City of Seattle v. Long ( 2021 )


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  •             FILE
    THIS OPINION WAS FILED
    FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON
    AUGUST 12, 2021
    IN CLERK’S OFFICE
    SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON
    AUGUST 12, 2021
    ERIN L. LENNON
    SUPREME COURT CLERK
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    CITY OF SEATTLE,                       )
    )               No. 98824-2
    Respondent,           )
    )
    v.                               )               En Banc
    )
    STEVEN GREGORY LONG,                   )
    )
    Petitioner.           )               Filed: August 12, 2021
    ________________________________________)
    MADSEN, J.—Steven Gregory Long parked his truck on property owned by the
    city of Seattle for more than 72 hours, violating Seattle Municipal Code (SMC)
    11.72.440(B). For this civil infraction, a city-contracted towing company impounded
    Long’s truck. Long contested the infraction and eventually agreed to a payment plan to
    reimburse the city for the costs of the impoundment. He now argues, among other things,
    that the impoundment violated Washington’s homestead act, ch. 6.13 RCW, and the
    federal excessive fines clause. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm in part and
    reverse in part.
    No. 98824-2
    BACKGROUND
    In 2016, Long was living in his truck. Long, then a 56-year-old member of the
    Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation, worked as a general
    tradesman and stored work tools as well as personal items in his vehicle. One day, Long
    was driving to an appointment when the truck began making “grinding” noises. On
    July 5, 2016, Long parked in a gravel lot owned by the city of Seattle. Long stayed on
    the property for the next three months.
    On October 5, 2016, police alerted Long that he was violating the SMC by parking
    in one location for more than 72 hours. SMC 11.72.440(B). Long claims he told the
    officers that he lived in the truck. Later that day, a parking enforcement officer posted a
    72-hour notice on the truck, noting it would be impounded if not moved at least one city
    block. SMC 11.30.060. Long did not move the truck. While Long was at work on
    October 12, 2016, a city-contracted company towed his truck. Without it, Long slept
    outside on the ground before seeking shelter nearby to escape the rain and wind.
    Long requested a hearing to contest the parking infraction. SMC 11.30.120
    (vehicle owner may request a hearing in municipal court to contest an impoundment). At
    the November 2, 2016 impoundment hearing, Long reiterated that he lived in his truck
    and kept all of his work tools in it. The magistrate found that Long had parked illegally,
    but the magistrate waived the $44.00 ticket, reduced the impoundment charges from
    $946.61 to $547.12, and added a $10.00 administrative fee. SMC 11.31.121 (violating
    2
    No. 98824-2
    the 72-hour rule is a “parking infraction” subject to $44.00 fine). 1 The magistrate drafted
    a payment plan requiring Long to pay $50.00 per month. 2 Long felt “forced” to agree or
    risk losing his truck at a public auction. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 109.
    Long appealed the magistrate’s findings. Though he did not contest that the truck
    was parked illegally, Long argued that the impoundment violated the state and federal
    excessive fines clauses, substantive due process, and the homestead act. Long moved for
    summary judgment, which the municipal court denied.
    On a RALJ appeal, the superior court affirmed and reversed in part: it rejected the
    substantive due process claim, and it held that the impoundment costs were
    unconstitutionally excessive under the federal constitution and that the payment plan
    violated the homestead act. The court concluded that the impoundment itself did not
    violate the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
    The parties then sought review at the Court of Appeals. In a published decision,
    the court concluded that the payment plan was invalid under the homestead act and
    rejected the constitutional argument that the impoundment and associated costs were
    excessive. City of Seattle v. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d 709, 
    467 P.3d 979
     (2020). The court
    also held that Long failed to show the impoundment was unlawful pursuant to article I,
    1
    The parties do not dispute that the impound charges for Long’s truck totaled $946.61. In
    municipal court, however, the fee was stated as $917.57. Regardless of this total, Long was
    ordered to pay $547.12, which he argues is unconstitutionally excessive.
    2
    Default under the payment plan would not have subjected the vehicle to forfeiture but could
    result in late charges and collection efforts.
    3
    No. 98824-2
    section 7 of the Washington State Constitution, declining to review it for the first time on
    appeal. Id. at 733-35.
    Long sought review here of the excessive fines and the article I, section 7 issues.
    Pet. for Review at 4-5, 8-18. Seattle cross petitioned, raising the homestead act as a
    contingent issue. Answer to Pet. for Review at 16-20. We granted review of all three. 3
    Order, No. 98824-2 (Wash. Dec. 2, 2020). Numerous amici curiae have filed briefs in
    support of Long, including the Institute for Justice, Public Justice, the American Civil
    Liberties Union (ACLU) of Washington, Northwest Justice Project, Juvenile Law Center,
    and Professors Alexes Harris and Mary Pattillo. Two amici contributed briefs in support
    of Seattle: the International Municipal Lawyers Association and the Washington
    Association of Municipal Attorneys. 4
    3
    Seattle argues that Long is not an aggrieved party and that the case is moot because he retrieved
    his truck and the Court of Appeals affirmed the voided payment plan. Answer to Pet. for Review
    at 5; RAP 3.1. Long counters that Seattle can still impose towing costs because the Court of
    Appeals eliminated only the storage costs; it did not preclude the city from “charging a vehicle
    owner for costs associated with the towing and impounding of a vehicle.” Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d
    at 715; Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 8. Further, Long contends the case meets the exception to mootness
    due to the public nature of the issue, the need to provide future guidance, and the likelihood that
    the issue will reoccur. Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 8-9 (citing In re Eaton, 
    110 Wn.2d 892
    , 895, 
    757 P.2d 961
     (1988)). Long is correct that the excessive fines clause issue is public, arising in other
    jurisdictions, e.g., Pimentel v. City of Los Angeles, 
    966 F.3d 934
     (9th Cir. 2020) (remanding case
    to determine whether parking fines were constitutionally excessive), and likely to reoccur
    considering the large population of persons living in vehicles. See Mem. of Amici Curiae in
    Supp. of Review at 3 (close to 12,000 people are homeless in Seattle/King County with more
    than 2,700 living in their vehicles). As a technical matter, we did not grant review of the
    standing issue. Our order grants Long’s petition and the “issue contingently raised in the
    answer,” that is, the homestead act. See Order, No. 98824-2 (Wash. Dec. 2, 2020) (emphasis
    added); Answer to Pet. for Review at 16-20. Even assuming the case is moot, Long persuasively
    shows the issues should be considered.
    4
    This list does not include all amici curiae that have submitted briefing in this court. We refer
    only to first amici author listed on the briefing.
    4
    No. 98824-2
    ANALYSIS
    We review a summary judgment order de novo, engaging in the same inquiry as
    the trial court. Highline Sch. Dist. No. 401 v. Port of Seattle, 
    87 Wn.2d 6
    , 15, 
    548 P.2d 1085
     (1976). Summary judgment is proper if the record shows “no genuine issue as to
    any material fact” and the “moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
    CR 56(c). The parties do not appear to contest the facts in this case.
    I. The Homestead Act
    A “uniquely American contribution” to real property law, homestead exemptions
    are based on the notion that citizens should have a home where family is sheltered and
    living beyond the reach of financial misfortune and the demands of certain classes of
    creditors. George L. Haskins, Homestead Exemptions, 63 HARV. L. REV. 1289, 1289
    (1950); Charless & Blow v. Lamberson, 
    1 Iowa 435
    , 439 (1855); see also Paul Goodman,
    The Emergence of Homestead Exemption in the United States: Accommodation and
    Resistance to the Market Revolution, 1840-1880, 80 J. AM. HIST. 470, 470 (1993). States
    began enacting homestead laws in the 19th century in order to provide security in an
    increasingly volatile American economy. Goodman, supra, at 470. Prior to these laws,
    the United States experienced financial panics that caused unemployment, bankruptcy,
    and loss of the family home. Id. at 471.
    Texas enacted the first homestead exemption in 1839. MacKenzie Breitenstein,
    Note, The Ideal Homestead Exemption: Avoiding Asset Conversion & Fraud but Still
    Protecting Dependents, 58 DRAKE L. REV. 1121, 1123 (2010). Today, 48 states have
    5
    No. 98824-2
    homestead exemption laws. Id. at 1126. All such laws require the claimed “homestead”
    to be the primary residence of the debtor or his or her dependents, and only one
    homestead may be claimed. Id. at 1127. Relevant here, the homestead exemption does
    not protect the full value of a homestead but protects up to “the sum of fifteen thousand
    dollars in the case of other personal property described in RCW 6.13.010.” Former
    RCW 6.13.030(2) (2007).
    Washington’s constitution provides,
    The legislature shall protect by law from forced sale a certain portion of the
    homestead and other property of all heads of families.
    WASH. CONST. art. XIX, § 1. The legislature fulfilled this mandate by passing the
    homestead act in 1895. LAWS OF 1895, ch. 64, § 1; Felton v. Citizens Fed. Sav. & Loan
    Ass’n of Seattle, 
    101 Wn.2d 416
    , 418, 
    679 P.2d 928
     (1984). Like all homestead acts,
    Washington’s statute “‘implements the policy that each citizen have a home where [the]
    family may be sheltered and live beyond the reach of financial misfortune.’” In re
    Dependency of Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d 927
    , 953, 
    169 P.3d 452
     (2007) (alteration in
    original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Pinebrook Homeowners Ass’n v.
    Owen, 
    48 Wn. App. 424
    , 427, 
    739 P.2d 110
     (1987)). The act is favored in law, and
    courts construe it liberally so it may achieve its purpose of protecting family homes. 
    Id.
    Under the homestead act some residences are automatically protected while others
    require an owner to file a declaration. RCW 6.13.040(1), (2); In re Tr.’s Sale of Real
    Property of Sweet, 
    88 Wn. App. 199
    , 201, 
    944 P.2d 414
     (1997) (“Since 1981, homestead
    protection is ‘automatic.’”). Qualifying homes are protected from attachment and
    6
    No. 98824-2
    execution or forced sale for the debts of the owner up to the amount specified in the
    statute. Former RCW 6.13.070 (1987). The homestead exemption does not protect the
    full value of a homestead, but it protects up to “the sum of fifteen thousand dollars in the
    case of other personal property described in RCW 6.13.010.” Former RCW 6.13.030(2).
    Here, we must determine whether the homestead act applies and whether any
    violation occurred. First, Seattle agrees that Long’s truck may qualify as a homestead but
    contends that additional procedural steps are necessary—namely, that RCW 6.13.040(1)
    requires Long to file a declaration, which he did not. Long responds that because he
    occupied the truck as his principal residence, it automatically qualifies. Second, Seattle
    argues that no attachment, execution, or forced sale occurred; Long disagrees.
    For the following reasons, we agree with Long. RCW 6.13.040(1) automatically
    protects occupied personal property as a homestead, and no declaration is required.
    Long’s truck therefore constitutes a homestead. However, we agree with Seattle that no
    attachment, execution, or forced sale occurred. The homestead act protections were not
    triggered at this point in Long’s case because no party sought to collect on Long’s debt.
    A. RCW 6.13.040(1) Automatically Protects Personal Property Occupied
    as a Principal Residence
    The meaning of a statute is a question of law we review de novo. State v.
    Mitchell, 
    169 Wn.2d 437
    , 442, 
    237 P.3d 282
     (2010). “‘The court’s fundamental
    objective in construing a statute is to ascertain and carry out the legislature’s intent.’”
    Lake v. Woodcreek Homeowners Ass’n, 
    169 Wn.2d 516
    , 526, 
    243 P.3d 1283
     (2010)
    (quoting Arborwood Idaho, LLC v. City of Kennewick, 
    151 Wn.2d 359
    , 367, 
    89 P.3d 217
    7
    No. 98824-2
    (2004)). If a statute’s meaning is plain on its face, we must follow that plain meaning.
    Dep’t of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 
    146 Wn.2d 1
    , 9-10, 
    43 P.3d 4
     (2002). A
    statute’s plain meaning is discerned from the ordinary meaning of the language, the
    context of the statute, related provisions, and the statutory scheme as a whole. Udall v.
    T.D. Escrow Servs., Inc., 
    159 Wn.2d 903
    , 909, 
    154 P.3d 882
     (2007).
    Whenever possible, statutes are to be construed so “‘no clause, sentence or word
    shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant.’” Kasper v. City of Edmonds, 
    69 Wn.2d 799
    ,
    804, 
    420 P.2d 346
     (1966) (quoting Groves v. Meyers, 
    35 Wn.2d 403
    , 407, 
    213 P.2d 483
    (1950)). “If a statute is ambiguous, we ‘may look to the legislative history of the statute
    and the circumstances surrounding its enactment to determine legislative intent.’” Five
    Corners Family Farmers v. State, 
    173 Wn.2d 296
    , 305-06, 
    268 P.3d 892
     (2011) (quoting
    Rest. Dev., Inc. v. Cananwill, Inc., 
    150 Wn.2d 674
    , 682, 
    80 P.3d 598
     (2003)).
    RCW 6.13.040(1) provides,
    Property described in RCW 6.13.010 constitutes a homestead and is
    automatically protected by the exemption described in RCW 6.13.070 from
    and after the time the real or personal property is occupied as a principal
    residence by the owner or, if the homestead is unimproved or improved
    land that is not yet occupied as a homestead, from and after the declaration
    or declarations required by the following subsections are filed for record or,
    if the homestead is a mobile home not yet occupied as a homestead and
    located on land not owned by the owner of the mobile home, from and after
    delivery of a declaration as prescribed in RCW 6.15.060(3)(c) or, if the
    homestead is any other personal property, from and after the delivery of a
    declaration as prescribed in RCW 6.15.060(3)(d).
    (Emphasis added.) Much of the emphasized language above was added in a 1993
    amendment. LAWS OF 1993, ch. 200, § 3. The amendment also included a section
    8
    No. 98824-2
    requiring a debtor claiming as a homestead “any other personal property” under RCW
    6.13.040 to file a declaration stating they reside on the personal property. Id. § 5
    (codified as RCW 6.15.060(3)(d)). Former RCW 6.13.010(1) (1999) defines a
    “homestead” as “real or personal property that the owner uses as a residence.”
    The parties essentially dispute whether the final clause of RCW 6.13.040(1)
    contemplates occupied or unoccupied personal property. Seattle argues that if occupied
    personal property is automatically exempt via the first clause of RCW 6.13.040(1), then
    “any other personal property” in the final clause must be unoccupied—yet lawmakers did
    not include that qualifier in the provision. City of Seattle’s Suppl. Br. (Seattle’s Suppl.
    Br.) at 3-4. Further, Seattle notes RCW 6.15.060(3)(d) requires a declaration for “any
    other personal property” to state that “‘the debtor resides thereon as a homestead.’” This
    requirement would be unnecessary if RCW 6.13.040(1) meant all personal property was
    occupied personal property. Id. at 2-3 (quoting RCW 6.15.060(3)(d)).
    We conclude that RCW 6.13.040(1)’s final clause refers to unoccupied property.
    RCW 6.13.040(1) states explicitly that automatic protections occur when “real or
    personal property is occupied as a principal residence.” (Emphasis added.) The first and
    final clauses of RCW 6.13.040 were added to the homestead act in a 1993 amendment.
    LAWS OF 1993, ch. 200, § 3. The decision to add both clauses to the act in the same
    amendment indicates that they apply to different situations. “[W]e presume the
    legislature says what it means and means what it says.” State v. Costich, 
    152 Wn.2d 463
    ,
    470, 
    98 P.3d 795
     (2004).
    9
    No. 98824-2
    If lawmakers intended for the final clause to refer to occupied property, they could
    have included the term as they did in the first clause; they did not. Indeed, the final
    clause uses different words than the first clause: “any other personal property.” RCW
    6.13.040(1) (emphasis added). When the legislature uses two different terms in the same
    statute, we presume the legislature intends the terms to have different meanings. Densley
    v. Dep’t of Ret. Sys., 
    162 Wn.2d 210
    , 219, 
    173 P.3d 885
     (2007). Thus, under the plain
    language of RCW 6.13.040(1), automatically protected real or personal property must be
    occupied while any other personal property does not.
    The statutory history of RCW 6.13.040 supports this reading. In 1881, a
    homestead could be created by mere occupancy. Davies v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    191 Wash. 459
    , 465, 
    71 P.2d 552
     (1937). With the passage of the homestead act in 1895, a
    homestead could be created only by filing a declaration. 
    Id.
     Homestead by declaration
    persisted until 1981, where the legislature changed course. It reintroduced automatic
    protection, which was ultimately codified in RCW 6.13.040. See LAWS OF 1981, ch. 329,
    § 9; see also In re Wenner, 
    61 B.R. 634
    , 635 (1985) (“The 1981 amendments [to the
    homestead act] provided that a homestead was automatically created in the debtor’s
    permanent residence beginning, ‘at the time the property is occupied as a permanent
    residence by the owner.’” (quoting RCW 6.12.080)). As a result, declarations have been
    used in instances where property was not yet occupied. The 1981 amendment added a
    section requiring a declaration for homesteads on unimproved land purchased with the
    intention of residing thereon. LAWS OF 1981, ch. 329, § 9. In 1987, the legislature added
    10
    No. 98824-2
    qualifying language to unimproved land and required a declaration for mobile homes: “if
    the homestead is unimproved or improved land that is not yet occupied as a homestead,
    from and after the declaration . . . or, if the homestead is a mobile home not yet occupied
    as a homestead and located on land not owned by the owner of the mobile home, from
    and after delivery of a declaration.” LAWS OF 1987, ch. 442, § 204(1)-(2).
    Lawmakers further evidenced their intent to automatically protect personal
    property, such as Long’s truck, in the 1993 amendment. “Because some Washington
    citizens reside on their boats or in their cars or vans, it has been recommended that the
    homestead exemption’s scope be expanded to include any personal or real property that
    the owner uses as a residence.” FINAL B. REP. ON SUBSTITUTE S.B. 5068, 53d Leg. Reg.
    Sess. (Wash. 1993) (emphasis added). Admittedly, expanding the definition of
    homestead does not directly answer the question of whether a declaration is required for a
    nontraditional residence. But, when combined with the plain language and statutory
    history of RCW 6.13.040, it is evident that the legislature intended occupied personal
    property to be automatically protected as homesteads and other, unoccupied personal
    property to qualify upon declaration.
    In addition to the plain language and history of .040(1), we reject Seattle’s reading
    because it would render the first clause of .040(1) meaningless. See G-P Gypsum Corp.
    v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    169 Wn.2d 304
    , 309, 
    237 P.3d 256
     (2010) (“‘Statutes must be
    interpreted and construed so that all the language used is given effect, with no portion
    rendered meaningless or superfluous.’” (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State
    11
    No. 98824-2
    v. J.P., 
    149 Wn.2d 444
    , 450, 
    69 P.3d 318
     (2003))). The first clause refers to occupied
    personal or real property; the last clause refers to “any other personal property,” that is,
    property other than that already mentioned.
    Long’s truck qualifies as a homestead because it was occupied personal property.
    RCW 6.13.040(1). The homestead act does not require him to file a declaration in
    addition to occupying the vehicle as his primary residence.
    B. The Homestead Act Does Not Apply at This Point in Long’s Case
    We next consider the homestead act’s protections against “attachment and . . .
    execution or forced sale for the debts of the owner up to the amount specified in RCW
    6.13.030.” Former RCW 6.13.070. Long argues his truck was under threat of a forced
    sale by public auction unless he agreed to the payment plan and was unlawfully attached
    under a possessory lien when the truck was towed. Suppl. Br. of Pet’r/Cross-Resp’t Long
    (Suppl. Br. of Long) at 20-25. Seattle contends that its conduct fell short of all three
    enumerated actions because Long indirectly consented to the sale when he parked illegally
    and that no lien attached to the truck because its $4,000 value fell below the homestead
    act’s $15,000 protection. See former RCW 6.13.030.
    Seattle is partially correct. No attachment and execution or forced sale occurred
    here, but not for the reasons the city offers. Rather, the homestead act’s protections do not
    apply because Seattle has not sought to collect on Long’s debt. Thus, his homestead act
    claim is premature.
    12
    No. 98824-2
    Former RCW 6.13.070 protects debtors against specific creditor actions. An
    “attachment” is the physical “seizing of . . . property to secure a judgment or to be sold in
    satisfaction of a judgment.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 157 (11th ed. 2019); see, e.g.,
    Weber v. Laidler, 
    26 Wash. 144
    , 146, 
    66 P. 400
     (1901) (noting that attachment involves
    seizure). An “execution” is a judicial “‘mode of obtaining the debt recovered by
    judgment’” such as a lien. Pinebrook Homeowners, 
    48 Wn. App. at 431
     (quoting First
    Nat’l Bank v. Tiffany, 
    40 Wn.2d 193
    , 196, 
    242 P.2d 169
     (1952)); BLACK’S, supra, 714
    (defining “execution” as a “[j]udicial enforcement of a money judgment, usu. by seizing
    and selling the judgment debtor’s property”). A “forced sale” is a nonconsensual sale to
    recover a debt. Felton, 
    101 Wn.2d at 422-23
    ; BLACK’S, supra, 1604 (defining “forced
    sale” as “[a] hurried sale by a debtor because of financial hardship or a creditor’s action.
    Cf. voluntary sale” (emphasis omitted)).
    As these definitions illustrate, former RCW 6.13.070 protects against actions taken
    to secure a debtor’s judgment. The homestead act does not specify a procedure for
    asserting and determining the validity of a homestead, leaving courts to formulate the
    remedy. Traverso v. Cerini, 
    146 Wash. 273
    , 277, 
    263 P. 184
     (1928). The Court of
    Appeals has held that the validity of a homestead claim should be determined whenever it
    is asserted as a defense to execution of judgment against property. Enyart v. Humble, 
    17 Wn. App. 181
    , 184, 
    562 P.2d 648
     (1977); see also City of Algona v. Sharp, 
    30 Wn. App. 837
    , 
    638 P.2d 627
     (1982) (homeowner moved to quash an order and notice of foreclosure
    for failure to pay an assessment for sewer installation). Where property claimed as a
    13
    No. 98824-2
    homestead was sold under execution, owners properly brought a quiet title action against
    a purchase for the purpose of asserting the homestead exemption. Domke v. Beck, 
    18 Wn.2d 568
    , 573, 
    139 P.2d 1017
     (1943). The homestead act operates as a shield to protect
    against creditors’ actions; it is not a sword to prevent such actions in the first instance.
    Christensen v. Christgard, Inc., 
    35 Wn. App. 626
    , 631, 
    668 P.2d 1301
     (1983) (citing
    Webster v. Rodrick, 
    64 Wn.2d 814
    , 816, 
    394 P.2d 689
     (1964)).
    As a legal matter, a debt is determined at adjudication. See Shaffer v. Heitner, 
    433 U.S. 186
    , 210 n.36, 
    97 S. Ct. 2569
    , 
    53 L. Ed. 2d 683
     (1977). Similarly, former RCW
    6.13.070(2) leaves it to courts to determine whether an exemption from the consequences
    of a debt applies. See Enyart, 17 Wn. App. at 184 (“The legislature has provided that
    homesteads should be identified and protected by the courts.”).
    Further, the homestead act’s monetary exemption is not a complete one. A
    homestead is protected for debts “up to the amount specified in RCW 6.13.030.” Former
    RCW 6.13.070. This limited exemption cannot exceed the lesser of, among other things,
    the total net value of homestead lands, manufactured homes, and a mobile home as
    described in former RCW 6.13.010; or the sum of $125,000 in the case of lands,
    manufactured homes, and a mobile home or the sum of $15,000 in the case of other
    personal property described in former RCW 6.13.010. Former RCW 6.13.030. When an
    owner’s equity in property exceeds these exemption amounts, creditors seeking the
    excess value of the homestead must record a judgment pursuant to RCW 6.13.090 to
    obtain a lien.5 For a homestead vehicle exceeding the $15,000 exemption, creditors
    5
    RCW 6.13.100 allows a creditor to apply for the appointment of an appraiser when a judgment
    is executed on property. Once appointed, the appraiser submits a report on the value of the
    14
    No. 98824-2
    would follow the same statutory procedure. Former RCW 6.13.030; RCW 6.13.090. If
    the homestead exemption applies as the concurrence contends to prevent attachment by
    means of towing, the process of determining a vehicle’s value would occur on the streets
    —bypassing adjudication and falling to parking enforcement officers. See concurrence at
    1. In sum, the homestead act protects only up to a certain amount and at least some
    portion of the value of the homestead will likely be available to pay the debt.
    Accordingly, the act operates a shield to preclude debtors from initially incurring a debt.6
    The Washington State Association of Municipal Attorneys (WSAMA) urges us to
    conclude, as a threshold matter, that the impoundment and payment plan are not “debts”
    contemplated by former RCW 6.13.070. Br. of Amicus Curiae WSAMA at 12. For
    support, WSAMA points to Tellevik v. 6717 100th Street S.W., 
    83 Wn. App. 366
    , 376-77,
    
    921 P.2d 1088
     (1996). In that case, the Court of Appeals held that civil asset forfeiture is
    not subject to homestead protection because it is not based on such debts. 
    Id.
     WSAMA
    argues that as in Tellevik, Long’s impoundment and assessed costs arose from an offense
    homestead, and the superior court will order either (1) a division of the property allowing the
    owner to retain a homestead and the creditor to seek enforcement of the execution on the
    remainder of the land or (2) sale of the property under the execution with no bid to be received
    unless it exceeds the amount of the homestead exemption. RCW 6.13.150, .160.
    6
    We understand the concurrence’s interest in protecting individuals who find themselves living
    in their vehicles, facing the towing and impoundment of their homes. See concurrence at 1-2.
    Nevertheless, towing a vehicle is not a debt protected under the homestead act until that debt is
    adjudicated. The practical consequences of the concurrence’s interpretation would also
    improperly shift the burden of determining the value of a homestead away from a court and onto
    parking enforcement officers. Such an interpretation transforms the act from a shield into a
    sword and would, at the very least, frustrate the statutory procedure for creditors pursuing the
    value of property exceeding the exemptions under former RCW 6.13.030. See RCW 6.13.090.
    15
    No. 98824-2
    rather than a debt. See Br. of Amicus WSAMA at 12, 14-16. WSAMA is incorrect. The
    impoundment and associated costs are not analogous to civil forfeiture. Long did not
    commit a criminal offense and his property was not seized pursuant to a forfeiture statute
    unlike Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 375 (citing RCW 69.50.505).
    Here, Long’s parking infraction gave rise to his debt. After contesting the
    infraction in municipal court, the magistrate imposed, and Long agreed to, a payment
    plan to reimburse the city for the impoundment costs. SMC 11.30.160(B) (upon
    imposition of a payment plan, “the City shall be responsible for paying the costs of
    impoundment to the towing company”). Seattle is Long’s creditor to whom he owes a
    $547.12 debt. See BLACK’S, supra, 506 (defining “debt” as “[l]iability on a claim; a
    specific sum of money due by agreement or otherwise”). At this point, however, there is
    no evidence that the city has attempted to collect on Long’s debt. Therefore, the
    homestead act’s shield against attachment, execution, or forced sale is unnecessary
    because none of these actions has occurred.
    II. Article I, Section 7
    Long also contends the impoundment of his truck violated article I, section 7. He
    first raised this issue in a reply brief at the Court of Appeals. See Resp’t Long’s Reply
    Br. (No. 78230-4-I May 13, 2019) at 23-24; see also Suppl. Br. of Resp’t/Cross-Pet’r
    (No. 78230-4-I Oct. 21, 2019) at 1-2, 5. Generally a party waives the right to raise an
    issue on appeal that was not raised before the trial court. See Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 19
    (citing Brundridge v. Fluor Fed. Servs., Inc., 
    164 Wn.2d 432
    , 441, 
    191 P.3d 879
     (2008)).
    16
    No. 98824-2
    RAP 2.5(a)(3) permits a party to raise a manifest error affecting a constitutional right for
    the first time on appeal. The Court of Appeals declined to address the issue pursuant to
    RAP 2.5(a) because Long did not make this showing. RAP 2.5(a)(3); Long, 13 Wn. App.
    2d at 733-34 (citing State v. A.M., 
    194 Wn.2d 33
    , 38, 
    448 P.3d 35
     (2019)).
    To meet RAP 2.5(a) and raise an error for the first time on appeal, an appellant
    must show (1) the error is manifest and (2) the error is truly of constitutional dimension.
    State v. O’Hara, 
    167 Wn.2d 91
    , 98, 
    217 P.3d 756
     (2009) (citing State v. Kirkman, 
    159 Wn.2d 918
    , 926, 
    155 P.3d 125
     (2007)). Reviewing courts look to the asserted claim and
    assess whether, if correct, it implicates a constitutional interest. 
    Id.
     (citing State v. Scott,
    
    110 Wn.2d 682
    , 687, 
    757 P.2d 492
     (1988)). Whether an error is manifest requires a
    showing of actual prejudice. 
    Id.
     at 99 (citing Kirkman, 
    159 Wn.2d at 935
    ).
    Here, Long relies on State v. Villela, 
    194 Wn.2d 451
    , 460, 
    450 P.3d 170
     (2019), to
    argue that the city’s failure to consider alternatives to impoundment was unreasonable
    under article I, section 7. Long’s claim implicates a constitutional privacy interest, but he
    does not show prejudice.
    Article I, section 7 provides, “No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or
    his home invaded, without authority of law.” Courts use a two-step analysis to determine
    whether this provision has been violated. State v. Puapuaga, 
    164 Wn.2d 515
    , 521-22,
    
    192 P.3d 360
     (2008) (citing State v. Surge, 
    160 Wn.2d 65
    , 71, 
    156 P.3d 208
     (2007)
    (plurality opinion)). First, we determine whether the action complained of disturbs one’s
    private affairs. Id. at 522. If so, we look to the second inquiry: whether authority of law
    17
    No. 98824-2
    justifies the intrusion. Id. “[W]arrantless seizures are per se unreasonable, and the State
    bears the burden of demonstrating that a warrantless seizure falls into a narrow exception
    to the rule.” State v. Doughty, 
    170 Wn.2d 57
    , 61, 
    239 P.3d 573
     (2010) (citing State v.
    Williams, 
    102 Wn.2d 733
    , 736, 
    689 P.2d 1065
     (1984)). Impounding a car is a seizure
    under our state constitution. State v. Reynoso, 
    41 Wn. App. 113
    , 116, 
    702 P.2d 1222
    (1985) (citing State v. Davis, 
    29 Wn. App. 691
    , 697, 
    630 P.2d 938
     (1981)).
    Most relevant to this case, a vehicle may be lawfully impounded in the course of
    enforcing traffic regulations if the driver committed a traffic offense for which the
    legislature has expressly authorized impoundment. Villela, 194 Wn.2d at 459 (quoting
    State v. Tyler, 
    177 Wn.2d 690
    , 699, 
    302 P.3d 165
     (2013)). If no probable cause exists to
    seize the vehicle and a reasonable alternative to impoundment exists, it is unreasonable to
    impound the vehicle. 
    Id.
     Reasonableness of a search or seizure is decided in light of the
    facts of the case, and a police officer must consider reasonable alternatives. State v.
    Houser, 
    95 Wn.2d 143
    , 148, 
    622 P.2d 1218
     (1980); Tyler, 
    177 Wn.2d at 699
    . Pursuant to
    Villela, an impoundment is lawful under article I, section 7 only if, in the judgment of the
    impounding officer, it is reasonable under the circumstances and there are no reasonable
    alternatives. 194 Wn.2d at 460.
    The impoundment was reasonable under the circumstances, and no alternatives
    existed in this case. The Court of Appeals correctly noted that Long told the officers his
    truck was in need of repairs and could not be driven. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 735; see
    also CP at 301-02 (“OFFICER 1: So I’m assuming this [the truck] runs? . . . MR.
    18
    No. 98824-2
    LONG: No, it doesn’t. It’s got a broken (inaudible). . . . OFFICER 1: You need to get
    that thing fixed as soon as possible . . . and get it moving because somebody’s going to
    come through here, probably a parking enforcement officer.”). The parking enforcement
    officer knew of this. CP at 306 (parking enforcement officer arrived at the location
    where Long’s truck is parked and was told Long “can’t move it”). When Long’s truck
    was towed, there appeared to be no other alternative to move it.
    Furthermore, the officers had authority of law to seize Long’s truck. Long
    violated the city’s 72-hour parking ordinance. SMC 11.72.440. He had no right to park
    on a public right of way. See Galvis v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    140 Wn. App. 693
    , 706, 
    167 P.3d 584
     (2007) (parking on a public right of way is a privilege); SMC 11.30.060 (a
    “vehicle . . . may be impounded after notice of such proposed impoundment has been
    securely attached”).
    Finally, Long contends that even if the initial impoundment was reasonable,
    holding his truck for an additional 21 days was unreasonable because the impoundment
    violated the homestead act. Suppl. Br. of Long at 19-21. We reject this argument. While
    it is far from acceptable that Long was deprived of his home for three weeks, Long does
    not argue that it violated due process. At the Court of Appeals, Long claimed the city
    violated his substantive due process rights with deliberate indifference by depriving him
    of shelter and exposing him to inclement weather. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 731-33. The
    court rejected this argument in part because Long offered no case considering the
    19
    No. 98824-2
    doctrine outside the context of a 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     claim. Id. at 732-33. Long did not
    seek review of the issue here.
    We note that our decision on the homestead act does not call into question the
    city’s independent authority to impound a vehicle. The Seattle Municipal Code provides
    this mechanism to enforce parking infractions. SMC 11.72.440. A vehicle owner can
    object to the impoundment and payment of fees, but the homestead act is not a sword to
    prevent impoundment. Christensen, 35 Wn. App. at 631. Homestead protections are
    resolved upon enforcement, not issuance, of a parking ticket or impoundment of a
    vehicle. See Enyart, 17 Wn. App. at 184; Domke, 
    18 Wn.2d at 573
    ; Sharp, 
    30 Wn. App. at 839
    .
    III. Excessive Fines
    Long also seeks relief under the state and federal excessive fines clauses. Pet. for
    Review at 17; WASH. CONST. art. I, § 14; U.S. CONST. amend. VIII. Washington’s
    constitution states, “Excessive bail shall not be required, excessive fines imposed, nor
    cruel punishment inflicted.” WASH. CONST. art. I, § 14. The federal constitution
    provides, “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel
    and unusual punishments inflicted.” U.S. CONST. amend. VIII.
    This court has stated that article I, section 14 provides greater protection than the
    Eighth Amendment for the purposes of cruel punishment. E.g., State v. Roberts, 
    142 Wn.2d 471
    , 506, 
    14 P.3d 713
     (2000) (recognizing that the “Washington State
    Constitution’s cruel punishment clause often provides greater protection than the Eighth
    20
    No. 98824-2
    Amendment”); accord State v. Manussier, 
    129 Wn.2d 652
    , 674, 
    921 P.2d 473
     (1996)
    (citing State v. Fain, 
    94 Wn.2d 387
    , 392-93, 
    617 P.2d 720
     (1980)). Long has failed to
    provide an analysis under State v. Gunwall, 
    106 Wn.2d 54
    , 
    720 P.2d 808
     (1986), in
    support of his argument that the excessive fines prohibition under our state constitution
    should be evaluated differently from the parallel provision in the United States
    Constitution. A Gunwall analysis is not a talisman but an interpretive tool. When a party
    urges a different or more protective interpretation under our state constitution for the first
    time, we expect supportive briefing, particularly when the language of that provision is
    identical to the United States constitutional provision. Absent support for an independent
    analysis, we view article I, section 14 and the Eighth Amendment as coextensive for the
    purposes of excessive fines.
    The excessive fines clause “limits the government’s power to extract payments,
    whether in cash or in kind, ‘as punishment for some offense.’” Austin v. United States,
    
    509 U.S. 602
    , 609-10, 
    113 S. Ct. 2801
    , 
    125 L. Ed. 2d 488
     (1993) (emphasis omitted)
    (quoting Browning-Ferris Indus. of Vt., Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc., 
    492 U.S. 257
    , 265,
    
    109 S. Ct. 2909
    , 
    106 L. Ed. 2d 219
     (1989)). Thus, a qualifying “fine” is a payment to a
    sovereign as punishment for some offense. United States v. Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. 321
    ,
    327-28, 
    118 S. Ct. 2028
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 314
     (1998); Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 265
    .
    The Supreme Court recently concluded that the clause is applicable to the states. Timbs
    v. Indiana, ___ U.S. ___, 
    139 S. Ct. 682
    , 687, 
    203 L. Ed. 2d 11
     (2019).
    21
    No. 98824-2
    A. Historical Considerations
    The excessive fines clause was taken “verbatim” from the English Bill of Rights
    and the Magna Carta, which guaranteed that a “‘[f]ree-man shall not be amerced[7] for a
    small fault, but after the manner of the fault; and for a great fault after the greatness
    thereof, saving to him his contenement.’” 8 Id. at 687-88 (quoting Magna Carta). The
    Magna Carta required monetary sanctions to be “‘proportioned to the wrong’” and “‘not
    be so large as to deprive [an offender] of his livelihood.’” Id. at 688 (alteration in
    original) (quoting Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 271
    ).
    Despite these guarantees, Stuart kings continued to impose large fines on English
    subjects in order to raise revenue, harass political rivals, and detain those unable to pay.
    Id. at 688 (majority), 694 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment) (reviewing the heavy
    fines imposed on the critics of the crown during the 17th century, such as a £100,000 levy
    against the sheriff of London for speaking against the Duke of York). After the last
    Stuart king was overthrown, the English Bill of Rights reaffirmed the Magna Carta’s
    excessive fines protection. Id. at 688. Virginia was the first to adopt the familiar
    language from the English Bill of Rights, and the Eighth Amendment was based directly
    on article I, section 9 of the Virginia Declaration of Rights of 1776. Id.; see also
    7
    Black’s defines “amerce” as “[t]o impose a fine or penalty that is not fixed but is left to the
    court’s discretion” or “[t]o fine or punish in any manner.” BLACK’S, supra, 103; see also Timbs,
    
    139 S. Ct. at 693
     (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment) (noting that “amercements” are the
    medieval predecessors of fines).
    8
    “Contenement” is defined as “[f]reehold land held by a feudal tenant, [especially] land used to
    support the tenant. ●Magna Carta (1215) exempted this property from seizure.” BLACK’S,
    supra, 398.
    22
    No. 98824-2
    Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 294
     (O’Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
    part). 9 All 50 states now include constitutional provisions against excessive fines.
    Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 689
    .
    B. The Excessive Fines Cases
    The Supreme Court largely ignored the excessive fines clause for two centuries.
    Beth A. Colgan, Reviving the Excessive Fines Clause, 102 CAL. L. REV. 277, 297 (2014)
    (“Though the Excessive Fines Clause was ratified in 1791, nearly two centuries passed
    before the Supreme Court undertook its first meaningful foray into analyzing the
    Clause.”). 1993 marked the Court’s first substantial engagement with excessive fines in
    Austin. See Dep’t of Revenue v. Kurth Ranch, 
    511 U.S. 767
    , 803 n.2, 
    114 S. Ct. 1937
    ,
    
    128 L. Ed. 2d 767
     (1994) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (stating that Austin “rescued” the
    excessive fines clause “from obscurity”). Austin held that civil and criminal forfeitures
    are subject to the excessive fines clause if they are at least partially punitive. 
    509 U.S. at 609-10
    . In that case, a defendant pleaded guilty to a drug offense and forfeited his
    automobile body shop and mobile home. 
    Id. at 604-05
    . The government argued on
    appeal that civil forfeiture was not “punishment” and could not be excessive under the
    Eighth Amendment. 
    Id. 607
    . The Court disagreed, concluding that punishment “‘cuts
    across the division between the civil and criminal law.’” 
    Id. at 610
     (quoting United
    States v. Halper, 
    490 U.S. 435
    , 447-48, 
    109 S. Ct. 1892
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 487
     (1989)). Civil
    9
    Sadly, in spite of our vaunted independence, America followed our English forebears’ history
    of economic abuse. See Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 688
    . After the Civil War, Southern states enacted
    “Black Codes,” imposing “draconian fines” for violations of vagrancy and recreating the system
    of involuntary servitude. 
    Id. at 688-89
    .
    23
    No. 98824-2
    proceedings “‘may advance punitive [and] remedial goals.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Halper, 
    490 U.S. at 447
    ). The relevant question, according to the Court, was whether a sanction is
    “simply” or “purely” remedial or whether it has any punitive characteristics, in which
    case it “must be considered a punishment for the purpose of the excessive fines clause.”
    State v. McClendon, 
    131 Wn.2d 853
    , 883, 
    935 P.2d 1334
     (1997) (plurality opinion); see
    also Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 621
    .
    Five years later, the Court returned to excessive fines in Bajakajian, in which a
    defendant was arrested at an airport for failing to declare that he and his family were
    transporting over $350,000 in currency out of the country. 
    524 U.S. at 324
    . Federal law
    required persons to forfeit to the government any property involved in such an offense.
    
    18 U.S.C. § 982
    (a)(1) (2012). The Supreme Court explained that proportionality was the
    appropriate standard to assess excessive fines and, specifically, that a punitive fine
    violates the Eighth Amendment if it is “grossly disproportional to the gravity of the
    offense.” Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 324
    . The Court found the forfeiture of the entire sum
    was unconstitutionally excessive after considering that among other things, it was not an
    egregious infraction and the money was not connected to any illegal activities. 
    Id. at 337-40, 344
    . Both Austin and Bajakajian remain the seminal cases in the Court’s
    excessive fines jurisprudence.
    In 2019, the Court once more examined the excessive fines clause in Timbs.
    There, a defendant pleaded guilty to dealing a controlled substance and conspiracy to
    commit theft. Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 686
    . The police seized the defendant’s Land Rover
    24
    No. 98824-2
    SUV (sport utility vehicle) purchased for $42,000. 
    Id.
     At the civil forfeiture hearing, the
    trial court found the vehicle had been used to facilitate a criminal offense but its value
    constituted four times the maximum monetary fine for the drug conviction ($10,000);
    thus, forfeiting the vehicle would be grossly disproportionate to the gravity of the
    offense. 
    Id.
     The Indiana Supreme Court did not examine excessiveness and instead held
    the excessive fines clause did not apply to state action. The Supreme Court granted
    review to answer this narrow question and held that the clause is an incorporated
    protection applicable to the states under the Fourteenth Amendment. 
    Id.
    C. Legal Principles
    It is self-evident that to trigger the Eighth Amendment’s excessive fines clause, a
    sanction must be a “fine” and it must be “excessive.” Because the clause limits the
    government’s power to extract payments as “punishment for some offense,” Browning-
    Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 265
    , qualifying fines must be at least “partially punitive.” Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 689
    . Therefore, the first step in an excessive fines inquiry is whether the state
    action is “punishment.” State v. Clark, 
    124 Wn.2d 90
    , 102, 
    875 P.2d 613
     (1994),
    overruled in part on other grounds by State v. Catlett, 
    133 Wn.2d 355
    , 
    945 P.2d 700
    (1997); Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 610
    . The second inquiry is whether the fine is
    constitutionally excessive. Clark, 
    124 Wn.2d at 102-03
    ; Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 334
    .
    Courts engage in this inquiry de novo. Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 336-37
    ; State v.
    Chenoweth, 
    160 Wn.2d 454
    , 462, 
    158 P.3d 595
     (2007) (interpreting the constitution is a
    question of law we review de novo).
    25
    No. 98824-2
    i. “Punishment”
    The Court of Appeals assumed without deciding that the impoundment of Long’s
    truck and the associated costs constitute a fine. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 730. Here, the
    parties disagree that either is a punishment and consequently a fine. Long argues that
    SMC 11.72.440(E) characterizes the impoundment and payment plan as a “penalty” for
    violating the 72-hour law, making them partially punitive. Suppl. Br. Long at 7; see also
    Consol. Br. of Resp’t/Cross-Pet’r Long (No. 78230-4-I Jan. 4, 2019) at 28-29. Seattle
    responds that the impoundment is not a fine because “‘deprivation by the government
    must be intended to be permanent.’” Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 11 (quoting Coleman v. Watt,
    
    40 F.3d 255
    , 263 (8th Cir. 1994)). Long retrieved his truck, thus the impoundment was
    not permanent. 
    Id.
     Regarding the associated costs, Seattle contends the payment plan is
    remedial rather than punitive because it was meant to recoup the towing and storage fees
    that the city paid on Long’s behalf. We agree with Long that the impoundment and
    associated costs are partially punitive and constitute fines. Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 610
    .
    If a sanction is partially punitive, it falls within the excessive fines clause. Id.; see
    also Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 372 (“If the statutory provision has any purpose not solely
    remedial, the forfeiture is punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment.”).
    SMC 11.72.440(E) states, “Vehicles in violation of this section are subject to impound as
    provided for in Chapter 11.30 SMC, in addition to any other penalty provided for by
    law.” (Emphasis added.) As the municipal and superior courts recognized, the plain
    26
    No. 98824-2
    language shows that one purpose of the ordinance is to penalize violators. See Hr’g
    (Mar. 2, 2018) at 50.
    The associated costs were intended to reimburse the city for towing and storage
    fees, but they did not exist in isolation. The fees were imposed only as a result of the
    impoundment, which SMC 11.72.440(E) characterizes as a “penalty.” While the costs
    may be remedial, they are also punitive. See Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at
    329 (citing
    BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1293 (6th ed. 1990) (“[R]emedial action” is one “brought to
    obtain compensation or indemnity.”); One Lot Emerald Cut Stones v. United States, 
    409 U.S. 232
    , 237, 
    93 S. Ct. 489
    , 
    34 L. Ed. 2d 438
     (1972) (monetary penalty provides a
    “reasonable form of liquidated damages” and thus a “remedial” sanction for
    compensating the government for lost revenue)). We hold the impoundment and
    associated costs are both partially punitive.
    Seattle does not meaningfully dispute the remedial versus punitive nature of the
    impoundment. Instead, the city argues that a fine must be a permanent loss as required
    by Coleman. Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 11; Answer to Pet. for Review at 6-7. In that case,
    the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals stated that a government deprivation “must be
    intended to be permanent to constitute a fine, as in the case of civil forfeitures.”
    Coleman, 
    40 F.3d at
    263 (citing Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 602
    ; Alexander v. United States, 
    509 U.S. 544
    , 
    113 S. Ct. 2766
    , 
    125 L. Ed. 2d 441
     (1993)). While Austin and Alexander
    concerned the permanent loss of property via forfeiture, neither requires it. 509 U.S. at
    604, 606-22; 509 U.S. at 547-48, 558-60.
    27
    No. 98824-2
    Additionally, Coleman devoted “little discussion” to the argument that a
    temporary deprivation is an excessive fine. 
    40 F.3d at 263
    . Instead, the opinion focused
    on the subject of Austin and Alexander rather than their underlying reasoning. See 
    id.
    The Austin Court explained that a forfeiture may serve a remedial purpose and still be
    subject to the excessive fines clause if it also serves “in part to punish.” 509 U.S. at 610;
    see also Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 265
    . This inquiry looks to the function of a
    specific sanction, not its form or duration. See Benjamin Gillig, Note, Nexus Rethought:
    Toward a Rational Factual Standard for Federal Criminal Forfeitures, 102 IOWA L.
    REV. 289, 297 (2016) (Austin “emphasized the function that a forfeiture plays in a
    particular case”). It advances a categorical analysis rather than a bright line rule as
    suggested by Seattle’s interpretation. See Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 372 (interpreting
    Supreme Court excessive fines precedent as applying a “categorical” approach that
    examines whether a forfeiture constitutes a punishment depending on the purposes of the
    provision).
    Though Austin took no direct position on whether a temporary deprivation may
    still be partially punitive, its reasoning supports this conclusion. Outside the parking
    infraction context, temporary vehicle deprivation is punitive. For example, former RCW
    46.55.350-.360 (2019), also known as “Hailey’s Law,” required officers to impound a
    vehicle when arresting drivers for DUIs (driving under the influence). LAWS OF 2011, ch.
    167, § 3. The law also precluded drivers from redeeming their vehicles until 12 hours
    after it arrived at the tow truck operator’s storage facility. Id. Hailey’s Law was meant
    28
    No. 98824-2
    to “deter those arrested for driving or controlling a vehicle while under the influence of
    alcohol or drugs.” Id. § 2(1)(c) (emphasis added). Deterrence has traditionally been
    viewed as a goal of punishment. Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 329
    .
    This court held that Hailey’s Law violated article I, section 7 and found the statute
    unconstitutional in Villela, 194 Wn.2d at 462. See also LAWS OF 2020, ch. 117, § 4
    (repealing Hailey’s Law). While in effect, however, Hailey’s Law required temporary
    deprivation of a car for DUI arrest as a deterrent. This temporary deprivation was plainly
    a punishment. See Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 329
    ; Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 372. Under
    Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 610
    , and Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 329
    , the law would qualify as
    partially punitive. Similarly, the temporary impoundment of Long’s is a penalty, and so,
    it is partially punitive. SMC 11.72.440(E); Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 610
    ; Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 329
    .
    Moreover, we are not bound by Coleman’s rather conclusory treatment of the
    Eighth Amendment. See 
    40 F.3d at 263
     (devoting “little discussion” to the argument that
    a temporary deprivation is an excessive fine). On federal constitutional questions, we are
    bound only by decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. State v. Vance, 
    168 Wn.2d 754
    , 762 n.7, 
    230 P.3d 1055
     (2010) (citing State v. Radcliffe, 
    164 Wn.2d 900
    ,
    906, 
    194 P.3d 250
     (2008); Tricon, Inc. v. King County, 
    60 Wn.2d 392
    , 394, 
    374 P.2d 174
    (1962)). We therefore anchor our interpretation on the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
    Austin and Bajakajian rather than the Eighth Circuit’s interpretation of those cases.
    29
    No. 98824-2
    Under the Court’s precedent, the impoundment of Long’s truck was partially punitive and
    constitutes a fine.
    ii. “Excessive”
    Next, we consider whether the fines were excessive. Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 333
    ;
    Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 372. “The touchstone of the constitutional inquiry under the
    Excessive Fines Clause is the principle of proportionality: The amount of the forfeiture
    must bear some relationship to the gravity of the offense that it is designed to punish.”
    Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at
    334 (citing Austin, 
    509 U.S. at 622-23
    ; Alexander, 
    509 U.S. at 559
    ). A fine violates the excessive fines clause if it is grossly disproportional to the
    gravity of a defendant’s offense. Id. at 336.
    Despite mandating a proportionality inquiry, the Court has not yet articulated a
    test to carry it out. See id. at 337-40; David Pimentel, Forfeitures and the Eighth
    Amendment: A Practical Approach to the Excessive Fines Clause as a Check on
    Government Seizures, 11 HARV. L. & POL’Y REV. 541, 542 (2017) (“[T]he Supreme
    Court . . . has not given clear or meaningful guidance for when a forfeiture should be
    deemed ‘excessive.’”). In lieu of such direction, lower courts have looked to Bajakajian
    for factors that the Court found persuasive. 10 This has resulted in a “patchwork” of tests
    in the federal circuits. Pimentel, supra, at 543-44. For example, the Eleventh Circuit
    10
    Nicholas M. McLean, Livelihood, Ability to Pay, and the Original Meaning of the Excessive
    Fines Clause, 40 HASTINGS CONST. L.Q. 833, 845-46 (2013) (“[E]ach circuit has had to develop
    its own version of the Bajakajian[ ] multi-factor gross disproportionality test, with the gross
    disproportionality determination often characterized as an inherently fact-intensive inquiry.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    30
    No. 98824-2
    applies a three-factor test 11 and the Tenth Circuit a nine-factor test. 12 Id. at 544.
    Regardless of the factors, the various tests are consistent in their “general
    permissiveness.” Id.
    This court adopted the Ninth Circuit’s test to determine whether a fine is grossly
    disproportional. The test includes but is not limited to “‘(1) the nature and extent of the
    crime, (2) whether the violation was related to other illegal activities, (3) the other
    penalties that may be imposed for the violation, and (4) the extent of the harm caused.’”
    State v. Grocery Mfrs. Ass’n, 
    195 Wn.2d 442
    , 476, 
    461 P.3d 334
     (2020) (quoting United
    States v. $100,348.00 in U.S. Currency, 
    354 F.3d 1110
    , 1122 (9th Cir. 2004) (citing
    Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 337-40
    )); see also Tellevik, 83 Wn. App. at 374-75 (listing
    similar factors). Bajakajian does not require the consideration of “any rigid set of factors
    in deciding whether a punitive fee is” proportional to the offense. United States v.
    Mackby, 
    339 F.3d 1013
    , 1016 (9th Cir. 2003).
    Critical to the present case is whether this proportionality inquiry can or should
    include consideration of a person’s ability to pay. Timbs notes that Bajakajian took “no
    position on . . . whether a person’s income and wealth are relevant considerations in
    judging the excessiveness of a fine,” 139 S. Ct at 688, yet Bajakajian also observed that
    no argument was presented on the issue: “[r]espondent does not argue that his wealth or
    income are relevant to the proportionality determination or that full forfeiture would
    deprive him of his livelihood and the District Court made no factual findings in this
    11
    United States v. Browne, 
    505 F.3d 1229
    , 1281 (11th Cir. 2007).
    12
    United States v. Wagoner County Real Estate, 
    278 F.3d 1091
    , 1101 (10th Cir. 2002).
    31
    No. 98824-2
    respect.” 
    524 U.S. at
    340 n.15 (citation omitted). While the Court has not yet decided
    whether ability to pay is required, the history of the Eighth Amendment suggests it is.
    The Magna Carta—from which the Eighth Amendment descended—limited the
    government’s power to impose punitive fines by, in part, forbidding penalties “so large as
    to deprive [a person] of his livelihood.” Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 271
    . English
    freemen could be amerced only in such a way as to save “‘to him his contenement,’” a
    merchant “his merchandise,” and a serf his “wainage.” 13 Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 335-36
    (quoting Magna Carta); see also Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 694
     (Thomas, J., concurring in
    judgment) (quoting 2 HENRY HALLAM, THE CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND:
    FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY VII TO THE DEATH OF GEORGE II 34 (8th ed. 1867)
    (noting the Magna Carta’s provision that no person be amerced to the “‘full extent of his
    means’”)). Blackstone’s Commentaries echo this notion: no one “shall have a larger
    amercement imposed . . . than his circumstances or personal estate will bear.” 4
    WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *372 (1769).
    Across the pond, the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals explained that its
    excessive fines clause reflected the traditional understanding that any “fine or
    amercement ought to be according to the degree of the fault and the estate of the
    defendant.” Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    5 Va. 555
    , 558 (1799) (emphasis added). Thomas
    Cooley’s esteemed constitutional treatise stated that the excessive fines provision requires
    13
    For the definition of “contenement,” see supra note 8. Black’s defines “wainage” as “[t]he
    plow, team, and other implements used by a person ([especially] a villein) to cultivate the soil”
    or the “[c]ultivated land or the profits from it.” BLACK’S, supra, 1894.
    32
    No. 98824-2
    a fine to “have some reference to the party’s ability to pay it.” THOMAS M. COOLEY, A
    TREATISE ON THE CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS WHICH REST UPON THE LEGISLATIVE
    POWER OF THE STATES OF THE AMERICAN UNION 328 (1868).
    Nineteenth century lawmakers appear to have accepted this traditional
    understanding. See Nicholas M. McLean, Livelihood, Ability to Pay, and the Original
    Meaning of the Excessive Fines Clause, 40 HASTINGS CONST. L.Q. 833, 883-84 (2013).
    In a 1864 speech to the United States Senate, one Pennsylvania Republican noted that an
    excessive fine “‘is a technical term’” and must “‘be determined from the condition of the
    man how much he could pay without touching the sustenance of his wife and children.’”
    Id. at 884 (quoting CONG. GLOBE, 38th Cong., 1st Sess. 561 (1864) (statement of Sen.
    Edgar Cowan)). Though not uniformly accepted, many state courts applied this
    understanding of the excessive fines clause. 14 For example, the Florida Supreme Court
    concluded that “[t]he duration and quantity of each [fine]” depends on the “aggravation,
    14
    See McLean, supra, at 885 & n.195 (citing State v. Staub, 
    182 La. 1040
    , 1044-45, 
    162 So. 766
    (1935) (“What constitutes an excessive fine for the violation of a penal statute depends in part
    . . . upon the ability of the defendant to pay. A fine which in one case would be only slight
    punishment, because easily paid, might in another case be excessive, because its payment would
    be ruinous to the convict.”); People v. Hershey Farms, Inc., 
    175 Misc. 641
    , 643, 
    24 N.Y.S.2d 163
     (Sup. Ct. 1941) (quoting 15 AM. JUR. Criminal Law § 551 (1938)) (“‘A fine is excessive if it
    seriously impairs his ability to gain a livelihood.’”); Cohen v. State, 
    173 Md. 216
    , 232, 
    195 A. 532
     (Ct. App. 1937) (“[W]hen a fine is imposed, it should be done with due regard to the ability
    of the defendant to pay.”); cf. State v. Ross, 
    55 Or. 450
    , 474, 
    104 P. 596
    , 
    106 P. 1022
     (1909)
    (“[I]mprisonment . . . for life, for the nonpayment of [a] fine, . . . is a cruel and unusual
    punishment.”). Not all state courts, however, agreed on this point. See, e.g., Poindexter v. State,
    
    137 Tenn. 386
    , 392, 
    193 S.W. 126
     (1917) (“A fine is proportioned to the gravity of the offense
    punished, and the financial ability of a defendant to pay is not ordinarily considered.”); Conley v.
    State, 
    85 Ga. 348
    , 
    11 S.E. 659
     (1890); State v. Little, 
    42 Iowa 51
    , 56 (1875) (“It seems to us that
    this is one of the cases which call for severe punishment. In view of the fact that the extent of
    the punishment in such cases is fixed by law at one thousand dollars, we think a fine of half that
    sum is far from being excessive in this case.”)).
    33
    No. 98824-2
    or otherwise, of the offense, [and] the quality and condition of the parties . . . the
    quantum, in particular, of pecuniary fines neither can nor ought to be ascertained by an
    invariable.” 
    Id.
     (second alteration in original) (quoting Frese v. State, 
    23 Fla. 267
    , 270-
    71, 
    2 So. 1
     (1887)).
    A number of modern state and federal courts have joined the chorus of legal
    scholars to conclude that the history of the clause and the reasoning of the Supreme Court
    strongly suggest that considering ability to pay is constitutionally required. E.g., Oregon
    v. Goodenow, 
    251 Or. App. 139
    , 153, 
    282 P.3d 8
     (2012) (“When assessing the severity of
    a defendant’s forfeiture, courts consider the amount of the forfeiture and the effect of the
    forfeiture on the defendant.” (citing United States v. Levesque, 
    546 F.3d 78
     (1st Cir.
    2008); Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 266-67
    )); Commonwealth v. 1997 Chevrolet, 
    106 A.3d 836
    , 871 (Pa. 2014) (“the excessive fines analysis . . . requires . . . a thorough
    examination of every property owner’s circumstances”); Rachel J. Weiss, The Forfeiture
    Forecast After Timbs: Cloudy with a Chance of Offender Ability to Pay, 61 B.C. L. REV.
    3073, 3108 (2020); Suppl. Br. of Long at 9 n.19 (citing law review articles in support).
    Federal circuit courts are split on the issue. United States v. Lippert, 
    148 F.3d 974
    , 978
    (8th Cir. 1998) (“[I]n the case of fines, as opposed to forfeitures, the defendant’s ability
    to pay is a factor under the Excessive Fines Clause.”). But see United States v. Smith,
    
    656 F.3d 821
    , 828 (8th Cir. 2011) (deeming a “‘defendant’s inability to satisfy a
    forfeiture at the time of conviction’” is not relevant to constitutional analysis (quoting
    34
    No. 98824-2
    United States v. Levesque, 
    546 F.3d 78
    , 85 (1st. Cir. 2008))); accord United States v.
    Seher, 
    562 F.3d 1344
    , 1371 (11th Cir. 2009).
    The Colorado Supreme Court recently observed that history and precedent
    constitute “persuasive evidence that a fine that is more than a person can pay may be
    ‘excessive’ within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment.” Dep’t of Labor & Emp’t v.
    Dami Hosp., LLC, 
    2019 CO 47
    , ¶ 30, 
    442 P.3d 94
    , 101. In addition to historical
    considerations, the Colorado court found that the “concept of ‘proportionality’ itself”
    supported considering ability to pay. Id. ¶ 31. A fine that would bankrupt one person
    would be a substantially more burdensome fine than one that did not. Id.
    The weight of history and the reasoning of the Supreme Court demonstrate that
    excessiveness concerns more than just an offense itself; it also includes consideration of
    an offender’s circumstances. The central tenant of the excessive fines clause is to protect
    individuals against fines so oppressive as to deprive them of their livelihood. Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 688
    . Inherent in this safeguard is the recognition that “‘what is ruin to one
    man’s fortune, may be a matter of indifference to another’s.’” Browning-Ferris, 
    492 U.S. at 300
     (O’Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (quoting 4 BLACKSTONE,
    supra, *371). As one Pennsylvania court astutely noted, “[T]he excessive fines analysis
    under the Eighth Amendment requires more than ‘lip service.’ . . . This requires a
    thorough examination of every property owner’s circumstances.” 1997 Chevrolet, 106
    A.3d at 871.
    35
    No. 98824-2
    The homelessness crisis and widespread use of fines to fund the criminal justice
    system also fully support an ability to pay inquiry. Amici have demonstrated what any
    casual observer of the news already knows: America is facing a severe housing crisis.
    E.g., Br. of Amici Curiae ACLU of Wash. et al. at 1; Benjamin Schneider, CityLab
    University: Understanding Homelessness in America, BLOOMBERG CITYLAB (July 6,
    2020), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2020-07-06/why-is-homelessness-
    such-a-problem-in-u-s-cities (reviewing a brief history, geographic and demographic
    trends, and the effect of COVID-19 on homelessness in America). In King County,
    nearly 12,000 people are experiencing homelessness, and over 2,000 of those individuals
    live in their vehicles. Homelessness in King County 2019, ALL HOME,
    http://allhomekc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/All-Homes-Infographic-V04.pdf
    [http://perma.cc/5LQX-ZCQE]; Amicus Br. of Nw. Justice Project at 2-3.
    Many factors have contributed to this emergency: volatile housing markets,
    uncertain social safety nets, colonialism, slavery, and discriminative housing practices—
    all exacerbated by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Br. of Amici Curiae ACLU of Wash.
    et al. at 1-7 (examining the effects of the seizure of Seattle and surrounding lands from
    indigenous peoples and racially restrictive covenants on communities of color); see also
    RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, THE COLOR OF LAW: A FORGOTTEN HISTORY OF HOW OUR
    GOVERNMENT SEGREGATED AMERICA 64, 97-99 (2017) (reviewing federal, state, and
    local housing policies that supported segregation such as redlining, that is the refusal to
    insure mortgages in black neighborhoods). The excessive fines clause descended from
    36
    No. 98824-2
    English law that sought to protect individuals from fines that would deprive them of their
    ability to live. This concern is directly related to an offender’s circumstances—in this
    case, homelessness and the circumstances forcing individuals into it.
    Further, this court has recognized that punitive fines should not be sought or
    imposed as “‘“a source of revenue.”’” Grocery Mfrs. Ass’n, 195 Wn.2d at 476 (quoting
    Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 689
     (quoting Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
    , 979 n.9, 
    111 S. Ct. 2680
    , 
    115 L. Ed. 2d 836
     (1991) (plurality opinion)). It has been said that “offender-
    funded justice” comprises much of the funding for criminal justice across the country,
    including traffic and parking violation fines. E.g., Bryan L. Adamson, Debt Bondage:
    How Private Collection Agencies Keep the Formerly Incarcerated Tethered to the
    Criminal Justice System, 15 NW. J.L. & SOC. POL’Y 305, 315 (2020); Suppl. Br. of Long
    at 13. Courts scrutinize “governmental action more closely when the State stands to
    benefit.” Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at
    979 n.9 (lead opinion). Including an ability to pay
    inquiry for an excessive fines claim allows courts to do just that.
    We pay more than “lip service” to the excessive fines clause and instead hew to its
    history. We conclude, as did the Colorado Supreme Court, that courts considering
    whether a fine is constitutionally excessive should also consider a person’s ability to pay.
    See Dami Hosp., 
    2019 CO 47
    , ¶ 31.
    D. Application to Long
    Our gross disproportionality test considers “‘(1) the nature and extent of the crime,
    (2) whether the violation was related to other illegal activities, (3) the other penalties that
    37
    No. 98824-2
    may be imposed for the violation, and (4) the extent of the harm caused,’” as well as a
    person’s ability to pay the fine. See Grocery Mfrs. Ass’n, 195 Wn.2d at 476; Dami
    Hosp., 442 P.3d at 101. In light of these factors, we conclude that the impoundment and
    $547.12 payment plan were unconstitutionally excessive.
    First, the nature of the offense at issue is a civil parking infraction that carries a
    $44 fine. SMC 11.31.121 (“Monetary penalties—Parking infractions”). The city
    certainly has an interest in keeping its streets clear and free of traffic, but the offense of
    overstaying one’s welcome in a specific location is not particularly egregious. See
    Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 13. Moreover, the city has suspended enforcement of the 72-hour
    parking violation during COVID-19, signaling that the city views it as a relatively minor
    offense. See Amici Br. of Pub. Justice et al. at 8. Second, there is no evidence that the
    infraction was related to any other criminal activity. Third, the only penalty identified is
    the $44 ticket and towing/storage costs. In this case, the magistrate waived the ticket and
    reduced the associated costs from approximately $900 to $550. If Long fell behind on
    payments, he would be subject to additional penalties in the form of late charges and
    collection efforts. Fourth, the extent of the harm caused was minimal. As the superior
    court noted, Long was not parked in an area of “very hot demand for city vehicles or
    otherwise.” Hr’g at 54. He was not parked in a residential neighborhood, and as noted,
    he was not cited for blocking or obstructing a roadway.
    On the other hand, the city was harmed when it paid the costs of towing and
    impoundment. See SMC 11.30.160(B) (allowing a payment plan requires that “the City
    38
    No. 98824-2
    shall be responsible for paying the costs of impoundment to the towing company”).
    Seattle leans heavily on the notion of reimbursement as evidence that the payment plan is
    not excessive because “[t]he government is entitled to rough remedial justice.” Clark,
    
    124 Wn.2d at 103
    ; Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 15. Clark reasoned that the value of the
    forfeited property in that case was equivalent to the cost of prosecution, thus the
    government received rough remedial justice, and the court declined to consider the
    forfeiture as an excessive fine. 
    124 Wn.2d at 103-04
    . But Seattle overlooks a critical
    caveat: Clark also explicitly acknowledged that “rough equivalence of the value of the
    property forfeited and the amount spent on prosecution may not always insulate a
    forfeiture from a finding that the forfeiture is ‘excessive.’” 
    Id. at 104
     (emphasis added).
    Reimbursement is but one factor courts may consider in a proportionality inquiry.
    Fifth, Long’s circumstances were such that he had little ability to pay $547.12.
    When his vehicle was impounded, Long earned between $300.00 and $600.00 in addition
    to $100.00 in tribal fees per month. He told the magistrate at his impoundment hearing
    that he lived in his truck and had only $50.00 to his name. Long was attempting to move
    himself out of homelessness by saving for an apartment. During that time, Long’s truck
    held his clothes, food, bedding, and various work tools essential to his job as a general
    tradesman. After the truck was towed, Long slept outside before seeking shelter from the
    cold weather, and he contracted influenza. These facts indicate Long could not afford to
    pay the $547.12 assessment. From October 13 until November 3, Long did not have his
    truck and could not access his tools, thus he could not find skilled labor jobs. During that
    39
    No. 98824-2
    period, he was homeless and sick, likely making very little money. The impoundment
    severely compromised Long’s ability to work—in other words, his livelihood. See
    Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 335
    ; Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 688
     (“‘[N]o man shall have a larger
    amercement imposed upon him, than his circumstances or personal estate will bear.’”
    (quoting 4 BLACKSTONE, supra, *372)).
    Moreover, paying $50 per month when Long made at most $700, would leave him
    $650 with which to live. Cf. Hr’g at 57 (the superior court stated that Long’s “income
    per month is something like $300 at best.”); see also Amici Br. of Pub. Justice et al. at 18
    & n.12 (the self-sufficiency standard or minimum amount of money to adequate meet
    one’s needs for a Seattle resident is $2,270 per month). It is difficult to conceive how
    Long would be able to save money for an apartment and lift himself out of homelessness
    while paying the fine and affording the expenses of daily life. See Amici Br. of Pub.
    Justice et al. at 17-19 (noting poor offenders facing large financial penalties routinely
    forgo basic needs, miss bills, and borrow at high interest rates); Professors Amicus
    Curiae Br. in Supp. of Resp’t at 9-16 (reviewing the “dramatically different type of
    justice” poor people face than “defendants with financial means,” including automatic
    license suspensions for failure to pay court fines, longer periods of homelessness, and
    persistent mental health concerns). Seattle asserts that treating the payment plan as
    excessive punishment is to “trivialize the Eighth Amendment.” Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 14.
    Yet to do what the city asks is to ignore the Eighth Amendment entirely. This we cannot
    do.
    40
    No. 98824-2
    Finally, though not referenced in our proportionality test, the Court of Appeals
    below considered the legislative approval of the fines. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 731.
    Pursuant to Seher, 
    562 F.3d at 1371
    , if the value of the fine is within the range prescribed
    by a legislative body, a strong presumption exists that a forfeiture is constitutional. The
    Court of Appeals found that towing and requiring a vehicle owner to pay the associated
    costs are the “exact penalties” authorized by the city council for violating the 72-hour
    rule. Long, 13 Wn. App. 2d at 731. While the Seattle City Council likely contemplated
    impoundment when enacting the parking ordinance at hand, it did not approve the related
    costs. Long points out that the fees here were set by a contract negotiated with the
    towing company. Seattle responds that the towing company went through the city’s
    competitive bidding process, indicating legislative approval for towing and storage costs.
    See Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at 16. But the process of competitive bidding shows only that
    Lincoln Towing won the contract, it does not explain how the company determines
    towing and storage costs. See Hr’g at 20-21 (superior court oral ruling). Nor does the
    record contain this information. This is far from the congressionally approved maximum
    financial penalty set out in Bajakajian. As such, it does not indicate a strong presumption
    of constitutionality.
    For these reasons, the impoundment and associated costs deprived Long of his
    means of living and violated the excessive fines clause.
    This decision is not intended to suggest that Seattle can never impound vehicles or
    impose costs associated with towing. Nor does it require city parking enforcement
    41
    No. 98824-2
    officers to determine a vehicle owner’s ability to pay at the issuance of a parking
    infraction, contrary to amicus International Municipal Lawyers Association’s assertion.
    See Amicus Br. of Int’l Mun. Lawyers Ass’n at 13. The above analysis focuses only on
    enforcement. See State v. Catling, 
    193 Wn.2d 252
    , 264, 
    438 P.3d 1174
     (2019) (noting
    that federal law does not preclude the imposition of a legal financial obligation but does
    restrict the use of Social Security for payment of the debt). The excessive fines clause
    prohibits the extraction of payment as a punishment for some offenses that would deprive
    a person of his or her livelihood. See Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 335
    ; Timbs, 
    139 S. Ct. at 688
    . A natural venue for this inquiry is an impoundment hearing in municipal court. See
    SMC 11.30.120(D) (vehicle owner entitled to a hearing in municipal court to contest an
    impoundment).
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the superior court’s conclusion that Long’s truck automatically
    qualifies as a homestead and that no declaration is required. RCW 6.13.040(1).
    However, because Seattle has not yet attempted to collect on Long’s debt, former RCW
    6.13.070 does not apply, and Long’s homestead act claim is premature. Thus, we reverse
    the superior court’s decision that Seattle violated the act.
    As to Long’s excessive fines claim, we hold that the impoundment and associated
    costs are fines and that an ability to pay inquiry is necessary. Long has shown that he
    lacks the ability to pay the imposed costs.
    42
    No. 98824-2
    Finally, we conclude that the payment plan as imposed was excessive. However, a
    reasonable fine may still be constitutional and appropriate. Accordingly, we remand the
    case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ___________________________________
    WE CONCUR:
    _______________________________                ________________________________
    _______________________________                ________________________________
    _______________________________                ________________________________
    _______________________________                ________________________________
    43
    City of Seattle v. Long, No. 98824-2 (González, C.J., concurring)
    No. 98824-2
    GONZÁLEZ, C.J. (concurring) – I largely concur with the well-reasoned
    majority. I particularly agree that Steven Long’s truck automatically qualified as
    his homestead because he obviously lived in it. In my view, though, the homestead
    act, ch. 6.13 RCW, also protected Long’s home both from being towed and from
    being subject to forced sale, regardless of whether the sale was ultimately avoided.
    By operation of law, as soon as the truck was towed, a lien was placed on it.
    RCW 46.55.140(1). This lien effectively attached the home as security for the
    impound debts. This violates the homestead act and never should have happened.1
    See former RCW 6.13.070 (1987). If a home is automatically protected as a
    principal residence under former RCW 6.13.010 (1999), it cannot be simply towed
    by an agent of the state and attached as security for the cost of that tow.2 Even if
    1
    Homesteads are not protected against debts secured by “mechanic’s, laborer’s, construction,
    maritime, automobile repair, material supplier’s, or vendor’s liens arising out of and against the
    particular property claimed as a homestead.” Former RCW 6.13.080(1) (2019). These
    exceptions are strictly construed and do not include an operator’s lien that arises from the towing
    of a vehicle. See Pinebrook Homeowners Ass’n v. Owen, 
    48 Wn. App. 424
    , 428-29, 
    739 P.2d 110
     (1987) (holding that an assessment lien does not qualify as one of the statutory homestead
    exceptions); see also City of Algona v. Sharp, 
    30 Wn. App. 837
    , 842-43, 
    638 P.2d 627
     (1982)
    (stating that “[a]n inference must therefore be made that the legislature intended the omission”
    of lien types not listed in the statute).
    2
    Amici curiae Northwest Justice Project and Northwest Consumer Law Center note that
    impoundment and auction of a vehicle is an expedited process with minimal due process
    protections. Amicus Br. of Nw. Justice Project et al. at 15. In fact, “[t]here is a high likelihood
    that vehicle-sheltered individuals will not even receive the [towing] notice, since it is mailed to
    1
    City of Seattle v. Long, No. 98824-2 (González, C.J., concurring)
    that were permissible, requiring Long to consent to a fine for the privilege of
    redeeming his home was not. Under threat of forced sale, Long was forced to
    accede to a payment plan even though the magistrate knew that the vehicle was
    Long’s primary residence. This, too, violates the clear protections of former
    RCW 6.13.070.
    The homestead act protects “‘a home where [the] family may be sheltered
    and live beyond the reach of financial misfortune’” and the act is construed
    “liberally so it may achieve its purpose of protecting family homes.” In re
    Dependency of Schermer, 
    161 Wn.2d 927
    , 953, 
    169 P.3d 452
     (2007) (alteration in
    original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Pinebrook Homeowners
    Ass’n v. Owen, 
    48 Wn. App. 424
    , 427, 
    739 P.2d 110
     (1987)). These protections
    would be gutted if the homeowner had to wait until their home is seized and a
    forced sale scheduled before invoking the act’s protections. The impoundment
    hearing is the very latest time the homestead act’s protections could be
    meaningfully raised. See RCW 46.55.120(2)(b).
    The city contends that the homestead act does not apply because a forced
    sale was merely contemplated and because Long impliedly consented to having
    his home impounded by failing to move it. See City of Seattle’s Suppl. Br. at
    9-10.
    the registered owner’s physical address, at which the homeless individual likely does not reside.”
    
    Id.
     at 15-16 (citing RCW 46.55.110(a)). This provides additional support for an automatic
    homestead protection that prevents towing in the first instance, as it “may be the only meaningful
    protection” prior to impound and auction. Id. at 16.
    2
    City of Seattle v. Long, No. 98824-2 (González, C.J., concurring)
    But Long could not move his truck because he could not afford a new part. That is
    not consent. Long did not violate the parking ordinance willingly; he simply had
    no other option. Nor did Long willingly enter into an arrangement that provided
    him a benefit with some possible risk. See Felton v. Citizens Fed. Sav. & Loan
    Ass’n of Seattle, 
    101 Wn.2d 416
    , 421, 
    679 P.2d 928
     (1984).
    Simply put, the homestead act was intended to provide shelter for families.
    Macumber v. Shafer, 
    96 Wn.2d 568
    , 570, 
    637 P.2d 645
     (1981) (citing Clark v.
    Davis, 
    37 Wn.2d 850
    , 
    226 P.2d 904
     (1951)). The act bars the city from towing a
    vehicle that is occupied as a primary residence and from forcing an individual to
    agree to a payment plan to prevent that vehicle from being sold at a public auction.
    With these observations, I respectfully concur.
    ____________________________
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    3