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- From: kadie@eff.org (Carl M. Kadie)
- Newsgroups: misc.legal,talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs,alt.society.civil-liberty
- Subject: [Supreme Court] _U.S. v. James Daniel Good Real Property_
- Date: 13 Dec 1993 23:13:54 -0500
- Message-ID: <2ejei2$cth@eff.org>
-
- [This is the full syllabus, order, opinion, and dissents from today's
- decision limiting civil forfeiture. -cmk]
-
- EXCERPT: "The principal question presented is whether, in the absence
- of exigent circumstances, the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
- Amendment prohibits the Government in a civil forfeiture case from
- seizing real property without first affording the owner notice and an
- opportunity to be heard. We hold that it does."
-
-
- ============================ 92-1180.ZS.filt =======================
-
-
- NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
- being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
- The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
- prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
- See United States v. Detroit Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
-
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
-
- Syllabus
-
- UNITED STATES v. JAMES DANIEL GOOD REAL
- PROPERTY et al.
- certiorari to the united states court of appeals for
- the ninth circuit
- No. 92-1180. Argued October 6, 1993-Decided December 13, 1993
-
- Four and one-half years after police found drugs and drug parapher-
- nalia in claimant Good's home and he pleaded guilty to promoting
- a harmful drug in violation of Hawaii law, the United States filed
- an in rem action in the Federal District Court, seeking forfeiture
- of his house and land, under 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(7), on the ground
- that the property had been used to commit or facilitate the com-
- mission of a federal drug offense. Following an ex parte proceed-
- ing, a Magistrate Judge issued a warrant authorizing the proper-
- ty's seizure, and the Government seized the property without prior
- notice to Good or an adversary proceeding. In his claim for the
- property and answer to the Government's complaint, Good asserted
- that he was deprived of his property without due process of law
- and that the action was invalid because it had not been timely
- commenced. The District Court ordered that the property be
- forfeited, but the Court of Appeals reversed. It held that the
- seizure without prior notice and a hearing violated the Due Pro-
- cess Clause, and remanded the case for a determination whether
- the action, although filed within the five-year period provided by
- 19 U. S. C. 1621, was untimely because the Government failed to
- follow the internal notification and reporting requirements of
- 1602-1604.
- Held:
- 1. Absent exigent circumstances, the Due Process Clause re-
- quires the Government to afford notice and a meaningful opportu-
- nity to be heard before seizing real property subject to civil forfei-
- ture. Pp. 4-19.
- (a) The seizure of Good's property implicates two ```explicit
- textual source[s] of constitutional protection,''' the Fourth Amend-
- ment and the Fifth. Soldal v. Cook County, 506 U. S. ___, ___.
- While the Fourth Amendment places limits on the Government's
- power to seize property for purposes of forfeiture, it does not
- provide the sole measure of constitutional protection that must be
- afforded property owners in forfeiture proceedings. Gerstein v.
- Pugh, 420 U. S. 103; Graham v. Connor, 490 U. S. 386, distin-
- guished. Where the Government seizes property not to preserve
- evidence of criminal wrongdoing but to assert ownership and
- control over the property, its action must also comply with the
- Due Process Clause. See, e.g., Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht
- Leasing Co., 416 U. S. 663; Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67.
- Pp. 4-8.
- (b) An exception to the general rule requiring predeprivation
- notice and hearing is justified only in extraordinary situations.
- Id., at 82. Using the three-part inquiry set forth in Mathews v.
- Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319-consideration of the private interest
- affected by the official action; the risk of an erroneous deprivation
- of that interest through the procedures used, as well as the proba-
- ble value of additional safeguards; and the Government's interest,
- including the administrative burden that additional procedural
- requirements would impose, id., at 335-the seizure of real proper-
- ty for purposes of civil forfeiture does not justify such an excep-
- tion. Good's right to maintain control over his home, and to be
- free from governmental interference, is a private interest of histor-
- ic and continuing importance, cf., e.g., United States v. Karo, 468
- U. S. 705, 714-715, that weighs heavily in the Mathews balance.
- Moreover, the practice of ex parte seizure creates an unacceptable
- risk of error, since the proceeding affords little or no protection to
- an innocent owner, who may not be deprived of property under
- 881(a)(7). Nor does the governmental interest at stake here
- present a pressing need for prompt action. Because real property
- cannot abscond, a court's jurisdiction can be preserved without
- prior seizure simply by posting notice on the property and leaving
- a copy of the process with the occupant. In addition, the Govern-
- ment's legitimate interests at the inception of a forfeiture proceed-
- ing-preventing the property from being sold, destroyed, or used
- for further illegal activity before the forfeiture judgment-can be
- secured through measures less intrusive than seizure: a lis pen-
- dens notice to prevent the property's sale, a restraining order to
- prevent its destruction, and search and arrest warrants to forestall
- further illegal activity. Since a claimant is already entitled to a
- hearing before final judgment, requiring the Government to post-
- pone seizure until after an adversary hearing creates no significant
- administrative burden, and any harm from the delay is minimal
- compared to the injury occasioned by erroneous seizure. Pp. 8-16.
- (c) No plausible claim of executive urgency, including the
- Government's reliance on forfeitures as a means of defraying law
- enforcement expenses, justifies the summary seizure of real proper-
- ty under 881(a)(7). Cf. Phillips v. Commissioner, 283 U. S. 589.
- Pp. 16-18.
- 2. Courts may not dismiss a forfeiture action filed within the
- five-year statute of limitations for noncompliance with the timing
- requirements of 1602-1604. Congress' failure to specify a conse-
- quence for noncompliance implies that it intended the responsible
- officials administering the Act to have discretion to determine
- what disciplinary measures are appropriate when their subordi-
- nates fail to discharge their statutory duties, and the federal
- courts should not in the ordinary course impose their own coercive
- sanction, see, e.g., United States v. Montalvo-Murillo, 495 U. S.
- 711, 717-721. Pp. 19-22.
- 971 F. 2d 1376, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
- Kennedy, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court with
- respect to Parts I and III, and the opinion of the Court with respect
- to Parts II and IV, in which Blackmun, Stevens, Souter, and
- Ginsburg, JJ., joined. Rehnquist, C. J., filed an opinion concurring
- in part and dissenting in part, in which Scalia, J., joined, and in
- which O'Connor, J., joined as to Parts II and III. O'Connor, J.,
- and Thomas, J., filed opinions concurring in part and dissenting in
- part.
-
- ============================ 92-1180.ZO.filt =======================
- NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
- preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
- notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
- ington, D.C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that
- corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 92-1180
- --------
- UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JAMES DANIEL
- GOOD REAL PROPERTY et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the ninth circuit
- [December 13, 1993]
-
- Justice Kennedy delivered the opinion of the Court.
- The principal question presented is whether, in the
- absence of exigent circumstances, the Due Process
- Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the Govern-
- ment in a civil forfeiture case from seizing real property
- without first affording the owner notice and an opportu-
- nity to be heard. We hold that it does.
- A second issue in the case concerns the timeliness of
- the forfeiture action. We hold that filing suit for
- forfeiture within the statute of limitations suffices to
- make the action timely, and that the cause should not
- be dismissed for failure to comply with certain other
- statutory directives for expeditious prosecution in
- forfeiture cases.
-
- I
- On January 31, 1985, Hawaii police officers executed
- a search warrant at the home of claimant James Daniel
- Good. The search uncovered about 89 pounds of
- marijuana, marijuana seeds, vials containing hashish oil,
- and drug paraphernalia. About six months later, Good
- pleaded guilty to promoting a harmful drug in the
- second degree, in violation of Hawaii law. Haw. Rev.
- Stat. 712-1245(1)(b) (1985). He was sentenced to one
- year in jail and five years' probation, and fined $1,000.
- Good was also required to forfeit to the State $3,187 in
- cash found on the premises.
- On August 8, 1989, four and one-half years after the
- drugs were found, the United States filed an in rem
- action in the United States District Court for the
- District of Hawaii, seeking to forfeit Good's house and
- the four-acre parcel on which it was situated. The
- United States sought forfeiture under 21 U. S. C.
- 881(a)(7), on the ground that the property had been
- used to commit or facilitate the commission of a federal
- drug offense.
- On August 18, 1989, in an ex parte proceeding, a
- United States Magistrate Judge found that the Govern-
- ment had established probable cause to believe Good's
- property was subject to forfeiture under 881(a)(7). A
- warrant of arrest in rem was issued, authorizing seizure
- of the property. The warrant was based on an affidavit
- recounting the fact of Good's conviction and the evidence
- discovered during the January 1985 search of his home
- by Hawaii police.
- The Government seized the property on August 21,
- 1989, without prior notice to Good or an adversary
- hearing. At the time of the seizure, Good was renting
- his home to tenants for $900 per month. The Govern-
- ment permitted the tenants to remain on the premises
- subject to an occupancy agreement, but directed the
- payment of future rents to the United States Marshal.
- Good filed a claim for the property and an answer to
- the Government's complaint. He asserted that the
- seizure deprived him of his property without due process
- of law and that the forfeiture action was invalid because
- it had not been timely commenced under the statute.
- The District Court granted the Government's motion for
- summary judgment and entered an order forfeiting the
- property.
- The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed in
- part, reversed in part, and remanded for further pro-
- ceedings. 971 F. 2d 1376 (1992). The court was
- unanimous in holding that the seizure of Good's proper-
- ty, without prior notice and a hearing, violated the Due
- Process Clause.
- In a divided decision, the Court of Appeals further
- held that the District Court erred in finding the action
- timely. The Court of Appeals ruled that the 5-year
- statute of limitations in 19 U. S. C. 1621 is only an
- -outer limit- for filing a forfeiture action, and that
- further limits are imposed by 19 U. S. C. 1602-1604.
- 971 F. 2d, at 1378-1382. Those provisions, the court
- reasoned, impose a -series of internal notification and
- reporting requirements,- under which -customs agents
- must report to customs officers, customs officers must
- report to the United States attorney, and the Attorney
- General must `immediately' and `forthwith' bring a
- forfeiture action if he believes that one is warranted.-
- Id., at 1379 (citations omitted). The Court of Appeals
- ruled that failure to comply with these internal report-
- ing rules could require dismissal of the forfeiture action
- as untimely. The court remanded the case for a deter-
- mination whether the Government had satisfied its
- obligation to make prompt reports. Id., at 1382.
- We granted certiorari, 507 U. S. ___ (1993), to resolve
- a conflict among the Courts of Appeals on the constitu-
- tional question presented. Compare United States v.
- Premises and Real Property at 4492 South Livonia Road,
- 889 F. 2d 1258 (CA2 1989), with United States v. A
- Single Family Residence and Real Property, 803 F. 2d
- 625 (CA11 1986). We now affirm the due process ruling
- and reverse the ruling on the timeliness question.
-
- II
- The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment
- guarantees that -[n]o person shall . . . be deprived of
- life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.-
- Our precedents establish the general rule that individu-
- als must receive notice and an opportunity to be heard
- before the Government deprives them of property. See
- United States v. $8,850, 461 U. S. 555, 562, n. 12
- (1983); Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67, 82 (1972);
- Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp. of Bay View, 395
- U. S. 337, 342 (1969) (Harlan, J., concurring); Mullane
- v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U. S. 306,
- 313 (1950).
- The Government does not, and could not, dispute that
- the seizure of Good's home and four-acre parcel deprived
- him of property interests protected by the Due Process
- Clause. By the Government's own submission, the
- seizure gave it the right to charge rent, to condition
- occupancy, and even to evict the occupants. Instead, the
- Government argues that it afforded Good all the process
- the Constitution requires. The Government makes two
- separate points in this regard. First, it contends that
- compliance with the Fourth Amendment suffices when
- the Government seizes property for purposes of forfei-
- ture. In the alternative, it argues that the seizure of
- real property under the drug forfeiture laws justifies an
- exception to the usual due process requirement of
- preseizure notice and hearing. We turn to these issues.
-
- A
- The Government argues that because civil forfeiture
- serves a -law enforcement purpos[e],- Brief for United
- States 13, the Government need comply only with the
- Fourth Amendment when seizing forfeitable property.
- We disagree. The Fourth Amendment does place
- restrictions on seizures conducted for purposes of civil
- forfeiture, One 1958 Plymouth Sedan v. Pennsylvania,
- 380 U. S. 693, 696 (1965) (holding that the exclusionary
- rule applies to civil forfeiture), but it does not follow
- that the Fourth Amendment is the sole constitutional
- provision in question when the Government seizes
- property subject to forfeiture.
- We have rejected the view that the applicability of one
- constitutional amendment pre-empts the guarantees of
- another. As explained in Soldal v. Cook County, 506
- U. S. __, __ (1992) (slip op., at 14):
- -Certain wrongs affect more than a single right and,
- accordingly, can implicate more than one of the
- Constitution's commands. Where such multiple
- violations are alleged, we are not in the habit of
- identifying as a preliminary matter the claim's
- `dominant' character. Rather, we examine each
- constitutional provision in turn.-
- Here, as in Soldal, the seizure of property implicates
- two -`explicit textual source[s] of constitutional protec-
- tion,'- the Fourth Amendment and the Fifth. Ibid. The
- proper question is not which Amendment controls but
- whether either Amendment is violated.
- Nevertheless, the Government asserts that when
- property is seized for forfeiture, the Fourth Amendment
- provides the full measure of process due under the Fifth.
- The Government relies on Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U. S.
- 103 (1975), and Graham v. Connor, 490 U. S. 386
- (1989), in support of this proposition. That reliance is
- misplaced. Gerstein and Graham concerned not the
- seizure of property but the arrest or detention of
- criminal suspects, subjects we have considered to be
- governed by the provisions of the Fourth Amendment
- without reference to other constitutional guarantees. In
- addition, also unlike the seizure presented by this case,
- the arrest or detention of a suspect occurs as part of the
- regular criminal process, where other safeguards ordi-
- narily ensure compliance with due process.
- Gerstein held that the Fourth Amendment, rather than
- the Due Process Clause, determines the requisite post-
- arrest proceedings when individuals are detained on
- criminal charges. Exclusive reliance on the Fourth
- Amendment is appropriate in the arrest context, we
- explained, because the Amendment was -tailored
- explicitly for the criminal justice system,- and its
- -balance between individual and public interests always
- has been thought to define the `process that is due' for
- seizures of person or property in criminal cases.-
- Gerstein, supra, at 125, n. 27. Furthermore, we noted
- that the protections afforded during an arrest and initial
- detention are -only the first stage of an elaborate
- system, unique in jurisprudence, designed to safeguard
- the rights of those accused of criminal conduct.- Ibid.
- (emphasis in original).
- So too, in Graham we held that claims of excessive
- force in the course of an arrest or investigatory stop
- should be evaluated under the Fourth Amendment
- reasonableness standard, not under the -more general-
- ized notion of `substantive due process.'- 490 U. S., at
- 395. Because the degree of force used to effect a seizure
- is one determinant of its reasonableness, and because
- the Fourth Amendment guarantees citizens the right -to
- be secure in their persons . . . against unreasonable . . .
- seizures,- we held that a claim of excessive force in the
- course of such a seizure is -most properly characterized
- as one invoking the protections of the Fourth Amend-
- ment.- 490 U. S., at 394.
- Neither Gerstein nor Graham, however, provides
- support for the proposition that the Fourth Amendment
- is the beginning and end of the constitutional inquiry
- whenever a seizure occurs. That proposition is inconsis-
- tent with the approach we took in Calero-Toledo v.
- Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U. S. 663 (1974), which
- examined the constitutionality of ex parte seizures of
- forfeitable property under general principles of due
- process, rather than the Fourth Amendment. And it is
- at odds with our reliance on the Due Process Clause to
- analyze prejudgment seizure and sequestration of
- personal property. See, e. g., Fuentes v. Shevin, 407
- U. S. 67 (1972); Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 416 U. S.
- 600 (1974).
- It is true, of course, that the Fourth Amendment
- applies to searches and seizures in the civil context and
- may serve to resolve the legality of these governmental
- actions without reference to other constitutional provi-
- sions. See Camara v. Municipal Court of San Francisco,
- 387 U. S. 523 (1967) (holding that a warrant based on
- probable cause is required for administrative search of
- residences for safety inspections); Skinner v. Railway
- Labor Executives' Assn., 489 U. S. 602 (1989) (holding
- that federal regulations authorizing railroads to conduct
- blood and urine tests of certain employees, without a
- warrant and without reasonable suspicion, do not violate
- the Fourth Amendment prohibition against unreasonable
- searches and seizures). But the purpose and effect of
- the Government's action in the present case go beyond
- the traditional meaning of search or seizure. Here the
- Government seized property not to preserve evidence of
- wrongdoing, but to assert ownership and control over the
- property itself. Our cases establish that government
- action of this consequence must comply with the Due
- Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amend-
- ments.
- Though the Fourth Amendment places limits on the
- Government's power to seize property for purposes of
- forfeiture, it does not provide the sole measure of
- constitutional protection that must be afforded property
- owners in forfeiture proceedings. So even assuming that
- the Fourth Amendment were satisfied in this case, it
- remains for us to determine whether the seizure com-
- plied with our well-settled jurisprudence under the Due
- Process Clause.
-
- B
- Whether ex parte seizures of forfeitable property
- satisfy the Due Process Clause is a question we last
- confronted in Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing
- Co., 416 U. S. 663 (1974), which held that the Govern-
- ment could seize a yacht subject to civil forfeiture
- without affording prior notice or hearing. Central to our
- analysis in Calero-Toledo was the fact that a yacht was
- the -sort [of property] that could be removed to another
- jurisdiction, destroyed, or concealed, if advance warning
- of confiscation were given.- Id., at 679. The ease with
- which an owner could frustrate the Government's
- interests in the forfeitable property created a -`special
- need for very prompt action'- that justified the postpone-
- ment of notice and hearing until after the seizure. Id.,
- at 678 (quoting Fuentes, 407 U. S., at 91).
- We had no occasion in Calero-Toledo to decide whether
- the same considerations apply to the forfeiture of real
- property, which, by its very nature, can be neither
- moved nor concealed. In fact, when Calero-Toledo was
- decided, both the Puerto Rican statute, P. R. Laws Ann.,
- Tit. 24, 2512 (Supp. 1973), and the federal forfeiture
- statute upon which it was modeled, 21 U. S. C. 881
- (1970 ed.), authorized the forfeiture of personal property
- only. It was not until 1984, ten years later, that
- Congress amended 881 to authorize the forfeiture of
- real property. See 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(7); Pub. L.
- 98-473, 306, 98 Stat. 2050.
- 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 encroachment-to minimize
- substantively unfair or mistaken deprivations of prop-
- erty . . . .- Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S., at 80-81.
- We tolerate some exceptions to the general rule requir-
- ing predeprivation notice and hearing, but only in
- -`extraordinary situations where some valid governmen-
- tal interest is at stake that justifies postponing the
- hearing until after the event.'- Id., at 82 (quoting
- Boddie v. Connecticut, 401 U. S. 371, 379 (1971)); United
- States v. $8,850, 461 U. S., at 562, n. 12. Whether the
- seizure of real property for purposes of civil forfeiture
- justifies such an exception requires an examination of
- the competing interests at stake, along with the prompt-
- ness and adequacy of later proceedings. The three-part
- inquiry set forth in Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319
- (1976), provides guidance in this regard. The Mathews
- analysis requires us to consider the private interest
- affected by the official action; the risk of an erroneous
- deprivation of that interest through the procedures used,
- as well as the probable value of additional safeguards;
- and the Government's interest, including the administra-
- tive burden that additional procedural requirements
- would impose. Id., at 335.
- Good's right to maintain control over his home, and to
- be free from governmental interference, is a private
- interest of historic and continuing importance. Cf.
- United States v. Karo, 468 U. S. 705, 714-715 (1984);
- Payton v. New York, 445 U. S. 573, 590 (1980). The
- seizure deprived Good of valuable rights of ownership,
- including the right of sale, the right of occupancy, the
- right to unrestricted use and enjoyment, and the right
- to receive rents. All that the seizure left him, by the
- Government's own submission, was the right to bring a
- claim for the return of title at some unscheduled future
- hearing.
- In Fuentes, we held that the loss of kitchen appliances
- and household furniture was significant enough to
- warrant a predeprivation hearing. 407 U. S., at 70-71.
- And in Connecticut v. Doehr, 500 U. S. 1 (1991), we held
- that a state statute authorizing prejudgment attachment
- of real estate without prior notice or hearing was
- unconstitutional, in the absence of extraordinary circum-
- stances, even though the attachment did not interfere
- with the owner's use or possession and did not affect, as
- a general matter, rentals from existing leaseholds.
- The seizure of a home produces a far greater depriva-
- tion than the loss of furniture, or even attachment. It
- gives the Government not only the right to prohibit sale,
- but also the right to evict occupants, to modify the
- property, to condition occupancy, to receive rents, and to
- supersede the owner in all rights pertaining to the use,
- possession, and enjoyment of the property.
- The Government makes much of the fact that Good
- was renting his home to tenants, and contends that the
- tangible effect of the seizure was limited to taking the
- $900 a month he was due in rent. But even if this
- were the only deprivation at issue, it would not render
- the loss insignificant or unworthy of due process protec-
- tion. The rent represents a significant portion of the
- exploitable economic value of Good's home. It cannot be
- classified as de minimis for purposes of procedural due
- process. In sum, the private interests at stake in the
- seizure of real property weigh heavily in the Mathews
- balance.
- The practice of ex parte seizure, moreover, creates an
- unacceptable risk of error. Although Congress designed
- the drug forfeiture statute to be a powerful instrument
- in enforcement of the drug laws, it did not intend to
- deprive innocent owners of their property. The affirma-
- tive defense of innocent ownership is allowed by statute.
- See 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(7) (-[N]o property shall be
- forfeited under this paragraph, to the extent of an
- interest of an owner, by reason of any act or omission
- established by that owner to have been committed or
- omitted without the knowledge or consent of that
- owner-).
- The ex parte preseizure proceeding affords little or no
- protection to the innocent owner. In issuing a warrant
- of seizure, the magistrate judge need determine only
- that there is probable cause to believe that the real
- property was -used, or intended to be used, in any
- manner or part, to commit, or to facilitate the commis-
- sion of- a felony narcotics offense. Ibid. The Govern-
- ment is not required to offer any evidence on the
- question of innocent ownership or other potential
- defenses a claimant might have. See, e.g., Austin v.
- United States, 509 U. S. ___ (1993) (holding that
- forfeitures under 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(4) and (a)(7) are
- subject to the limitations of the Excessive Fines Clause).
- Nor would that inquiry, in the ex parte stage, suffice to
- protect the innocent owner's interests. -[F]airness can
- rarely be obtained by secret, one-sided determination of
- facts decisive of rights. . . . No better instrument has
- been devised for arriving at truth than to give a person
- in jeopardy of serious loss notice of the case against him
- and opportunity to meet it.- Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee
- Committee v. McGrath, 341 U. S. 123, 170-172 (1951)
- (Frankfurter, J., concurring) (footnotes omitted).
- The purpose of an adversary hearing is to ensure the
- requisite neutrality that must inform all governmental
- decisionmaking. That protection is of particular impor-
- tance here, where the Government has a direct pecuni-
- ary interest in the outcome of the proceeding. See
- Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U. S. ___, ___, n. 9 (1991)
- (opinion of Scalia, J.) (slip op., at 19, n. 9) (-[I]t makes
- sense to scrutinize governmental action more closely
- when the State stands to benefit-). Moreover, the avail-
- ability of a postseizure hearing may be no recompense
- for losses caused by erroneous seizure. Given the
- congested civil dockets in federal courts, a claimant may
- not receive an adversary hearing until many months
- after the seizure. And even if the ultimate judicial
- decision is that the claimant was an innocent owner, or
- that the Government lacked probable cause, this deter-
- mination, coming months after the seizure, -would not
- cure the temporary deprivation that an earlier hearing
- might have prevented.- Doehr, supra, at ___ (slip op.,
- at 12).
- This brings us to the third consideration under
- Mathews, -the Government's interest, including the
- function involved and the fiscal and administrative
- burdens that the additional or substitute procedural
- requirement would entail.- 424 U. S., at 335. The
- governmental interest we consider here is not some
- general interest in forfeiting property but the specific
- interest in seizing real property before the forfeiture
- hearing. The question in the civil forfeiture context is
- whether ex parte seizure is justified by a pressing need
- for prompt action. See Fuentes, 407 U. S., at 91. We
- find no pressing need here.
- This is apparent by comparison to Calero-Toledo,
- where the Government's interest in immediate seizure of
- a yacht subject to civil forfeiture justified dispensing
- with the usual requirement of prior notice and hearing.
- Two essential considerations informed our ruling in that
- case: first, immediate seizure was necessary to establish
- the court's jurisdiction over the property, 416 U. S., at
- 679, and second, the yacht might have disappeared had
- the Government given advance warning of the forfeiture
- action. Ibid. See also United States v. Von Neumann,
- 474 U. S. 242, 251 (1986) (no preseizure hearing is
- required when customs officials seize an automobile at
- the border). Neither of these factors is present when
- the target of forfeiture is real property.
- Because real property cannot abscond, the court's
- jurisdiction can be preserved without prior seizure. It
- is true that seizure of the res has long been considered
- a prerequisite to the initiation of in rem forfeiture
- proceedings. See Republic Nat. Bank of Miami v. United
- States, 506 U. S. ___, ___ (1992); United States v. One
- Assortment of 89 Firearms, 465 U. S. 354, 363 (1984).
- This rule had its origins in the Court's early admiralty
- cases, which involved the forfeiture of vessels and other
- movable personal property. See Taylor v. Carryl, 20
- How. 583, 599 (1858); The Brig Ann, 9 Cranch 289
- (1815); Keene v. United States, 5 Cranch 304, 310 (1809).
- Justice Story, writing for the Court in The Brig Ann,
- explained the justification for the rule as one of fixing
- and preserving jurisdiction: -[B]efore judicial cognizance
- can attach upon a forfeiture in rem, . . . there must be
- a seizure; for until seizure it is impossible to ascertain
- what is the competent forum.- 9 Cranch, at 291. But
- when the res is real property, rather than personal
- goods, the appropriate judicial forum may be determined
- without actual seizure.
- As The Brig Ann held, all that is necessary -[i]n order
- to institute and perfect proceedings in rem, [is] that the
- thing should be actually or constructively within the
- reach of the Court.- Ibid. And as we noted last Term,
- -[f]airly read, The Brig Ann simply restates the rule that
- the court must have actual or constructive control of the
- res when an in rem forfeiture suit is initiated.- Repub-
- lic Nat. Bank, supra, at ___ (slip op., at 7). In the case
- of real property, the res may be brought within the
- reach of the court simply by posting notice on the
- property and leaving a copy of the process with the
- occupant. In fact, the rules which govern forfeiture
- proceedings under 881 already permit process to be
- executed on real property without physical seizure:
- -If the character or situation of the property is such
- that the taking of actual possession is impracticable,
- the marshal or other person executing the process
- shall affix a copy thereof to the property in a con-
- spicuous place and leave a copy of the complaint
- and process with the person having possession or
- the person's agent.- Rule E(4)(b), Supplemental
- Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims.
- See also United States v. TWP 17 R 4, Certain Real
- Property in Maine, 970 F. 2d 984, 986, and n. 4 (CA1
- 1992).
- Nor is the ex parte seizure of real property necessary
- to accomplish the statutory purpose of 881(a)(7). The
- Government's legitimate interests at the inception of
- forfeiture proceedings are to ensure that the property
- not be sold, destroyed, or used for further illegal activity
- prior to the forfeiture judgment. These legitimate inter-
- ests can be secured without seizing the subject property.
- Sale of the property can be prevented by filing a
- notice of lis pendens as authorized by state law when
- the forfeiture proceedings commence. 28 U. S. C. 1964;
- and see Haw. Rev. Stat. 634-51 (1985) (lis pendens
- provision). If there is evidence, in a particular case,
- that an owner is likely to destroy his property when
- advised of the pending action, the Government may
- obtain an ex parte restraining order, or other appropri-
- ate relief, upon a proper showing in district court. See
- Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 65; United States v. Premises and
- Real Property at 4492 South Livonia Road, 889 F. 2d
- 1258, 1265 (CA2 1989). The Government's policy of
- leaving occupants in possession of real property under
- an occupancy agreement pending the final forfeiture
- ruling demonstrates that there is no serious concern
- about destruction in the ordinary case. See Brief for
- United States 13, n. 6 (citing Directive No. 90-10 (Oct.
- 9, 1990), Executive Office for Asset Forfeiture, Office of
- Deputy Attorney General). Finally, the Government can
- forestall further illegal activity with search and arrest
- warrants obtained in the ordinary course.
- In the usual case, the Government thus has various
- means, short of seizure, to protect its legitimate inter-
- ests in forfeitable real property. There is no reason to
- take the additional step of asserting control over the
- property without first affording notice and an adversary
- hearing.
- Requiring the Government to postpone seizure until
- after an adversary hearing creates no significant ad-
- ministrative burden. A claimant is already entitled to
- an adversary hearing before a final judgment of forfei-
- ture. No extra hearing would be required in the typical
- case, since the Government can wait until after the for-
- feiture judgment to seize the property. From an admin-
- istrative standpoint it makes little difference whether
- that hearing is held before or after the seizure. And
- any harm that results from delay is minimal in compar-
- ison to the injury occasioned by erroneous seizure.
-
- C
- It is true that, in cases decided over a century ago, we
- permitted the ex parte seizure of real property when the
- Government was collecting debts or revenue. See, e.g.,
- Springer v. United States, 102 U. S. 586, 593-594
- (1881); Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Improvement
- Co., 18 How. 272 (1856). Without revisiting these cases,
- it suffices to say that their apparent rationale-like that
- for allowing summary seizures during wartime, see
- Stoehr v. Wallace, 255 U. S. 239 (1921); Bowles v.
- Willingham, 321 U. S. 503 (1944), and seizures of con-
- taminated food, see North American Cold Storage Co. v.
- Chicago, 211 U. S. 306 (1908)-was one of executive
- urgency. -The prompt payment of taxes,- we noted,
- -may be vital to the existence of a government.-
- Springer, supra, at 594. See also G. M. Leasing Corp.
- v. United States, 429 U. S. 338, 352, n. 18 (1977) (-The
- rationale underlying [the revenue] decisions, of course,
- is that the very existence of government depends upon
- the prompt collection of the revenues-).
- A like rationale justified the ex parte seizure of tax-
- delinquent distilleries in the late nineteenth century,
- see, e.g., United States v. Stowell, 133 U. S. 1 (1890);
- Dobbins's Distillery v. United States, 96 U. S. 395
- (1878), since before passage of the Sixteenth Amend-
- ment, the Federal Government relied heavily on liquor,
- customs, and tobacco taxes to generate operating reve-
- nues. In 1902, for example, nearly 75 percent of total
- federal revenues-$479 million out of a total of $653
- million-was raised from taxes on liquor, customs, and
- tobacco. See U. S. Bureau of Census, Historical Statis-
- tics of the United States, Colonial Times to the Present
- 1122 (1976).
- The federal income tax code adopted in the first quar-
- ter of this century, however, afforded the taxpayer
- notice and an opportunity to be heard by the Board of
- Tax Appeals before the Government could seize property
- for nonpayment of taxes. See Revenue Act of 1921, 42
- Stat. 265-266; Revenue Act of 1924, 43 Stat. 297. In
- Phillips v. Commissioner, 283 U. S. 589 (1931), the
- Court relied upon the availability, and adequacy, of
- these preseizure administrative procedures in holding
- that no judicial hearing was required prior to the sei-
- zure of property. Id., at 597-599 (citing Act of Febru-
- ary 26, 1926, ch. 27, 274(a), 44 Stat. 9, 55; Act of May
- 29, 1928, ch. 852, 272(a), 601, 45 Stat. 791, 852, 872).
- These constraints on the Commissioner could be overrid-
- den, but only when the Commissioner made a deter-
- mination that a jeopardy assessment was necessary.
- 283 U. S., at 598. Writing for a unanimous Court,
- Justice Brandeis explained that under the tax laws
- -[f]ormal notice of the tax liability is thus given; the
- Commissioner is required to answer; and there is a
- complete hearing de novo . . . . These provisions amply
- protect the [taxpayer] against improper administrative
- action.- Id., at 598-599; see also Commissioner v.
- Shapiro, 424 U. S. 614, 631 (1976) (-[In] the Phillips
- case . . . the taxpayer's assets could not have been
- taken or frozen . . . until he had either had, or waived
- his right to, a full and final adjudication of his tax
- liability before the Tax Court (then the Board of Tax
- Appeals)-).
- Similar provisions remain in force today. The current
- Internal Revenue Code prohibits the Government from
- levying upon a deficient taxpayer's property without
- first affording the taxpayer notice and an opportunity
- for a hearing, unless exigent circumstances indicate that
- delay will jeopardize the collection of taxes due. See 26
- U. S. C. 6212, 6213, 6851, 6861.
- Just as the urgencies that justified summary seizure
- of property in the 19th century had dissipated by the
- time of Phillips, neither is there a plausible claim of
- urgency today to justify the summary seizure of real
- property under 881(a)(7). Although the Government
- relies to some extent on forfeitures as a means of de-
- fraying law enforcement expenses, it does not, and we
- think could not, justify the prehearing seizure of forfeit-
- able real property as necessary for the protection of its
- revenues.
-
- D
- The constitutional limitations we enforce in this case
- apply to real property in general, not simply to resi-
- dences. That said, the case before us well illustrates an
- essential principle: Individual freedom finds tangible
- expression in property rights. At stake in this and
- many other forfeiture cases are the security and privacy
- of the home and those who take shelter within it.
- Finally, the suggestion that this one petitioner must
- lose because his conviction was known at the time of
- seizure, and because he raises an as applied challenge
- to the statute, founders on a bedrock proposition: fair
- procedures are not confined to the innocent. The ques-
- tion before us is the legality of the seizure, not the
- strength of the Government's case.
- In sum, based upon the importance of the private
- interests at risk and the absence of countervailing Gov-
- ernment needs, we hold that the seizure of real property
- under 881(a)(7) is not one of those extraordinary in-
- stances that justify the postponement of notice and
- hearing. Unless exigent circumstances are present, the
- Due Process Clause requires the Government to afford
- notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard before
- seizing real property subject to civil forfeiture.
- To establish exigent circumstances, the Government
- must show that less restrictive measures-i.e., a lis pen-
- dens, restraining order, or bond-would not suffice to
- protect the Government's interests in preventing the
- sale, destruction, or continued unlawful use of the real
- property. We agree with the Court of Appeals that no
- showing of exigent circumstances has been made in this
- case, and we affirm its ruling that the ex parte seizure
- of Good's real property violated due process.
-
- III
- We turn now to the question whether a court must
- dismiss a forfeiture action that the Government filed
- within the statute of limitations, but without complying
- with certain other statutory timing directives.
- Section 881(d) of Title 21 incorporates the -provisions
- of law relating to the seizure, summary and judicial
- forfeiture, and condemnation of property for violation of
- the customs laws.- The customs laws in turn set forth
- various timing requirements. Section 1621 of Title 19
- contains the statute of limitations: -No suit or action to
- recover any pecuniary penalty or forfeiture of property
- accruing under the customs laws shall be instituted
- unless such suit or action is commenced within five
- years after the time when the alleged offense was dis-
- covered.- All agree that the Government filed its action
- within the statutory period.
- The customs laws also contain a series of internal
- requirements relating to the timing of forfeitures.
- Section 1602 of Title 19 requires that a customs agent
- -report immediately- to a customs officer every seizure
- for violation of the customs laws, and every violation of
- the customs laws. Section 1603 requires that the cus-
- toms officer -report promptly- such seizures or violations
- to the United States attorney. And 1604 requires the
- Attorney General -forthwith to cause the proper proceed-
- ings to be commenced- if it appears probable that any
- fine, penalty, or forfeiture has been incurred. The
- Court of Appeals held, over a dissent, that failure to
- comply with these internal timing requirements man-
- dates dismissal of the forfeiture action. We disagree.
- We have long recognized that -many statutory requisi-
- tions 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 requisi-
- tions ineffectual.- French v. Edwards, 13 Wall. 506, 511
- (1872). We have held that if a statute does not specify
- a consequence for noncompliance with statutory timing
- provisions, the federal courts will not in the ordinary
- course impose their own coercive sanction. See United
- States v. Montalvo-Murillo, 495 U. S. 711, 717-721
- (1990); Brock v. Pierce County, 476 U. S. 253, 259-262
- (1986); see also St. Regis Mohawk Tribe v. Brock, 769 F.
- 2d 37, 41 (CA2 1985) (Friendly, J.).
- In Montalvo-Murillo, for example, we considered the
- Bail Reform Act of 1984, which requires an -immedi-
- at[e]- hearing upon a pretrial detainee's -first appear-
- ance before the judicial officer.- 18 U. S. C. 3142(f).
- Because -[n]either the timing requirements nor any
- other part of the Act [could] be read to require, or even
- suggest, that a timing error must result in release of a
- person who should otherwise be detained,- we held that
- the federal courts could not release a person pending
- trial solely because the hearing had not been held -im-
- mediately.- 495 U. S., at 716-717. We stated that
- -[t]here 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.-
- Id., at 717 (citing French, supra, at 511). To the con-
- trary, we stated that -[w]e do not agree that we should,
- or can, invent a remedy to satisfy some perceived need
- to coerce the courts and the Government into complying
- with the statutory time limits.- 495 U. S., at 721.
- Similarly, in Brock, supra, we considered a statute
- requiring that the Secretary of Labor begin an investi-
- gation within 120 days of receiving information about
- the misuse of federal funds. The respondent there
- argued that failure to act within the specified time
- period divested the Secretary of authority to investigate
- a claim after the time limit had passed. We rejected
- that contention, relying on the fact that the statute did
- not specify a consequence for a failure to comply with
- the timing provision. Id., at 258-262.
- Under our precedents, the failure of Congress to speci-
- fy a consequence for noncompliance with the timing
- requirements of 19 U. S. C. 1602-1604 implies that
- Congress intended the responsible officials administering
- the Act to have discretion to determine what disciplin-
- ary measures are appropriate when their subordinates
- fail to discharge their statutory duties. Examination of
- the structure and history of the internal timing provi-
- sions at issue in this case supports the conclusion that
- the courts should not dismiss a forfeiture action for
- noncompliance. Because 1621 contains a statute of
- limitations-the usual legal protection against stale
- claims-we doubt Congress intended to require dismissal
- of a forfeiture action for noncompliance with the inter-
- nal timing requirements of 1602-1604. Cf. United
- States v. $8,850, 461 U. S., at 563, n. 13.
- Statutes requiring customs officials to proceed with
- dispatch have existed at least since 1799. See Act of
- Mar. 2, 1799, 89, 1 Stat. 695-696. These directives
- help to ensure that the Government is prompt in ob-
- taining revenue from forfeited property. It would make
- little sense to interpret directives designed to ensure the
- expeditious collection of revenues in a way that renders
- the Government unable, in certain circumstances, to
- obtain its revenues at all.
- We hold that courts may not dismiss a forfeiture
- action filed within the five-year statute of limitations for
- noncompliance with the internal timing requirements of
- 1602-1604. The Government filed the action in this
- case within the five-year statute of limitations, and that
- sufficed to make it timely. We reverse the contrary
- holding of the Court of Appeals.
-
- IV
- The case is remanded for further proceedings consis-
- tent with this opinion.
-
- It is so ordered.
-
- ============================ 92-1180.ZX.filt =======================
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 92-1180
- --------
- UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JAMES DANIEL
- GOOD REAL PROPERTY et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the ninth circuit
- [December 13, 1993]
-
- Chief Justice Rehnquist, with whom Justice Scalia
- joins, and Justice O'Connor joins in Parts II and III,
- concurring in part and dissenting in part.
- I concur in Parts I and III of the Court's opinion and
- dissent with respect to Part II. The Court today departs
- from longstanding historical precedent and concludes
- that the ex parte warrant requirement under the Fourth
- Amendment fails to afford adequate due process protec-
- tion to property owners who have been convicted of a
- crime that renders their real property susceptible to civil
- forfeiture under 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(7). It reaches this
- conclusion although no such adversary hearing is
- required to deprive a criminal defendant of his liberty
- before trial. And its reasoning casts doubt upon long
- settled law relating to seizure of property to enforce
- income tax liability. I dissent from this ill-considered
- and disruptive decision.
-
-
- I
-
- The Court applies the three-factor balancing test for
- evaluating procedural due process claims set out in
- Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319 (1976), to reach its
- unprecedented holding. I reject the majority's expansive
- application of Mathews. Mathews involved a due process
- challenge to the adequacy of administrative procedures
- established for the purpose of terminating Social Secu-
- rity disability benefits, and the Mathews balancing test
- was first conceived to address due process claims arising
- in the context of modern administrative law. No
- historical practices existed in this context for the Court
- to consider. The Court has expressly rejected the notion
- that the Mathews balancing test constitutes a -one-size-
- fits-all- formula for deciding every due process claim
- that comes before the Court. See Medina v. California,
- 505 U. S. ___ (1992) (holding that the Due Process
- Clause has limited operation beyond the specific guaran-
- tees enumerated in the Bill of Rights). More important-
- ly, the Court does not work on a clean slate in the civil
- forfeiture context involved here. It has long sanctioned
- summary proceedings in civil forfeitures. See, e. g.,
- Dobbins's Distillery v. United States, 96 U. S. 395 (1878)
- (upholding seizure of a distillery by executive officers
- based on ex parte warrant); and G. M. Leasing Corp. v.
- United States, 429 U. S. 338 (1977) (upholding warrant-
- less automobile seizures).
-
-
- A
-
- The Court's fixation on Mathews sharply conflicts with
- both historical practice and the specific textual source of
- the Fourth Amendment's -reasonableness- inquiry. The
- Fourth Amendment strikes a balance between the
- people's security in their persons, houses, papers, and
- effects and the public interest in effecting searches and
- seizures for law enforcement purposes. Zurcher v.
- Stanford Daily, 436 U. S. 547, 559 (1978); see also
- Maryland v. Buie, 494 U. S. 325, 331 (1990); and
- Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives' Assn., 489 U. S.
- 602, 619 (1989). Compliance with the standards and
- procedures prescribed by the Fourth Amendment
- constitutes all the -process- that is -due- to respondent
- Good under the Fifth Amendment in the forfeiture
- context. We made this very point in Gerstein v. Pugh,
- 420 U. S. 103 (1975), with respect to procedures for
- detaining a criminal defendant pending trial:
- -The historical basis of the probable cause require-
- ment is quite different from the relatively recent
- application of variable procedural due process in
- debtor-creditor disputes and termination of govern-
- ment-created benefits. The Fourth Amendment was
- tailored explicitly for the criminal justice system,
- and its balance between individual and public
- interests always has been thought to define the
- `process that is due' for seizures of person or prop-
- erty in criminal cases, including the detention of
- suspects pending trial.- Id. at 125, n. 27 (emphasis
- added).
- The Gerstein Court went on to decide that while there
- must be a determination of probable cause by a neutral
- magistrate in order to detain an arrested suspect prior
- to trial, such a determination could be made in a
- nonadversarial proceeding, based on hearsay and written
- testimony. Id., at 120. It is paradoxical indeed to hold
- that a criminal defendant can be temporarily deprived
- of liberty on the basis of an ex parte probable cause
- determination, yet respondent Good cannot be temporar-
- ily deprived of property on the same basis. As we said
- in United States v. Monsanto, 491 U. S. 600, 615-616
- (1989):
- -[I]t would be odd to conclude that the Government
- may not restrain property, such as the home and
- apartment in respondent's possession, based on a
- finding of probable cause, when we have held that
- (under appropriate circumstances), the Government
- may restrain persons where there is a finding of
- probable cause to believe that the accused has
- committed a serious offense.-
- Similarly, in Graham v. Connor, 490 U. S. 386,
- 394-395 (1989), the Court faced the question of what
- constitutional standard governs a free citizen's claim
- that law enforcement officials used excessive force in the
- course of making an arrest, investigatory stop, or other
- -seizure- of his person. We held that the Fourth
- Amendment, rather than the Due Process Clause,
- provides the source of any specific limitations on the use
- of force in seizing a person: -Because the Fourth
- Amendment provides an explicit textual source of
- constitutional protection against this sort of physically
- intrusive governmental conduct, that Amendment, not
- the more generalized notion of `substantive due process'
- must be the guide for analyzing these claims.- Id., at
- 395. The -explicit textual source of constitutional
- protection- found in the Fourth Amendment should also
- guide the analysis of respondent Good's claim of a right
- to additional procedural measures in civil forfeitures.
-
-
- B
-
- The Court dismisses the holdings of Gerstein and
- Graham as inapposite because they concern -the arrest
- or detention of criminal suspects.- Ante at 6. But we
- have never held that the Fourth Amendment is limited
- only to criminal proceedings. In Soldal v. Cook County,
- 506 U. S. ___, ___ (1992), we expressly stated that the
- Fourth Amendment -applies in the civil context as well.-
- Our historical treatment of civil forfeiture procedures
- underscores the notion that the Fourth Amendment
- specifically governs the process afforded in the civil
- forfeiture context, and it is too late in the day to
- question its exclusive application. As we decided in
- Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U. S.
- 663 (1974), there is no need to look beyond the Fourth
- Amendment in civil forfeitures proceedings involving the
- Government because ex parte seizures are -too firmly
- fixed in the punitive and remedial jurisprudence of the
- country to be now displaced.- Id., at 686 (quoting J. W.
- Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co. v. United States, 254 U. S.
- 505, 510-511 (1921) (forfeiture not a denial of procedural
- due process despite the absence of preseizure notice and
- opportunity for a hearing)).
- The Court acknowledges the long history of ex parte
- seizures of real property through civil forfeiture, see
- Phillips v. Commissioner, 283 U. S. 589 (1931); Springer
- v. United States, 102 U. S. 586 (1881); Murray's Lessee
- v. Hoboken Land & Improvement Co., 18 How. 272
- (1856); United States v. Stowell, 133 U. S. 1 (1890); and
- Dobbins's Distillery v. United States, 96 U. S. 395
- (1878), and says -[w]ithout revisiting these cases,- ante,
- at 16,-whatever that means-that they appear to
- depend on the need for prompt payment of taxes. The
- Court goes on to note that the passage of the Sixteenth
- Amendment alleviated the Government's reliance on
- liquor, customs, and tobacco taxes as sources of operat-
- ing revenue. Whatever the merits of this novel distinc-
- tion, it fails entirely to distinguish the leading case in
- the field, Phillips v. Commissioner, supra, a unanimous
- opinion authored by Justice Brandeis. That case dealt
- with the enforcement of income tax liability, which the
- Court says has replaced earlier forms of taxation as the
- principle source of governmental revenue. There the
- Court said:
- -The right of the United States to collect its internal
- revenue by summary administrative proceedings has
- long been settled . . . [w]here, as here, adequate
- opportunity is afforded for a later judicial determi-
- nation of the legal rights, summary proceedings to
- secure prompt performance of pecuniary obligations
- to the government have been consistently sustained.-
- 283 U. S., at 595 (footnote omitted).
- -Where only property rights are involved, mere
- postponement of the judicial enquiry is not a denial
- of due process, if the opportunity given for the
- ultimate judicial determination of the liability is
- adequate.- Id., at 596-597.
- Thus today's decision does not merely discard estab-
- lished precedence regarding excise taxes, but deals at
- least a glancing blow to the authority of the Govern-
- ment to collect income tax delinquencies by summary
- proceedings.
-
-
- II
-
- The Court attempts to justify the result it reaches by
- expansive readings of Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67
- (1972), and Connecticut v. Doehr, 500 U. S. ___ (1991).
- In Fuentes, the Court struck down state replevin
- procedures, finding that they served no important state
- interest that might justify the summary proceedings.
- 407 U. S., at 96. Specifically, the Court noted that the
- tension between the private buyer's use of the property
- pending final judgment and the private seller's interest
- in preventing further use and deterioration of his
- security tipped the balance in favor of a prior hearing in
- certain replevin situations. -[The provisions] allow
- summary seizure of a person's possessions when no more
- than private gain is directly at stake.- Id., at 92. Cf.
- Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 416 U. S. 600 (1974) (up-
- holding Louisiana sequestration statute that provided
- immediate postdeprivation hearing along with the option
- of damages).
- The Court in Fuentes also was careful to point out the
- limited situations in which seizure before hearing was
- constitutionally permissible, and included among them
- -summary seizure of property to collect the internal
- revenue of the United States.- 407 U. S., at 91-92
- (citing Phillips v. Commissioner, supra). Certainly the
- present seizure is analogous, and it is therefore quite
- inaccurate to suggest that Fuentes is authority for the
- Court's holding in the present case.
- Likewise in Doehr, the Court struck down a state
- statute authorizing prejudgment attachment of real
- estate without prior notice or hearing due to potential
- bias of the self-interested private party seeking attach-
- ment. The Court noted that the statute enables one of
- the private parties to -make use of state procedures with
- the overt, significant assistance of state officials,- that
- involve state action -substantial enough to implicate the
- Due Process Clause.- Connecticut v. Doehr, supra, at
- ___ (quoting Tulsa Professional Collection Services, Inc.
- v. Pope, 485 U. S. 478, 486 (1988)). The Court con-
- cluded that, absent exigent circumstances, the private
- party's interest in attaching the property did not justify
- the burdening of the private property owner's rights
- without a hearing to determine the likelihood of recov-
- ery. 500 U. S., at ___. In the present case, however, it
- is not a private party but the Government itself which
- is seizing the property.
- The Court's effort to distinguish Calero-Toledo v.
- Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U. S. 663 (1974), is
- similarly unpersuasive. The Court says that -[c]entral
- to our analysis in Calero-Toledo was the fact that a
- yacht was the `sort [of property] that could be removed
- to another jurisdiction, destroyed, or concealed, if
- advanced warning of confiscation were given.'- Id., at
- 679. Ante, at 8. But this is one of the three reasons
- given by the Court for upholding the summary forfeiture
- in that case: the other two--fostering the public interest
- and preventing continued illicit use of the property,- and
- the fact that the -seizure is not initiated by self-interested
- private parties; rather, Commonwealth officials deter-
- mine whether seizure is appropriate . . . ,- 416 U. S., at
- 679, are both met in the present case. And while not
- capable of being moved or concealed, the real property
- at issue here surely could be destroyed or damaged.
- Several dwellings are located on the property that was
- seized from respondent Good, and these buildings could
- easily be destroyed or damaged to prevent them from
- falling into the hands of the Government if prior notice
- were required.
- The government interests found decisive in Calero-
- Toledo are equally present here: the seizure of respond-
- ent Good's real property serves important governmental
- purposes in combatting illegal drugs; a preseizure notice
- might frustrate this statutory purpose by permitting
- respondent Good to destroy or otherwise damage the
- buildings on the property; and Government officials
- made the seizure rather than self-interested private
- parties seeking to gain from the seizure. Although the
- Court has found some owners entitled to an immediate
- postseizure administrative hearing, see, e. g., Mitchell v.
- W. T. Grant Co., supra, not until the majority adopted
- the Court of Appeals ruling have we held that the
- Constitution demanded notice and a preseizure hearing
- to satisfy due process requirements in civil forfeiture
- cases.
-
-
- III
-
- This is not to say that the Government's use of civil
- forfeiture statutes to seize real property in drug cases
- may not cause hardship to innocent individuals. But I
- have grave doubts whether the Court's decision in this
- case will do much to alleviate those hardships, and I am
- confident that whatever social benefits might flow from
- the decision are more than offset by the damage to
- settled principles of constitutional law which are in-
- flicted to secure these perceived social benefits. I would
- reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals in toto.
-
- ============================ 92-1180.ZX1.filt =======================
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 92-1180
- --------
- UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JAMES DANIEL
- GOOD REAL PROPERTY et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the ninth circuit
- [December 13, 1993]
-
- Justice O'Connor, concurring in part and dissenting
- in part.
- Today the Court declares unconstitutional an act of
- the Executive Branch taken with the prior approval of
- a federal magistrate in full compliance with the laws
- enacted by Congress. On the facts of this case, however,
- I am unable to conclude that the seizure of Good's
- property did not afford him due process. I agree with
- the Court's observation in an analogous case more than
- a century ago: -If the laws here in question involved
- any wrong or unnecessary harshness, it was for Con-
- gress, or the people who make congresses, to see that
- the evil was corrected. The remedy does not lie with
- the judicial branch of the government.- Springer v.
- United States, 102 U. S. 586, 594 (1881).
-
- I
- With respect to whether 19 U. S. C. 1602-1604
- impose a timeliness requirement over and above the
- statute of limitations, I agree with the dissenting judge
- below that the Ninth Circuit improperly -converted a set
- of housekeeping rules for the government into statutory
- protection for the property of malefactors.- 971 F. 2d
- 1376, 1384 (1992). I therefore join Parts I and III of
- the Court's opinion.
- I cannot agree, however, that under the circumstances
- of this case-where the property owner was previously
- convicted of a drug offense involving the property, the
- Government obtained a warrant before seizing it, and
- the residents were not dispossessed-there was a due
- process violation simply because Good did not receive
- preseizure notice and an opportunity to be heard. I
- therefore respectfully dissent from Part II of the Court's
- opinion; I also join Parts II and III of the opinion of
- The Chief Justice.
-
- II
- My first disagreement is with the Court's holding that
- the Government must give notice and a hearing before
- seizing any real property prior to forfeiting it. That
- conclusion is inconsistent with over a hundred years of
- our case law. We have already held that seizure for
- purpose of forfeiture is one of those -extraordinary
- situations,- Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67, 82 (1972)
- (internal quotation marks omitted), in which the Due
- Process Clause does not require predeprivation notice
- and an opportunity to be heard. Calero-Toledo v.
- Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U. S. 663, 676-680
- (1974). As we have recognized, Calero-Toledo -clearly
- indicates that due process does not require federal
- [agents] to conduct a hearing before seizing items
- subject to forfeiture.- United States v. $8,850, 461 U. S.
- 555, 562, n. 12 (1983); see also United States v. Von
- Neumann, 474 U. S. 242, 249, n. 7 (1986). Those cases
- reflect the common-sense notion that the property owner
- receives all the process that is due at the forfeiture
- hearing itself. See id., at 251 (-[The claimant's] right to
- a [timely] forfeiture proceeding . . . satisfies any due
- process right with respect to the [forfeited property]-);
- Windsor v. McVeigh, 93 U. S. 274, 279 (1876).
- The distinction the Court tries to draw between our
- precedents and this case-the only distinction it can
- draw-is that real property is somehow different than
- personal property for due process purposes. But that
- distinction has never been considered constitutionally
- relevant in our forfeiture cases. Indeed, this Court
- rejected precisely the same distinction in a case in which
- we were presented with a due process challenge to the
- forfeiture of real property for back taxes:
- -The power to distrain personal property for the
- payment of taxes is almost as old as the common
- law. . . . Why is it not competent for Congress to
- apply to realty as well as personalty the power to
- distrain and sell when necessary to enforce the
- payment of a tax? It is only the further legitimate
- exercise of the same power for the same purpose.-
- Springer, supra, at 593-594.
- There is likewise no basis for distinguishing between
- real and personal property in the context of forfeiture of
- property used for criminal purposes. The required nexus
- between the property and the crime-that it be used to
- commit, or facilitate the commission of, a drug
- offense-is the same for forfeiture of real and personal
- property. Compare 21 U. S. C. 881(a)(4) with
- 881(a)(7); see Austin v. United States, 509 U. S. ___,
- ___ (1993) (construing the two provisions equivalently).
- Forfeiture of real property under similar circumstances
- has long been recognized. Dobbins's Distillery v. United
- States, 96 U. S. 395, 399 (1878) (upholding forfeiture of
- -the real estate used to facilitate the [illegal] operation
- of distilling-); see also United States v. Stowell, 133
- U. S. 1 (1890) (upholding forfeiture of land and buildings
- used in connection with illegal brewery).
- The Court attempts to distinguish our precedents by
- characterizing them as being based on -executive
- urgency.- Ante, at 16. But this case, like all forfeiture
- cases, also involves executive urgency. Indeed, the
- Court in Calero-Toledo relied on the same cases the
- Court disparages:
- -[D]ue process is not denied when postponement of
- notice and hearing is necessary to protect the public
- from contaminated food, North American [Cold]
- Storage Co. v. Chicago, 211 U. S. 306 (1908); . . . or
- to aid the collection of taxes, Phillips v. Commis-
- sioner, 283 U. S. 589 (1931); or the war effort,
- United States v. Pfitsch, 256 U. S. 547 (1921).- 416
- U. S., at 679.
- The Court says that there is no -plausible claim of
- urgency today to justify the summary seizure of real
- property under 881(a)(7).- Ante, at 17-18. But we
- said precisely the opposite in Calero-Toledo: -The
- considerations that justified postponement of notice and
- hearing in those cases are present here.- 416 U. S., at
- 679. The only distinction between this case and Calero-
- Toledo is that the property forfeited here was realty,
- whereas the yacht in Calero-Toledo was personalty.
- It is entirely spurious to say, as the Court does, that
- executive urgency depends on the nature of the property
- sought to be forfeited. The Court reaches its anomalous
- result by mischaracterizing Calero-Toledo, stating that
- the movability of the yacht there at issue was -[c]entral
- to our analysis.- Ante, at 8. What we actually said in
- Calero-Toledo, however, was that -preseizure notice and
- hearing might frustrate the interests served by [forfeit-
- ure] statutes, since the property seized-as here, a
- yacht-will often be of a sort that could be removed to
- another jurisdiction, destroyed, or concealed, if advance
- warning of confiscation were given.- 416 U. S., at 679
- (emphasis added). The fact that the yacht could be
- sunk or sailed away was relevant to, but hardly disposi-
- tive of, the due process analysis. In any event, land and
- buildings are subject to damage or destruction. See
- ante, at 8 (Rehnquist, C. J., concurring in part and
- dissenting in part). Moreover, that was just one of the
- three justifications on which we relied in upholding the
- forfeiture in Calero-Toledo. The other two-the impor-
- tance of the governmental purpose and the fact that the
- seizure was made by government officials rather than
- private parties-are without a doubt equally present in
- this case, as The Chief Justice's opinion demonstrates.
- Ante, at 7-8.
-
- III
- My second disagreement is with the Court's holding
- that the Government acted unconstitutionally in seizing
- this real property for forfeiture without giving Good
- prior notice and an opportunity to be heard. I agree
- that the due process inquiry outlined in Mathews v.
- Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319, 335 (1976)-which requires a
- consideration of the private interest affected, the risk of
- erroneous deprivation and the value of additional
- safeguards, and the Government's interest-provides an
- appropriate analytical framework for evaluating whether
- a governmental practice violates the Due Process Clause
- notwithstanding its historical pedigree. Cf. Medina v.
- California, 505 U. S. ___, ___ (1992) (O'Connor, J.,
- concurring in judgment). But this case is an as applied
- challenge to the seizure of Good's property; on these
- facts, I cannot conclude that there was a constitutional
- violation.
- The private interest at issue here-the owner's right
- to control his property-is significant. Cf. Connecticut
- v. Doehr, 500 U. S. ___, ___ (1991) (-[T]he property
- interests that attachment affects are significant-). Yet
- the preforfeiture intrusion in this case was minimal.
- Good was not living on the property at the time, and
- there is no indication that his possessory interests were
- in any way infringed. Moreover, Good's tenants were
- allowed to remain on the property. The property
- interest of which Good was deprived was the value of
- the rent during the period between seizure and the
- entry of the judgment of forfeiture-a monetary interest
- identical to that of the property owner in $8,850, supra,
- in which we stated that preseizure notice and hearing
- was not required.
- The Court emphasizes that people have a strong
- interest in their homes. Ante, at 9, 18. But that
- observation confuses the Fourth and the Fifth Amend-
- ments. The -sanctity of the home- recognized by this
- Court's cases, e. g., Payton v. New York, 445 U. S. 573,
- 601 (1980), is founded on a concern with governmental
- intrusion into the owner's possessory or privacy inter-
- ests-the domain of the Fourth Amendment. Where, as
- here, the Government obtains a warrant supported by
- probable cause, that concern is allayed. The Fifth
- Amendment, on the other hand, is concerned with
- deprivations of property interests; for due process
- analysis, it should not matter whether the property to
- be seized is real or personal, home or not. The relevant
- inquiry is into the governmental interference with the
- owner's interest in whatever property is at issue, an
- intrusion that is minimal here.
- Moreover, it is difficult to see what advantage a
- preseizure adversary hearing would have had in this
- case. There was already an ex parte hearing before a
- magistrate to determine whether there was probable
- cause to believe that Good's property had been used in
- connection with a drug trafficking offense. That hearing
- ensured that the probable validity of the claim had been
- established. Cf. Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp., 395
- U. S. 337, 343 (1969) (Harlan, J., concurring). The
- Court's concern with innocent owners (see ante, at
- 10-11) is completely misplaced here, where the warrant
- affidavit indicated that the property owner had already
- been convicted of a drug offense involving the property.
- See App. 29-31.
- At any hearing-adversary or not-the Government
- need only show probable cause that the property has
- been used to facilitate a drug offense in order to seize
- it; it will be unlikely that giving the property owner an
- opportunity to respond will affect the probable-cause
- determination. Cf. Gerstein v. Pugh, 420 U. S. 103,
- 121-122 (1975). And we have already held that prop-
- erty owners have a due process right to a prompt
- postseizure hearing, which is sufficient to protect the
- owner's interests. See $8,850, 461 U. S., at 564-565;
- Von Neumann, 474 U. S., at 249.
- The Government's interest in the property is substan-
- tial. Good's use of the property to commit a drug
- offense conveyed all right and title to the United States,
- although a judicial decree of forfeiture was necessary to
- perfect the Government's interest. See United States v.
- A Parcel of Rumson, N. J., Land, 507 U. S. ___, ___
- (1993) (plurality opinion); compare Doehr, supra, at ___
- (noting that the plaintiff -had no existing interest in
- Doehr's real estate when he sought the attachment-).
- Seizure allowed the Government to protect its inchoate
- interest in the property itself. Cf. Mitchell v. W. T.
- Grant Co., 416 U. S. 600, 608-609 (1974).
- Seizure also permitted the Government -to assert in
- rem jurisdiction over the property in order to conduct
- forfeiture proceedings, thereby fostering the public
- interest in preventing continued illicit use of the
- property and in enforcing criminal sanctions.- Calero-
- Toledo, 416 U. S., at 679 (footnote omitted); see also
- Fuentes, 407 U. S., at 91, n. 23, citing Ownbey v.
- Morgan, 256 U. S. 94 (1921). In another case in which
- the forfeited property was land and buildings, this Court
- stated:
- -Judicial proceedings in rem, to enforce a forfeiture,
- cannot in general be properly instituted until the
- property inculpated is previously seized by the
- executive authority, as it is the preliminary seizure
- of the property that brings the same within the
- reach of such legal process.- Dobbins's Distillery, 96
- U. S., at 396, citing The Brig Ann, 9 Cranch 289
- (1815).
- The Government in Dobbins's Distillery proceeded almost
- exactly as it did here: The United States Attorney
- swore out an affidavit alleging that the premises were
- being used as an illegal distillery, and thus were subject
- to forfeiture; a federal judge issued a seizure warrant;
- a deputy United States Marshal seized the property by
- posting notices thereon admonishing anyone with an
- interest in it to appear before the court on a stated
- date; and the court, after a hearing at which Dobbins
- claimed his interest, ordered the property forfeited to the
- United States. See Record in Dobbins's Distillery v.
- United States, No. 145, O. T. 1877, pp. 2-8, 37-39,
- 46-48. The Court noted that -[d]ue executive seizure
- was made in this case of the distillery and of the real
- and personal property used in connection with the
- same.- 96 U. S., at 396.
- The Court objects that the rule has its origins in
- admiralty cases, and has no applicability when the
- object of the forfeiture is real property. But Congress
- has specifically made the customs laws applicable to
- drug forfeitures, regardless of whether the Government
- seeks to forfeit real or personal property. 21 U. S. C.
- 881(d); cf. Tyler v. Defrees, 11 Wall. 331, 346 (1871)
- (-Unquestionably, it was within the power of Congress
- to provide a full code of procedure for these cases
- [involving the forfeiture of real property belonging to
- rebels], but it chose to [adopt], as a general rule, a well-
- established system of administering the law of capture-).
- Indeed, just last Term, we recognized in a case involving
- the seizure and forfeiture of real property that -it long
- has been understood that a valid seizure of the res is a
- prerequisite to the initiation of an in rem civil forfeiture
- proceeding.- Republic Nat. Bank of Miami v. United
- States, 506 U. S. ___, ___ (1992).
- Finally, the burden on the Government of the Court's
- decision will be substantial. The practical effect of
- requiring an adversary hearing before seizure will be
- that the Government will conduct the full forfeiture
- hearing on the merits before it can claim its interest in
- the property. In the meantime, the Government can
- protect the important federal interests at stake only
- through the vagaries of state laws. And while under the
- current system only a few property owners contest the
- forfeiture, the Court's opinion creates an incentive and
- an opportunity to do so, thus increasing the workload of
- federal prosecutors and courts.
- For all these reasons, I would reverse the judgment of
- the Court of Appeals. I therefore respectfully dissent
- from Part II of the opinion of the Court.
-
- ============================ 92-1180.ZX2.filt =======================
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 92-1180
- --------
- UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JAMES DANIEL
- GOOD REAL PROPERTY et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the ninth circuit
- [December 13, 1993]
-
- Justice Thomas, concurring in part and dissenting in
- part.
- Two fundamental considerations seem to motivate the
- Court's due process ruling: first, a desire to protect the
- rights incident to the ownership of real property,
- especially residences, and second, a more implicitly
- expressed distrust of the Government's aggressive use of
- broad civil forfeiture statutes. Although I concur with
- both of these sentiments, I cannot agree that Good was
- deprived of due process of law under the facts of this
- case. Therefore, while I join Parts I and III of the
- Court's opinion, I dissent from Part II.
- Like the majority, I believe that -[i]ndividual freedom
- finds tangible expression in property rights.- Ante, at
- 18. In my view, as the Court has increasingly empha-
- sized the creation and delineation of entitlements in
- recent years, it has not always placed sufficient stress
- upon the protection of individuals' traditional rights in
- real property. Although I disagree with the outcome
- reached by the Court, I am sympathetic to its focus on
- the protection of property rights-rights that are central
- to our heritage. Cf. Payton v. New York, 445 U. S. 573,
- 601 (1980) (-[R]espect for the sanctity of the home . . .
- has been embedded in our traditions since the origins of
- the Republic-); Entick v. Carrington, 19 How. St. Tr.
- 1029, 1066 (C. P. 1765) (-The great end, for which men
- entered into society, was to secure their property-).
- And like the majority, I am disturbed by the breadth
- of new civil forfeiture statutes such as 21 U. S. C.
- 881(a)(7), which subjects to forfeiture all real property
- that is used, or intended to be used, in the commission,
- or even the facilitation, of a federal drug offense. As
- Justice O'Connor points out, ante, at 2-4, since the
- Civil War we have upheld statutes allowing for the civil
- forfeiture of real property. A strong argument can be
- made, however, that 881(a)(7) is so broad that it dif-
- fers not only in degree, but in kind, from its historical
- antecedents. See, e.g., Brief for Respondents 19-21.
- Indeed, it is unclear whether the central theory behind
- in rem forfeiture, the fiction -that the thing is primarily
- considered the offender,- J. W. Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co.
- v. United States, 254 U. S. 505, 511 (1921), can fully
- justify the immense scope of 881(a)(7). Under this
- provision, -large tracts of land [and any improvements
- thereon] which have no connection with crime other
- than being the location where a drug transaction oc-
- curred,- Brief for Respondents 20, are subject to forfeit-
- ure. It is difficult to see how such real property is
- necessarily in any sense -guilty- of an offense, as could
- reasonably be argued of, for example, the distillery in
- Dobbins's Distillery v. United States, 96 U. S. 395
- (1878), or the pirate vessel in Harmony v. United
- States, 2 How. 210 (1844). Given that current practice
- under 881(a)(7) appears to be far removed from the
- legal fiction upon which the civil forfeiture doctrine is
- based, it may be necessary-in an appropriate case-to
- reevaluate our generally deferential approach to legisla-
- tive judgments in this area of civil forfeiture.
- In my view, however, Good's due process claim does
- not present that -appropriate- case. In its haste to
- serve laudable goals, the majority disregards our case
- law and ignores the critical facts of the case before it.
- As the opinions of The Chief Justice, ante, at 5-8, and
- Justice O'Connor, ante, at 2-5, persuasively demon-
- strate, the Court's opinion is predicated in large part
- upon misreadings of important civil forfeiture prece-
- dents, especially Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing
- Co., 416 U. S. 663 (1974). I will not repeat the cri-
- tiques found in the other dissents, but will add that it
- is twice-puzzling for the majority to explain cases such
- as Springer v. United States, 102 U. S. 586 (1881), and
- Dobbins's Distillery, supra, as depending on the Federal
- Government's urgent need for revenue in the 19th cen-
- tury. First, it is somewhat odd that the Court suggests
- that the Government's financial concerns might justifi-
- ably control the due process analysis, see ante, at 16,
- and second, it is difficult to believe that the prompt
- collection of funds was more essential to the Govern-
- ment a century ago than it is today.
- I agree with the other dissenters that a fair applica-
- tion of the relevant precedents to this case would indi-
- cate that no due process violation occurred. But my
- concerns regarding the legitimacy of the current scope of
- the Government's real property forfeiture operations
- lead me to consider these cases as only helpful to the
- analysis, not dispositive. What convinces me that
- Good's due process rights were not violated are the facts
- of this case-facts that are disregarded by the Court in
- its well-intentioned effort to protect -innocent owners-
- from mistaken Government seizures. Ante, at 10. The
- Court forgets that -this case is an as applied challenge
- to the seizure of Good's property.- Ante, at 5
- (O'Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
- part). In holding that the Government generally may
- not seize real property prior to a final judgment of
- forfeiture, see ante, at 15, 18, the Court effectively
- declares that many of the customs laws are facially
- unconstitutional as they apply under 21 U. S. C. 881(d)
- to forfeiture actions brought pursuant to 881(a)(7).
- See, e.g., 19 U. S. C. 1602, 1605 (authorizing seizure
- prior to adversary proceedings). We should avoid reach-
- ing beyond the question presented in order to fashion a
- broad constitutional rule when doing so is unnecessary
- for resolution of the case before us. Cf. Ashwander v.
- TVA, 297 U. S. 288, 347 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concur-
- ring). The Court's overreaching is particularly unfortu-
- nate in this case because the Court's solicitude is so
- clearly misplaced: Good is not an -innocent owner-; he
- is a convicted drug offender.
- Like Justice O'Connor, I cannot agree with the
- Court that -under the circumstances of this case-where
- the property owner was previously convicted of a drug
- offense involving the property, the Government obtained
- a warrant before seizing it, and the residents were not
- dispossessed-there was a due process violation simply
- because Good did not receive preseizure notice and an
- opportunity to be heard.- Ante, at 2 (O'Connor, J.,
- concurring in part and dissenting in part). Wherever
- the due process line properly should be drawn, in cir-
- cumstances such as these, a preseizure hearing is not
- required as a matter of constitutional law. Moreover,
- such a hearing would be unhelpful to the property
- owner. As a practical matter, it is difficult to see what
- purpose it would serve. Notice, of course, is provided by
- the conviction itself. In my view, seizure of the prop-
- erty without more formalized notice and an opportunity
- to be heard is simply one of the many unpleasant collat-
- eral consequences that follows from conviction of a
- serious drug offense. Cf. Price v. Johnston, 334 U. S.
- 266, 285 (1948) (-Lawful incarceration brings about the
- necessary withdrawal or limitation of many privileges
- and rights-).
- It might be argued that this fact-specific inquiry is too
- narrow. Narrow, too, however, was the first question
- presented to us for review. Moreover, when, as here,
- ambitious modern statutes and prosecutorial practices
- have all but detached themselves from the ancient
- notion of civil forfeiture, I prefer to go slowly. While I
- sympathize with the impulses motivating the Court's
- decision, I disagree with the Court's due process analy-
- sis. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
-
- --
- Carl Kadie -- I do not represent EFF; this is just me.
- =kadie@eff.org, kadie@cs.uiuc.edu =
-
-
-