Factual and Procedural Background
The State introduced evidence at trial tending to establish the following facts: On 29 May 2015, Officer Miles Costа of the Nashville Police Department was driving his patrol vehicle on the east side of Nashville, North Carolina when he noticed expired tags on a car being driven by Robert Lindsey Coley, Jr. ("Defendant"). After verifying that the vehicle's registration was expired, Officer Costa pulled over Defendant's car and approached the driver's sidе.
Defendant told Officer Costa that he did not have his driver's license with him and that he could not find his registration card. While speaking to Defendant, Officer Costa smelled the odor of marijuana and asked him to exit the vehicle. Officer Costa then asked Defendant if he had any marijuana in the
By this time, another officer had arrived on the scene, and the two officers searched the vehicle together. They found a digital scale, another sandwich bag containing 2.9 grams of marijuana, and two partially smoked marijuana cigars in the center console. Thirteеn Dutch Masters cigar wrappers, along with one unopened package of cigars, were discovered elsewhere in the car. The officers found a box of sandwich bags in the backseat that had been opened along with 23 loose sandwich bags strewn throughout the vehicle.
Defendant also had over $800 in cash on his person. He informed the officers that he had just cashed his paycheck, and Officer Costa found a pay stub in the vehicle.
Defendant told the officers that he kept the scale in his car to ensure that he actually received from his sellers the precise amount of marijuana that he had purchased so as to avoid being "rippеd off." He further stated that the sandwich bags were in his vehicle because "his drug dealers were cheap and ... [h]e had to provide his own bags."
Officer Costa testified on direct examination, in pertinent part, as follows:
[PROSECUTOR]: Now, I want to talk about your law enforcement experience and training. You testified that this substance was marijuana. Have you had any particular training in the identification of marijuana?
[OFFICER COSTA]: Yes, ma'am.
[PROSECUTOR]: Please explain that training for us.
[OFFICER COSTA]: We-we go through a-we go to a control room, controlled area, controlled classroom and marijuana's presented to us in big amounts, small amounts. And the smell, we're allowed to smell it. We're allowed to touch it. We're allowed to feel it. Everything like that.
....
[PROSECUTOR]: ... Are you familiar with how marijuana is commonly sold?
[OFFICER COSTA]: Yes, ma'am.
[PROSECUTOR]: Tell me about that.
[OFFICER COSTA]: Marijuana is, majority of the time, commonly sold in your nickel bags оr your dime bags.
[PROSECUTOR]: Tell me what exactly is a nickel bag?
[OFFICER COSTA]: A nickel bag is .5 grams of marijuana. Usually costs, depending on the grade of marijuana, $5. A dime bag would be $10 and that is a-that's one gram of marijuana.
[PROSECUTOR]: And in selling those quantities, how are they typically packaged? Or how is the marijuana typically packaged?
[OFFICER COSTA]: They're packaged in a sandwich bag.
....
[PROSECUTOR]: Tell me why you chose to charge the Defendant with possession with intent to sell or deliver versus just possessing the marijuana?
[OFFICER COSTA]: Yes, ma'am; the-with the amount of marijuana and the two individual bags, normally if somebody is going to have a large amount of marijuana, they're going to have it one [sic] bag. The two-two separate bags, the amount of marijuana, the sandwich bags all over the vehicle, the drug scale[.]
....
[PROSECUTOR]: Now, you said that you took the amount, the way it was divided and packaged and the sandwich bags and the scale as factors that went towards your charging. Now, [Defendant] offeredan explanation that [Defendant's counsel] has presented to the jury. Was that explanation not sufficient enough to deter you from charging the possession with intent to sell or deliver?
[OFFICER COSTA]: Yes, ma'am. The explanation did not make any sense to me. I've never heard it before coming from anybody else. Normally, people who have marijuana inside of the vehicle do not have several sandwich bags inside of the vehicle.
At the close of the State's evidence, Defendant moved to dismiss the chargе of possession of marijuana with intent to sell or deliver based on insufficiency of the evidence. The trial court denied his motion.
During Defendant's case-in-chief, the following exchange occurred between Defendant and his attorney:
[DEFENDANT'S COUNSEL]: What's the deal with the sandwich bags?
[DEFENDANT]: The dealers who I was dealing with they just wouldn't have them, they wouldn't supply them. They would say they don't want to risk having them and stuff like that. They just wouldn't have them, so I would use it to what I would pick a week [sic] to put them into the bag.
....
[DEFENDANT'S COUNSEL]: Now, why did you have-also found in your car was a scale. Why did you have the scale?
[DEFENDANT]: To make sure I was getting what I was purchasing. I mean, people that I'm dealing with, it's not like it's a pre-packaged product where I'm going to know exactly what I'm getting is what they're telling me. So I would check it to make sure that it is what they say it is, the amount wise.
....
[DEFENDANT'S COUNSEL]: Why did you have two bags?
[DEFENDANT]: One of them I actually had forgotten about. ...
[DEFENDANT'S COUNSEL]: Why-how did you forget about a bag of marijuana?
[DEFENDANT]: It just wasn't good quality and I ended up buying something else and I guess I just forgot it was in there.
Defendant renewed his motion to dismiss at the close of all thе evidence, and the trial court once again denied his motion. On 30 August 2016, the jury convicted him of both charges. The trial court consolidated the convictions and sentenced Defendant to a term of imprisonment between 6 and 17 months, suspended the sentence, and placed him on supervised probation for 18 months. Defendant gave oral notice of appeal in open court prior to the entry of the judgment.
Analysis
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
As an initial matter, we must determine whether we possess jurisdiction over this appeal. Rule 4(a) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure states, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) Manner and time. Any party entitled by law to appeal from a judgment or order of a superior or district court rendered in a criminal action may take appeal by:
(1) giving oral notice of appeal at trial ....
N.C. R. App. P. 4(a).
Here, Defendant gave oral notice of appeal in open court after the jury returned its verdict but prior to the entry of judgment by the trial court. Thus, because he did not give notice of his appeal following entry of the judgment, his right to appeal has been lost based on his failure to comply with Rule 4(a).
See
State v. Robinson
,
Defendant has filed a petition for writ of
certiorari
requesting appellate review of his convictions in the event that his notice of appeal is deemed by this Court to be defective. Pursuant to Rule 21(a)(1) of the Appellate Rules, this Court may, in its discretion, grant a petition for writ of
certiorari
and review an order or judgment entered by the
Here, the State dоes not contend that it was misled by Defendant's defective notice of appeal and acknowledges that it is within this Court's discretion to allow the petition.
See
State v. Springle
,
In our discretion, we elect to grant Defendant's petition for writ of
certiorari
and proceed to address the merits of his argument.
See
Robinson
,
II. Denial of Motion to Dismiss
Defendant's sole argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the possession with intent to sell or deliver marijuana charge. His primary contention is that the quantity of marijuana found in his vehicle was too small to allow this charge to be submitted to the jury.
"A trial court's denial of a defendant's motion to dismiss is reviewed
de novo
."
State v. Watkins
, --- N.C. App. ----, ----,
Substantial evidence is "such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion."
State v. Smith
,
Pursuant to
It is instructive to examine prior cases from our appellate courts on this issue. In
Blakney
, the defendant's vehicle cоntained 84.8 grams of marijuana packaged in a number of containers, including "two sandwich bags, four 'dime bags,' and five other types of bags."
Blakney
,
[T]he mаnner in which the marijuana was packaged (such as four "dime bags") raised more than an inference that defendant intended to sell or deliver the marijuana. Further, the presence of items commonly used in packaging and weighing drugs for sale-a box of sandwich bags and [a] digital scale[ ]-along with a large quantity of cash in small denominations рrovided additional evidence that defendant intended to sell or deliver marijuana, as opposed to merely possessing it for his own personal use[.]
Id.
at 520,
State v. Williams
,
Similarly, in
State v. Yisrael
, --- N.C. App. ----,
We determined that "[t]his quantity of illegal drugs and its packaging ...; the large amount of unsourced cash on [the defendant's] person; and the stolen and loaded handgun [are] sufficient to support a reasonable inference that [the defendant] intended to sell or deliver the marijuana he admittedly possessеd ...."
Had defendant possessed more than 1.89 grams of marijuana, or had there been additional circumstances to consider, we may have reached a different conclusion; however, givеn the fact that neither the amount of marijuana nor the packaging raises an inference that defendant intended to sell the drugs, the presence of the cash as the only additional factor is insufficient to raise the inference.
Id.
at 733,
Nettles
involved the discovery of four to five crack cocaine rocks weighing 1.2 grams in the defendant's vehicle.
Nettles
,
Thus, in ruling upon the sufficiеncy of evidence in cases involving the charge of possession with intent to sell or deliver, our courts have placed particular emphasis on the amount of drugs discovered, their method of packaging, and the presence of paraphernalia typically used to package drugs for sale. Moreover, our case law demonstrates that this is a fact-specific inquiry in which the totality of the circumstances in each case must be considered unless the quantity of drugs found is so substantial that this factor-by itself-supports an inference of
As noted above, Defendant's vehicle contained a total of 11.5 grams of marijuana contained in two sandwich bags. Additionally, a digital scale and an open box of sandwich bags were found along with 23 loose sandwich bags. Viewed in isolation, the relatively small quantity of marijuana discovered in the vehicle would not be enough to support an inference that Defendant possessed the drugs with the intent to sell or deliver.
See
State v. Wiggins
,
Even assuming that this case can be characterized as a close one, we have held that "[i]n borderline or close cases, our courts have consistently expressed a preference for submitting issues to the jury."
Yisrael
, --- N.C. App. at ----,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that Defendant received a fair trial free from error.
NO ERROR.
Judges ZACHARY and BERGER concur.
