86 Pa. Super. 532 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1925
Argued October 5, 1925. Murio Bellosits was arrested, in the county of Lawrence, while transporting intoxicating liquor in a Studebaker Light Six Coupe automobile, and the car was seized by the officers making the arrest. Bellosits entered a plea of nolo contendere to an indictment charging him with unlawful transportation of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes. The district attorney presented a petition to the court below praying that the automobile be adjudged forfeited to the Commonwealth and condemned and that the same be ordered sold in the manner provided by law. The court fixed November 17, 1924 for a hearing on the petition and directed notice to be given in accordance with the provisions of the statute. The appellant, on November 11, 1924, presented a petition to the court averring that it was the holder of a chattel mortgage on the car in question, executed by Bellosits, as security *534 for the payment of a note, on which there was a balance of the debt unpaid amounting to $368.90, which mortgage was duly filed of record in Mahoning County, Ohio; that the unlawful use of the car by Bellosits was without the knowledge of the appellant, and praying that if the car was adjudged forfeited to the Commonwealth and ordered to be sold, there should be included in the said order a direction that the claim of the Metropolitan Securities Company should be paid out of the fund derived from the sale, after payment of costs. The court fixed the time for a hearing on this petition for November 17, 1924, the date fixed for the hearing on the petition of the district attorney. The court after a full hearing, decreed that the car be condemned and adjudged to be forfeited to the Commonwealth and ordered that it be sold by the sheriff, after the notice required by the statute, and that the proceeds of the sale be paid to the county treasurer; and dismissed the claim presented by the appellant. The Metropolitan Securities Company appeals and here assigns for error the making of the above order and the dismissal of its claim.
The learned counsel for the appellant urge in their brief that: "The State could acquire no interest in the said automobile except by condemnation and the said automobile having been condemned, it would then have an interest in the proceeds of sale, but before condemnation the Commonwealth was advised of the existence of a chattel mortgage, a lien on said automobile, and the State was therefore advised of the existence of said chattel mortgage before it acquired any interest of any character whatsoever." "The Commonwealth was not an intervening creditor or owner. It had no right in or claim to the motor vehicle. The appellant had title under its mortgage." These suggestions have no application to the present case. When, at common law, a conviction of felony involved a forfeiture of goods no title vested in the king until *535
there was a conviction or outlawry of the felon. This rule does not apply to proceedings in rem, under statutes providing for the forfeiture of specific property used in violation of law. Statutes providing for the forfeiture of specific property used in violation of law are constitutional: Commonwealth v. Patsone,
This appellant may have had a lien upon this automobile so long as it remained in the State of Ohio, although no evidence was produced in the court below to establish that fact. When the vehicle was brought into Pennsylvania by the owner it became subject to the laws of this state and any creditor of the owner might have caused it to be seized in execution for the payment of his debt, although that creditor knew of the existence of the mortgage in the state of Ohio: Klaus v. Majestic A.H. Co.,
The decree is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at cost of the appellant. *537