OPINION
This is the state’s appeal from a final judgment of the Superior Court dismissing the state’s appeal to that court from a final judgment of the Sixth Division District Court that had dismissed its civil in rem forfeiture proceeding commenced there pursuant to G.L.1956 § 21-28-5.04.2.
Case Facts and Procedural History
The pertinent facts and procedural history of this case show that on November 5, 1992, the state filed a civil in rem complaint in the Sixth Division District Court, alleging that the defendant vehicle, a 1990 Chevrolet Corvette (Corvette), was purchased by Oscar Caba (Caba) with proceeds derived from the illegal sales of controlled substances and therefore subject to civil forfeiture under § 21-28-5.04.2. In response to the state’s complaint for forfeiture, Jacqueline Francisco (Francisco or claimant), Caba’s sister, filed an answer, asserting therein that she was the innocent owner of the Corvette and that it had not been purchased with drug proceeds and praying that the forfeiture be denied. In accordance with the civil forfeiture statute, a hearing was held before a judge of the Sixth Division District Court to determine whether the Corvette was subject to forfeiture.
At that hearing the state presented evidence showing that on April 2, 1992 the Corvette was seized following the execution of a search warrant at Caba’s East Providence residence. During that search police recovered heroin, money, and original purchase records in the name of Caba relating to the Corvette. It was shown that Francisco did not live with Caba but that the Corvette had nonetheless remained at Caba’s home for some three months from December 1991 until the execution of the search warrant on March 20, 1992. Additionally the state offered evidence that Caba alone had negotiated the purchase of the Corvette, that he paid $19,500 in cash for the vehicle, and that in March of 1992 he had attempted to obtain a Florida registration for the vehicle in the name “Jackeline Francisco” through an accomplice of Caba’s in the heroin trafficking enterprise alleged against Caba. Francisco, however, testified that she had asked her brother to purchase the Corvette for her because of her inexperience in car buying. She further testified that she borrowed and then gave her brother the money with which to purchase the Corvette. The District Court judge found that the state had not established probable cause to show that the Corvette had been purchased with drug proceeds and on November 5, 1993 entered a judgment in favor of Francisco and ordered the Corvette to be returned to her.
*504
Following entry of the District Court final judgment, the state then filed its notice of appeal to the Providence County Superior Court pursuant to § 21 — 28—5.04.2(j)(l). The claimant, however, moved to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that the civil in rem forfeiture statute did not provide the state any right to appeal and additionally that the appeal was prohibited by both state and federal constitution double jeopardy clauses. That motion was heard before a justice in the Superior Court. She dismissed the appeal, agreeing that § 21-28-5.04.2 did not grant the state a right of appeal and that the state and federal double jeopardy clauses prohibited such an appeal. In deciding the double jeopardy question, she characterized the civil in rem forfeiture proceeding as quasi-criminal and thus concluded that the state was not allowed to appeal from the adverse ruling, citing
United States v. DiFmncesco,
The Statutory Objection
We first address the question of whether the General Assembly granted the state a right of appeal when it enacted Rhode Island’s civil in rem forfeiture law, § 21-28-5.04.2. It is well settled in this state that the construction of statutes is a matter reserved for the courts and that the Supreme Court is the final arbiter of questions of statutory construction.
Lawrence v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
The language of concern in this appeal is found in § 21 — 28—6.04.2(j) (1). It provides that “[a]n appeal may be claimed by either party from any judgment of forfeiture rendered by the district court, to be taken in like manner as by defendants in criminal cases within the jurisdiction of the district court to try and determine * * *.” Identical language is found in G.L.1956 § 12-21-30. We conclude that by using the phrase “either party” the General Assembly intended to give the state a right of appeal. Although it is the property that is being acted against in a civil in rem forfeiture case, the only parties litigating the issue of forfeiture are the state and any claimant. Therefore, when the statute speaks of “either party,” it must mean the state and/or a claimant.
Our interpretation is not affected by the additional language in § 21 — 28—5.04.2(j)(l) that allows an appeal to either party from “any judgment of forfeiture.” Even though that language might suggest that an appeal is available to either party only after there has been a judgment in which the property has been forfeited to the state, such an interpretation would render the words “either party” mere surplusage because it would only be the aggrieved claimant who would want to appeal from a “judgment of forfeiture.” We believe that it is best then to construe the language “any judgment of forfeiture” to mean “any judgment
concerning
a forfeiture.” By construing the statute to mean “concerning” a forfeiture we conclude that we “better fulfill the purpose of the statute.”
See, e.g., Rice Machinery, Inc. v. Norberg,
We are also not willing to accept claimant’s contention that the phrase contained in § 21-28 — 5.04.2(j)(l) that requires appeals “to be taken in like manner as by defendants in criminal cases” requires a contrary interpretation. The claimant suggests that the state is generally not given a right of appeal in criminal cases and that thus the appeal process in a civil in rem forfeiture proceeding should follow the “manner” of criminal cases and not allow the state any opportunity for appeal. We find this to be an awkward reading of the statute and believe that the word “manner” is more properly understood as speaking to the
procedure
to be followed in taking an appeal. The claimant’s argument additionally lacks merit since it merely begs the question rather than answer it. It is well settled that the state in certain instances has statutory authority to claim appeals in criminal proceedings.
State v. Alexander,
Finally, we are unpersuaded by claimant’s contention that under § 21-28-5.04.2(o) the General Assembly evidenced an intent to preclude the state’s appeal in civil in rem *505 forfeiture cases by requiring the properly to be returned to the claimant forthwith after a judgment against the state. The claimant suggests that the return of the property evinces an intention that the case should proceed no further. We believe, however, that the General Assembly did not intend the property to be returned until after the appellate process had been concluded, knowing that the state’s appeal would serve to stay the District Court’s order. See Dist. R. Civ. P. 62, 73.
The Double Jeopardy Issue
We next consider the double jeopardy issue raised by claimant. She contends that even if the General Assembly intended to give the state a right of appeal from an adverse judgment in a civil in rem forfeiture proceeding, the double jeopardy clauses of the United States Constitution 1 and the Rhode Island Constitution 2 prohibit such an appeal. She suggests that the appeal would constitute a forbidden “successive prosecution.”
In considering this contention, we note that the double jeopardy clause contained in the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution is made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Benton v. Maryland,
It has long been recognized by the United States Supreme Court that the double jeopardy clause “protects against three distinct abuses: a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal; a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction; and multiple punishments for the same offense.”
United States v. Halper,
The factual circumstances that over time have proven incompatible with the “complex of rights” protected by the double jeopardy clause have varied widely. However, whether involving the multiple punishment component,
see State v. One Lot of $8,560 in U.S. Currency,
Thus it was in
Ventures Management Co., Inc. v. Geruso,
Although arising in the context of the double jeopardy ban against multiple punishments, the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Ursery,
— U.S. -,
In responding to this argument, the Court made it a clear that a civil forfeiture proceeding was an in rem proceeding against a physical object and thus distinguishable from an in personam criminal prosecution.
Ursery,
— U.S. at -,
The Court in
Ursery
applied a two part test to consider whether the civil forfeiture proceedings in that case were part of that rare breed of case so sufficiently punitive as to amount to a criminal prosecution for double jeopardy analysis.
Id.
at —,
In this instant case, as was the case in Ursery, the legislative intent was to make the in rem proceedings clearly civil. In examining § 21-28-5.04.2, we see that it is entitled “Civil forfeiture procedure” as opposed to § 21-28-5.04.1, which is entitled “Criminal forfeiture procedures.” The statute clearly states that the proceedings are to be in the nature of a civil in rem action and shall be governed by our civil action rules for in rem proceedings, thus distinguishing them from a traditional in personam criminal prosecution. We believe the statutory language signals the clear legislative intent that these forfeiture proceedings are to be civil in nature rather than criminal.
Under our two step inquiry we next look at the effect of the proceedings to see if they are so punitive as to be criminal despite the legislative intent. We believe that the statute serves important remedial rather than punitive goals. This point is perhaps best illustrated by the fact that the property forfeited is distributed primarily to the law enforcement agencies concerned in the appre *507 hension of the individuals involved in the particular criminal activity in proportion to those agencies’ “contribution to the investigation of the criminal activity related to the asset being forfeited.” G.L.1956 § 21-28-5.04(b) (3)(A) (ii) — (iii). In this way the state deprives the criminal of the profits of his or her crime and reimburses the public exchequer for its moneys expended in apprehending the property and the criminal. These are certainly both remedial goals. Relying on this inquiry, we conclude that the civil forfeiture proceeding in the case before us is civil and does not implicate the double jeopardy clause.
The claimant’s reliance on
United States v. DiFrancesco,
The claimant also relies on
DiFrancesco
by raising the specter that allowing an appeal on these facts will merely give the state, with all its resources and power, a second chance to attempt to prove that the Corvette in question was purchased with drug-related moneys.
DiFrancesco,
We point out parenthetically that at oral argument the question was raised concerning whether Ursery alters what we said last term in One Lot. We conclude that it does. At the time we rendered our decision in One Lot, the courts in general, both state and federal, were uncertain about the appropriate analysis to be used in deciding double jeopardy claims in the context of a civil in rem forfeiture proceeding. In One Lot we concluded that Hamper’s analysis was then still controlling for these eases. Ursery has subsequently made it clear, however, that an in rem civil forfeiture proceeding, as we have here, is unique. To the extent One Lot held that *508 Halper guides our double jeopardy analysis for civil in rem forfeiture proceedings, it is no longer controlling.
For these reasons we conclude that the state is empowered under Rhode Island’s civil forfeiture statute to appeal from the adverse judgment entered by the District Court and that the state and federal double jeopardy clauses do not prohibit such an appeal. The state’s appeal is sustained, the Superior Court’s final judgment is vacated, and the case file and papers are remanded to that court for trial de novo on the state’s appeal from the District Court judgment.
Notes
. The double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides: "[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.”
. The double jeopardy clause of the Rhode Island Constitution contained in article 1, section 7, provides: "No person shall be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy.”
. It is uncontroverted that in this case claimant has not been punished for any wrongdoing, so we are not concerned with an issue of successive punishments.
See generally United States v. Halper,
