Noy v. State

83 P.3d 538, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 235, 2003 WL 23207968
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 29, 2003
DocketA-8327
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 83 P.3d 538 (Noy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noy v. State, 83 P.3d 538, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 235, 2003 WL 23207968 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

A jury convicted David S. Noy of violating AS 11.71.060(a), which prohibits possession of less than eight ounces of marijuana. The marijuana was found in Noy’s home. Noy appeals his conviction, arguing that he was convicted for engaging in conduct (possession of marijuana for personal use in one’s home) that is protected by the privacy provision of the Alaska Constitution (article I, section 22). 1

We agree that Noy may have been convicted for conduct that is constitutionally protected. As we explain here, Alaska citizens have the right to possess less than four ounces of marijuana in their home for personal use. Accordingly, we reverse Noy’s conviction. The State remains free to retry Noy if the State believes it can prove that Noy possessed at least four ounces of marijuana.

Noy also claims that the district court should have allowed him to raise the defense of medical necessity. However, as we explain, the district court properly rejected Noy’s proposed defense.

Facts of the case

The North Pole police contacted Noy at his home and told him they smelled growing marijuana. The police searched Noy’s house and found approximately eleven ounces of harvested marijuana, consisting of buds, leaves, and stalks. The police also found five immature marijuana plants. The police did not, however, find any scales or packaging material; nor was there any other evidence that Noy was engaged in any commercial conduct involving marijuana.

Except for the immature plants, all the plant material — including the buds, leaves, and stalks — was placed in a paper bag and sent to the state crime lab for identification and weighing. The immature plants were not tested, nor did they form part of the State’s case. Ultimately, Noy was charged with possessing more than eight ounces of harvested marijuana.

At trial, however, the State did not offer the paper bag in evidence. Therefore, the jury had to rely on testimony and photographs showing what the police had placed in the bag. Based on the testimony and photographs, the paper bag obviously contained stalks along with buds and leaves. Among other things, the jury was instructed that “[m]arijuana means the seeds, leaves, buds, and flowers of the plant, Cannabis, whether growing or not, but it does not include the stalks of the plants, or fiber produced from the stalks.” The jury found Noy not guilty of possessing eight ounces or more of marijuana, but guilty of possessing less than eight ounces.

Alaska Statute 11.71.060(a)(1), the statute that prohibits possession of less than eight ounces of marijuana under any and all circumstances, violates article I, section 22 of the Alaska Constitution as construed in Ra-vin v. State

Noy was convicted under AS 11.71.060(a)(1), which makes it a class B misdemeanor to use or display any amount of marijuana, or to possess “one or more preparations, compounds, mixtures, or substances” containing marijuana “of an aggregate weight of less than one-half pound.” 2 This statute criminalizes conduct that the Alaska Supreme Court has declared is protected under article I, section 22 of the Alaska Constitution.

Article I, section 22 states: “The right of the people to privacy is recognized and shall not be infringed. The legislature shall implement this section.”

*541 In Ravin, the Alaska Supreme Court held that this provision of our constitution protects possession of marijuana for personal use in one’s home. The court acknowledged that there is no fundamental right to possess' or ingest marijuana. Nevertheless, the court held that article I, section 22 gives people a heightened expectation of privacy with respect to their personal activities within their home. 3 The court held that this heightened right of privacy “encompass[ed] the possession and ingestion of ... marijuana in a purely personal, non-commercial context in the home” unless the state could show that such an intrusion into people’s privacy bore “a close and substantial relationship'... to a legitimate governmental interest” — that is, unless the state proved “that the public health or welfare [would] in fact suffer” if private possession of marijuana were not prohibited. 4

The supreme court concluded that the state had demonstrated a substantial interest in regulating the use of marijuana by drivers, in prohibiting the use of marijuana by children, in regulating the use or possession of marijuana in public places, and in regulating the buying and selling of marijuana. 5 The supreme court added that the state could validly prohibit “[pjossession at home of amounts- of marijuana indicative of [an] intent to sell rather than possession for personal use.” 6 However, the court concluded that the state had shown “no adequate justification for ... prohibiting] possession of marijuana by an adult for personal consumption in the home.” 7

In 1975, following the supreme court’s decision in Ravin, the Alaska Legislature amended AS 17.12 (the then-existing marijuana laws) to take into account the supreme court’s ruling. The legislature exempted marijuana from the normal penalties for possession of “depressant, hallucinogenic, or stimulant drugs” 8 and enacted two special provisions governing marijuana possession:former AS 17.12.110(d) and (e). 9

Former AS 17.12.110(d) prohibited public use of marijuana, possession of more than an ounce of marijuana in a public place, possession of any amount of marijuana while operating a motor vehicle or airplane, and possession of any amount of marijuana by a minor. The maximum penalty for violating these provisions was a fine of $1,000.

Former AS 17.12.110(e) prohibited possession by an adult of one ounce or less of marijuana in a public place. It also prohibited possession by an adult of any amount of marijuana for personal use in a non-public place. This second provision clearly encom--passed possession of marijuana in one’s home for personal use — conduct that, in Ravin, the supreme court had said was protected from governmental intrusion. However, the legislature declared that there was no criminal penalty for violating subsection (e); rather, the offender faced a “civil fine of not more than $100.”

Seven years later, in 1982, the legislature moved Alaska’s drug laws from Title 17 to Title 11. The provisions of AS 17.12 dealing with marijuana were repealed, and new marijuana provisions were enacted in AS 11.71. 10 In this 1982 revision of the marijuana laws, the legislature dropped the civil fine for possession of marijuana for personal use in a non-public place — thus ending any potential conflict with Ravin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P.3d 538, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 235, 2003 WL 23207968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noy-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.