In thе District Court, the appellants challenged the constitutionality of certain Arizona statutes, sought to convene
On July 8, 1965, Adolfo Perez was involved in an accident in his home state of Arizona. At the time, he was driving alone in an automobile registered in his name, but owned by the community Adolfo Perez and Emma Perez, husband and wife, the appellants. Later, in the Arizona Court, the occupants of the other automobile instituted an action against appellants for damages sustained in the accident. Appellants appeared in that action and confessed judgment for approximately $2,450.00. Adolfo’s driver’s license, and his automobile registration, were thereafter suspended by reason of his failure to carry the liability insurance required under the provisions of ARS § 28-1142. Subsequently, the appellants filed separаte petitions in bankruptcy and each was adjudicated a bankrupt. The confessed judgment was scheduled by each of the bankrupts. Appellants were thereafter duly discharged.
At a later date, the appellants were served with a notice by the Arizona Highway Department that thеir drivers’ licenses, as well as motor vehicle registration, had been suspended pursuant to the provisions of ARS § 28-1162, subsec. A.
APPELLANTS’ CONTENTIONS
Appellants’ contentions, briefly stated, are as follows:
(1) That, as applied to appellants, ARS § 28-1163, subsec. B is in conflict with Section 17 of the Bankruptсy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 35, and thus violates the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution.
(2) That ARS § 28-1162, subsec. A, separately, and when read in connection with ARS § 28-1163, subsec. B, violates the due process and equal protection clauses of the Constitution, as imposed on the states by the Fourteenth Amendment.
(3) Thаt the challenged statutes violate the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits involuntary servitude.
(4) That the challenged statutes constitute a bill of attainder prohibited by Article I, Section Ten of the United States Constitution.
The first issue has been decided against appellants in Kesler v. Dept. оf Public Safety,
Aside from the decisions in Kesler and Reitz, a number of responsible courts have spoken on the subject and have held that financial responsibility laws, such as the one here in question, are not violative of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The bеllwether of this group dealing with the legislation before us is Schecter v. Killingsworth,
Financial responsibility laws, such as the Arizona statutes before us, do not unconstitutionally discriminate against the рoor. Moreover, Schecter teaches that the provisions of the Arizona legislation, designed to provide security against uncompensated damages, is not violative of substantive due process. Although Kesler is not cited in Schecter, the logic there employed follows the same general pattern. No one questions that one of the principal purposes of financial responsibility acts is the protection of the public using the highways from financial hardship which might result by the negligent use of automobiles by financially irresponsible persons. That object is accomplished by requiring proof of financial responsibility by those involved in an accident either by the showing of insurance which covers the accident or requiring a bond or a deposit of cash or other securities. Incident to one of its principal purposes, by reason of threat of loss of driving rights following an uninsured accident, the legislation tends to encourage operators of motor vehicles to obtain liability insurance and to invite drivers to drive more carefully. The latter, however, are not the primary objectives of this legislation. The Arizona Court correctly rejected the constitutional challenges of lack of due process and equal protection of the laws. The fact that a person may be poor and unable to furnish financial security or pay a judgment growing out of his conduct on the highways does not guarantee that person a right to drive. Here, we should mention, as was emphasized in Kesler, the fact that the Arizona legislation permits the judgment debtors to pay the judgments in installments. While we are not governed by state decisions interpreting the United States Constitution, there is no rule against following those decisions when they are patterned after those in the Federal Courts.
APPEAL OF EMMA PEREZ
Mrs. Perez argues that the automobile was registered in her husband’s name, he was the negligent driver and, although the automobile was community property
Starting with the fundamental premise that ownership of the vehicle was in the community of husband and wife and that Mrs. Perez’ ownership was equal to her husband’s, subject to her husband’s right to administer the property, Mortensen v. Knight,
It seems to us that Mrs. Perez’ legal status, on the facts before us, is closely analogous to that of an automobile owner who permits another to drive it. If the driver is negligent, judgment is entered against both the driver and the owner, or the owner alone. The financial rеsponsibility laws have been uniformly applied against the owner under these circumstances. The parent case on this line of authority seems to be In re Opinion of Justices,
The logic of the Massachusetts court was used to reach the same conclusion in Watson v. State Division of Motor Vehicles,
More in point is Sheehan v. Division of Motor Vehicles,
The following cases, among others, invoke the same legal principles and uphold the state’s right to revoke the driver’s license and the car registration after judgment has been entered against the owner and remains unsatisfied. Continental Cas. Co. v. Phoenix Constr. Co.,
Can we logically distinguish Escobedo, and other cases of like tenor, from the case before us ? Simply stated, a valid distinction does not exist. In Escobedo, the wife was the owner of the automobile, permitting her husband to drive the vehicle on the California highways. Here, the wife is the owner of her community interest in the automobile. Thе statutory and decisional law of Arizona make the husband what might be termed the managing agent of the wife in the control of the community automobile. We might well say that the Arizona community property law was written into and became part of the marriage contract between appellants. Moreover, Mrs. Perez’ driver’s license is not a right which is entirely separate and distinct from the community. With married couples in Arizona, the driver’s licenses of both husband and wife are an integral part of the ball of wax, which is the basis of the Arizona community property laws. Although issued to the individuals, the licenses grant permission to drive community vehicles where a husband and wife are concerned. The fact, if it be a fact, that Mrs. Perez could not use the community property to purchase casualty insurance is beside the point. Her driver’s license was issued subject to the financiаl responsibility law. The loss of her driver’s license is the price an Arizona wife must pay for negligent driving by her husband of the community vehicle, provided, that neither she, her husband, nor the community pay the damages, established by judgment, flowing from the husband’s negligent acts. In these circumstances, the police power of the state to exercise proper control over reckless, wrongful driving on its highways overbalances the wife’s right to retain- her license. It is our considered judgment that the legislation in question bears a real and a substantial relationship to public safety on the Arizona highways. Since Mrs. Perez cannot provide proof of that responsibility, she is no longer entitled to drive on the highways. Of course, arrangements can still be made to pay the judgment in installments.
We agree with the trial judge that the claims of unconstitutionality are unsubstantial within the meaning of the rule stated in Ex Parte Buder,
Other contentions raised by the appellants have received our consideration.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 28 U.S.C. § 2281.
. ARS § 28-1162, subsec. A:
“The superintendent upon receipt of a certified copy of a judgment, shall forthwith suspend the license and registration and nonresident operating privilege of a person against whom the judgment was rendered, except as otherwise provided in this section and § 28-1165.”
. ARS § 25-211.
. The problems rising from a divorce of the ] ties or death of the husband are not before us.
