Pеtitioner is in the constructive custody of bail under a civil arrest order of the Los Angeles County Superior Court. He questions the constitutionality of the statutes that authorize arrest and imprisonment on an ex parte application of the plaintiff in a civil action. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 478-504.) The statutes do not require that the defendant be brought into court after his arrest or that he bе notified that he has the right to release on bail (Code Civ. Proc., § 486), the right to apply for reduction of bail (Code Civ. Proc., § 503), the right to appear in court to challenge the legality оf the arrest (Code Civ. Proc., § 503), and the right to appear by counsel
(Cooke
v.
United States
(1925)
Petitioner contends that this statutory procedure does not meet the standards of due process of law. Habeas cor
*488
pus lies to test the constitutionality of the legislation under which the petitioner was imprisoned and is now constructively restrained on bail.
(In re Petersen
(1958)
Petitioner agreed to buy a truck tractor from Motor Truck Distributors Co. for $16,591.30, payable in monthly installments. He defaulted in his payments. Motor Truck Distributors Co. brought an action against him for recovery of the truck or $16,000 damages and invoked thе remedy of claim and delivery. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 509-521.) The sheriff could not find petitioner or the truck and returned the complaint and claim and delivery process unserved.
The company thеn invoked the remedy of mesne civil arrest and bail under the statutes here attacked. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 478-504.) The procedures followed by the company, the court, and the sheriff complied with those statutes. The company presented declarations to the superior court under penalty of perjury showing “that a sufficient cause of action exists, and that the case is one of those mentioned in Section 479.” 2 (Code Civ. Proc., § 481.) The company filed an undertaking, as required by section 482, to “pay all costs which may be adjudged to the defendant, and аll damages which he may sustain by reason of the arrest, if the same be wrongful, or without sufficient cause.” The court ordered the sheriff to arrest petitioner and fixed bail at $16,000 plus a $4,000 penalty assessment. 3
*489 The sheriff arrested petitioner on March 5, 1968, when he appeared at a sheriff’s substation to report that the truck had been stolen from him. He was allowed to teleрhone his employer and an attorney. (Pen. Code, § 815.5.) A sheriff’s officer complied with the provision in Code of Civil Procedure section 484 that the officer who arrests the defendant “must deliver to him a copy of the affidavit [that resulted in issuance of the arrest order], and also, if desired, a copy of the order of arrest.” 4 About March 6, 1968, a sheriff’s officer served petitiоner with a summons and a complaint in the company’s action. About March 8 an attorney referred by petitioner’s employer visited him in jail. This attorney filed an answer to the complaint but refused to take any action to obtain petitioner’s release from jail unless petitioner paid him $500. Petitioner was unable to pay this fee.
Petitioner spent five weeks in jail with no opportunity to appear in the superior court to seek release from his detention. He wrote to the Better Business Bureau stating that his custodians had told him he would be held until the сompany obtained a date for his court appearance or arranged for his release, “which could be forever.” The bureau forwarded his letter to the Los Angeles Cоunty Public Defender. A deputy public defender interviewed petitioner, determined that he was indigent, and moved in the civil action for reduction of bail. On April 11, 1968, the superior court reduced bail to $1,000 plus a $250 penalty assessment. 5 Petitioner obtained a surety bond in this amount and has since been in the constructive custody of bail.
A state cannot deprive a person of his life, liberty, or
*490
property without affording him an opportunity to be hеard by a tribunal empowered to decide the lawfulness of the deprivation.
(Armstrong
v.
Manzo
(1965)
Moreover, “The right to be heard would be, in many cases, of little avail if it did not comprehend the right to be heard by counsel. ’’
(Powell
v.
Alabama
(1932)
The writ is granted and petitioner is discharged from the constructive custody of bail. His surety will stand exonerated when this decision becomes final.
McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
Government Code section 27706, subdivision (c), provides that upon request the public defender “shall defend any person who is not financially able to employ counsel in any civil litigation in which, in the judgment of the public defender, the person is being persecuted or unjustly harassed. ’ ’
By chance the fаcts as to petitioner’s imprisonment came to the attention of the public defender, who obtained a hearing on a motion to reduce bail and petitioner’s release on reduced bail,
Code of Civil Procedure section 479 sets forth five “cases,” defined in part by the nature of the action and in part by the conduct of the defendant, when the remedy of civil arrest is available. Among these eases is “an action to recover the possession of personal property unjustly detained, when the property or any part thеreof, has been concealed, removed, or disposed of, to prevent its being found or taken by the Sheriff. ’ ’
The declarations submitted by the company include an averment by a repossession agent that in October 1967 petitioner “advised me that he could not and would not make any further payments on the truck. He further stated that he had no intention of giving up the truck, but rаther that he would keep it out of my reach and the reach of plaintiff Motor Truck Distributors Co.” The agent set forth his many unsuccessful attempts to find the truck.
Penal Code section 13521 provides for the levy of a penalty assessment of $5 for each $20 of “every fine, penalty, and forfeiture imposed and collected by the courts for criminal offenses” other than violаtions of the Vehicle Code, traffic ordinances, and the Pish and Game Code. “When any deposit of bail is made for an offense to which this action applies, the person making such deposit shall also deposit a sufficient amount to include the assessment. . . .” If the bail is forfeited the assessment goes to the state Peace Officers’ Training Fund, Section
*489
13521 is constitutional as applied to bail in a criminal ease.
(People
v.
Norman
(1967)
The bail furnished by a civil defendant, however, is not “for an offense to which this section [Penal Code section 13521] applies.” The sureties who furnish bail for the civil defendant bind themselves that he will be amenable to the civil court’s process “during the pendency of the action, and to such as may be issued to enforce the judgment therein, or that they will pay to the plaintiff the amount of any judgment which may be recovered in the action.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 487.) Thus the bail is designed to assure the civil defendant’s appeаrance and the satisfaction of any judgment for the plaintiff, not to fine or penalize the defendant. The court’s requirement of a penalty assessment was therefore unauthorizеd. (See 35 Ops. Cal.Atty.Gen. 77, 81-82 (1960).)
Section 484 is the only provision in the statutory civil arrest scheme (Code Civ. Proc, §§ 478-504) requiring the furnishing of any information to the defendant concerning his arrest.
As to the impropriety of the penalty assessment in this civil action see fn. 3, supra.
