State v. Starks

419 S.W.2d 82, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 819
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 11, 1967
Docket52157
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 419 S.W.2d 82 (State v. Starks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Starks, 419 S.W.2d 82, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 819 (Mo. 1967).

Opinions

HENLEY, Presiding Judge.

Defendant was charged by information with unlawful possession of a stimulant drug, amphetamine hydrochloride. Section 195.240 (all references to statutes are to RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., unless otherwise indicated). A jury was waived; he was tried before the court and found guilty; his motion for new trial was overruled and he was sentenced to'imprisonment for five years. Section 195.270. He appeals. The case comes to the writer on reassignment.

[83]*83The information, alleging prior felony-convictions, charged that defendant “ * * on October IS, 1965, at the City of St. Louis aforesaid, did unlawfully and feloni-ously have in his possession a drug which is designated by the Missouri State Division of Health to be a stimulant, to-wit: an amount of 0.098 grams of Amphetamine Hydrochloride in violation of Chapter 195, Section 195.240 Revised Statutes of the State of Missouri, 1959.”

The evidence showed that on the above date, around 11 p. m., two St. Louis police officers were cruising west in the 4400 block of Delmar when they saw defendant and a companion, walking east on Delmar, turn and walk on to the parking lot of a gas station. Defendant had his hands behind his back and the officers observed an object drop from behind him and fall between his legs. It was a flat packet approximately an inch or so square, silver or aluminum foil in color, light in weight and it glinted and fluttered as it fell. The officers testified defendant denied having dropped anything or any knowledge of the packet. The packet was found on the ground behind defendant, close to his right foot. The packet contained a “white powderish substance.” Defendant’s counsel stipulated that the contents of the packet were checked by the laboratory technician and that “this package contained amphetamine”, .098 grams.

There was no proof by anyone as to what amphetamine hydrochloride is.

In State v. Bridges, Mo., 398 S.W.2d 1, the charge against defendant specified “amphetamine hydrochloride” and the proof showed the substance in question was amphetamine hydrochloride. The state contended that the indictment charged distribution of amphetamine itself, because amphetamine hydrochloride is not a derivative but a compound or mixture containing the proscribed drug amphetamine. But there was no proof to support that contention. The conviction was reversed and the cause remanded to give the state an opportunity to produce such proof as it could that “ * * * the compound in question is not a derivative of amphetamine but rather a compound or mixture containing the proscribed drug amphetamine itself.” See also: State v. Ransom, Mo., 412 S.W.2d 125.

In this case the information charges defendant with possession of “amphetamine hydrochloride”, but the proof shows the packet contained amphetamine; hence, there is no question involved here, as there was in Bridges, supra, requiring proof that the substance in the packet was not a derívate of amphetamine but was a compound containing amphetamine. The proof it that it was amphetamine.

Defendant contends the information is fatally defective and charges no offense, because it charges possession of amphetamine hydrochloride, a drug not designated a stimulant or barbiturate drug by the Division of Health on the list filed with the Secretary of State pursuant to § 195.230. On the date of the alleged offense amphetamine hydrochloride was not on the list of proscribed drugs, but the statute itself proscribed possession of amphetamine. The state contends in this case, as it did in Bridges and Ransom, supra, that the information is not defective, because “ * * * the drug amphetamine hydrochloride is a compound or mixture containing the proscribed drug amphetamine itself.” There is no evidence in the record to support this contention.

The drug bearing the name amphetamine hydrochloride had not at the time of the alleged offense been designated by the Division of Health to be a stimulant; therefore, it was not a proscribed drug. The information charges defendant with possession of a drug not then proscribed by law; therefore, the information is defective, states no offense, and the judgment must be reversed.

Should the case be remanded to permit the state to amend the information to allege the offense it attempted to charge and the proof supported? We think so.

[84]*84Criminal Rule 24.02, V.A.M.R., supplanting §§ 545.290 and 545.300, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., provides that an information may be amended “ * * * at any time before verdict or finding if no additional or different offense is charged and if substantial rights of the defendant are not prejudiced.” The Rule is as broad as §§ 545.290 and 545.300,1 which permit amendments in matters of form or substance at any time before trial. Section 545.300, first appearing in Laws of 1925, page 194 (§ 3564, RSMo 1929), provides that “ * * * no such amendment shall be allowed as would operate to charge an offense different from that charged or attempted to be charged in the original information.” (Italics added.)

An amendment of this information by striking the word “hydrochloride” would not result in a charge of an “additional or different offense.” Such an amendment would result only in charging an offense which the original information attempted to charge, that is, possession of a stimulant drug.

In State ex rel. Downs v. Kimberlin, 364 Mo. 215, 260 S.W.2d 552, 556 [5], decided after the effective date of Criminal Rule 24.02, the court, en banc, held that the state could file a substitute information for an indictment the trial court had quashed as not stating facts sufficient to charge a crime. In so holding the court referred to § 545.300 and concluded that the trial court had held that the indictment was “ * * * ‘insufficient as to form or substance’ * * *that this ruling of the trial court thereby made applicable the further provision of the statute that “ * * * ‘an information charging the same offense charged or attempted to be charged in such indictment may be substituted therefor at any time before the jury is sworn.’ ” It has been said that the right to amend an information is broader than the right to amend an indictment, 42 C.J.S. Indictment and Information § 232, page 1243 and that the right to amend an information is as broad as the right to amend pleadings in civil cases, except as limited by statute, § 545.290. State v. Hall, 312 Mo. 425, 279 S.W. 102, 108 [10]; State v. Cain, Mo.App., 31 S.W.2d 559, 561 [2],

In State v. Lane, Mo., 371 S.W.2d 261, at 1. c. 264, the court quoted with approval the following pertinent language from State v. Broeder, 90 Mo.App. 156, 167-168: “‘And it seems to us that when the right is given to amend, as to both form and substance, as it is in section 2481 [RSMo 1899], supra, [now section 545.290] the right can not be restricted to such defects as would be cured by the statute of j eofails, after verdict, but exists even if the information failed to state any offense, if it can be clearly gathered from what is stated in the information that the prosecuting attorney intended to charge a particular offense or the violation of a specific statute.’ ”

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State v. Starks
419 S.W.2d 82 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
419 S.W.2d 82, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-starks-mo-1967.