Opinion
In a case of first impression, we conclude the municipal court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under section 10751 of the Vehicle Code (section 10751) to dispose of an allegedly stolen vehicle during the pendency of defendant’s criminal trial for receiving stolen property (Pen. Code, § 496, subd. 1). Accordingly, the municipal court order had no collateral estoppel effect and the superior court erred in dismissing the information on that basis. We reverse.
Background
Following defendant’s March 1987 preliminary hearing, he was held to answer on one felony count of receiving stolen property, a 1983 Porsche automobile engine. Before his trial, however, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Detective Thomas Lynch, the investigating officer who testified at defendant’s preliminary hearing, instituted a municipal court proceeding under section 10751 to dispose of the seized vehicle containing the allegedly stolen engine. (People v. 1981 Porsche Convertible (Mun. Ct. L.A. County, 1987, No. 003520).)
Subdivision (a) of section 10751 states: “No person shall knowingly buy, sell, offer for sale, receive, or have in his possession, any vehicle, or component part thereof, from which the manufacturer’s serial or identification number has been removed, defaced, altered, or destroyed, unless the vehicle or component part has attached thereto an identification number assigned or approved by the department in lieu of the manufacturer’s number.” 1
Subdivision (b) of section 10751 provides for the destruction, disposition, or sale of a vehicle or component part described in subdivision (a) which comes into the custody of a peace officer. However, the court may not issue an order disposing of the property until the person from whom the property
At the January 1988 municipal court postseizure hearing, the People were not represented by counsel. Lynch appeared and testified, as did defendant, who was represented by counsel. The municipal court ordered the seized vehicle returned to defendant, finding the People had failed to prove dеfendant “had knowingly bought, sold, offered for sale, received, or had in his possession any vehicle, or component parts thereof, from which the manufacturer’s serial number or identification number had been removed, defaced, altered, or destroyed . . . .” The municipal court further found defendant was a “bona fide purchaser of the vehicle, engine, and transmission and did not willfully or knowingly purchase or receive said vehicle, engine, or transmission knowing that it was or had been stolen . . . .” The People did not appeal the municipal court order.
Knowledge that the property was stolen is a requisite element of the crime of receiving stolen property. (Pen. Code, § 496, subd. 1; CALJIC No. 14.65.) In February 1988, defendant filed a motion in the superior court to dismiss the information on the ground the People were collaterally estopped from relitigating the issue of whether he knew the vehicle, engine, or transmission had been stolen. After hearing argument by counsel for both parties, the superior court granted the motion. This appeal followed.
Issue
The People contend (1) the municipal court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under section 10751 to enter an order disposing of the seized vehicle; and (2) in any event, the superior court erred in applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel.
Discussion
Preliminarily, we note that in California, a court’s subject matter jurisdiction may be collaterally аttacked where the judgment is void on its face. (See 8 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Attack on Judgment in
In opрosing defendant’s motion to dismiss, the People collaterally attacked the municipal court order, contending it “was beyond the power of the court to issue.” With our permission, the People augmented the record on appeal by supplying a few documents filed in the section 10751 proceeding. But since the section 10751 hearing was not transcribed, we are unable to discern whether the municipal court record contains any evidence of this pending criminal action against defendant.
In any event, since the People collaterally attacked the municipal court order in this criminal action, the superior court could have taken judicial notice of its own records in this case. (See
Haldane
v.
Bogy
(1962)
We must ascertain the legislative intent in order to give effect to the purpose of section 10751, subdivision (b), which states that it does “not apply with respect to a seized vehicle or component part used as evidence in any criminal action or proceeding.” In determining legislative intent, we look first to the words of the statute.
(People
v.
Black
(1982)
Defendant concedes in his brief that the limiting language in subdivision (b) of section 10751 precluded the municipal court from disposing of the vehicle during the pendency of his criminal action. However, defendant
The
Griffin
decision is readily distinguishable, however. There, the court continued a probation revocation hearing at the defendant’s request, unaware that the probationary period would expire before the continued hearing date. After the court revoked probation, the defendant challenged the validity of the order, claiming the court’s jurisdiction to modify probation hаd expired. In a habeas corpus writ proceeding, the California Supreme Court held the court’s jurisdiction had not expired, stating: “The statutes themselves contemplate that such fundamental jurisdiction continues, for they provide for the court’s determination of certain matters after the end of the probationary term.”
(In re Griffin, supra,
But in this case, it cannot be said that the municipal court merely acted in excess of its jurisdiction. To the contrary, the рlain language of subdivision (b) of section 10751 establishes the municipal court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear or determine the matter because the seized vehicle was to be used as evidence in defendant’s pending criminal action. The fact the People erroneously sought a municipal court order disposing of the vehicle under section 10751 is immaterial. For it is fundamental that subject matter jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent, waiver or estoppel.
(Flores
v.
Natividad Medical Center
(1987)
Nor are we persuaded that subdivision (e) of section 10751, which describes the nature of the postseizure hearing,
2
conferred subject matter
But defendant’s construction of subdivisions (b) and (e) fails to properly harmonize the two parts, either with each other or with Penal Code section 1417 et seq., which governs the disposition of evidence in criminal casеs.
3
In interpreting a statute, the court must avoid a construction that makes some words surplusage.
(People
v.
Black, supra,
Defendant nevertheless argues the municipal court was vested with jurisdiction to render factual findings under subdivision (e) of section 10751 notwithstanding the pending criminal action, since good faith purchasers of seized property are entitled to a prompt determination of their rights. Defendant relies on the court’s statement in
Hughes
v.
Neth
(1978)
In
Hughes,
the court concluded former section 10751 did not comply with the due process requirement of notice and hearing. The Legislature subsequently amended the statute in response to the
Hughes
decision. In discussing former section 10751, the
Hughes
court said that although the section provided exemptions to the summary disposal of vehicles or vehicle parts with altered or removed serial or manufacturer’s numbers, the statute left “the factual determinations implicit in the above exemptions to be made by the police officer or the magistrate acting ex parte. This section provides no safeguards to prevent the arbitrary seizure and destruction оf property alleged to be controlled by it where it is applied to vehicles seized but never used as evidence because no criminal proceedings were commenced.”
(Hughes
v.
Neth, supra,
Nothing in the
Hughes
opinion indicates there was a pending criminal action against the person from whom the seized motorcycle was taken. As we read the opinion, we find it addressed the arbitrary seizure and destruction of “vehicles seized but never used as evidence because no criminal proceedings were commenced.”
(Hughes
v.
Neth, supra,
While defendant contends the Legislature demonstrated in subdivision (f) that it knows how to exempt a class of persons, namely scrap metal proces
It therefore follows that the municipal court order is void for lack of jurisdiction and thus has no collateral estoppel eifect. The superior court erred in dismissing the action under the doctrine of collateral estoppel.
Disposition
We reverse the order of dismissal.
Spencer, P. J., and Devich, J., concurred.
Notes
A violation of section 10751 constitutes a misdemeanor. (Veh. Code, § 40000.9.)
Subdivision (e) states: “A hearing on the disposition of the property shall be held by the municipal or justice court within 60 days after the seizurе. The hearing shall be before the court without a jury. [[J] (1) If the evidence reveals either that the identification number has not been removed, altered, or destroyed or that the identification number has been removed, altered, or destroyed but satisfactory evidence of ownership has been presented to the seizing agency or court, the property shall be released to the person entitled thereto. Nothing in this
Penal Code section 1417 provides: “All exhibits which have been introduced or filed in any criminal action or proceeding shall be retained by the clerk of the court subject to Sections 1417.2 and 1417.3 until final determination of the action or proceedings and the exhibits shall thereafter be distributed or disposed of as provided in this chapter.”
Penal Code section 1417.1 provides in relevant part: “No order shall be made for the destruction of an exhibit prior to the final determination of the action or рroceeding. . . .”
Penal Code section 1417.2 states: “Notwithstanding Section 1417.5, the court may, on application of the party entitled thereto or an agent designated in writing by the owner, order an exhibit delivered to that party at any time prior to the final determination of the action or proceeding, upon stipulation of the parties or upon notice and motion if both of the following requirements are met: [j|] (a) No prejudice will be suffered by either party. [j[] (b) A full and complete photographic record is made of the exhibits so released. [If] The party to whom the exhibit is being returned shall provide the photographic record. This section shall not apply to any material, the relеase of which is prohibited by Section 1417.6.”
Penal Code section 1417.5 provides in part: “Except as provided in Section 1417.6, 60 days after the final determination of a criminal action or proceeding, the clerk of the court shall dispose of all exhibits introduced or filed in the case and remaining in the clerk’s possession
Subdivision (f) states: “This section shall not apply to a scrap metal processor engaged primarily in the acquisition, processing, and shipment of ferrous and nonferrous scrap, and who receives dismantled vehicles from licensed dismantlers, licensed junk collectors, or licensed junk dealers as scrap metal for the purpose of recycling the dismantled vehicles for their metallic content, the end product of which is the production of material for recycling and remelting purposes for steel mills, foundries, smelters, and refiners.”
