People v. Four Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty Dollars

2011 IL App (4th) 100528, 952 N.E.2d 1259
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 25, 2011
Docket4-10-0528
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2011 IL App (4th) 100528 (People v. Four Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty Dollars) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Four Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty Dollars, 2011 IL App (4th) 100528, 952 N.E.2d 1259 (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS Appellate Court

People v. Four Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty Dollars ($4,850) United States Currency, 2011 IL App (4th) 100528

Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellant, Caption v. FOUR THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS ($4,850) UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant-Appellee.

District & No. Fourth District Docket No. 4–10–0528

Argued May 10, 2011 Filed July 25, 2011

Held The forfeiture of $4,850 seized on the ground that it was connected to (Note: This syllabus illegal narcotics was barred on the ground that the State exceeded the constitutes no part of the mandatory and cumulative 97-day deadline in sections 5 and 6(A) of the opinion of the court but Drug Asset Forfeiture Procedure Act, which is intended to promote has been prepared by the efficiency and dispatch in governmental operations and protect a Reporter of Decisions for property owner’s right to reasonably prompt postdeprivation the convenience of the procedures. reader.)

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Macon County, No. 07–MR–530; the Review Hon. Lisa Holder White, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed. Counsel on Jack Ahola, State’s Attorney, of Decatur (Patrick Delfino, Robert J. Appeal Biderman, and Charles F. Mansfield, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.

Sara M. Mayo, of LaBarre, Young & Behnke, of Springfield, for appellee.

Panel JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Steigmann and Pope concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The police seized $4,850 in cash from the residence of Deeandre Woodland on the ground that the money was connected to illegal narcotics. The State thereafter brought an action pursuant to the Drug Asset Forfeiture Procedure Act (Act) (725 ILCS 150/1 through 14 (West 2006)), seeking a judgment that the currency should be forfeited to the State. Woodland filed a motion to dismiss the forfeiture action because the State had exceeded the cumulative 97-day deadline in sections 5 and 6(A) of the Act (725 ILCS 150/5, 6(A) (West 2006)). The trial court granted his motion, and the State appeals. We agree with the trial court that the cumulative 97-day deadline created by sections 5 and 6(A) is mandatory, not directory, and that missing the deadline had the consequence of barring the requested forfeiture. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND ¶3 On August 30, 2007, the State’s Attorney filed a notice of forfeiture with the circuit court. The notice was addressed to Woodland at 1435 North Woodford Street in Decatur and notified him that forfeiture proceedings were pending against $4,850 in United States currency, which the police seized on April 18, 2007, at 227 North 25th Street. The notice referred to Woodland as an owner of this currency and warned him that he might forfeit his ownership unless, within 45 days, he filed two documents with the State’s Attorney’s office: (1) a verified claim for the return of the currency, setting forth his interest in the currency and why that interest was not subject to forfeiture; and (2) a cost bond or, alternatively, an indigency affidavit. ¶4 On October 11, 2007, Woodland filed two documents with the circuit court: (1) a document entitled “Verified Claim and Motion To Dismiss” and (2) an indigency affidavit. In the first document, Woodland stated he had acquired the $4,850 “as the result of the sale

-2- of a motor vehicle, a 1997 Ford Expedition XLT, to Christy Rubi on or about April 10, 2007.” ¶5 In addition to explaining where the currency came from and why it was not subject to forfeiture, the “Verified Claim and Motion To Dismiss” pointed out the State’s noncompliance with sections 5 and 6(A) of the Act (725 ILCS 150/5, 6(A) (West 2006)). Section 5 required the police, within 52 days after seizing the currency, to notify the State’s Attorney of the seizure, and section 6(A) required the State’s Attorney, within 45 days after receiving the notice of seizure from the police, to cause a notice of pending forfeiture to be given to the owner of the currency. Woodland observed that under those two statutory provisions, sections 5 and 6(A), the State had, at the most, a total of 97 days after the seizure of the currency to give him notice of a pending forfeiture (52 + 45 = 97). He further observed that the State had missed this cumulative 97-day deadline. The police seized the currency on April 18, 2007, and 134 days later, on August 30, 2007, the State’s Attorney gave Woodland notice of a pending forfeiture. Consequently, in his “Verified Claim and Motion To Dismiss,” Woodland requested “[t]hat the forfeiture action herein commenced be dismissed, with prejudice,” and that the $4,850 be returned to him. ¶6 On June 4, 2008, by docket entry, the trial court granted Woodland’s motion for dismissal for the reason Woodland had urged, namely, the violation of the cumulative 97-day deadline in sections 5 and 6(A) (725 ILCS 150/5, 6(A) (West 2006)). ¶7 The State appealed, and on December 24, 2009, we dismissed the appeal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. People v. One Thousand Two Hundred Forty Dollars ($1,240), 396 Ill. App. 3d 665, 667 (2009). We reasoned that because the State’s Attorney had not yet filed a verified complaint pursuant to section 9(A) of the Act (725 ILCS 150/9(A) (West 2006)), the trial court “lacked jurisdiction over Woodland’s motion to dismiss.” $1,240, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 672. We explained that under the Act, “Woodland had to file his own verified claim with the State’s Attorney for the return of the property” (he had done so) and that “the State’s Attorney had then to file a verified complaint thereby commencing the judicial forfeiture proceeding. Because the latter never occurred, the court lacked jurisdiction,” so we held. Id. ¶8 On March 16, 2010, the State filed a verified complaint, which alleged as follows. On November 10, 2006, the police stopped Woodland in the 300 block of East Division Street for a traffic violation. During the traffic stop, the police searched Woodland’s person and found $1,240 in currency as well as a digital scale with cocaine residue on it. On April 18, 2007, the police executed a warrant to search Woodland’s residence at 227 North 25th Street. Woodland was home at the time. The police found an open bag of dog food by the back door, and inside the bag, they found a total of $4,850 in currency, banded into five separate bundles. In a trash can just outside the back door, the police found two plastic-bag corners with cocaine residue inside them. While searching the residence, the police questioned Woodland, and he stated he was unemployed. The complaint alleged that the $4,850 that the police had found in the bag of dog food was subject to forfeiture because the money was connected with drug trafficking. ¶9 On April 7, 2010, instead of filing an answer, Woodland filed a motion to dismiss the

-3- State’s complaint, and to return the $4,850 to him, for the same reason he had stated in his previous (premature) motion for dismissal, namely, the State had waited more than 97 days after seizing the currency to give him notice of a pending forfeiture, thereby violating sections 5 and 6(A) of the Act (725 ILCS 150/5, 6(A) (West 2006)). In a docket entry on July 1, 2010, the trial court granted Woodland’s motion, again for that reason. ¶ 10 This appeal followed.

¶ 11 II. ANALYSIS ¶ 12 A.

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2011 IL App (4th) 100528, 952 N.E.2d 1259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-four-thousand-eight-hundred-fifty-dollars-illappct-2011.