Thе state has long had the power to forfeit property used for criminal purposes, but the power’s pedigree does not excuse the City of New York’s continued use of antiquated rules to govern its exercise. Where the federal government once sought to seize tax-delinquent distilleries without a hearing because its need for funds was urgent,
Springer v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Defendanb-Appellant City of New York
1
has authorized its police department to seize any motor vehicle that is “suspected of having been used as a means of committing crime or employed in aid or furtherance of crime,” N.Y. City Admin. Code § 14 — 140(b), as the first step toward obtaining title to the vehicle through civil forfeiture,
Krimstock v. Kelly (Krimstock I),
After what is now termed a “Krimstock” hearing, if the City can justify the continued retention of a seized vehicle, either because it is likely to prevail in the eventual forfeiture action or because it wishes to retain the vehicle as evidence against the owner or driver, it generally does not press further for forfeiture until the district attorney’s office notifies the City that a criminal case against the vehicle’s owner or driver will not be brought or has been concluded.
3
88 R.C.N.Y. § 12-35(d) (providing a method for obtaining a district attorney’s release);
cf. County of Nassau v.
Canavan,
If, on the other hand, a claimant demands the vehicle’s return, the City must institute a forfeiture action within twenty-five days.
Id.
§ 12-36(a).
4
While only the vehicle’s owner and/or driver is a claimant,
see id.
§ 12-31, any party,' including a lienholder, is “not [a] lawful claimant” if associated with criminal conduct involving use of the vehicle and thereby precluded from recovering the vehicle,
see
N.Y. City Admin. Code § 14-140(e) (one who “suffered [his vehicle] to be used” in committing a crime is not a lawful claimant);
id.
(one who “derives his or her claim in any manner” from someone who is not a lawful claimant is also not a lawful claimant);
Krimstock I,
If the City can show by a preponderance of the evidence that it is entitled to forfeit the vehicle,
see id.
— because it is conneet-ed with criminal activity, thus precluding the existence of a “lawful claimant” to the vehicle — it may sell the vehiclе at auction. If a third party has a security interest in the vehicle, the City will remit ninety percent of the auction proceeds to that party.
Ford Motor Credit Co. v. N.Y. City Police Dep’t,
The forfeiture process — from seizure to auction — takes considerable time.
See id.
at 613 (“In [some] instances, the Property Clerk held vehiclеs for extended periods of time without instituting forfeiture proceedings or selling vehicles as abandoned .... ”);
see also Prop. Clerk v. Duck Jae Lee,
Plaintiff-Appellee Ford Motor Credit levies a barrage of challenges to the rules governing forfeiture proceedings. Ford Motor Credit principally complains (1) that the City has refused to consider
*190
secured creditors as “claimants” (or their analogue) — although they are in many cases “not lawful claimants” — thus precluding them from triggering the City’s duty to initiate a forfeiture action within twenty-five days and (2) that the City has refused to consider secured creditors as “interested persons” entitled to notice of and an opportunity to be heard in forfeiture proceedings. Citing
Mathews v. Eldridge,
ANALYSIS
I. Application of the Due Process Clause
In adjudicating due process claims, “we consider two distinct issues: 1) whether plaintiffs possess a liberty or property interest protected by the Due Process Clause; and, if so, 2) whether existing state procedures are constitutionally adequate.”
Kapps v. Wing,
First, a security interest is indisputably a property interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Mennonite Bd. of Missions v. Adams,
Moreover, at common law, when the government forfeits property, “the vesting of its title in the property, relates back to the moment when the property became forfeitable.”
United States v. 92 Buena Vista Ave.,
Our conclusion accords with the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
In re Metmor Financial, Inc.,
[E]ven though forfeiture occurred prior to the actual seizure, the government can succeed to no greater interest in the property than that which belonged to the wrongdoer whose actions have justified the seizure. Ackley purchased the property encumbered by Metmor’s secured note, with interest accruing. His equity was subject to an obligation to repay the borrowed principal and to pay interest on the unpaid balance until all of the principal was repaid. The government now attempts to transform that *192 note into one that is unsecured and interest free. Such a result would deprive Metmor of its stake in the forfeited property and would constitute a taking without due process.
Id. at 448-49 (emphasis added).
The City argues that even if Ford Motor Credit has a property interest in the present value of a seized vehicle, delay does not
“depnvei
] [it] of that interest,”
Sealed v. Sealed,
II. The Process Ford Motor Credit Is Due
A. The City must permit Ford Motor Credit to participate in forfeiture proceedings.
Pursuant to New York City regulations, the City must “provide the claimant
and any other interested persons
with an adequate opportunity to be heard” before it may forfeit a seized vehicle. 38 R.C.N.Y. § 12 — 36(b) (emphasis added). The district court interpreted the term “interested persons” to include secured creditors like Ford Motor Credit.
See Ford Motor Credit,
Section 12-36 explicitly applies only to the driver of a seized vehicle.
Compare
38 R.C.N.Y. § 12-36,
with
38 R.C.N.Y. § 12-31 (defining a “claimant” as “the person from whosе person or possession property ... was taken”). However, the canon of constitutional avoidance,
see Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Fla. Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council,
*193
The City argues that while we should construe the term “interested persons” in § 12-36 broadly, it does not include Fоrd Motor Credit within its ambit; the City contends that Ford Motor Credit cannot be an interested person because it “has [no] information to contribute on the illegal use of [a seized] vehicle.”
See
Appellants’ Br. at 34. Even accepting' the City’s premise-that only those with something to contribute to the forfeiture proceeding can be “interested persons”-its argument fails. Were Ford Motor Credit permitted to participate in forfeiture procеedings, it could protect its interest in the present value of a seized vehicle in several ways: it could expedite the litigation by moving the court to dismiss the action for failure to prosecute,
see Duck Jae Lee,
The City also argues that Ford Motor Credit need not be counted an “interested person” because it could protect its interest in the present value of a seized vehicle by obtaining title to the vehicle. However, “a party’s ability to take steps to safeguard its interests does not relieve the State of its constitutional obligаtion.”
Mennonite Bd. of Missions,
B. The City must commence forfeiture proceedings within twenty-five days from the date Ford Motor Credit makes a demand on a vehicle, provided that a claimant would otherwise be entitled to make a demand on the vehicle.
Unlike § 12-36, 38 R.C.N.Y. § 12-31 is clear on its face: Ford Motor Credit is not a “claimant” and may not demand a vehicle’s return. We must therefore consider whether the Fourteenth Amendment requires that Ford Motor Credit be treated as a clаimant for purposes of triggering the City’s duty to commence a forfeiture action within twenty-five days. 11 In answering this question, we have two analytical lenses at our disposal.
In
$8,850,
the Supreme Court applied the four-factor test propounded first in
Barker v. Wingo,
It is not clear whether we should apply
Barker
or
Mathews
to this case. On the one hand, Ford Motor Credit seeks principally to expedite the forfeiture process,
see, e.g.,
Appellee’s Br. at 29-31, and the district court appears to have relied on
Barker,
We need not decide the question, however, since § 12-31 is unconstitutional under either application. As the district court explained, “the City has caused substantial delays,”
First, Ford Motor Credit’s interest in the present value of a seized vehicle, while not as great as the interest of the vehicle’s owner in possession of a seized vehicle— because seized vehicles are not usеd by Ford Motor Credit as “a mode of transportation ... [or] the means to earn a livelihood,”
id.
at 61 — is still considerable. Indeed, the Supreme Court has affirmed the importance of the income stream derived from ownership of property.
See United States v. James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
In sum, we agree with the district court that henceforth, when Ford Motor Credit has a security intеrest in a seized vehicle, the City must (1) permit Ford Motor Credit to participate as a party in the forfeiture action and (2) commence the forfeiture action within twenty-five days from the date that Ford Motor Credit makes a demand on the vehicle, provided that a claimant would otherwise be entitled to make a demand on the vehicle.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
.We use the term "the City” as shorthand for thе various defendants to this action, including the New York City Police Department and the Property Clerk of the City of New York.
. Although captioned differently,
Jones v. Kelly,
. Under 38 R.C.N.Y. § 12-34(a), a person may also request that the district attorney release his vehicle to the Property Clerk prior to the conclusion of the related criminal case.
. As we explained in
Krimstock I,
"the statute here requires only that a forfeiture proceeding be
initiated
within 25 days after a claim is made.”
. This byzantine statutory scheme is a relic of the days when a "lawful claimant” had to bring a civil action in replevin in order to obtain the return of seized property.
Krimstock I,
.The "General Release with Indemnification Agreement” used at the time the City took this appeal reads in pertinent part: “[T]he relea-sors will hold harmless the releasee, the New York City Police Department ... and indemnify same from any claim or claims that may be asserted against them and for any damage, expense or cost which the New York City Police Department may suffer in connection with [the] property.”
. Ford Motor Credit also contends that the City's requirement that secured creditors sign the “General Release with Indemnification Agreement” "shocks the conscience” and violates the Fourteenth Amendment. We need not consider this argument, as the parties have agreed to amend the "General Release with Indemnification Agreement.” Finally, Ford Motor Credit argues that the City's retention of ten percent of the auction proceeds constitutes an excessive fine in violаtion of the Eighth Amendment (or, in the alternative, also "shocks the conscience” in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment). While there is cause for some concern over the poor correlation between the administrative costs the City likely incurs and the flat, ten-percent fee it charges secured creditors, we agree with the district court that the imposition of this fee does not violate the Eighth Amendment and that "[t]he City’s actions do not rise to the ‘conscience-shocking level' that would be necessary to support a claim of denial of substantive due process.”
See Ford Motor Credit,
. “[I]n the event of nonforfeiture,” the City argues that Ford Motor Credit may "sue [vehicles’ owners] for return of the vehicles or for such other relief as might be provided in their contracts with [those owners].”
Foley,
. Although the Supreme Court has held that a state need not permit an "innocent owner defense,"
see Bennis v. Michigan,
. The City also relies on
Foley
for the proposition that Ford Motor Credit cannot be an “interested party.”
. As we have explained, the City may retain a seized vehicle as “arrest evidence” or “trial evidence.” Of course, Ford Motor Credit may not seek the premature forfeiture of a vehicle that the City wishes to retain for such purposes.
. We observe in passing that we do not require the City to prosecute forfeiture cases inefficiently; it may still hold blocks of seized vehicles and seek their forfeiture at one time.
.
Cf. Ford Motor Credit,
