State v. Morgan

120 S.W.3d 795, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 2003 WL 22805518
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 2003
Docket25453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 S.W.3d 795 (State v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Morgan, 120 S.W.3d 795, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 2003 WL 22805518 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

KENNETH W. SHRUM, Judge.

A jury found Kim David Morgan (“Defendant”) guilty of two counts of selling a controlled substance (methamphetamine) in violation of section 195.211.1 He was sentenced as a prior and persistent offender. See § 558.016.3. Defendant urges reversal because he claims there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict and the trial court erred by sentencing him as a prior and persistent offender. We reverse in part; we affirm in part.

This court accepts as true all evidence favorable to the State, including all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence while disregarding all evidence and inferences to the contrary. State v. Withrow, 8 S.W.3d 75, 77 (Mo.banc 1999). “An inference is a logical and reasonable conclusion of a fact not presented by direct evidence but which by the process of logic and reason, a trier of fact may conclude exists from the established facts.” State v. Hyde, 682 S.W.2d 103, 106[8] (Mo.App.1984). Although an inference only satisfies a party’s burden of producing evidence with regard to a particular fact, a trier of fact may accept the existence of the assumed fact. Id. at 106[9].

[797]*797On April 24, 2002, the State filed an information charging the Defendant with two counts of selling a controlled substance. This information was later amended to allege that Defendant was a prior and persistent offender (“Case 1”).

Another information was filed on August 14, 2002. It charged Defendant with two additional counts of selling controlled substances, but did not allege his prior and persistent offender status (“Case 2”). The two cases were “consolidated” for trial which was held on January 19, 2003.

When the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict in Case 1, a mistrial was declared. However, the jury convicted Defendant on both counts in Case 2. The following are facts that relate solely to Case 2.

On January 17, 2002, Defendant told Michael Bane (“Bane”) that he could get Bane a gram of methamphetamine for $100. Bane, a paid informant, answered that he had to get the money from a friend and would return later. Bane then contacted officer Mark McClendon (“McClen-don”) and told him he could make a buy. After McClendon agreed to this, he searched Bane’s car, “set [Bane] up with a recorder,” and gave him $100 to make the buy. As planned, Bane went back to Defendant’s house and picked him up. After giving Defendant the money, they drove to “some apartments” on “South Main.” Defendant then got out of the car and told Bane to “circle the block” (which he did). By the time he circled the block, Defendant had gone inside, exited the apartment, and was walking on the sidewalk. Bane stopped, Defendant got in the car, and Defendant handed him a gram of methamphetamine. All the while, Bane was under surveillance by drug task force officers. However, the recording device worn by Bane did not work on this occasion. After Bane returned Defendant to his home, he went directly to McClendon’s office and gave the task force personnel the drugs he purchased from Defendant.2

Approximately one week later, Bane arranged to make another drug buy from Defendant. The same initial procedure was followed by task force personnel, i.e., Bane and his vehicle were searched, he was given a recorder and fitted with a device whereby officers could listen to the conversations between Bane and Defendant, and Bane was given drug purchase money. Bane then picked up Defendant, gave him $100, and dropped him off at the same apartment. As before, Bane was told to circle the block, but on this occasion, he had to go around the block more than once because Defendant was in the apartment “14,15 minutes.” When Defendant finally exited the apartment, he gave Bane the purchased methamphetamine. As he took Defendant home, Bane gave Defendant some of the methamphetamine. He delivered the remainder to task force employees. On this occasion, the conversations between Defendant and Bane were discernable to task force workers. For instance, they heard Bane ask Defendant if his source at the apartment would sell an “eight ball all at once,” i.e., one-eighth of an ounce of methamphetamine. Defendant’s response “indicated that they weren’t willing to sell an eight ball ... all at one time but they would sell grams at a time.” Moreover, when Defendant got in Bane’s car with the drugs, he stated that the person inside the apartment produced two packages and “he picked the fattest one or the biggest one.”3

Although the information filed in Case 2 charged Defendant as a principal offender, [798]*798the jury instructions inexplicably hypothesized Defendant acted as an accomplice.4 Moreover, the Case 2 information did not allege Defendant’s prior and persistent offender status, yet the trial court sentenced him as such. These discrepancies under-gird Defendant’s claim of entitlement to a new trial.

Point I: Sufficiency of the Evidence to Support Verdict Directors

In Point I, Defendant maintains there was insufficient evidence from which the jury could find the offenses were committed as hypothesized in the two verdict-directing instructions, i.e., that “persons unknown sold methamphetamine,” and that Defendant “acted together with or aided” such other persons in committing that offense.5 Specifically, Defendant argues that “the State produced no evidence as to the identity or mental state of the ‘persons unknown’ and therefore the jury had no basis to find that element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.”

“The standard of appellate review of a claim of insufficient evidence to support conviction is whether there was sufficient evidence from which a jury might have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Parnell, 21 S.W.3d 896, 899 (Mo.App.2000).

We first examine evidence that supports Defendant’s conviction of the Count IV charge, i.e., the second buy in Case 2 where the recorded conversations between Defendant and Bane were presented to the jury. Contrary to Defendant’s assertions, his own admissions provided evidence from which a trier of fact could reasonably infer that “unknown persons” existed, that such persons were acting with Defendant to sell this substance, and those unknown persons knew the substance was methamphetamine. For instance, the jury, via the recording, heard Defendant discuss with Bane his source for methamphetamine, the source’s refusal to sell an “eight ball,” and how the source produced two bags of drugs from which Defendant could choose. From this, the jury was entitled to believe that “persons unknown” existed.

Defendant’s conversations with Bane, coupled with McClendon’s testimony, also provided a basis by which the jury could reasonably and logically conclude that these unknown persons knew the substance being sold was methamphetamine. Defendant had conversations with Bane about his “source”-for the drugs. Officer McClendon explained to the jury that the term “eight ball” was a frequently used reference to illicit drugs, i.e., 3.5 grams (one-eighth ounce) of methamphetamine or crack cocaine. Consequently, it was reasonable for the jury to infer that Defendant’s statement to Bane that his source would sell only grams and not an “eight ball” was an obvious reference to selling drugs.

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Related

Morgan v. State
319 S.W.3d 514 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2010)
State v. Morgan
120 S.W.3d 795 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.3d 795, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 1869, 2003 WL 22805518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morgan-moctapp-2003.