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State v. $35,453.00 U.S. Currency

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit
Jun 30, 2010
43 So. 3d 962 (La. Ct. App. 2010)

Opinion

No. 45,106-CA.

April 21, 2010. Opinion Granting Rehearing June 30, 2010.

Appeal from the Fourth Judicial District Court, Ouachita Parish, No. 2007-3651, Wilson Rambo, J.

Jerry L. Jones, District Attorney, for Appellant.

Robert Stephen Tew, Assistant District Attorney, Peter John, for Appellee.

Before BROWN, CARAWAY and DREW, JJ.


A.J. Ellis, Jr., appeals a judgment of forfeiture of a pickup truck and two separate sums of money valued at over $82,000 in the aggregate. He focuses on three alleged errors by the trial court which found that:

1. The state's notices of seizure were valid;

2. Ellis's attempt to contest the forfeitures was invalid; and

3. The lack of notice of final judgments was not being adversely decisive with respect to these forfeitures, under these facts, due to the administrative nature of this process.

Actually, the lack of Notice of Judgment(s) is the point seized upon by the trial court in allowing this appeal to go forward, months after the judgment(s) were rendered.

We affirm in all respects.

FACTS

On October 11, 2007, agents of the Monroe Metro Narcotics Task Force executed a search warrant for controlled dangerous substances at the home of the defendant, a suspected drug dealer with previous drug charges and no visible means of support.

A narcotics interdiction unit under the umbrella of the Monroe Police Department.

Drugs were indeed discovered and seized, along with:

• a combined $35,453 in cash, some taken from Ellis himself, and some taken from his premises; and

Later in these proceedings, the paperwork lists this cash seizure as $35,463, a $10 increase.

• a pickup truck, along with the title thereto. On October 15, 2007, the state timely filed an application for warrant of seizure for forfeiture pursuant to La.R.S. 40:2601(5), together with an affidavit of verification. On the same date, the trial court granted the warrant of seizure for forfeiture. This process effectuated a hold on the property, pending further disposition.

The truck was titled in the names of A.J. Ellis, Jr., and Janie H. Ellis. They are married to each other.

On October 23, 2007, the agents seized a bank account or accounts at IBERIA BANK, totaling $46,742.36. On October 25, 2007, the state timely filed a second application for warrant of seizure for forfeiture plus affidavit of verification, relative to these bank proceeds. The trial court executed this warrant, ordering the bank proceeds held pending further disposition. These documents were filed into the record on October 25, 2007.

Account #6000000509 in IBERIA BANK was listed in the names of Ms. Janie H. Ellis and Ms. Hazel V. Ellis. Hazel V. Ellis Harris is the daughter of Janie H. Ellis.

Pursuant to the forfeiture statutes, the state timely filed two separate notices of pending forfeiture:

• The first, dated October 19, 2007, relative to the October 11, 2007, seizure of $35,453 in cash proceeds and the pickup truck, was served on the defendant on October 22, 2007; and

• The second, dated October 31, 2007, relative to the October 23, 2007, seizure of the $46,742.36 in bank proceeds, was served on the defendant on November 13, 2007. On November 21, 2007, the claimant attempted to express his opposition to the process by filing a "Petition for Stipulation of Exemption And/or Notice of Claim Against Seized Property in Pending Forfeiture, and Request for Hearing for Return of Seized Property."

Oddly, there was no order attached, requesting a trial setting, which may or may not have made a difference in the timing of counsel's discernment of the invalidity of his claim on behalf of Mr. Ellis. Whether any revised strategy would have altered the case's outcome is speculative.

Crucially, the claim failed to comply with La.R.S. 40:2610, in these particulars:

• The claim was signed by his lawyer, when it should have been signed by the claimant himself;

• It was unsworn; and

• It was actually served on the Clerk of Court and the Metro Narcotics Task Force, even though R.S. 40:2610 A requires that the seizing agency and (critically) the district attorney be notified by certified mail, return receipt requested.

Even worse for Mr. Ellis, his defective filing of November 21, 2007, sought to defend only the first seizures. Consequently, Ellis made no pleading in the trial court in opposition to the second seizure — the forfeiture of the $46,742.36 in bank proceeds.

The fruits of the original search warrant consisted of the drugs, pickup truck, title to truck, and the (now) $35,463 of cash, taken from the person of A.J. Ellis, Jr., and from his home at 3504 Church Street, Monroe, Louisiana.

In other words:

• there are three parcels of property: the cash currency, the pickup truck, and the bank proceeds from IBERIA BANK;

• the claimant's filing as to the cash currency and the truck did not comply with La.R.S. 40:2610 and is, therefore, without effect; and

• the claimant failed to include in his claim any reference to the $46,742.36 in IBERIA BANK proceeds, so nothing was before the trial court, and nothing is before us, pertaining to this sum of money.

Having received no certified notice, the district attorney reasonably assumed that the defendant had simply failed to respond to the seizure notices within the requisite 30 days. Accordingly, the state proceeded administratively thereafter, effectuating no further service upon or notice to the defendant. In March 2008, four months after the defendant had filed his flawed claim, the state filed its application for forfeiture for the pickup truck and the combined monetary proceeds in excess of $82,000. Presumably the provision and execution of the original and amended judgments was done ex parte and in chambers. There are no court minutes reflecting otherwise.

Consider these comments by the assistant district attorney at a much later argument in March of 2009, with our emphasis added: "But our law requires a claimant to file a claim within thirty days from the time he is given a notice of pending forfeiture. This case — or the record in this case reflects that Mr. Ellis never filed a claim. Our law says that when a claimant fails to file a claim, the District Attorney can move the Court to enter an order of forfeiture administratively. And nothing's done in a suit record. It's all administrative. And you have affidavits from the seizing agency that, you know, this is what they did and this is what we're forfeiting and that no claims have been filed. We did that, Your Honor. That's exactly what we did. Nobody provided the District Attorney's Office with a claim pursuant to law and we got an order from the Court forfeiting the assets for that reason. We distributed the money. The money has already been distributed pursuant to law. And then I get a notice of appeal from Mr. Ellis' counsel saying that we want an appeal. And that's the first news that I knew that there was any claim to these assets at all. And that would have been, let's see — the Court signed the original application for forfeiture on March 20, 2008. On November 26, 2008, that's when I received a copy of the notice of appeal. So some March to November, whatever that math is. We get the money in March. We get an order of forfeiture in March and we distribute it pursuant to law. And in November of that year I find out that there's a claim. Okay? Our law says that an owner must file a claim, that claim must be in proper form. It must be under oath with a penalty of false swearing hanging over your head. That claim must be given to the District Attorney's Office and the seizing agency by certified mail. There's a good reason for that, Judge. We won't know of a claim if we don't get it. That's what happened in this case. Mr. Ellis' lawyer didn't file a claim. He filed a petition with the Clerk of Court. Did he serve the District Attorney's Office? No, sir. He didn't."

The trial court has subsequently made it clear that the record was not provided to it at the time the judgment of forfeiture was signed, notwithstanding the standard form language in the judgment.

The judgment starts off with this boilerplate language: "In this matter, the Court having reviewed the pleadings and documents, finding the law. . . ."

What is clear is that the most cursory review of the record by the prosecutor could have resulted in at least making the court aware that the (flawed) claim was in the record, regardless of whether or not the filing bore any legal ramifications. The court should have been advised that the defendant was objecting to the forfeiture, had the prosecutor been aware of this fact. One thing appears certain: The original judgment would not have been signed in March of 2008, at least not by this trial judge, without a clear assessment of the legal effect, vel non, of the Ellis filing. Instead, the court, operating in a vacuum, rendered its ex parte judgment, and the eagle soon flew to the respective governmental interest holders. In November of 2008, eight months after the execution of the original judgment of forfeiture, and six months after the execution of the second amended judgment, the claimant filed a motion for appeal, which the state sought to dismiss.

See specific comments of the trial court on this issue, found in footnote #3 of the trial court's Reasons for Judgment (as to the challenged right to appeal), rendered, dated, and filed on June 19, 2009.

"The eagle flies on Friday" is an expression describing payday, the line being lifted from the lyrics of the classic blues tune "Call It Stormy Monday," written in 1947 by Aaron "T-Bone" Walker. Perhaps the legendary B.B. King produced the most acclaimed recording of the song.

20% of the net proceeds to the Task Force, 40% to the Monroe Police Department, 20% to the District Attorney, and 20% to the Criminal Court Fund.

After argument and a contested hearing in March of 2009, the trial court in June of 2009 rejected the state's attempt to have claimant's appeal dismissed. Claimant's motion for new trial was rejected in July of 2009.

APPLICABLE LAW

This situation is controlled by the following:

The Seizure and Controlled Dangerous Substances Property Forfeiture Act of 1989, i.e., La.R.S. 40:2601-2622; and

State of Louisiana v.2003 Infiniti G35 VIN# JNKCV51E93MO24167 and Kristofor Rebstock, 2009-1193 (La.1/20/10), 27 So.3d 824.

THE BOTTOM LINE

We find that the state properly served Ellis with the notices of pending forfeiture, and the claimant already knew enough, at the point of service, to have secured a lawyer to protect his interests.

We find that the state, having received no notice of claimant's opposition, was entitled to proceed administratively to forfeit and disburse the proceeds, without necessity of further notice to claimant.

DISCUSSION

Ellis is out of court. The bottom line is that the state has complied with La.R.S. 40:2601, et seq., and Ellis has not.

Recent cases support the rulings of the trial court.

In State v. Six Hundred Seventy Six Dollars $676 U.S. Currency Seized from Branch, 31,095 (La.App.2d Cir. 9/23/98), 719 So.2d 154, writ denied, 1998-2359 (La. 1/8/99), 734 So.2d 1227, this court, through (now Chief) Judge Brown, stressed the mandatory procedural requirement of La.R.S. 40:2610, "which provides in part that the claim shall be sent to the seizing agency and to the district attorney by certified mail, return receipt requested. Branch failed to do this. Instead, he filed his claim with the clerk of court which will not suffice." Ellis made the same error.

The state Fifth Circuit has recently agreed, holding that the requirement of the Act stating that the claim shall be mailed to the seizing agency and to the district attorney by certified mail, return receipt requested, is mandatory, not discretionary. See State v. Johnson, 06-647 (La.App. 5th Cir. 1/30/07), 951 So.2d 1239.

In State v.2003 Infiniti G35, supra, authored by Justice Clark, this language guides us:

As is apparent from its structure, language, and general tenor, the Act provides not only a process by which the State is able to have forfeited such property in a speedy, fair, and efficient manner, without the accumulation of litigation, storage, and maintenance costs, but also provides a means through which an innocent owner or interest holder can regain his property in a speedy and relatively inexpensive process. However, in order for the Act to function as intended, courts must ensure that both the State and the owner or interest holder strictly follow each of the Act's detailed requirements for the various stages in the process.

Cf., La.R.S. 40:2621. Statutory construction
The provisions of this Chapter shall be liberally construed to effectuate its remedial purposes. Civil remedies under this Chapter shall be supplemental and not mutually exclusive. They do not preclude and are not precluded by any other provision of law.

We also find 2003 Infiniti, supra, to be quite helpful in this area. This language is especially instructive: "the owner or interest holder must file either a claim or a request for stipulation that 'shall be mailed to the seizing agency and to the district attorney by certified mail, return receipt requested.'"

Ellis's claim fell significantly short of the statutory requirements, resulting in his filing having no legal effect relative to the forfeitures. The state was entitled to rely upon the lack of receipt of any claim by certified mail. This reliance allowed the district attorney to apply for forfeiture and allocation of the property, pursuant to La.R.S. 40:2616. As in 2003 Infiniti, supra, there was no (valid) claim filed, meaning that the state was cleared to proceed on an administrative basis.

Our ruling today is in no way inapposite to our ruling in State v. $790 Cash, 36,107 (La.App.2d Cir. 6/12/02), 821 So.2d 609, in which this court held that any defects in claimants' objection to forfeiture are waived if the state, without objection, allows the pre-forfeiture rule to be fully tried. These are not the facts pertaining to Ellis. $790 Cash bolsters the requirement of strict legal compliance in forfeiture situations.

The requisite strict reading of the Act does, indeed, operate both ways. "The failure to properly serve a defendant with process as required by law is a vice of form upon which a judgment can be nullified." State v. 1987 Ford, 94-0803 (La. App. 1st Cir. 3/3/95), 652 So.2d 633. Here, Ellis was properly served with each notice of forfeiture, and he timely secured counsel to respond to the notices, refuting any alleged prejudice occasioned by his purported illiteracy.

We are troubled by the state's inability to get the VIN correct, after three tries. Though we and the jurisprudence rightfully require strict procedural compliance relative to forfeitures, the VIN problem, though embarrassing to the state, is de minimis. This clerical error is not fatal to the state's claim. In addition, Ellis was present, surrounded by drugs and cash, on the day the truck and title were taken. He suffered no confusion as to what was taken and what was taking place that day.

The VIN listed in this original judgment of forfeiture did not match the VIN listed on the truck title. The state has twice sought and the court has twice executed ex parte amended judgments, in failed attempts to correct the VIN. Unfortunately, the VIN on the third judgment is still incorrect. None of the judgments has been served on Ellis.

Ellis's filing is egregiously deficient in not strictly complying with the requirements of La.R.S. 40:2610, and "[a] petition is not a claim under the Forfeiture Act." Wright v. Bryant, 94-579 (La.App. 3d Cir. 12/7/94), 647 So.2d 625, writ denied 95-0054 (La.3/10/95), 650 So.2d 1179.

Labeled as a "Petition for Stipulation of Exemption And/or Notice of Claim Against Seized Property in Pending Forfeiture, and Request for Hearing for Return of Seized Property."

Our opinion in State v. 1979 Cadillac Deville, 25,230 (La.App.2d Cir. 12/1/93), 627 So.2d 729, is also distinguishable. In that case, we held that:

If, prior to entry of a "default" forfeiture judgment, the state had actual notice that Buckley wishes to contest the forfeiture, and actual notice of where Buckley is, then the state cannot ignore this information and seek a "default" judgment.

We further found in 1979 Cadillac Deville, supra, that, given the actual notice received by the state, the trial court erred as a matter of law in its conclusion that the mailing requirements of the forfeiture statute outweigh a defendant's fundamental right to challenge the forfeiture.

In this proceeding, of course, the district attorney never had formal or actual notice. He did not discover that the forfeiture was purportedly contested until several months after the judgments were signed, and long after the proceeds had been distributed.

See footnote #4, supra.

Confusingly, the defendant takes the position that he filed a timely notice of claim. The state counters that no claim was filed.

This dispute is actually a little more convoluted than either side indicates in brief. Our view is that Ellis's flawed claim should have been disclosed to the court before the judgment was preferred and signed. Nevertheless, the law requires us to disregard the flawed claim, due to the lack of statutory compliance.

PROBLEMS

This disposition seems harsh, in that lingering questions remain about whether procedural due process has occurred relative to:

• Any interest of Janie H. Ellis in and to the pickup truck, which is titled in the names of A.J. Ellis, Jr., and Janie H. Ellis, 3504 Church St., Monroe, LA 71202; and

Any claim for exemption of the pickup truck by Janie H. Ellis would have been fruitless because she could have never overcome the mandatory requirement of La.R.S. 40:2605(3).

• Any interest of Janie H. Ellis and Hazel V. Ellis in and to the proceeds seized from the IBERIA BANK accounts) in the names of Ms. Janie H. Ellis and Ms. Hazel V. Ellis. Indeed, we have nothing before us reflecting A.J. Ellis, Jr., as being an account holder.

There was probable cause established in the affidavit of the seizing agency officer, relative to the initial seizures of the bank proceeds, but the showing was not overwhelming. Since the two ladies filed no claim, after due notice, we have nothing before us by which to consider any relief, assuming they were due any.

CONCLUSION

Since the state complied with the applicable mandatory statutes, while Ellis did not, we find that the in rem judgment of forfeiture as to Ellis was legally rendered, and we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

We decline to assess attorney's fees in favor of or against either party. We order that all costs of this appeal be paid by appellant.

DECREE

At appellant's cost, the rulings of the trial court are AFFIRMED.

CARAWAY, J., dissents with written reasons.


I respectfully dissent.

After the trial court's rendition of the Judgment of Forfeiture, the court correctly determined at a contradictory post-judgment hearing that the delays for new trial and for appeal had never commenced running due to the failure to have provided Mr. Ellis notice of judgment. The judgment at that stage of the proceedings could not then be executed. Therefore, the trial court's authorization to publicly sell the vehicle and its order to the motor vehicle department to "cancel title in the name of the defendant" and deliver title to a new purchaser were still pending the finality of the judgment. Likewise, the portion of the judgment for distribution of the $46,742 which the state had already received out of the IberiaBank account of Ms. Ellis and her daughter was not then final.

I must note that the state's administrative procedure with the bank's acquiescence improperly resulted in the immediate payment of cash from the account to the state. The Forfeiture Act recognizes the use of a writ of attachment and constructive seizure which must be applicable to an incorporeal movable. La.R.S. 40:2606, 2607(B) and 2611(B). The demand deposit account is an incorporeal movable. Therefore, the state's power for constructive seizure under Section 2607(B)(2) alone applies. Had a garnishment under a writ of attachment been utilized for the seizure, the bank/garnishee's declaration under oath regarding the account under its control would have revealed formally that the only named defendant in the proceeding was not the owner of the account. La.C.C.P. art. 3503 and arts. 2411, et seq.

With the new trial delays for the judgment still pending, the trial court allowed evidence at the contradictory hearing which revealed the "PROBLEMS" of due process regarding the missing owners of the property which the majority correctly now identifies. Nevertheless, instead of the trial court pulling back its judgment and correcting those problems with its peremptory power under La.C.C.P. art. 927(B) for the joinder of parties indispensable for its adjudication, the court sanctioned its yet-to-be enforceable judgment, or in the more accurate musical vernacular, "let the dogs out," against the property of owners who had never been made parties to the action. That judgment is still not final. I will not sanction it by affirmation on appeal but instead would reverse it with the same peremptory power for remand for the inclusion of Ms. Ellis and her daughter into the suit.

ON REHEARING

Before BROWN, STEWART, CARAWAY, DREW and MOORE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Counsel for the State relies heavily on the recent Louisiana Supreme Court case of State of Louisiana v. 20003 Infiniti G35 VIN #JNKCV51E93MO24167 and Kristofor Rebstock, 2009-1193 (La.1/20/10), 27 So.3d 824, but seems to overlook the conspicuous procedure set forth in that case. Louisiana's Seizure and Controlled Dangerous Substances Property Forfeiture Act of 1989 establishes particular guidelines that must be followed in order to effect a proper seizure and forfeiture of property. Courts cannot pick and choose to whom to apply these guidelines. "In order for the Act to function as intended, courts must ensure that both the State and the owner or interest holder strictly follow each of the Act's detailed requirements for the various stages in the process." Id. at 828. The State not only failed to serve a notice of final judgment upon the defendant on three occasions, but it initially failed to include the suit caption on the Notice of Pending Forfeiture Pleadings which it presented to the trial judge. Janie H. Ellis and Hazel V. Ellis were never once named in any one of those pleadings. A.J. Ellis, Jr. was the only defendant identified even though the vehicle identification number was listed from a title that bore the names of the defendant as well as Janie H. Ellis; yet she was never made a defendant in the proceedings. The IberiaBank account's number was identified; yet the fact that Mr. Ellis was not a party to the account was not. Such representations to a court for the obtainment of a judgment are inexcusable. Therefore, as a result of the State's and defendant's failure to follow the proper procedure, commencement of forfeiture proceedings is best started anew.

In its representation to the court, the State notes that the claim filed by Mr. Ellis, although defective, never contests the seizure of the bank accounts and we agree. However, Mr. Ellis was not a proper party under La.R.S. 40:2610 to assert any claim to a bank account in which he has no interest or ownership. Ordinarily the time delay to assert a claim in a forfeiture proceeding is thirty days after Notice of Pending Forfeiture. When asked whether she was ever notified that the funds in the account had been seized, Mrs. Janie Ellis testified that she never received any notification; and although there was a copy of the letter from Iberia Bank addressed to her residence stating that such had occurred, there is no conclusive evidence showing that Mrs. Ellis actually received this notice. In any event, neither of the owners of the bank account were ever served with process as defendants in this action.

Even after realizing these "problems of due process" the trial court, in essence, ignored the rights of both indispensable parties, Mrs. Janie Ellis and her daughter, Ms. Hazel Ellis. Even though these women did not assert a claim to the bank funds, it does not shock the sense of justice to allow them the opportunity to be heard. Mrs. Ellis testified that the funds in the bank were her daughter's and in both their names in cases where she would need to make emergency withdrawals. This is not to say that these funds cannot be claimed by the State as the fruits of illegal activity, but such determination must be made after hearing from all parties. Pursuant to La.C.C.P. art. 927(B), this court now reverses the judgment of the trial court and remands for the joinder of Janie H. Ellis and Hazel V. Ellis and for all other proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Costs of this appeal are assessed to the State of Louisiana in the amount of $191.50 in accordance with La.R.S. 13:5112.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

DREW, J., dissents to the "Per Curiam on Rehearing" with written reasons.

BROWN, C.J., dissents for the reasons set forth by Judge Drew.


For the reasons outlined in my previous opinion, I make these additional comments, respectfully dissenting from the rehearing majority's Per Curiam, which reverses the entirety of our previous opinion.

The legislative branch enacts statutes; the judicial branch interprets these laws. Here, however, the majority on rehearing engages in judicial activism, to arrive at a desired result, notwithstanding the law of criminal forfeiture and the procedural posture of this matter. The new majority has declined to follow the Louisiana Supreme Court's recent decision of State v. 2003 Infinite G35 VIN# JNKCV51E93MO2467 and Kristofor Rebstock, 2009-1193 (La.1/20/10), 27 So.3d 824, which provides an enlightening roadmap to guide the execution and analysis of these cases. The new majority is apparently offended by the terms of Louisiana's Seizure and Controlled Dangerous Substances Property Forfeiture Act of 1989 (La.R.S. 40:2601-2622). Statutory objections should be addressed in the legislature.

There was ample time for anyone adversely affected to intervene in these proceedings. Consider the chronology:

• Original seizures — September 2007;

• State's application for Warrant of Seizure for Forfeiture — Oct.2007;

• Defective Objection filed by defense counsel — November 2007; and

Two points: First, this Objection ("Petition for Stipulation of Exemption and/or Notice of Claim Against Seized Property in Pending Forfeiture, and Request for Hearing for the Return of Seized Property") only covered the cash and truck. Second, wouldn't it have been a good idea for the defense lawyer to have provided an order for the hearing date, instead of just hiding in the weeds for four months?

• Actual Application for Forfeiture — March of 2008.

Critically, the majority on rehearing fails to consider the factual and legally distinct postures of the three items of forfeiture.

I. The Cash Seized at the Scene

The amount of $35,453 in U.S. currency was seized on October 11, 2007, from defendant's person and from his home, during the successful execution of a search warrant for drugs.

Defendant's lawyer filed an unsworn "petition" objecting to the seizure of this currency, but never served the district attorney properly. It is mandated by La.R.S. 40:2610 that:

• the defendant himself file the claim,

• the filing must be in affidavit form, and

• the district attorney must be served by certified mail.

None of this was done properly.

Rebstock's objection ( Rebstock, supra) was far superior to what we have here in that all three of these statutory requirements were satisfied in that case. His claim was still denied because of a lack of specificity.

Claimant's failure to follow any one of these three statutory mandates results in his objections being without effect. Since the district attorney was never legally served with any adverse claim, the state had no notice of the objection by attorney for Ellis. Accordingly, the state properly proceeded to dispose of these properties on a strictly administrative basis, all as per law.

Nowhere in the original dissent, or in the current majority opinion on rehearing, is there any factual or legal basis by which to rescind the forfeiture of this cash. The current majority just does it, sua sponte, even though this cash seizure was not even challenged upon rehearing.

II. The Pickup Truck and Title Seized at the Scene

Also seized at the Ellis home on the same date was a 2001 pickup truck, titled jointly in the names of A.J. Ellis, Jr., and Janie H. Ellis. Defendant's lawyer objected to the forfeiture of the truck, but with the same three deficiencies as outlined pertaining to the cash.

Mr. and Mrs. Ellis are married to each other.

Common deficiencies found in defendant's "petition" objecting to forfeiture of the cash and the truck: (1) the objection was not signed by the defendant, (2) it was unsworn, and (3) it was not served upon the district attorney by certified mail, as required by law.

Defendant's sole complaint at rehearing concerned the incorrect VIN# relative to this truck; no rehearing was requested on the currency or the bank proceeds.

On rehearing, the majority has ignored the "erroneous VIN" attack, reopened the entire case, and nullified seizure of the truck because Mrs. Ellis was not made a party to the petition for forfeiture of the truck. This holding somehow ignores a clear statutory prohibition as to any claim she could have made pertaining to the vehicle. Mrs. Ellis had no way to prove any exemption pertaining to this truck, since she held it jointly with her husband, "whose conduct gave rise to its forfeiture."

As per the "Sexton rule," hitherto unknown to this writer.

A property interest is exempt from forfeiture under this Chapter if its owner or holder establishes all of the following:

40:2605



That with respect to conveyances for transportation only, he did not hold the property jointly, in common, or in community with a person whose conduct gave rise to its forfeiture.

III. The Bank Proceeds

We noted in Footnote #18 of the original majority opinion that:

There was probable cause established in the affidavit of the seizing agency officer, relative to the initial seizures of the bank proceeds, but the showing was not overwhelming. Since the two ladies filed no claim, after due notice, we have nothing before us by which to consider any relief, assuming they were due any.

Our previous majority opinion merely noted the due process question relative to Janie H. Ellis (wife of Mr. Ellis) and Hazel V. Ellis (daughter of Mr. Ellis). We then resolved any due process issues in favor of the state.

The truck was titled in the names of A.J. Ellis, Jr., and Janie H. Ellis. The bank proceeds were apparently in an account or accounts in the names of Janie H. Ellis and Hazel V. Ellis. Whether or not others were named on the accounts is unclear.

At least the inadequate objections about the cash and the truck were timely. No claim was made about the bank accounts, until this appeal.

Puzzlingly, Janie Ellis and Hazel Ellis have had years to complain, yet they have chosen to remain silent. The majority has cast these ladies as victims. There are other interpretations of their non-actions. The bottom line is that these ladies have never asked for our help, yet the majority finds a way to grant them relief on appeal.

The rehearing application asks for review of one item of the previous majority opinion, about one of the seized properties. Instead, the new majority, apparently applying the "sniff test, throws out everything, and suggests that everyone just start over.

Only alleging for rehearing that the incorect VIN# should cause us to reconsider forfeiture of the truck. Nothing about the accounts.

With respect, I dissent.


Summaries of

State v. $35,453.00 U.S. Currency

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit
Jun 30, 2010
43 So. 3d 962 (La. Ct. App. 2010)
Case details for

State v. $35,453.00 U.S. Currency

Case Details

Full title:STATE OF LOUISIANA, Plaintiff-Appellee v. $35,453.00 US CURRENCY AND A…

Court:Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit

Date published: Jun 30, 2010

Citations

43 So. 3d 962 (La. Ct. App. 2010)