1 Conn. App. 315 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
This is an appeal1 from the judgment of the trial court granting the state's motion to confiscate the defendant's automobile pursuant to the in rem statute, General Statutes
The facts are not in dispute. On August 20, 1981, the defendant was arrested pursuant to an arrest warrant for three illegal sales of drugs to a confidential informant which had taken place in the defendant's automobile. At the time of the arrest the defendant was driving his automobile and had come to Connecticut from New York to participate in a contemplated fourth transaction, the sale of marijuana. The police had set up the transaction using the informant. On the floor in the front of the car was a brown paper bag. After the defendant was placed under arrest the police took the automobile to the police station and made an inventory search of it which disclosed that the paper bag contained marijuana. The police then prepared and obtained from a judge3 a warrant for the search and seizure of the automobile, and also had the court issue an in rem summons to the defendant pursuant to General Statutes
After a hearing, the court granted the state's in rem motion, declared the automobile a nuisance and ordered it disposed of under General Statutes
It is clear that this statute, read strictly, as it must be, requires that the issuance of the warrant, pursuant to which the property sought to be confiscated is seized precede the seizure and that the seizure take place pursuant to that warrant. See State v. Bucchieri, supra; State v. Anonymous (1980-8),
"The word `seizures' in the Fourth Amendment has, in the main, not been a source of difficulty. The `act of physically taking and removing tangible personal property is generally a "seizure."'" 1 LaFave, Search and Seizure 2.1(a), p. 221; cf. State v. Ostroski,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.