Ritter v. Commonwealth

173 S.E.2d 799, 210 Va. 732, 1970 Va. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 27, 1970
DocketRecord 7159
StatusPublished
Cited by138 cases

This text of 173 S.E.2d 799 (Ritter v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritter v. Commonwealth, 173 S.E.2d 799, 210 Va. 732, 1970 Va. LEXIS 193 (Va. 1970).

Opinions

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Harold Edward Ritter, Jr., defendant, seeks to reverse a judgment entered by the Circuit Court of the City of Virginia Beach on July 25, 1968, finding him guilty of possession of a narcotic drug (marijuana) in violation of Virginia’s Uniform Narcotic Drug Act, and sentencing him to three-year term in the penitentiary.

On January 31, 1968, Sgt. L. O. Sutton obtained a search warrant for the residence of Harold E. Ritter, 1400 East Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Virginia. Defendant, then an eighteen-year-old student at First Colonial High School, resided in this dwelling with his parents. The dwelling was searched, and no drugs were found.

The officers had noted the delivery and deposit by the postman of a package in the Ritter mailbox and questioned Mrs. Harold E. Ritter, mother of defendant, as to any package that defendant may have received. Sgt. Sutton testified that, after being told by Mrs. Ritter that she had not collected the mail for this particular day, “[W]e walked out to the mailbox and she removed the mail from the box and handed me this package addressed to the defendant”. On cross-examination Sutton elaborated as follows:

“I asked her at the house had she checked the mail that day and, as I recall, we didn’t ask her for it. She found the package, she saw it, obviously knowing there was such a package there, and I am not certain whether we were in the driveway or actually at the box whenever she handed it to us. I am sure we were at least as far from here to this doorway away from the box at the time she handed it to us. Whether we were back up in the driveway or not, I am not certain.”

[734]*734The wrappings on the package showed that it was sent from Cocoa Beach, Florida, marked “First Class Mail”, and addressed to Eddie Ritter, 1400 East Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Virginia.

After receiving the package from the mother, Sgt. Sutton went to the First Colonial High School where defendant and numerous other students were being interviewed by police officers investigating narcotic violations. Defendant had not been questioned at that time.

Ritter was taken into an office at the school and was told that he was being interviewed “in reference to his violation of the narcotic drug laws”. Before being asked any questions, defendant was fully advised of his constitutional rights. He indicated that he understood, signed the “legal rights interview form” and agreed to make a statement. The form which he signed recites that the interview was “in connection with the alleged commission of the crime of Possession of Narcotic Drugs”.

Sutton then handed to Ritter the unopened package which had been concealed beneath the officer’s coat and asked defendant to open it. The officer either gave Ritter his knife, or assisted him by clipping the binding tape.

Defendant opened the package and viewed its contents. Sutton asked him: “What is this?” and defendant replied: “It’s pot.”

When asked who sent it, defendant replied that any of 200 people could have sent it to him. His attention was directed to the Cocoa Beach, Florida postmark, and Ritter said that any of 50 people could have sent it to him from there; that he could have mentioned to anyone that he wanted some marijuana and they could have sent it to him whenever they came in contact with it.

After identifying the contents of the package as “pot”, the “jargon” of drug users for marijuana or Cannabis Sativa L., Ritter was asked if it were his. Defendant’s answer was: “It must be mine, it’s got my name on it.”

Ritter was then advised that he was under arrest for possession of marijuana. He was searched, and the officers found in his wallet a money order receipt from the Western Union Telegraph Company for $42.50 ($40 plus $2.50 charges). The receipt shows that on January 24, 1968, Eddie Ritter, of 1400 East Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Virginia, sent $40 to Gary Price, 220 Lincoln Avenue, Apt. B-10, Cape Canaveral, Florida, a city testified to be contiguous to Cocoa Beach.

Defendant was questioned as to his use and knowledge of mari[735]*735juana in the Virginia Beach area. Sutton said he was cooperative and showed him four or five different fields or places where he knew that marijuana was growing.

The contents of the package were taken by Sutton to the Crime Laboratory in the City of Norfolk and analyzed in his presence. A copy of the official laboratory report was introduced in evidence. It is dated January 31,1968, signed by Heinz H. Karnitschnig, M. D., Deputy Chief Medical Examiner, and Ramon A. Morano, M. S. C., State Toxicologist. The report shows the substance submitted to be “loose weed for identification” which analyzed as “weed (30.5 Gms.): identified to be cannabis (marihuana).”

Evidence was adduced to show that 30.5 grams of cannabis would have a price range from $25 to $50, depending on the area it came from, the demand and the supply.

Sgt. Sutton was the only witness for the Commonwealth. Defendant did not testify and called only one witness in his behalf—Gary Price.

Price, a resident of Virginia Beach, was attending college in Florida in January, 1968, and admitted receiving from Eddie Ritter a money order for $40.

He testified that following the receipt of a letter from defendant, he phoned the latter and Ritter asked him to purchase some beads and a bracelet for his girl friend; that during the course of their conversation, Price requested payment of a $20 loan made defendant in July, 1967; and that Ritter agreed to send this and $20 more for the beads and bracelet.

This witness said that he could not get the bracelet but did obtain the beads, for which he paid “around $10” and figured “it was worth $10 to get them”.

Price further testified that a package containing the beads, together with an accompanying letter, was sent to Ritter “around the end of January or the beginning of February, something like that. I can’t remember exactly”. He denied sending marijuana to defendant, but admitted knowledge of this drug, saying: “I have an idea what it is. I mean, I have heard.” When asked if his associates “didn’t try to sell it, push it or give it away”, Price responded that “he did not know, that he did not look into it, and that it was not any of his business”.

Defendant contends that the package containing the marijuana was not lawfully obtained by the officers, and therefore should not have been admitted in evidence. We disagree.

[736]*736The evidence before us shows that there was no search of the mailbox by the officers or seizure of the package by them. The mailbox was opened by the mother of defendant, and a package addressed to him was freely and voluntarily given by her to the officers. There is no evidence that they threatened Mrs. Ritter, used any force or exercised any coercion to induce her to deliver the package.

Defendant cites Bumper v. North Carolina, 391 U. S. 543, 88 S. Ct. 1788, 20 L. ed. 2d 797 (1968). There the officers represented to defendant’s grandmother, who was in possession of the premises, that they had a search warrant. A search was conducted, and a rifle was found which was subsequently introduced in evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.E.2d 799, 210 Va. 732, 1970 Va. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritter-v-commonwealth-va-1970.