Opinion
At about noon, on February 11, 1969, appellant, K. Hiram Johnson, and his friend, Susan Ackerman, entered the United States from Mexico at the San Ysidro border crossing station. After a preliminary examination, they were taken to the customs baggage room for a more complete inspection. Johnson was asked by United States Customs Inspector Reay to empty his pockets. He removed a number of items, including one dirty, scored pill, which later proved to contain amphetamine. Reay called the San Diego City police and asked if they wanted to talk to a person who had one pill in his pocket.
As a result of the foregoing, Johnson was arrested and eventually the District Attorney of San Diego County filed an information in superior court charging him with two felonies. In count I of the information, he was charged with possessing restricted dangerous drugs (Health & Saf. Code, § 11910), and in count II with transporting restricted dangerous drugs (Health & Saf. Code, § 11912). A jury convicted Johnson of both possessing and transporting the single pill. The trial judge sentenced him to state prison for each violation. He ordered the two prison sentences to run concurrently. Johnson appeals from the judgment of conviction.
*847
While appellant has not raised the issue of multiple conviction and multiple punishment on appeal, it is our duty to point out both have improperly occurred.
(People
v.
Toliver,
To prove their case, the People called a police chemist who testified he had analyzed the pill and found it to contain amphetamine. He further stated, “ . . . the form of the tablet would indicate to me that it would be a useful amount.” An opinion is no better than the reason given to support it. On cross-examination he testified he performed a qualitative and not a quantitative analysis, did not know how much amphetamine was in the tablet, did not know if there was enough amphetamine in the pill to have a “narcotic effect,” 1 and admitted he had no way of knowing if the pill would produce an effect. He again stated: “ . . . I state it is a useful amount because of the form it has, in a recognized manufactured form, which to me indicates it is in a condition that can be used.” He did not identify the pill as the product of any particular commercial drug manufacturer or as being of a kind commercially known to contain any particular quantity of amphetamine.
*848
In
People
v.
Leal,
At the outset of his instructions the trial judge, in the instant case, stated to the jury: “I also want to tell you that the statute on possession of these dangerous drugs does not specify any particular amount that has to be possessed, it just says possession. A small amount is possession just as much as a large amount, if the law is violated in other ways.” This was an inaccurate and incomplete statement of the law.
(People
v.
Leal, supra,
In its formal instructions to the jury, the court evidently used CALJIC instruction 701 (defining possession) and 701-A (defining transportation) as revised in 1967 to meet the rule established in
People
v.
Leal, supra,
Appellant, with the aid of counsel appointed to advise him, repre *849 sented himself at the trial. At the conclusion of the instructions, he submitted the following two handwritten instructions to the court:
“1. You are instructed that although the law does not require any particular quantity of the dangerous drug to be possessed or transported, you must find that the defendant possessed and/or transported a usable quantity of that drug.
“2. Usable quantity of a dangerous drug is that quantity that is capable of being consumed and have [sic] a narcotic effect.”
The proposed instructions were rejected by the trial judge.
The Attorney General contends the proposed instructions were properly refused. He concedes the first instruction is a correct statement of the law, but maintains the second is inaccurate because the word “effect” is used in lieu of “potential,” the word employed in Leal. Assuming the second proposed instruction to be inaccurate, that fact would not excuse the failure to give the first instruction which properly states the law. Moreover, we are not convinced the use of the word “effect” instead of the word “potential” makes the second proposed instruction inaccurate. The argument to the contrary involved a subtlety in semantics we do not feel obliged to pursue under the circumstances. If any error appears in the instruction, we think, as already indicated, it lies in the use of the word “narcotic” as descriptive of the effect of a dangerous drug. The proposed instructions certainly called attention to the fact appellant contended the jury should be instructed on the issue of “usable quantity,” a matter which had not been correctly covered in the court’s previous instructions.
The final question to be answered is whether the indicated errors were prejudicial and require a reversal of the judgment. We believe they were. The uncontradicted evidence establishes the pill contained amphetamine, but it does not establish, as a matter of law, it contained a sufficient quantity of the drug to come within statutory prohibitions. The expert called by the People gave his opinion the pill contained a usable amount of amphetamine, but he admitted his opinion was based solely on the pill’s form. He also admitted he did not know if there was enough amphetamine in the pill to have a “narcotic” effect and he had no way of knowing if the pill would produce an effect. At the very least, the reasonable inferences to be drawn from this testimony created a conflict as to whether the pill contained amphetamine in an amount sufficient to be usable as a dangerous drug. This factual question required jury determination under full, fair and accurate instructions as to the law.
(People
v.
Leal, supra,
In
People
v.
Perez, supra,
In view of our holding, it is not necessary to discuss appellant’s other contentions of error which we find to be without merit.
The judgment is reversed.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Coughlin, J., concurred.
Notes
Amphetamine is classified as a restricted dangerous drug (Health & Saf. Code, § 11901) and not as a narcotic. It may not accurately be described as having a “narcotic” effect. This seems to have been overlooked by the expert as it has been by the parties on appeal.
If adapted to fit the facts of this case, the first sentence of CALJIC No. 701 would read; “Every person who possesses any restricted dangerous drug such as amphetamine, in an amount sufficient to be used as a dangerous drug, is guilty of a crime.”
