This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court making permanent a writ of prohibition.
In August, 1908, one Bessie Seaman, presented to Honorable E. P. Shortall, judge of the police court of the city and county of San Francisco, an affidavit, properly subscribed and sworn to by her, in which she averred that in February 1908, one E. R. Burke had willfully, unlawfully and feloniously taken and carried away a certain diamond breast-pin of the value of $250, the property of said Bessie Seaman, and that there was probable and reasonable cause to believe that said breast-pin was concealed at the place of business of the *584 Modem Loan Company, the above-named respondent, in San Francisco. Upon said affidavit the police judge issued a search-warrant, pursuant to which the said breast-pin was taken from the possession of the respondent. Thereafter, it appearing that said police judge was about to proceed and determine the ownership of said pin, the respondent, claiming a lien upon the same, and asserting that he was entitled as such lienholder to possession thereof, instituted these proceedings in the superior court for a writ of prohibition. That court held that the provisions of the Penal Code, which purport to authorize the police judge to hear and determine “the ownership of” and “title to” personal property, were unconstitutional, -and that therefore such police judge was without jurisdiction to proceed in the matter, and a peremptory writ of prohibition issued as prayed for in the petition. From the judgment in favor of the Modern Loan Company appellants prosecute this appeal.
Respondent claims that when personal property has been stolen or embezzled, and that fact is made to appear by affidavit, nevertheless a search-warrant should not issue unless a complaint is filed charging the guilty person with the larceny or embezzlement of the property in question. (See
contra, Haworth
v.
Newell,
The sections of the Penal Code which authorize the disposition and award of personal property seized under search-warrants fail to provide for the giving of notice to interested parties, or to afford them an opportunity to be heard on such proceedings, and for this reason respondent contends, that those sections are unconstitutional.
*585 When personal property has been stolen or embezzled, and as the result of proceedings under a search-warrant has been seized and delivered to a magistrate, he must dispose of it as provided in sections 1408 and 1409 of the Penal Code.
Subdivision 1 of section 1524 of the same code provides that a search-warrant may issue “When the property was stolen or embezzled, in which case it may be taken on the warrant from any place in which it is concealed, or from the possession of the person by whom it was stolen or embezzled, or from any person in whose possession it may be.” Section 1536 provides: “When the property is delivered to the magistrate he must, if it was stolen or embezzled, dispose of it as provided in sections 1408 and 1413, inclusive. . . .”
Sections 1408 and 1409 of the Penal Code read as follows:
“Sec. 1408. On satisfactory proof of the ownership of the property, the magistrate before whom the information is laid, or who examines the charge against the person accused of stealing or embezzling it, must order it to be delivered to the owner, on his paying the necessary expenses incurred in its preservation, to be certified by the magistrate. The order entitles the owner to demand and receive the property.”
“Sec. 1409. If property stolen or embezzled comes into the custody of the magistrate, it must be delivered to the owner on satisfactory proof of his title, and on his paying the necessary expenses incurred in its preservation, to be certified by the magistrate.”
We agree with the contention of the respondent that these two sections, so far as they are applicable to search-warrant proceedings, are void. One who is in possession of property under a claim of right cannot be deprived of its possession without due process of law; and in order to constitute due process of law, there must be notice of the time and place of hearing and an opportunity to be heard.
(Murray
v.
Hoboken Land etc. Co.,
As said by the supreme court of this state in
In re Lambert,
In the language of Mr. Justice Rich, speaking for the supreme court of the state of New York in
Re Grout,
It will be unnecessary in this case to consider whether or not the magistrate sitting in search-warrant proceedings may, as the language of the statute (Pen. Code, secs. 1408, 1409) imports, adjudicate the title to the property. It may be conceded, that if he passes upon the title he does so only incidentally
(Estate of Rathget,
*588 Turning from these observations to a consideration of cases which tend more directly to support respondent’s position, that the sections in question are void in failing to provide for the giving of notice to the claimant and an opportunity to be heard, in the case of State v. Snow, 3 R. I. 64, liquors of specified kinds kept for sale in violation of the provisions of a certain act were liable to be seized upon search-warrant and adjudged forfeited. The court held that the section providing for the mode of condemnation of the liquors was unwarranted, in that the parties interested in the subject of the adjudication were afforded under the act no opportunity to answer and defend. The court said: “In order to the validity of a judicial trial, the parties interested in the subject of the adjudication should be informed of the nature and cause of the charge upon which the adjudication is to be made—they must have an opportunity to answer and defend. Can it be said in this case that there is any such opportunity given to any person who has an interest in the things seized upon the search-warrant, that he has any notice of any allegation of the facts necessary to exist in order to warrant a forfeiture, or of any proceeding against the liquors themselves? We think not. No such allegation is anywhere made or to be made. No complaint of that kind is provided for, and the property is to be divested from the owner without any charge or trial of the facts upon which alone he could be legally divested, and without any notice of any such intended trial or inquiry. ” „
In the case of
Fisher
v.
McGirr,
In
Ieck
v.
Anderson,
And in
Loesch
v.
Koehler,
Hibbard
v.
People,
Donovan
v.
Mayor of Vicksburg,
Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, speaking of search-warrants, and after referring to a number of objections that would be fatal to such a warrant, says: “The warrant must also command that the goods or other articles to be searched for, if found, together with the party in whose custody they are found, be brought before the magistrate to the end that, upon further examination into the facts, the goods and the party in whose custody, they were, may be disposed of according to law. And it is a fatal objection to such a warrant that it leaves the disposition of the goods searched for to the ministerial officer, instead of requiring them to be brought before the magistrate, that he may pass his judgment upon the truth of the complaint made; and it would also be a fatal objection to a statute authorizing such a warrant, if it permitted a condemnation or other final disposition of the goods without notice to the claimant, and without an opportunity for a hearing afforded him.’’
Black on Intoxicating Liquors, at section 351, says: “The statute’’ (i. e., one providing for the confiscation or forfeiture of liquors kept in violation of law), “must provide *592 for notice to the party interested in the property, and for a trial and judicial ascertainment of the facts requisite by the statute to warrant a forfeiture, and' an opportunity must be given for such party to appear and defend. . If the statute fails in these particulars it is not valid.”
McConnell
v.
McKillip,
The ease of
Collins
v.
Lean,
There is a line of cases holding that it is a proper exercise of legislative power to provide for the destruction of property without notice when the public welfare demands
*594
summary action. Instances of this kind are the power to destroy diseased meat or decayed fruit, to kill diseased cattle, to destroy obscene pictures and books, to pull down houses in the path of a devastating fire, to destroy property used or kept in violation of the law which is incapable' of lawful use.
(Mullen
v.
Mosley,
If it be conceded that in a criminal prosecution a court, judge or magistrate would be authorized and warranted incidentally to pass upon and award the possession of personal property as provided in said sections 1408 and 1409, yet in the ease at bar no one has been arrested; no one has been charged with an offense; no one has been brought to trial, nor is the article seized to be used in evidence in any ease. Thus it clearly appears that the search-warrant proceedings were resorted to for the sole purpose of having the magistrate pass upon the right of possession of property under a law which gives no notice to the person from whom the property is summarily taken. We think that it was never intended under the circumstances of this case that the right of possession of property should be adjudicated by a magistrate, especially when the law has provided the means for settling such question by the ordinary action of claim and delivery. In our opinion sections 1408, 1409, in so far as they purport to authorize a magistrate to pass upon and adjudicate the right to the possession of personal property without notice to the person from whose possession it was taken or who claims title to it, are null and void.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hall, J., and Cooper, P. J., concurred.
