In this appeal defendant James Montgomery attempts to present for our determination two arguments against the constitutionality of § 204.410, The Code, 1973, as that statute existed at the time of his trial and conviction [before our decision in
State
v.
Monroe,
Defendant was charged by county attorney’s information in Muscatine County with conspiring to deliver a controlled substance, to-wit: cocaine, in violation of § 204.401(2), The Code, 1973. He entered a plea of not guilty. On December 11, 1974, defendant was found guilty by jury verdict of the crime charged. An “accommodation” hearing pursuant to Code § 204.410 was had on January 27, 1975, after which trial court declined to sentence defendant as an accommodation offender. Defendant was sentenced to imprisonment in the Men’s Reformatory at Anamosa for a period not to exceed 10 years. This appeal followed.
Defendant asserts (1) Code § 204.410 is unconstitutional in that it purports to obviate the requirement that the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged, and (2) Code § 204.410 is unconstitutional because it fails to provide explicit standards for the determination of when an accommodation sale is made, so that its vagueness allows arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.
We consider these claims in reverse order.
I. With regard to defendant’s second assertion on appeal, it is clear defendant did not raise the issue in trial court. In numerous decisions we have held that issues not raised in the trial court, including constitutional questions, cannot be effectively asserted for the first time on appeal. See, e.
g., State v. Greene,
II. The same principles are ultimately applicable to defendant’s first issue stated for review. The issue was not raised in trial court. However, subsequent to de *598 fendant’s trial we decided State v. Monroe, supra, in which we held Code § 204.410 unconstitutional because it shifted the burden to defendant to demonstrate his delivery of a controlled substance was not an accommodation. By expunging the constitutionally offensive language and reading into the remainder constitutionally mandated principles, we were able to salvage a portion of the provision.
Although defendant did not raise below the issue we subsequently decided in
Monroe,
he asserts he should, nonetheless, be able to urge the question on appeal and thereby take advantage of the change of law accomplished in that case. In this regard, he relies on
State v. Wisniewski,
Our decision in
Wisniewski
is of no benefit to the defendant here. In Division III of our opinion in
State v. Leonard,
No further discussion is necessary. Put simply, defendant’s failure to raise below the issues he asserts on appeal has left us nothing to review. Accordingly, trial court must be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
