A jury found Michael Jay Evans (appellant) guilty of actual or constructive possession of two controlled substances (Counts Two & Four) and possession of drug paraphernalia, including pipes or other items used with controlled substances (Count Five). Appellant argues the trial court erred, in pertinent part, by denying a motion for judgment of acquittal (JOA) on Counts Two and Four, where the circumstantial evidence was insufficient to establish that appellant constructively possessed the controlled substances. On this argument, we reverse the judgment and sentence on these two counts. The evidence supports appellant’s conviction in Count Five, for which the trial court sentenced him to time served.
FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Officers with a search warrant went to appellant’s residence, where their search disclosed a duffel bag atop the bed in the master bedroom. A confidential informant had identified this bedroom as appellant’s but did not identify who owned the duffel bag. Inside the bag, officers found appellant’s passport, a memo book, and a small travel toiletry bag. Inside the toiletry bag, they discovered a glass smoking device and a pain reliever bottle containing miscellaneous pills, eventually analyzed and identified as MDMA and Carisoprodol. During the search, appellant, another man, and appellant’s daughter were in the residence. Also, the confidential informant, appellant’s relatives, and several other people frequently visited or stayed at the residence. Some of these visitors had ready access to the master bedroom and had stored illicit drugs there.
The defense theorized the premises were under joint possession and because the officers did not find the contraband on appellant’s person, his mere occupancy of the residence could not establish the necessary elements of constructive possession. Defense counsel, on that basis, moved for JOA on Counts Two and Four. The trial court denied the motion.
ANALYSIS
We review de novo the denial of a motion for JOA to determine whether the evidence is legally sufficient to prove the charged offense.
See Jones v. State,
“Proof of possession of a controlled substance may be actual or constructive.”
Taylor v. State,
Because the premises where the officers found the contraband were in joint, rather than exclusive, possession, one cannot infer either the “knowledge” or “ability to maintain dominion and control” element from mere ownership of the residence or proximity to the contraband. The State must establish both elements by independent proof.
See id.; Taylor,
Such proof may consist either of evidence establishing that the accused had actual knowledge of the presence of the contraband in the place where it is found, or circumstantial evidence from which a jury might properly infer that the accused had knowledge of the presence of the contraband.
Robinson v. State,
By analogy to
S.B.,
the evidence here showed appellant jointly occupied the residence and the master bedroom where the officers found the contraband hidden inside the duffel bag. The evidence did not show who owned the duffel bag. S.B. had admitted ownership of the grocery bag, yet that admission, along with mere location, did not suffice to prove constructive possession in a jointly occupied car.
See
Here, the State relies solely upon the presence of appellant’s passport in the outer duffel bag to argue that it made a satisfactory prima facie case of possession of the contraband secreted inside the travel toiletry bag, itself enveloped in the duffel. The State does not attempt to grapple with either S.B. or N.K.W.
The required analysis for a constructive possession case where the premises, including the master bedroom, are jointly occupied, leads us to conclude the State offered no independent proof that appellant knew about the hidden controlled substances.
See Cook v. State,
