People v. One 1941 Cadillac Club Coupe

147 P.2d 49, 63 Cal. App. 2d 418, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 958
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1944
DocketCiv. 14133
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 147 P.2d 49 (People v. One 1941 Cadillac Club Coupe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. One 1941 Cadillac Club Coupe, 147 P.2d 49, 63 Cal. App. 2d 418, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 958 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinions

WHITE, J.

Plaintiff commenced proceedings to forfeit the defendant automobile on the ground that it was used unlawfully to transport narcotics (secs. 11610-11629, Health & Safety Code—formerly known as the State Narcotic Act). Pursuant to the code provisions, the following were notified of the proceeding: Gilbert B. Gonzales, the registered owner, and Pacific Finance Corporation of California, the legal owner. Gilbert B. Gonzales, the registered owner, filed an answer in which he denied that the vehicle was used unlawfully to conceal, convey, carry or transport narcotics. By its answer the legal owner, Pacific Finance Corporation of California, set up its interest under a conditional sales contract upon which there was a balance due in the sum of $780, and further alleging that its interest under said conditional sales contract was created after reasonable investigation by such corporation of the moral responsibility, character and reputation of the registered owner.

With reference to the seizure of said vehicle, the record discloses that on August 23, 1942, while the automobile was, with the consent of the registered owner, under the sole control and in the temporary possession of one Andrew Pekara, certain narcotic enforcement officers made a search of the vehicle and in a depression in the seat thereof, not visible to one entering the driver’s compartment, found a single marihuana cigarette. Hence, the attempted forfeiture not only of the registered owner’s interest but of the legal owner’s as well.

The case was tried under the provisions of the aforesaid • Health & Safety Code; The portion of the statute involved [420]*420is found in section 11620 of such code and reads as follows:

‘ ‘ The claimant of any right, title or interest in the vehicle may prove his lien, mortgage or conditional sales contract to be bona fide and that his right, title or interest was created after a reasonable investigation of the moral responsibility, character, and reputation of the purchaser, and without any knowledge that the vehicle was being, or was to be, used for the purpose charged.”

At the trial the State stipulated (1) that the conditional sales contract under which the Pacific Finance Corporation of California claimed an interest in said automobile was bona fide; (2) that said corporation’s right, title and interest under said contract was created without any knowledge that the vehicle was being, or to be, used for the purpose charged. The issue here presented is therefore narrowed down to the question of whether the right, title or interest of said finance company was created after a reasonable investigation by it of the moral responsibility, character and reputation of the purchaser. The trial court found that “said vehicle was used unlawfully to transport narcotics, to-wit, marihuana, and was seized by the Division of Narcotic Enforcement of the State of California on or about August 23, 1942, at the time of the arrest of Andrew Pekara, who had the specific consent of the registered owner (Gilbert B. Gonzales) to drive said vehicle;” also, “that the conditional sales contract, right, title and interest of the Pacific Finance Corporation of California arose in good faith and for a valuable consideration, and was created after a reasonable investigation of the moral responsibility, character and reputation of the purchaser, and without any knowledge that said vehicle was being or was to be used for any unlawful purpose; . . . that the amount due to Pacific Finance Corporation of California upon its conditional sales contract is the sum of $780.00 . . . (which) is less than the value of said vehicle.”

This appeal is by the State from the judgment rendered which forfeited to the State of California the interest of the registered owner, Gilbert B. Gonzales, in and to said vehicle; ordered the automobile sold at public auction and from the proceeds of the sale directed that the sum of $780 with interest at 10 per cent from December 8, 1942, be paid) to respondent corporation.

As grounds for reversal appellant urges “that the finding of the court that the right, title and interest of the Pacific [421]*421Finance Corporation ‘was created after a reasonable investigation of the moral responsibility, character and reputation of the purchaser’ is not supported by the evidence.”

The claim that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the finding that a reasonable investigation of the moral character of the owner was made, is totally without merit.

The requirements of the foregoing provision are highly penal and impose a burden of a most extraordinary nature on a lawful and useful business transaction, the like' of which is unknown elsewhere in the law. Any attempt, therefore, to enforce a forfeiture under such circumstances, imposes a corresponding duty on the courts to scan the record with meticulous care, to the end that no injustice may result from such action. (25 C.J. 1172.) And in that connection, all doubts must necessarily be resolved in favor of the innocent claimant. No rule is more firmly grounded in our law than the one which declares that neither courts of law nor of equity look with favor upon statutes which impose penalties or exact forfeitures. Therefore, every intendment and presumption is against one who seeks to enforce the penalty or forfeiture created by such a statute. (Savings & Loan Society v. McKoon, 120 Cal. 177, 179 [52 P. 305].)

Section 11610 of the Health and Safety Code relating to forfeitures of vehicles for violations of the State Narcotic Law provides as follows: “A vehicle used to unlawfully transport any narcotic, or in which any narcotic is unlawfully kept, deposited or concealed, or in which any narcotic is unlawfully possessed by an occupant thereof, shall be forfeited to the State.”

To transport means to carry or convey from one place to another. And it must clearly appear that the vehicle was being used for such a purpose. The incidental discovery of a single marihuana cigarette in a vehicle is not sufficient to establish the fact that the vehicle was being used to transport narcotics. The forfeiture provisions of the Health & Safety Code are designed to aid in the suppression of the traffic in narcotics. There is no evidence in the record tending to prove, or that even suggests, that the automobile in question was being used for such a purpose. If the attempted forfeiture is based on the balance of the aforesaid provision, viz.: “ or in which any narcotic is unlawfully kept, deposited or concealed, or in which any narcotic is unlawfully [422]*422possessed by an occupant thereof”, then it must clearly appear that either the legal or equitable owner of the vehicle, as the case may be, who is seeking to protect his interest therein, was an aider and abettor in such unlawful conduct, or in other words, pariiceps crimmis. Furthermore, the statement that when an attack is made upon a judgment on the ground that it is unsupported by the evidence, the power of reviewing courts is limited to a determination of whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uneontradicted, which will sustain the judgment rendered, is supported by legion of authority. The record herein shows that on or about June 8, 1942, an automobile dealer named Lee Evans sold the vehicle here in question to respondent Gilbert B. Gonzales on a conditional sales contract. On June 9, 1942, in the usual and ordinary course of business, respondent Pacific Finance Corporation purchased the contract from Evans.

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People v. One 1941 Cadillac Club Coupe
147 P.2d 49 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
147 P.2d 49, 63 Cal. App. 2d 418, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-one-1941-cadillac-club-coupe-calctapp-1944.