Opinion
Appellant California Department of Motor Vehicles appeals an order granting a writ of mandate which was filed on August 12, 1985. The writ precluded appellant from suspending respondent Theresa Lee Fahlgren’s driver’s license for driving without properly establishing financial responsibility pursuant to California Vehicle Code section 16070. We reverse.
*933 I
On April 21, 1984, respondent wаs involved in an automobile accident with Ms. Dorothea Wilson. As required by California Vehicle Code section 16000 et seq.* 1 (the financial responsibility law), both parties filed “SR-1” forms (“Report of Traffic Accident” forms) with appellant in Sacramento. Ms. Wilson’s SR-1 indicated estimated damage to her vehicle to be $1,000; respondent’s form indicated an unknown amount of damage to her automobile but did allege physical injury to her person “[primarily [in the] neck & shoulder.” While Wilson claimed her vehicle was insured at the time of the accident, respondent offered no evidence or indication of any “financial responsibility.”
Acting under authority of section 16070, 2 3appellant on August 9, 1984, issued to respondent its “Order of [License] Suspension” to be in effect for one year. Subsequently, respondent properly requested an administrative hearing on the matter, which was held on December 13, 1984, in order to give respondent an opportunity to “show why the suspension provisions of the law [did] not apply to [her].” At the hearing, appellant introduced as evidence the signed SR-1 reports of both parties, and three supporting auto repair invoices and а statement by Ms. Wilson regarding the damages to her vehicle. Respondent offered no evidence but did object to the evidence offered by appellant. The hearing resulted in the sustaining of respondent’s license suspension based on the evidence which established (1) property damage to Wilson’s automobile in excess of $500, (2) bodily injury to respondent, and (3) that rеspondent failed to establish financial responsibility at the time of the accident.
On March 8, 1985, respondent filed a petition for writ of mandate in Superior Court of Contra Costa County. The writ was granted and filed on August 12, 1985, on the basis that respondent’s own SR-1 form was im *934 properly admitted into evidence at the hearing against her and, without it, the remaining evidence was insufficient to uphold a suspension. 3
The present appeal was timely filed on August 21, 1985.
II
The sole issue before this court is whether “a person’s own accident report filed pursuant to . . . [s]ection 16000 can be used ... to establish a prima facie case justifying the suspension of that driver’s license under the financial responsibility law.” Respondent concedes that “if [rjespondent’s SR-1 form [was properly admitted and relied on at the hearing], then [a]ppellant has established a prima facie case, and [the] administrative decision should be upheld.”
The use of one’s own SR-1 report as the basis of his/her license suspension is a specific issue previously not addressed. We do, however, have sufficient similar case law upon which we may analyze the instant case. Resolving the present issue requires оne to first examine the very purpose of the subject Financial Responsibility Law.
The state Supreme Court interpreted “[t]he California financial responsibility law (Veh. Code, § 16000 et seq.) [as requiring] drivers of motor vehicles to be self-insured, to have insurance, or to be otherwise financially responsible for damages caused by accidents.”
(Daniels
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1983)
Although not fully dispositive of our case,
Daniels
is marginally applicable. The difference is that
Daniels
dealt with a “hearsay” SR-1 report, here we deal with the licensee’s
own
signed and sworn statement (SR-1). We do find some support in
Daniels
for the state’s use of a licensee’s own SR-1 against that party. In discussing the necessary competency, reliability and trustworthiness of the other party’s SR-1, the court noted
(Daniels, supra,
Similar to the Daniels case, the parties’ briefs here also include a discussion of Government Code section 11513, subdivision (c), 5 which is alleged to have some relevance regarding the use of hearsay evidence in administrative hearings. We find the discussion of section 11513 misplaced in this case as respondent’s SR-1 form, is an exception to the hearsay rule.
Examination of the legislative intent behind the 1974 enactment of the financial responsibility law (Veh. Code, §§ 16000-16075) reveals its passage as an effort to deal with the increasing number of “financially irresponsible” drivers. The Legislature declared that drivers or owners of automobiles in the state shall be ‘“financially capable of providing monetary protection to those suffering injury to their person or property by reason of the ownershiр or use of such vehicles’” regardless of fault of the owners or drivers and
“‘such capability shall be deemed as a concurrent responsibility of such motor vehicle ownership or operation.’”
The Legislature further stated that owners or operators of vehicles “shall evidence such financial capability by
*936
the methods specified in this act.”
(Anacker
v.
Sillas
(1976)
Regarding the reporting requirements, the Anacker court observed that while every automobile driver or owner shall be financiаlly responsible (under § 16020 6 ), only those drivers who are involved in an accident may have to prove compliance with that law. “In some sense a person may rightly complain that it is unfair for him to have to establish proof of financial responsibility while others, not involved in an accident, do not.” (Anacker, supra, 65 Cal.App.3d at pp. 423-424.) Regardless of the reporting “disparity,” the court saw its duty nоt to criticize the wisdom of a statute but only to determine its constitutionality. (Id,., at p. 424.) In Anacker, it was found that “the law is more fully served when proof of financial responsibility is required without respect to who has suffered the injury.” (Id., at p. 425.)
Turning to the case at bar, in light of all the foregoing, we cannot agree that a licensee’s own SR-1 cannot be used in the prima facie case of his/ her license suspension. From Daniels, we see that the licensee’s own SR-1 has the trustworthiness, reliability and competency necessary to support a suspension finding. From the legislative intent behind the Financial Responsibility Law, we see as necessary the requirement of every driver’s or owner’s financial responsibility, such responsibility proven by the rational reporting method prescribed by the Legislature.
III
The second major reason given by the court below for granting the writ is that the use of respondent’s SR-1 form against her violated the privilege against self-incrimination.
Respondent asserts that section 16005 was included in the Financial Responsibility Law so that this law would not violate a person’s privilege against self-incrimination. We will first discuss whether the use of one’s own SR-1 form violatеs that person’s privilege against self-incrimination, and then we will consider the specific effect of section 16005.
Initially, we note that one’s privilege not to be a witness against herself expressly applies to criminal cases (see U.S. Const., Amend. V; Cal. Const., art. I, § 13; Evid. Code, § 930). Regarding disclosure of
*937
incriminating evidence however, “the privilege not to disclose any incriminating mаtter may be asserted by any person either in a civil or criminal proceeding. [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Whelchel
(1967)
Under the direction of the United States Supreme Court in
Gault,
the state court in
Borror
found that “in a proceeding to revoke or suspend a license or other administrative action of a disciplinary nature . . . [s]uch a proceeding does not bear a close identity to the aims and objectives of criminal law enforcеment, but has for its objectives the protection of the public rather than to punish the offender.”
(Borror, supra,
We find support for our position in
California
v.
Byers
(1970)
In the present case, we find the SR-1 neatly fulfills the criteria and factors outlined and discussed in both the state and federal jurisdictions. License granting and suspension is a сivil act carrying few, if any, criminal or criminal-type implications, it involves a subject which is fully within state regulatory power, and it affects the society at large rather than any single “selective group.”
Section 16005 provides in subdivision (a) as follows: “All reports and supplemental reports required by this chapter including insurance information forms shall be without prejudice to the individuаl so reporting and shall be for the confidential use of the department and any other state department requiring such information, except that the department shall upon request disclose from the reports: . . . [¶] (4) Any suspension action taken by the department.” Respondent asserts that this section prohibits the use of her SR-1 form as evidence in a suspension hearing.
It is а fundamental tenet of our law that in interpreting a statute a court must adopt the construction which effectuates the purpose that the Legislature has sought to promote in enacting the statute.
(Klarfeld
v.
Berg
(1981)
Our acceptance of respondent’s position would be a direct contradiction of the legislative attempt to “check” as many drivers as possible for financial responsibility. Not to allow use of a licensee’s own SR-1 form against him or her would make the state’s burden of proof virtually impossible since the other driver’s SR-1 form (per Daniels) cannot be used for the prima facie сase. Furthermore, the language of section 16005 does not support respondent’s assertion as the section provides that the information in the SR-1 form “shall be for the confidential use of the department and any other state department requiring such information, ...” This language would seem to indicate that the information in the SR-1 form can be used by the department without limitation as long as it is for a function properly performed by the department. There is no question that the suspension of drivers’ licenses is a proper function of the department. Furthermore, subdivision (a)(4) of section 16005 provides that the department shall upon request disclose any suspension taken by the department. It would therefore appear that the depаrtment could properly use a person’s own SR-1 form in a suspension hearing and that only if suspension of the license is found to be required, is any knowledge of the contents of the SR-1 to be disclosed to the public.
Although there are no cases precisely on point, the California Supreme Court in
State of California
ex. rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
Section 16005 is intended to serve the same purpose. The language “without prejudice to the individual” is designed to prevent wholesale disclosure to the public of a licensee’s insurance and financial data. It was *940 never intended to prevent appellant from enforcing the very law the reports were dеsigned to implement.
In response to the fear that use of one’s SR-1 form against the licensee will discourage reporting, we need only adopt the United States Supreme Court’s observation that “[a]n organized society imposes many burdens on its constituents . . . [including] the filing of tax returns for income . . . .”
(California
v.
Byers, supra,
The judgment is reversed.
Scott, J., and Merrill, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all code sections herein refer to the Califоrnia Vehicle Code.
Section 16070, in relevant part, provides that “(a) Whenever a driver involved in an accident described in Section 16000 fails to prove the existence of financial responsibility ... at the time of the accident,” that driver’s license shall be suspended.
Other relevant Vehicle Code sections include:
(1) Section 16000 which describes accidents resulting in “damage to the property of any one person in excess of five hundred dollars ($500) or in bodily injury or in the death of any person shall within 10 days after the accident, report the accident on a form approved by the department . . . .”
(2) Section 16020 states that, “Every driver of, and owner of, a motor vehicle shall, at all times maintain in force one of the forms of financial responsibility specified in Section 16021.”
(3) Section 16021, in relevant part, considers financial responsibility established if a driver or owner is (a) self-insured; (b) insured under a form of insurance or bond complying with state requirements; (c) the federal, state, or municipal government or an agent thereof.
The superior court’s “Notice of Decision,” in part, reads: “This Court agrees that using one’s own compliance with the reporting requirement as evidence of supporting a suspension is a violation of CVC 16000 et seq. and the privilege against self-incrimination. This is because a different result would make a law violator better off than the law compiler. The other exhibits should not have been received absent a foundation for competency of the person making the estimate or testimony that repairs were made and paid for. Therefore, there is no evidence of damage before DMV. [¶] Although both counsel apparently agree that the [appellant’s] own damages are sufficient to trigger the suspension, it would appear that CVC 16020 and 16050 et seq. are designed for the protection of the other vehicles and occupants and one’s own damages alone should not trigger a suspension.”
In Daniels, contrary to the D.M.V.’s contentions in that case, the court found such a report did not come under the “business records” exception (Evid. Code, § 1271) to the hearsay rule. (Daniels, supra, 33 Cal.3d at pp. 537-538.) Neither was such a report admissible by statutory prescription—although Vehicle Code section 14108 allows for the consideration of a department’s “official records” at administrative hearings, Government Code section 11513 (applicable by Veh. Code, § 14112) allows hearsay evidence to be used only for “supplementing or explaining other evidence” but is insufficient “in itself to support a finding unless it would be admissible over objection in civil actions.”
Applicability of Government Code section 11513, subdivision (c) is disсussed in
Daniels, supra,
See footnote 2, ante, for the text of section 16020.
The
Byers
court noted (
