Over a plea of not guilty, the trial court, sitting without a jury, found Johnny Ray Trejo guilty of a Class B misdemeanor in possessing a useable quantity of marijua *383 na, of not more than two ounces. The court assessed punishment at six months in jail, and a $1,000 fine. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 4476-15, § 4.051(a), (b)(1) (Supp. 1988). Trejo contends in a single point of error that the evidence was insufficient to permit the finding of guilty. We will affirm the judgment.
THE EVIDENCE
Police officers Jarveis and Rose gave uncontradicted testimony. Jarveis testified he saw a four-door automobile stopped in a city park, at 12:20 a.m., in apparent violation of the curfew notices displayed on signs erected in the park, one of which stood in front of the automоbile. The weather was cold and rainy. The windows of the automobile were down, and it appeared to be occupied. Jarveis radioed for a “back-up unit” as he drove his own car to the parked automobile.
Jarveis queried a female seated in the driver’s seat of the parked automobile. She stated shе did not know of the curfew, and that she had left her driver’s license at home. She produced a pawn ticket for identification, then got out of the automobile.
Jarveis leaned over by the open back window of the automobile. He smelled “a strong odor” of freshly burnt marijuana emanating from the car. He also saw two malе passengers. Trejo occupied the right-front seat, the other passenger the rear seat. They obeyed Jarveis’s order to get out of the car. Officer Rose arrived as Jarveis stood with the occupants of the car.
Jarveis invited Rose to “smell inside the vehicle,” which he did. Rose testified he smelled the odor of mаrijuana, which had been burned within the hour, in his opinion. Rose searched the car. He found a small “derringer” pistol under the rear seat. On the passenger side of the front seat, where Trejo had been sitting, Rose saw “some Zig-Zag papers, or rolling papers,” as well as “some seeds.” Rose then watched the three individuals while Jarvеis conducted a second search.
On the passenger side of the front seat, under a floormat, Jarveis found two partially burned marijuana cigarettes. Rose failed to find them because he looked only under “the lower portion” of the floormat. On the passenger side of the front seat, where Trejo had been sitting, Jarvеis found “some seeds,” and “a package of rolling papers,” or “Zig-Zags.” None of the three individuals claimed the marijuana cigarettes when Jarveis asked who owned them. Jarveis arrested all three.
Before trial, and based on an analysis of the two cigarettes by the Department of Public Safety, Trejo and the State stiрulated the two cigarettes constituted a useable quantity of marijuana, weighing not more than two ounces. The “seeds” were not mentioned in the report or the stipulation, and nothing in the evidence explicitly identified the seeds as being marijuana seeds. Nothing in the evidence suggested that the “rolling papers” were the samе as those which encased the two marijuana cigarettes.
DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS
The trial court’s finding of guilty rests entirely on circumstantial evidence. We therefore inquire whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt; and whether the evidence as a whole рermitted the fact finder reasonably to conclude that every reasonable hypothesis, other than Trejo’s guilt, had been excluded.
Martin v. State,
The essential elements of the offense are (1) Trejo had actual care, custody, control, or management of the two cigarettes, and (2) he knew they were contraband. The “possession” need not be exclusive. It may be joint among the occupants of the car, and that is the State’s theory in Trejo’s case. Trejo’s presence in the car, with the two cigarettes, is a factor that logically tends to show his participation in the offense; standing alone, however, it is insufficient to support a finding of guilty. Additional evidence is required, which “affirmatively links” Trejo to the two ciga
*384
rettes, before the finding of guilty may be sustained under the rules mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
Martin,
The application of the relevant rules to particular circumstances has given rise tо more than a few opinions by the Court of Criminal Appeals.
See generally
Caudill,
Probability Theory and Constructive Possession of Narcotics: On Finding that Winning Combination,
17 Hous.L.Rev. 541 (1980). Because the theory is one of constructive, and not literal, possession, and a deprivation of liberty is at stake, the matter is a delicate one. Critical distinctions are, nevertheless, not always apparent.
Cf, e.g., McGaskey v. State,
We find the Court of Criminal Appeals has identified several factors, recurring in similar cases, that have logical forсe in establishing the two essential elements, and excluding exculpatory hypotheses, when narcotics are found in an automobile. That the accused
knew of the presence
of the contraband and its
forbidden nature
may be inferred from such particular factors as these: (1) the contraband was so situated in the car that it could be seen by the accused,
Salas v. State,
The element of
actual care, control,
or
management
may be inferred from such particular factors as these: (1) the accused owned the automobile in which the narcotics were found,
DeShong;
(2) he operated the automobile,
DeShong, Christopher, Gutierrez, Marsh;
(3) the contraband was so situated in the automobile thаt it was readily accessible to the accused,
Salas, Moulden, Sanchez, DeShong, Lewis;
(4) the accused was in close proximity to articles related to the contraband, such as apparent marijuana seeds, a “sprig” of marijuana, or “rolling papers” or other paraphernalia connected to the use of the contraband,
Sanders v. State,
Still other factors have logical force in establishing both of the essential elements, and in eliminating exculpatory hypotheses: (1) the physical condition of the accused indicated his recent consumption of the narcotic found in the car, McGaskey; (2) traces of the contraband were found on the person of the accused, Salas; (3) the accused made affirmative statements conneсting him to the contraband, Sanders, Moulden; and (4) the automobile appeared to be involved, a “short time” before it was *385 stopped, in activities that appeared to be drug trafficking, Marsh.
Because the two essential but disparate elements must be established, and any exculpatory hypothesis excluded, it is seldom that any one of the listed factors will have logical force sufficient to sustain a conviction based on constructive possession of the narcotic, even when coupled with the accused’s presence in the automobile where it was found. The “affirmative link” customarily emerges, instead, from an orchestration of several of the listed faсtors, and the logical force they have in combination.
In Trejo’s case, the evidence showed the following factors: (1) the automobile emitted an aroma of recently or freshly burnt marijuana, of a strength that indicated the marijuana had been burned, in the car, within the hour; (2) the two cigarettes were “partially burned”; (3) seeds аnd rolling papers lay on the front seat where Trejo had been sitting in the front passenger seat; (4) the marijuana, while concealed under the floormat, was easily accessible to Trejo, and more accessible to him than the other occupants; (5) the automobile was parked off the street, in the dark, in the eаrly morning hours, with the windows down in cold and rainy weather; (6) the apparent driver denied knowledge of the curfew, a notice of which was on a sign located in front of the car. From the two factors last mentioned, the trier of fact might reason the automobile was parked where it was to prevent observation of any activities in the car; and the windows were down in inclement weather to permit the escape of smoke and odor from the two cigarettes, while they were burning.
We believe a rational trier of fact might infer the requisite element of
actual care, custody, control or management,
beyond a reasonable doubt, from the aggregate logical force of all the six factors listеd in the preceding paragraph. The odor of freshly burnt marijuana, coupled with the presence of the seeds and rolling papers on the front seat, must have apprised Trejo of the existence of marijuana in the car, even though none was in “plain view.”
Christopher,
We believe a rational trier of fact might also infer the element of guilty
knowledge,
beyond a reasonable doubt, frоm the six factors present in Trejo’s case. The element derives from the statute under which Trejo was charged. It provides that one “commits an offense if he
knowingly
*386
... possesses a useable quantity of marijuana.” Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4476-15, § 4.051(a),
supra
(emphasis added). The statutory definition of “knowingly,” given in the penal code, applies. Tex.Pen. Code Ann. §§ 1.03(b), 6.02(b) (1974). Proof of the element generally depends on circumstantial evidence; it is an inference drawn by the trier of fact from
all
the circumstances.
Dillon v. State,
We believe the requisite inference might be drawn here from the presence of the marijuana odor; the location of the seeds, the rolling papers, and the partially burned cigarettes; Trejo’s proximity to each of those articles; and, especially, the clandestine situation of the parked car, indicating a consciousness of guilt on the part of all the occupants of the car. In
Moulden,
for example, the court stated that Moulden’s guilty knowledge was sufficiently proved
merely
by his close proximity to the marijuana at his feet, and to the related paraphernalia.
Moulden,
On the other hand, we believe Trejo’s case
is
distinctly different from similar cases where the evidence was found insufficient. In
Payne v. State,
We hold the evidence sufficient to support the judgment below, which we therefore affirm.
