Branch v. Mills

1972 OK CR 200, 500 P.2d 590
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 16, 1972
DocketA-17502
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1972 OK CR 200 (Branch v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch v. Mills, 1972 OK CR 200, 500 P.2d 590 (Okla. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

OPINION

SIMMS, Judge:

Petitioner, William Max Branch, seeks Prohibition against the District Court of Oklahoma County from proceeding against him to jury trial, following preliminary hearing, on the felony charge of Unlawful Possession of Hashish with Intent to Distribute, Oklahoma County Case No. CRF-72-568. Petitioner’s theory is the hashish charge arose out of a single, continuing transaction involving two misdemeanors, to which misdemeanors petitioner has previously pled guilty and been sentenced. Petitioner specifically contends that to place him on trial on the felony charge amounts to placing him twice in jeopardy for the same offense.

Writ denied.

Evidence at the preliminary hearing indicated that Robert Shahan, an Oklahoma City Police Officer, on March 9, 1972, at approximately 5:15 P.M., went to an address designated as 3419-½ North McKinley, armed with an arrest warrant for the petitioner for the offense of Unlawful Distribution of a Controlled, Dangerous Drug. The defendant was apprehended in the front yard of that address. Following the apprehension, a search of his person by the officers disclosed a small tinfoil packet containing a dark-like substance, in petitioners’ right front jeans pocket. At this point in time, Officer Shahan “also placed him under arrest on this” (Prelim.Trans. 9).

According to the preliminary hearing record, on the way to the police station, Officer Shahan, while helping the petitioner put a billfold in petitioners shirt pocket, discovered six other tin-foil wrapped packages in the shirt pocket, which he seized from petitioner and put in a packet marked “Sealed No. 4020”.

After petitioner was booked in the Oklahoma City Police Department, the arresting officers obtained a search warrant for the residence at the address above de[592]*592scribed, went back to this designated address, and searched the house and found marijuana therein. The exact amount of time which elapsed between the arrest of the person of petitioner, and the execution of the search warrant to search his home is not clear from the record, however, it appears the search warrant was executed within a period of one to two hours following the arrest of petitioner.

Petitioner was subsequently charged in Case No. CRM-72-383 with the offense of Unlawful Possession of Controlled Drugs (amphetamines); CRM-72-384, Unlawful Possession of Marijuana (the marijuana found in the house, and CRF-72-568, Unlawful Possession of Hashish with Intent to Distribute (the hashish taken from the person of the petitioner).

Petitioner entered pleas of guilty to the offense involving amphetamines and the marijuana found in his home.

Oklahoma’s Constitutional provision relating to double jeopardy reads :

“Nor shall any person be twice put in jeopardy of life or liberty for the same offense.” Const. Art. II, § 21.

Title 22, O.S.1971, § 14, provides:

“No person can be subjected to a second prosecution for a public offense for which he has once been prosecuted and duly convicted or acquitted, except as hereinafter provided for new trials.”

Title 22, O.S.1971, § 522, provides:

“When the defendant shall have been convicted or acquitted upon an indictment or information, the conviction or acquittal is a bar to another indictment or information for the offense charged in the former, or for an attempt to commit the same, or for an offense necessarily included therein, of which he might have been convicted under that indictment or information.”

Petitioner relies, in addition to the Oklahoma Constitutional and statutory provisions, upon the cases of Beaman v. State, 69 Okl.Cr. 455, 104 P.2d 260; State v. Hunt, Okl.Cr., 330 P.2d 756; Heldenbrand v. Mills, Okl.Cr., 476 P.2d 375; Estep v. State, 11 Okl.Cr. 103, 143 P. 64; Householder v. Ramey, Okl.Cr., 485 P.2d 247.

A careful and close reading of the opinions relied upon by petitioner to establish his claim of double jeopardy reveal that there is a vital fact distinction between these cases and the case at bar.

In Beaman v. State, supra, officers obtained a search warrant for defendants’ premises, as well as a warrant to search the automobile belonging to Beaman. As the officers approached the house to be searched, they saw Beaman coming toward his car with a basket containing several pints of intoxicating liquor which the officers seized. They thereafter went directly into the house, under authority of the search warrant, and the search revealed approximately 160 pints of tax paid liquor in a bedroom closet. The county attorney filed one charge against Beaman for the liquor contained in the basket and a separate charge against Beaman for the liquor found in the house under the search warrant.

Beaman was tried to a jury and convicted under the information charging possession of the liquor which was contained in the basket which Beaman held at the time the officers approached the house.

Before trial on the information accusing Beaman of possession of liquor found in the house, Beaman entered a plea of former jeopardy by reason of the former trial and conviction upon an information charging possession of intoxicating liquor, which grew out of the same transaction for which the information upon which he was to go to trial was filed.

This Court held that the county attorney had no authority to divide the offense oi possession of the liquors in the house and the possession of liquors just outside the house. All constituted one transaction, and [593]*593one charge of possession only should have been filed.

We observe, in Beaman, supra, that the acts of the officers was uninterrupted and that they went directly from the place where Beaman was found to have liquor in the basket into the house. We also must emphasize that Beaman is distinguishable from the case at bar, in that the elements of proof necessary to both possession charges were identical.

State v. Hunt, supra, is distinguishable, as well, from the petitioners case, in that there was one single act of sale by defendant Hunt to four different high school boys, all minors, who purchased 3.2 beer from defendant. In Hunt, supra, this Court sustained a plea of double jeopardy against prosecution for sale to each of the four high school boys.

Hawk v. Mills, Okl.Cr., 476 P.2d 86, cited by petitioner in his brief deals with the applicability of the theory of collateral estoppel to criminal proceeding as established by the United States Supreme Court in Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 90 S.Ct. 1189, 25 L.Ed.2d 469. Hawk, supra, dealt with various types of drugs seized as a result of a single search of a residence. After trial by a jury, which jury found the defendant Hawk to be not guilty of the offense of possession of certain drugs, the state attempted to prosecute him for possession of a different type and description of drugs found in the single search. This Court properly held the theory of collateral estoppel to apply.

The theory of collateral estoppel cannot be enlarged to encompass the facts of the case at bar, when there are two searches, separate in time and under different authority.

Householder v.

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Branch v. Mills
1972 OK CR 200 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK CR 200, 500 P.2d 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-mills-oklacrimapp-1972.