State v. Morris

422 P.2d 27, 70 Wash. 2d 27, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 884
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1966
Docket38442
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 422 P.2d 27 (State v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Morris, 422 P.2d 27, 70 Wash. 2d 27, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 884 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Hale, J. —

Never judge a book by its cover. April 6, 1965, Seattle police officers found a one-volume treatise on textiles entitled “America’s Fabrics” by Bendure and Pfeiffer in an apartment they believed occupied by Mr. Amos Lee Morris, the appellant. Appellant said that he had seen the book, but had never read or examined it. He was thus unaware that pages 25 through 626 thereof had been cut out to form a rectangular compartment between its covers. Concealed in this cutout, the police found marijuana cigarettes, defined in law as a narcotic drug (RCW 69.33.220 (14)), and Obedrin and Seconal, classified as dangerous drugs (RCW 69.40.061), and accuse Morris of possessing both the book and the drugs.

Amos Lee Morris now appeals the judgment and sentence of 20' years’ confinement imposed on count 1 for possession of narcotic drugs, the marijuana, and 6 months’ confinement in the county jail (suspended) on count 2 for possession of the dangerous drugs, Obedrin and Seconal. Seattle police officers testified that, pursuant to a search warrant, they entered the apartment occupied by appellant at 1916 East Fir Street and, after a search of the bedroom, front room, dining room and kitchen, found the book containing the marijuana cigarettes, the Obedrin and the Seconal pills in a pantry joining the kitchen.

Appellant assigns error to the testimony of J. R., a 16-year-old girl, presented by the state to prove both appellant’s occupancy of the premises and his possession of the narcotics and dangerous drugs. On direct examination in the state’s case in chief, the girl testified that, during March, 1965, a month before she became 16, she had visited the apartment in which the book had been discovered; that she was in the apartment every day between March 16th and March 30th; that appellant Amos Morris and his brother, Frank Morris, lived there.

*29 Following this sparse but elemental testimony, the state asked her no further questions and neither appellant nor his brother, a codefendant, cross-examined her. At the request of the state, she was ordered to remain in attendance.

After the state had rested its case in chief, appellant’s brother, Frank Morris, testified on his own behalf that, although he had been at the apartment the night the officers searched it, he did not live there, but that appellant, his older brother, did. He said that, during the search, one of the officers handed him the book (exhibit No. 1) and asked him who owned it, and he had told the officers he did not know. He testified that he had never seen the book before, and so informed the officers at the time of the search. He said that he spent only one night in the apartment but had helped Amos move in. He had no knowledge of the girl J.R., he said, and had never seen her in the apartment.

Appellant, on his own behalf, testified that he had at one time lived in the apartment at 1916 East Fir; that during this period his brother Frank lived with him; that he had seen the book (exhibit No. 1) only in the possession of one T.E. who carried it around with him in the streets and in pool halls. Appellant said that, although he had paid the rent on the apartment, he had lived at his father’s home until April 1, 1965. He testified he had been arrested and put in city jail April 5th, and was still in jail April 6th, the night the officers found the book in the apartment. He argued that such occupancy as was shown was insufficient to prove his possession of the book.

As to the book, appellant testified he had seen it in the apartment several times, brought there by and kept only in T.E.’s possession, but was unaware of its contents. He testified that he had never read it, examined it, handled it, or given it any attention. He indicated also that he had little interest in other people’s reading habits and would not be inclined to nor had he ever, when seeing T.E. carrying the book, inquired as to its contents. Appellant showed complete indifference to the book and its contents except that he did recognize it as the one T.E. carried about and *30 brought to the apartment several times. Appellant denied that the young girl, J.R., had ever been in the apartment while he was there. He knew her. only from seeing her several times on the street or “Just with the other girls, around cafes and places.”

Then came the testimony which apparently is the basis for one of the assignments of error. The young girl J.R., of the white race, testified, when recalled by the state on rebuttal, that she had stayed all night at the apartment every night from March 16th to March 30th; that appellant Amos and his brother Frank occupied the apartment during that period; that Amos kept his clothing there; that she had first seen the book in the possession of one T.E. in the apartment, referring to the apartment.as “Frank and Amos’ house ... on East Fir”; that T.E. had the book in his possession when he came in, and she saw Amos Morris handle the book; that Amos opened the book and she saw that its contents consisted of plastic containers filled with pills and capsules.

J.R. testified that she saw this book in that apartment at least three other times, that appellant Amos Morris was present in the apartment on each occasion, and that on each of these three latter occasions, she saw him open the book. Only once during these three occasions was she in a position to see the book’s contents, and they were the same as she had earlier described when she had first observed Amos Lee Morris open it.

The certified statement of facts sets forth no objections to any of the foregoing testimony nor from the record can we find where appellant moved to strike it from the record or have the jury ordered to disregard it. The evidence thus stands in the record supplying cogent proof from which the jury could find appellant’s possession of the apartment, the book, and ipso facto the marijuana and drugs. The assignment of error thus raises no points on review, for we can find no place in the record where the trial court had an opportunity to consider and rule upon these claimed errors. State v. Johnson, 69 Wn.2d 264, *31 418 P.2d 238 (1966); State v. Miller, 66 Wn.2d 535, 403 P.2d 884 (1965).

Appellant also assigns error to the testimony of J.R. on the further grounds that her presence in court as a witness for the state tended to prove him guilty of another crime, i.e., contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and that, because she was of the white race and he and his brother' of the Negro race, her testimony was unfairly prejudicial.

Appellant’s arguments as to the witness’s racial origin are without merit. Since the identity of the witness was not an issue, her racial origin and skin coloring were complete irrelevancies and the objection raised on that ground thus properly overruled. As to proof of other crimes, we see little merit there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
422 P.2d 27, 70 Wash. 2d 27, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morris-wash-1966.