OPINION
Opinion by
This case presents the exact problem forecast nearly a decade ago by our brother jurist when he opined that the guidelines distinguishing actual delivery of narcotics from constructive delivery of
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narcotics had become so muddled that prosecuting attorneys who are preparing an indictment would be left with no discernible guidelines to follow.
Warren v. State,
Raelun Cornell Stephens appeals his conviction by a jury for delivery of a controlled substance. The indictment alleged Stephens constructively delivered cocaine to Brady Odom (who at trial was shown to be a Panola County deputy sheriff) in an amount greater than four grams but less than 200 grams. The evidence at trial showed Stephens made an actual delivery of ten grams of cocaine to an undercover confidential informant, who later turned over the cocaine to Odom. Stephens now raises several points of error. Because we find the evidence to be legally insufficient, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render a judgment of acquittal.
I. Sufficiency
Stephens challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction for “constructive delivery” of cocaine to Odom. In a legal sufficiency review, we examine the evidence adduced in the trial below in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and ask whether any rational trier of fact could have found all the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has mandated that a complaint alleging insufficiency of the evidence is to be analyzed under the hypothetically correct jury charge.
Gharbi v. State,
The grand jury’s indictment alleged that Stephens
on or about the 5th day of October, 2006, and before presentment of this indictment in the County of Panola and State of Texas, did then and there knowingly deliver by constructive delivery to Brady Odom, a controlled substance, namely, cocaine, in an amount of four grams or more but less than 200 grams,
*180 AGAINST THE PEACE AND DIGNITY OF THE STATE.
A person commits a crime in Texas if he “knowingly manufactures, delivers, or possesses with intent to deliver a controlled substance listed in Penalty Group 1.” Tex. Health
&
Safety Code Ann. § 481.112 (Vernon 2003);
see also Talley v. State,
“[A]n actual transfer or delivery, as commonly understood, contemplates the manual transfer of property from the transferor to the transferee
or to the transferee’s agents or to someone identified in law with the transferee.” Heberling v. State,
A “constructive transfer” requires “the transfer of a controlled substance either belonging to an individual or under his control by some other person or agency at the instance or direction of the individual accused of such constructive transfer.”
Daniels v. State,
Some appellate jurists have written that a constructive transfer requires the trans-feror to have actual knowledge of the ultimate transferee.
See, e.g., Daniels,
Others, including the more recent and binding rulings, do not require proof of knowledge of the identity of an intended third-party transferee. In
Sims v. State,
the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals made a thoughtful and considered analysis of some of the various meanings of “constructive delivery” as employed in Texas.
“[W]hen the State alleges constructive transfer to an alleged ultimate recipient ... the accused must have contemplated that his initial transfer would not be the final transaction in the chain of distribution.”
Daniels,
A classic constructive delivery case is
Gutierrez v. State,
With these thoughts in mind, we now turn to our application of the hypothetically correct jury charge to the evidence presented in the case now on appeal. By incorporating the statutory definition of *182 “deliver” into the primary statute at issue in this case, we conclude the hypothetically correct jury charge, as authorized by the indictment in this case, required the State to present proof of the following elements: (1) that Stephens, (2) knowingly, (3) constructively delivered, (4) with intent to deliver, (5) cocaine, (6) to some third-party transferee beyond Robert Lewis. Absent proof of each of these elements, we cannot conclude the evidence is legally sufficient to prove constructive delivery in this case.
The evidence at trial, when viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, showed Stephens sold six or seven rocks of cocaine aggregating about ten grams to a confidential informant, Lewis, on October 5, 2006, for $275.00. David Allen Gray, a deputy with the Panola County Sheriffs Office, told the jury that this amount was what he normally saw distributed to mid-level dealers and was worth about $1,000.00 if sold on the street in subsequent smaller sales. Gray opined that the $275.00 paid by Lewis to Stephens for the ten grams of cocaine was too low to have been considered an amount a typical end user would pay. However, when asked on cross-examination whether ten grams could, in fact, be a “personal use” amount, Gray only answered, “Ten grams is a pretty good amount.” And Lewis himself later testified that he had previously purchased six rocks of crack cocaine during a previous sting operation, paying only $100.00 for the drugs on that occasion.
There was no testimony that Lewis brought his own scales to the drug transaction; instead, he and Stephens used Stephens’s scales to weigh the drugs. This fact may be significant because it suggests Lewis would appear to Stephens to be an end user who trusted his own dealer rather than a mid-level dealer concerned about receiving an adequate amount for later resale. Additionally, Lewis never testified that he had, in any way or manner, suggested to Stephens — either before or during the drug sale — that Lewis intended to later deliver or resell this cocaine to Odom or anyone else.
Moreover, the State presented no evidence from any other source that Stephens believed Lewis would thereafter specifically transfer the cocaine to Odom or another, that Stephens had directed Lewis to transfer the cocaine specifically to Odom or another, or that Stephens intended for Lewis to transfer the narcotics specifically to Odom or another.
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Nor did the State present any evidence Stephens knew or should have reasoned that Lewis was an intermediary for Odom or another.
Cf. Heberling,
Such is true in this case because the State presented no evidence to suggest that Stephens could have assumed Lewis would thereafter deliver, sell, transfer, or convey any or all of the cocaine to another party. To do so, the jury must stack its inferences atop one another. Instead, the evidence in this case supports only the conclusion that Stephens reasonably believed Lewis was purchasing the cocaine for his own personal use. The State presented no direct or circumstantial evidence that is legally sufficient to support a different conclusion with respect to this particular element of the indicted offense.
Absent specific evidence to support the conclusion Stephens knew that a subsequent delivery would be made specifically by the confidential informant to Odom or another, the State’s evidence in this case is legally insufficient to prove Stephens constructively transferred cocaine.
The State suggests in its brief that the jury was free to infer from the evidence that Stephens knew Lewis would later transfer the cocaine to one or more persons. The State presented evidence that ten grams of cocaine was a quantity greater than that normally purchased for personal use; the State also presented evidence that Lewis paid less than the typical amount one would expect to pay for that great a quantity of cocaine. This evidence, argues the State, showed Stephens knew or should have known Lewis would not be the final recipient of the narcotics at issue. We find no precedent requiring that result, and we conclude that the evidence wholly fails to show any intent or knowledge by Stephens that there would be some final recipient other than Lewis.
While the State’s evidence showed Stephens actually delivered cocaine to Lewis, the evidence did not go further to prove Stephens had any actual knowledge or intent that these same narcotics would be ultimately transferred to Odom or any third party. Accordingly, because the State did not meet its burden of proof (as set forth by the hypothetically correct jury charge applicable in this case) to show a knowing constructive delivery, we have no choice but to conclude the evidence is legally insufficient.
II. Conclusion
The State’s evidence overwhelmingly showed Stephens was a crack dealer. But, unfortunately, the State’s evidence did not prove all the essential elements of the specific offense with which Stephens was charged: constructive delivery (as opposed to an actual delivery to Lewis).
Accordingly, we have no choice but to reverse the trial court’s judgment and render a judgment of acquittal. Stephens’s remaining issues are moot.
Notes
. Delivery may also be accomplished by an offer to sell.
Conaway v. State,
. One unreported case, addressing a conviction for constructive delivery, involved evidence the transferor defendant did not know of the existence of an ultimate recipient or had directed the intermediary to deliver the substance to that specific (ultimate) transferee.
Terrell v. State,
Nos. 01-99-00901-CR & 01-99-00902-CR,
. The State points out that Stephens testified that he believed Lewis was a drug dealer and that he had seen Lewis "cooking” crack.
