Dwayne HARBISON, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Arkansas, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
*147 Harry L. Ponder, Walnut Ridge, for appellant.
Paul L. Cherry, Asst. Atty. Gen., Little Rock, for appellee.
NEWBERN, Justice.
Dwayne Harbison was convicted of being in possession of marijuana and cocaine. He was sentenced to six months in jail on the misdemeanor charge of possession of marijuana. On the cocaine possession charge, a felony, he was sentenced to three years imprisonment with two years suspended. He appeals only the cocaine conviction, contending that it was not the intent of the general assembly in criminalizing possession of a controlled substance to punish one found in possession of a bottle containing only cocaine dust or residue. We agree, thus the conviction is reversed and the case is dismissed.
In the record before us there is no testimony about the circumstances of Harbison's arrest. The record does contain a Hoxie police officer's affidavit, which apparently served as a basis for an arrest warrant in the case. That affidavit states that two officers stopped a car which had one headlight and one taillight out. They observed marijuana in the vehicle. They searched the vehicle and found marijuana and a brown glass bottle containing white powder.
A motion was made to dismiss the cocaine charge on the ground that the amount in the brown bottle was insufficient to give rise to a charge of possession. Testimony of two experts from the state crime laboratory was taken. Apparently two defendants' cases were being considered jointly because it was stipulated between Harbison's lawyer and the prosecution that the testimony being taken would be used for both cases.
A drug chemist testified that he identified a substance found inside two plastic drinking straws as being a "trace amount" of cocaine "residue" too small to weigh with state crime laboratory equipment which could weigh nothing smaller than one milligram. From colloquy among the court and counsel, it is apparent that the two straws were unrelated to the case against Harbison but had to do with the other defendant.
The laboratory's chief toxicologist then testified that the amount found in the two straws was not sufficient to have any effect on the "human system" and a drug user would not attempt to use it because it "would not be an amount that someone would be interested in trying to use."
We have no similar testimony with respect to the brown bottle, but the prosecution stipulated that the expert testimony would have been the same with respect to the amount of cocaine found there. The record contains state's exhibit "3" which is a laboratory report concerning examination of six items. The report lists Harbison as the suspect; otherwise, we have no information as to how the six items were obtained by the authorities except perhaps the brown bottle was the one found in the car stopped by the officers. Other than the brown bottle and 1.8 grams of marijuana, the list included a blue speckled tablet, three yellow tablets, a glass tube, and a mirror. On none of these latter items was any controlled substance detected.
The motion to dismiss was denied, and the case went to trial before the judge without a jury. The state introduced its exhibit "3" and the brown bottle. Conviction and sentencing followed.
1. Arkansas law
Harbison was convicted of violating Ark. Code Ann. § 5-64-401 (1987). The relevant operative part of that section appears in subsection (c): "It is unlawful for any person *148 to possess a controlled substance...." Harbison argues "all violations are based on weight of the controlled substance." While that is so with respect to subsections (a), (b), and (d) of the statute, subsection (c) says nothing about weight. The argument does not end there, however, but goes on to cite cases from other jurisdictions with statutes like ours where it has been held that possession of a trace or less than a useable amount of a controlled substance does not constitute an offense.
The state's brief dismisses the argument, contending we have already decided the issue. In Berry v. State,
Also cited by the state is Holloway v. State,
The only other case cited in the state's brief is Johnson v. State,
The state apparently did not perceive in this case that we are squarely, and for the first time, asked whether possession of a controlled substance must be of a measurable or useable amount to constitute a violation of § 5-64-401.
2. Cases from other jurisdictions
Counsel for Harbison argues that common sense, justice, and fairness dictate that the law should not punish a person found to be in possession of a container which only a scientist can determine to contain a controlled substance. Cases from other states are cited in support of the argument. Although there is an abundance of them, the state's brief did not cite any case on point. Some other jurisdictions, although in some instances only upon proof of additional facts, would punish such conduct. We must decide whether to follow that view or side with those jurisdictions which would require either a useable amount of the substance or an amount sufficient to permit the person in possession to know of its presence.
The early cases dealt with possession of alcoholic beverages during the prohibition period. In Schraeder v. Sears,
In Henson v. State,
In Isner v. United States,
The earliest notable case dealing with a drug other than alcohol on the question of possession of a miniscule amount is Greer v. State,
The Greer case was followed by Pelham v. State,
The California Supreme Court interpreted its possession statute to require a "knowing" possession in the same sense that the accused must have knowledge of the presence of the object, although it is not necessary that he or she have knowledge of its "character." The court noted that the essence of "possession" is dominion and control, and those do not exist absent knowledge. People v. Gory,
Without going into the question of whether the amount of controlled substance found was sufficient to permit knowledge of its presence the Arizona Supreme Court, in the other leading case, held that, to constitute the offense of possession, a "useable" amount must be found. State v. Moreno,
Following primarily the Moreno case, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals reached a similar decision in Edelin v. United States,
The Moreno and Edelin cases have been followed recently by another case in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, Singley v. United States,
In Note, 77 Col.L.Rev. 596 (1977), it was reported that the states adopting the "useable amount" were in the minority of jurisdictions having considered the issue. However, the cases cited from the states in the majority were either those, unlike Arizona and California, adopting a blind adherence to statutory language requiring a finding of "any" amount of a drug or an "identifiable" amount. Our statute does not contain either of those words in its operative phrase. If it did, we would nonetheless examine the legislative intent. The other cases cited as being from states in the majority are ones, according to the author, which require more than an identifiable trace to permit an inference of knowledge in the absence of other circumstantial evidence, although they reject the "useable amount" rationale.
We have not held that possession must be "knowing" possession. During oral argument of this case, the state's lawyer, in response to a hypothetical question, argued that knowledge is irrelevant to possession. He contended that a case where a citizen is found to be in possession of a controlled substance under circumstances indicating lack of knowledge on his part would probably not be prosecuted because the prosecutor would exercise his discretion not to prosecute. We find that to be a totally unsatisfactory response if we are to have, to the extent possible, a government of laws.
The cases we have discussed all drive toward the same logical point, whether the rationale is that the amount of a controlled substance is either (1) sufficient to permit knowledge of its presence without the need *151 for scientific identification or (2) sufficient to be useable in the manner in which such a substance is ordinarily used. The intent of the legislation prohibiting possession of a controlled substance is to prevent use of and trafficking in those substances. Possession of a trace amount or residue which cannot be used and which the accused may not even know is on his person or within his control contributes to neither evil.
We recognize the possibility that one may be in possession of an amount of a controlled substance sufficient to permit knowledge of its presence and yet still not be in possession of a useable amount. We agree, however, with the courts that have concluded that possession of less than a useable amount of a controlled substance is not what legislators have in mind when they criminalize possession because it cannot contribute to future conduct at which the legislation is aimed, that is, use of or trafficking in drugs.
It is clear in this case that Harbison was found to be in possession of a bottle which had less than a useable amount of cocaine. As a practical matter, it was a bottle which had had cocaine in it, and that is not a crime.
Reversed and remanded.
HAYS and GLAZE, JJ., dissenting.
HAYS, Justice.
The majority characterizes the case as one in which the defendant was found to be in possession of a bottle "which had had cocaine in it, and that is not a crime." But that assertion overtly understates the facts, against the myriad of cases holding that on appeal we give the facts their strongest probative force and consider them in the light most favorable to the appellee. Boone v. State,
The majority goes to some length to arrive at the conclusion that unless the quantity of cocaine is in "a useable amount," there is no violation of the law. I respectfully disagree and submit that one need look no farther than the plain wording of our own Uniform Controlled Substance Act to refute the majority's position. Ark.Code Ann. § 5-64-401(c) (1987), states, "It is unlawful for any person to possess a controlled substance...." Thus the act prohibits the possession of cocaine (a controlled substance), irrespective of the amount. That should end the matter, as we often say we must give effect to the language of the statute as we find it. Carr v. Turner,
By today's decision the majority effectively overrides the plain intent of the legislature and holds that the possession of cocaine (and necessarily all other controlled substances) is legal, provided it is "less than a useable amount," whatever that may prove to be. I venture that determination will prove difficult to apply and will needlessly complicate the enforcement of the Uniform Controlled Substance Act, for how much marijuana is necessary to constitute "a useable amount?" Or how much crack, or heroin? I have no idea and I doubt seriously if the majority does, but those are issues we will now be asked to address. I believe a more dependable standard would be whether the amount is sufficient to permit identification of the substance, in which case its possession is unlawful.
GLAZE, J., joins in dissent.
