Defendant, with four prior convictions for drug related offenses, waived a jury and was tried to the court for possession of 80.48 grams of Cannabis Sativa, commonly called marijuana. Sections 195.020 and 195.200, V.A.M.S. The penalty was assessed at twelve years confinement.
He does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction and the evidence may be outlined in summary form. On January 14, 1969, several police officers went to the premises occupied by defendant at 4928 Lotus Avenue in St. *713 Louis. They had in their possession a warrant authorizing search of the premises for marijuana. In this case we are not interested in the forty thousand dollars of allegedly stolen property found, but only the marijuana which provided the basis for the present charge.
First, defendant attacks the validity of the search warrant which was issued from the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction on the day of the search. It was signed by one J. S. Gollub, acting as provisional judge, under the following appointment:
“It appearing to the satisfaction of the court in vacation on the application of the Clerk of the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction that the Honorable David Fitzgibbon, Judge of the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction, Division No. 2, will be absent from the City of St. Louis, and thereby unable to discharge the duties of this office. It is therefore ordered that J. S. Gollub be, and is hereby appointed provisional judge pursuant to Section 479.070, RSMo 1949, to act as such provisional judge from January 6, 1969, to January 26, 1969, inclusive.”
The statutory authority for such an appointment is found in Section 479.070, which provides, in part:
“1. In the event of the sickness or absence of the judge of either division of the court, if for any reason the judge of the other division of the court cannot sit, the circuit court of St. Louis city, or any judge thereof, in vacation, may appoint, for the time being, a provisional judge of said division, who shall possess the qualifications of a judge of the circuit court; and who, in the absence, sickness or other incapacity of the regular judge, shall have all the power and perform all the duties conferred and imposed by law upon the regular judge.”
As indicated by the order of appointment, the court has two divisions. Section 479.010. The order made no reference as to the availability of the regular judge of Division No. 1 to serve in No. 2. Defendant contends that an appointment of a provisional judge for either division, when the regular judge is absent, can only be made “if for any reason the judge of the other division of the court cannot sit.” Obviously, this argument is valid for the simple reason the statute specifically predicates the authority to appoint a provisional judge for one division upon the unavailability “for any reason” of the regular judge of the other division. Defendant relies generally on the text authority found in 48 C.J.S. Judges § 101, p. 1113, which concludes: “A special or substitute judge must be selected in accordance with constitutional and statutory regulations. * * * In order to constitute a special or substitute judge under the law, his selection must comply with the provisions of the law.” Such is the law of this state, for, as said in State ex rel. Allen v. Trimble,
Further, in connection with the validity of the search warrant, defendant contends that there were not sufficent evidential facts presented for the judge to determine the question of probable cause for its issuance, and the seizure of “marijuana” is not authorized by statute. On the first point we need not, again, review the multitude of cases, both federal and state, on the question. It is sufficient to resolve whether or not the judge had before him such facts that he could make an “independent” and “disinterested” determination on the issue of “probable cause.” Aguilar v. Texas,
We next consider the argument there is no statutory authority for the seizure of marijuana. [The search warrant designated marijuana as the object of search.] Defendant concedes there is for any designated “narcotic drug” unlawfully possessed. Section 195.135. Cannabis is by statute declared to be a narcotic drug. Section 195.010(5-17). Which leaves one question — is marijuana synonymous with cannabis ? In State v. Page, Mo.,
Lastly, defendant claims the trial court erred by not allowing him to show that cannabis sativa could lose its potency. After noting that such inquiry of the state’s expert witness was first denied, the record reflects the ruling was changed and the inquiry allowed. In any event, the answer was that tetrahydro cannibinol is the narcotic substance which gives a positive color test, and that the test was positive. Development of the hypothetical possibility potency might dissipate under certain circumstances would have been of no benefit to defendant since the test was positive.
The penalty is within the range of punishment provided by statute, and finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.
