State v. Beaver

346 S.E.2d 476, 317 N.C. 643, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2427
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 12, 1986
Docket710A85
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 346 S.E.2d 476 (State v. Beaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Beaver, 346 S.E.2d 476, 317 N.C. 643, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2427 (N.C. 1986).

Opinion

MITCHELL, Justice.

The defendant was convicted of manufacturing a controlled substance (marijuana) upon a proper indictment and was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of three years. Three related *644 charges were dismissed at the close of the State’s evidence. The defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals.

The majority of the panel in the Court of Appeals concluded that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of constructive possession of the marijuana by the defendant. As a result, the Court of Appeals reversed the defendant’s conviction. Hedrick, C. J., dissented. We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.

The State’s evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, tended to show inter alia that on 28 July 1982, the State Bureau of Investigation and the Cherokee County Sheriffs Department were jointly involved in a marijuana eradication program. Special Agent Rick Whisenhunt of the State Bureau of Investigation testified that in July 1982 he was responsible for drug enforcement activities in several North Carolina counties. On 28 July 1982, he was conducting an aerial surveillance and ground operation in a search for marijuana in Cherokee County. A nine-person ground crew followed the directions of an aircraft pilot and went to the Beaver residence in the Violet Community.

The defendant Howard Beaver first was seen coming from behind the house. He was wearing a pair of green coveralls and a headband and “sweating heavily.” Special Agent Thomas Frye told the defendant that marijuana plants had been seen from the air growing behind the residence and asked for permission to go through the yard to secure the plants. The defendant stated that his mother would not appreciate their driving through the yard. He directed the officers to use a logging road located to the right of the residence. The defendant stated that he and his mother lived in the house.

The officers then followed the logging road and found a barn approximately seventy-five yards from the house. The barn contained drying marijuana plants. The marijuana was “still on the stalk hung upside down like tobacco in a barn.” The area around the barn “was all grown up but the worst areas were bush-hogged.” 1 A path which appeared to have been cut and mowed *645 with a “bushhog” and tractor ran directly from the yard of the Beaver residence to the barn. Other paths had been “bush-hogged” and mowed from the house directly to patches of marijuana growing behind the house.

The officers located a total of five marijuana patches growing at distances of from three hundred yards to five hundred yards behind the house. The plants appeared to have been well fertilized and watered and were from eight to twelve feet high. Fertilizer bags and water jugs were found in the mouth of a nearby stream.

Whisenhunt testified that he did not see any other roads leading from the state road in front of the Beaver residence to the marijuana patches. The logging road was passable only by vehicles with four-wheel drive. He stated that the road was “red clay and washed really badly” and “overgrown on either side.”

While the officers were in the fields of growing marijuana, the defendant was seen standing nearby. He had removed his coveralls and was wearing trousers and a shirt. The defendant was placed under arrest shortly thereafter. As the officers prepared to take the defendant back to his residence in one of their vehicles, the defendant stated that they could not drive directly to the house. He then gave directions to the officers as to the best route back to the house and told them the location of groundhog holes and other obstacles they should avoid on the way.

The defendant’s mother was at the house when the officers brought him there from the marijuana patch. She began to cry when she was told that her son had been arrested for manufacturing marijuana. Agent Frye testified that the defendant’s mother then told the defendant: “I told' you you’d get caught. I told you not to mess with that stuff.” The defendant responded: “Shut up Mama, shut up Mama. They hadn’t caught me in the fields, they hadn’t caught me doing anything. Shut up.”

While being transported to jail the defendant said that he had known the marijuana plants were being grown behind his residence, but that he was not going to tell anyone because “it ought to be legal anyhow.” He further said that he was on parole from prison in Kansas and could not tell anyone about the marijuana because a condition of his parole was that he not act as an inform *646 ant. The defendant asked Whisenhunt how many pounds of marijuana he estimated would be taken. Whisenhunt said at least three hundred pounds. The defendant then said: “Well, there won’t be that much after it dries. I have seen it drying in barns before and it really loses its weight.”

C. D. Holbrook, Special Agent and the Chief Pilot for the State Bureau of Investigation, also testified. On 28 July 1982, he was piloting an aircraft and making an aerial search for growing marijuana in Cherokee County. He spotted what appeared to be marijuana growing behind the defendant’s home and directed the ground crews to go there. Holbrook testified that from the air he saw “very clearly defined paths that went from the house area back in the direction of the patches.” He informed the officers in the ground crews to go to the rear of the house where they would find paths leading to the patches.

Cherokee County Deputy Sheriff Clay Hardin testified that he accompanied other deputies and agents of the State Bureau of Investigation to the Beaver residence on 28 July 1982. The only indication of any recent cultivation in the vegetable garden behind the Beaver home was found at one spot where it appeared that someone had been digging potatoes in “just a small area there, big enough for a meal.” However, “The tater digging was about a day or two old.” Grass had already started growing in that spot.

Hardin also testified that there were paths leading to the marijuana patches and that there was a trail four to five feet from the side of the barn to the edge of the yard. In addition: “The barn was growed up except for one area right when you go in the barn that had just been . . . bushhogged apart and go into the barn.” Ragweeds, milkweeds, and itch weeds were growing higher than Hardin’s head in the area between the barn and a tool shed at the edge of the yard of the Beaver home. A patch had been “bushhogged” through the weeds and was “wide enough for any man could walk with ease through there without getting soaking wet.” A person standing at the shed could see a person standing at the side of the barn and carry on a conversation with him “without straining your voice.”

The State contends that the Court of Appeals erred by reversing the judgment of the trial court. The State argues that the *647 evidence at trial was sufficient to require submission of the charge of manufacturing marijuana to the jury and to support the verdict and judgment against the defendant. We agree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 S.E.2d 476, 317 N.C. 643, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-beaver-nc-1986.