as it was in Marshall. (Id.
at pp.
250-251 [64 L.
Ed. 2d at
pp. 193-194].) [*845]
Plaintiff places heavy
reliance on dictum from the California Supreme Court
in People v. Eubanks (1996) 14
Cal.4th
580 [59 Cal. Rptr. 2d
200, 927 P.2d 310] to the
effect that institutional
interests,
as well as personal ones, may impermissibly skew a prosecutor's exercise of discretion
in the charging and plea bargaining
of cases. (Id. at p. 596.)
Eubanks, however, concerned the
issue of whether a prosecutor who accepts
financial assistance from the [**706] victim
of a crime suffers from a conflict
of interest
that
would render it unlikely that the defendant
would receive fair treatment
during the criminal proceedings, thus requiring recusal under Penal Code section 1424.
(Eubanks, at pp. 583-584.) [***15]
The opinion expressly did "not
reach any constitutional
question" (id. at p. 596, fn.
8) and thus its applicability
to the
present case is doubtful.
But even accepting that the institutional pecuniary interests may be as significant
as personal ones for purposes of due process scrutiny,
plaintiff's contention still fails because of the
impossibility of quantifying that interest on a facial constitutional
challenge.
It may be that neither the
city attorney nor the
police department has any incentive
to enforce the
forfeiture law because, in practice, the
expenses of storage, towing and prosecution
always exceed the value of the vehicles.
Or perhaps vehicle forfeiture is an
extremely lucrative business for the
City.
We simply do not know. We are limited
to the
text
of the ordinance itself, which provides no clue as to whether
the prosecuting
agencies have such a strong
pecuniary interest in the
execution of Part XXV that it substantially
affects their
ability to
impartially exercise their discretionary
enforcement functions.
No constitutional
infirmity appears on this ground.
Thus, the demurrer to the
first cause of action was properly sustained.
V. Excessive
[***16] Fines Violation
Plaintiff's third and fifth
causes of action allege that Part XXV on its
face violates the
excessive fines clause contained in the Eighth
Amendment to
the United
States
Constitution.
(2) The Eighth Amendment states, "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor
cruel and unusual punishments inflicted."
(U.S. Const., 8th Amend.)
"The Excessive Fines Clause limits
the government's
power to extract payments,
whether in cash or in kind, 'as punishment for some offense.'
" (Austin v. United
States
(1993) 509 U.S.
602, 609-610 [125 L. Ed. 2d
488, 497, 113 S. Ct. 2801],
quoting Browning-Ferris v.
Kelco Disposal (1989) 492 U.S. 257, 265 [106 L.
Ed. 2d 219, 232, 109 S. Ct. 2909].)
A civil forfeiture levied in connection with
the commission of a criminal [*846]
offense, even though in rem
in character, constitutes a form of punishment
and therefore falls within the
prohibition on excessive fines. (Austin,
supra, 509 U.S.
at pp.
619-622 [125 L.
Ed. 2d at
pp. 503-506].)
(3) " 'The touchstone of the
constitutional inquiry under the
Excessive Fines Clause is the
principle of proportionality: The amount
of the forfeiture
must bear some [***17] relationship
to the
gravity of the
offense that
it is designed to punish.'
" (City and County of San Francisco v.
Sainez (2000) 77 Cal.App.4th
1302, 1321-1322 [92 Cal. Rptr. 2d 418], quoting
United States v.
Bajakajian (1998) 524 U.S. 321, 334 [141 L.
Ed. 2d 314, 329, 118 S. Ct. 2028].)
"Bajakajian adopted a gross
disproportionality standard
articulated
in cruel and unusual punishments
clause precedent to hold that a reviewing court
'must compare the
amount of the
forfeiture to
the gravity
of the defendant's offense.
If the amount
of the forfeiture
is grossly disproportional to the
gravity of the
defendant's offense, it is unconstitutional.' " (Sainez, supra, at
p. 1322, quoting Bajakajian, supra, at
pp. 336-337
[141 L. Ed.
2d at p.
331].)
Pointing out that solicitation of prostitution is
a relatively minor crime, usually
punishable by a small fine and a short [**707] period of probation,
plaintiff maintains
that
the compelled forfeiture of an automobile,
which is often a person's most valuable asset,
is grossly disproportionate to the predicate
offense.
Again plaintiff's
argument is fatally
flawed by the fact that her challenge is limited
to the
[***18] text of the
ordinance. Depending on the circumstances,
specific applications of Part XXV could yield vastly
disparate results. The
forfeited vehicle could be an old
jalopy or a luxury car worth tens of thousands
of dollars. The crime could be anything from a straightforward "trick"
to the
sale of several pounds of heroin or cocaine.
Untethered
to any particular
application, plaintiff's excessive fines claim must fail because she cannot
demonstrate
that
the punishment
of forfeiture is grossly disproportionate to the
underlying crime, either as a
general rule or in the " 'vast majority'
" of cases. (Kasler v. Lockyer (2000) 23 Cal.4th 472, 502 [97 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 334, 2 P.3d 581].)
The trial court properly sustained
the demurrer to
plaintiff's third
and fifth causes of action.
VI. Procedural Due Process
We next turn to
plaintiff's second cause of action, which asserts
that
Part XXV is invalid for failing to provide a reasonably prompt
hearing on the probable merit of the
government's right to detain the
vehicle. [*847]
A. General Principles
"The primary purpose of procedural due process is to provide affected
parties with
the right
to be heard at
a meaningful time and in a meaningful
manner. [***19] " (Ryan v.
California Interscholastic Federation-San Diego Section
(2001) 94 Cal.App.4th
1048, 1072 [114 Cal. Rptr. 2d
798] (Ryan); see Fuentes
v. Shevin (1972) 407 U.S. 67,
80 [32 L. Ed.
2d 556, 570, 92 S. Ct. 1983]
(Fuentes).)
Procedural due process is guaranteed
by the Fifth
and Fourteenth Amendments
to the
federal Constitution (United
States
v. Good Real Property (1993) 510 U.S. 43, 49-52
[126 L. Ed.
2d 490, 500-502, 114 S. Ct. 492] (Good Real Property)) and article
I, section 7 of the California Constitution
(Menefee & Son v. Department of
Food & Agriculture (1988) 199
Cal. App.
3d 774, 780-781 [245 Cal. Rptr. 166] (Menefee)); and these guarantees
apply to civil forfeiture proceedings.
"[A]t a minimum,
whenever property is taken due process requires some form of notice and a hearing."
(Tyler v. County of Alameda (1995) 34 Cal.App.4th 777,
783 [40 Cal. Rptr. 2d
643] (Tyler).) "The
right to
prior notice and a hearing is central to the Constitution's
command of due process. 'The purpose
of this requirement is not
only to ensure abstract
fair play to the
individual. Its
purpose, more particularly, is to protect his use and possession of property from arbitrary
[***20] encroachment--to
minimize substantively unfair or mistaken
deprivations of property ... .' " (Good Real Property,
supra, 510 U.S.
at p.
53 [126 L. Ed.
2d at p.
503], quoting Fuentes, supra, 407 U.S. at pp. 80-81
[32 L. Ed.
2d at p.
570].)
Beginning with Sniadach
v. Family Finance Corp. (1969) 395 U.S. 337 [23 L.
Ed. 2d 349, 89 S. Ct. 1820] (Sniadach), the concept
that
due process mandates the right
to notice
and hearing prior to the taking
of property has been held applicable
even to temporary
deprivations of property. (Fuentes, supra, 407 U.S. at p. 85 [32 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 572] [temporary,
nonfinal taking of property is nonetheless
a "deprivation" within the
meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment]; Beaudreau v. Superior Court
(1975) 14 Cal.3d 448, 455 [121 Cal. Rptr. 585, 535 [**708] P.2d
713]; Carrera v. Bertaini (1976) 63 Cal.
App. 3d 721, 727 [134 Cal. Rptr. 14].)
"Although due
process generally requires that an individual be given an opportunity
for a hearing before he is deprived of any significant property
interest
[citation],
the United
States
Supreme Court has ' "rejected the
proposition [***21] that [due process] always requires the State to
provide a hearing prior to the initial
deprivation of property."
' " (Bostean v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist. (1998)
63 Cal.App.4th 95, 112 [73 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 523], [*848] quoting
Gilbert v.
Homar (1997) 520 U.S. 924, 930 [138 L.
Ed. 2d 120, 127, 117 S. Ct. 1807], first
italics added.)
Given the mobility of motor
vehicles and the need for prompt action to prevent
their removal, we recognize that the City
need not provide a hearing before
it seizes a vehicle pursuant to Part XXV (see Calero-Toledo
v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co.
(1974) 416 U.S.
663, 678-680 [40 L. Ed. 2d
452, 465-466, 94 S. Ct. 2080], and plaintiff
does not argue to the
contrary.
(4) However, even where summary action
is justified, due process still requires a reasonably prompt hearing to
test
the probable merit of the
government's case. (Krimstock
v. Kelly (2d Cir. 2002) 306 F.3d
40, 69-70, cert. den. (2003) 539 U.S.
969 [156 L. Ed.
2d 675] (Krimstock); Tyler, supra,
34 Cal.App.4th at p. 784.)
As the court
stated
in Stypmann v. City
and County of San Francisco (9th Cir.
1977) 557 F.2d 1338, 1344 [***22] (Stypmann):
"Seizure of property without
prior hearing has been sustained
only where the owner is afforded [a]
prompt post-seizure hearing at
which the person seizing the property
must at
least make a showing of probable
cause." (Italics added.)
B. Due Process Barriers Under the
City's Forfeiture
Ordinance
Part XXV runs into serious constitutional
difficulties when measured against the
foregoing principles. The only
public duty triggered
by the City's
seizure of a vehicle is the issuance
of a receipt by the peace officer conducting
the seizure.
(§ 5-1004.) The ordinance then
requires the city attorney or district attorney to
conduct an investigation
and commence forfeiture proceedings
if warranted, but within
an extraordinary time frame: "as soon as practicable but
in any case within one year"
of the seizure.
(§ 5-1006,
subds. (a) & (b), italics added.)
Worse still, while the prosecuting
agency must give all persons with an interest in the
vehicle notice of the seizure and intended
forfeiture (§ 5-1006,
subd. (c)), there
are no time limits on how soon after
the seizure such notice must
be given. Claimants may be forced to
wait weeks or even months [***23]
before any hearing is held on the
merits of the
government's case, prima facie or otherwise.
Even if the City institutes
forfeiture proceedings with some diligence, the
procedure suffers from significant
delay. Interested parties
have 10 days to file a notice of claim after
being served with notice of seizure.
(§ 5-1007,
subd. (a).)
If a verified claim is filed, the
court clerk is directed to set the
forfeiture proceeding for a hearing
"not less than thirty (30) days" thereafter. [*849]
(§ 5-1007,
subd. (b), italics
added.) n5 These time frames do not [**709] even account
for time needed to conduct
discovery, requests for postponements,
and the predictable
congestion of the
trial court's
calendar, all of which make substantial additional
delay a likely conclusion.
n5 The City's representation that "the
maximum delay, on the face of the ordinance ... is 30
days" appears to be based on a
misreading of section 5-1007.
The section imposes a minimum,
not a maximum time
frame for setting
the case for hearing, and even that
period does not begin to run until
a claim is filed. The claim form is
received only when the City causes the
notice of seizure and intended forfeiture
proceedings to be personally served
or sent by registered mail to
those persons with an interest in the
seized vehicle. (§ 5-1006,
subd. (c).)
[***24]
In other words, even with prosecutorial
and judicial agencies firing on all cylinders, owners of seized vehicles face a
minimum six- to
seven-week wait
for a hearing. When we factor in knowledge of how the
court system
operates in the
real world, delays of two, three or four months
are realistic in the vast
majority of cases.
C. Application
of the Mathews
Test
(5) Despite Part XXV's obvious difficulties
in affording prompt postseizure review, we must
nevertheless pay heed to the
admonition of the
United States Supreme Court
in Mathews v. Eldridge (1976) 424 U.S. 319 [47 L.
Ed. 2d 18, 96 S. Ct. 893] (Mathews)
that
" ' "[d]ue process," unlike some legal rules, is not a technical
conception with
a fixed content
unrelated to
time, place and circumstances.'
[Citation.] '[D]ue process is flexible and calls for such
procedural protections as the
particular situation demands.'
[Citation.] Accordingly, resolution
of the issue whether the
administrative
procedures provided ... are
constitutionally sufficient
requires analysis of the governmental and private
interests
that
are affected."
(Id. at
p. 334 [47 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 33]; accord, Civil Service
Assn. v.
City and County
of San Francisco (1978) 22 Cal.3d
552, 561 [150 Cal. Rptr. 129,
586 P.2d 162].) [***25]
(6) Under Mathews, the constitutional
sufficiency of a governmental scheme
that
affects property
interests
should be resolved by considering three
factors: "[f]irst, the
private interest that will be affected
by the official action; second, the
risk of an erroneous deprivation of
such interest
through the
procedures used, and the probable
value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government's
interest,
including the function involved and the
fiscal and administrative burdens that the
additional or substitute procedural requirement
would entail."
(Mathews, supra, 424 U.S. at p. 335
[47 L. Ed.
2d at p.
33].) Mathews requires the
court to
"strik[e] the appropriate
due process balance" among these
factors.
(Mathews, at
p. 347 [47 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 40].)
n6
n6
Procedural due process challenges based on the
California Constitution
are also analyzed using the Mathews paradigm.
(Cf. Ryan, supra, 94 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1071-1072.)
[***26] [*850]
The Mathews
balancing test
has been used routinely to determine
the adequacy of due process
procedures in a wide variety of situations
(Campo v. New York City
Employees' Ret.
System (2d Cir.
1987) 843 F.2d 96, 100, fn. 3; Zuckerman, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 43)
including the adequacy of a
prejudgment process in forfeiture proceedings.
(Krimstock, supra, 306 F.3d at p. 60; County
of Nassau v. Canavan (2003) 1 N.Y.3d
134, 142 [802 N.E.2d 616, 770 N.Y.S.2d
277] (Canavan).)
Here, the first of these
factors--the
importance of the
private interest affected--weighs
heavily in favor of the party suffering the
seizure. Few deprivations of property
can create more havoc to the
average person's life than the loss of a motor
vehicle. It
is universally recognized that " 'automobiles
occupy a central place in the lives of most
Americans, providing access to jobs,
schools, and recreation as well as to the
daily necessities of life.' " (Krimstock,
supra, 306 F.3d at p. 61,
quoting Coleman v. Watt (8th
Cir. 1994) 40 F.3d 255, 260-261.) The uninterrupted use of a motor
vehicle is especially important in California,
where distances [***27] between
home [**710] and work are often
great and public transportation is not
always easily accessible.
The second factor is the risk of an erroneous deprivation.
Here, the balance tips toward
the City,
but barely.
Favoring the City's position
is the fact
that
the seizure occurs not upon the
mere application of a private party
(see, e.g.,
Fuentes, supra, 407 U.S. at pp. 69-70 [32 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 564]; Sniadach, supra, 395
U.S.
at pp.
337-338 [23 L.
Ed. 2d at
pp. 351-352]),
but incident
to an arrest,
search, or probable cause determination by a peace officer.
Other factors, however, cut
the other
way: Because the City has a direct
pecuniary interest in the
outcome of proceedings, there is a danger of overzealous enforcement, making the
need for prompt postseizure review by a neutral
party especially vital. (See
Good Real Property, supra, 510 U.S. at pp. 55-56 [126 L.
Ed. 2d at
pp. 504-505].) Also, the
ordinance provides no recompense for erroneous deprivations;
in view of the congested calendar of the
civil courts, this
poses an extreme hardship for ultimately
successful claimants. (Ibid; Krimstock,
supra, 306 F.3d at p. 63.) [***28]
The final factor is the government's
interest
in retaining vehicles postseizure and prior to
judgment (Canavan, supra, 1 N.Y.3d at p. 144)
as well as the burden alternative
safeguards would impose. This factor weighs strongly
against the
validity of the
ordinance.
First, the City's
ordinance contains no provision
whereby the owner may post a bond in order to
retain the
vehicle pending final adjudication. Although
Part XXV allows the City
to settle any contested claim forthwith by accepting
payment in lieu of forfeiture (§ 5-1008), an owner whose vehicle is seized [*851]
cannot retrieve it
pendente lite
under any circumstances. The vehicle simply sits
in storage until
judgment.
Given the fact
that
the forfeiture
trial will not
occur for weeks or even months, this is intolerable. A requirement
that
the owner post
a bond for a temporary restraining order against
sale or disposal of the vehicle
would serve the government's interest equally well, without jeopardizing due process through
lengthy delay.
Second, the government's interest in holding the
vehicle to prevent crime is negligible.
The seizure does nothing to stop
offenders from using another vehicle
to resume [***29] their
criminal activities. And
the fact
that
the ordinance permits the City to settle the case by accepting
a cash payment from the owner (thereby
placing the vehicle right back on city
streets)
renders disingenuous the City's declaration
that
the vehicles are "nuisances"
that
must be "abated."
(§ 5-1000.)
(7) Application of the Mathews
factors convinces us that Part XXV fails to
meet minimum due process standards because it
contains no provision for a prompt postseizure
hearing, to test whether
the City
has probable cause to hold the vehicle.
(Mathews, supra, 424 U.S. at p. 335
[47 L. Ed.
2d at p.
33].) Our conclusion is
especially informed by the fact that, as structured, the
ordinance fails to offer any
assurance that
the forfeiture
trial will take
place within a reasonably prompt period of time. (Krimstock,
supra, 306 F.3d at pp. 44,
48-49 [forfeiture law that authorized
vehicle seizure until judgment with no
provision for earlier probable cause hearing held unconstitutional];
Coleman v. Watt,
supra, 40 F.3d at pp. 257-261 [impoundment
of vehicle for eight weeks without
hearing violated owner's due process
rights]; [***30] Stypmann,
supra, 557 F.2d at pp.
1343-1344 [seizure and five-day impoundment
of vehicle with no probable cause
hearing "clearly excessive"]; Canavan, supra, 1 N.Y.3d at pp. 143-144 [**711] [vehicle forfeiture
ordinance that
failed to afford "prompt post-seizure retention hearing before a neutral
magistrate"
violates due process].) n7
n7 Citing Tobe, supra, 9 Cal.4th 1069, the
City points
out that we may not
declare a statute facially unconstitutional
based on hypothetical applications. Rather,
plaintiff " ' "must demonstrate that the act's provisions inevitably
pose a present total
and fatal conflict with applicable
constitutional prohibitions." ' " (Id.
at p.
1084, italics added.)
Tobe, however,
was not a procedural due process
case. In California Teachers Assn. v. State of
California (1999) 20 Cal.4th 327 [84 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 425, 975 P.2d 622] (California
Teachers), which like this case
involved a procedural due process challenge, the
court explained: "Even when
considering a facial challenge to a
procedural scheme, a court must determine
whether the
procedures 'provide sufficient protection
against erroneous and unnecessary
deprivations of liberty' and property. [Citation.]
The balancing analysis set forth in cases such as [Mathews],
supra, 424 U.S. 319 [47 L. Ed. 2d
18, 96 S. Ct.
893], requires an examination of
procedures to determine whether
they assure a minimum overall standard of fairness in the
particular context.
'[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the
risk of error inherent in the [truthfinding process as applied to
the] generality of cases, not
the rare exceptions.' (Id. at p. 344
[47 L. Ed.
2d at p.
39]. In considering facial
challenges to procedural schemes, the United
States
Supreme Court balances the competing
interests
to ascertain
whether the
procedures meet due process
requirements--not
simply whether there are instances
falling within the scheme in which a particular
result would be constitutionally permissible."
(California Teachers, at p. 347, italics
added.)
Thus, in
analyzing Part XXV for due process
sufficiency, we must consider how it operates
in most cases.
We may not "ignore the actual
standards contained
in a procedural scheme and uphold the
law simply because in some hypothetical situation it
might lead to
a permissible result." (California Teachers, supra, 20 Cal.4th at p. 347.)
[***31] [*852]
The authorities cited
by the City
to support
the constitutional
validity of Part XXV are not
persuasive. In United States v.
Banco Cafetero Panama (2d Cir. 1986) 797 F.2d
1154, which involved the
government's attempt to forfeit
$ 3 million in bank accounts which
were traceable to narcotics
transactions
(id. at
p. 1156), the
court merely held that the banks did not
have the right
to an immediate postseizure
probable cause hearing in advance of the
forfeiture trial. The court
noted that the
forfeiture trial
itself should be conducted within
a reasonable time. (Id.
at pp.
1162-1163.)
Moreover, 16 years later the same court
that
decided Banco invalidated a New York City
ordinance, which, like Part XXV,
failed to provide the vehicle owner with
a reasonably prompt pendente lite
hearing on the legitimacy of the
detention. (Krimstock,
supra, 306 F.3d at p. 44.)
United States v. One 1971 BMW 4-Door
Sedan (9th Cir.
1981) 652 F.2d 817 (One BMW),
which held that
a 72-hour probable cause hearing was
not required (id. at pp. 820-821)
and that
a two-and-one-half-month
delay in instituting [***32]
forfeiture proceedings was not unreasonable (id.
at pp.
821-822), is not only clearly distinguishable
n8 but appears out of sync with
United States Supreme Court
authority
decided both before (see Commissioner
v. Shapiro (1976) 424 U.S. 614,
629 & fn. 11 [47 L. Ed. 2d
278, 291, 96 S. Ct. 1062]
(Shapiro)) and since (Good Real Property, [**712] supra, 510 U.S. at p. 46 [126 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 498]).
n8 In One
BMW, a narcotics vehicle forfeiture case, almost
all of the delay was attributable to the period necessary to
obtain the
results of a laboratory test and the
owner was in jail during this time awaiting
trial on narcotics
charges. Moreover, the federal statute at issue contained
a provision whereby any interested party
could promptly petition
for remission of the forfeiture (One BMW, supra, 652 F.2d
at p.
820), a feature not present
in the Stockton ordinance.
Gonzales v. Rivkind (11th Cir.
1988) 858 F.2d 657 held that
owners of vehicles [***33] that were
seized at the
border for transporting illegal aliens were not
automatically
entitled
to a judicial probable cause hearing
within 72 hours after claimant's
request for such a hearing, the court
declaring that
the forfeiture
proceeding itself "if timely, affords a claimant
of seized property all process to which he is constitutionally
due." (Id. at p. 661, italics
added.) Here, Part XXV contains
no provision for a probable cause hearing and the
forfeiture procedure itself is so encumbered with
intrinsic delay as to deprive claimants
of any hope of a prompt adjudication of their
case. [*853]
United
States v. $ 8,850 (1983) 461 U.S.
555 [76 L. Ed.
2d 143, 103 S. Ct. 2005] and United States
v. Von Neumann (1986) 474 U.S.
242 [88 L. Ed.
2d 587, 106 S.
Ct.
610], each of which involved customs
forfeitures of property coming into
this country
from abroad, are not apposite. As the court
noted in Krimstock, supra, 306 F.3d
at p.
68, both of these decisions applied the
"speedy trial" test set forth
in Barker v. Wingo (1972) 407 U.S. 514
[33 L. Ed.
2d 101, 92 S. Ct. 2182]
(Barker) to determine whether
specific delays in the progress of
forfeiture [***34] proceedings deprived the
petitioners
of due process: "The application
of the speedy trial
test
presumes prior resolution of any
issues involving probable cause to
commence proceedings and the
government's custody of the
property or persons pendente lite,
leaving only the issue of delay in the proceedings.
... The Constitution,
however, distinguishes between the
need for prompt review of the propriety
of continued government custody,
on the one hand, and delays in
rendering final judgment, on the other." (Krimstock,
supra, 306 F.3d at p. 68.) n9
n9 We also
question whether
the Barker test,
which was developed to assess violations of a defendant's
Sixth Amendment right
to a speedy trial,
can ever be an appropriate gauge for
measuring the right to a timely probable cause hearing following the government's
seizure of property. (Barker, supra, 407 U.S.
514 [33 L. Ed.
2d 101].) The Supreme Court has since made clear that seizures of property
in connection with civil forfeiture
proceedings implicate both the Fourth Amendment
right to
be free from unreasonable seizure and the
Fifth Amendment right
to notice
and hearing in a timely manner. (Good Real Property,
supra, 510 U.S.
at pp.
49-50 [126 L.
Ed. 2d at
pp. 500-501].) Recent
state
and federal cases involving civil forfeiture,
including Good Real Property,
apply the Mathews analysis, and we believe Mathews provides the
appropriate yardstick in this
area. (Mathews,
supra, 424 U.S.
319 [47 L. Ed.
2d 18].)
[***35]
Notwithstanding
Part XXV's failure to provide a probable cause hearing, the City
insists that due process is still
satisfied because "there is nothing
in the statutory
scheme that
would prohibit a vehicle owner from
seeking immediate equitable relief by means of a temporary
restraining order and an order to show cause."
It points
out that Part
XXV expressly makes the Code of
Civil Procedure applicable to forfeiture proceedings.
(See § 5-1007,
subd. (b)(3).)
We are not persuaded.
First, the City
does not explain how a claimant can apply for a temporary
restraining order (TRO) or order to show cause in a civil case that does not
yet exist,
for until the
City decides to
file a forfeiture action there
is no subject matter
jurisdiction in the trial
court.
Second, placing the
burden on the claimant to pry
open the courthouse
doors to test the
government's case does not comport
with due process. To pass constitutional
scrutiny a statutory
scheme must "provide a prompt and effective
means for claimants to challenge the
legitimacy of [**713] the
City's retention of their
vehicles pendente lite."
(Krimstock, supra, 306 F.3d at p. 60.)
Putting
aside the time
and expense [***36] required to retain
counsel and file a [*854] lawsuit,
requiring the owner to seek a TRO would place the
burden on him or her to prove both irreparable injury and a likelihood of prevailing
on the merits
(Code Civ. Proc., § 526,
subd. (a)(1) & (3)). This is the
opposite of what due process mandates--that government bear the
initial burden of proving probable
cause for continued retention
of property it
has taken.
(8) In sum, any procedural scheme that permits
the City
to seize a vehicle off the street without a prior hearing must
contain its
own provisions for prompt postseizure review.
"[W]e are neither inclined nor
permitted
to accord the
administrative
forfeiture statute what Justice
Holmes, in a different context,
called 'a little
play in its joints.'
" (Nasir v. Sacramento
County
Off.
of the Dist. Atty.
(1992) 11 Cal.App.4th 976,
987 [15 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 694], quoting Bain Peanut Co. v. Pinson (1931) 282 U.S.
499, 501 [75 L. Ed. 482, 491, 51 S. Ct. 228].)
Thus, "[t]he fact that an owner may institute a
judicial proceeding for the return of the
property is simply no substitute for the
requirement that an owner be accorded a fair hearing on the merits
of [***37] the
seizure." (Menefee, supra,
199 Cal. App.
3d at p.
782.)
D. Conclusion
(9) "[A]t least where irreparable injury may result from a deprivation
of property pending final adjudication of the
rights of the
parties, the
Due Process Clause requires that the party whose property
is taken be given an opportunity
for some kind of predeprivation or
prompt post-deprivation
hearing at which some showing of the probable validity
of the deprivation
must be made."
(Shapiro, supra, 424 U.S. at p. 629 [47 L.
Ed. 2d at
p. 291], italics
added.)
Part XXV violates procedural due process because it fails to
provide a prompt postseizure probable cause hearing on the City's
right to
continued retention of the
seized vehicles, especially in light
of the fact
that
the ordinance permits the
forfeiture proceedings to proceed at
a languid pace, requiring many weeks or even months
to be brought
to resolution.
Because the ordinance
is unconstitutional on its
face, the trial
court erred in failing to overrule the
demurrer to the
second cause of action. In light
of our reversal on this ground and
our determination
that
the ordinance is preempted by state law [***38] (see part
VII, post), we do not reach plaintiff's
claims in her sixth cause of action that the
ordinance is void for vagueness and violates
the separation
of powers doctrine. [*855]
VII. Preemption
A. General Principles
(10) Local legislation that
conflicts with
the provisions of general laws is
unconstitutional as it
is in violation of article XI, section
7 of the California Constitution. "The fact
that
the state has legislated
on the same subject does not
necessarily exclude the municipal power. The municipality
may make additional regulations, different
from those established
by the state and not
inconsistent
with the
purpose of the general law. It is
only where the Legislature has manifested
an intention,
expressly or by implication, wholly to occupy the
field, so that
any local regulations will
necessarily be inconsistent with state law,
that
municipal power is lost." (8 Witkin,
Summary of Cal.
Law (9th ed.
1988) Constitutional Law, §
794, p. 322.)
(11) In Sherwin-Williams
Co. v.
City of Los
Angeles (1993) 4 Cal.4th 893 [16 Cal. Rptr. 2d 215, 844 P.2d
534], the California Supreme
Court explained: " 'A conflict exists
if the local legislation " 'duplicates, [***39] [**714] contradicts, or enters
an area fully occupied by general law, either
expressly or by legislative implication.'
" ' " (Id. at p. 897.) Local legislation
is duplicative of general law when it is coextensive
therewith;
it is contradictory to
general law when it is inimical thereto;
it enters
an area that
is fully occupied by general law when the
Legislature has expressly manifested its
intent
to fully occupy the area, or when it
has done so impliedly measured against
certain indicia of legislative intent. (Id. at pp. 898-899.)
B. Overview of State Civil Forfeiture
Provisions--Controlled Substances
(12) The California
Uniform Controlled Substances Act
(the UCSA) (Health & Saf.
Code, § 11000 et
seq.) is a comprehensive regulation of controlled
substances that includes their
definition (chapter 2), and lawful (chapters
4 and 5) and unlawful uses (chapter
7). The UCSA also contains stringent substantive and procedural conditions
for the civil forfeiture of a vehicle used in the
commission of a specified controlled
substance offense. (Id., § § 11469-11495.) It
delegates authority to a
local agency to forfeit a vehicle [***40] only if these
conditions are met. (Id.,
§ § 11469, 11488.4.)
The forfeiture portion of the
UCSA is introduced by a statement of purpose that the principal
objective of forfeiture is law enforcement
and that
local prosecutors are directed "[w]henever appropriate
[to] seek criminal sanctions as to
the underlying criminal acts which give rise to
the forfeiture
action."
(Id.,
§ 11469, subds.
(a), (c).) A criminal
sanction is "appropriate" (i.e., required) when real or personal property is sought
to be forfeited. (Id., § 11470, subds.
(g) & (h).) [*856]
(13) The commission of a controlled
substance offense is the primary condition
justifying forfeiture. The
interest
of the registered
owner of a vehicle may be forfeited
only where it is used as an
"instrument to
facilitate"
the crimes of "manufacture of, or possession for sale or sale" of
identified controlled
substances (in specified amounts). n10
(Health & Saf. Code, §
11470, subd. (e).) The registered
owner's interest vests
in the state only upon "commission of the [criminal] act
giving rise to forfeiture" and then
only "if the state or
local governmental entity
proves a violation of" the specified [***41] offense.
(Id.,
§ 11470, subd.
(h).) A judgment of forfeiture
requires a conviction in the "underlying or related
criminal action." (Id., § 11488.4,
subd. (i)(3).) A contested issue of forfeiture
must be tried
in conjunction with the trial of the
offense (id., § 11488.4,
subd. (i)(5)), and the prosecution
bears the burden of proof beyond a
reasonable doubt that the vehicle was used, or intended
to be used, to
facilitate
a violation of one of the enumerated
underlying offenses (id., § 11488.4,
subd. (i)(1)). n11 Further,
the interests of encumbrancers, bona fide purchasers and certain community
property interests are protected against
forfeiture.
(Id.,
§ 11470, subds.
(e) & (h).) The UCSA
is implemented by extensive procedures for compliance with its
substantive
provisions. (See, e.g., id., §
11488.4.)
n10 The mere
possession of a controlled substance is not
within the
offenses for which the forfeiture of a vehicle may be sought. (See Health
& Saf. Code, § 11470, subd.
(e).)
n11 A separate contested hearing regarding the
role of the vehicle as an "instrument to facilitate" a covered offense may occur when there is no contest to the underlying offense.
(Health & Saf. Code, §
11488.4, subd. (i)(5).)
[***42]
C. Implied Preemption
(14) Because the UCSA does
not expressly prohibit a local entity from enacting
supplemental legislation regarding
[**715] forfeiture of vehicles in the
area of controlled substances, the
question is whether preemption
may be implied from the UCSA. There are three
tests
of preemption by implication: " ' "(1) [T]he subject matter has been so fully and completely covered by general law as to clearly indicate
that
it has become exclusively a matter of state
concern; (2) the subject matter has been partially
covered by general law couched in such terms
as to indicate
clearly that
a paramount state concern will not
tolerate
further or additional local action;
or (3) the subject matter has been partially
covered by general law, and the
subject is of such a nature that the
adverse effect of a local ordinance
on the transient citizens
of the state outweighs
the possible benefit to the municipality." ' " (Morehart
v. County
of Santa Barbara (1994) 7 Cal.4th 725,
751 [29 Cal. Rptr. 2d
804, 872 P.2d 143].)
(15) " 'Where the
Legislature has adopted statutes
governing a particular subject matter, its
intent
with regard to
occupying the field to the
exclusion of [*857] all local regulation
is not to
be measured [***43] alone by the language used but
by the whole purpose and scope of the legislative
scheme.' " (American
Financial Services Assn. v. City of
Oakland (2005) 34 Cal.4th 1239, 1252 [23 Cal.
Rptr.
3d 453, 104 P.3d 813] (American
Financial), quoting Tolman v. Underhill (1952) 39 Cal.2d
708, 712 [249 P.2d 280].)
(16) Here, the state, through the
UCSA, has legislatively occupied an
area of statewide
importance: the
civil forfeiture of vehicles when
used in connection with the
drug trade.
The Legislature has also made the UCSA binding on local governmental agencies, such as the
City.
(See Health & Saf. Code, § §
11469, 11488.4.) It has
delegated to
local authorities
the power to
forfeit a vehicle only as
permitted
by its express provisions. These provisions include the
requirement of a criminal conviction, proof beyond a reasonable doubt of the
conditions justifying
forfeiture, and the protection of innocent
parties who hold an interest in
the vehicle.
(17) The state has therefore
enacted specific and detailed legislation,
binding on local authorities, in the
area of forfeiture of vehicles used
in transactions
involving a controlled substance.
The [***44] City's Part
XXV intrudes into this
area in significant and contradictory
ways: The ordinance subjects a
vehicle to forfeiture as a nuisance if it
is used to "acquire or attempt to
acquire any controlled substance."
(§ § 5-1000,
5-1001.)
n12 To acquire or attempt to acquire a controlled
substance means to purchase or attempt to purchase a controlled
substance.
n13 However, a mere purchaser of a controlled
substance is not liable as a principal in the
sale of a controlled substance and cannot
be prosecuted for the same offense as the
seller: "[O]ne who merely purchases drugs is not
guilty of furnishing as an aider and
abettor
of the seller ... ." (People v.
Edwards (1985) 39 Cal.3d 107, 114,
fn. 5 [216 Cal.
Rptr.
397, 702 P.2d 555], citing People v.
Label (1974) 43 Cal. App. 3d 766, 770 [119 Cal.
Rptr.
522]; see also People v.
Hernandez (1968) 263 Cal. App. 2d 242, 247 [69 Cal.
Rptr.
448]; People v. Lamb (1955)
134 Cal. App.
2d 582, 585-586 [285 P.2d 941].)
Thus, Part XXV authorizes forfeiture
under certain conditions [**716] which would not
even constitute the
commission of a criminal offense.
n12 Part XXV applies to
"[a]ny person or his or her servant,
agent, or employee who owns, leases,
conducts, or maintains any vehicle" and the
vehicle is used for the
"purposes or acts set forth
in this section
... ."
(§ 5-1000.)
[***45]
n13 If
"to acquire" means "to possess," Part
XXV also authorizes the forfeiture
of a vehicle that is used in the
commission of the offense of
possession of a controlled substance (Health
& Saf. Code, § 11377), which does not qualify for forfeiture
under the UCSA.
The UCSA makes possession for sale (id.,
§ 11378), but not
mere possession, a qualifying offense for forfeiture
(id., § 11470, subd.
(e)).
[*858]
Like the UCSA, Part XXV applies to
vehicles that
are used to consummate transactions involving a controlled
substance.
Since it does not distinguish
between the
kinds or amounts of the controlled
substance sought to be
"acquired," Part XXV
includes all of the substances covered by the
UCSA. It
does not require proof beyond a
reasonable doubt of the grounds for forfeiture
n14 and contains no protections
against forfeiture
for innocent parties who hold community
property, bona fide purchaser or
encumbrancer interests. n15
Thus, the City's
ordinance authorizes vehicular forfeiture under a panoply of circumstances that would be impermissible if forfeiture [***46]
were sought under the UCSA.
n14 Part XXV provides that "the
City of Stockton shall have the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the
vehicle was used as set forth in Section
5-1000."
(§ 5-1006,
subd. (f).)
n15 The only
remedy provided to an innocent party
is the receipt
of proceeds from the sale of a
forfeited vehicle. Part
XXV provides that upon the
sale of a forfeited vehicle the proceeds of the
sale shall be paid to an innocent purchaser or encumbrancer.
(§ 5-1008,
subd. (a).)
The interest
of the innocent
person nonetheless may be forfeited.
(18) The Legislature's express
delegation of the
power of forfeiture to local agencies, its
scrupulous attention to
conditions necessary for forfeiture, and its
protection
of due process rights of those impacted
by forfeiture, manifests a clear intent to
occupy the area of forfeiture of vehicles when used as instrumentalities of the
drug trade.
There is no room, under this scheme,
for local legislation in the same field which, as Part
XXV does, [***47] expands the
conditions triggering
forfeiture of vehicles used in drug transactions,
loosens the requisite standard
of proof, omits due process protections
for innocent parties, and divides up the
net proceeds among local law
enforcement agencies. n16
n16 Health and Safety
Code section 11469, subdivision (a)
provides: "Law enforcement is the principal objective
of forfeiture.
Potential
revenue must not be allowed to
jeopardize the effective investigation and prosecution
of criminal offenses, officer safety,
the integrity of ongoing investigations, or the
due process rights of citizens."
(Italics added.)
The City's position nevertheless
finds support in Horton, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th 580,
which addressed a claim of preemption
as to an Oakland ordinance n17 that the parties agree replicates
Part XXV of the
City's ordinance in all material respects. The Oakland
ordinance authorized the seizure, forfeiture,
and sale of vehicles used to acquire
or attempt to
acquire [***48] controlled substances. (Id.
at p.
584.) The taxpayer
litigants
claimed the ordinance was preempted by Health
and Safety Code section 11469 et
seq. (Horton, at p. 586.)
The Court of Appeal, First Appellate
District,
Division Three, rejected that
claim on the view that the "state statutory
scheme is [*859] silent
with regard to
vehicles used by drug buyers," and therefore
the ordinance "covers an area
untouched by statewide legislation." (Ibid.)
n17 Oakland
Municipal Code, former chapter 3, article 23, Ordinance No.
11987 (1997), section 3-23.01 is
now title
9, chapter 9.56,
section 9.56.010 (hereafter
the Oakland ordinance).
(Horton, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 584.)
Although Horton does recite
the text of the Oakland ordinance, we
have taken judicial notice of it
at plaintiff's
request.
(See fn. 1, ante.)
(19) Horton's reasoning
cannot be reconciled with the
broad scope and detailed parameters set
forth in the
UCSA regarding forfeiture [***49] of vehicles used in the
drug trade.
The Legislature has scrupulously set forth [**717] the
conditions for forfeiture of vehicles used as instrumentalities
for controlled substances while omitting others. This occupation
of the field preempts local regulation,
even on subjects not specifically addressed by the
state
statutes. The
state's
decision to authorize
vehicle forfeiture in some aspects of the
drug trade but
not others
"is not an invitation
for municipal regulation." (American Financial, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 1259.) For example, the
Legislature may well have concluded
vehicle forfeiture as too severe a sanction
to impose on drug buyers, who are
generally viewed with greater sympathy
and leniency than drug sellers and
manufacturers.
Expressio unius est exclusio alterius--"the
expression of certain things in a statute
necessarily involves exclusion of other
things not
expressed." (Henderson v. Mann Theatres
Corp. (1976) 65 Cal. App. 3d
397, 403 [135 Cal. Rptr. 266].) To paraphrase Isaac v.
City of Los
Angeles (1998) 66 Cal.App.4th 586
[77 Cal.
Rptr.
2d 752], the "absence of
any specific statewide legislation"
with regard to
drug buyers, "does not create [***50]
a statutory loophole inviting
local legislation, because of the pervasive statutory
scheme already in place ... ." (Id.
at p.
601.)
Our view is supported,
not only by Legislative Counsel's opinion that the Oakland ordinance
"is in conflict with and preempted
by state
law," n18 but by the California Supreme Court's
recent decision in American
Financial. There, the City
of Oakland enacted a local ordinance regulating
predatory lending practices within
the city
limits.
(American Financial, supra, 34 Cal.4th at pp. 1248-1250.) The Legislature
also enacted a set of statutes
designed to combat similar abuses (Fin.
Code, § § 4970-4979.8 [also known as Division 1.6]). (American
Financial, at p. 1244 & fn.
2.)
n18 Letter
exhibit to
plaintiff's Third Supplemental Request
for Judicial Notice (Legislative Counsel of California's letter to Sen.
John Vasconcellos, Mar. 17, 1998, p. 16); see footnote 1, ante.
Both sets of [***51]
regulations regulated lending practices
in the " 'subprime' " home
loan market (American Financial,
supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 1246, fn.
5), but Oakland's ordinance contained numerous prohibitions
and limitations
that
were different from those in Division 1.6. Like Part
XXV here and the Oakland ordinance in Horton, the
local ordinance in American Financial imposed more extensive and stringent penalties
for predatory practices than
those set
forth in Division 1.6. Although Division 1.6
contained no express preemption language, the
California Supreme Court found
preemption in [*860]
view of the "clear indications of the
Legislature's implicit intent to
fully occupy the field of regulation of predatory
lending tactics
in home mortgages." (American Financial, at p. 1252.)
Without addressing the
comprehensive nature of the state forfeiture
statutes, the
City argues there
is no preemption by redefining the subject
matter. According to
the City,
while the UCSA forfeiture statutes
regulate "tools used and profits
realized by drug dealers," its
ordinance merely regulates "the field of nuisance as it
relates to
drive-up drug buyers." Citing
general public nuisance statutes [***52] (Civ.
Code, § § 3479, 3480), n19
as [**718] well as Government
Code section 38771, n20 the City
insists it
is authorized to
identify a local problem as a
nuisance and regulate it, regardless of the
state's
extensive regulation in the
same area.
n19 Civil
Code section 3479 provides:
"Anything which is injurious to health,
including, but not limited
to, the
illegal sale of controlled substances, or is indecent
or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property,
so as to interfere
with the
comfortable enjoyment of life or property,
or unlawfully obstructs the
free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any navigable lake, or river, bay,
stream, canal, or basin, or any
public park, square, street, or highway, is a nuisance."
Civil Code
section 3480 provides:
"A public nuisance is one which affects
at the
same time an entire community
or neighborhood, or any considerable number of persons, although the
extent
of the annoyance or damage inflicted upon individuals may be unequal."
[***53]
n20 Government Code section
38771 provides: "By ordinance the
city legislative
body may declare what constitutes a nuisance."
We disagree. Civil
Code sections 3479 and 3480
define a nuisance for both private and public actions. (See also Civ.
Code, § 3481.)
While a private nuisance may be
"enjoined or abated" (Code
Civ. Proc.,
§ 731), a public nuisance may be abated by any authorized
public body or officer (Civ.
Code, § 3494) and only by a
"civil action" brought in the
name of the People of the State by the
district
attorney
or the city
attorney
of any city.
n21 (Code Civ. Proc., § 731.) Such an abatement is normally accomplished by the
equitable remedy of injunction, an in personam action. (See People ex rel.
Gallo v. Acuna (1997) 14 Cal.4th
1090, 1102-1103 [60 Cal. Rptr. 2d 277, 929 P.2d
596]; In re Englebrecht
(1998) 67 Cal.App.4th 486,
492 [79 Cal. Rptr. 2d
89]; People ex rel. Gow v. Mitchell
Brothers' Santa
Ana Theater (1981) 114 Cal. App. 3d
923, 932-933 [171 Cal. Rptr. 85] [***54] [injunction
against the
display of obscene films is in personam].)
n21 Civil
Code section 3491 specifies the remedies against
a public nuisance as "1. Indictment or
information; 2.
A civil action; or, 3. Abatement."
An abatement
without
a civil action runs contrary to the equitable
authority
granted district attorneys or city
attorneys
in Code of Civil Procedure section
731.
Part XXV is not authorized
by Civil Code sections 3479
and 3480 for at least two
reasons: First, the forfeiture
relief provided in the ordinance
appears to be in rem and not in personam.
Second, Part XXV does not require the [*861]
commission of the crime of
illegal sale of a controlled substance, the
ground specified in Civil Code section
3479. If it
did so provide, it would be in direct conflict
with the
procedure in Health and Safety Code section
11470 et seq.,
which is in rem. n22
n22
"The forfeiture prescribed by the Health
and Safety Code [section 11470 et
seq.] is in rem." (Baca v.
Minier (1991) 229 Cal.
App. 3d 1253, 1262 [280 Cal.
Rptr.
810], citing People v. One 1941 Chevrolet
Coupe (1951) 37 Cal.2d 283, 286 [231
P.2d 832] ["A statutory or legislative
forfeiture is in rem against the
property itself. A common-law
or judicial forfeiture is in
personam against a defendant [citation].
The forfeiture prescribed by the Health
and Safety Code is in rem"].)
[***55]
(20) Further, just as a statute
giving cities general authority to legislate
on a given subject (e.g., Gov. Code, §
38771) "would not
validate a city
ordinance if it in fact conflicted
with a state statute"
(City of Bakersfield v. Miller (1966) 64 Cal.2d
93, 101 [48 Cal. Rptr. 889,
410 P.2d 393]), the result
should be no different where a city's ordinance runs afoul of the
doctrine of implied preemption. The
City's general authority to regulate
nuisances cannot be used as a tool to
override the Legislature in an area in which it
has already manifested an intent to occupy.
The thrust of the
reasoning advanced by the City, and validated
in Horton, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th 580, is that cities
are free to supplement the
UCSA simply by omitting the
conditions that are essential
to vehicular forfeiture therein
and creating their
own conditions for vehicle forfeiture.
Taken to its
logical conclusion, such a view would find preemption
only where state
statutes and municipal regulations
precisely overlap. This [**719] would virtually
wipe out the
doctrine of implied preemption, a result
that
has been criticized by our Supreme
Court in American Financial
as [***56] a "notable departure
from our implied preemption precedents."
(American Financial, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 1261.)
The UCSA's provisions permitting forfeiture
of vehicles as instrumentalities
of the drug trade
represent " 'legislative estimates regarding the
significance of a given problem and the
responsive measures that should be taken
toward its
resolution.'
" (American Financial, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 1259, quoting
California
Fed. Savings & Loan Assn. v. City of Los
Angeles (1991) 54 Cal.3d. 1, 24 [283 Cal. Rptr. 569, 812 P.2d
916].) The City is not
free to ignore them and impose its
own solutions.
We are unpersuaded by the
City's argument
that
the fact
the Legislature
once passed an express preemption
amendment, only to be blocked by the
Governor's veto, shows that no
implied preemption was intended.
n23 If [*862] anything,
the bill's passage supports our conclusion that the lawmakers
never intended to allow local regulation
in this area.
The Governor's views on preemption
are certainly not binding on other
branches of government, and our
Supreme Court has made clear that such
statements carry no weight
in construing the
intent
of the Legislature
[***57] as a whole. (American Financial, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 1261
["we are reluctant to
reward the opponents of preemption
when nothing in the statutory
language or history suggests they
persuaded the Legislature to
consider relinquishing its historical control
of this particular
regulatory field and to tolerate municipal, and possibly conflicting, regulation"].)
n23 As noted in Horton:
"In September 1999, the Legislature
passed Assembly Bill No. 662 (1999-2000 Reg.
Sess.), amending [Health and Safety
Code] section 11469 et seq.
to include forfeitures under the
criminal profiteering statute. The
bill also declared the Legislature's intent that forfeiture
law be exclusive of any local ordinance or regulation,
declaring the subject a matter of statewide concern."
(Horton, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 588.)
Assembly Bill No. 662 stated that
" '[t]he provisions of this section
are a clarification and declaration of existing
law.' " (Ibid.) The bill was vetoed
by Governor Davis, expressing the
view that
" '[i]t is not appropriate
for the State to take away the
tools from Oakland, Sacramento, and other
cities considering the adoption
of similar ordinances without a more careful analysis of the
amount of discretion which should be left
to cities
to craft
their own remedies in response to local conditions.' " (Ibid.)
[***58]
D. Home Rule Doctrine
(21) The City also defends the claim of preemption
by invoking its status as
a charter city
and the home rule doctrine. (Cal.
Const.,
art.
XI, § 5.)
Under the home rule doctrine, California's Constitution
reserves to charter cities
the right
to adopt
and enforce ordinances that conflict
with general state laws, provided the
subject of the
regulation is a " 'municipal
affair' " rather than one of " 'statewide co