State v. One Motor Vehicle to Wit: 1982 Plymouth, Serial No. JP3BE4439CU404899

507 A.2d 633, 67 Md. App. 310, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 7, 1986
Docket873, September Term, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 507 A.2d 633 (State v. One Motor Vehicle to Wit: 1982 Plymouth, Serial No. JP3BE4439CU404899) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. One Motor Vehicle to Wit: 1982 Plymouth, Serial No. JP3BE4439CU404899, 507 A.2d 633, 67 Md. App. 310, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 313 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

The ancient common law of deodand 1 has been for most crimes relegated to the dustbin of history. It remains, however, an effective weapon in society’s arsenal against the use of and traffic in illicit drugs. Under the subheading “Health—Controlled Dangerous Substances,” §§ 276 through 302 of Article 27 spell out the various provisions of law available to combat the use of contraband drugs. Section 297 specifically deals with the forfeiture of property to the State. Narrowing the focus more tightly, subsection *312 (a)(4) sets forth the circumstances under which a motor vehicle “shall be subject to forfeiture”:

“(4) All conveyances including aircraft, vehicles or vessels, which are used, or intended for use, to transport, or in any manner to facilitate the transportation, sale, receipt, possession, or concealment of property described in paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection____”

Of present pertinence, the key words are:

“(4) All ... vehicles ... which are used ... in any manner to facilitate the ... possession, or concealment of [controlled dangerous substances].”

The issue before us is that of whether a further subsection of § 297—subsection (f), “Motor Vehicles—Standards for seizure”—is a modification, by way of limitation, on subsection (a)(4)’s forfeiture conditions or whether subsection (f) is rather a set of “guidelines” to the police to assist them in deciding when to seize a vehicle and to recommend forfeiture to the State’s Attorney. For reasons to be discussed, we hold the latter to be the case. Even in that context, there remains an issue of what standard of review, if any, the judge at a forfeiture proceeding shall employ to determine whether the policeman properly followed the guidelines provided by the statute.

As we turn to the facts of the case, it is beyond dispute that the 1982 Plymouth in question was used, at the very least, for the possession and concealment of marijuana, if not, indeed, for the transportation, sale, or receipt of marijuana. On February 24, 1985, Officer Hicks, of the Northern District Drug Enforcement Unit, was on patrol, with two other officers, in an unmarked vehicle. They observed the Plymouth parked on the north side of the 1600 block of Sulgrave Avenue. The Plymouth was occupied by two persons: Laura Blasetti (the registered owner), in the driver’s seat; and a male, in the front passenger seat. The officers parked their vehicle approximately 20 to 30 feet behind the Plymouth. Aided by the car’s interior lights and *313 by street lights in the vicinity, the officers “could see very vividly through the rear window of the [Plymouth].”

Based on his observation of the occupants, Officer Hicks “believed there might be a narcotics transaction or some kind of narcotics violation possibly taking place.” He and one of the other officers approached the Plymouth. They saw Laura Blasetti hand the male a white, hand-rolled cigarette. When the two officers identified themselves, Ms. Blasetti attempted to place the cigarette into her purse, which was located between the two seats. Officer Hicks recovered the cigarette. Based upon his experience, he believed it to contain marijuana.

The search of the vehicle produced a large zip-lock freezer bag containing a “plant material,” which later analysis showed to be 213.6 grams of marijuana. The bag was located on a shelf underneath the glove compartment. In Officer Hick’s expert opinion, the large amount of marijuana indicated strongly that it was not for personal consumption but for commercial sale.

After Officer Hicks seized the vehicle and recommended forfeiture to the State’s Attorney, the State, on April 4, 1985, filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City a Petition for Forfeiture of the Plymouth. Both Laura Blasetti, the registered owner, and the Equitable Bank, N.A., the registered lienholder, filed an answer. At the forfeiture hearing held on June 13, 1985, however, Equitable Bank did not participate. 2

The hearing judge ultimately superimposed upon the sufficient conditions for forfeiture unequivocally recited by subsection (a)(4) the additional condition that at least one of the criteria spelled out in subsection (f)’s “guidelines” be satisfied as well. He looked, clearly not by way of any due process review of the propriety of Officer Hicks’s pretrial conduct (the judge had earlier denied Ms. Blasetti’s Motion *314 to Dismiss in that regard), at all of the substantive evidence “as the fact finder.” His stated purpose was to determine whether the State had shown “by a preponderance of the evidence that there is a cause of action.” As the ultimate fact finder on the substantive issue, the judge found:

“I find as a fact, based upon the circumstances and notwithstanding the large amount of marijuana found in the car, namely, 213.6 grams, I find as a fact that under these circumstances no sale was contemplated. I also find, and I do not think it is contested, that none of the other criteria in Subsection F of Section 297 of Article 27 is satisfied. I find as a fact that a distribution of marijuana did take place in that vehicle on that night in question from the Defendant to the passenger, the Defendant being the owner of the vehicle; however, I find as a fact that that distribution was not a sale. It was just a gratuitous transfer.
... It’s my view, in reading the Statute, that in order for a vehicle to be subject to forfeiture, then at least one of the criteria in Subsection F must be satisfied, and I find that none of the criteria in Subsection F have been satisfied____”

We hold that the judge’s interpretation of the substantive law as to forfeiture was incorrect as a matter of law. In stating the necessary conditions for a forfeiture, subsection (a)(4) “covers the waterfront.” The overall scheme of § 297 makes that clear. Its thirteen lettered subsections—(a) through (m)—each bears its own descriptive subtitle. Subsection (a), subtitled “Property subject to forfeiture,” is the only one remotely concerned with the necessary conditions for forfeiture. Barring exceptions not here pertinent, the use of a vehicle for the possession of drugs, standing alone, is enough. The judge found that condition to have been satisfied:

“I find as a fact that a distribution of marijuana did take place in that vehicle on that night in question from the *315 Defendant to the passenger, the Defendant being the owner of the vehicle; ...”

No commercial aspect to the crime is required.

The result may seem harsh. The Legislature, however, intended it to be harsh. It provided, moreover, that the courts would have little option but to apply the law with all of its intended rigor. In a series of decisions from 1971 through 1973, the Court of Appeals explained that the forfeiture law was deliberately created as a stern measure. Those decisions, each by a unanimous Court, did not hesitate to apply the stern measure. Each was brought on appeal by the State. Each reversed a decision by the trial court to deny forfeiture.

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Bluebook (online)
507 A.2d 633, 67 Md. App. 310, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-one-motor-vehicle-to-wit-1982-plymouth-serial-no-mdctspecapp-1986.