DocketNumber: No. 6,781.
Judges: Angstman, Callaway, Galen, Ford, Matthews
Filed Date: 4/11/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
To possess — to have actual control, care and management of an illicit article, and not a passing control, shadowy and fleeting in its nature — requires control of the thing possessed, with the right to dispose of it in any manner the possessor may see fit (33 C.J. 585; State v. Williams,
Numerous assignments of error are specified, but in the view that we take of the case only one — the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the conviction, raised by defendant on motion for a directed verdict — need be considered.
The evidence shows that two federal narcotic agents, Williams and Welliver, in company with McNabb and Wood, and James Brennan, who was jointly charged with defendant, entered a one-story frame house at 35 West Porphyry Street in Butte, on March 15, 1930. The front door of the house was locked when they arrived there. Brennan unlocked the door with a key which he had in his possession. The room into which they entered contained a bed, table, radio, bookcase and writing-stand. This room we shall hereafter refer to as the front room. Under the top of the table there was a bookcase containing a number of books. There were two rooms to the north of the front room, which were used as a kitchen and back bedroom. Between the front room and the kitchen there was a door situated in the northeast corner of the front room. When the officers entered the front room, defendant was standing in the northeast corner of the room near the door leading into the kitchen and about ten feet from the table. On the table was a stocking and a cambric tobacco pouch which, upon examination, were found to contain packages of cocaine hydrochloride. There was also some found under the the base of a plaster-of-paris lamp which stood on the radio situated on the west side of the room. A dictionary which was lying on the book-rack under the top of the table also had packages of cocaine hydrochloride concealed in the binding. On the flyleaf of the book were printed in pencil the words "Property of Samuel C. Hood." It was not shown by whom the words were printed. *Page 436
There is evidence that when the officers entered the room defendant rushed to the kitchen stove and made motions tending to indicate that he threw something in the fire-box. When asked by one of the officers what he threw in the stove, he replied, "a peach stone." The officer, though admitting that he did not make a careful examination to see whether there was a peach stone in the fire, said there was none there that he could see.
Elizabeth M. Gill testified that she owned the house situated at 35 West Porphyry Street on March 15, 1930, and that it had not been rented to defendant and that he was not a tenant of hers or in possession of the premises with her knowledge. There is no direct evidence that defendant ever had possession of any of the packages of cocaine hydrochloride found in the room.
The question before us is whether the foregoing evidence is[1] sufficient to justify defendant's conviction. To justify a conviction of unlawful possession of a prohibited article there must be proof of actual control and management of the thing prohibited (33 C.J. 585).
Counsel for the state, in reliance upon the case of State v.Jacobson,
Conceding, without deciding, that all the evidence in the[3] case was properly admitted, it is insufficient to sustain the conviction of defendant. If the book belonged to defendant, it may have been loaned by him to the owner or occupant of the house, and it is just as reasonable to suppose that someone other than defendant concealed the cocaine in its binding. It does not appear that he had any knowledge of the fact that it contained cocaine; nor is there any evidence that defendant at that time was in possession or control of the book. The same presumption does not obtain here against this defendant that would in case the book were found in his own place of residence. The evidence tending to show that he threw something in the stove when the officers entered the room is a suspicious[4] circumstance, but suspicions, however justified, are not sufficient to sustain a conviction. (State v. Riggs, supra; State
v. Konon, supra; State v. Kerrigan,
A case more nearly on a parallel with this than that ofState v. Jacobson, supra, is the case of State v. Cooper,
The judgment is reversed, with direction to the district court of Silver Bow county to dismiss the information and discharge the defendant.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, FORD and MATTHEWS concur.