UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
v.
ONE TOSHIBA COLOR TELEVISION; TWO ANSWERING MACHINES; ONE HEALTH TECH COMPUTER
*Reginald McGlory, Appellant in No. 98-3578 *(Pursuant to Rule 12(a), F.R.A.P.) (D.C. Civ. No. 90-cv-00138)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
ASSORTED JEWELRY
*Reginald McGlory, Appellant in No. 98-3579 *(Pursuant to Rule 12(a), F.R.A.P.) (D.C. Civ. No. 90-cv-00370)
NOS. 98-3578 and 98-3579
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) July 13, 1999
ARGUED EN BANC: November 8, 1999
Filed May 24, 2000
On Appeal From the United States District Court For the Western District of Pennsylvania District Judge: Honorable D. Brooks Smith[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
MICHAEL A. YOUNG, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) 165 Christopher Street New York, NY 10014, Counsel for Appellant
HARRY LITMAN, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) United States Attorney BONNIE R. SCHLUETER MARY McKEEN HOUGHTON, ESQUIRE Assistant United States Attorney 633 United States Post Office and Courthouse Pittsburgh, PA 15219 Counsel for Appellees
Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) July 13, 1999
Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, ROTH and RENDELL, Circuit Judges.
ARGUED EN BANC: November 8, 1999
Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, SLOVITER, MANSMANN GREENBERG, SCIRICA, NYGAARD, ALITO, ROTH, McKEE, RENDELL and BARRY, Circuit Judges.
Filed May 24, 2000
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Chief Judge.
In these consolidated appeals Reginald McGlory challenges the results of two forfeiture proceedings. The first appeal requires that we revisit the question of the notice that the United States must provide when it pursues forfeiture proceedings against the property of an incarcerated defendant in its custody. The second concerns the District Court's use of the doctrine of laches to prevent McGlory from challenging a forfeiture proceeding in which the notice given for the forfeiture is later discovered to be constitutionally inadequate.
In the first appeal, which concerns forfeiture of certain items of jewelry, the government directed notice by certified mail to the facility in which McGlory was incarcerated. McGlory maintains that he did not receive the notice, and that the government should have ensured that he received personal notification of the proceedings against his property. In United States v. McGlory,
As in all cases in which proper notice under the Due Process Clause is at issue, the touchstone of analysis is whether the notice was "reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections." Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust, Co.,
Though there is much to recommend the actual notice standard when the United States Attorney is dealing with federal prisoners and detainees, we are not prepared to require the government to bear the evidentiary burden of establishing actual notice in all cases. Such a demonstration could impose needless litigation costs, especially if the due process challenge arises years after the conclusion of the initial proceedings. Moreover, the Supreme Court has never required the demonstration of actual notice. At all events, the jurisprudence of constitutional notice appropriately focuses not on what actually occurred, but rather on the procedures that were in place when notice was attempted. Evaluating the adequacy of these procedures requires consideration of the context in which they occur.
We conclude that the circumstances surrounding the federal government's incarceration of a prisoner require greater efforts at ensuring notice than would be expected for individuals at liberty in society. When one is in prison, the relative difficulty to the government to effect actual notice is reduced, while the ability of prisoners to ensure that they receive notices directed to them suffers. However, we stop short of the Weng standard and adopt an approach that focuses on the extent that procedures are reasonably likely to effect actual notice. Under this regime, the government's obligations do not end at the mailbox. Rather, we hold that if the government wishes to rely on direct mail, it bears the burden of demonstrating that procedures at the receiving facility were reasonably calculated to deliver the notice to the intended recipient. On this record, we cannot determine whether such a system was in place in McGlory's facility. We will therefore vacate the judgment and remand to the District Court for further factual findings on the sufficiency of the notice.
In the second forfeiture now before us, which concerns certain electronic equipment, the notice provided to McGlory concededly fell short of the constitutional minimum. The government contends, however, that McGlory's attempt to recover the forfeited property is barred by the doctrine of laches, and the District Court agreed. We conclude that the doctrine of laches should not be considered when the issue is whether a judgment is void. If McGlory unreasonably delayed in seeking the recovery of his property, the proper time to raise the issue is in a proceeding in which he seeks recovery from the government. The District Court will have to consider whether such recovery is available by a motion to vacate that arises under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) or if McGlory will have to proceed by other means. We will therefore vacate the District Court's judgment that McGlory's action was barred by laches.
I.
This is the third time that forfeitures of McGlory's property have come before this Court, and the facts surrounding his arrest and detention are described several times in the Federal Reporter, most recently in United States v. McGlory,
On September 8, 1989, Pittsburgh police officers and Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrested McGlory for conspiracy to possess heroin with intent to distribute. He was ultimately convicted of conspiracy to possess and distribute heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, use of a firearm in a drug trafficking operation, and laundering drug proceeds. He received a life sentence. On the date of his arrest, the officers searched several residences used by McGlory and seized numerous items of property, including, at issue in this appeal, one Toshiba color television set, two answering machines, one Health Tech computer, and assorted jewelry. In 1990, the United States Attorney instituted civil judicial forfeiture actions against these items under 21 U.S.C. S 881.
Until McGlory was sentenced on February 11, 1991, he was in the custody of the United States Marshals Service, and was housed in various detention facilities with which it had contracted. In initiating the forfeiture against the jewelry, the government mailed notice of the action to McGlory care of the Ohio County Jail in Wheeling, West Virginia, where he was apparently being held at the time. The notice was received at the jail on November 9, 1990 and signed for by one of the jail's officers. The government also sent notice to the jail by regular mail and mailed notice by certified mail to one of McGlory's pre-incarceration residences. That letter was not accepted. Finally, the government sent notice to McGlory's ex-wife, and to an attorney by the name of William Magann,1 and it published notice for three consecutive weeks in a general circulation newspaper. No one filed a claim or answer as directed by the notice to those seeking to contest the forfeiture. A default judgment was entered in the government's favor on January 7, 1991. The government ultimately sold the jewelry for $9,950.
The government also initiated forfeiture proceedings against the television set and the other equipment, mailing the notice to an address used by McGlory. The government also sent notice to McGlory's mother and Magann and published notice in a newspaper. This proceeding was resolved by default judgment in the government's favor on May 31, 1990.
McGlory maintains that he never received any notice, and he was unaware of any of the forfeiture proceedings until December 1993. On April 11, 1994, he filed a pro se motion pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(e), seeking return of all the property that had been seized from him. The District Court dismissed the motion without prejudice on January 6, 1997, and McGlory promptly filed a motion to reconsider the denial of his 41(e) motion. Shortly thereafter, he filed a motion to vacate the judgments in the two earlier proceedings. The Magistrate Judge to whom the case was assigned concluded that no constitutional notice violation occurred in the jewelry forfeiture proceeding, but that there was a violation in the proceeding concerning the electronic equipment. Notwithstanding this conclusion, he recommended that this claim be dismissed based on the doctrine of laches because: (a) McGlory had inexcusably delayed seeking recovery of the property; and (b) this delay was prejudicial to the government. Relying on the Magistrate Judge's report, the District Court denied McGlory's motion to vacate the judgments on September 23, 1998. McGlory filed a timely notice of appeal.
The District Court had jurisdiction over the forfeiture proceedings under 28 U.S.C. SS 1331, 1345, and 1355, and over the motion to vacate judgment under 28 U.S.C. S 1331. We have jurisdiction to review the District Court's final order under 28 U.S.C. S 1291. Our review over constitutional issues is plenary, see United States v. Various Computers & Computer Equip.,
II.
The central issue in the appeal from the jewelry forfeiture is whether a pretrial detainee is entitled to actual notice of judicial forfeiture proceedings initiated against him.2 The District Court concluded that attempting service in jail via the mail satisfied constitutional requirements for the service of notice. It primarily relied upon two cases. First, it looked to our opinion in United States v. $184,505.01,
We have never addressed the specific claim that McGlory urges upon us now. Our most recent pronouncement on the issue, which also involved McGlory, held no more than that the government agency pursuing the forfeiture must send notice to the facility at which the detainee is actually incarcerated and that it may not rely on another agency to do so. See United States v. McGlory,
A.
Our analysis perforce begins with Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust, Co,
Under this framework, it is clear that when an incarcerated individual is the one being served, the serving party must attempt to effect service where the prisoner may be found--that is, in prison, not the pre-incarceration address. See Robinson v. Hanrahan,
B.
The government argues that precedent supports the conclusion that direct mail always satisfies due process requirements. Indeed, Supreme Court authority indicates that mailing to the location where the party can be found usually suffices for due process purposes. See Mullane,
While this argument carries strong surface appeal, it ignores the framework that Mullane decreed. Precedents endorsing direct mail as a means of meeting constitutional notice requirements in certain contexts do not establish that such mailings result in per se satisfaction of notice requirements. Adequacy of notice is always evaluated by reference to the surrounding circumstances. See Mullane,
C.
Our sister circuits have differed on what kind of notice is the constitutional minimum for incarcerated individuals whose property is subject to forfeiture. United States v. Clark,
Other courts of appeals, however, have required more. In Weng v. United States,
First, as a prisoner, the owner is unable to insure that he will receive the notice once the post office has delivered it to the institution. The owner is entirely dependent on the institution to deliver his mail to him. Second, because the owner's jailor--the Bureau of Prisons--is part of the same government . . . as the agency seeking to give notice, the forfeiting agent can in all probability easily secure the Bureau's cooperation in assuring that the notice will be delivered to the owner and that a reliable record of the delivery will be created.
Id.
The court concluded that, under the circumstances, merely sending notice to the detention facility without ensuring actual delivery to the prisoner is not notice "such as one desirous of actually informing [the owner] might reasonably adopt." Id. (quoting Mullane,
As Weng recites, the circumstances of prisoners differ greatly from free citizens, a fact that potentially alters the evaluation of what steps are reasonably calculated to provide notice. When an individual is incarcerated at a location of the government's choosing, the government's ability to find and directly serve him or her with papers is at or near its zenith. Not only does the government know where to find the person, it can be equally sure that he or she will be there when the papers are delivered. Indeed, it can even move the person to a more convenient location if it so chooses. This appears especially the case where, as here, ongoing criminal proceedings against the prisoner brought the prisoner into frequent face-to-face contact with government attorneys.
For his part, a prisoner lacks the ability to take steps to ensure that his mail is actually delivered to him. This dilemma is especially acute for a prisoner who may be transferred from facility to facility, complicating efforts to effect service. In the outside world, an individual who changes addresses can arrange to have mail forwarded and can notify interested parties as to the change of address. While a prisoner may take similar steps, the effectiveness of these measures may depend in some degree on such independent factors as prison policies vis-a-vis the forwarding of mail or the amount of forewarning a prisoner receives of an impending transfer. We also note that a prisoner may not know how long he or she will be at the changed address, which may make prison forwarding difficult. Shades of the same problem also exist for a prisoner who is not moved, but remains at one facility. If a person lives in an apartment building where the distribution of mail among the residents leads to lost missives, that person has some recourse, through complaint or, possibly, moving elsewhere. Such options are necessarily curtailed for the prisoner.
The relative burdens and benefits of additional steps to ensure actual notice, therefore, suggest that requiring greater efforts at assuring notice by the government is appropriate. In other words, there is much to commend the Weng approach, and as an aspiration, the Weng rule comports with our ideas of the sort of effort that the government should undertake when it wishes to effect notice of a forfeiture proceeding against a prisoner in federal custody. On the other hand, Weng involved a prisoner held in a federal, rather than a state, facility. As the Seventh Circuit has observed, "[t]he prophylactic Weng rule, requiring actual notice, becomes less reasonable as the federal government exercises less control over the detainee." Donovan v. United States,
Though attractive, the Weng rule does present problems. The real difficulty with the Weng rule lies not in requiring the government to demonstrate actual notice, but rather the evidentiary burden that such a standard could impose after the passage of time. Given the temporal gap that may separate a forfeiture from a due process challenge to the proceedings, it is easy to imagine situations in which proof of the delivery of notice may be unavailable, even if such notice was properly served. An overly strict notice requirement, therefore, could lead to unsettling the outcome of completed proceedings based on nothing but bare allegations of a party who had lost property.
More importantly, the Weng approach undermines the procedural analysis that has heretofore animated the Supreme Court's dictates on this subject. The Court has never employed an actual notice standard in its jurisprudence. Rather, its focus has always been on the procedures in place to effect notice. See, e.g. , Mennonite Bd. of Missions,
Because the District Court did not make findings on the sort of procedures in place at the facility at which McGlory was housed and whether these procedures were reasonably calculated to ensure that the notice, once addressed to McGlory, would still reach him upon arrival at the prison (and indeed, would only be accepted were McGlory actually present), we will vacate the District Court's ruling as to the jewelry forfeiture and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
III.
In the forfeiture proceeding regarding the Toshiba television and other electronic equipment, the government made no attempt to serve McGlory in jail. For due process purposes, therefore, the attempted notice was clearly inadequate. Though the government concedes the constitutional deficiency of its notice, it contends, and the District Court agreed, that McGlory's motion to vacate judgment on this forfeiture is precluded by the doctrine of laches. We disagree.
A.
The District Court treated McGlory's motion as arising under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), but concluded that the improper notice given by the government of the forfeiture proceedings rendered the judgments, as applied against him, "voidable" rather than "void," as provided by Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(4). We think this conclusion incorrect. As a general matter, we have held that the entry of a default judgment without proper service of a complaint renders that judgment void. See Gold Kist, Inc. v. Laurinburg Oil Co., Inc.,
In light of our decision in Gold Kist, we are in accord with the majority view. Gold Kist involved a service of a summons and complaint in a manner that did not conform with Pennsylvania law. See Gold Kist,
The same logic applies here. Though we understand the concern expressed by the Sixth Circuit in Dusenbery that a prisoner claimant could sit on his or her rights until after the passage of the statute of limitations for the government to reinitiate a proceeding, see Dusenbery,
B.
The District Court ruled that McGlory's motion to vacate was barred by the doctrine of laches. The doctrine of laches hails from equity, and is invoked when two essential elements exist: inexcusable delay in instituting suit, and prejudice resulting to the defendant from such delay. See Central Penn. Teamsters Pension Fund v. McCormick Dray Line, Inc.,
McGlory's motion was to vacate the forfeiture judgments against him and is treated, as discussed above, as arising under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b). It is understandable why the District Court may have thought that the doctrine of laches applied. A motion under Rule 60(b) is equitable in nature, so it is reasonable to believe that equitable doctrines apply. See Assmann v. Fleming,
In light of our ruling that the judgment against McGlory in the electronic equipment forfeiture is void, however, no passage of time can transmute a nullity into a binding judgment, and hence there is no time limit for such a motion. It is true that the text of the rule dictates that the motion will be made within "a reasonable time." See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b). However, nearly overwhelming authority exists for the proposition that there are no time limits with regards to a challenge to a void judgment because of its status as a nullity; thus laches is no bar to recourse to Rule 60(b)(4). See Hertz Corp. v. Alamo Rent-A-Car, Inc.,
We agree that no passage of time can render a void judgment valid, and a court may always take cognizance of a judgment's void status whenever a Rule 60(b) motion is brought. Without addressing any other reason to bar a Rule 60(b) motion that attacks a judgment as void,6 we hold that laches may not be used to preclude such a motion. Cf. Micro Leasing,
C.
Though we hold that laches is not available to preclude a claimant from attacking a void judgment, our holding is not to be construed as allowing a petitioner to sit on his or her rights. It is true that if a court is able to determine that a prior judgment is indeed void, it should declare it as such, but that does not mean that other remedies, such as the actual return of property or its cash value, are immune from defenses of waiver or laches. In other words, we conclude that the potential prejudice that arises from such delay is best dealt with outside of the Rule 60(b) context.
Whether McGlory unreasonably delayed in seeking recovery of his property in general, which is the laches issue considered by the District Court, is a matter distinct from whether the judgment that forfeited the property was void. That is not, however, a matter that is before this Court. We are only reviewing the denial of McGlory's motion to vacate. Even if he prevails on this motion, that does not mean that he is entitled to any monetary relief or relief in the form of a transfer of property. It has been held that Rule 60(b) does not provide for such remedies. See United States v. One 1961 Red Chevrolet Impala Sedan,
It is in the pursuit of his remedies that McGlory's delay, if any, will become an issue. Though the vacatur of the earlier judgment will be a powerful weapon for McGlory in such an effort, it will not decide the issue. McGlory would have to act within the confines of whatever legal framework surrounds the legal or equitable remedy he will elect to pursue. At that time, the District Court may consider whether the doctrine of laches applies, or whether the sixyear statute of limitations for suits against the federal government is applicable. See 28 U.S.C.S 2401(a). It would appear that the federal statute applies, see Menkarell v. Bureau of Narcotics,
If the District Court concludes laches analysis to be in order anyway, it will have to determine the interplay between laches and the relevant statute of limitations, giving consideration to the cases that indicate that if a suit is brought within the statutory period, laches would generally be unavailable. See, e.g., Central Penn. Teamsters Pension Fund v. McCormick Dray Line, Inc.,
We reference the foregoing authority not to express any view on the merits but only to flag important issues that the District Court did not appear to consider in its analysis of laches. At all events, we make no ruling on issues of inexcusable delay because all we have before us is the motion to vacate, and, as we have held, laches analysis does not apply to such a motion. Finally, in ruling that the judgment in the electronic equipment forfeiture is void, we offer no opinion as to whether the government is prohibited from reinitiating the forfeiture action against McGlory or if the passage of the relevant statute of limitations has been tolled. The District Court will have to consider the issue should the government attempt to reinitiate such proceedings.
The judgment of the District Court will be vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes:
Notes
In proceedings below, McGlory claimed not to know who Magann is, and the government does not contend that he represented McGlory in this matter.
The relevant precedents in this area involve both judicial and administrative forfeitures. Insofar as both judicial and administrative forfeiture proceedings carry the potential to affect the property rights of the owner, there would appear to be no reason to distinguish between the notice required by the Due Process Clause in the two situations. At all events, the issue presented in this appeal solely concerns judicial forfeitures.
It is true that Tulsa Professional. Collection Services v. Pope,
Our ruling is analogous to the approach taken by the Ninth Circuit in United States v. Real Property,
Our approach would also apply to the problem of the relocated prisoner. Just as the government can monitor whether mail reaches a prisoner within a facility, it can similarly ensure that mail will follow an inmate who is transferred from one facility to another. See generally Small v. United States,
We also note that McGlory's delay vis-a-vis attacking the judgment (as opposed to inquiring into the disposition of his property, an issue that is not before us) was clearly not unreasonable. He maintains that he promptly sought relief from the judgments against him once he learned of them in 1994, and the District Court made no fact findings that indicate that McGlory learned of the judgments at an earlier date. Nor does this appear to be a situation in which McGlory can be accused of having waived his ability to bring a Rule 60(b) motion, as he did not previously launch a Rule 60(b) attack against the judgments. Cf. Beller & Keller v. Tyler,
ALITO, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting:
I join parts I and III of the opinion of the court and concur in the judgment insofar as it relates to No. 98-3578. However, I respectfully dissent from the court's disposition of No. 98-3579 and from part II of the opinion of the court, which adopts an interpretation of due process that has no basis in prior decisions of the Supreme Court or our circuit.
The question before us is not whether it would be good policy to require the government in forfeiture proceedings to provide notice to interested parties by some means superior to the mail. Rather, the question is whether the government complied with the minimum requirements of the Due Process Clause by sending notice by mail (return receipt requested) to McGlory at the facility where he was detained. Under Supreme Court precedent, this met constitutional standards. The Supreme Court has repeatedly referred to the service of notice by mail as sufficient to satisfy the minimum requirements of due process. See, e.g. , Tulsa Prof 'l Collection Services v. Pope,
The majority seemingly acknowledges that service by mail sent to the addressee's current address is constitutionally adequate in almost all other contexts, but the majority holds that such notice may not be sufficient when sent to a detainee or prisoner. Why? Why is it that mail sent to, say, an inexpensive long-term-occupancy hotel is reasonably calculated under all the circumstances to apprise an interested party of the pendency of a for feiture action but mail sent to a jail or prison may not be? The answer must be that there is a significantly higher probability that mail sent to such hotels will reach the addressees than is the case with mail sent to a jail or prison. But where is the evidence that this is so? The majority studiously avoids this point--for the very good reason that no evidence whatsoever to this effect has been adduced, by McGlory, the majority in this case, or any other judicial opinion of which I am aware. Such systemic problems may or may not exist; I don't know; and I doubt that my colleagues do either. But without such evidence, there is no logical basis for the majority's decision.
It may well be that it would be advisable for those with legislative or rulemaking authority to require the government in forfeiture cases to provide better notice than is required by the minimum standard imposed by due process. Congress has recently manifested concern about the fairness of federal forfeiture procedures and has enacted the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-185, 114 Stat. 202 (2000), to remedy the problems that it found. This Act, however, does not require that notice of forfeiture be provided by some means better than the mail, but perhaps Congress should consider that question. Congress has the capability--which the federal courts plainly lack--to investigate whether notice of forfeiture sent by mail fails to reach the addressee in a significant number of cases. (The mere fact that McGlory and a handful of other federal prisoners and detainees have claimed that they did not receive notice sent by mail to their facilities is hardly enough to show the existence of a serious problem.) Congress also has the ability to craft a rule that is specifically targeted to deal with any problem it finds to exist. It can specify the addressees to which any such rule applies--e.g., all persons to whom notice is provided, only those in custody, only those in custody on federal charges, or only those in federal facilities. And it can provide that any new rule will not have retroactive effect. A court, in interpreting the Due Process Clause, lacks such flexibility.
I have three additional observations about the majority's decision. First, although the decision formally applies only to notices of forfeiture sent by the federal government to persons in custody on federal charges, its logic extends to any forfeiture notices sent to any persons in custody. If notice of a federal forfeiture proceeding that is sent by mail to a person in a state facility on federal charges is not reasonably calculated under all the circumstances to apprise that person of the pendency of the federal forfeiture proceeding, notice of a state forfeiture proceeding that is sent by mail to another person held in the same facility on state charges cannot be reasonably calculated to inform that person of the pendency of the state forfeiture proceeding. Thus, the majority's decision has a broad logical sweep.
Second, the majority's standard regarding the adequacy of mail handling procedures is left open-ended and will almost certainly lead to confusion and litigation. Under the majority's decision, notice by mail to a detainee or prisoner satisfies due process only if the facility's mail handling procedures at the time in question were reasonably calculated to ensure that the notice reached the addressee. See Maj. Op. p. ___. What does this mean in practical terms? Must there be a written policy? Must the addressee sign a receipt? May delivery of the mail be entrusted to other detainees or prisoners? Must the mail be handed to the addressee personally? One or more rounds of litigation will almost certainly be required to answer these and related questions.
Third, although the majority has attempted to devise a rule that will not impose an undue evidentiary burden in cases in which forfeiture judgments are sought to be vacated for lack of proper notice, the majority's decision may well prove quite difficult to administer. As previously noted, the majority's mail handling standard is murky, and attempting to establish what procedures were followed at various points in the past at the numerous state and federal facilities in which federal detainees and prisoners have been held may not be easy. And if the majority's decision is extended to state detainees and prisoners, as I think logic requires, the problem will be magnified.
I would hold that due process was satisfied and leave it to the legislative or rulemaking processes to decide whether additional notice requirements should be imposed in forfeiture cases.
Notes:
On only one occasion has the Court held that notice by mail sent to the addressee's correct address was not constitutionally adequate. In Covey v. Town of Somers,
