State v. Napier, Unpublished Decision (5-22-1998)
State v. Napier, Unpublished Decision (5-22-1998)
Opinion of the Court
On May 3, 1996, Crase and a police detective purchased one-eighth of an ounce (3.5 grams) of cocaine from Napier as part of an undercover operation. On that date, Napier delivered the cocaine to Crase and the detective in an automobile that contained his two minor children. Police later arranged six more controlled purchases of cocaine from Napier over the following six weeks. All but the last of these transactions involved approximately half an ounce of cocaine, varying between twelve and eighteen grams.
In the last transaction, which was scheduled for June 13, 1996, Napier agreed to supply one and a half ounces (42 grams) of cocaine to Crase. This sale was not completed, however, because police decided to cancel the transaction. Hoping that Napier would become an informant, the police wanted to arrest him quietly, away from his home, so that knowledge of his arrest would not spread to his contacts. Police canceled the June 13 sale because Napier would not agree to a place and time for the sale that suited these police objectives.
On July 30, 1996, the Montgomery County Grand Jury handed down a seven-count indictment against Napier. The first count was for selling cocaine in an amount less than the minimum bulk and within one hundred feet or within the view of any juvenile against R.C.
Napier was arrested shortly after the grand jury handed down its indictment. He was tried before a jury between March 24 and 26, 1997. At trial, Napier raised the defense of entrapment. On March 26, the jury found Napier guilty on all seven counts, rejecting his affirmative defense. On April 10, 1997, the trial court sentenced him to six concurrent terms of imprisonment, one term of between two and fifteen years, and five terms of between three and fifteen years with three years of actual imprisonment. In addition, the court sentenced him to serve a consecutive term of between five and twenty-five years on Count Seven of the indictment, with five years of actual imprisonment. Napier now appeals from the judgment of the trial court.
The trial court gave the jury spoken instruction with regard to each count against Napier. For Count One, the court gave the following instruction:
Ladies and gentlemen, Count I of the indictment charges the defendant with Aggravated Trafficking in Drugs. Before you can find the defendant guilty you must find beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about the 3rd day of May, 1996 and in Montgomery County, Ohio the defendant knowingly sold or offered to sell cocaine in an amount less than ten grams.
The court gave essentially the same instruction on each of the remaining six counts, changing the dates of each crime and the quantity of cocaine sold. Concerning each of the five counts of violating R.C.
2925.03 (A)(5), the court expressed the requisite quantity as "an amount equal to or exceeding ten grams but less than thirty grams." Then, for Count Seven, the court's instruction stated "an amount equal to or exceeding thirty grams but less than 100 grams."1 These instructions were nearly identical to those approved by the Ohio Judicial Conference and provided at 4 Ohio Jury Instructions (1996) 388-89, Section 525.03.
Napier argues that the instructions were improper because the court should have defined the word "bulk" as it was used in the indictment. He contends that the jury could not have made a reasoned determination of his guilt of any crime other than trafficking in violation of R.C.
We note that appellant's trial attorney made no objection to the jury instructions at trial. Ordinarily, a criminal defendant's failure to object to a jury instruction constitutes a waiver of any claim of error on appeal based on that instruction.State v. Long (1978),
Moreover, although the trial court did not define bulk, it did inform the jury of the amount of cocaine that they would need to find in order to convict the defendant on each count of the indictment. In essence, the trial court made the simple calculations that the jury would otherwise have been required to perform. Rather than rendering the instructions confusing, as Napier claims, the court's approach produced instructions that were very simple and easy to understand. Undoubtedly, the simplicity of these instructions explains why the Ohio Judicial Conference adopted this method over one that defined the bulk amount and then required the jury to compute the relevant fractional or multiple part of bulk. We see no error in the instructions as they were given. Clearly there was no plain error.
Napier raises a separate, but related, argument when he asserts error in connection with the jury verdicts. He contends that the verdict forms given to the jury were improper because they did not require the jurors to enter the amount of cocaine involved in each sale or offer. Instead, the forms asked the jurors to pen either "guilty" or "not guilty" before the words: "of the offense of Aggravated Trafficking in Drugs as charged in the indictment." Napier cites no authority in support of the proposition that jurors are required to enter a finding of the amount of drugs involved when they find a defendant guilty of violating R.C.
R.C.
(G) When a person is charged with possessing a bulk amount or a multiple of a bulk amount, the jury, or the court trying the accused, shall determine the amount of the controlled substance involved at the time of the offense and, if a guilty verdict is returned, shall return the findings as part of the verdict. In any such case, it is unnecessary to find and return the exact amount of the controlled substance, and it is sufficient if the finding and return is to the effect that the amount of the controlled substance involved is a bulk amount or the requisite multiple of a bulk amount, or that the amount of the controlled substance involved is less than a bulk amount or the requisite multiple of a bulk amount.
At least one court has concluded that subsection (G) does not apply to crimes involving the sale of controlled substances. State v. Manross (July 10, 1987), Ashtabula App. No. 1295, unreported, at 3, reversed on other grounds (1988),
40 Ohio St.3d 180 . The Manross court reasoned that the subsection, on its face, appears to apply only when a person is charged with possession of a controlled substance. Id. Sale and possession are treated differently elsewhere within the statute. See R.C.2925.03 . Nevertheless, other courts have not recognized this distinction. See, e.g., State v. Allen (Oct. 2, 1982), Warren App. No. 70, unreported at 2 (modifying a judgment of conviction under R.C.2925.03 (A)(6) and (A)(7) for failure to abide by R.C.2925.03 (G)). As now amended, the Revised Code plainly extends this fact-finding requirement to crimes of both possession and sale of controlled substances. See R.C.2925.03 (G) and 2925. 11(G).
Criminal defendants have also argued that R.C.
(A) When the presence of one or more additional elements makes an offense one of more serious degree:
* * *
(2) A guilty verdict shall state either the degree of the offense of which the offender is found guilty, or that such additional element or elements are present. Otherwise, a guilty verdict constitutes a finding of guilty of the least degree of the offense charged.
At least one court has found that R.C.
2945.75 does not apply when a criminal defendant is charged only with trafficking in a certain amount and there is no instruction given on a lesser included offense. See McDonald, supra, at 4.
We need not determine if the trial court erred in failing to follow one of these two statutes. As Napier concedes in his appellant's brief, where the indictment — as it did in the instant case — charges that the accused sold a controlled substance in the bulk amount or some requisite multiple of bulk, it is sufficient that the jury's verdict state that accused is guilty as charged in the indictment. See State v. Schultz (July 7, 1983), Cuyahoga App. No. 45511, unreported, at 3; see also State v. Smith, supra,
at 2 (applying Schultz on review of a verdict rendered after a bench trial). Even if there is error in failing to enter a specific finding in the verdict under R.C.
Napier contends, however, that his case is distinguishable because the trial court did not define the meaning of bulk as it appeared in the indictments. This distinction cannot hold. Following the trial court's instructions, the jurors had to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Napier sold or offered to sell between 10 and 30 grams of cocaine for each count of violating R.C.
We note that Napier did not raise this argument in the trial court. Generally, "an appellate court will not consider any error which counsel for a party complaining of the trial court's judgment could have called to trial court's attention at a time when such error could have been avoided or corrected by the trial court." State v. Awan (1986),
In arguing his second assignment of error, Napier does not claim that police violated any of his constitutional rights. He also cites us no authority that would permit an appellate court to reverse a criminal conviction based on a police investigation that violated public policy, but not a constitutional right of the accused. Even were we to assume that the police investigation of Napier did violate some element of public policy, Napier does not explain why that element should override other fundamental tenets of public policy, such as the proposition that those who sell cocaine should be prosecuted, as that policy is expressed in R.C.
Statutes are "the legislature's expression of public policy."Painter v. Graley (1994),
Finally, even If we were to treat Napier's second assignment of error as somehow raising a claim of violation of his due process rights, we would find no constitutional violation. This court has previously rejected very similar claims by criminal appellants whose entrapment defenses failed to sway juries. SeeState v. Delisio (Sept. 3, 1992), Greene App. No. 91-CA-46, unreported, at 7; State v. Feltner (Aug. 16, 1989), Miami App. No. 88-CA-34, unreported, at 2-4. In Feltner, we considered the argument that a police investigation of drug sales amounted to outrageous governmental conduct. Therein, we noted that, if an appellant can show no violation of a protected right, in order to sustain a constitutional claim, he must show that police conduct otherwise shocks the conscience. Supra, at 3. The police investigation in this case was neither extraordinary nor shocking. In other Ohio cases, investigations involving multiple purchases from a single defendant have resulted in multiple convictions for the traffickers. See, e.g., State v. Hackworth (1992),
For the foregoing reasons, we overrule Napier's second assignment of error. Having overruled all assignments of error raised by the appellant, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.
KERNS, J., and MILLIGAN, J., concur.
(Hon. Joseph D. Kerns, Retired from the Court of Appeals, Second Appellate District and Hon. John R. Milligan, Retired from the Court of Appeals, Fifth Appellate District, Sitting by Assignment of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio).
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