Brown v. State
Brown v. State
Opinion
The defendant was indicted and convicted for the unlawful possession of 125 tablets containing pentazocine (Talwin) in violation of the Alabama Uniform Controlled Substances Act. Alabama Code 1975, Sections
Three issues are presented on appeal.
Talwin was designated a controlled substance by the Federal Government on January 10, 1979. Volume 44, Federal Register, *Page 785
No. 7, page 2169. Consequently and under the facts of this case, Sections
Section
McCurley v. State,"A reading of the statute (Section
20-2-20 ) reveals that the classification procedures under (a) and (b) refer to different scheduling requirements. Paragraph (a) deals with the Board's classification of a substance upon its own initiative. In performing that function the Board is required to consider eight specified aspects, and thereafter under paragraph (b) to `make findings . . . and issue a rule controlling the substance if it finds the substance has a potential for abuse.'"Paragraph (d), however, entails an entirely different procedure, unrelated to the several aspects specified in paragraph (a). Under (d) the Board may rely upon a final control order published in the federal register, and 30 days from such publication may itself order control. Paragraph (d) allows for an objection to the control of such a substance and a public hearing following the Board's published objections. In its salient features, paragraph (d) adopts the procedures utilized by the federal government in determining a control status, a procedure significantly similar to that accomplished under our own law.
21 U.S.C.A. Sections 802 ,811 , 812."
The undisputed evidence in this case is that the Board of Health made no objection to the federal designation of Talwintablets as a Schedule IV controlled substance. As a result, thirty days from publication in the Federal Register of the final order designating Talwin tablets as a Schedule IV substance, Talwin tablets became a Schedule IV controlled substance in Alabama.
From the exhibits admitted into evidence in this case, it appears that the State Board of Health classified Talwin as a controlled substance on August 15, 1973. However, in McCurleyv. State,
Under the State Board of Health's own regulations, injectable pentazocine or Talwin was classified as a Schedule III controlled substance, while oral pentazocine was listed as a Schedule IV substance. The Federal Register classifies all pentazocine as a Schedule IV substance.
An extract from the minutes of the February 21, 1979, meeting of the Board of Health reflects:
"A notice from the Federal Register, Vol. 44, No. 7, Wednesday, January 10, 1979, places Pentazocine into Schedule IV of the Federal Schedule, effective February *Page 786 9, 1979. The Subcommittee moved that the placement of Talwin Tablets and Compound in Schedule IV coincides with action previously taken in Alabama by the State Committee of Public Health, but that injectible Pentazocine would remain in Schedule III and would be unchanged from its position as earlier placed in Alabama by the State Committee of Public Health. The motion carried unanimously."
Under the principles stated in McCurley, the evidence in this case does not show that the State Board of Health has complied with its statutory duty in classifying injectable pentazocine
as a Schedule III controlled substance. There is no evidence that the Board "publish(ed) the reasons for objection (to the federal classification) and afford(ed) all interested parties an opportunity to be heard." Section
Procedural due process requires that citizens be given fair notice of conduct forbidden by a penal statute. A strong argument can be made that Section
In McCurley, one of the contentions was that the procedure outlined under Section
McCurley, 390 So.2d at 30."We may take judicial knowledge of the fact that the Federal Register contains published accounts of preliminary and final control rulings of the Food and Drug Administration of the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare, that these rules either call for or reflect public hearings, and that they include scientific findings on the qualities and propensities of drugs which are made the basis of recommendations from the Secretary of HEW to the Attorney General of the United States who has the statutory authority to add to or delete a drug from the federal schedule. McElroy, Alabama Evidence, Section 480.01 (4);
21 U.S.C.A. Section 811 . In short, the federal decision to classify a drug as a controlled substance itself is subject to codified objective standards, and publish findings and rules. As we stated, paragraph (d) simply enables the Alabama board to adopt those procedures rather than having to duplicate them. Under that paragraph, moreover, the Board was not required to make an express finding supporting its order. Cf. Alabama Public Service Commission v. Nunis,252 Ala. 30 ,39 So.2d 409 (1949). Under those circumstances we do not believe that a failure of due process has been shown. Railroad Commission v. A.G.S.R. Co.,185 Ala. 354 ,64 So. 13 (1913)."
Under the authority of McCurley, this Court must uphold the constitutionality of Section
We have searched the record for error as required by law. The judgment of the Circuit Court is without error and is hereby affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Andre Louis Brown v. State.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published