A police detective, aided by an informant, persuaded one Scalese to put him in touch with a seller of marijuana. The appellant was contacted and delivered five "pound" bags of the substancе to the detective, in the presence of Scalese, at which time both he and Scalese were arrested. The two, charged with possession with intent to manufacture or deliver, were granted separаte trials. The jury in the Scalese trial, which was held first, found the defendant not guilty. Scalese had defended on the grounds of alleged entrapment and lack of proof of possession. The attorney for Scalese, Richard Hanson, signed an affidavit in which he declared that jurors in the case had told him that they found Scalese had been entrapped by police officers. The Hanson affidavit detailed the evidence upon which the jury might have found that Scalese had been entrapped.
This affidavit was presented to the Superior Court along with pretrial motions to suppress the use of the marijuana as evidence against the appellant, or in the alternative, to dismiss the prosecution under CrR 8.3(b). These motions were denied.
CrR 8.3(b) provides:
(b) On Motion of Court. The court on its own motion in the furtherance of justice, after notice and hearing, may dismiss any criminal prosecution and shall set forth its reasons in a written order.
The discretion conferred upon the superior court
*580
under this rule must be exercised in conformity with the requirement that the record show governmental misconduct or arbitrary action of the type which this court has histоrically found sufficient to support a dismissal of a criminal charge.
State v. Burri,
In
State v. Baker,
Dismissal of charges is an extraordinary remedy. It is available оnly when there has been prejudice to the rights of the accused which materially affected the rights of the accused to a fair trial and that prejudice cannot be remedied by granting a new trial.
Baker, at 332-33.
Aside from the inadequacy of the attorney's affidavit to establish that Scalese was entrapped by police officers, 1 *581 the appellant offers no authority that entrapment of an accomplice is a рroper ground for dismissal of a prosecution. Such entrapment may have been a defense to the prosecution of Scalese, but it is no defense to the action against the appellant, much lеss a ground for dismissal. He does not suggest that he himself was entrapped. Inasmuch as there was no showing that the appellant had been unfairly treated or that the alleged governmental misconduct toward Scalеse affected in any way the appellant's right to a fair trial, the court did not err in refusing to dismiss.
The appellant suggests that the prosecution should have been denied the right to introduce the captured marijuana in evidence because of the alleged entrapment of Scalese. He relies upon the fact that entrapment is contrary to public policy, as evidenced by the fact that it may be shown as a defense to a prosecution. RCW 9A.16.070. Because entrapment involves objectionable police conduct, the appellant maintains that the exclusionary rule, applied where evidence has been obtained in violation of the defendant's Fourth Amendment rights, should be adopted in entrapment cases, and further should be applied in a prosecution where evidence obtained through entrapmеnt of one person is offered against another.
As we have already observed (see footnote 1), the alleged entrapment of Scalese was never established in this trial, or in the trial of Scalese himsеlf. But assuming the fact were judicially established, we see no sound reason to adopt the exclusionary rule contended for by the appellant. That rule has been found necessary to secure to citizens the protection of their constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment.
Mapp v. Ohio,
Next, the appellant argues that his indictment should have been dismissed because the police in making contact with Scalese allegedly used an informant who was regularly paid on a contingent fee basis. There is nothing in the record of this case to show that such was the fact. Nor does the record show that the evidence presented against the defendant wаs gathered by an informant.
In
Williamson v. United States,
Since neither of these evils was present here, and, moreover, no evidence рrocured by an informer was used against the appellant, we need not decide here to what extent improper payments to such an agent should affect the trial of an accused.
Finally, appеllant argues that after enactment of the Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act of 1979, marijuana's classification as a schedule I drug no longer bears a rational relationship to a lеgitimate state purpose. Appellant's constitutional challenge is based on the fact that, under the statutory definition, marijuana belongs in *583 schedule I only if it has no accepted medical use in treatment in the United States. RCW 69.50.203. Appellant points out that the Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act recognizes that there may be medical uses of marijuana for cancer and glaucoma sufferers аnd perhaps others. RCW 69.51.040(2).
The 1979 act sets up a program to research the effects of marijuana on cancer and glaucoma patients, and authorizes the use by such patients of the drug under controlled circumstances. This provision does not manifest a legislative finding that there is an accepted medical use for the drug, but rather a finding that there may be such a use.
State v. Palmer,
The appellant also contends that RCW 69.51 repeals marijuana's schedule I classification by implication. Repeal by implication is not favored.
A later act will not operate to repeal an earlier act unless the later act covers the entire subject matter of the earlier legislation, is complete in itself, and is patently intended to supersede prior legislаtion on the subject, or unless the two acts are so clearly inconsistent that they *584 cannot be reconciled and both given effect by any fair and reasonable construction.
State v. Adams,
The judgment is affirmed.
Brachtenbach, C.J., and Stafford, Utter, Dolliver, Hicks, Williams, Dore, and Dimmick, JJ., concur.
Reconsideration denied January 14, 1982.
Notes
Jurors may not impeach their own verdict by affidavit, or otherwise. In
Cox v. Charles Wright Academy, Inc.,
Thus, courts may consider only such fаcts asserted in the affidavits of jurors which relate to the claimed misconduct of the jury and do not inhere in the verdict itself. The mental processes by which individual jurors reached their respective conclusions, thеir motives in arriving at their verdicts, the effect the evidence may have had upon the jurors or the weight particular jurors may have given to particular evidence, or the jurors' intentions and beliefs, are all faсtors inhering in the jury's processes in arriving at its verdict, and, therefore, inhere in the verdict itself, and averments concerning them are inadmissible to impeach the verdict.
(Citations omitted.)
The effect of the affidavit of Hanson was to propose an amendment to the verdict, so that it reflected a finding upon the issue of entrapment, whereas the verdict rendered may have been based on a simple finding that the State did not prove its case to the satisfaction of the jury. If a verdict is to be amended, it must be done in the presence of the jury when it is before the court and under its control. J. Proffatt, Jury Trial § 461 (1880). 89 C.J.S. Trial § 513 (1955). In short, the verdict cannot be amended after the jury has been exposed to outside influence, nor can an amendment be effected by less than the whole body of the jury. The proposed amendment would have been improper in any event, since the jury had not been asked to make a special finding on the issue of entrapment.
*581 Moreover, an attorney's affidavit, reporting statements made to him by jurors, is hearsay and cannot be used to accomplish that which cannot be done by affidavits of the jurors themselves. Cox v. Charles Wright Academy, Inc., supra.
