Opinion
— Plaintiff, Leah Morris, appeals from summary judgment granted to defendant, the State Controller (controller), in a class action for equitable relief from alleged unconstitutional takings of property, namely interest “and other accruals” on unclaimed property held by the controller under the Unclaimed Property Law, Code of Civil Procedure section 1500 et seq. (UPL; undesignated section references are to the Code of Civil Procedure). The trial court ruled that the UPL did not work such a taking. We agree with that conclusion, and affirm the judgment.
FACTS
The UPL governs the state’s handling and disposition, generally through the controller, of property such as bank accounts and securities, held by entities such as banks, brokerage firms, and insurance companies, the owners of which have not acknowledged or claimed their interest in for several years,
The described escheat of unclaimed property under the UPL differs from traditional, “permanent escheat.” Permanent escheat, which generally requires a judicial proceeding, constitutes “the absolute vesting in the state of title to property . . . .” (§ 1300, subd. (d).) Nonpermanent “ ‘[e]scheat’ ” “means the vesting in the state of title to property . . . subject to the right of claimants to appear and claim the escheated property . . . .” (§ 1300, subd. (c).) 2
Plaintiff filed her complaint on behalf of herself and a class consisting of persons (excluding California state and federal judges) whose property, taken into custody under the UPL, had while in state custody earned either interest, dividends or other accruals that were used to fund state programs, or “allowed the state to forego borrowing like amounts,” for which the state had not paid compensation. The controller had paid plaintiff the money she had claimed (later stipulated to be $6,334.07), but had not paid her any interest earned on that principal or the interest the state had saved by not having to borrow the amount. The complaint alleged that the UPL was “purely custodial . . . and title to unclaimed property is never transferred from the owner to the defendant or the State of California.” Plaintiff alleged that the retention of interest earned on such private funds constituted a taking, and that unearned interest the state profited by from holding and using the property should be repaid as part of it. After alleging the suitability of a class action, plaintiff averred that the controller’s retention of earnings and failure to pay the interest the state had saved were takings without just compensation, in
The parties stipulated and the court ordered that it would decide the question of liability before class certification, and then the appropriate remedy. Both sides moved for summary judgment (in plaintiff’s case, “summary judgment as to liability”). Although the motions essentially presented legal questions, the controller submitted a declaration to the effect that the abandoned property account of the unclaimed property fund, into which unclaimed property is deposited, is not an interest-bearing account. In answers to interrogatories, filed by plaintiff, the controller stated that money in the general fund that is not immediately needed for expenditure is invested in a pooled money account, which does earn interest. 3
The basic premise of plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment was that the nonpermanent escheat of unclaimed property under the UPL transferred only custody, not title. Because title and ownership remained with owners like herself, plaintiff argued, the failure to compensate for use of the property, and the state’s retention of such interest as the property earned while in its hands, constituted uncompensated and hence unconstitutional takings. 4 The controller’s motion opposed plaintiff’s contentions on several bases, including that the state held title to escheated unclaimed property until it was claimed, and that in those circumstances the original owners did not have a property interest requiring retention of, or compensation by, interest.
Ruling that plaintiff had not established a taking in the operation of the UPL, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion, granted the controller’s, and entered judgment for the controller.
DISCUSSION
Here as below, plaintiff’s position depends upon the proposition that the UPL does not provide that the state holds title to nonpermanently escheated property. Section 1300, subdivision (c), however, refutes this claim. Once again, that subdivision defines escheat (as contrasted with permanent escheat) as “the vesting in the state of title to property . . . subject to the right of claimants to appear and claim the escheated property . . . .” Although the
There is no inconsistency between this reality and the legislative and judicial declarations that plaintiff relies on, which essentially distinguish between the status of property held under the UPL and property that has permanently escheated, granting absolute title to the state. Thus, section 1501.5, subdivision (a) provides that “. . . property received by the state under this chapter [UPL] shall not
permanently
escheat to the state.” (Italics added.) The same distinction appears in the cases plaintiff cites, which refer to the state’s taking custody rather than absolute ownership of unclaimed property.
(Fong v. Westly
(2004)
In short, nonpermanent title does reside in the state with respect to unclaimed property taken into custody under the UPL. The state’s ability to utilize that title is strictly governed by the UPL, which provides for retention to pay owners’ claims, and interim use in the general fund. But the state’s title overcomes plaintiff’s claims of entitlement to interest on the property, whether actually accrued or compensatory for the property’s use. Before explaining how this is so, however, we respond to plaintiff’s explicit and implicit claims that the statutory attribution of nonpermanent title to the state violates constitutional provisions.
First, plaintiff argues that escheat accomplished by statutory authorization, without notice and opportunity for a hearing, violates the requirements of due process. Assuming that permanent escheat requires such notice and hearing (see, e.g.,
State v. Savings Union Bank & Trust Co
(1921)
Fong, supra,
117 Cal.App.4th at pages 853-854, also rejected the contention, implicit in plaintiff’s position, that the transfer of property by nonperma-nent escheat under the UPL constituted an unconstitutional taking. In so holding,
Fong
relied on two federal cases, both of which again apply.
In re
The second cited case was the Supreme Court’s decision in
Texaco, Inc.
v.
Short
(1982)
Plaintiff avers that
Texaco, supra,
Texaco, supra,
Because title to plaintiff’s property was legitimately vested in the state during the period in question, she was not entitled to the interest earned on it. The UPL specifies that such interest shall be paid to the general fund. (§ 1562.) This directive does not violate the principle that interest “follows” and attaches to the principal on which it is earned (see, e.g.,
Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation
(1998)
Plaintiff’s claim of entitlement to “constructive interest” for state use of the property when it did not generate interest also fails. The state being entitled to use property to which it has constitutionally assumed title, there exists neither a taking in such use nor a duty to compensate for it. Plaintiff’s argument for “constructive interest” is based on a federal forfeiture case, which required the government to pay interest earned on money seized but ultimately returned to its owner. The case did not involve abandoned or unclaimed property, nor did its ruling derive from any constitutional mandate.
(U.S.
v.
$277,000 U.S. Currency
(9th Cir. 1995)
We conclude that the state’s retention of interest earned on unclaimed property, to which it has temporary, nonpermanent title, does not constitute an unconstitutional taking without compensation.
The judgment is affirmed. The controller shall recover costs on appeal.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 13, 2008, S165055.
Notes
The UPL previously provided for payment of interest on claims, but that allowance was eliminated in 2003. (Stats. 2003, ch. 228, § 8, eff. Aug. 11, 2003.)
The UPL is part of a larger escheat law, title 10 of part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which begins with section 1300. Its terms are applicable throughout the title.
The controller also reported paying approximately 200,000 unclaimed property claims, on the order of $1,000 each, in each of four recent fiscal years.
Although the complaint alleged that the property of some class members earned other incidents besides interest, plaintiff claimed only deprivation of interest. Our analysis will refer to interest, as the parties also generally do.
Plaintiff contends that the controller should be judicially estopped by statements made in briefs in other cases, about the rights of owners not being divested under the UPL. Although we grant the request to judicially notice these briefs, they do not qualify for judicial estoppel, which requires, among other things, that the positions taken in the former and present cases “are totally inconsistent.”
(Jackson v. County of Los Angeles
(1997)
