John Terry Camp and Regina Ruth Poole were jointly tried for three violations of the Controlled Substances Act (sale of marijuana, *715 possession of amphetamine, and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute). Camp was convicted of the sale and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and sentenced to ten years on each count with eight years to be served, the two sentences to be served concurrently. Poole was convicted of all three counts and sentenced to ten years on each count with eight years to serve, all sentences to run concurrently. The two appellants have filed separate appeals but with substantially the same enumerations of error and thus we will consolidate the appeals and consider the two appeals as one. Held:
1. Both Camp and Poole moved the trial court to suppress the fruits of a search and seizure contending the warrantless search violated their rights of privacy protected under the federal constitution. The trial court sustained the motion to suppress and the State appealed that decision to this court. This court reversed the suppression of the evidence and returned the case for trial.
State v. Camp,
At the trial of this case, the State relied upon the decision of this court in its argument that the fruits of the search were valid. Camp and Poole continued to advance the argument that the search of the room in which they were sleeping violated the Fourth Amendment of the U. S. Constitution, the self same argument advanced and rejected by this court upon the consideration of the appeal which approved the search and reversed the denial of the motion to suppress by the trial court.
Where the State relies upon a former judgment which fully adjudicated the issue now made by the appellants and that judgment has neither been reversed nor modified by any exception which the appellants have taken to it, such unreversed and unmodified judgment is res judicata as between the same two parties and thus is the law of the case. While we recognize that the “law of the case” rule has been abolished by OCGA § 9-11-60 (h), we are satisfied the matter may no longer be contested.
Seymour v. State,
2. Appellants submitted written requests for three charges. Error is claimed because the trial court declined to give the first two charges in the language requested. The first requested charge related to the principle that mere presence at the scene of a crime or where criminal acts are committed is insufficient to authorize conviction.
In that portion of its charge, the trial court charged the jury that “while mere presence at the scene of the commission of a crime is not sufficient evidence to convict one of being a party thereto, presence, *716 companionship, and conduct before and after the offense are circumstances . . . from which intent may be inferred.” Appellants argue that the context of the charge given by the court weakened the contention that the actual seller of the marijuana was the only guilty culprit and that they (Camp and Poole) just happened to be present.
Such a request tended to be argumentative for it ignored the state of the evidence that Camp had participated in the placing of the marijuana under the waterbed earlier during the day and that when Stockton (the actual seller to the undercover agent) went to the room occupied by Camp and Poole and asked for a small bag, both Camp and Poole were overheard in a discussion prior to a bag being handed through the door to Stockton. Thus mere presence at the scene did not fully describe the activity engaged in by Camp and Poole. The charge actually given by the trial court fully met the request to charge that mere presence did not authorize conviction but could be considered as some evidence of participation as a principal in the crimes of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and sale of marijuana.
It is not error to refuse to give a requested charge which is argumentative or favors one party’s position by applying facts as legal principles.
Ferry v. State,
In the second requested charge, appellants sought an instruction that mere acquiescence by Camp and Poole in the sale by Stockton of marijuana to the undercover agent does not imply complicity in Stockton’s illegal activity, citing
Parker v. State,
3. Each appellant argues that it was error to charge upon the legal principle of conspiracy where that substantive crime was not indicted. Although there is no affirmative evidence of an express agreement between Stockton, Camp and Poole jointly to possess with intent to distribute or to sell marijuana, there is at least some evidence to show that the three co-actors were aware of the quantity of marijuana, that it was not only contained in bulk but some was separately packaged ready for sale and that Stockton’s request for a small bag and passage to him of the quantity requested, was with intent to carry out their common agreement. Slight evidence will justify a charge even where the preponderance of the evidence tends to show the nonexistence of such a fact.
Heard v. State,
4. Each appellant argues the trial court erred in denying respectively their motions for directed verdict of acquittal. This finds its basis in the argument that Stockton admitted the marijuana was his; that he made the sale; and Camp’s and Poole’s contentions that they were simply present when Stockton made the sale. As hereinabove indicated, the evidence was sufficient to allow the jury to conclude that Camp and Poole were more than mere bystanders and in fact did participate in the sale. We will not second guess what evidence the jury chose to believe. Only where there is no conflict in the evidence and a verdict of acquittal is demanded as a matter of law is it error for a trial court to refuse to direct a verdict of acquittal.
Davis v. State,
5. In her last enumeration of error, Poole contends it was error to assess a separate punishment for the possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute as well as for the sale of the same marijuana. If the facts were as argued by Poole, this enumeration might have more merit. However, the facts show that a very small amount of marijuana
*718
was sold to an undercover agent and that sale resulted in the count of unlawful sale. In addition thereto, a large amount (over five pounds) of marijuana was found within the control and possession of Camp and Poole in addition to the small baggie of marijuana sold. Inasmuch as the sale of marijuana was not directly related to nor did possession of the quantity sold constitute the basis for the count of possession of the remainder of the marijuana, the separate conviction and punishment did not constitute double jeopardy. See
Smith v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
