This Court granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in
Johnson v. State,
The evidence recited by the Court of Appeals shows that, acting on information from a confidential informant, on February 11, 2002, police secured a warrant to search Johnson’s vehicle. The warrant was executed on February 19, 2002, and twelve grams of crack cocaine were found in the console in the ceiling between the two front seats. Johnson also had $997 in cash in his pocket, and there was evidence that such an amount indicated that one was a dealer of crack cocaine, rather than merely a user.
Johnson testified at trial, denying the drugs were his, and asserting that they were planted in his vehicle by someone else. He *512 said that while he was visiting the home of his cousin, Marvin Johnson (“Marvin”), his vehicle was unattended and unlocked. Two witnesses testified that on the night of February 19, 2002, while Johnson was inside Marvin’s house, Cedric Bridges entered Johnson’s car and moved his hands around the area above the driver’s seat. One witness testified that, immediately afterward, Bridges gave the other witness a piece of crack cocaine, said that the two witnesses should split it, and not to say anything about it. Johnson also presented his own testimony, and that of another witness, to explain the presence of the money on his person.
The trial court denied Johnson’s request to instruct the jury regarding the doctrine of “equal access” to the place where contraband is found. A majority of the Court of Appeals reversed, ruling that an “equal access” instruction should have been given. This Court granted the State’s petition for certiorari. 1
In its discussion of the equal access rule,
2
the Court of Appeals quoted from
Wilkerson v. State,
The equal access rule, as it applies in the automobile context, is merely that evidence showing that a person or persons other than the owner or driver of the automobile had equal access to contraband found in the automobile may or will, depending upon the strength of the evidence, overcome the presumption that the contraband was in the exclusive possession of the owner or driver.
(Emphasis supplied.) Johnson, supra at 284-285. Although in its decision, the Court of Appeals relied upon precedent that the purpose of an equal access charge is to rebut the permissive presumption of exclusive possession by the owner or driver of a vehicle, in this case no such presumption arose; the jury was never instructed on any presumption of possession.
*513 The Wilkerson quote accurately reflects the law; a charge on equal access is appropriate to counter a jury instruction on presumption of possession, and is not necessary otherwise.
Equal access is merely a defense available to the accused to whom a presumption of possession flows. Where the State did not show the indicia giving rise to the presumption, that is, ownership or exclusive control of the vehicle, no presumption arose and therefore there was no triggering of the equal access defense. [Cit.]
Thompson v. State,
A requested jury charge must be “legal, apt and
precisely
adjusted to some principle involved in the case and be authorized by the evidence.” (Punctuation omitted; emphasis in original.)
Lane v. State,
Further, the equal access language that the Court of Appeals evaluated, by its own terms, “ ‘applies only where the sole evidence of possession of contraband found in the vehicle is the defendant’s ownership or possession of the vehicle.’ ”
Johnson,
supra at 285. And, it is not the case that Johnson’s ownership of the vehicle was the sole evidence of his possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. He had a large sum of cash on his person, consistent with a person being a dealer of crack cocaine.* **
4
See
Pittman v. State,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Further facts can be found in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Johnson, supra.
Johnson submitted his request for a jury instruction on equal access by filing a document that requested that the trial court give the “charges from the Uniform Jury Charges listed in Exhibit ‘A’ included in Exhibit “A” was simply the text: “Equal Access - page 136.” No further elucidation concerning the language of the instruction requested appears in the record; we note that the State submitted its requests for jury instructions in a similar manner. The Court of Appeals did not address any issue concerning this procedure, and our grant of certiorari does not encompass consideration of whether this request for jury instruction satisfies Uniform Superior Court Rule 10.3, or complies with the stricture that to warrant appellate review, requests for jury instructions must be written. See
Burger v. State,
The Court of Appeals’s opinion addresses the issue of whether “equal access” was Johnson’s “sole defense,” requiring that the jury be instructed on the principle.
Tarvestad v. State,
Johnson asserts that he explained his possession of the money. However, his evidence in explanation did not eliminate the State’s evidence, it simply created a question of fact for the jury’s resolution; the jury was free to reject Johnson’s evidence and conclude that possession of $997 in cash was additional evidence of Johnson’s possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. See
Conaway v. State,
