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HomeHarbors and Navigation CodeDiv. 3Ch. 3Art. 1§ 523 Vessel Removal By Officers

§ 523 Vessel Removal By Officers

Harbors and Navigation Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 523 Vessel Removal By Officers

This law lets police, lifeguards, or marine safety officers take away a boat (or its trailer) from public water or public land when it’s blocking traffic, is stolen, the owner can’t look after it, is tied to a crime, or is a danger to people or the environment.

Key Takeaways

  • •Officers can remove a boat if it’s left unattended and blocks traffic or creates a hazard (a)(1).
  • •They can take a stolen or reported‑missing boat (a)(2).
  • •If the people in charge are too sick or injured to look after the boat, it can be taken (a)(3).
  • •When someone is arrested while on the boat, the boat can be removed (a)(4).
  • •Boats that threaten navigation, public safety, health, or the environment can be taken (a)(5)‑(a)(6).
  • •Boats with registration that expired more than a year ago can be removed (a)(7).
  • •On public land, officers can take a boat if they think it was used in a crime or holds evidence of a crime (c)(1)(A)‑(B).
  • •The government can ask a court to make the owner pay for towing and storage costs (b) and (c)(3).
  • •No lien (a claim on the boat) is placed unless the owner agreed the boat was used in a crime (c)(2).
  • •The word “vessel” also covers the trailer that carries the boat (d).

Example

A boat is tied to a dock in a busy marina but the owner left it there and it blocks other boats from getting in and out.

An officer can pull the boat off the dock and store it until the owner fixes the problem, because the boat is stopping normal traffic and could cause a crash.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 523 Vessel Removal By Officers

(a) A peace officer, as described in Section 663, or a lifeguard or marine safety officer employed by a county, city, or district while engaged in the performance of official duties, may remove a vessel from, and, if necessary, store a vessel removed from, a public waterway under any of the following circumstances: (1) When the vessel is left unattended and is moored, docked, beached, or made fast to land in a position that obstructs the normal movement of traffic or in a condition that creates a hazard to other vessels using the waterway, to public safety, or to the property of another. (2) When the vessel is found upon a waterway and a report has previously been made that the vessel has been stolen or a complaint has been filed and a warrant thereon issued charging that the vessel has been embezzled. (3) When the person or persons in charge of the vessel are by reason of physical injuries or illness incapacitated to an extent as to be unable to provide for its custody or removal. (4) When an officer arrests a person operating or in control of the vessel for an alleged offense, and the officer is, by any provision of this code or other statute, required or permitted to take, and does take, the person arrested before a magistrate without unnecessary delay. (5) When the vessel interferes with, or otherwise poses a danger to, navigation or to the public health, safety, or welfare. (6) When the vessel poses a threat to adjacent wetlands, levies, sensitive habitat, any protected wildlife species, or water quality. (7) When a vessel is found or operated upon a waterway with a registration expiration date in excess of one year before the date on which it is found or operated on the waterway. (b) Costs incurred by a public entity pursuant to removal of vessels under subdivision (a) may be recovered through appropriate action in the courts of this state. (c) (1) A peace officer, as described in Section 663, or marine safety officer employed by a city, county, or district, while engaged in the performance of official duties, may remove a vessel from, and, if necessary, store a vessel removed from, public property within the territorial limits in which the officer may act, in either of the following circumstances: (A) When any vessel is found upon the public property and the officer has probable cause to believe the vessel was used in the commission of a crime. (B) When a vessel is found upon public property and an officer has probable cause to believe that the vessel itself provides evidence that a crime was committed or the vessel contains evidence of a possible crime that was committed and the evidence cannot be easily removed from the vessel. (2) Notwithstanding Section 3068 of the Civil Code, or Section 22851 of the Vehicle Code, no lien shall attach to a vessel removed under this subdivision unless it is determined that the vessel was used in the commission of a crime with the express or implied consent of the owner of the vessel. (3) In any prosecution of a crime for which a vessel was removed and impounded under this subdivision, a court may order a person convicted of a crime involving the use of a vessel to pay the costs of towing and storage of the vessel and any administrative charges imposed in connection with the removal, impoundment, storage, or release of the vessel. (d) For purposes of this section, “vessel” includes both the vessel and any trailer used by the operator to transport the vessel. (Amended by Stats. 2018, Ch. 341, Sec. 1. (AB 2175) Effective January 1, 2019.)

Last verified: January 11, 2026

Key Terms

peace officerlifeguardmarine safety officerpublic waterwaypublic propertyremoval of vesselsprobable cause

Related Statutes

  • § 524 Stolen Or Abandoned Vessel Removal
  • § 663 Peace Officer Vessel Enforcement
  • § 280 Vessel Meeting Navigation Rules
  • § 281 Vessel Collision Avoidance Rules
  • § 282 Sailing Vessel Right Of Way

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Harbors and Navigation Code. Section 523.
View Official Source