OPINION
Appellant, Larry G. Hishaw, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was charged in the District Court, Oklahoma County, Case No. CRM-76-2018, with the offense of Possession of Marijuana, in violation of
Briefly stated, the facts adduced during the trial of this case are as follows. On the morning of May 29, 1976, Police Officers Emberling and Andrews of the Oklahoma City Police Department stopped a car driven by one James Hishaw pursuant to a radiogram which indicated that said person was wanted on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Pursuant to this stop, the defendant and another passenger, Otis Pet-it, were also requested to step out of the vehicle. At this time Officer Emberling saw a hand-rolled cigarette, later ascertained to contain marijuana, laying on the right front floorboard of the vehicle, where the defendant’s feet were located. He also observed the other passenger brush a plastic baggie containing a green leafy substance off of the backseat onto the floor. The defendant was subsequently arrested for possession of marijuana.
At the trial, the defendant denied knowledge of the presence of any marijuana in the vehicle and Otis Petit testified that all of the marijuana found in the vehicle, in fact, belonged to him.
Due to the controlling nature of the defendant’s second assignment of error, this Court need not consider the other errors asserted in the defendant’s brief. . The defendant contends that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the defendant had the requisite possession and control of the marijuana in question.
While proof of actual physical possession of a controlled substance is not necessary even a showing of constructive possession requires proof that a defendant have knowledge of its presence and the power and intent to control its disposition or use.
Staples v. State,
Okl.Cr.,
In the instant case, the only evidence adduced at trial against this defendant was that one marijuana cigarette was found on the floor next to his feet in a car in which he was a passenger. Further, said cigarette had not been lit and the State’s own witness indicated that there was no evidence that any marijuana had been smoked within the vehicle. However, the State would attempt to link the cigarette in question to the defendant by the mere fact that it was “easily visible.” This Court, in
Brown v. State, supra,
cited with approval
Dishman v. State,
3 Tenn.Cr.App. 725,
Here, the State’s case, based entirely upon circumstantial evidence, was insufficient to warrant a conviction since it did not exclude every reasonable hypothesis but that of guilt and this Court has held on numerous occasions that proof amounting only to a strong suspicion or a mere probability is insufficient.
Roth v. State,
Okl.Cr.,
Further, in view of the fact that the defendant moved, at the close of the State’s case, for a directed verdict on specific grounds that the State’s evidence failed to establish possession and control and since said motion should have been granted by the trial Judge, we have no alternative other than to reverse and remand with instructions to dismiss. We further note that the State’s evidence was not completed by defense testimony. See,
Johnson v. State,
Okl.Cr.,
