Opinion
Undеr the financial responsibility laws (Veh. Code, §§ 16000-16553)
1
the Department of Motor Vehicles (hereinafter the department) will suspend the license of a driver who is involved in an automobile accident which has resulted in bodily injury or property damage in excess of $200 unless he either deposits security with the department sufficient in the opinion of the department to satisfy any final judgment against him up to a stated maximum or establishes his exemption from the security requirement by one of several methods, such as by showing that he was insured at the time of the accident.
2
However, as a condition of the suspension, the department must make a determination that there is a reasonable possibility thаt a judgment may be recovered against the driver, based upon his potential culpability.
(Orr
v.
Superior Court
(1969)
The question involved in this proceeding is whether the driver is entitled to a hearing on the issue of his potential culpability prior to the suspension of his license or whether the department may make its determination, as it now does, merely on the basis of writtеn accident reports which the persons involved in the accident are required to file (§ 16000) without affording the driver an opportunity to personally appear. We conclude that the determination of possible culpability by the department without affording the licensee an opportunity for a hearing does not comply with the requirements of due process, in view of the United States Supreme Court decisions in
Bell
v.
Burson
(1971)
Petitioner is a minor who was involved in an automobile accident on
*795 March 18, 1971. The driver of the other vehicle in the accident filed a report with the department claiming that he had incurred property damage of $260. Petitioner also filed an acсident report. The department, apparently on the basis of these reports, found there was a reasonable possibility that a judgment might be recovered against petitioner as a result of the accident. Since petitioner was uninsured and could not deposit security, his license was suspended. He asserted that he was not rеsponsible for the accident and demanded a hearing to determine whether there was any likelihood that he would be found liable.
Upon the refusal of the department to grant a hearing, he filed a petition for a writ of mandate in an appellate court through his guardian ad litem. The petition seeks, on behalf of petitioner and others similarly situated, to compel respondents, the department and its director, to revoke the order of suspension issued to petitioner and others whose licenses were suspended without hearing, and to afford them notice and an opportunity to be heard on the question of their possible culpability.
Petitioner relies on numerous recent cases in which the United States Supreme Court and this court have recognized that an individual is constitutionally entitled to a hearing prior to being deprived of a significant interest.
(Goldberg
v.
Kelly
(1970)
The rule explicated in the foregoing cases is applicable to the instant circumstances. A person’s interest in the retention of his driver’s license and in the use of his motor vehicle represents a sufficiently important benefit to justify the requirement that he be accorded a hearing, before he is deprived of those rights, to determine whether there is a reasonable possibility that a judgment will be recovered against him.
Petitioner emphasizes that the rural and urban poor, who cannot afford to purchase insurance or tо post security, are frequently faced with license
*796
suspension under the financial responsibility law, and that a person deprived of the right to drive may forfeit his employment and suffer other disabilities. If there had been any lingering doubt about the importance of the right to a driver’s license, it has been dispelled by
Bell
v.
Burson, supra,
We observe, as a second factor justifying a presuspension hearing, that the primary purpose of the financial responsibility law is not to assure that careless drivers are denied the . use of the highways—since the most grossly negligent drivers who can post security or are exempt from, complying with the requirement may retain their licenses—but, rather, to afford monetary protection to those who suffer injury or property damage by virtue of the carelessness of financially irresponsible drivers.
(Barrera
v.
State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co.
(1969)
Nevertheless, respondents argue, this court decided in
Escobedo
v.
State of California
(1950)
Two years after our decision in
Orr
v.
Superior Court, supra,
*797
The significance of
Bell,
however, is that the decision not only requires a prior determination of culpability as a condition of suspension but that it leaves no doubt such a determination must be made in the context of a hearing. Georgia actually provided a hearing prior to suspension, but the proceeding was confined to such questions as whether the driver was in fact involved in the accident and whether he came within any of the statutory exemptions. The high court held that in providing a forum to decide the question of possible -liability Geоrgia could elect to include this issue at the hearing already provided by its laws (402 U.S. at pp. 542-543 [29 L.Ed.2d at pp. 96-97]), that the additional expense to the state was not a sufficient reason to deny a hearing (
We are called upon, then, to examine the procedure followed in this state to determine if it satisfies the requirements of
Bell
v.
Burson, supra,
*798
We conclude that this procedure does not comply with the command of
Bell
v.
Burson, supra,
Respondents do not seriously contend that the procedure followed by the department constitutes a hearing on the issue of possible culpability. They assert, however, that because the scope of the determination to be *799 made by the department is restricted to whether there is credible evidence of a reasonable possibility of the driver’s culpability and the question of actual fault is not in issue, it is sufficient if the department makes its determination on the basis of the written reports.
This posture is in conflict with both
Bell
v.
Burson, supra,
It necessarily follows that
Escobedo
v.
State of California, supra,
The licensee must be afforded the opportunity to make his presentation personally rather than in writing, under the holding of the United States Supreme Court in
Goldberg
v.
Kelly, supra,
Petitioner is entitled to a writ of mandate commanding respondents to revoke the order suspending his license and to provide him with an opportunity for a hearing. He also seeks to compel respondents to reinstate the licenses of those persons whose driving privileges were previously suspended under the financial responsibility law, until respondents grant them a hearing on the issue of their possible culpability. We do not deem it necessary to require respondents to vacate suspension orders previously issued, other than the order issued to petitioner. However, those whose licenses are currently under suspension because of their failure to comply with the requirements of the financial responsibility law are entitled to a hearing if they so request.
Finally, petitioner prays for damages allegedly Suffered as the result of the illegal suspension of his license. He cites no authority and has presented neither evidence nor argument to justify an award of damages in this mandamus proceeding. The denial of a damage award is proper.
Let a writ of mandate issue directing respondents to revoke the order suspending petitioner’s license and to provide petitioner, upon due notice, a hearing on the suspension of his license.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
AII code references are to the Vehicle Code.
In addition to suspension of the license of the driver of a vehicle involved in an accident, the financial responsibility law provides that the owner of the car must surrender his registration card and license plates to the department and store the car at his own expense if neither he nor the person who drove the car with his permission can comply with the security deposit requirement or establish an exemption. (§ 16100 et seq.)
Section 40833 provides that neither this report nor the department’s action thereon shall be referred to in any way or be admissible as evidence of the negligence or due care of any party at the trial of any action at law to recover damages.
According to petitioner, it is the department’s poliсy to refuse to reveal the contents of the opposing driver’s report unless and until a court action is filed seeking review of the suspension. The Attorney General, representing the department, acknowledges that this has been the department’s policy in the past and states that it was due to a misunderstanding of the law. This lapse has now been corrected, it is asserted, and orders have been issued to department employees that a driver involved in an accident is entitled to see the reports filed by other parties and witnesses prior to the time he files an action for court review. Although this policy statement does not provide that a driver threatened with suspension may review the evidence submitted to the department prior to the effective date of suspension by the department, we assume that such is the intent of the order, however inartfully drawn, *798 in view of the Attorney General’s concession in his brief that it would be “unthinkable” to permit an agency to base its decision upon evidence not disclosed to the affected party.
Petitioner assеrts that the department’s procedure provides him with no hearing whatever. He states that because the department is required to decide only whether it is reasonably possible that he was liable for the accident, almost any discrepancy between opposing reports would justify a decision against him. The others involved in the accident may omit pertinent matters or may simply falsify their reports in an attempt to force petitioner to pay their claims of damage or suffer the suspension of his license. If he is not afforded the opportunity to challenge these errors or misstatements at a hearing before the department he is forever preсluded from a meaningful opportunity to defend his version of the accident to avoid a suspension. He is not entitled to a trial de novo even if he seeks court review of the department’s determination since on review a court must rely solely upon evidence submitted to the department.
(Orr
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Richardson
v.
Wright
(1972)
Respondents place great reliance upon
Rivas
v.
Cozens
(N.D.Cal. 1971)
