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Lambert v. State
Lassiter & Cassinelli, by: Michael Kiel Kaiser, for appellant.
Leslie Rutledge, Att'y Gen., by: Adam Jackson, Ass't Att'y Gen., for appellee.
In October 2018, officers Frank Gibson and Terry Ford knocked on Clifton Lambert's front door pursuant to an arrest warrant and "heard a little noise just to the right of the door" while waiting for Lambert to answer, which he did after approximately fifteen to twenty seconds. Once inside the house, the officers saw in plain view a white substance in plastic baggies that was later identified by a laboratory as methamphetamine. The contraband was spotted on the floor next to a television stand. In addition, a small Altoids tin, with magnets on the back of it, had apparently fallen to the floor, opened, and was therefore in view of law enforcement. The tin contained more baggies of suspected methamphetamine. Finally, numerous baggies rolled together with duct tape were in plain view on a desk by the front window. Lambert was arrested and charged with possession of methamphetamine with purpose to deliver and possession of drug paraphernalia.
A jury trial was convened in due course, and during it, the State called Officer Gibson, who testified during the State's case-in-chief that Lambert had claimed at the scene that the drugs were not his and that he "just kind of rambled about some other things." When the prosecutor asked, "Was anyone else in the residence at the time of your search?" Officer Gibson replied, "Just Mr. Lambert, Officer Ford, and myself."
Lambert was convicted by the jury of possessing methamphetamine.1 On the jury's recommendation, the court sentenced Lambert to thirty years (as a habitual offender) and assessed a $10,000 fine. Lambert appeals the conviction.
Lambert challenges whether the State's evidence against him was enough to support the conviction. Lambert specifically argues that the State failed to link him to the methamphetamine that law enforcement found in plain view inside the jointly occupied premises but not on his person. Therefore, Lambert's main point on appeal is that that he did not constructively possess the contraband, which is the State's theory of the case. But an actual-possession case is not the same as a constructive-possession case. This means that Lambert's motion for directed verdict at trial should have apprised the circuit court of the evidentiary deficiency that he now raises for the first time: that the State did not link Lambert to the contraband that was not found on his person, that the contraband was not his (according to his statement at the scene), and that the contraband was found while he lived in what he now says for the first time on appeal was a jointly occupied dwelling.2
Ark. R. Crim. P. 33.1(c) (2019).
Lambert's motion for a directed verdict was as follows:
The defense moves for a directed verdict. The State has failed to present sufficient evidence without speculation or conjecture to arrive at the conclusion that Mr. Lambert either possessed methamphetamine, possessed between 2 and 10 grams[.]
The caselaw has for years recognized that a constructive-possession case is different from a case in which contraband is found on someone's person, for example. The main difference between the two is that an alleged actual possession of contraband requires that the State establish direct physical control over the contraband. Constructive possession, on the other hand, may be established when a person, although not in actual possession of the contraband, has the right to control it and intends to do so—either directly or through one or more persons. Holloway v. State , 293 Ark. 438, 444, 738 S.W.2d 796, 800 (1987).
For example, in Conley v. State , the defendant's motion for a directed verdict was that "the State never proved Conley had the marijuana in his possession when they found it." 2011 Ark. App. 597, at 6, 385 S.W.3d 875, 878. We held that the motion was too general to preserve an argument against a constructive-possession theory of the case. One of the missing components to Conley's motion was that it omitted an argument or reference to the "additional linking factor" argument that he later made on appeal. Id. Another example is Cooley v. State , 2013 Ark. App. 580, 2013 WL 5592219, which involved the constructive possession of firearms and drugs that were found in the curtilage of a jointly occupied house. The motion there was that the which was not specific enough to preserve the argument that the State failed to sufficiently establish a constructive possession. Id. at 6.
Other inadequate examples of motions for directed verdicts in constructive-possession cases include the following:
Contrast these lapses with Garner v. State , 2020 Ark. App. 101, 594 S.W.3d 145. While Garner did not state the words "constructive possession" or "jointly occupied premises" in the circuit court, he did argue specific facts in his motion for a directed verdict in a manner that chinned Rule 33.1 ’s pole. Id. at 5, 594 S.W.3d at 150.
In this case, Lambert's oral motion for a directed verdict does not satisfy Rule 33.1 as it has been applied by this court's and the supreme court's cases. His motion was more like the ones in Conley , Cooley , and Dixon than in Garner . Because Lambert did not make with enough precision in circuit court the argument that the State failed to prove that he constructively possessed contraband, his argument on appeal was not properly preserved for review.
Next, Lambert argues that the circuit court abused its discretion by preventing defense counsel from cross-examining officer Gibson about the officer's statement at trial that Lambert "just kind of rambled about some other things." Lambert says the error was not harmless "as proof regarding potential other occupants would have weighed heavily against a finding of constructive possession given the contraband was found in [a] communal area of the multiroom residence."
On cross-examination, Lambert's attorney asked officer Gibson, "Did Mr. Lambert tell you about several recent occupants in his home?" The prosecutor objected to this question about other occupants—arguing that it was hearsay admitted on behalf of the defendant. The following colloquy occurred.
We hold that Lambert did not preserve this issue for our review...
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