Murray v. State

798 N.E.2d 895, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2149, 2003 WL 22718017
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 2003
Docket01A02-0303-CR-225
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 798 N.E.2d 895 (Murray v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. State, 798 N.E.2d 895, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2149, 2003 WL 22718017 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SULLIVAN, Judge.

Appellant, Teddy Murray, appeals from his convictions for Possession of Chemical Reagents or Precursors with the Intent to Manufacture Methamphetamine, a Class C felony ("possession of precursors"), 1 Operating a Motor Vehicle After Having Been Adjudged an Habitual Traffic Offender, a Class D felony, 2 Receiving Stolen Property, a Class D felony, 3 Resisting Law Enforcement, a Class D felony, 4 and Criminal *898 Recklessness, a Class A misdemeanor. 5 Murray also appeals from the determination that he is an habitual substance offender. 6 Upon appeal, Murray presents three issues for our review, which we renumber and restate as:

I. Whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury,
II. Whether the crime of possession of chemical reagents or precursors with intent to manufacture methamphetamine is a "substance offense" for purposes of the habitual substance offender statute, and
III. Whether the sentence imposed is contrary to law.

We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

On November 18, 2001, Indiana State Police Trooper Kurt Jack was on patrol in his marked police car when he observed a pickup truck traveling at a high rate of speed. Trooper Jack tracked the vehicle with a radar unit and determined that the truck was traveling seventy-two miles per hour in a fifty-five mile per hour zone. Murray was later identified as the driver and the sole occupant of the truck. As Trooper Jack began to follow, Murray accelerated away from him. Trooper Jack caught up to the truck within two miles, at which time he activated the red lights on his vehicle Murray rapidly decelerated and turned the truck into a corn field and thereafter led Trooper Jack and approximately ten to fifteen other law enforcement officers on a high-speed chase which spanned two Indiana counties and eventually ended in Ohio when Murray jumped out of the still rolling truck and started running through a wooded area. Murray crossed the St. James River on foot and was eventually apprehended when officers found him hiding beneath the roots of an uprooted tree.

After Murray was apprehended, the truck was impounded and Trooper Brian Walker conducted an inventory search. Strewn throughout the inside of the truck, Trooper Walker found five twenty-four count boxes of Sine-Aid cold medicine, two twenty-four-count boxes of Roundy's Aphedrid cold medicine, one twenty-four-count box of Comtrex cold medication, two cans of starting fluid (e. ether), a box containing ten Mason jars, a four-pound box of salt, a cut segment of a garden hose, two lithium batteries, 7 a .22 caliber rifle, and miscellaneous grocery items.

The troopers also determined that Murray was an habitual traffic violator and that his license had been suspended for a ten-year period to end in September 2006. Further, during the course of the chase, Trooper Jack learned that the license plate number on the truck was registered to another vehicle. Indeed, a piece of sandpaper obscured the truck's VIN number, the steering column had been "punched," a red stripe had been painted over an existing silver stripe, and handrails had been added to the bed of the truck. As it turned out, the truck Murray was driving had been reported stolen by Murray's cousin.

On November 14, 2001, the State filed an information charging Murray with five counts stemming from the November 13 incident. On November 29, 2001, the State filed an additional information alleging Murray to be an habitual substance offender. The case proceeded to a jury *899 trial in Murray's absence on January 6 and 7, 2008. At the conclusion of the evidence, the jury found Murray guilty on all counts. At the conclusion of the second phase of the trial, the jury found that Murray was an habitual substance offender. The trial court sentenced Murray to ten years imprisonment for the underlying convictions, enhanced by eight years for the habitual substance offender determination. 8

I

Jury Instruction

Murray first argues that the trial court committed reversible error in instructing the jury. At trial, the State tendered the following instruction, which the trial court gave as Final Instruction 19:

"The possession of a large amount of ephedrine and/or pseudoephedrine, along with other chemical reagents or precursors, is circumstantial evidence of intent to manufacture methamphetamine. If you find from the facts presented that the defendant was in possession of an amount of ephedrine and/or pseudoephedrine that is greater than that needed for his own personal use, along with other chemical reagents or precursors, you may infer that the defendant possessed the ephedrine and/or pseudoephedrine with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine." Appendix at 181.

Murray objected to the instruction specifically challenging the use of the word "large" in the first sentence and to that part of the second sentence which referred to an amount "that is greater than that needed for his own personal use." Murray requested that the instruction be stricken or, at the very least, be modified to exclude the "large" and "personal use" language. Murray based his objection upon the fact that the Legislature had removed the "personal use" exception from the definition of "manufacture" and that the instruction effectively put such back in.

In response, the State argued that the "personal use" language was not derived from the old definition of manufacture; rather it was directed toward the inference which could be drawn from the possession of a large quantity of an item-ie., cold medication-which in and of itself is legal to possess. In overruling Murray's objection, the trial court explained:

"The reason for overruling the objection is two parts. One, the change in the statute, it appears to me that that made it easier to prove this matter and I think that the instruction as written actually makes it harder to prove because it followed an older language and I think that's in the benefit of the defendant and secondly, the logic of these cases, it seems to me is that you have household ingredients that can be compounded to make an illegal drug and so the proof of intent to do that would be a large quantity of certain ingredients and I think that given that, that instruction, as proposed makes better sense and echoes the law as I understand it." Transcript at 362. ~

, The purpose of jury instructions is to inform the jury of the law applicable to the facts without misleading the jury and to enable it to comprehend the case clearly and arrive at a just, fair, and correct verdict. Dill v. State, 741 N.E.2d 1230, 1232 (Ind.2001).

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Bluebook (online)
798 N.E.2d 895, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2149, 2003 WL 22718017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-state-indctapp-2003.