Martin Dennis Arrasmith appeals his conviction in a bench trial of possessing with intent to distribute 134 pounds of marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). On April 26,1976, a border patrol agent stopped Arrasmith at the permanent immigration checkpoint near Falfurrias, Texas. The agent smelled marijuana, searched Arrasmith’s car, and seized the evidence. The district court denied Arrasmith’s motion to suppress.
On appeal Arrasmith does not claim the search was illegal. At permanent checkpoints agents may make stops without probable cause or reasonable suspicion,
United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
Arrasmith’s sole contention draws upon the following exchange during defense counsel’s cross-examination of the border patrol agent:
Q: What does marijuana smell like?
A: Marijuana.
[Defense counsel]: Your honor, I don’t think that answer is responsive.
THE COURT: It is responsive. It smells like marijuana.
[Defense counsel]: Marijuana smells like marijuana?
THE COURT: Yes, sir.
A district court possesses broad discretion concerning whether to allow a witness to testify in terms of his “opinion” that something smells like marijuana or whether, alternatively, to require the witness to testify to more basic “facts” describing the odor more minutely. The district court’s decision here was not unreasonable. Describing odors is a task that can severely test the abilities of even the most accomplished wordsmith. Defense counsel remained free, moreover, to pose additional questions requiring the witness to describe the smell in greater detail.
Arrasmith contends, however, that in practical effect the district court took judicial notice that marijuana smells like marijuana. We disagree and find nothing improper in the district court’s action. We agree that the district court, as the trier of facts on a suppression motion, must conscientiously resolve factual questions on the basis of the evidence presented. But triers of fact are also free to employ their com
Arrasmith’s real objection, of course, is not to the tautological notion that marijuana smells like marijuana; whatever else marijuana does or does not smell like, it certainly smells like itself. But the statement that “marijuana smells like marijuana” may also convey the meaning that the odor of marijuana is distinctive and easily recognized. To the extent that the district judge may have accepted that meaning, however, he had an ample evidentiary basis for doing so, for the agent had so testified. Litigation could not go forward if we were to adopt the general principle that a fact-finder who accepts testimony as true thereby takes improper judicial notice of its truth.
Whether the agent smelled marijuana was a factual question relevant to the probable cause issue. In resolving that factual question, the district court relied upon the testimony of an experienced border patrol agent who said he had smelled marijuana many times. The court neither limited Arrasmith’s cross-examination of the agent nor prevented him from introducing any relevant evidence. The district court conscientiously found the facts on the basis of the evidence and did not take into account impermissible considerations. The court’s findings are not clearly erroneous. The conviction is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Agents need not have probable cause or reasonable suspicion in order to search at the border or its functional equivalent.
See Almeida-Sanchez v. United States,
