OPINION
Artlеtt Willis Smith was charged with and convicted in Oklahoma County District Court of Possession of a Controlled Dangerous Substance (Methamphetamine), After Former Conviction of Distribution of Marijuana and a sentence of fifteen years’ imprisonment was imposed. He was also charged with but acquitted of Distribution of a Controlled Dangerous Substance (Mar- ' ijuana).
At approximately 5:45 a.m., May 14, 1982, police officers observed what they thought to be a drug trаnsaction between appellant and Terry Holly. They observed Holly, whom one of the officers had arrested several days prior to this dаte on a drug related offense sitting in an automobile outside of a motel. They then observed appellant come from one of the mоtel rooms and hand Holly a paper sack which he put into the trunk of the vehicle, and saw Holly hand appellant what the officers thought tо be cash. Appellant got into the vehicle and the officers stopped them about one block away. Holly, who was driving, was arrested for not having a driver’s license. An inventory was made prior to impoundment of the vehicle and a paper sack containing five baggies of marijuana was found in the trunk. Appellant was then arrested, but he had no identification with him. He said he had it in his motel room and that the officers could go get it. Appellant’s “wife” (Terrye Hopkins) was in the room. When she came to the door, the officers smelled marijuana. She quickly *484 closed the doоr, and the officers heard a commotion and reopened it. They observed the appellant’s wife go to the back of the room, and they saw a shoe box containing marijuana lying on the bed. They found Terrye Hopkins in the restroom washing white powder from a hand mirror. They also discоvered a bag of white powder, which later proved to be methamphetamine, and a bag of marijuana in a trash can in the restroom.
Appellant first contends that his arrest was illegal and that the contraband seized from his motel room should have been excluded as evidencе at his trial. He urges that the officers had no probable cause for his arrest.
The test for probable cause on a warrantless arrest is:
‘whether at the moment the arrest was made, the officers had probable cause to make it — whether at that moment the facts and circumstances within their knowledge and of which they had reasonably trustworthy infоrmation was sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that the petitioner [arrestee] had committed or was committing an offense.’
Booker v. State,
Appellant argues that he only gave the officers his room number at the motel so
he
could go there to get his driver’s license, not that they could go to the door. So, he presses, his consent could not be construed to allow the police officers to go to the door of the motel, and all evidence of criminality within the motel room should have been suppressed. Even if we аgreed that his arrest was illegal, we could not agree that the officers’ search of the room was illegal. Once at the motel room, the officers were justified in making a warrant-less seizure of the contraband. They were at a place they had a lawful right to be when they viewed аnd smelled what was obviously contraband.
Teeman v. State,
Appellant next urges that there was insufficient evidence that he was in possession of the methamphetamine to sustain his conviction of unlawful possession. This drug was found in the restroom of the motel room which appellant told the officers he was occupying. He had returned with the officеrs to the room in order to retrieve his driver’s license. Appellant contends that the only reasonable conclusion that could be reached on this evidence is *485 that he did not know of the contraband and that he was not in possession of it.
Possession of a controlled drug may be established though one is not in actual physical custody of the substance.
Staples v. State,
Appellant was charged with joint possession with Terrye Hopkins of the controlled substance. We find that there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could infer this fact.
Appellant told the officers that he was occupying with his wife the room in which the drugs were found. In fact, his driver’s license was recovered from the room. When the officers went to the door of the room they observеd through the chained door the smell of marijuana and then saw marijuana sitting on the bed in a shoe box lid. Terry picked up several items and went to the restroom where the officers discovered the plastic bag containing methamphetamine and one containing marijuana in the trash can. The flagrant use and positioning of the drugs within the jointly occupied motel room is evidence of joint ownership and control. This, plus the evidence presented at trial that appellant delivered marijuana to Terry Holly served to dispel the idea that appellant was an unsuspecting bystander in relation to the drugs. This additional incriminating factor supports the jury’s verdict of guilt of possession.
Rudd v. State,
Finding no error meriting modification or reversal, judgment and sentence is AFFIRMED.
