JACOBS, Justice.
Gary A. Crawford appeals from an order of the Superior Court denying his petition for return of property that was seized by police in an investigation that led to his June 1, 2001 plea of guilty to one count of third degree rape and two counts of sexual exploitation of a child. Crawford was sentenced to 30 years imprisonment (suspended after 9 years for decreasing levels of supervision) on September 26, 2001. After the Superior Court denied his motion for a reduction of sentence, that sentence was affirmed by this Court on March 25, 2003.
On August 2, 2002, Crawford filed a motion in the Superior Court seeking return of his property that had been seized in the investigation. The motion was referred to a Superior Court Commissioner for findings of fact and recommendations. The State filed a response to Crawford’s motion on December 9, 2002, in which the State opposed the return of the property. The Commissioner recommended that the property be forfeited, and the Superior Court adopted the Commissioner’s recommendation.
Crawford then appealed the order of the Superior Court to this Court, after which
the State filed a motion to affirm, which was denied. Because Crawford appeared
pro se,
this Court appointed an
amicus curiae
to address the legal issues presented.
Because it filed its motion for forfeiture less than 20 days before the date that had been scheduled for Crawford’s trial, the State concedes that it waived its right to seek forfeiture under Criminal Rule 40.
The State contends, nonetheless, that under 11
Del. C.
§ 2311(a)(2),
the trial court retained independent power to dispose of property “validly seized” whether or not the State satisfies the procedural requirements of Rule 40. Additionally, the State argues, its December 9, 2002 response to Crawford’s motion for return of property operated as a timely petition for forfeiture under 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, because that response was filed before Crawford’s sentence was affirmed on March 25, 2003.
The
amicus
responds that the State’s December 9, 2002 response cannot be considered a timely petition for forfeiture, because it was filed after the expiration of the one-year period of limitations set forth in 10
Del. C.
§ 8115. That statute requires that an action for forfeiture upon a penal statute must be filed within one year “from the accruing of the cause of action.”
The
amicus
urges that the State’s claim is time-barred under Section 8115, because Crawford’s cause of action “accrued” on the date of his guilty plea, June 1, 2001 — more than one year before the State responded to Crawford’s petition for return of property. The
amicus
also contends that even if the State’s response was timely under Section 8115, the 20-day-before-trial filing requirement of Criminal Rule 40 “trumps” 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, because under 11
Del. C.
§ 5122,
any inconsistency between the Delaware Code and the Rules of Criminal Procedure must be resolved in favor of the Court Rule.
Four issues are presented on this appeal:
First,
is Criminal Rule 40 jurisdictional, such that if the State files a petition for forfeiture less than 20 days before the scheduled criminal trial date, the State is
barred from seeking forfeiture based on a criminal statute?
Second,
when does the cause of action “accrue” for purposes of the one-year limitations period mandated by 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, which applies to actions for forfeiture based on a civil penal statute?
Third,
does Section 8115’s one-year statute of limitations for the State to file a civil action for forfeiture also apply to a defendant’s petition for return of property?
Fourth,
and finally, does 11
Del. C.
§ 2311(a)(2) independently empower the Superior Court to dispose of property seized from individuals convicted of crimes, and if so, is that power subject to the defendant’s Due Process right to a jury trial?
Forfeiture proceedings that are civil in nature are governed by the one-year statute of limitations found at 10
Del. C.
§ 8115. Also applicable to forfeiture proceedings is Criminal Rule 40(a), which requires that in a criminal proceeding, the State “shall” file a motion for forfeiture no later than 20 days before the trial of the criminal offense. Crawford, and the
ami-cus
claim that because the State failed to file a timely motion for forfeiture in his criminal case, the State forever waived its right to forfeiture, because 11
Del. C.
§ 5122 provides that any inconsistency between the Delaware Code and the Rules of Criminal Procedure must be resolved in favor of the Rules.
The difficulty with that argument is that 11
Del. C.
§ 5121, the statute that empowers the Superior Court to adopt procedural rules, also provides that “[s]uch rules shall not abridge, enlarge or modify the substantive rights of any person.”
“Any person” would presumably include jural persons such as the State. Arguably, therefore, the 20 days-before-trial filing requirement of Rule 40 cannot be jurisdictional. If it were, then Rule 40 (a procedural rule) would severely abridge the State’s statutory (substantive) right under Section 8115 to file a forfeiture proceeding within one year of the accruing of the cause of action. Moreover (as the State points out), by pleading guilty long before the scheduled criminal trial date, a defendant could preclude the State from filing a forfeiture motion before its right to do so under Rule 40 has expired.
How the inconsistency between Rule 40 and Section 8115 should be resolved, is an issue that need not be decided in this case, however. In all events, and at the latest, under Section 8115 the State was required to seek forfeiture within one year from the accrual of its cause of action. We have previously determined that a cause of action under Section 8115 “ac~ cruefs]” on the date of the defendant’s sentencing. Because the State did not file an action for forfeiture within one year from Crawford’s sentencing, the State waived its entitlement to seek forfeiture in all events.
A cause of action for forfeiture under Section 8115 accrues on “the date the criminal case ends,” which, this Court
has held, is the date of sentencing.
That is because the date of sentencing is the “benchmark” of a final judgment in a criminal case,
and the defendant’s time to file an appeal begins to run from that date.
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JACOBS, Justice.
Gary A. Crawford appeals from an order of the Superior Court denying his petition for return of property that was seized by police in an investigation that led to his June 1, 2001 plea of guilty to one count of third degree rape and two counts of sexual exploitation of a child. Crawford was sentenced to 30 years imprisonment (suspended after 9 years for decreasing levels of supervision) on September 26, 2001. After the Superior Court denied his motion for a reduction of sentence, that sentence was affirmed by this Court on March 25, 2003.
On August 2, 2002, Crawford filed a motion in the Superior Court seeking return of his property that had been seized in the investigation. The motion was referred to a Superior Court Commissioner for findings of fact and recommendations. The State filed a response to Crawford’s motion on December 9, 2002, in which the State opposed the return of the property. The Commissioner recommended that the property be forfeited, and the Superior Court adopted the Commissioner’s recommendation.
Crawford then appealed the order of the Superior Court to this Court, after which
the State filed a motion to affirm, which was denied. Because Crawford appeared
pro se,
this Court appointed an
amicus curiae
to address the legal issues presented.
Because it filed its motion for forfeiture less than 20 days before the date that had been scheduled for Crawford’s trial, the State concedes that it waived its right to seek forfeiture under Criminal Rule 40.
The State contends, nonetheless, that under 11
Del. C.
§ 2311(a)(2),
the trial court retained independent power to dispose of property “validly seized” whether or not the State satisfies the procedural requirements of Rule 40. Additionally, the State argues, its December 9, 2002 response to Crawford’s motion for return of property operated as a timely petition for forfeiture under 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, because that response was filed before Crawford’s sentence was affirmed on March 25, 2003.
The
amicus
responds that the State’s December 9, 2002 response cannot be considered a timely petition for forfeiture, because it was filed after the expiration of the one-year period of limitations set forth in 10
Del. C.
§ 8115. That statute requires that an action for forfeiture upon a penal statute must be filed within one year “from the accruing of the cause of action.”
The
amicus
urges that the State’s claim is time-barred under Section 8115, because Crawford’s cause of action “accrued” on the date of his guilty plea, June 1, 2001 — more than one year before the State responded to Crawford’s petition for return of property. The
amicus
also contends that even if the State’s response was timely under Section 8115, the 20-day-before-trial filing requirement of Criminal Rule 40 “trumps” 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, because under 11
Del. C.
§ 5122,
any inconsistency between the Delaware Code and the Rules of Criminal Procedure must be resolved in favor of the Court Rule.
Four issues are presented on this appeal:
First,
is Criminal Rule 40 jurisdictional, such that if the State files a petition for forfeiture less than 20 days before the scheduled criminal trial date, the State is
barred from seeking forfeiture based on a criminal statute?
Second,
when does the cause of action “accrue” for purposes of the one-year limitations period mandated by 10
Del. C.
§ 8115, which applies to actions for forfeiture based on a civil penal statute?
Third,
does Section 8115’s one-year statute of limitations for the State to file a civil action for forfeiture also apply to a defendant’s petition for return of property?
Fourth,
and finally, does 11
Del. C.
§ 2311(a)(2) independently empower the Superior Court to dispose of property seized from individuals convicted of crimes, and if so, is that power subject to the defendant’s Due Process right to a jury trial?
Forfeiture proceedings that are civil in nature are governed by the one-year statute of limitations found at 10
Del. C.
§ 8115. Also applicable to forfeiture proceedings is Criminal Rule 40(a), which requires that in a criminal proceeding, the State “shall” file a motion for forfeiture no later than 20 days before the trial of the criminal offense. Crawford, and the
ami-cus
claim that because the State failed to file a timely motion for forfeiture in his criminal case, the State forever waived its right to forfeiture, because 11
Del. C.
§ 5122 provides that any inconsistency between the Delaware Code and the Rules of Criminal Procedure must be resolved in favor of the Rules.
The difficulty with that argument is that 11
Del. C.
§ 5121, the statute that empowers the Superior Court to adopt procedural rules, also provides that “[s]uch rules shall not abridge, enlarge or modify the substantive rights of any person.”
“Any person” would presumably include jural persons such as the State. Arguably, therefore, the 20 days-before-trial filing requirement of Rule 40 cannot be jurisdictional. If it were, then Rule 40 (a procedural rule) would severely abridge the State’s statutory (substantive) right under Section 8115 to file a forfeiture proceeding within one year of the accruing of the cause of action. Moreover (as the State points out), by pleading guilty long before the scheduled criminal trial date, a defendant could preclude the State from filing a forfeiture motion before its right to do so under Rule 40 has expired.
How the inconsistency between Rule 40 and Section 8115 should be resolved, is an issue that need not be decided in this case, however. In all events, and at the latest, under Section 8115 the State was required to seek forfeiture within one year from the accrual of its cause of action. We have previously determined that a cause of action under Section 8115 “ac~ cruefs]” on the date of the defendant’s sentencing. Because the State did not file an action for forfeiture within one year from Crawford’s sentencing, the State waived its entitlement to seek forfeiture in all events.
A cause of action for forfeiture under Section 8115 accrues on “the date the criminal case ends,” which, this Court
has held, is the date of sentencing.
That is because the date of sentencing is the “benchmark” of a final judgment in a criminal case,
and the defendant’s time to file an appeal begins to run from that date.
Therefore, a cause of action for forfeiture based on a penal statute (which involves a criminal conviction and sentence) accrues upon the entry of final judgment in the underlying criminal case.
The parties suggest other dates, such as the date the conviction or the sentence is affirmed, or the date of the jury’s verdict of conviction (or, alternatively, the date of the guilty plea) as the time from which a cause of action “accrues.” Although these positions appear to have found some support in Superior Court case law,
this Court has held that for purposes of determining when a cause of action “accrues” under Section 8115, the controlling date is the date of sentencing.
The third issue is whether the statute of limitations applies both to the State’s petition for a forfeiture of property and to the defendant’s petition for return of property. We hold that it does. Section 8115 refers to “... the suit of the party aggrieved, ... or of the State, or otherwise”
to one year after the “accrual” of the cause of action. Thus, the one-year time bar applies to both the State and the party whose property has been seized. This Court has held that a defendant’s petition for return of property, if filed more than one year from the defendant’s sentencing, is time-barred and must be dismissed.
Crawford’s petition for return of property is not time-barred, however, because Crawford was sentenced on
September 26, 2001, and he filed his petition for the return of property on August 2, 2002. His petition, therefore, fell within Section 8115’s one-year period of limitations.
The State next asserts that its answer to Crawford’s petition should be deemed a timely motion for forfeiture of property. Assuming without deciding that filing an answer that contains an objection to a petition for return of property was a procedurally proper way for the State affirmatively to seek a forfeiture, the State’s answer was not filed until December 9, 2002 — more than one year after Crawford had been sentenced. Thus, under any scenario the State’s forfeiture claim is time-barred.
Lastly, the State claims that even if its application for forfeiture was not timely, the Superior Court is still empowered to order a forfeiture of the defendant’s property under its authority independently conferred by 11
Del. C.
§ .2311(a)(2). That statute provides that property of one “duly convicted of the alleged crime... shall be disposed of as the court directs.” Crawford and the
amicus
respond that even under that construction of Section 2311, Crawford is entitled to a jury trial on his petition for return of property. Crawford is correct: in
State v. Rossitto,
this Court determined that a defendant is entitled to the due process safeguards of a jury trial in a proceeding to determine forfeiture under Section 2311(a)(2).
Although Crawford would be entitled to a jury trial on his petition for return of property, that is of no moment in this case, because the State’s application for forfeiture was untimely under Section 8115. Therefore, no trial is needed, since Crawford’s petition for return of property must be treated as unopposed and the items of property at issue must be ordered returned to him.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this Opinion.