The STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Hussain ADEL, Petitioner.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*1073 John S. Hutson, Mark W. Muenster, Vancouver, for Petitioner.
Arthur Curtis, Clark County Prosecutor, Kathleen A. Rukliss, Deputy Clark County Prosecutor, Vancouver, for Respondent.
DOLLIVER, Justice.
Hussain Adel claims his two convictions for simple possession of marijuana violate double jeopardy. We agree, and we reverse one conviction.
Hussain Adel was the owner and operator of a convenience store in Clark County. Officers from the Clark-Skamania Drug Task Force contacted Adel in his store for an investigative stop. The officers obtained Adel's consent to search both the store and Adel's car which was parked outside.
In the car's ash tray the officers found three cigarette butts. The butts tested positive for marijuana and weighed 0.1 gram. In the store the officers found marijuana around the cash register counter. The evidence from the store weighed less than 0.2 gram. In total, the marijuana discovered both in the car and in the store amounted to less than 0.3 gramapproximately the weight of three large paper clips.
Adel was charged with two counts of simple possession of marijuana. One charge was based upon the marijuana fragments found in Adel's car, and the other charge was based upon the minuscule amount of marijuana found in the store. The district court found Adel guilty on both charges.
The superior court affirmed Adel's two convictions in a one-page ruling. Adel sought discretionary review by the Court of Appeals, but a court commissioner denied review in a detailed ruling. The Court of Appeals declined to modify the commissioner's ruling. We accepted the case for review to consider the double jeopardy issue.
Adel did not raise the double jeopardy argument at trial, but the constitutional challenge may be raised for the first time on appeal. State v. O'Connor,
The double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment offers three separate constitutional protections. State v. Gocken,
If Adel's possession of marijuana in two places constitutes just one criminal act, or one "unit of prosecution," then Adel's two convictions violate double jeopardy by punishing him twice for the same offense. Double jeopardy is implicated whether or not Adel's sentences are served concurrently or consecutively. Ball v. United States,
To determine if a defendant has been punished multiple times for the same offense, this court has traditionally applied the "`same evidence'" test. Calle,
A Court of Appeals commissioner dismissed Adel's double jeopardy argument by relying upon the same evidence test and *1074 State v. McFadden,
Both the same evidence test and Blockburger's same elements test are inapplicable to Adel's situation because both tests apply only to a situation where a defendant has multiple convictions for violating several statutory provisions. Blockburger,
When a defendant is convicted for violating one statute multiple times, the same evidence test will never be satisfied. As previously mentioned, the same evidence test asks whether the convicted offenses are the same in law and the same in fact. Two convictions for violating the same statute will always be the same in law, but they will never be the same in fact. In charging two violations of the same statute, the prosecutor will always attempt to distinguish the two charges by dividing the evidence supporting each charge into distinct segments. See Michelle A. Leslie, Note, State v. Grayson: Clouding the Already Murky Waters of Unit of Prosecution Analysis in Wisconsin, 1993 Wis. L.Rev. 811, 824 (making this same point to illustrate that the "identical in law and in fact" analysis is not useful in the unit of prosecution context).
The proper inquiry in this case is what "unit of prosecution" has the Legislature intended as the punishable act under the specific criminal statute. See Bell v. United States,
If the Legislature has failed to denote the unit of prosecution in a criminal statute, the United States Supreme Court has declared the ambiguity should be construed in favor of lenity. Bell,
We now turn to the facts of this case. The first step in the unit of prosecution inquiry is to analyze the criminal statute. The relevant portion of the possession statute states, "any person found guilty of possession of forty grams or less of marihuana shall be guilty of a misdemeanor." RCW 69.50.401(e). Possession has been defined as personal custody or dominion and control. State v. Staley,
RCW 69.50.401(e) fails to indicate whether the Legislature intended to punish a person multiple times for simple possession based upon the drug being stashed in multiple places. This lack of statutory clarity favors applying the rule of lenity and finding Adel guilty on only one count of simple possession. See Bell,
The Legislature's intent is obviously relevant when construing an ambiguous statute. One way of construing legislative intent regarding the unit of prosecution for a simple possession crime is to refer to the 40 gram cutoff between a misdemeanor and a felony. See RCW 69.50.401(e). The Legislature has indicated the desire to punish possession of over 40 grams of marijuana as a more serious crime. In doing so, the Legislature focused solely on the quantity of the drug, and did not reference the spatial or temporal aspects of possession. Indeed, if officers had found 21 grams in Adel's store, and 21 grams in his car, prosecutors most certainly would have attempted to aggregate the two stashes and charge Adel with felony possession. Cf. Rashad,
The State's argument that Adel violated the possession statute multiple times simply because he constructively possessed the drug in two different places rests on a slippery slope of prosecutorial discretion to multiply charges. How far apart do drugs have to be kept to constitute "separate" stashes? Under the State's theory it seems a defendant could be convicted of three counts of possession if the drug was found in the defendant's sock, pant pocket, and purseeach "location" being a "separate" place. A reasonable person would respond that all the drugs found were on the defendant's person, and the drugs could not be segregated by the different locations on the defendant's person to justify separate convictions. The same reasonable response can be made in Adel's situation: All of the drugs found in this case were within Adel's dominion and control at the same time. The possession statute does not authorize multiple convictions based upon a drug being stashed in multiple places within a defendant's actual or constructive possession.
In State v. Mason,
*1076 The apparent evils the legislature sought to attack were "advancing prostitution" and "profiting from prostitution." A person is equally guilty of either of those evils whether he has only one prostitute working for him or several.... We find this case substantially indistinguishable from the plural cohabitation in Snow and the interstate transportation of two women in Bell.
Mason,
An apparent conflict between several Court of Appeals cases must be discussed in light of our unit of prosecution analysis. The conflict between State v. McFadden,
In McFadden, the defendant went to an apartment to sell cocaine to an informant. Police raided the apartment and caught McFadden with 5.5 grams of cocaine. Police then searched the van which McFadden had driven to the apartment, and they discovered another 83.9 grams of cocaine. McFadden,
Here the two offenses are not the same factually. They involve different quantities of cocaine and different locations.
McFadden,
In State v. Lopez,
*1077 Lopez discussed the same evidence test, but ultimately decided the "separate" evidence of the two quantities of cocaine failed to support two charges. The court observed, "[I]t is difficult to see how the source of contraband or how it is held should have an effect on the crime of possession." Lopez,
State v. O'Connor,
First, the court found the two charges were legally identical. O'Connor,
O'Connor properly applied the same evidence test to the case. The court's reliance on Lopez when discussing whether the criminal conduct was one act or transaction simply recognized the similarity of the unit of prosecution inquiry and the same evidence analysis. In both contexts, a court should guard against the State's attempting to segment a singular criminal act to form the basis for multiple convictions.
In conclusion, McFadden and Lopez are disapproved insofar as both cases apply the traditional same evidence analysis when the proper question should have focused on the unit of prosecution.
DURHAM, C.J., and SMITH, GUY, JOHNSON, MADSEN, ALEXANDER, TALMADGE and SANDERS, JJ., concur.
TALMADGE, Justice, (concurring).
I concur specially to emphasize the unit of prosecution approach to double jeopardy is necessarily one that must develop on a case-by-case basis. There may be circumstances in future cases where the jurisdictional or temporal differences in the possession of illegal substances may be so great as to suggest completely distinct units of prosecution. For example, if a person were arrested in Seattle for possessing 20 grams of marijuana, and Spokane police served a search warrant on the person's Spokane residence and found 15 grams of marijuana on that same day, two distinct units of prosecution might exist. Similarly, if a person were in possession of 20 grams of marijuana and used the substance in its entirety, and, thereafter, several days later acquired another 15 grams of marijuana for personal use, two distinct units of prosecution are likely present under such circumstances.
