Supreme Court Decision
Austin v. U.S.
A Civil Forfeiture Case
Jun 28, 1993
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BY JUSTICE BLACKMUN, For the Court In this case, we are asked to decide whether the Excessive Fines clause of the Eighth Amendment applies to forfeitures of property under 21 U.S.C, Sections. Sections 881(a)(4) snd (a)(7). We hold that lr does and therefore remand the case for conslderatlon of the question whether the forfeiture at issue here was excessive. The purpose of the Eighth Amendment .... was to limit the Government's power to punish. The Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause is self-evidently concerned with punishment. The Excessive Fines Clause limits the Government's power to extract payments, whether in cash or in kind. "as punishment for some offense... ." Thus, the question is not, as the United States would have it, whether forfelture under Sections Sections 881(a)(4j and la)(7) aIs civil or criminal, but rather whether it is punishment. In consldering this question we are mindful of the fact ihat sanctions frequently serve more than one purpose. We need not exclude the possibility that a forfeiture serves remedal purposes to conclide that it is subject to the limitations of the excessive Fines Clause. We, however, must determine that it can only be explained as serving in part to punish.... We turn next to consider whether forfeitures under 21 U.S.C. Sections Secyions 881(a)(4) and (a)(?) are properly considered punishment today. We find nothing in these provisions or their legislative history to contradict the historical understanding of forfeiture as punishment. Unlike traditional forfeiture statutes,Sec(ions Sections 881(a)(4) and (a)(7) expressly provide an "innocenl owner" defense. These exemptions serve to focus the provisions on the culpability of the owner in a way tha~ makes them look more like punishment, not less. In United States v. United States Coin & Currency, we reasoned that 19 U.S.C. Sections 1618, which provides that the Secretary of the Treasury is to return the property of those who do not intend to violate the law, demonstrated Congress' intent "to impose a penalty only on those who are significantly involved in a criminal enterprise. " . Furthermore, Congress has chosen to tie forfeiture directly to the commission of drug offenses. Thus, under sections 881(a)(4) a conveyance is forfeitable of ot os ised or intended for use to facilitate the transportation of controlled substances, rhelr raw materials or the equipment used ts manufacture or distribute them. Under Sections 881(a)()), real properly is forfeitable if it is used or intended for use to facilitate the commlssion of a drug-related crime punishable by more than one year's imprisonment. The legislative history ol Sections 881 confirms the punitive nature of these provisions. When it added subsection(a)(7) to subsections 881 in 1984, Congress recognized that the traditional criminal sanctions of fine and imprisonment are inadequate to deter the enormously profitable trade in dangerous drugs." It characterized the forfeiture of real property as "a powerful deterrent...." The Government argues that Sections 881(a)(4) and (a)(7) are not punitive but, rather, should be considered remedial in two respects. First, they remove the "instruments" of the drug trade. "thereby protecting the community fromthe threat of continued drug dealing." Second, the forfeited assets serve to compensate the Government for the expense of law-enforcement activity and for its expenditure on societal problems such as urban blight, drug addiction and other health concerns resulting from the drug trade..." In our view, neither argument withstands scrutiny. Concededly, we have recognized that the forfeiture of contraband itself may be characterized as remedial because it removes dangerous or illegal items from society. The Court, however, previously has rejected Government's attempt to extend that reasoning to conveyances used to transport illegal ilguor. It noted. "There is nothing even remotely criminal in possessing an automobile." The same, without question, is true of the properties involved here, and the Government's attempt to characterize these properties as "lnstruments" of the drug trade must meet the same fate as Pennsylqanla's effort to characterize the 1958 Plymourh sedan as "contraband." The Government's second argument about the remedial nature of this forfeiture is no more persuasive. We previously have upheld the forfeiture of goods involved in customs vtolations as "a reasonable form of liquidated damages. But the dramatic variations in the value oif conveyances and real property forfeitable under Sections Sections 881(a)(4) and (a)(7) undercut any similar argument with respect to those provisions. Fundamentally. even assuming that Sections Sections 881(a)(4) snd (a)(7) serve some remedial purpose, the Government's argument must fail. "[A] civil sanction that cannot fairly be said solely to serve a remedial purpose, but rather can only be explained as also serving elther retributive or deterrent purposes, is punishment, as we have come to undersland the term." In light of the historlcal understanding of forlelture as punishment, the clear focus of Sections Sections 881(a)(4) and (a)(?) on the culpability of the owner, and he evidence that Congress understood those provisions as serving to deter and to punish, we cannot conclude that forfeiture under Sections Sections 881(a)(4) and (a)(7) serves solely a remedial purpose. We therefore conclude that forfeiture under these provisions constitutes "payment to a sovereign as punishnlent for some offense," Browning-Ferris, 492 U.S., at 265, and, as such, is subject to the limitations of the Eight Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause. BY JUSTICE SCALIA, Concurring We recently stated that, at the time the Eighth Amendment was drafted, the term "fine" was "understood to mean a payment to a sovereign as punishment for some offense." It seems to me that the Court's opinion obscures this clear statement, and needlessly attempts to derive from our sparse case law on the.subject of _in rem_ forfeiture the questionable proposition that the owner of property taken pursuant to such forfeiture is always blameworthy. I write separately to explain why I consider this forfeiture a fine, and to point out that the excessiveness inquiry for statutory _in rem_ forfeitures is different from the usual excessiveness inquiry. That this forfeiture works as a fine raises the excessiveness issue, on which the Court remands. 1 agree that a remand is in order, but think it worth pointing out that on remand the excessiveness analysis must be different from that applicable to monetary fines and, perhaps, to in personal forfeitures. In the case of a monetary fine, the Eighth Amendment's origins in the English Bill of Rights, intended to limit the abusive penalties assessed against the King's opponents, demonstrate that the touchstone is value of the fine in relation to the offense.... Here, however, the offense of which petitioner has been convicted is not relevant to the forfeiture. Section Sections 881 requires only that the Government show probable cause that the suhject property was used for the prohibited purpose. The burden then shifts to the property owner to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the use was made without his "knowledge, consent or willful blindness." Unlike monetary fines, statutory _in rem_ forfeitures have traditionally been fixed, not by determining the appropriate value of the penalty in relation to the committed offense, but by determining what property has been "tainted" by unlawful use, to which issue the value of the property is irrelevant. Scales used to measure out unlawful drug sales, for example, are confiscable whether made of the purest gold or the basest metal. But an _in rem_forfeiture goes beyond the traditional limits that the Eighth Amendment permits if it applies to property that cannot properly be regarded as an instrumentality of the offense - the building, for example in which an isolated drug sale happens to occur. Such a confiscation would be an excessive fine. The question is not how much the confiscated property is worth, but whether the confiscated property has a close enough relationship to the offense. BY JUSTICE HENNEDY, Concurring In recounting the law's history, we risk anachronism if we attrihute to an earlier time an intent to employ legal concepts that had not yet evolved. I see something of that in the Court's opinion here, for in its eagerness to discover a unified theory of forfeitures, it recites a consistent rationale of personal punishment (hat neither the cases nor other narratives of the common law suggest. For many of the reasons explained by Justice Scalia, I am not convinced that all _in rem_ forfeitures were on account of the owner's blameworthy conduct. Some impositions of _in rem_ forfeiture may have been designed either to remove property that was itself causing injury, or to give the court jurisdiction over an asset that it could control in order to make injured parties whole. At some point we may have to confront the constitutional question whether forfeiture is permitted when the owner has committed no wrong of any sort, intentional or negligent. That for me would raise a serious question. Though the history of forfeiture laws might not be determinative of that issue, it would have an important bearing on the outcome. I would reserve for that or some other necessary occasion the inquiry the Court undertakes here. With these observations, I concur in part and concur in the judgment.