delivered the opinion of the Court.
Charged jointly under two separate indictments in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, appellants Robert Davis and Maxine Green were subsequently convicted on January 27, 1969 at a court trial of the following offenses :
Green
February 28, 1968 — Possession and sale of marihuana (Indictment #34298)
March 23, 1968 — Possession of marihuana and possession of narcotic paraphernalia (Indictment #34297)
Davis
February 28, 1968 — Control of marihuana (Indictment #34298)
March 23, 1968 — Control of marihuana (Indictment #34297)
Appellant Green was sentenced to three years and appellant Davis to five years under the jurisdiction of the Department of Correction. Each appellant contends on this appeal that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions. 1
The pertinent facts are these: On December 26, 1967, appellants each signed, as husband and wife, a two-year lease on an apartment in Baltimore County. On February 28, 1968, a police officer working under cover, Thomas Manzari, went to appellants’ apartment accompanied by •one Terry Diamond. Appellant Green admitted Miss Diamond to the apartment but told Manzari to wait outside. A few minutes thereafter, Diamond emerged from the apartment and conversed with Manzari, following which Manzari returned to the apartment where he met Green, who was then standing outside of her apartment. Man.zari asked Green to sell him $50.00 worth of marihuana. ■Green agreed, went by herself into the apartment and returned with a “Read’s Drug Store bag” full of marihuana, which Manzari then bought.
Subsequently, the police obtained a search warrant for appellants’ apartment which was executed at 5:15 p.m. •on March 23, 1968. The officers entered the apartment through the unlocked door after their knock went unanswered. Appellant Green was present in the apartment; appellant Davis was not. The police observed in plain “view on the living room coffee table two small pieces of hashish and a razor blade. Appellant Davis then entered
Mrs. Dorothy Glazer, a part-time rental agent for the apartment development in which appellants had rented their apartment, testified that both appellants signed the lease in her presence. She stated that she recognized them at the trial because “They lived in the apartment right next door to me.”
Isadore Davis, appellant Davis’s father, testified on his son’s behalf that he paid the rent on the apartment; that his son had appellant Green “in a family way” and he (the older Davis) was “looking to protect” Green until the baby was born; that his son resided at home with him, although he did stay with Green two nights weekly between January 1,1968 and the end of March, 1968.
There was evidence showing that during their search of the apartment, the police found some men’s slacks, shaving cream, and a razor in the apartment.
In convicting Davis of having under his “control” the marihuana which Green sold to Manzari on February 28, 1968, the trial court said:
“He was the tenant, one of the two tenants of that apartment. He was there two-sevenths of the time. The marijuana came from that apartment. * * * There is no question that it was not in his actual physical possession, no proof that it was, but he did have control as a tenant and as a user of the apartment and its contents. So that, in my judgment, the State has met the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty.”
“Testimony shows that he was a resident two-sevenths of the time, and he leased the premises here. Also he had needle marks on his arms.”
We hold that the trial judge, in convicting appellant Davis of control of marihuana on February 28, 1968, was clearly erroneous in his judgment on the evidence; we think the trial judge’s conclusion that Davis had marihuana under his control on March 23, 1968 was not clearly erroneous.
Maryland Code, Article 27, Section 277, makes it unlawful for any person,
inter alia,
to “have under his control” any prohibited narcotic drug. As used in the statute, the term “control” means “to exercise restraining or directing influence over,”
viz.,
to relate to authority over what is not in one’s physical possession.
Franklin v. State,
It has been' held that where one has exclusive possession of a home or apartment in which prohibited narcotics are found, it may be inferred, even in the absence of other incriminating evidence, that such person knew
In
Haley v. State, supra,
we reversed a conviction for control of narcotics where the evidence showed only that the defendant was found in a dwelling where prohibited narcotics were discovered. In that case, the evidence showed that the accused had no proprietary interest in the premises, did not reside there, and the evidence did not show that he had previously visited the premises. In
Wimberly v. State,
The only evidence linking appellant Davis with the marihuana sold by Green to Manzari on February 28, 1968 was that he was a co-lessee of the premises, resided there at least two nights weekly, and had an intimate personal relationship with the co-lessee Green. It was not shown that Davis was on the premises at the time of the sale. There was no evidence or inferences drawable therefrom to show where in the apartment Green kept the marihuana which she sold Manzari, nor was there any evidence showing that Davis knew Green had marihuana on the premises at that time or was using the apartment for the purpose of keeping and/or selling that prohibited narcotic drug. The conviction of Davis for exercising restraining or directing influence over the marihuana sold by Green to Manzari would appear to rest entirely on the fact of his co-occupancy of the apartment and his relationship with Green. To convict Davis because, as a joint occupant of the premises from which the marihuana was sold, he had non-exclusive access thereto is to infer his guilt solely on account of his intimate relationship and association with Green. We think this, without more, too thin a nexus upon which to predicate guilt, and we therefore reverse Davis’s conviction of control of narcotics on February 28,1968.
As to the marihuana found in the apartment on March 23, 1968, we think there was evidence, in addition to the fact of Davis’s co-occupancy of the apartment with Green, from which it could properly be inferred that Davis was in control of the marihuana in the metal box and that in plain view on the coffee table. The needle marks found on Davis’s arm at the time of his arrest permitted an inference that he knew of the presence of,
That the convictions of Green were not clearly erroneous is too clear to require extended discussion. The evidence showed that she possessed and sold marihuana to Manzari on February 28, 1968. That she possessed marihuana and the narcotic paraphernalia found in plain view in the apartment on March 23 is equally clear. She was present at the time the police undertook their search. There was evidence that she had engaged in at least one previous sale of marihuana from the premises. On these facts, an inference is clearly proper that she knew of and possessed the marihuana and narcotic paraphernalia in the metal box and that found on the coffee table.
As to Green: Judgments affirmed.
As to Davis: Judgment affirmed under indictment #3U297. Judgment reversed under indictment #3b298.
Notes
. The docket entries erroneously show that appellant Davis was convicted of sale of marihuana under Indictment #34298 and •of possession of narcotic paraphernalia under Indictment #34297. The docket entries are similarly incorrect in showing that appellant Green was convicted of control of marihuana under both in•dictments.
