Cooper v. Police Property Clerk

416 F. Supp. 49, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14252
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 7, 1976
DocketNo. 74 C 916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 416 F. Supp. 49 (Cooper v. Police Property Clerk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Police Property Clerk, 416 F. Supp. 49, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14252 (E.D.N.Y. 1976).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

PLATT, District Judge.

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

Plaintiff brought this civil rights action to recover $1,000 which he alleges is illegally retained by one of the defendants, the Police Property Clerk of the City of New York.

It appears that upon his arrest on February 27, 1973, for reckless driving, plaintiff offered the arresting officer $1,000 to drop the charges. He was indicted for bribery and reckless driving, and was convicted of the former offense upon a plea of guilty in Kings County Supreme Court on July 24, 1973. That same day he was sentenced to a prison term of not more than four years.

At the time of the arrest, plaintiff’s $1,000 was confiscated. According to his “Affidavit in Support of Civil Rights Complaint,” submitted by plaintiff in this action on June 19, 1974, plaintiff requested the return of his money on April 16, 1974. On the same day he requested a release from the defendant District Attorney of Kings County. Since all information before this Court indicates that plaintiff’s criminal proceedings ended on the day of his sentence, it follows that these requests were made almost nine months after the end of his criminal proceedings.

DISCUSSION

I

Plaintiff claims that since the defendant Property Clerk has never initiated forfeiture proceedings concerning the $1,000, he is entitled by the terms of the opinion of the Court of Appeals in McClendon v. Ro[51]*51setti, 460 F.2d Ill (2d Cir. 1972), and the opinions of Judge Lasker in the same case after remand to a return of the money, and further claims that the failure to return the money is a violation of his civil rights.

The Court of Appeals declared in McClendon that certain New York City Administrative Code provisions establishing procedures for the return of seized property were, as applied to claimants of money or property other than contraband, unconstitutional under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The essential shortcoming of the Code provisions, as established in the Court of Appeals decision and developed by Judge Lasker on remand at 369 F.Supp. 1391 (S.D.N.Y.1974), was that they forced claimants to initiate proceedings, in which they bore the burden of proof, before they could recover property.

On July 15,1974, after further consideration, Judge Lasker issued an unreported opinion which mandated the use of certain procedures by the Property Clerk in dealing with seized property other than contraband. Such property must now be inventoried at the time of arrest, and a voucher given to the accused. Upon receipt of a timely demand for return of property accompanied by the voucher and a release from the District Attorney indicating that the property is no longer needed for a criminal proceeding, the Clerk must release the property, unless within ten days he brings a forfeiture proceeding on the grounds that the property was unlawfully obtained, was stolen, was the proceeds of a crime, or was the instrumentality of a crime. A demand is for these purposes “timely” if made by the claimant in writing within ninety days of the termination of the relevant criminal proceedings. If the claimant is imprisoned, the same ninety day period applies but the claimant may have an additional ninety days after acknowledgment of his demand to submit the release from the District Attorney. If no timely demand is made, i. e., when ninety days have passed after the termination of the relevant criminal proceedings, the property may be disposed of by the Property Clerk pursuant to law.

II

Plaintiff’s suit against the District Attorney for Kings County is based on that defendant’s failure to provide a release when plaintiff requested one on July 19, 1974. The District Attorney has since provided a release. Further, as will be indicated below, the failure to provide a release immediately did not itself cause plaintiff to be unable to recover his $1,000 or otherwise injure him or deprive him of civil rights. It follows that plaintiff states no claim against this defendant.

III

Plaintiff’s claim against defendant Property Clerk is that under McClendon he is entitled to return of the $1,000 because he made a demand for it and the Property Clerk did not thereafter begin a forfeiture action. He takes this position even though the $1,000 was the bribe offered by plaintiff and the instrumentality of a crime, and even though any claim he could make in a forfeiture proceeding would therefore be frivolous. He thus maintains that he had a right to a day in court before any forfeiture, even if only so that he could take a frivolous position. He further asserts that the Property Clerk denies him due process and therefore his civil rights when he fails to return the money in the absence of a forfeiture contest, and that since a forfeiture contest is now barred by Judge Lasker’s ten day time limit the only remedy is the return of the money.

Even assuming, however, that claimants are, as plaintiff contends, entitled to a proceeding in which they can make frivolous arguments, plaintiff too is bound by Judge Lasker’s time limits. He made no demand for the $1,000 until more than eight months had passed after his sentencing (as defendant Property Clerk points out in his Third Affirmative Defense), and plaintiff’s demand was therefore not timely. Upon the expiration of the ninetieth day after his sentencing, plaintiff lost his right to demand his day in court.

[52]*52That such a loss is not itself arbitrary and thus a due process violation is suggested by the Court of Appeals in McClendon, 460 F.2d at page 113, where the Court carefully indicates that all plaintiffs before it had made timely demands on the Property Clerk, and by Judge Lasker, who, as indicated, also endorsed the time requirement.

Nor does the fact that Judge Lasker’s adoption of a ninety day rule came only in July, 1974, justify plaintiff’s failure to make a demand in 1973. In adopting the ninety day limit, Judge Lasker simply continued — and lent validity to — the three month limit that had been provided under the City’s previous regulation (New York, N. Y., Administrative Code § 435 — 4.0(e)). The Code provisions gave plaintiff notice in 1973 that he was required to file a claim within that three month period. In other words, the decisions of Judge Lasker and the Court of Appeals invalidate the application of the other Code provisions only as to the claimants who make timely demands, • with timeliness measured as always against a ninety day limit. Those, like plaintiff, who do not make timely demands in accordance with the Code provisions must look elsewhere for relief.

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Bluebook (online)
416 F. Supp. 49, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-police-property-clerk-nyed-1976.