Defendant City of New York seizes the motor vehicles of some of those accused of driving while intoxicated and of committing other crimes for which a motor vehicle could be considered an instrumentality.
Plaintiffs contend that their inability to challenge, promptly after the vehicles are seized, the legitimacy of and justification for the City’s retention of the vehicles prior to judgment in any civil forfeiture proceeding violates their constitutional rights. We agree. A car or truck is often central to a person’s livelihood or daily activities. An individual must be permitted to challenge the City’s continued possession of his or her vehicle during the pendency of legal proceedings where such possession may ultimately prove improper and where less drastic measures than deprivation pendente lite are available' and appropriate.
We vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for the court to order, after consultation with the parties, the appropriate injunctive relief.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs challenge the seizure and retention of motor vehicles under a section of the City’s Civil Administrative Code, N.Y.C.Code § 14-140. The City claims and plaintiffs do not contest that the statute authorizes the City’s Property Clerk to take custody, following seizure, of, among other things, “all property ... suspected of having been used as a means of committing crime or employed in aid or furtherance of crime....” N.Y.C.Code § 14-140(b). Seized property is retained by the Property Clerk of the New York City Police Department until the City either loses a future forfeiture suit or decides not to pursue one and someone claims the seized property. Id. § 14 — 140(e); 38-A New York City Rules & Regulations (“R.C.N.Y.”) § 12-36. The relevant provision of the Administrative Code states:
Where ... property ... ha[s] been used as a means of committing crime or employed in aid or in furtherance of crime ..., a person who so ... used [or] employed ... any such ... property or permitted or suffered the same to be used [or] employed ... or who was a participant or accomplice in any such act, or a person who derives his or her claim in any manner from or through any such person, shall not be deemed to be the lawful claimant entitled to ... such ... property....
N.Y.C.Code § 14-140(e)(l). The statute applies to all levels of crime, not just felonies, and to all types of crimes. Moreover, it applies to all property, both real and personal.
Under the statute, the City can seize a motor vehicle following an arrest for the state-law charge of driving while intoxicated (“DWI”) or any other crime for which the vehicle could serve as an instrumentality. The arraignment of the defendant in the criminal action concerns only the prosecution of the criminal charge. A defendant charged with DWI does not have a right to a post-arrest hearing to determine whether probable cause existed either for his or her arrest or for the seizure of the vehicle. Unlike a felony charge, for which a “prompt” probable cause hearing must be held or evidence of probable cause must be presented to a grand jury, N.Y.Crim. Proc. § 180.10, a misdemeanor charge of DWI requires no post-arrest determination of probable cause, id. §§ 170.10 et seq.; People v. Green,
Upon seizing the vehicle, the police issue the arrestee a voucher for. the vehicle and any other seized property. 38-A R.C.N Y. § 12-32(a). If a claimant makes a formal demand for the return of the vehicle, the City has twenty-five days in which either to initiate a civil forfeiture proceeding under the City’s Administrative Code or to release the vehicle. Id. § 12-36(a).
Vehicles belonging to the named members of the putative class in this action were seized by the City between March and May of 1999. The vehicles of six of the seven named plaintiffs — Valerie Krim-
Each of the five other DWI arrestees also pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of driving while impaired. Valerie Krim-stock, who at the age of forty-eight had never been arrested before, entered her plea to the lesser charge in September 1999 — some four months after she had been served with a forfeiture complaint. It was not until eleven months later, in August 2000, that a judge dismissed the forfeiture action and ordered that her 1995 Toyota, on which she had continued to make monthly payments of $273.00, be returned to her.
In the case of Charles Flatow — a retired sales manager whose car was seized on April 3, 1999 in connection with a first-time DWI arrest — the Property Clerk commenced a forfeiture action on June 15, 1999. Mr. Flatow also pleaded guilty to the lesser charge, paid a fine, and completed the required community service and Drinking Driver program. Yet by December 1999, he still had received no hearing in the forfeiture action and his car remained in police custody. As a result, Mr. Flatow had not been given an opportunity to' present evidence that a prescription anti-depressant medication he was taking at the time of the arrest caused the Breathalyzer test to exaggerate the percentage of alcohol in his bloodstream.
To take yet another example, the 1995 Plymouth van owned by the seventh named plaintiff, Sandra Jones, was seized in March 1999 when her estranged husband, to whom she had lent the vehicle, was arrested for drug and weapon possession. Even though these charges were later dismissed, the Property Clerk initiated a forfeiture action in May 1999, alleging that Ms. Jones had “consented, suffered or permitted” her vehicle to be used by her husband in the commission of crimes. During the pendency of the action, Ms. Jones continued to make monthly payments of $428.06 on her impounded vehicle. In January 2000, some ten months after the police had seized it, the Property Clerk returned her van. In sum, at the time this suit was filed in December 1999, no court had yet ruled on the legitimacy of the retention of any of plaintiffs’ vehicles, all of which remained in the possession of the police even though the criminal cases underlying the forfeiture actions had concluded and none had resulted in a
Plaintiffs brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and seeking a prompt hearing following the seizure of vehicles, at which the City “must demonstrate probable cause that the car was used in furtherance of a crime and that it is necessary that the vehicle remain in the City’s custody until the conclusion of the forfeiture proceeding.”
The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Krimstock,
DISCUSSION
A federal court may dismiss a complaint for “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). “We review de novo a district court’s dismissal of a complaint pursuant
Our primary focus today is the City’s continued retention of vehicles after their warrantless seizure by-the police and prior to the ultimate resolution of the forfeiture action in court. It is this intermediate deprivation, lasting months or sometimes years without any prompt hearing before a neutral fact-finder, that we deem constitutionally infirm. In the absence of a showing that continued impoundment constitutes a valid deprivation, seized vehicles must be released during the pendency of civil proceedings.
We reach this conclusion in light of the dictates of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. In Part I, we establish a framework for analyzing plaintiffs’ challenge to the probable validity of the City’s post-seizure, pre-judgment retention of their vehicles, and we define “probable validity” as a due process concept that in the present case embraces the City’s probable cause for initially seizing the vehicles. In Parts II and III, we discuss the applicability of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to seizure and retention of personal property under civil forfeiture laws. In the course of discussing the Fourteenth Amendment, we give special attention to three areas of due process concern raised by N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 as applied to the present facts: the temporal gap that typically exists between vehicle seizure and the eventual forfeiture proceeding; the plight of innocent owners;
I. The Probable Validity of Continued Deprivation of Vehicles
Plaintiffs in this action essentially seek an early opportunity to test the City’s likelihood of success on the merits of the forfeiture action, or what the Supreme Court has termed the “probable validity” of continued deprivation of a claimant’s property during the pendency of legal proceedings. Cf. Comm’r v. Shapiro,
For present purposes, we treat probable validity as a comprehensive due process concept that includes the City’s probable cause for initially seizing vehicles. Clearly, the legality of a warrantless seizure is a component of the larger question of the probable validity of continued retention of a seized vehicle. If a seizure lacked probable cause, and the City could offer no untainted post-seizure evidence to justify further retention, the claimant’s vehicle would ordinarily have to be released during the pendency of proceedings. Cf. Marine Midland Bank, N.A. v. United States,
Although there is an obvious overlap between probable cause for a seizure and the probable validity of a retention, the two are not necessarily coextensive. For example, at a retention hearing, the City might succeed in showing that police officers had probable cause for seizing the vehicle of a DWI arrestee, yet be unable to establish the probable validity of continued deprivation pendente lite in the face of proof of innocent ownership or evidence that the Breathalyzer test had registered inaccurate results. Similarly, the City might establish probable cause for a seizure but fail to persuade the court that its interest in the accused instrumentality would not be protected by measures less drastic than continued deprivation. Conversely, the City might fail to establish probable cause for an initial seizure yet be able to offer post-seizure evidence showing the probable validity of retention during the pendency of proceedings. Thus, the legality of a seizure typically will be a subset of the larger due process question of the legitimacy of continued impoundment pendente lite.
II. The Role of the Fourth Amendment in Civil Forfeiture
The Supreme Court has held that the Fourth Amendment protects claimants against unreasonable seizures of their property in the civil forfeiture context. See United States v. James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
The Supreme Court has not said that a probable cause hearing is required after a warrantless seizure of property and before trial of a government’s claim to title under a civil forfeiture law. Yet many of our laws are fashioned to ensure that a prompt hearing before a neutral judicial or administrative officer is held after the war-rantless seizure of property and before full adjudication of the merits of a claim. One example is the federal civil forfeiture regime as administered by the courts of this Circuit in the context of seizures of illicit proceeds and instrumentalities. As this Court has recognized, “the seizure and forfeiture of property are two distinct events under the [federal] civil forfeiture laws.” Marine Midland Bank,
We recognize that the likelihood of illegal seizure is reduced in the context of DWI arrests and that the City’s burden of proving probable cause in such cases is not onerous.
III. The Role of the Fourteenth Amendment in Civil Forfeiture
The government’s seizure and retention of property under civil forfeiture statutes, in the absence of a meaningful hearing at a meaningful time, raise serious due process concerns under the Fourteenth Amendment. See James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
The fundamental right to notice and a meaningful hearing at a meaningful time has been recognized in many different contexts. See, e.g., James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
A. Temporary Deprivations of Properr ty Pendente Lite
Temporary deprivation of real or personal property pendente lite in a forfeiture action must satisfy the demands of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court has held that even a brief and provisional deprivation of property pending judgment is of constitutional importance. See Fuentes,
The district court in this case collapsed the separate issues of probable cause and due process" into a' single analysis and, applying the test for due process set forth in Mathews v. Eldridge,
The district court’s analysis resembles the approach taken by the New York Supreme Court in Grinberg v. Safir, in which a DWI arrestee brought an Article 78 proceeding to contest the City’s seizure of his 1988 Acura for forfeiture. In response to Grinberg’s Fourth Amendment challenge to the seizure and retention of his vehicle, the court, citing various warrant-less arrest and seizure exceptions, held that “[ojnce an object is permissibly seized as an instrumentality during an arrest, no warrant, pretrial hearing or judicial approval is needed for retention during the criminal action.” Grinberg, 181 Misc.2d at 452,
For reasons discussed more fully below, we disagree with these courts’ conclusions. Contrary to the district court’s determination in the present case, a war-rantless arrest by itself does not constitute an adequate, neutral “procedure” for testing the City’s justification for continued and often lengthy detention of a vehicle which may be owned by the arrestee or by someone entirely unconnected with the conduct that gave rise to the arrest. Further, to say that the forfeiture proceeding, which often occurs more than a year after a vehicle’s seizure, represents a meaningful opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time on the issue of continued impoundment is to stretch the sense of that venerable phrase to the breaking point. We also consider it a non sequitur to hold, as the Grinberg court did, that because postponing the commencement of a forfeiture action pending the underlying criminal proceeding may not offend due process, retention of the seized vehicle without a hearing throughout that same period, or longer, is constitutionally permissible. The issues of a speedy trial and a prompt retention hearing are not parallel in this context, particularly when less restrictive methods for protecting the City’s interest in the allegedly offending res are available. Cf. Lee v. Thornton,
In sum, just as in the attachment and seizure cases cited above, the purpose of requiring due process in the present circumstances “is not only to ensure abstract fair play to the individual,” but “more particularly, ... to protect his [or her] use and possession of property from arbitrary encroachment — to minimize substantively unfair or mistaken deprivations of property.” James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
B. Special Due Process Concerns in the Present Case
Our concern that plaintiffs be provided an early opportunity to test the propriety of the City’s retention of their vehicles, after seizure pursuant to N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 and prior to any eventual civil forfeiture judgment, is heightened by several factors. These factors include the temporal gap that typically exists between seizure of the vehicle and the forfeiture proceeding, the inability of innocent owners to challenge promptly the City’s retention of their vehicles pendente lite, and the inadequacy of other suggested remedies for providing prompt post-seizure review
1. The Temporal Gap Between Seizure and Forfeiture Proceedings
N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 and the applicable rules leave a significant temporal gap between the moment a vehicle is seized and the time the City commences forfeiture proceedings. Although it is possible for the City to initiate a forfeiture action earlier, it need not bring such an action until twenty-five days after a claim is made for the vehicle. 38-A R.C.N.Y. § 12-36(a) (“If a timely demand is made for the return of the property before the forfeiture proceeding is instituted, such proceeding shall be brought no later than ... within 25 days after the date of demand.”).
Many state forfeiture statutes, unlike N.Y.C.Code § 14-140, provide an early opportunity to challenge the • governmental authority’s probable cause for seizing property or the legitimacy of its retaining seized property during the pendency of proceedings. Florida’s contraband forfeiture statute is one example. In upholding the Florida statute in a case involving police seizure of a vehicle from a public place,
Seizing agencies shall make a diligent effort to notify the person entitled to notice of the seizure. Notice provided by certified mail must be mailed within 5 working days after the seizure and must state that a person entitled to notice may request an adversarial preliminary hearing within 15 days after receiving such notice.... The seizing agency shall set and notice the hearing, which must be held within 10 days after the request is received or as soon as practicable thereafter.
Fla. Stat. § 932.703(2)(a); see also Cochran v. Harris,
In addition, many state statutes afford avenues of interim relief for claimants who are adversely affected by seizure and retention of property. For example, the Florida contraband forfeiture statute provides that if the court determines that probable cause exists to seize property, “the court shall order the property restrained by the least restrictive means to protect against disposal, waste, or continued illegal use of such property pending disposition of the forfeiture proceeding.” Fla. Stat. § 932.703(2)(d). These means include “a bond or other adequate security equivalent to the value of the property.” Id.; cf. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-4306(G) (“An owner of property seized for forfeiture may obtain the release of the seized property by posting ... a surety bond or cash.,..”); Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11492(c) (providing for various remedies to preserve the status quo pendente lite, including “a surety bond or undertaking to preserve the property interests of the interested parties”); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:64-3(g) (providing that persons with an interest in property seized for forfeiture, except defendants prosecuted in connection with the seized property, may, after posting a bond, secure release of the property pending the forfeiture action). Again, no protections for a claimant’s practical interests in seized property are provided for under the New York forfeiture law.
2. Seizure of Property of Innocent Owners
With respect to innocent owners, the City’s authority to seize property may be
The forfeiture provision operates against those persons who “shall not be deemed to be the lawful claimant” to the property that has been seized by the police department. N.Y.C.Code § 14-140(e)(l).
In sum, there is a heightened potential for erroneous retention where an arrestee, whether for DWI or some other suspected criminal conduct, is not the owner of the seized vehicle. The plight of innocent owners, as exemplified by the experience of plaintiff Sandra Jones, persuades us that an early retention hearing following seizure under N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 is constitutionally required.
3. Other Suggested Remedies Do Not Provide Prompt Post-Seizure Review.
In prosecuting vehicle forfeiture actions under N.Y.C.Code § 14-140, the City has consistently opposed motions for interim relief in the form of a retention hearing. For example, in its Memorandum of Law opposing a motion for an “immediate retention hearing” in the case of Property Clerk v. Ali, the City stated that
*59 under the CPLR there is no basis upon which defendant can even make this motion. Likewise, the CPLR does not provide for such a hearing. Defendant has circumvented the traditional rules of civil procedure by asking this court to entertain, and plaintiff to defend, against a motion that has no legal basis and a hearing that would clearly be improper under the rules.
Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiffs Opposition to an Immediate Retention Hearing, at 12, Property Clerk v. Ali, No. 413408/99 (Sup.CtN.Y.Co.). In Ali, as here, the City maintained that due process was satisfied by a resolution of the merits at the eventual civil forfeiture hearing.
Nevertheless, defendants here suggest that plaintiffs may assert their constitutional rights and challenge the City’s continued retention of their vehicles through the procedural means of a Request for Judicial Intervention (“RJI”) or an Article 78 proceeding brought under New York state law. We disagree. Under current law, any review of the legitimacy of the City’s continued retention of a vehicle would likely come, at the earliest, months after its seizure. This delay is a result, first, of the City’s need to initiate forfeiture proceedings. Assuming that a claimant requests the return of the property immediately upon seizure by the police, the City has twenty-five days in which to initiate proceedings. Only after a civil forfeiture proceeding is commenced and process is served can an owner submit a RJI. See 22 N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. § 202.6(a). Along with the RJI, a claimant files a request for' a preliminary conference. See id. § 202.12(a) (“If the action has not been assigned to a judge, the party shall file a request for judicial intervention together with the request for a preliminary conference.”). Under the New York rules, a “preliminary conference” is held no later than forty-five days from the request “unless the court orders otherwise.” Id. § 202.6(b). The rules do not explicitly permit a determination of probable cause or the legitimacy of continued retention at the preliminary conference, or even provide for the taking of evidence, indicating that, at most, the preliminary conference may serve (as plaintiffs suggest) to set a future date for a probable cause hearing.
The City also suggests that an Article 78 proceeding under New York state law is, available to claimants to redress any constitutional grievances. Requiring plaintiffs to resort to an Article 78 proceeding, however, would place the onus on .each plaintiff to bring a separate civil action in order to force the City to justify its seizure and retention of a vehicle. This civil action provides the “[r]elief previously obtained by writs of certiorari to review, mandamus or prohibition.” N.Y. C.P.L.R. 7801. To petition for mandamus, a claim
The City cites Grinberg v. Safir as proof that relief is currently available in an Article 78 proceeding. To challenge the City’s forfeiture proceeding and retention of his vehicle, the petitioner in Grinberg filed an Article 78 action and, with it, a request for a temporary restraining order. Although the court held argument only two days after the action was filed, it denied the temporary restraining order, observing that “[l]ikely inconvenience is not proof of immediate and irreparable injury,” Grinberg,
In sum, we conclude that the suggested remedy of an Article 78 proceeding does not provide a prompt and effective means for claimants to challenge the legitimacy of the City’s retention of their vehicles pen-dente lite. Cf. Fuentes,
IV. The Mathews v. Eldridge Inquiry
The Supreme Court has set forth three factors to weigh in deciding whether the demands of the Due Process Clause are satisfied where the government seeks to maintain possession of property before a final judgment is rendered. See Mathews,
A. The Private Interest Affected
The first factor to be considered in the Mathews inquiry is “the private interest affected by the official action.” Mathews,
The particular importance of motor vehicles derives from their use as a mode of transportation and, for some, the means to earn a livelihood. An “individual has an important interest in the possession of his [or her] motor vehicle,” which is “often his [or her] most valuable possession.” Lee,
Other considerations as well bear on the importance of the private interest at stake. One is the availability of hardship relief under the applicable law. Cf. Dixon v. Love,
For these reasons, we cannot agree with the district court’s cursory assessment of the interest at stake based solely on its observation that the seizure of the vehicles occurred “in a jurisdiction that abounds in mass transit facilities.” Krimstock,
B. The Risk of Erroneous Deprivation Through the Procedures Used and the Probable Value of Other Safeguards
The second factor to be considered under the Mathews test is “the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards.” Mathews,
Nevertheless, we conclude that, on balance, the second Mathews factor weighs in favor of the City. We acknowledge that the risk of erroneous seizure and retention of a vehicle is reduced in the case of a DWI owner-arrestee, because a trained police officer’s assessment of the owner-driver’s state of intoxication can
Yet the City’s victory on the second Mathews factor is a narrow one. As noted earlier, the risk of erroneous deprivation that is posed to innocent owners is a substantial one. Moreover, our inquiry into the risk of error is partly informed by the City’s pecuniary interest in the outcome of § 14-140 proceedings. As the Supreme Court has observed, greater procedural safeguards are “of particular importance ... where the Government has a direct pecuniary interest in the outcome of the proceeding.” James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
The Supreme Court has expressed additional concern when, as here, the “erroneous deprivation” cannot be recompensed by the claimant’s prevailing in later proceedings:
[T]he availability of a postseizure hearing may be no recompense for losses*64 caused by erroneous seizure. Given the congested civil dockets in federal courts, a claimant may not receive an adversary hearing until many months after the seizure. And even if the ultimate judicial decision is that the claimant was an innocent owner, or that the Government lacked probable cause, this determination, coming months after the seizure, “would not cure the temporary deprivation that an earlier hearing might have prevented.”
James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
In sum, because we recognize that the risk of erroneous deprivation in the context of DWI owner-arrestees is in many cases a reduced one, we conclude that the second Mathews factor weighs in favor of the City. The scales are very nearly in equipoise, however, in light of the comparably greater risk of error that is posed to innocent owners, the City’s direct pecuniary interest in the outcome of forfeiture proceedings, and the lack of adequate recompense for losses occasioned by erroneous seizures of vehicles.
C. The Government’s Interest
The third Mathews factor examines “the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.” Mathews,
The first, and the most compelling among those the City has adduced, is to prevent a vehicle from being sold or destroyed before a court can render judgment in future forfeiture proceedings. The City cites Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co.,
The critical difference between Calero-Toledo and the present case is that plaintiffs’ vehicles have already been seized and are in the hands of the police. Just as with real property seized by the government in forfeiture proceedings, there is no danger that these vehicles will abscond. See James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
A' second reason offered by the City for maintaining custody of vehicles prior to judgment in forfeiture proceedings is that the City’s in rem jurisdiction over the vehicles depends upon its unbroken possession from seizure to judgment. The Supreme Court has held, however, that possession of a res during the entire course of the proceedings is unnecessary to preserve jurisdiction. See Republic Nat’l Bank of Miami v. United States,
Even if driving while intoxicated were considered a matter of “executive urgency,” the response the City has chosen, requiring the impoundment of vehicles until forfeiture proceedings are terminated, is ill-suited to address the urgency. While initial seizure of a vehicle serves the constructive purpose of keeping an individual from driving in an inebriated condition, that purpose often loses its basis in urgency once the individual has regained sobriety on the morrow.
Finally, the City’s asserted interest in removing dangerous drivers from the road is weakened if it extends not to all vehicles seized in connection with DWI arrests, but only to those that might yield an attractive price at auction. The November 1988 Forfeiture Guide produced by the Legal Bureau of the City of New York Police Department instructs that “[c]ertain categories of property do not warrant forfeiture litigation due to their small value or
D. Balancing the Mathews v. Eldridge Factors
Balancing the Mathews factors, we find that the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee that deprivations of property be accomplished only with due process 'of law requires that plaintiffs be afforded a prompt post-seizure, pre-judgment hearing before a neutral judicial or administrative officer to determine whether the City is likely to succeed on the merits of the forfeiture action and whether means short of retention of the vehicle can satisfy the City’s-need to preserve it from destruction or sale during the pendency-of proceedings:
In James Daniel Good Real Property, the Supreme Court concluded that to seize real property without notice and hearing, the “Government must show that less restrictive measures — i.e., a Us pendens, restraining order, or bond — would not suffice to protect the Government’s interests in preventing the sale, destruction, or continued unlawful use of the real property.” James Daniel Good Real Prop.,
E. Inapplicability of United States v. $8,850 and the Speedy Trial Test
The City argues that the Mathews v. Eldridge balancing test is displaced by the Supreme Court’s decision to apply the speedy trial test, and not the Mathews inquiry, in examining the constitutionality of any delay in the return of property subject to future civil forfeiture proceedings. See United States v. $8,850,
We disagree. As discussed in Section III.A above, plaintiffs’ claim does not concern the speed with which civil forfeiture proceedings themselves are instituted or conducted. Instead, plaintiffs seek a prompt post-seizure opportunity to challenge the legitimacy of the City’s retention of the vehicles while those proceedings are conducted. The application of the speedy trial test presumes prior resolution of any issues involving probable cause to commence proceedings and the government’s custody of the property or persons pen-dente lite, leaving only the issue of delay in the proceedings. The impoundment of property — or the incarceration of a criminal defendant — certainly increases the hardship worked by any delay. The Constitution, however, distinguishes between the need for prompt review of the propriety of continued government custody, on the one hand, and delays in rendering final judgment, on the other.
V. The Prompt Vehicle Retention Hearing
As a remedy, we order that claimants be given a prompt post-seizure retention hearing, with adequate notice,
Although we decline to dictate a specific form for the prompt retention hearing, we hold that, at a minimum, the hearing must enable claimants to test the probable validity of continued deprivation of their vehicles, including the City’s probable cause for the initial warrantless seizure. In the absence of either probable cause for the seizure or. post-seizure evidence supporting the probable validity of continued deprivation, an owner’s vehicle would have to be released during the pen-dency of the criminal and civil proceedings.
We hasten to point out that we do not envision the retention hearing as a forum for exhaustive evidentiary battles that might threaten to duplicate the eventual forfeiture hearing.
On remand, in addition to fashioning appropriate relief, the district court should ascertain how many of the named plaintiffs have recovered their vehicles from the Property Clerk and determine whether their claims have thereby been rendered moot.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, we hold that promptly after their vehicles are seized under N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 as alleged instru-mentalities of crime, plaintiffs must be given an opportunity to test the probable validity of the City’s deprivation of their vehicles pendente lite, including probable cause for the initial warrantless seizure. We remand to the district court to rule on plaintiffs’ request to certify their class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, and to formulate, in consultation with the parties, the appro
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. The New York City Corporation Counsel has delegated to the Property Clerk of the New York City Police Department the authority, under New York City’s Administrative Code, to bring the civil forfeiture actions at issue in this appeal. See Property Clerk v. Covell,
. As noted below, the remedies available to those who have had their property seized under New York state civil forfeiture law (N.Y.C.P.L.R. art. 13-A) do not apply to seizures under N.Y.C.Code § 14-140. Other remedies suggested by the City, specifically a Request for Judicial Intervention and an Article 78 proceeding brought under New York state law, do not provide a prompt retention hearing, as discussed below.
. The applicable rules state that "[i]f a timely demand is made for the return of the property before the forfeiture proceeding is instituted, such proceeding shall be brought no later than ... within 25 days after the date of demand. If such proceeding is not commenced within this time period, the property clerk shall give written notice to the claimant or the claimant's representative, at his or her last known address .. . that the property will be returned forthwith to that person.” 38-A R.C.N.Y. § 12-36(a). Absent a demand for the return of the property, the City may commence forfeiture proceedings on its own initiative, often at the conclusion of the criminal proceedings. See id. (“If such proceeding is instituted before the termination of criminal proceedings against the claimant, this sub-chapter shall not be construed to effect [sic ] any right of a party to the forfeiture proceeding to have the forfeiture proceeding stayed for such period as the court may determine.”).
.This provision and several others found in the rules governing forfeitures under the present statute were adopted as a result of this Court's determination that certain aspects of the predecessor statute were unconstitutional. See McClendon v. Rosetti,
. The state statute prohibits the operation of a motor vehicle if the driver "has .10 of one per centum or more by weight of alcohol in the person's blood.” N.Y. Veh. & Traf. § 1192(2). A violation is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine or by imprisonment for not more than one year, or both. Id. § 1193(l)(b).
.Judge Jacobs does not subscribe to the four preceding paragraphs which recount and rely upon the circumstances particular to the named plaintiffs in this putative class action. His reasons are as follows: (1) The opinion implicitly generalizes from circumstances of the individual plaintiffs — for example, that this one had never been arrested before, that this one is a retired person, and so forth. The named plaintiffs in a putative class action are frequently selected to be especially sympathetic and appealing, but the rule we make will also govern vehicles seized from persons who are habitual drunks. (2) The fact that the six “DWI arrestees ... pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of driving while impaired” does not remotely call into question the arresting officer’s probable cause to arrest them for drunk driving. It goes without saying that plea bargains in misdemeanor cases are offered for many reasons other than factual innocence or even insufficiency of evidence.
. Even though plaintiffs invoked Fourteenth Amendment protections in their complaint, their claims involve both the City’s probable cause to believe their vehicles were subject to seizure and forfeiture (a Fourth Amendment concern, as applied through the Fourteenth Amendment) and the City's justification for retaining their vehicles pendente lite (a Fourteenth Amendment concern). We address both issues.
. The court did abstain from hearing plaintiffs' claim that they had a due process right to a meaningful opportunity to request court-appointed counsel. Krimstock,
. Here and throughout this opinion, we use the phrase "innocent owner” as a term of art denoting a person who has an ownership interest in property threatened with civil forfeiture but who neither participated in nor permitted or suffered the alleged illegal use of the property, and persons who claim that status. Our use of the term is not intended to suggest that drivers or other persons initially charged with a vehicle-related crime are not presumed innocent until proven guilty in a criminal proceeding or are presumptively unlikely to prevail in a civil forfeiture proceeding.
. Marine Midland Bank involved the seizure of interbank funds under the federal civil forfeiture laws and upon a warrant issued by a federal magistrate judge, who had determined that the government had probable cause to believe that interbank accounts were being used to launder narcotics proceeds. Marine Midland Bank,
. See People v. Earley,
. The district court also cited United States v. Von Neumann,
. The 25-day rule under 38-A R.C.N.Y. § 12-3 6(a) represents a legislative expansion of the time period originally ordered in McClendon v. Rosetti,
. In contrast, while the statute here requires only that a forfeiture proceeding be initiated within 25 days after a claim is made, the California controlled substances act requires that, once a person claiming an interest in seized property files a verified claim, "the [civil] forfeiture proceeding shall be set for hearing on a day not less than 30 days therefrom, and the proceeding shall have priority over other civil cases." Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11488.5(c)(1) (emphasis added). Similarly, the civil forfeiture provision of the Wisconsin controlled substances act states that "the action shall be set for hearing within 60 days of the service of the answer but may be continued for cause or upon stipulation of the parties.” Wis. Stat. § 961.555(2)(b); see also State v. Rosen,
Some legislatures have sought to mitigate the depreciation of property values and other costs incurred through delays of civil forfeiture proceedings. See, e.g., Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-4310(1) ("Before staying civil discovery [in a forfeiture proceeding until a related criminal trial is concluded], the court shall make adequate provision to prevent any loss or expense to any victim or party resulting from the delay, including loss or expense due to maintenance, management, insurance, storage or preservation of the availability of the property or due to depreciation in the value of the property.”).
. In Bennis v. Michigan,
. This cumbersome construction, defining those subject to forfeiture proceedings in terms of who is not a "lawful claimant" to the property, appears to reflect the former practice under which the burden rested on a claimant to bring a civil action in replevin to obtain the return of seized property. See Hofferman v. Simmons,
.The relevant portion of the section provides:
Where moneys or property ... have been used as a means of committing crime or employed in aid or in furtherance of crime or held, used or sold in violation of law, ... a person who ... so used, employed, sold or held any such moneys or property or permitted or suffered the same to be used, employed, sold or held ... or a person who derives his or her claim in any manner from or through any such person, shall not be deemed to be the lawful claimant entitled to any such moneys or property....
N.Y.C.Code § 14 — 140(e)(1). The statute also deems not a lawful claimant any "person who derives his or her claim in any manner from or through any such person.” Id. This formulation evidently could include other potential
. It is not entirely clear whether the City has the burden of proving that the owner "permitted or suffered” a vehicle to be used as an instrumentality of crime, or whether innocent ownership is an affirmative defense to be raised by the claimant. Without deciding that question, we note that we have found one New York state court opinion that has held that the City has the burden. See Property Clerk v. Pagano,
. Many state statutes, while permitting seizure of forfeitable property, are much more explicit than N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 in limiting or exempting the forfeiture liability of innocent owners. These statutes generally provide for affirmative defenses by innocent owners or make proof of the owners' culpable knowledge part of the seizing authority's burden. For example, a Maine statute that permits forfeiture of a motor vehicle upon a defendant’s simultaneous conviction for operating under the influence (“OUI”) and operating after suspension for a prior OUI conviction, requires that the defendant be the "sole owner-operator of that vehicle.” Me.Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 29-A, § 2421(1); see also State v. One Blue Corvette, 732 A.2d 856 (Me.1999) (holding that the statutory requirement that defendant be the "sole owner-operator of that vehicle” precluded forfeiture of a vehicle jointly owned by defendant’s wife). Other state statutes contain express exceptions for a variety of innocent parties: Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-4304(l)-(2), (4)-(5) (common carriers; owners whose vehicles were "unlawfully in the possession of a person other than the owner” during commission or omission of an act; owners who "did not know and could not reasonably have known of the act or omission”; and bona fide purchasers for value "not knowingly taking part in an illegal transaction” and "reasonably without notice of the act or omission giving rise to forfeiture”); Cal. Health & Safety Code §§ 11470(e)-(h) (persons other than defendant with a community property interest in the vehicle; bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers), 11488.5(e) (owners who did not have “actual knowledge that the seized property would be or was used for a purpose for which forfeiture is permitted and consented to that use”); Fla. Stat. § 932.703(6)-(7) (spouses, lienholders, lessors, joint owners, and other parties lacking knowledge of the criminal activity alleged); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:64-5(a)-(b) (unwitting lessors and security-interest holders; owners who show that they were "not involved in or aware of the unlawful activity and ... had done all that could reasonably be expected to prevent the proscribed use of the property by an agent”); La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 14:98(D)(2)(b) (unwitting owners; owners of stolen vehicles); Minn.Stat. § 169A.63(7) (unwitting owners, bona fide security-interest holders, and lessors). Notably, New York state civil forfeiture statutes likewise provide a defense for innocent owners. See N.Y. C.P.L.R. 1311 (4)(d)(ii)-(iii) (innocent persons subject to "adverse impact of a forfeiture”; defendants acquitted of the underlying crime), 131 l(3)(b)(iv) (non-criminal defendants who either did not know “that the instrumentality was or would be used in the commission of a crime” or did not knowingly obtain an "interest in the instrumentality to avoid forfeiture”). In Property Clerk v. Ferris,
Moreover, in contrast to § 14-140, the primary federal civil drug forfeiture statute, 21 U.S.C. § 881, contained an express "innocent owner” defense, which stated that "no conveyance shall be forfeited ... to the extent of an interest of an owner, by reason of any act or omission established by that owner to have been committed or omitted without the knowledge, consent, or willful blindness of the owner.” 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(4)(C). Replacing this provision, the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act of 2000, Pub.L. No. 106-185, 114 Slat. 202 (codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. § 983), creates a uniform innocent owner defense whereby a claimant may affirmatively prove innocent ownership by a preponderance of the evidence. 18 U.S.C. § 983(d). The statute specifically mentions owners who “did not know of the conduct giving rise to forfeiture”; bona fide purchasers or sellers for value; claimants who acquired a property interest through marriage, divorce, or legal separation; spouses or legal dependents who acquired property by inheritance or probate; and joint tenants and others with a partial interest in property.
. In contrast, for orders of attachment granted without notice under New York state civil forfeiture law, contained at N.Y. C.P.L.R. art. 13-A, the claiming authority must move for a hearing within five days of the seizure. N.Y. C.P.L.R. 1317, 1329 (providing for ex parte attachment of assets for five days, after which the attaching authority must move for an order confirming the attachment and permitting the defendant to challenge the attachment, with the burden of proof on the attaching authority to establish the grounds for the attachment, its need, and the probability of success on the merits). In upholding these provisions against doubts as to the constitutionality under the Fourteenth Amendment of ex parte pre-judgment attachment, the New York Court of Appeals relied, inter alia, on available means to challenge promptly the basis for the attachment. Morgenthau v. Citisource, Inc.,
. The New York court rules include among "matters to be considered” at the conference the simplification of issues, setting a schedule for discovery, addition of necessary parties, and settlement, 22 N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. § 202.12(c)(l)-(4), and "any other matters that the court may deem relevant,” id. § 202.12(c)(5).
. Plaintiffs have represented that, in the New York Supreme Court, First Judicial Department, Civil Branch, all forfeiture actions under N.Y.C.Code § 14-140 are assigned to the same judge, making further delays likely.
. In contrast, a provision of the federal civil forfeiture statute allows release of property pendente lite under certain circumstances, including when "continued possession by the Government ... will cause substantial hardship to the claimant, such as preventing the functioning of a business, preventing an individual from working, or leaving an individual homeless; [and] the claimant's likely hardship ... outweighs the risk that the property will be destroyed, damaged, lost, concealed, or transferred if it is returned to the claimant during the pendency of the proceeding.” 18 U.S.C. § 983(f)(l)(C)-(D). Similarly, N.Y. C.P.L.R. 1311 (4)(d) permits the dismissal or mitigation of a forfeiture action "in the interests of justice” — for example, in light of "the seriousness and circumstances of the crime to which the property is connected relative to impact of forfeiture of property upon the person who committed the crime.” As noted earlier, however, N.Y. C.P.L.R. 1311 does not apply to "the limited forfeiture proceedings available pursuant to Administrative Code § 14-140.” Ferris,
. On several occasions, the Second Circuit has stressed that "[f|orfeiture is a harsh and oppressive procedure which is not favored by the courts.” United States v. $31,990 in U.S. Currency,
. Some state statutes expressly admonish against governmental opportunism in seizing and forfeiting property. See Cal. Health & Safety Code § 11469(a) ("Law enforcement is the principal objective of forfeiture. Potential revenue must not be allowed to jeopardize the effective investigation and prosecution of criminal offenses, officer safety, the integrity of ongoing investigations, or the due process rights of citizens."); id. § 11469(f) ("Seizing agencies shall avoid any appearance of impropriety in the sale or acquisition of forfeited property.”); Fla. Stat. § 932.704(1) ("It is the policy of this state that law enforcement agencies shall utilize the provisions of the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act to deter and prevent the continued use of contraband articles for criminal purposes while protecting the proprietary interests of innocent owners and lienholders and to authorize such law enforcement agencies to use the proceeds collected ... as supplemental funding for authorized purposes. The potential for obtaining revenues from forfeitures must not override fundamental considerations.... It is also the policy of this state that law enforcement agencies ensure that, in all seizures made under [the Act], their officers adhere to federal and state constitutional limitations regarding an individual's right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures....”).
. We note that in contrast to the forfeiture statute at issue in the present case, the Puerto Rican statute in Calero-Toledo required that seized motor vehicles be appraised for their monetary value by the Office of Transportation and that plaintiffs "have the right to give bond ... to answer for the seizure if the lawfulness of the latter is upheld.” 34 P.R. Laws Ann. § 1722(b) (repealed 1988).
. In addition, we note that the City does not caption these civil forfeiture actions as pro
. A claimant's proven history of persistent drunkenness or repeated DWI violations, however, might justify a fact-finder in denying release of the vehicle pendente lite.
. In Statewide Auto Parts, this Court considered a due process challenge to the federal government's seizure of real and personal commercial properties pursuant to an ex parte warrant and the federal civil forfeiture statute. Statewide Auto Parts, 971-F.2d at 898-99. In other cases involving seizure of real property, this Court has been careful to emphasize the value of less drastic means than seizure for protecting the government's interest in forfeitable property. See, e.g., United States v. Premises & Real Property at 4492 South Livonia Road, Livonia, N.Y.,
. We also note that this Court has observed, in the context of the federal forfeiture laws, that "under the Barker [speedy trial] test, which we think applies to the holding of the forfeiture trial as well as to the filing of the action, there is a due process violation at some point.” United States v. Banco Cafetero Panama,
. Pursuant to 38-A R.C.N.Y. § 12-32, the voucher issued to an arrestee by the police upon arrest and seizure must notify the arres-tee of procedures for demanding the return of property and the possible actions that the Property Clerk may take after the demand has been made. See also Butler v. Castro, 896
. We note that both parties appear to agree that plaintiffs' vehicles were not seized as "arrest evidence” pursuant to N.Y.C.Code § 14 — 140(b) but rather as instrumentalities of crime. According to the City: “The seven named plaintiffs [have had their vehicles] impounded and held by the Property Clerk for forfeiture, because they were used in furtherance of a crime.” In any event, it is hard to imagine how an arrestee's vehicle could serve as evidence in the ordinary DWI case.
. For example, we do not expect that these limited hearings will resemble the sometimes prolonged pretrial hearings that district courts in this Circuit have conducted to address probable cause for the government’s seizure of property under federal forfeiture laws. See, e.g., Names Registry Publ’g,
. At the time of oral argument before this Court, three of the seven named plaintiffs— Jones, Krimstock, and Walters' — had recovered their vehicles. Inasmuch as plaintiffs primarily seek relief in the form of a preliminary injunction and class certification, the question arises whether the claims of some plaintiffs have been rendered moot, and this is a question that a court must address sua sponte. The Supreme Court has held in some cases, however, that "the termination of a class representative’s claim does not moot the claims of the unnamed members of the class.... That the class was not certified until after the named plaintiffs’ claims had become moot does not deprive us of jurisdiction.... In such cases, the 'relation back' doctrine is properly invoked to preserve the merits of the case for judicial resolution.” County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
