State v. Cain , 419 S.C. 24 ( 2017 )


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  •                      THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Supreme Court
    The State, Respondent,
    v.
    Charles Allen Cain, Petitioner.
    Appellate Case No. 2015-001983
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Appeal from Spartanburg County
    R. Lawton McIntosh, Circuit Court Judge
    Opinion No. 27694
    Heard October 20, 2016 – Filed January 5, 2017
    REVERSED
    Thomas J. Rode, of Thurmond Kirchner & Timbes, P.A.,
    of Charleston; and Chief Appellate Defender Robert
    Dudek, of Columbia, both for Petitioner.
    Attorney General Alan Wilson and Senior Assistant
    Attorney General David Spencer, both of Columbia; and
    Solicitor Barry J. Barnette, of Spartanburg, all for
    Respondent.
    JUSTICE FEW: Charles Allen Cain appeals his conviction for trafficking in
    methamphetamine. He argues the State produced insufficient evidence as to the
    quantity of drugs required for trafficking, and thus the trial court erred when it
    denied his motion for a directed verdict. The court of appeals found the core of
    Cain's argument was not preserved for appellate review, and affirmed. We find
    Cain's argument is preserved, and the court of appeals erred by affirming the denial
    of the directed verdict motion. We reverse.
    I.     Facts and Procedural History
    In January 2012, deputies of the Spartanburg County Sheriff's Office went to 371
    Dakota Street near the City of Spartanburg to serve a bench warrant on Travis
    Kirby. Charles Cain and Tiphani Parkhurst were renting a bedroom in the house
    and answered the door. After some discussion, Cain gave the deputies permission
    to enter. While searching for Kirby, the deputies discovered equipment used to
    manufacture methamphetamine. The deputies called Beth Stuart, a forensic
    chemist employed by the Sheriff's Office, to investigate the scene. Although Stuart
    did not find any methamphetamine, she did find evidence of ingredients used to
    manufacture methamphetamine. This evidence included empty packages of
    Sudafed, which Stuart determined once contained 19.2 grams of pseudoephedrine.
    Using a scientific theory known as stoichiometry,1 Stuart calculated that 19.2
    grams of pseudoephedrine could theoretically produce 17.67 grams of
    methamphetamine, if Cain manufactured the methamphetamine with maximum
    efficiency. Based on Stuart's analysis, the State charged Cain and Parkhurst with
    trafficking in methamphetamine under subsection 44-53-375(C) of the South
    Carolina Code (Supp. 2016). Under that subsection, a defendant is guilty of
    trafficking if the State proves the defendant "knowingly . . . attempts . . . to . . .
    manufacture . . . ten grams or more of methamphetamine." 
    Id. Cain made
    a pretrial motion to dismiss, a directed verdict motion, and he renewed
    the directed verdict motion at the close of the evidence, all on the basis that the
    State did not present sufficient evidence to prove the required quantity of
    methamphetamine to establish trafficking under subsection 44-53-375(C). The
    trial court denied the motions. The jury found Cain and Parkhurst guilty of
    trafficking in methamphetamine.
    Cain appealed to the court of appeals raising three issues. He argued (1) the trial
    court erred in admitting Stuart's testimony into evidence; (2) the trial court erred in
    denying Cain's directed verdict motion because the State did not prove Cain had
    custody and control of the means of manufacturing the methamphetamine; and (3)
    1
    Stoichiometry is "the study of quantitative relationships involving the substances
    in chemical reactions." Daniel L. Reger, Scott R. Goode & David W. Ball,
    Chemistry: Principles and Practice 92 (3rd ed. 2010).
    the trial court erred in denying Cain's directed verdict motion because the State did
    not present sufficient evidence of the requisite quantity of methamphetamine for a
    conviction for trafficking. The court of appeals reached the merits of the first two
    issues, and affirmed. State v. Cain, 
    413 S.C. 508
    , 527, 533, 
    776 S.E.2d 374
    , 384,
    387 (Ct. App. 2015). The central issue of Cain's appeal was the sufficiency of the
    State's evidence of quantity—the third issue—which Cain described in his brief to
    the court of appeals as "whether an attempted trafficking conviction may be based
    solely on expert testimony that it was 'theoretically' possible that the accused could
    have committed the offense." The court of appeals found this issue was not
    preserved for appellate 
    review. 413 S.C. at 530-31
    , 776 S.E.2d at 385-86. We
    granted certiorari only to review the court of appeals' decision as to the third issue.2
    II.    Evidence of Quantity
    Subsection 44-53-375(C) permits the State to prove trafficking based on a variety
    of factual scenarios. One element the State must prove in all scenarios is the
    quantity of "ten grams or more." 
    Id. Commonly, the
    State meets its burden on
    this element by proving the quantity of the methamphetamine itself. In this case,
    however, the sheriff's deputies found no methamphetamine. Therefore, to prove
    Cain guilty of trafficking the State was required to prove he attempted to
    manufacture the requisite quantity. The State relied exclusively on Stuart to prove
    the element of quantity, as there is no other evidence in the record of the quantity
    of methamphetamine Cain attempted to manufacture.
    Cain argues Stuart's testimony is insufficient because it proves only the theoretical
    quantity of drugs a person could have produced at maximum efficiency; it does not
    prove the quantity Cain could realistically have intended to manufacture. Without
    evidence showing Cain could actually have produced ten grams or more of
    methamphetamine with the equipment and ingredients he had at his disposal, Cain
    argues, the trial court erred in denying his motion for directed verdict. We agree.
    As background to her testimony about quantity, Stuart described the equipment
    and ingredients found at the scene, and how Cain would have used them in the
    "one pot" method of manufacturing methamphetamine. As Stuart explained, a
    person using the one pot method fills a two-liter drink bottle with various
    ingredients until a chemical reaction takes place. The bottle Cain used was an
    2
    The issues we identify as the second and third correspond to subparts B and A of
    section II of the court of appeals' 
    opinion. 413 S.C. at 528-33
    , 776 S.E.2d at 384-
    87.
    empty liquor bottle. The first step of the one pot method is to crush Sudafed pills
    and put the pseudoephedrine into the bottle. Then, Cain would have dumped
    ammonia, lighter fluid, lithium strips from batteries, and water into the liquor
    bottle and waited for a chemical reaction. Stuart explained that after an hour or so,
    Cain would have poured the liquid out of the liquor bottle into a separate bottle.
    That liquid is methamphetamine base. To produce the end product, Cain would
    have dumped muriatic acid, which is commonly found in drain cleaners, and salt
    into another bottle to produce acid gas. When the acid gas is mixed with the liquid
    base, it forms a white powder that is the end product—methamphetamine. Stuart
    testified Cain's method did not take place under laboratory conditions, and
    admitted that calling his operation a "meth lab" was a "misuse of the word lab."
    As to the quantity of methamphetamine that could be produced from this method,
    Stuart and the solicitor had the following exchange:
    Q:     Now, if you take the 19,200 milligrams of either
    the Sudafed you found or the empty Sudafed that
    had been there . . . and you were going to attempt
    to manufacture methamphetamine, and you got a
    one hundred percent yield . . . how much
    methamphetamine could you manufacture?
    A:     17.67 grams.
    ....
    Q:     And that's under laboratory conditions?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     Let's say you only got an 80 percent
    yield . . . [h]ow much could you manufacture?
    A:     14.13 grams.
    Q:     How about a 75 percent yield?
    A:     13.25 grams.
    Q:     How about a 70 percent yield?
    A:     12.36 grams.
    Q:     What about a 65 percent yield?
    A:     11.48 grams.
    Q:     Still more than ten grams?
    A:     Yes, sir.
    Q:     So . . . if you were going to get at least a two-thirds
    return on what you put in, you would still
    manufacture more than ten grams?
    A:     Yes.
    This testimony was the only evidence the State offered as to the quantity involved
    in Cain's alleged trafficking in methamphetamine.
    "It is a fundamental concept of criminal law that the State must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt all the elements of the offense charged against the defendant."
    State v. Brown, 
    360 S.C. 581
    , 590, 
    602 S.E.2d 392
    , 397 (2004). The State may not
    obtain a conviction when its proof as to any one element requires the jury to
    speculate or guess whether the defendant engaged in the conduct the legislature
    sought to criminalize. State v. Brown, 
    267 S.C. 311
    , 316, 
    227 S.E.2d 674
    , 677
    (1976) (stating "the motion for a directed verdict should be granted where evidence
    . . . is such as to permit the jury to merely conjecture or to speculate"); see also
    Hanahan v. Simpson, 
    326 S.C. 140
    , 149, 
    485 S.E.2d 903
    , 908 (1997) (stating
    "verdicts may not be permitted to rest upon surmise, conjecture, or speculation");
    State v. Hyder, 
    242 S.C. 372
    , 379, 
    131 S.E.2d 96
    , 100 (1963) ("We have held that
    suspicion, however strong, does not suffice to sustain a conviction."). The
    "attempt[] . . . to manufacture . . . methamphetamine" is criminalized under
    subsection 44-53-375(B) of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2016) without regard
    to quantity. Subsection 44-53-375(C) criminalizes such an attempt as "trafficking"
    only when the State proves the quantity he attempted to manufacture was "ten
    grams or more." However, subsection 44-53-375(C) does not criminalize the
    theoretical possibility of manufacturing ten grams or more of methamphetamine.
    Stuart's testimony proves it was theoretically possible to manufacture 17.67 grams
    of methamphetamine from 19.2 grams of pseudoephedrine if the process was
    conducted at one hundred percent efficiency. However, Stuart specifically
    acknowledged the quantity of 17.67 grams was calculated on the assumptions of
    "ideal laboratory conditions" with "pure products" used by a "trained chemist."
    Stuart admitted Cain did not have ideal laboratory conditions, and the State offered
    no evidence Cain even knew how to manufacture methamphetamine. There is no
    other evidence in the record to support the validity of Stuart's assumptions. Stuart's
    testimony also proves the quantity of methamphetamine Cain could have
    manufactured at various lower levels of efficiency. However, Stuart's testimony
    provides no basis for calculating the level of efficiency Cain could actually have
    reached under the circumstances that existed in the house. In fact, Cain's counsel
    specifically asked Stuart on cross examination, "There's no way to tell, from what
    you had there, how much [the defendants] were actually getting from their work?"
    Stuart replied, "No, sir."
    This answer left the jury in the position of having to speculate as to Cain's
    efficiency at making methamphetamine, and therefore having to guess at how
    much of the drug he attempted to manufacture. As we stated in Brown, "the
    motion for a directed verdict should be granted where evidence . . . is such as to
    permit the jury to merely conjecture or to 
    speculate." 267 S.C. at 316
    , 227 S.E.2d
    at 677. Because the State offered no evidentiary basis on which the jury could
    have determined—without speculating—the quantity of methamphetamine Cain
    attempted to manufacture, the trial court was required to grant Cain's motion for a
    directed verdict, and the court of appeals erred by affirming.
    Courts in other jurisdictions have also found that evidence of a theoretical amount
    produced at maximum efficiency is insufficient proof of the quantity element. In
    United States v. Eide, 
    297 F.3d 701
    (8th Cir. 2002), the defendant was convicted of
    attempting to manufacture five grams or more of 
    methamphetamine. 297 F.3d at 702
    . On appeal, he argued the government's evidence was not sufficient as to
    quantity, and thus "he should be resentenced on the included offense of simple
    attempted 
    manufacturing." 297 F.3d at 704
    . As in Cain's case, the government in
    Eide did not find any methamphetamine in the defendant's residence, but it did find
    pseudoephedrine and equipment commonly used to manufacture
    
    methamphetamine. 297 F.3d at 702
    -03. Therefore, the government relied on
    expert testimony to establish the quantity of methamphetamine the defendant
    attempted to 
    manufacture. 297 F.3d at 703-04
    .
    The government's expert was Patricia Krahn, a chemist from the Iowa Division of
    Criminal 
    Investigation. 297 F.3d at 703
    . She testified the 27.6 grams of
    pseudoephedrine found at the defendant's residence could theoretically produce
    "the highest possible yield" of 25.39 grams of 
    methamphetamine. 297 F.3d at 703
    -
    04. The Eighth Circuit found this evidence insufficient, stating, "Quantity yield
    figures should not be calculated without regard for the particular capabilities of a
    defendant and the drug manufacturing 
    site." 297 F.3d at 705
    . See also United
    States v. Anderson, 
    236 F.3d 427
    , 430 (8th Cir. 2001) (stating "the relevant inquiry
    is not what a theoretical maximum yield would be, or even what an average
    methamphetamine cook would produce, but what appellants themselves could
    produce"); United States v. Eschman, 
    227 F.3d 886
    , 890 (7th Cir. 2000) (holding
    "courts cannot quantify yield figures without regard for a particular defendant's
    capabilities when viewed in light of the drug laboratory involved"); Buelna v.
    State, 
    20 N.E.3d 137
    , 146 (Ind. 2014) (holding testimony must be "accurately
    tailored to the specific manufacturing conditions, ingredients, and skill of the
    accused").
    In Eide, after rejecting the government's evidence of theoretical maximum yield,
    the Eighth Circuit focused on the expert's explanation of "the particular
    methamphetamine manufacturing processes" the defendant used, and her testimony
    "that his lithium ammonia reduction process was capable of producing a 40 to 50
    percent 
    yield." 297 F.3d at 705
    . The court stated, "This yield would have resulted
    in producing 10.1 to 12.6 grams of actual 
    methamphetamine." 297 F.3d at 704
    .
    The court affirmed the conviction because it found, "The particularized nature of
    Krahn's testimony, combined with additional evidence suggesting that Eide was
    experienced in the manufacture of methamphetamine, were sufficient for a jury to
    find beyond a reasonable doubt that Eide was a good cook capable of producing a
    40 to 50 percent 
    yield." 297 F.3d at 705
    .
    Unlike the expert testimony in Eide, Stuart's testimony provided the jury no basis
    on which to determine how much methamphetamine Cain could actually have
    produced. If Cain were a "good cook" like Eide, "capable of producing a . . . 50
    percent yield," he would have manufactured 8.83 grams of methamphetamine, and
    thus, he could not be guilty of trafficking.
    We review the denial of a directed verdict motion in a criminal case under the any
    evidence standard of review. "If there is any direct evidence or any substantial
    circumstantial evidence reasonably tending to prove the guilt of the accused, the
    Court must find the case was properly submitted to the jury." State v. Harris, 
    413 S.C. 454
    , 457, 
    776 S.E.2d 365
    , 366 (2015) (quoting State v. Brandt, 
    393 S.C. 526
    ,
    542, 
    713 S.E.2d 591
    , 599 (2011)). In this case, the State presented some evidence
    of quantity. As we have explained, however, subsection 44-53-375(C) does not
    criminalize the theoretical possibility of manufacturing "ten grams or more" of
    methamphetamine. Because the State did not establish the level of efficiency Cain
    could have actually achieved in his attempt to manufacture methamphetamine, the
    jury was forced to speculate as to whether Cain could have actually produced the
    requisite quantity. Under this circumstance, we find the State presented "no
    evidence" that Cain attempted to manufacture ten grams or more of
    methamphetamine. The trial court erred in not granting Cain's directed verdict
    motion.
    III.   Issue Preservation
    We now turn to the court of appeals' holding that Cain's argument was not
    preserved for appellate review. Our appellate courts have consistently found issues
    preserved for review when the issue was raised to and ruled upon by the trial court.
    See, e.g., State v. Williams, 
    417 S.C. 209
    , 228 n.10, 
    789 S.E.2d 582
    , 592 n.10 (Ct.
    App. 2016) ("In order for an issue to be preserved for appellate review, it must
    have been raised to and ruled upon by the trial judge." (quoting State v. Dunbar,
    
    356 S.C. 138
    , 142, 
    587 S.E.2d 691
    , 693 (2003))). While a party may not argue one
    ground at trial and another ground on appeal, State v. Bailey, 
    298 S.C. 1
    , 5, 
    377 S.E.2d 581
    , 584 (1989), we do not require a party to use the same language on
    appeal as it did at trial, Herron v. Century BMW, 
    395 S.C. 461
    , 466, 
    719 S.E.2d 640
    , 642 (2011). We find Cain's argument at trial and his argument on appeal were
    the same: that Stuart's testimony was not sufficient to prove the quantity element of
    "ten grams or more." Thus, the argument before us now is preserved for appeal
    because it was raised to and ruled upon by the trial court. See 
    Williams, 417 S.C. at 228
    n.10, 789 S.E.2d at 592 
    n.10.
    Cain repeatedly argued at trial the State's evidence as to quantity was not
    sufficient. In a pretrial motion to dismiss, Cain argued, "I don't think there's
    anything in [subsection 44-53-375(C)] or in South Carolina law that says you can
    take a theoretical yield3 based on the evidence found and make it into a trafficking
    case." Cain continued, "I just think that if the case would go forward it would go
    forward as a manufacturing as opposed to trafficking case." In drawing this
    3
    Theoretical yield is "the maximum quantity of product that can be obtained from
    a chemical reaction, based on the amounts of starting materials." Reger, Goode &
    Ball, supra note 1, at 118. However, the amount actually produced "is always less
    than the theoretical yield." 
    Id. at 123.
    distinction between trafficking and simple manufacturing, which under subsection
    44-53-375(B) contains no element of quantity, Cain necessarily focused the trial
    court's attention on the sufficiency of the State's evidence on the quantity element.
    The solicitor clearly understood the argument to relate to quantity, stating "we
    would argue that [Cain and Parkhurst] are attempting to manufactur[e]
    methamphetamine and the attempt to manufacture [is] more than, the theoretical
    yield of more than 10 grams in this case, the maximum theoretical yield is just
    about 17 grams." The trial court took the motion to dismiss under advisement.
    Cain also focused on quantity when he made his motion for a directed verdict. He
    argued,
    Your Honor, we'd make a motion for directed verdict.
    The testimony has been presented that there is some type
    of something going on in this house, some ingredient in
    this house that has been identified as a meth lab with
    some yield. In optimal conditions, maybe, to be a little
    over 17 grams.
    He continued his argument by drawing the same distinction between simple
    manufacturing and trafficking. He stated,
    I think the evidence that has been presented is, at this
    point . . . not sufficient for at least trafficking . . . [b]ut it's
    certainly the—it's too speculative to present the
    trafficking. So, if we don't have—if we have enough to
    present to the jury, I submit we have—it would be for
    manufacturing as opposed to trafficking.
    In denying the motion, the trial court specifically referred back to the previous
    discussion about "theoretical yield," indicating the trial court understood the
    directed verdict motion to address the sufficiency of the State's evidence on the
    element of quantity. See State v. Kromah, 
    401 S.C. 340
    , 353, 
    737 S.E.2d 490
    , 497
    (2013) (holding the issue was preserved when the trial court immediately appeared
    to understand the objection was a renewal of a previous argument); State v.
    Hendricks, 
    408 S.C. 525
    , 531, 
    759 S.E.2d 434
    , 437 (Ct. App. 2014) (holding an
    issue was preserved in part because the trial court immediately understood the
    basis of the objection).
    After all the evidence had been presented, the parties began another discussion of
    the quantity element. The trial court stated,
    I think you're protected on the record, but I am denying
    the motion based on the plain reading of the statute, and
    based on the case of persuasive authority[4] that was
    handed in by [the solicitor]. I think theoretical yield
    would be an appropriate analysis in this case.
    At first glance, the ruling appears to relate only to the motion to dismiss.
    However, later in the transcript the trial court clarified it understood Cain to have
    renewed his directed verdict motion—on the basis of quantity—and that when it
    ruled, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss and the renewed directed verdict
    motion.
    On appeal, Cain made the same argument—theoretical yield is not sufficient
    evidence of quantity—but he complimented the argument by describing what
    evidence would be sufficient. In doing so, he used a term he had not used at trial—
    "potential yield." Cain used the term potential yield to describe for the court of
    appeals the quantity of methamphetamine a person could actually produce given
    his level of expertise in light of all the conditions present at the time. He used the
    term to draw a contrast between evidence that would be sufficient and the
    4
    The "persuasive authority" to which the trial court referred was an unpublished
    opinion from the Iowa court of appeals, State v. Knapp, No. 08-1918 (Iowa Ct.
    App. Dec. 17, 2009). The solicitor earlier relied on Knapp to support the State's
    argument that theoretical yield evidence is sufficient to prove the quantity element.
    Knapp supports neither the State's argument nor the trial court's ruling. While it is
    true the State relied on theoretical yield evidence in Knapp, the Iowa court of
    appeals affirmed based on the expert's testimony of what actual yield the defendant
    could have achieved. Knapp, slip op. at 8. The defendant in Knapp possessed
    enough pseudoephedrine to produce a "theoretical yield of 15.4 grams of
    methamphetamine." Knapp, slip op. at 3. However, the expert estimated the
    defendant could "actually produce between six and seven grams of pure
    methamphetamine." 
    Id. theoretical yield
    evidence offered by the State, which he argued was not sufficient.5
    This was the same argument Cain made in his pre-trial motion to dismiss, his
    directed verdict motion, and his renewed directed verdict motion. Regardless of
    the labels used by Cain, his argument on appeal was the same argument repeatedly
    raised to and ruled upon by the trial court. Thus, we find the court of appeals erred
    in holding Cain's argument is not preserved for review.
    IV.    Conclusion
    We find the State produced insufficient evidence as to the quantity of drugs
    involved in Cain's alleged trafficking in methamphetamine. Accordingly, the court
    of appeals' decision—and Cain's conviction for trafficking—are REVERSED.
    BEATTY, C.J., KITTREDGE, HEARN, JJ., and Acting Justice Costa M.
    Pleicones, concur.
    5
    Other courts have used the terms "theoretical yield" and "potential yield" to draw
    the same contrast between the quantity of drugs that can be manufactured at
    maximum efficiency (theoretical yield) and the quantity that could actually be
    produced given the limitations of the system used and the expertise of the person
    making the drugs (potential yield). Compare United States v. Weaver, 425 F.
    App'x 267, 268-69 (4th Cir. 2011) (discussing "theoretical yield"), and United
    States v. Chase, 
    499 F.3d 1061
    , 1069 (9th Cir. 2007) (same), and State v. Hooks,
    
    777 S.E.2d 133
    , 136 (N.C. Ct. App. 2015) (same), with Knapp, No. 08-1918, slip
    op. at 8 (discussing "potential yield"). We suggest the term "potential yield" is
    confusing, and if it is necessary to label the concept Cain sought to describe, a term
    such as "actual yield" would be more useful.