PATEL v. STATE OF GEORGIA.
A24A1477
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
March 14, 2025
FIFTH DIVISION. MERCIER, C. J., MCFADDEN, P. J., and RICKMAN, P. J.
MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.
Jagrutiben Patel appeals from a judgment in favor of the state on its petition seeking forfeiture of currency in connection with the possession and sale by Patel’s convenience store of edible products containing delta-8-THC. She argues, among other things, that the trial court erred because the state “failed to carry its burden of proof to support its forfeiture petition.” We agree that the state did not present evidence to meet its “burden of proof . . . to show by a preponderance of the evidence that seized property is subject to forfeiture.”
1. Facts and procedural history
After a series of motions and rulings that are not pertinent to our disposition of this appeal, the case proceeded to an evidentiary hearing. Evidence was presented that Patel’s store possessed and sold edible products infused with delta-8-THC, which the parties stipulated is a “tetrahydrocannabinol substance which may be contained in the
The trial court found, among other things, that the state had established a presumption that the products were contraband because they contained THC and that Patel had failed to rebut that presumption by showing that they were “hemp” or “hemp products.” So the trial court entered judgment for the state. Patel appeals.
2. Analysis
The Georgia Controlled Substances Act provides that controlled substances, proceeds from the sale of controlled substances, and property found in close proximity to controlled substances are contraband subject to forfeiture in accordance with the procedures set forth in Uniform Civil Forfeiture Procedure Act.
The state’s assertion that Patel had engaged in conduct giving rise to forfeiture was premised on its claim that the products infused with delta-8-THC were controlled substances. So to prevail on its forfeiture petition, the state was required to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the products were controlled substances. Only then would the state be entitled to the rebuttable presumption of
The state did not present evidence to meet this burden. While there was evidence that the products were infused with THC, not all THC is a controlled substance. The Georgia Controlled Substances Act defines the term “controlled substance” to mean “a drug, substance, or immediate precursor in Schedules I through V of Code Sections 16-13-25 through 16-13-29 and Schedules I through V of 21 CFR Part 1308.”
Tetrahydrocannabinol, tetrahydrocannabinolic acid, or a combination of tetrahydrocannabinolic acid which does not contain plant material
exhibiting the external morphological features of the plant of the genus Cannabis, but not including such substance when found in hemp or hemp products as such terms are defined in Code Section 2-23-3 [of the Georgia Hemp Farming Act].
In this case the question is whether the products constituted “hemp.” We do not consider whether they fell within the definition of “hemp products” because at the time of the proceedings below, the Georgia Hemp Farming Act defined “hemp products” to exclude “food products infused with THC unless approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration.”
We now turn to whether the evidence presented to the trial court demonstrates that the products in this case fell outside the definition of “hemp.” It does not. At the time of the proceedings below, the Georgia Hemp Farming Act defined “hemp” as “the Cannabis sativa L. plant and any part of such plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with the federally defined THC level for hemp or a lower level.”
In other words, the version of the Georgia Hemp Farming Act in effect at the time defined hemp to encompass products containing “the Cannabis sativa L. plant and any part of such plant” unless they contained more than 0.3 percent of delta-9-THC.
Instead, to show that a product containing THC fell outside the applicable definition of hemp, and thus was a controlled substance, the state was required to show not just that it contained delta-8-THC, but also that it contained the necessary concentration of delta-9-THC. But the state presented no evidence establishing the concentration of delta-9-THC in any of the products at issue. Consequently, it did not establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the delta-8-THC-infused products
For this reason, we agree with Patel that the state “failed to carry its burden of proof to support its forfeiture petition[,]” and so we reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of the state.
Judgment reversed. Rickman, P. J., concurs specially and Mercier, C. J., concurs in judgment only.
PATEL v. THE STATE.
Court of Appeals of Georgia
I concur with the majority opinion that the state failed to carry its burden of proving that Patel engaged in conduct giving rise to forfeiture, and that the trial court erred by granting the petition seeking forfeiture of currency seized from her convenience store. I write separately to further explain why, on the record before us, the state failed to show that the delta-8-THC contained in the products sold by Patel was a controlled substance as defined by Georgia law and, consequently, failed to present a prima facie case that the seized funds were subject to forfeiture.
With respect to the products containing delta-8-THC seized by law enforcement from Patel’s store and used to sustain the state’s petition of forfeiture, Patel submitted affidavits from a pharmacologist and a board-certified technologist in chemistry, both of whom explained that delta-8-TCH is a naturally occurring cannabinoid compound commonly derived from the hemp Cannabis sativa L. plant. The parties expressly stipulated to the same. Thus, naturally-occurring delta-8-THC is a hemp derivative and, under the plain language of the governing statute during the relevant time period, was not considered a controlled substance under Georgia law so
Nevertheless, the trial court noted that delta-8-THC may also be produced synthetically “from non-cannabis materials,” and that synthetically-produced delta-8-THC may not have been exempted from the list of Schedule I controlled substances. See AK Futures LLC v. Boyd Street Distro, LLC, 35 F4th 682, 692 (9th Cir. 2022) (citing a letter from the Drug Enforcement Agency stating that “synthetic” delta-8-THC is produced “from non-cannabis materials” and thus remains banned). Based on that possibility, the trial court afforded the state a rebuttable presumption that the products seized from Patel’s store containing delta-8-THC were Schedule I controlled substances, and placed on Patel the burden of proving that those products contained naturally-occurring, as opposed to “synthetic,” delta-8-THC. In doing so, the trial court erroneously relieved the state of its burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Patel violated the Georgia Controlled Substances Act. See
In sum, the only evidence in the record before this Court, by way of affidavits and the parties’ stipulations, is that the delta-8-THC contained in the products seized from Patel’s store may have been naturally derived from the hemp cannabis plant and, therefore, may not have been a Schedule I controlled substance. And, as discussed in the majority opinion, the state presented no evidence that the products contained an unlawful concentration of more than 0.3% delta-9-THC. As such, the state failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Patel’s property was subject to forfeiture, and the trial court erred by holding otherwise.
