Lead Opinion
{¶ 1} Joshua Kingsland was a passenger in a pickup truck stopped by police because it had a cracked windshield and lacked a rear bumper. Neither the driver nor Kingsland owned the vehicle, and Kingsland appeared "somewhat very nervous." After walking around the back of the truck several times, the officer smelled what he believed was ether, a precursor used in the manufacture of methamphetamine. When the officer asked what was in the back of the truck, Kingsland said, "[I]t ain't mine" even though the officer had not told Kingsland what he had seen.
{¶ 2} Based on these facts, a jury found Kingsland guilty of illegal possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs. On appeal, Kingsland argues that insufficient evidence supports his conviction and that his conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Because the only evidence linking Kingsland to the material in the back of the truck is his presence as a passenger in the truck, his nervousness, and his denial of ownership of any items in the truck's bed, we agree that the state failed to present sufficient evidence that, if believed, would convince the average mind of Kingsland's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. We therefore reverse his conviction.
{¶ 4} After passing beside the back of the pickup several times, Officer Caldwell sensed an "overwhelming" smell of what he thought was ether coming from the bed of the truck. Ether is a precursor used in the production of methamphetamine. Looking more closely at the contents in the bed of the truck, Officer Caldwell discovered a capped mason jar with a rubber tube in it wrapped in a plastic bag, and he immediately suspected that he had found a meth lab. *Page 658 Officer Caldwell approached Kingsland and asked him, "What's in the back of the truck?" According to Officer Caldwell, Kingsland replied, "It ain't mine."
{¶ 5} Deputy Sheriff Jeff McCarty arrived on the scene and believed from the smell that there was ether in the mason jar and that the jar contained a "sludge or residue left over from * * * a methamphetamine cook." An inventory search of the truck disclosed a new pack of lithium batteries and a glass bottle with milky residue between the driver's and passenger's seats in the cab of the truck. In the rear of the truck, police found lithium battery shells and plastic bottles and jars with a milky residue. Because these items were typical of a meth lab, the officers placed Kingsland and the driver under arrest. Kingsland asked the officers to fingerprint all of the alleged contraband and denied owning it. However, no scientific tests were performed on these objects before a hazardous-materials crew destroyed everything except the unopened box of batteries.
{¶ 6} The state indicted Kingsland on one count of illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs, a violation of R.C.
{¶ 7} The jury found Kingsland guilty of the illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of methamphetamine, and the trial court sentenced him to a term of two years in prison. Kingsland filed this appeal.
*Page 6591. The trial court violated Joshua Kingsland's rights to due process and a fair trial when, in the absence of sufficient evidence, the trial court found Mr. Kingsland guilty of illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs.
Fifth andFourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Section16 , ArticleI of the Ohio Constitution. (Tr. 460; September 26, 2007, Sentencing Entry.)2. The trial court violated Joshua Kingsland's rights to due process and a fair trial when it entered a judgment of convictions for illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs, when that judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Fifth andFourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Section16 , ArticleI of the Ohio Constitution. (Tr. 460; September 26, 2007, Sentencing Entry.)
{¶ 10} Our function when reviewing the weight of the evidence, on the other hand, is to determine whether the greater amount of credible evidence supports the verdict.State v. Thompkins (1997),
{¶ 12} R.C.
{¶ 13} Possession may be actual or constructive.State v. Butler (1989),
{¶ 14} Initially, Kingsland argues that we cannot consider whether the evidence supports a finding that he constructively possessed the precursors to methamphetamine because the trial court denied the state's motion to instruct the jury on constructive possession. He relies on the principle that "the Constitution protects every criminal defendant `against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged.'" United States v. Booker (2005),
{¶ 15} We must now determine whether the state presented sufficient evidence to allow the jury to decide whether Kingsland knowingly exercised control over the chemicals found in the pickup truck. Officer Caldwell testified that when he initially approached the pickup, he looked into the truck's bed to make sure no one was there. At that time, he did not notice any of the bottles and jars containing the milky residue. The state presented 11 photographs depicting the items found in the back of the truck, and each of the items containing residue was partially concealed within plastic bags, a bucket, or a bowl. The glass bottle found in the cab of the pickup was also partially concealed in a cardboard box and covered with the unopened package of lithium batteries. Officer Caldwell testified that he walked around the rear and sides of the pickup several times before he smelled what he believed — but could not say for a fact — was ether. Even though Officer Caldwell testified that he had received specialized training in the detection of meth labs and the chemicals associated with the illegal production of methamphetamine, and even though the jars and bottles were in plain view and lit by the lights from his cruiser, he did not discover the contraband until he had almost concluded the traffic stop. Officer Caldwell admitted that the objects in the truck would not have been readily apparent if someone approached the truck in the dark. He also admitted that Kingsland had denied knowing about the contraband, that Kingsland had requested that the police fingerprint the objects, and that no fingerprints had been collected before the objects were destroyed.
{¶ 16} Officer Caldwell's testimony and the exhibits admitted at trial make clear that Kingsland could be a passenger in this truck and not be aware of the bottles, jars, and chemicals. The state presented no evidence showing that Kingsland had any specialized knowledge regarding methamphetamine production or that he should have recognized these objects as components in the production of methamphetamine. There is no evidence regarding what time of day Kingsland got in the truck or how long he had been in it. Thus, all the state showed was mere proximity to the illegal chemicals.
{¶ 17} The only other evidence purportedly connecting Kingsland to these chemicals is Officer Caldwell's testimony that Kingsland had acted "somewhat very nervous and shaky, and uh, was kind of irate, jittery maybe, in — in somewhat of a hurry * * * um, but nervous." Although Officer Caldwell testified that Kingsland appeared more nervous than the average person stopped for a traffic violation, he also admitted that his inquiry about a warrant that was mistakenly in force "[would] make a lot of people nervous." On redirect, Officer Caldwell testified that "when I was approaching the vehicle he kept looking *Page 662 through the back glass at me. That's actually what made me actually go to the post-to-head position, to where I could be in front of him, to where I can see through the windshield to see hands." On recross, however, Officer Caldwell admitted that at the time he approached the vehicle, "[Kingsland] was in a very animated conversation with whoever was on that cell phone * * * [a]nd when we're in a very animated telephone conversation on a cell phone a lot of times we do move around."
{¶ 18} It is not clear from the record whether any of this nervous behavior observed by Officer Caldwell occurred before or after he informed Kingsland that he was wanted on a warrant. Thus, an examination of the record shows that the cause of and the extent of Kingsland's nervousness is not clear. In any case, we do not believe that Kingsland's being "somewhat very nervous" in itself suffices to prove that he was in the conscious possession of the illegal chemicals.
{¶ 19} Officer Caldwell also testified that Kingsland's initial reaction "when I asked * * * what's in the back of the truck [was] it ain't mine. * * * I didn't even tell `em what it was yet." The state argues that Kingsland's statement that "[i]t ain't mine" shows guilty knowledge. However, nothing in Kingsland statement shows that he knew what was in the back of the truck. It is not the case that Kingsland denied owning a particular object in a way that would show he was aware it was in the back of the truck. For instance, had Kingsland responded that "those lithium battery shells are not mine" or "that mason jar is not mine," his statement would help to show that he was in the conscious presence of contraband. However, the only inference that the jury could draw from his statement that "[i]t ain't mine" is that he denied owning whatever it was that Officer Caldwell had found.
{¶ 20} Here, we cannot say that the state presented sufficient evidence that, if believed, would convince the average mind of Kingsland's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The state's evidence showed that the drugs were found in the pickup, that neither the driver nor Kingsland owned the pickup, and that Kingsland was a passenger in the pickup for some unknown duration. The driver did not testify. None of the state's evidence indicates that Kingsland should have or could have known that he was in close proximity to illegal chemicals based upon their appearance and location in the truck. In order to conclude that it was Kingsland who was in control of the chemicals, jars, and bottles rather than the driver or the owner of the truck, the jury would have to speculate. Officer Caldwell testified that Kingsland appeared "somewhat very nervous," but we do not believe that an individual acting "somewhat very nervous" in itself suffices to show guilt in the absence of any other evidence. See State v. Bush, Cuyahoga App. No. 81959, 2003-Ohio-4054,
{¶ 21} Likewise, we do not believe that the greater amount of credible evidence supports the verdict. Thus, Kingsland's conviction is also against the manifest weight of the evidence. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment below.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
ABELE, P.J., concurs.
KLINE, J., concurs separately.
Concurrence Opinion
{¶ 22} I concur in judgment and opinion. I agree that Kingsland's mere presence as a passenger in the truck is not enough to conclude that he had constructive possession of any item found in the bed of the truck. See State v.Smith, Logan App. No. 8-04-40,
{¶ 23} I write separately to discuss what an officer found stuffed between the two front seats in a box, i.e., lithium batteries (items used in the manufacture of *Page 664 methamphetamine) and a mason jar with white residue in it (a by-product of methamphetamine manufacture). The evidence did not show that these items were in plain view or that Kingsland was conscious of their presence inside the truck. Thus, just as the evidence was insufficient to show Kingsland's possession of the items in the bed of the truck, the evidence was also insufficient to show that Kingsland possessed the items inside the truck. Consequently, I agree that insufficient evidence supports Kingsland's conviction of illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs.
{¶ 24} Accordingly, I concur in judgment and opinion.
