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SPONSOR: |
Coll |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
139 |
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SHORT TITLE: |
DWI Vehicle Seizure |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
Chavez |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
Minimal (See Narrative) |
Recurring |
General
Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates SB 248
Conflicts with SB 82
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
Minimal |
Minimal |
Recurring |
General |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Public Defenders (PD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Department of Health (DOH)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Administrative Office of the District Attorney
(AODA)
State Highway & Transportation Department
(SHTD)
New Mexico Corrections Department (CD)
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Bill 139 would
make provisions for seizure, forfeiture and disposal of a motor vehicle of a
person convicted of driving with a revoked drivers license if the underlying
revocation was for driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or
drugs or violation of the Implied Consent Act.
As drafted, the legislation would require that the seizure, forfeiture
and disposal of said vehicle be pursuant to the provisions of the Forfeiture
Act.
The bill also provides
for the seizure, forfeiture, and disposal of the offender’s motor vehicle when
the offender is a subsequent DWI offender and has had at least one (1) prior
DWI conviction.
Significant
Issues
Currently,
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill does not make an appropriation. Local and state law enforcement and the judiciary will be significantly impacted administratively and fiscally.
The contract/private prison annual costs of incarcerating an inmate
based upon Fiscal Year 02 actual expenditures is $23,552 per year for
males. The cost per client to house a
female inmate at a privately operated facility is $25,117 per year. Because state owned prisons are essentially
at capacity, any net increase in inmate population will be housed at a contract/private
facility.
a.
The
District Attorney's Office would need to shift unknown number of attorneys to
District Court to prosecute forfeiture acts.
The limited jurisdiction granted to the
b.
Personnel
will need to be assigned to take control over the vehicles while they are in
State custody, and personnel will need to administer the sale or other disposition
of the vehicles. These are recurring costs.
c.
Proceeds
from the sale of the vehicles may generate some revenue; however, it is not
known whether revenue generated will exceed administrative costs of the program
§
The Department’s
§ In regards to the judiciary, any additional fiscal impact would be proportional to the enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions. New laws, amendments to existing laws, and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
Additionally, there will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution, and documentation of statutory changes
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Please refer to the fiscal implications section above.
CONFLICT
House Bill 139 and Senate Bill 82 are both trying to accomplish similar tasks. House Bill 139 requires the vehicle to be subject to seizure, forfeiture and disposal as opposed to Senate Bill 82, which requires mandatory immobilization.
It is suggested by AODA that within the City of
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Public Defenders
indicated that the legislation does not contemplate the “innocent party”
consequences of the measure if seizure of the motor vehicle poses an imminent
danger to the health, safety or employment of the convicted person’s immediate
family or the family of the owner of the motor vehicle. The repercussions of immobilizing a motor
vehicle in vast geographic areas that have no public transportation are
profound. Further, the bill may have
some inherent constitutional flaws if the vehicle seized either belongs to
someone else, or is owned jointly by another.
It is suggested by
AODA that the reference to the Forfeiture Act does not spell out the purpose of
the proposed forfeitures. This will
invite numerous legal challenges in what has already become one of the most
fiercely litigated areas of criminal law--DWI's. Specifically, the Supreme Court in City v.
One 1984 Chevy Ut., premised its
holding on the detailed purpose section of Albuquerque's Vehicle Nuisance
Ordinance and its protection for secured parties or owners who were unaware of
the vehicle's illegal use. The drafters
failure to include a purpose section or an innocent owner provision may prove
problematic.
While this concern is irrelevant to felony DWI
charges in the district courts, since the State may pursue the simultaneous
criminal and civil actions pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 31-27-6 (2002), it will be
a problem in metropolitan and magistrate court prosecutions as these courts
have no jurisdiction over forfeitures.
According
to the Department of Public Safety, the significant issue is that the legislation,
as proposed, requires that the seizure, forfeiture and disposal is pursuant to
the provisions of the Forfeiture Act. A
recent case, City of
The
Forfeiture Act as enacted is unworkable because it is procedurally burdensome
and requires DPS to expand significant attorney resources with no ability to
cover the cost of providing those resources.
Accordingly, if this legislation were enacted, DPS could not pursue
forfeiture without legislative appropriations to cover the costs attendant with
the litigation. Even if DPS had legal
resources to pursue the forfeitures, it is doubtful the state could prevail in
a forfeiture under the Forfeiture Act.
There are jurisdictional problems because most DWI cases are tried in
municipal, magistrate and metropolitan courts, and forfeiture actions under the
Forfeiture Act are brought in the district courts. Consequently, DPS suggests that if forfeiture
is to be an effective tool to combat the DWI problem, the forfeiture provisions
should model those employed by the City of
FC/njw