State v. Eleven Thousand Three Hundred Forty-Six Dollars and No Cents in U.S. Currency
Decision Date | 07 July 1989 |
Docket Number | FORTY-SIX,No. 88-227,88-227 |
Citation | 777 P.2d 65 |
Parties | STATE of Wyoming, Appellant (Plaintiff), v. ELEVEN THOUSAND THREE HUNDREDDOLLARS AND NO CENTS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Appellee (Defendant). |
Court | Wyoming Supreme Court |
Russell A. Hansen, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellant.
Gayla L. Daniels and Kenneth W. Hildebrand, Casper, for appellee; argument by Ms. Daniels.
Before CARDINE, C.J., and THOMAS, URBIGKIT, MACY and GOLDEN, JJ.
The State of Wyoming seized $11,346.00 from Terry Davis Jaeger and initiated civil forfeiture proceedings against the money, asserting that it had been used to facilitate the sale of certain controlled substances. The district court determined that the State had not established probable cause to believe that the money was used or intended to be used in violation of the Wyoming Controlled Substance Act of 1971, W.S. 35-7-1001 through 35-7-1057, and, therefore, granted Jaeger's motion for summary judgment.
We affirm.
During the course of a narcotics investigation, the Gillette Police Department made three controlled purchases of methamphetamine. On each occasion the Department furnished "buy money" to a confidential informant with the intent of tracing the chain of transfers of that money to the ultimate supplier of the drugs. Surveillance teams observing the third purchase on April 13, 1987, followed that trail to Jaeger's automotive repair shop. Officers approached Jaeger for identification and, as he produced his driver's license, observed a large amount of currency in his wallet. At their request, Jaeger permitted the officers to inspect the money and compare it to photocopies of the bills which they had provided to their informant earlier that evening. No matches were found. Nevertheless, the officers detained Jaeger for nearly two hours, until they were able to match some of his money with photocopies of bills provided for two earlier methamphetamine purchases. He was then arrested and charged with one count of conspiracy to deliver a controlled substance.
Subsequently, on May 27, 1987, the State brought an action under W.S. 35-7-1049 seeking forfeiture of the money seized from Jaeger. Jaeger filed a motion to suppress the money as evidence in the pending criminal action. The district court's order granting that motion states, in pertinent part:
Jaeger then filed, in the forfeiture proceeding, a motion for return of property pursuant to Rule 40(e), W.R.Cr.P., which provides in part:
He also filed a motion for summary judgment. In support of these motions, he argued that the State could not forfeit property unless it had been lawfully seized under the provisions of the forfeiture statute. Such a seizure could only occur, Jaeger contended, where the State had probable cause to seize the property at the time of the seizure. The two grounds advanced for his claim that the State could not meet its burden of establishing probable cause to seize his money were:
(a) The issue had been conclusively determined to the detriment of the State pursuant to his motion to suppress evidence, so as to collaterally estop the State from relitigating the issue;
(b) The exclusionary rule required the suppression of evidence in both the criminal action and the forfeiture proceedings, thereby leaving the State no untainted evidence with which to prove its case.
After considering the parties' briefs and after two separate hearings, the district court granted Jaeger's summary judgment motion, explaining its ruling:
We agree.
In addition to substantively limiting the scope of forfeiture to certain defined property, the legislature also imposed certain procedural restrictions on the State's access to that remedy. Section 35-7-1049(b) provides:
If subsection (b) is to be given any meaningful effect, it must be read to condition the State's right to forfeiture. The legislature's creation of a specific mode of exercising a power excludes all others. Hopkinson v. State, 704 P.2d 1323, 1326 (Wyo.1985); Attletweedt v. State, 684 P.2d 812, 815 (Wyo.1984). Furthermore, the clear language of the statute requires that these conditions which the legislature has statutorily imposed upon the seizure of property must exist at the time law enforcement officers make the seizure.
In the present case, the State relies wholly upon subsection (b)(iii) to justify the seizure of Jaeger's money. Accordingly, the State had a dual burden of proof. It ultimately had to prove that Jaeger's money was traceable to the exchange of a controlled substance or otherwise used to facilitate a violation of the Wyoming Controlled Substances Act. However, as a threshold matter, the State also had to establish that either the Wyoming State Board of Pharmacy or the Attorney General had probable cause to believe that such was the case at the time the law enforcement officers seized that money. Jaeger asserted that the State was precluded from establishing its probable cause to seize his money by the prior contrary determination of that issue at his criminal suppression hearing. Since it could not establish one of the necessary conditions to forfeiture under the statute, Jaeger asserted, the State was not entitled to forfeit his money as a matter of law. He is correct only insofar as the State sought to impute, to the "board or commissioner," any probable cause possessed by the police officers who seized his property.
The doctrine of collateral estoppel bars the parties to an action, and their privies, from contesting in a subsequent suit all issues which were actually litigated in the former action. That is, where the parties have had a full and fair opportunity to contest a question which is essential to the determination of their dispute, a final valid judgment on the merits of that dispute by a court of competent jurisdiction precludes the relitigation of that question by those parties and their privies. Matthews v. Fetzner, 768 P.2d 590, 592 (Wyo.1989); Delgue v. Curutchet, 677 P.2d 208, 213-214 (Wyo.1984).
The State, in this appeal, does not argue that the suppression order issued in Jaeger's criminal prosecution was not a final valid judgment. Rather, it argues that the agency of the State which appears as the nominal plaintiff in forfeiture is neither identical to nor in privity with the State's agency that prosecuted Jaeger. Nevertheless, it would rely on facts within the knowledge of the Gillette Police Department and the Campbell County Prosecutor's office to establish the "commissioner's" probable cause to seize...
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