State v. Cecil U. Cobb ( 2010 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF
    TENNESSEE
    FILED
    AT KNOXVILLE
    December 2, 1999
    OCTOBER SESSION, 1999                             Cecil CROWS ON, Jr.
    Appellate Court Clerk
    STATE OF TENNESSEE,             *
    *     No. 03C01-9811-CR-00420
    Appellee,                 *
    *     SULLIVAN COUNTY
    vs.                             *
    *     Hon. PHYLLIS H. MILLER, Judge
    CECIL U. COBB, JR.,             *
    *     (Possession of Dihydrocodeinone,
    Appellant.                *     a Schedule III controlled substance;
    *     simple possession of marijuana;
    *     failure to obey a traffic signal;
    *     driving under the influence of an
    *     intoxicant)
    For the Appellant:                    For the Appellee:
    Gerald L. Gulley, Jr.                 Paul G. Summers
    Contract Appellate Defender           Attorney General and Reporter
    P. O. Box 1708
    Knoxville, TN 37901-1708              Marvin S. Blair, Jr.
    Assistant Attorney General
    (APPEAL ONLY)                         Criminal Justice Division
    425 Fifth Avenue North
    and                                   2d Floor, Cordell Hull Building
    Nashville, TN 37243-0493
    Leslie S. Hale
    Office of the Public Defender
    P. O. Box 839                         H. Greeley Wells, Jr.
    Blountville, TN 37617                 District Attorney General
    Robert H. Montgomery
    Asst. District Attorney General
    Thomas McKinney                       Blountville, TN 37617
    Attorney at Law
    222 E. Center Street
    Kingsport, Tn 37660
    (AT TRIAL)
    OPINION FILED:
    AFFIRMED
    David G. Hayes, Judge
    OPINION
    The appellant, Cecil U. Cobb, Jr., was convicted by a Sullivan County jury of
    the misdemeanor offenses of possession of Dihydrocodeinone, a Schedule III
    controlled substance; simple possession of marijuana; failure to obey a traffic signal;
    and driving under the influence of an intoxicant.1 The trial court imposed an
    effective sentence of twenty-three months, twenty-eight days. 2 On appeal, the
    appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for each of his four convictions
    and the chain of custody related to the possession of the marijuana and Schedule III
    drugs.
    After review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    BACKGROUND
    Around 2:00 a.m. on May 30, 1997, Lieutenant Bob Abernathy of the
    Kingsport Police Department was dispatched to Ralph’s Bar and Grill to investigate
    an activated security alarm. When the police called the restaurant to verify the
    alarm, a voice on the other end cursed them and hung up the telephone. The
    business owner, Ralph Barrett, was advised of the situation and met the lieutenant
    and two other officers at the scene. No visible signs of a burglary were observed,
    however, a white Chevrolet Cavalier was located in the parking lot.
    Upon entering the building, Lieutenant Abernathy observed the appellant
    emerge from a room behind the bar. The lieutenant attempted to elicit the
    appellant’s name to which the appellant responded “Stubby, 357.” The officers
    noted the appellant’s odor of alcohol, his bloodshot eyes, and his “uncooperative”
    nature. The appellant advised Barrett that he had been drinking. Barrett explained
    1
    After the ju ry’s guilty verdict for D UI was returned , the appe llant pled guilty to D UI 4 th offense.
    2
    The trial court imposed the following sentences for each of the respective offenses:
    possession of dihydrocodeinone, eleven months and twenty-nine days; possession of marijuana,
    eleven months and twenty-nine days; and failure to obey a traffic signal, thirty days. These
    sentences were ordered to run concurrently. For the DUI fourth offense, the appellant received
    eleven months and twenty-nine days to be served consecutively to the above sentence of eleven
    months and twenty-nine days.
    2
    to the officers that the appellant was employed as a cook at the restaurant, that he
    had a key to the building, and that he had occasionally slept in the back room.
    Because Barrett permitted the appellant to remain in the restaurant and no other
    patrons were around, the officers did not remove the appellant from the premises
    even though he was obviously intoxicated. The officers instructed the appellant not
    to leave the building. Mr. Barrett stayed behind to speak further with the appellant.
    Following the investigation of the alarm call, Kingsport Police Officer Rusty
    Wallace testified that he drove west, two tenths of a mile, on Stone Drive and pulled
    off the road into Trader’s Village to fill out a report. A few minutes later, Officer
    Wallace observed a white car, which appeared to be the same car he had
    previously noticed in the parking lot at Ralph’s Bar and Grill, traveling at
    approximately sixty-five to seventy mph in a fifty-five mph speed zone. Initiating
    pursuit, the officer observed the vehicle speed through a red light “at the intersection
    of the exit ramps from John B. Dennis and Stone Drive,” without even touching the
    brakes. After barely negotiating the ramp, the appellant pulled over to the shoulder
    of the road. Upon approaching the vehicle, Officer Wallace recognized the driver as
    the person he had seen inside Ralph’s Bar and Grill approximately fifteen minutes
    earlier.
    The officer noticed the odor of alcohol and ordered the appellant out of the
    vehicle. The appellant admitted that he drank a couple of beers earlier. When
    asked to recite the alphabet, he stopped at the letter “G” and then said “and the rest
    of them.” He declined to perform any other field sobriety tests. At this point, the
    appellant was arrested and transported to the Kingsport City Jail.
    At the jail, the appellant refused to sign an implied consent form. Officer
    Wallace delivered the appellant to the jailer, Mike Hickman, for booking. Upon
    searching the appellant, Officer Hickman found a ”baggie” of marijuana and twelve
    pills wrapped separately in cellophane in the appellant’s pants pocket. The twelve
    pills were of two different types: some were “oblong with specs on them” and some
    were “round.” Laboratory tests from the TBI Crime lab later established that all
    twelve pills contained dihydrocodeinone, a Schedule III substance. The officer also
    3
    discovered two “rolled cigarette joints” of marijuana in the appellant’s shirt pocket.
    After finding these items, Officer Hickman “took them straight to the arresting officer
    [Rusty Wallace]” in booking and advised the officer where he found them on the
    appellant. Officer Wallace testified that the items brought to him by Officer Hickman
    were two hand rolled marijuana cigarettes and some other pills of dihydrocodeinone
    wrapped in cellophane. Although Officer Hickman did not place any identifying
    marks upon the bag or drugs, he testified that he noted in the log book the articles
    found on the appellant.
    If, at trial, any doubt remained as to the appellant’s intoxication after the
    State’s proof, it was removed during the defense proof by the testimony of the
    appellant and his employer, Barrett. Barrett testified that, after arriving at his
    restaurant, he entered and encountered the appellant:
    He was sitting in the middle of the restaurant at a table asleep, passed
    out, whatever you want to call it. . . .
    ...
    There’s no doubt, he was drunker than, he was drunk. . . . [O]ne of the
    officers] asked Stubby, . . . what his full name was, and Stubby said,
    ‘Stubby.’ . . . and that’s all you fuckin’ need to know.
    ...
    After they left, I tried to get Stubby to let me take him home. He
    wouldn’t listen. I tried to get him to go back there and lay down, stay
    all night. He wouldn’t listen. I told him, I said, ‘Stubby, if you leave
    here, they are going to get you. They’re going to be sitting down the
    road waiting on you, and get you. I said, you better not leave here.’
    And he would not listen to me. He got his keys and went out the door.
    As he was going out the door, I was still begging him, I said, ‘Stubby,
    please, don’t leave, they’ll get you tonight.’ He left.
    The appellant testified on his own behalf. He related that, after closing
    Ralph’s Bar and Grill sometime after 12:00 midnight, he traveled with a friend to a
    local establishment known as the “Hog Wild.” The appellant described the Hog Wild
    as a place to go dance and drink. The appellant informed the jury that, after arriving
    at the Hog Wild;
    I’d say I drank ten (10) or twelve (12) beers, maybe more. . . . I was
    pretty drunk, I don’t remember leaving or anything.
    ...
    I remember getting there, and I remember probably an hour, hour and
    a half after that, and I just lost my memory, I guess. I drank the beer
    pretty fast. I guess that’s got a lot to do with it.
    The appellant conceded that he could not deny that he ran a traffic light
    because he could not remember “driving the vehicle that night.”
    4
    In reference to the charge of possession of a Schedule III drug, the appellant
    testified he had been prescribed Lortab, by Dr. Moore of Powell Valley Family
    Physicians, for pain. It was stipulated that Lortab contains the chemical substance
    hydrocodeinone. He related that he had surgery on both of his legs and, as a result,
    experiences constant pain. The appellant provided the court with a copy of his
    prescription dated February 10, 1997, for 7.5 milligrams of Lortab in the amount of
    100 pills. He further testified that, at times, pursuant to his prescription he has
    possessed both the “brand name lortabs[,] and the generic kinds also.” He testified
    that he normally carried these pills with him in a cellophane wrapper or plastic bag
    due to the fact that the plastic bottles are too cumbersome to fit in his pocket. He
    acknowledged that there have been occasions when he has “run out” of the
    prescribed medication. He denied having any marijuana or other illegal drugs in his
    possession, other than those medically prescribed to him. Although the appellant
    did acknowledge that the “oblong [pills] with the specs on them” were the prescribed
    hydrocodeinone, he denied any knowledge of the “round ones [pills].”
    Following the court’s instructions, the jury returned a verdict of guilty on all
    counts of the indictment.
    I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    The appellant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence with
    regard to each conviction. The standard for appellate review on an evidentiary
    challenge is whether after considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e). See also
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 317, 
    99 S.Ct. 2781
    , 2789 (1979).
    A. Possession of Dihydrocodeinone
    The appellant argues the evidence of this conviction was insufficient based
    upon his prescription for dihydrocodeinone. Moreover, he contends that his
    conviction should be reversed because the validity of the prescription was stipulated
    by the State. The jury found the appellant guilty pursuant to 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39
    -
    17-418(a) (1996 Supp.). In order to obtain a conviction under this statute, the State
    5
    must prove that the defendant “knowingly possessed . . . a controlled substance
    unless the substance was obtained directly from, or pursuant to, a valid prescription
    or order of a practitioner while acting in the course of professional practice.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-418
    (a) (emphasis added).
    Before examination of this issue, we note that the jury was improperly
    instructed that a valid prescription constituted a defense to the charged crime. A
    valid prescription constitutes neither an affirmative defense nor a general defense to
    the offense of simple possession of a controlled substance. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-204
    (a) (1991) (“[a]n affirmative defense in this title is so labeled by the
    phrase: ‘It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under . . .’”) and 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-203
    (a) (“[a] defense to prosecution for an offense in this title is so labeled
    by the phrase: ‘It is a defense to prosecution under . . . that . . . ‘”). However, the
    prescription does constitute an exception.3 See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-427
     (“It is
    an exception to this part if the person lawfully possessed the controlled substance
    as otherwise authorized by [the Tennessee Drug Control Act of 1989]; see also
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-418
    (a). 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-202
     provides as
    follows:
    (a) An exception to an offense in this title is so labeled by the phrase:
    “It is an exception to the application of . . .,” or words of similar import.
    (b) (1) Unless the statute defining an offense states to the contrary, the
    state need not negate the existence of an exception in the charge
    alleging commission of the offense.
    (2) An exception to be relied upon by a person must be proven by a
    preponderance of the evidence.
    The State’s proof established through the testimony of Officer Hickman that
    the appellant possessed twelve pills, both “round” and “oblong,” of the controlled
    substance stipulated as dihydrocodeinone. Also stipulated was the fact that the
    appellant possessed a valid prescription for Lortab, which contains
    dihydrocodeinone. However, the appellant admitted on direct examination4 and
    3
    The only difference between a defense and an exception is that a defense need only be
    sufficiently raised by the proof while an exception places the burden on the defendant to prove the
    excep tion by a prep ondera nce of th e eviden ce. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-202
    . Since the
    trial court ch arged th e lesser burden , the defen dant rec eived the b enefit of the instruction .
    Accordingly, we find the error is harmless. Tenn. R. Crim . P. 52(a).
    4
    Q:(Direct examination) (Defense Counsel) I’ll ask you to look at these pills here. Do they
    app ear to be th e kin d of p ills, tha t hydro cod one [sic] th at co me in pill fo rm that a re us ually
    prescribed to you, or that you have gotten in your prescription? Can you identify any of those?
    A: (Defendant) Some of these, yes.
    6
    again on cross-examination that the “round” dihydrocodeinone pills found in his
    pants pocket were not possessed by virtue of a prescription. It is incumbent upon
    the defendant to bring himself entirely within the exception contained in the statute.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-202
    . See generally State v. Sanderson, 
    550 S.W.2d 236
    (Tenn. 1977) (providing discussion of prescription exception); Hayes v. State, 
    513 S.W.2d 144
    , 145 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1974), (exception recognized and burden of
    proof on person claiming it). By the appellant’s own admission, he did not fall within
    the exception. Moreover, he failed to meet his burden of establishing by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the “round” pills fell under his valid prescription.
    The plain language of 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-418
    (a) requires that the controlled
    substance possessed, not merely the same schedule of drug, be directly possessed
    from a valid prescription.           If this court construed the statute as the appellant
    argues, it would permit a defendant in possession of a valid prescription to illegally
    obtain the controlled substance and cloak himself under the protection of the
    prescription. Accordingly, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State, the proof was sufficient to convict the appellant of possession of
    dihydrocodeinone.
    B. Possession of Marijuana
    Next, the appellant challenges his conviction for possession of marijuana
    based upon the fact that the appellant “did not know how it [marijuana] got to be on
    his person.” The testimony of the State’s witnesses clearly established that the
    appellant had possession of the marijuana. Officer Hickman testified that he
    removed two marijuana cigarettes from the appellant’s shirt pocket and a “baggie”
    containing loose marijuana from the appellant’s pants. Officer Wallace identified the
    marijuana as that given to him by Hickman that he sent to the crime lab. Taken in
    the light most favorable to the State, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient
    for a rational juror to find the appellant guilty of this offense beyond a reasonable
    Q: Okay. And wha t are the ones that you can identify and know - - - -
    A: T he on es th at are oblon g with the s pec s [sic ] in the m is the h ydroc odo ne [s ic], tha t’s
    the cheap nam e brand. The round on es, I don’t - - - -
    Q: Th e nam e brand , or the che aper bra nd of lortab you are talk ing abou t?
    A: The round ones, I have not seen, I don’t know what they are. They were not in my
    pocket, I have no idea what these are.
    ...
    Q: So, you don’t know whether the other round pills there, or the dihydrocodone [sic] was
    prescr ibed for you , or not, you do n’t reme mbe r taking tha t as suc h.
    A: No, I do n’t
    7
    doubt. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-418
    (a).
    C. Driving Under the Influence
    Third, the appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his
    conviction for driving under the influence. The overwhelming nature of the evidence,
    including the appellant’s admission of intoxication, established, beyond a
    reasonable doubt, the appellant’s guilt for driving under the influence. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 55-10-401
     Supp. (1996).
    D. Failure to Obey a Traffic Signal
    Finally, the appellant challenges his conviction for failure to obey a traffic
    signal. We conclude that Officer Wallace’s testimony that the appellant sped
    through a red traffic signal without applying the brakes at the intersection of John B.
    Dennis and Stone Drive is sufficient for a rational juror to find him guilty of this
    offense beyond a reasonable doubt. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 55-8-110
     (1992
    Supp.).
    II. Chain of Custody
    In his second issue, the appellant challenges the chain of custody related to
    his possession of drugs. He argues that because Officer Hickman failed to make
    identifying marks on the bags or drugs before giving them to Officer Wallace, who
    was absent during the search, the State did not establish the requisite chain of
    custody necessary to admit the drugs into evidence. It is well-established that
    before physical evidence may be introduced, the party offering the evidence must
    produce a witness who is able to identify the evidence or establish an unbroken
    chain of custody. State v. Holbrooks, 
    983 S.W.2d 697
    , 700 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1998). However, the party is not required to prove the identity of the physical
    evidence to an absolute certainty nor is the party required to exclude all possibilities
    of tampering. State v. Holloman, 
    835 S.W.2d 42
    , 46 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992). The
    identification or chain of custody is sufficient “if the facts establish a reasonable
    assurance of the identity of the evidence” and its integrity. State v. Woods, 
    806 S.W.2d 205
    , 212 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990); State v. Kilburn, 
    782 S.W.2d 199
    , 203
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1989). The question of whether the chain of custody has been
    sufficiently established by the proof rests within the sound discretion of the trial court
    8
    and will not be overturned on appeal absent an abuse of that discretion. Holloman,
    
    835 S.W.2d at 46
    .
    The State produced the testimony of Officer Hickman who identified the two
    marijuana cigarettes and the cellophane wrapper containing the separately
    packaged marijuana and hydrocodeinone pills as the items seized from the
    appellant. Then, Officer Hickman provided that he immediately recorded the items
    in the log book and turned them over to Officer Wallace. Wallace identified the
    drugs and the cellophane wrapper as the items given to him by Officer Hickman that
    he later sent to the crime lab. Moreover, the appellant testified that he normally
    carried his hydrocodeinone pills inside a cellophane wrapper or plastic bag.
    The fact that Officer Hickman did not place identifying marks on the bag or
    drugs goes to the weight and credibility of the evidence and not their admissibility.
    Finding no abuse of the trial court’s discretion, this issue is without merit.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ____________________________________
    DAVID G. HAYES, Judge
    CONCUR:
    __________________________________________
    GARY R. WADE, Presiding Judge
    __________________________________________
    DAVID H. WELLES, Judge
    9
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