445 F.2d 701 | D.C. Cir. | 1971
Lead Opinion
Appellant was convicted of violating 26 U.S.C. § 4704(a) (purchase, sale, or receipt of narcotic drugs not in the original stamped package and without the appropriate tax-paid stamps) and 21 U. S.C. § 174 (facilitation of concealment and sale of narcotic drugs, knowing the same to have been imported illegally). He was sentenced to two to eight years on the first charge and to five years on the second, the terms to be served concurrently.
The Government presented only two witnesses before it rested. The first was Detective Winston Norman, one of the police officers who made the arrest; the other was the expert witness who identified the narcotic drug as heroin. Detective Norman testified that he and two other police officers went to the apartment of the woman who was indicted jointly with appellant in this case, in order to execute a search warrant. The time was 6:00 in the morning. When they entered, they found the woman and appellant in the bedroom, both undressed. Appellant was hiding behind the bed. On the top of a dresser the narcotics were discovered. When he was asked to get dressed, appellant removed a shirt and a suit from a closet in the bedroom, and underwear and socks from a drawer in the dresser. Several pairs
The Government claims that its evidence proves constructive possession, and that it must therefore be permitted to go to the jury, since the statutes allow the jury to infer commission of the offenses from unexplained possession. To us, however, the Government’s evidence seems entirely inadequate to defeat appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal. We must remember that constructive possession means being in a position to exercise dominion or control over a thing.
The necessary background information is strikingly absent in this case. The Government claims that the presence of men’s clothes in the apartment contributes to the conclusion that appellant’s presence was “neither fortuitous nor brief, but residential,” but it did not offer proof that the clothes in question belonged to or even fit appellant. For all the Government has shown, appellant may be guilty of no more than an illicit relationship. The woman, charged with the same offenses as appellant, pleaded guilty to a lesser included offense, and the evidence is entirely consistent with the hypothesis that she procured heroin for her own use. Appellant may have known about the heroin, she may even have used it in his presence, but more is required before appellant can be said to possess the heroin himself.
It is perfectly true that this appellant may be guilty. The trouble with absence of evidence is that it is consistent with any hypothesis. It is no answer to say, as the Government does, that this is a “close case,” and therefore “one for the triers of fact.” The defense was entitled to rest at the close of the Government’s case, and for the jury to have convicted appellant on the evidence presented at that point would have been utter speculation.
Reversed.
. E. g., Miller v. United States, 121 U.S. App.D.C. 13, 15, 347 F.2d 797, 799 (1965) ; see Bar Ass’n of the District of Columbia, Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 93 (1966).
. United States v. Bethea, 143 U.S.App. D.C. 68, 442 F.2d 790 (March 22, 1971), ís a case very similar to this one. Appellant was a passenger in a car in which narcotics were discovered. He was convicted of the same offenses as appellant in this ease. This court reversed, finding that the Government had failed to introduce sufficient evidence to prove constructive possession.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
Judicial decisions have at best established ill-defined guidelines as to the ev-identiary requirements necessary to prove constructive possession. Especially in reported cases growing out of narcotics prosecutions the opinions are usually built upon involved and obscure reasoning which certainly suggests judicial subjectivity. The resulting confusion should convince those who read the cases that decisions in this area are made by a selective rather than a comprehensive application. See Annot., 91 A.L.R.2d 810 (1963). The rhetorical legerdemain compounded in this area of the law invokes abstractions which appear more designed to achieve a particular result in an individual case than to stabilize and formalize a workable index of objective standards. The more cases one reads on constructive possession the deeper is he plunged into a thicket of subjectivity. Successive cases enumerate a continuing re-interpretation which can only be described as judicial whimsy. To basic questions to which the an
Confronted with a library of flexible abstractions, government and defense counsel alike must struggle, too often unsuccessfully, with a logically insoluble dilemma. The sum total of recorded cases can best be described as symbiotic.
The majority opinion accurately points out the affirmative conclusions which were not negated by the Government’s proof and which require reversal of the present ease. In so doing we make, to us, an acceptable disposition of the present case. Lawyers in future cases, concerned as to the issue of constructive possession, will still find most trial and appellate courts simultaneously looking in both directions.
. The usual approach to determination of the existence or presence of constructive possession is largely a matter of tone. To attempt to catalogue conflicting opinions would be tedious and perplexing. The lack of exactitude is illustrated by reference to the following cases :
United States v. Vasquez, 429 F.2d 615 (2d Cir. 1970) ; United States v. Febre, 425 F.2d 107 (2d Cir. 1970) ; United States v. Lopez, 355 F.2d 250 (2d Cir. 1966) ; United States v. Carter, 320 F.2d 1 (2d Cir. 1963) ; Hallman v. United States, 115 U.S.App.D.C. 350, 320 F.2d 669 (1963) ; United States v. Douglas, 319 F.2d 526 (2d Cir. 1963) ; United States v. Ramis, 315 F.2d 437 (2d Cir. 1963) ; United States v. Jones, 308 F.2d 26 (2d Cir. 1962) (en banc) ; Collis v. United States, 101 U.S.App.D.C. 160, 247 F.2d 566 (1957) ; People v. Pippin, 16 App.Div.2d 635, 227 N.Y.S.2d 164 (1962) ; People v. Jackson, 23 Ill.2d 360, 178 N.E.2d 320 (1961) ; Crisman v. Commonwealth, 197 Va. 17, 87 S.E.2d 796 (1955).
In approximately half of the cited cases constructive possession was found to exist. In the other half the court’s finding was in the negative. It is not difficult to visualize a different court holding exactly the opposite in most of these cases. The affirmative and negative rulings are in such obvious conflict that for the practitioner the problems are difficult to understand and apparently for the courts impossible to master.