153 A. 786 | Conn. | 1931
Michael K. Krugelis purchased an automobile of a dealer under a conditional bill of sale by the terms of which the title remained in the seller until the full purchase price was paid. The dealer assigned its interest in the car as conditional vendor to the Commercial Credit Corporation. Alexandrovicz *620 took the car with the knowledge and consent of Krugelis, but without his knowledge that it would be used to transport liquor, and without the knowledge and consent of the Commercial Credit Corporation, and used it in the illegal transportation of intoxicating liquors, for which offense he was arrested and convicted and the car seized by the prosecuting authorities. The State's Attorney gave notice to Krugelis and the Commercial Credit Corporation that he would proceed under the statute to dispose of the car as a vehicle used with intent to violate the law. The Commercial Credit Corporation opposed the sale on the ground that the illegal use of the car was without its knowledge or consent. The facts are stipulated and we are asked to decide whether upon such a state of facts the court should order the sale of the car.
This application is brought under the provisions of Chapter 211 of the Public Acts of 1929 (now §§ 2719 to 2723, Revision of 1930), which deal with the disposition to be made of intoxicating liquors and of property used in connection with their sale or transportation, which have been seized in a prosecution for violation of the laws relating to such liquors. It provides that the prosecuting authority shall make application to the court having jurisdiction for an order for the disposition of the property, that reasonable notice of the pendency of the application shall be given to any person claiming an interest in such property, that if the court shall find that it belongs to him and has not been sold or used with intent to violate the law it shall order the property returned to the claimant, but if it shall find that it does not belong to the claimant, or that it has been sold or used with intent to violate the law, it shall order the property disposed of as therein provided. Sections 2722 and 2723, Revision of 1930, *621 the construction of which is herein involved, are set forth in the footnote.*
The constitutionality of this statute was attacked inPickett, Pros. Atty., v. Marcucci's Liquors,
As already noted, the statutes of many States provide for the forfeiture of property used in the commission of crime. Numerous cases in which these statutes have been construed with respect to the rights of those claiming ownership or a lien upon such property will be found collected in 47 A. L. R. 1055, and 61 A. L. R. 551. The varying provisions of the different statutes have naturally been reflected in diverging decisions in the cases in which they have been construed. In the rather numerous cases where the statute expressly protects the rights of an innocent owner or lienor, the question here presented does not arise. In others the language of the statute is such that an intent to preserve such rights is apparent. In a few jurisdictions, where the statute does not directly or by necessary implication protect the rights of the owner, the courts have treated the forfeiture as a penalty for the crime in the commission of which the property was used, and held that a construction of the statute penalizing an innocent owner or lienor would bring it in conflict with the due process clause of the Federal Constitution. That such is not the nature of the proceeding we have already held (Pickett, Pros. Atty., v. Marcucci'sLiquors, supra), and the Supreme Court of the United States has upheld the constitutionality of such a statute when attacked on these grounds. Van Oster v.Kansas,
The Federal Revenue Act (U.S. Rev. Stats., § 3450) provides for the forfeiture of property illicitly used, and the United States Supreme Court has uniformly held that the remedy created by the statute is one of a civil nature in rem, quite independent of the conviction of the wrongdoer, and is to be enforced regardless of the knowledge of the owner of the property as to the use to which it has been put. Dobbins's Distillery
v. United States,
The principle of the statute providing for the forfeiture in an action in rem is that the implements used "themselves constitute a subject liable to offend against the public welfare notwithstanding the innocence of the owner. The things themselves are primarily treated as the offender. The intent of the person in actual control may in some circumstances be enough *626
to determine the guilt of the article against which the complaint for forfeiture is pending." Fitzwilliam Co.,Inc. v. Commonwealth, supra, p. 107. When forfeiture is deemed necessary to restrain the commission of an offense, the courts uphold it though the owner was ignorant of the illicit use. "Certain uses of property may be regarded as so undesirable that the owner surrenders his control at his peril." Van Oster v. Kansas,
The Superior Court is advised that upon the facts *627 stipulated it should order the sale of the automobile, and that the claimant, the conditional vendor, has no interest in the proceeds of the sale.
No costs will be taxed in this court to either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.