Hey Sing Yeck v. Anderson
Hey Sing Yeck v. Anderson
Opinion of the Court
This was an action, of claim and delivery for one net, three boats and fishing tackle alleged to have been taken and wrongfully detained from the plaintiff.
It appears that the property belonged to the plaintiff, who had rented it to certain Chinese fishermen for the purpose of fishing in. the tide waters of the state. In December, 1878, these men, who had possession of the property, were catching
At the time of the fishing the defendant was an acting constable of Suisun township. In that capacity he arrested the men for a violation of the law, and seized their nets, boats, and fishing tackle. The seizure was followed by the prosecution of the offenders, and they were severally convicted and sentenced to pay a fine. No fault is found with the proceedings against them personally. But no proceedings of any kind were taken, against the property which had been seized.
The court below found as a fact that the plaintiff knew nothing of the unlawful use of his property by those to whom he had hired it, and did not “connive at or encourage” such use; and it would seem to be harsh justice, to say the least, to deprive him of his property for no guilty act of his own. It may be conceded that the innocence of the plaintiff > would not exempt his property from the punishment of a statute, the provisions of which it had been used to violate, if the statute itself had provided for enforcing the punishment by some judicial proceedings against it. Under such circumstances, property used to commit the aggression might be treated as an, offender—as the guilty instrument or thing to which the forfeiture denounced by the statute attached—without reference to the character or conduct of the owner. But the statute under consideration contained no provisions whatever for determining whether the property was liable to condemnation
Such an enactment cannot be -harmonized with those constitutional guaranties which are supposed to secure everyone within the state in his rights of liberty and property. "No man,” says Mr. Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, "can by his misconduct forfeit his property unless steps are taken to have the forfeiture declared in due judicial proceedings. Forfeitures of rights or property cannot be adjudged by legislative act; and confiscations without a judicial hearing and judgment after due notice would be void as not due process of law.”
The cases of the United States v. Brig Malek, 2 How. U. S. 210,11L. Ed. 239, and Henderson’s Distilled Spirits, 14 Wall. (U. S.) 44, 20 L. Ed. 815, cited in argument by counsel of defendant, arose out of judicial proceedings in. rem to subject property to condemnation, for an alleged violation of the criminal or revenue laws of the United States, and they are authority for the principle that forfeitures are not adjudgable by legislative act, except it may be for a violation of the revenue laws; "except,” says the supreme court of Michigan, "in those cases where proceedings to collect the public revenue may stand upon a peculiar footing of their own, it is an inflexible principle of -constitutional right, that no person can legally be divested of his property without remuneration or against his will, unless he is allowed a hearing before an impartial tribunal, where he may contest the claim set up against him, and be allowed to meet it on the law and facts. Where a debt or penalty or forfeiture may be set up against him, the determination of his liability becomes a judicial question; and all judicial proceedings are required by the constitution to be exercised by courts of justice. He can only be reached through the forms of law upon a regular hearing, unless he has by contract referred the matter to another mode of determination.” The law of the land in judicial proceedings requires a hearing before condemnation, and judgment before dispossession.
Judgment affirmed.
We concur: McKinstry, 'J.; Ross, J.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.