State v. Wotring

279 S.E.2d 182, 167 W. Va. 104, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 620
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1981
Docket14019
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 279 S.E.2d 182 (State v. Wotring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Wotring, 279 S.E.2d 182, 167 W. Va. 104, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 620 (W. Va. 1981).

Opinion

McGraw, Justice:

The appellant, Wanda Jean Wotring, was convicted of possession of marihuana with intent to deliver by a jury June 1,1976, in the Circuit Court of Tucker County. She was sentenced to spend one to five years at the West Virginia State Prison for Women at Pence Springs and was fined $15,000. * She assigned fifteen errors in her petition for appeal, the same errors upon which she based an unsuccessful motion for a new trial made to the court below. In her brief, she consolidates or abandons most of the errors initially assigned and now asks us to review six assignments of error, including one raised for the first time here. The appellant’s contentions Sre as follows: the search of her residence was illegal; she was not given a timely Miranda warning; she did not personally enter her not guilty plea; the state did not prove she was in possession of the marihuana; the trial judge’s comments in open court were prejudicial; and, the denial of probation violated her due process rights. After reviewing the record and the briefs filed in this case, as well as the law relevant to the issues raised, we do not find sufficient merit in the appellants contentions to reverse, and we affirm the judgment of the lower court.

*106 The appellant, forty-nine years of age at the time of her trial, owned about fifty acres in the Smokey Hollow Road area of Parsons, Tucker County, where she had lived on and off since her birth, occasionally leaving the area to work in the Washington-Baltimore region. Using a trailer as a starting point, she built a fourteen-room residence with a bubble-covered, heated swimming pool. Her three children were living with her at this residence at the time the events in this case transpired.

Late in the afternoon of April 28, 1976, Trooper J.L. Cunningham of the West Virginia Department of Public Safety filed an affidavit and complaint for a search warrant with Justice of the Peace Jerome B. DiBacco. Trooper Cunningham averred that he had cause to believe that marihuana was concealed in the residence of Wanda Jean Wotring and

that the facts for such belief are that Wanda Jean Wotring has a reputation with me and my department over several months as being a trafficker in unlawful drugs, and numerous information from several types of persons as to such activities. Police officer Tpr. J.L. Cunningham did on the 16th day of April, 1976 witness a transaction on the premises of Wanda Jean Wotring between David Kisner and the daughter of the accused.

That evening police officers went to the appellant’s residence and effected a search of the premises. She and her children were there at the time. In an upstairs bedroom, which Mrs. Wotring at the time identified as her room, Trooper Cunningham and Corporal M.M. Davisson found in an overnight case a clear plastic bag in which were eight smaller baggies containing what appeared to be marihuana. In the larger plastic bag they found a small white envelope on which was written “April 12, ten .times twenty 200”. According to the testimony of Trooper Cunningham, the appellant “was advised of her rights by Corporal Davisson in my presence at the time the evidence was found”.

The bulk of the prosecution’s case came from the testimony of several young people in the area, some of *107 whom had apparently arranged deals with the prosecution in exchange for their testimony. One witness testified that he had made four purchases of marihuana from Mrs. Wotring between December 1, 1975, and April 28, 1976, paying $20.00 per one-ounce baggie. Another prosecution witness testified that he purchased an ounce bag of marihuana from Mrs. Wotring at her home on April 9,1976, for $20.00. He stated that the bag he purchased resembled the bags of marihuana shown to have been admitted in evidence at the trial. His visit at the Wotring residence and the purchase of the bag of marihuana from Mrs. Wotring were confirmed by the testimony of another student who accompanied him. Another prosecution witness testified that he made ten purchases of marihuana from Mrs. Wotring between December, 1975, and April 28, 1976, paying $20.00 for each one-ounce bag. A fourth witness testified that he bought three packages of marihuana at $20.00 each from Mrs. Wotring personally between December 1, 1975, and April 28, 1976. Each of the five witnesses identified the woman sitting at counsel table as Wanda Jean Wotring, the person who sold the marihuana. Trooper J.L. Cunningham was recalled as a witness by the defense to testify concerning a purchase he observed at the Wotring residence on April 6, 1976. In the course of his investigation, he accompanied a young man who purchased an ounce of marihuana for $20.00. He testified that the young man knocked at the door of the Wotring residence where he was met by a “very young girl” to whom he paid the $20.00 and who, a minute later, returned with a package of marihuana.

At trial the defense called as a witness a man who was dating Mrs Wotring and was a frequent visitor in her home. He testified that he had heard rumors that she was trafficking in drugs. He stated that he was an overnight guest in the home on April 27, 1976, and slept in the room where the bags of marihuana and the envelope were found by the law officers. He testified that on the morning of April 28, 1976, before he left for work, he searched the room for evidence of drugs for the purpose of determining whether the appellant was trafficking in drugs. He stated that he *108 “went through that particular case that they were supposed to have found marihuana in and it was not in there at that time.”

Mrs. Wotring’s two daughters testified that they had never seen their mother have any marihuana in her possession. A workman on the Wotring premises who was familiar with all areas of the house testified that he had never seen any evidence of marihuana or any transactions involving sales of marihuana thereabouts. Another witness who had visited in the Wotring home testified that he had been offered marihuana there, but never by Mrs. Wotring. Mrs. Wotring testified that the weekend or train case in which the marihuana was found was not her property, and that she had never opened the case. She denied knowing who placed the bag of marihuana in the case. She explained that when she stated to the police officers that the room in which the marihuana was found was her room, she was meaning to say all the rooms were her rooms. She testified: “I said this is my room. They are all my rooms.”

The appellant testified at length on direct examination concerning her family history, her marriages, her employment, her property ownership, and the construction and maintenance of the fourteen-room house and swimming pool. She testified that she had two houses and seven trailer spaces for rent on her land, and that she received a monthly railroad retirement check arising from a deceased husband’s employment. Her total monthly income, without outside work, was $1,250.00. From these facts the State attempted to paint a picture of a lifestyle which could not be justified by the appellant’s income, with the implication that the appellant sold marihuana to support her standard of living.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 S.E.2d 182, 167 W. Va. 104, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wotring-wva-1981.