State v. Sanders

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 21, 2022
Docket21-358
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Sanders (State v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sanders, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-417

No. COA21-358

Filed 21 June 2022

Iredell County, No. 20 CR 055180

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

JERMAINE LYDELL SANDERS, Defendant.

Appeal by Town of Mooresville and Mooresville Police Department from

orders entered 24 November 2020 by Judge Deborah Brown and 26 January 2021,

and 11 February 2021 by Judge Christine Underwood in Iredell County District

Court. Appeal dismissed by order entered 20 April 2021 by Judge Christine

Underwood. We allowed a petition for writ of certiorari by the Town of Mooresville

and the Mooresville Police Department to review orders entered 24 November 2020

by Judge Deborah Brown and 26 January 2021, 11 February 2021, and 20 April 2021

by Judge Christine Underwood in Iredell County District Court. Heard in the Court

of Appeals 26 January 2022.

Perry Legal Services, PLLC, by Maria T. Perry, for defendant-appellee.

Cranfill Sumner LLP, by Steven A. Bader and Patrick H. Flanagan, for appellants.

Acting United States Attorney William T. Stetzer, by Assistant United States Attorney J. Seth Johnson, amicus curiae. STATE V. SANDERS

Opinion of the Court

Kristi L. Graunke and Leah J. Kang for American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina Legal Foundation, Inc.; Dawn N. Blagrove and Elizabeth G. Simpson for Emancipate NC, Inc.; Daryl Atkinson and Whitley Carpenter for Forward Justice; and Laura Holland for North Carolina Justice Center, amici curiae.

MURPHY, Judge.

¶1 Judicial proceedings pertaining to criminal seizures of personal property in

North Carolina are based on in personam, not in rem, jurisdiction. These proceedings

differ from federal civil forfeiture proceedings, which are based on in rem jurisdiction

over the property at issue. For this reason, where a federal court adopts a seizure of

property by North Carolina law enforcement, federal courts assume exclusive, in rem

jurisdiction over the seizure, as no state-level in rem jurisdiction exists to take

priority over the federal exercise of in rem jurisdiction; the ordinary rule prioritizing

the in rem jurisdiction of the first in time to exercise it does not apply unless in rem

jurisdiction exists in the first place. Here, where the trial court issued orders

purporting to exercise in rem jurisdiction, it erred. Accordingly, we must vacate the

trial court’s orders and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

¶2 This appeal arises out of a seizure of property belonging to Defendant

Jermaine Lydell Sanders by the Mooresville Police Department (“MPD”). On or about

15 November 2020, MPD officers discovered a vehicle in a hotel parking lot matching STATE V. SANDERS

the description of a vehicle provided by night shift officers. The vehicle, which

Defendant was renting, contained $16,761.00 in cash in a plastic bag in the center

console. Defendant, who was inside the hotel, fled upon seeing the officers.

Meanwhile, the MPD seized the cash.

¶3 On 19 November 2020, Defendant appeared through counsel before the Iredell

County District Court and filed a Motion for Personal Property to be Released to

Defendant (“November Motion”) arguing the currency’s seizure was unlawful.

However, the following day, while the November Motion was under consideration, an

officer of the United States Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) informed the

MPD that, because Defendant was being investigated for money laundering under 18

U.S.C. § 1956, the DHS was “adopting the case.” On 23 November 2020, the MPD

relinquished the currency to the DHS, and a DHS officer converted the funds into a

check payable to United States Customs and Border Protection.

¶4 The District Court granted Defendant’s November Motion in an order entered

24 November 2020 (“November Order”). Defendant’s counsel promptly notified the

MPD of the November Order and attempted to coordinate the return of Defendant’s

cash; however, the MPD indicated in response that it could not return the cash due

to the adoption. Having received this response, Defendant filed a Verified Motion to

Show Cause on 10 December 2020 briefly describing the foregoing events and

alleging, inter alia, that the MPD unconstitutionally seized the $16,761.00, “has the STATE V. SANDERS

financial ability to comply with the [trial] [c]ourt’s November [] [O]rder to return

[Defendant’s] cash[,]” “inexcusably failed to do so[,]” and “is subject to being held in

contempt until it complies with the order.” In response, the District Court, in an

order dated 26 January 2021 (“January Order”), “decreed that the [MPD] will be held

in contempt unless a representative from [the MPD] appears in person on [9

February] 2021 . . . to show cause why [it] should not be held in contempt for failure

to return funds to [Defendant] as ordered . . . .”

¶5 A hearing was held on 9 February 2021 in accordance with the January Order,

shortly after which the District Court entered another order (“February Order”). The

trial court made the following relevant findings of fact in the February Order:

1. On [15 November 2020], the [MPD] seized $16,761.00 in cash as a part of a search of [Defendant’s] rental vehicle, in violation of [his] 4th, 5th and 8th Amendment U.S. constitutional rights, as made applicable to the states by the 14th Amendment.

....

7. This [c]ourt acquired in rem jurisdiction over the cash on [19 November 2020—]the date [Defendant] filed the motion for return of property.

17. The [MPD] is an agency of the Town of Mooresville [(“Mooresville”)], and it operates under the supervision and control of . . . Mooresville. Together or severally, the said town and [the MPD] have the financial means to comply with the [November Order]. STATE V. SANDERS

18. Although Counsel for the [MPD] argued, in defense of not being held in contempt, that . . . Mooresville and the [MPD] are incapable of returning the seized funds because a federal agency has them, this argument has previously been resolved [by the November Order] and is res judicata.

19. Furthermore, this argument is meritless in view of . . . Mooresville and [the MPD’s] ability to use funds, or to liquidate assets, at their disposal so as to enable them to comply with the subject order by releasing $16,761.00 to [Defendant].

20. Finally, [the November Order] did not premise release of the amount of $16,761.00 on the [MPD’s] ability to effect reversal of its wrongful transfer of a different $16,761.00 to a third party.

21. The [MPD] may never be able to reverse its unauthorized conduct in attempting to remove from this court’s jurisdiction rem over which the court had jurisdiction. However, should said department later be successful in recovering $16,761.00 from federal authorities, it will obviously be entitled to keep those funds to replenish the payment required by [the November Order].

22. The [c]ourt also takes note that the [MPD] has not filed an appeal of the November . . . Order, nor a motion to set aside the [o]rder.

23. By its conduct, the [MPD] has willfully failed to comply with [the November Order].

24. . . . Mooresville and the [MPD] have had 77 days to make arrangements to comply with the [November] Order. STATE V. SANDERS

25. . . . Mooresville, by and through the [MPD], which town also had notice of the November . . . [O]rder, has willfully failed to comply with [the November Order].

Based upon these findings of fact, the District Court “conclude[d] as a matter of law[]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Sanders, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanders-ncctapp-2022.