Kuhn v. Cissel
This text of 409 A.2d 182 (Kuhn v. Cissel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Appellant, a resident of Arlington, Virginia, sued appellee, the property clerk of the Metropolitan Police Department, for the return of his shotgun which had been voluntarily surrendered to the police by a third party. The trial court refused to order the shotgun returned, ruling that it was a “dangerous article” within the meaning of D.C.Code 1973, § 22-32171 and must be disposed of accordingly. We affirm on other grounds.
In October 1976, appellant brought his shotgun into the District of Columbia to loan to a friend. The gun remained in the friend’s custody until November 1976, when police were called to the home by the friend’s wife. The wife voluntarily surrendered the gun to a Metropolitan Police Officer and it was turned over to the property clerk for disposal. The gun had never been registered in the District, and had been in the jurisdiction for more than 48 hours.2
Upon appellant’s request for the return of his shotgun, the property clerk conducted a hearing, and ruled that he was not entitled to receive the gun. Appellant then brought suit in Superior Court for return of the gun. The trial court, after de novo proceedings,3 reached the same conclusion as the property clerk, holding that [185]*185since the gun was unregistered at the time it was delivered to the police, it was unlawfully possessed by the friend4 and thus constituted a nuisance.5 The court rejected appellant’s argument that D.C.Code 1978 Supp., § 6-1875 required the return of the weapon, reasoning that the statute did not apply to the instant case because there had been no arrest or prosecution of the wife.6 For reasons set forth below, we sustain the trial court’s ruling. However, we find § 6-1875 clearly applicable to the facts of this case. We decline to decide whether a shotgun could be a “dangerous article” under § 22-3217.7
D.C.Code 1973, § 4-1568 requires the property clerk to return property to its [186]*186owner unless the property was feloniously obtained, is the proceeds of a crime, or is needed as evidence in the prosecution of a crime. Since appellant is the owner of the shotgun and it is not needed as evidence, he is entitled to the return of his shotgun under § 4-156 unless some other statute specifically provides otherwise. Of the two statutes which limit operation of this general statute where firearms are involved, D.C. Code 1973, § 22-3217 and D.C.Code 1978 Supp., § 6-1875, the latter is applicable to the facts of this case.
Section 6-1875 is part of the Firearms Control Act of 1975 (the Act or the Firearms Act)9 enacted in 1976. Concerned with the dangerous increase in the number and use of guns in the jurisdiction, the Council of the District of Columbia passed this legislation requiring the registration of all guns, and expanding the type of weapons which cannot be possessed in the District.10 The Act bars anyone from receiving, possessing, or having under his or her control any firearm or destructive device unless it is registered,11 and makes unregis-terable certain firearms.12 Under the Act, application for a registration certificate must be filed within 48 hours of bringing the firearm into the District. D.C.Code 1978 Supp., § 6-1816. In the present case, although the shotgun could have been lawfully possessed in the District, no application for a registration certificate was made either by appellant or his friend. Thus its possession within the District by appellant’s friend was unlawful.
Section 6-1875 sets forth the manner in which a . person may voluntarily surrender or deliver a weapon, registered or not, to the Metropolitan Police Department. Subsection (a) specifically prevents the arrest or prosecution of the surrendering person for violations of the Act. Subsection (b) directs that the surrendered firearm be destroyed unless it is needed as evidence. In the trial below and in oral argument, appellant argued that § 6-1875 does not apply to this case for two reasons: (1) Since the wife was not subject to arrest or prosecution under the Act, no immunity was needed, obviating the application of subsection (a). Without subsection (a) immunity, the subsection (b) provision for weapon destruction could not have independent application. (2) Section 6-1875 was only intended to apply to the situation where the owner or someone in possession with the owner’s consent surrendered the weapon. Where a third party delivered the firearm, the owner’s property rights would remain.
First, it is clear to us that the wife was technically in violation of § 6-1811 both by exercising sufficient control over the shotgun in its delivery to the police, and by being in constructive possession of it while it was kept in her home. Therefore, she could have been subject to arrest or prosecution were it not for the immunity provisions of § 6-1875(a). However, even if [187]*187she were not in violation of any section of the Act, we reject appellant’s contention below, and in oral argument, that § 6-1875(b) had no independent application. There is nothing in the language of the statute itself, nor in the legislative history,13 to warrant such a construction. Subsection (a) provides immunity for one who surrenders or delivers a weapon. It does not state that if such immunity is unnecessary, the weapon is to be returned to the owner. We will not read this exception into the statute without a clear indication that this was the intent of the Council. Indeed, in light of the Council’s objective of closely regulating firearms traffic and discouraging possession of weapons in the District, the destruction of weapons held in violation of the Act is a necessary component of the overall scheme.14 This purpose would be defeated if § 6-1875 is construed as prohibiting the destruction of a gun merely because the gun was surrendered by someone not subject to prosecution under the Act.
Appellant’s second argument is similarly flawed. Appellant asserts that since § 6-1875 only provides immunity for the immediate possessor who surrenders a weapon, and not for the owner or other person entitled to possession, by the same token the statute was not meant to cut off the owner’s property rights when someone else surrenders the property. As with the first argument, the clear language of the statute and its legislative history do not reveal any intention to so limit its application. No distinction is made anywhere between a surrender by the gun owner or one in possession with his consent, and surrender by a third party. Nor is ownership or consensual possession mentioned as exempt from the operation of § 6-1875(b). To read the section as appellant suggests would lead to the anomalous result that the owner of an illegally possessed gun could recover the weapon so long as it was surrendered to the police by a third party. The owner might be subject to other penalties for violation of the Act, but could nevertheless reacquire the weapon.15 We cannot believe the Council intended such a result. The statute is concerned with the presence of firearms in the District, not with the identity of the person who surrenders them. Any firearm not properly in compliance with the Act is thus subject to destruction.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
409 A.2d 182, 1979 D.C. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhn-v-cissel-dc-1979.