The defendant, in proceedings had under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, has been convicted on an indictment charging her with unlawful possession of a Class A controlled substance (heroin) with intent to distribute the same. G. L. c. 94C, §§ 31 and 32. She has assigned as error (1) the denial of her pre-trial motion to suppress certain evidence seized pursuant to a search warrant and (2) the denial of her separate motions (a) for a directed verdict generally and (b) for a directed verdict on so much of the indictment as charged intent to distribute.
1. The sole contention raised by the motion to suppress appears to be that the search warrant did not meet the “particularity” requirement of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States concerning the place to be searched. 1
The application for the warrant, which appears on the same sheet of paper as the warrant itself (see
Commonwealth
v.
Pope,
*655 The premises searched pursuant to the warrant consisted of one half of a two story wood 2 building located on Stanwood Street which contained two separate duplex apartments, neither of which was physically interconnected with the other. The only means of approach to the building which was described in the evidence adduced at the hearing on the motion to suppress consisted of a walk and steps (possibly brick; see n. 2) which led from Stanwood Street to a single door which was set in the front of the building and which opened into a front porch partially enclosed by glass. On a post to the left of and on the exterior side of that door there were, at the time of the execution of the warrant, two mailboxes, one directly over the other; over the uppermost mailbox was the number 145. To the right and also on the exterior side of the same door was another post with one mailbox; directly over that box was the number 143. Once the exterior door was opened there were immediately visible (if they were not already visible through the glass which formed the exterior wall of the porch) two distinct doorways, one to the left and one to the right, which led, respectively, to the two separate duplex apartments of which the building was comprised. The officers who executed the warrant searched the apartment on the left hand side of the building, where they found the heroin and other articles hereinafter described. The apartment on the right hand side of the building was not searched.
We hold that the warrant, when read in the light of the application and the supporting affidavit and considered in conjunction with the physical facts, described with sufficient particularity the premises which were to
*656
be and were searched. “A conveyancer’s precision of language is not to be expected in the affidavit”
(Commonwealth
v.
Pellier,
2. There was no error in denying either of the motions for a directed verdict.
The search yielded, and there were introduced in evidence, the following: a “hundred some-odd” bags of heroin found in a man’s suitcoat jacket hanging in an *657 upstairs bedroom closet; various types of paraphernalia (found in an attache case discovered in the bedroom) which, on the testimony of an officer of the drug control unit of the Boston police, were customarily used in the cutting and packaging of heroin for the street trade; and various personal papers (found in a bureau in the same bedroom) which specifically identified the defendant by name (some of them also identifying her by reference to the 145 Stanwood Street address), such as Medicaid eligibility and welfare identity cards, a driver’s license, a savings account passbook, and a receipt for payment of the rent of the apartment in question for the month in which the search was made. 3 The defendant was found in the apartment with “several of her minor children” some time after 7:30 p.m. on a winter evening. There was evidence that following her arrest and receipt of Miranda warnings the defendant had told one of the searching officers (the one who had arrested her) that she was a tenant of the building; that the apartment in question had been rented for her approximately two months earlier by the defendant in a companion indictment (codefendant) tried together with the present indictment; and that she and her “boy friend” were the joint owners of some $700 found in the apartment, most of it in the bedroom.
The foregoing evidence was sufficient to warrant findings that the defendant was knowingly and constructively in possession of heroin.
Commonwealth
v.
Mott, ante,
47, 53-54 (1974).
Commonwealth
v.
Xiarhos, ante,
225, 231-232 (1974). The quantity of heroin, whether taken in conjunction with or considered apart from the cutting paraphernalia, was sufficient to warrant a finding of possession with intent to distribute.
Commonwealth
v.
Ellis,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“. . . and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched . . ..” No question has been raised concerning probable cause for issuance of the warrant. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
Todisco,
There is no suggestion that the misdescription of the building as “brick” which appeared in the application and in the supporting affidavit was deliberate. See
Commonwealth
v.
Murray,
The defendant has not argued that such papers could not be seized under the warrant or that they were otherwise not admissible in evidence.
