Opinion
Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction for possession of a restricted dangerous drug (Health & Saf. Code, § 11910) entered following trial by the court. We have concluded that the judgment should be reversed on the ground that there was no substantial evidence introduced to show that defendant had the requisite knowledge of the character of the drug found in the vehicle in which he was arrested.
The facts which led to defendant’s arrest are as follows: Around 2:30 a.m. on October 12, 1969, Officer Pettus observed defendant seated alone in the right front passenger seat of a car parked in a lot adjoining an apartt ment house. The officer approached the car and noticed defendant making “a motion to the center of the seat.” Pettus motioned for defendant to lower *214 the car window and thereafter asked defendant what he was doing in the parking lot. Defendant replied that he was waiting for a friend who was speaking to the building manager about obtaining an apartment. The officer asked defendant for his identification, and as defendant stepped outside the car with his wallet^ the interior lights illuminated the inside of the vehicle, enabling the officer to observe two brown paper bags (containing beer) lying on the carpet in front of the passenger seat occupied by defendant and one benzedrine tablet lying at the base of one of the bags. Pettus thereupon arrested defendant for possession of a dangerous drug; a subsequent search of the car produced two other brown paper bags partially concealed beneath the driver’s seat. The top bag had been partly torn open; it contained 832 benzedrine tablets. The other bag contained 1,001 such tablets.
Defendant testified that he had been in a bar around 12:30 and had purchased a six-pack of beer. As he was leaving the bar, David Shubin invited him to come with him for some coffee. Defendant lfcft-with Shubin in Shubin’s car, sitting on the passenger side of the front seat. Shubin drove to an apartment house and exited from the car, explaining to defendant that he was going to try to get a room there. Defendant accompanied Shubin into the apartment, but soon became tired of waiting and returned to the car, where he was subsequently arrested. Defendant denied any knowledge of the presence or character of the tablets in the bags beneath the driver’s seat or of the single tablet found on the floor in front of the seat occupied by defendant. Shortly after defendant’s arrest, Shubin was apprehended in or near the apartment house. Officer Pettus was able to confirm that the car in which defendant had been seated belonged to Shubin. We are not informed whether Shubin was also tried for possession of the drugs found in his car.
Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the foregoing evidence to sustain his conviction for possession of a restricted dangerous drug. As we recently pointed out in
People
v.
Redmond,
In determining the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction for possession of a restricted dangerous drug, precedents relating to
*215
possession of narcotics are relevant. (See
People
v.
Hunt,
The elements of unlawful possession may be established by circumstantial evidence and any reasonable inferences drawn from such evidence. (Pe
ople
v.
White, supra,
On the other hand, we find no evidence whatsoever, circumstantial or otherwise, to support a finding that defendant knew that the tablets in Shubin’s car were restricted dangerous drugs. As we have seen, knowledge by the accused of the character of the contraband is an essential element of the offense of possession. (E.g.,
People
v.
White, supra,
*216
- Of course, knowledge of the character of dangerous drugs or narcotics may be shown by acts or declarations of the accused which indicate a “consciousness of guilt,”
(People
v.
Redrick, supra,
It is suggested that defendant’s knowledge of the character of the tablets found in Shubin’s car is supported by the very fact that he was in “possession” of those tablets. It is true that in
People
V.
White, supra,
In the instant case, on the other hand, the facts do not justify any reasonable inference that defendant knew the character of the drugs found in Shubin’s car, Although defendant may have been in constructive possession of the contraband, such possession alone does not satisfy the requirement of knowledge developed by the cases. (See
People
v.
Winston, supra,
There is no question that the evidence in this case could form the basis for a strong suspicion of defendant’s guilt. However, as we emphasized in
People
v.
Redmond, supra,
We conclude that there was no substantial evidence that defendant knew that the tablets in the car were restricted dangerous drugs.
The judgment of conviction is reversed.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., and Sullivan, J,, concurred.
Notes
In
People
v.
Newman, ante,
pages 48, 53 [
