OPINION
The offense is sale of marihuana; the punishment, five (5) years.
Appellant contends that the amount of marihuana shown is not sufficient to support the conviction and relies upon Pelham v. State,
In the case at bar, the undercover informer testified that she purchased a cigarette from the appellant, pretended to smoke the same, and at the first opportunity extinguished the cigarette and turned it over to an officer. The chemist who analyzed this unconsumed portion of the cigarette testified that %oo of a gram of marihuana were contained therein.
In this case, sale of a whole cigarette was proven; by the time the unsmoked part of that cigarette got to the chemist, only a small weighable and identifiable quantity remained. In Tuttle v. State,
Finding the evidence sufficient to support the conviction, the judgment is affirmed.
