Carlos Mata stands convicted of delivering marijuana and heroin. His appeal raises two general issues concerning the heroin charge. (1) Did the state entrap Mata into delivering the heroin? (2) Did the trial court err by limiting tеstimony regarding events after the heroin transaction, and by ruling that alibi testimony would be inadmissible? For reasons explained below, we hold that Mata was not entrapped and that the district court did not commit reversible error in its rulings on trial testimony. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
I
First, we consider the entrapment issue. This issue poses a twofold task — identifying the legal standards that govern the entrapment defense, and applying those standards to the record before us. We will take each task in turn.
A
“Entrapment” has been defined as “[t]he act of officers or agents of the government in inducing a person to commit a crime not contemplated by him, for the purpose of instituting a criminal prosecution against him.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 477 (rev. 5th ed. 1979);
see also
W. LaFAVE & A. SCOTT, HANDBOOK ON CRIMINAL LAW 369-74 (1972). Entrapment occurs “when an otherwise innocent person, not inclined to commit a criminal offense, is induced to do so by a State agent who, desiring grounds for prosecution, originates the criminal design and im
*186
plants in the mind of the innocent person the disposition to commit the alleged offense.”
State v. Hansen,
Idaho recognizes, as do nearly all jurisdictions, that a defendant cannot be convicted of а crime he was entrapped into committing.
E.g., State v. McKeehan,
Recently, another purpose has been ascribed to the entrapment defense — to discourage official lawlessness in the name of law enforcement. This purpose invites a broader focus upon the objective conduct of govеrnment agents.
See generally
Annot.,
The Idaho Supremе Court has not yet examined, in a majority opinion, the comparative merits of the subjective and objective tests of entrapment.
But see State v. Hansen, supra
(Bistline, J., dissenting). However, on several occasions the court has discussed entrapment as a jury issue.
State v. Hansen, supra; State v. Mojica,
B
The record here discloses without dispute that a police informant and a deputy sheriff in plain clothes drove to Mata’s house. The informant spoke with Mata and asked if he would help them purchase heroin. Mata agreed and the three drove in the informant’s car to another house where Mata gave the occupant one hundred dollars in money furnished by the deputy. *187 The three then drove to yet another location where Mata picked up a tinfoil packet containing heroin and gave it to the informant. Mata later was arrested and charged with delivery of the heroin.
Prior to this transaction, the informant had obtained heroin from Mata on other occasions. The number of such purchases is controverted in the record, but it is undisputed that at least one such prior transaction hаd occurred. It is also undisputed that the informant was a drug user and once had “shot up” heroin in Mata’s presence. There was disputed evidence as to whether Mata ever had turned down a request by the informant to obtain heroin for him.
Upon this evidence, the question of entrapment was presented to the jury. The jury was instructed on entrapment; but those instructions are not in the record, and no issue has been raised about them. Consequently, we presume that the jury applied proper instructions to the evidence when it convicted Mata and rejected his entrapment defense.
The verdict of a properly instructed jury will not be overturned if it is supported by substantial, competent evidence. The jury is entitled to draw all justifiable inferences from the evidence.
E.g., State v. Greensweig,
II
We now turn to Mata’s attack upon rulings by the district court, restricting trial testimony by two witnesses. Each ruling will be examined individually.
A
Mata contends that the district court improperly prohibited examination of the informant concerning events after the transaction in question.
1
Mata suggests that he might have used post-transaction events either to support his entrapment defense or to “impeach” the informant. However, it is not self-evident how either of these asserted purposes would have been served by such quеstioning. The record contains no question asked, or sought to be asked, specifically concerning any post-transaction event. Neither does the record contain any offer of proof showing the evidence Mata asserts to have been wrongfully excluded. It is an appellant’s burden to furnish a record upon which his contentions of error can be tested. Error will not be presumed.
E.g., State v. Bylama,
In
State v. Palin,
B
The final question is whether testimony by Mata’s wife was improperly cut off when she was asked about a family visit to her mother’s house on the day of the subject heroin transaction. Apparently believing that this question might lead to alibi testimony, the court interceded sua sponte. During a colloquy with counsel at the bench, the judge inquired whether Matа had given the state notice of intent to offer an alibi defense. Upon- learning that such notice had not been given, the court ruled that no alibi testimony would be permitted. We must now determine whether that ruling was erroneous and, if so, whether the error is reversible.
The law in Idaho on whether a defendant must provide notice of alibi is clear. Idaho Code § 19-519 provides that at “any time after arraignment ... and upon written demand of the prosecuting attorney, the dеfendant shall serve within ten (10) days ... a written notice of his intention to offer a defense of alibi.” (Emphasis supplied.) Idaho Criminal Rule 12.1 states that if “the defendant intends to rely upon the defense of alibi, he shall comply with section 19-519, Idaho Code.” In this case, the state concedes that the prosecutor made no request for an alibi notice. The prosecutor merely made a discovery demand for the identity of defense witnesses, with which Mata complied. We hold that, absent a specific request under I.C. § 19-519, Mata was not required to give notice of an alibi defense. The trial judge erred in ruling that no alibi testimony would be allowed.
However, it remains to determine whether this error requires the conviction to be reversed. A conviction need not be reversed when an error is harmless. The test is whether it appears from the record that the error contributed to the verdiсt, leaving the appellate court with a reasonable doubt that the jury would have reached the same result had the error not occurred. See, e.g., State v. Palin, supra. In applying this test we note that Mata made no offer of proof at trial as to what alibi testimony, if any, his wife would have given, absent the court’s ruling. Consequently, Mata has been unable to show on appeal any prejudice flowing from the trial court’s error. Moreover, Mata’s defense at trial was entrapment — a theory necessarily relying upon facts inconsistent with an alibi. Mata’s counsel, in both opening and closing arguments, urged the theory of entrapment. Mata himself testified at trial and said nothing about an alibi. His testimony was directed solely toward entrapment. In addition, Mata called the police informant as a witness. The informant, together with the sheriff’s deputy, identified Mata as a participant in the heroin transaction. Their testimony in this regard was unrefuted. We conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the district court’s error in construing I.C. § 19-519 did not contribute to the verdict. Therefore, it was harmless.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. Mata called the informant as a witness. Consequently, our discussion does not concern the permissible scope of cross-examination.
