State v. Aaron Todd ( 2011 )


Menu:
  • Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
    ENTRY ORDER
    SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2010-173
    JANUARY TERM, 2011
    State of Vermont                                      }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    v.                                                 }    District Court of Vermont,
    }    Unit No. 2, Rutland Circuit
    }
    Aaron Todd                                            }    DOCKET NO. 1450-9-08 Rdcr
    Trial Judge: Thomas A. Zonay
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Defendant appeals from his conviction of conspiracy to dispense cocaine. He argues that
    there was insufficient evidence to establish his guilt. We conclude that defendant waived this
    argument, and we therefore affirm.
    Defendant was charged with conspiracy to dispense cocaine based on allegations that he
    received crack cocaine in exchange for allowing several individuals to live with him and sell
    cocaine from his residence. See 13 V.S.A. § 1404(a) (“A person is guilty of conspiracy if, with
    the purpose that an offense [including sale or distribution of a regulated drug] be committed, that
    person agrees with one or more persons to commit or cause the commission of that offense, and
    at least two of the co-conspirators are persons who are neither law enforcement officials acting in
    official capacity nor persons acting in cooperation with a law enforcement official.”). More
    specifically, the information alleged that defendant, with the purpose that the offense of
    dispensing regulated drug, sale of cocaine, 18 V.S.A. § 4231(b)(1), be committed, agreed with
    one or more persons to cause the commission of dispensing regulated drug, and that defendant
    committed the overt act of accepting pieces of crack cocaine as payment for allowing these
    individuals to stay at his residence from which these individuals sold cocaine in violation of 13
    V.S.A. §§ 1404 and 1409.
    At trial, the State offered testimony from several police officers who conducted a drug
    raid at defendant’s trailer. Defendant also provided statements to police identifying the men that
    were staying with him, indicating that these individuals were selling crack at the residence, and
    that they provided him with one to two rocks of cocaine each day for staying at the residence. At
    the close of the State’s case, defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal. The court denied the
    motion, finding the evidence sufficient to support the charge. Among other evidence, the court
    cited the defendant’s admission that he received crack cocaine for allowing the individuals to
    stay with him so that they could sell drugs.
    Defendant presented one witness on his own behalf. He did not renew his motion for
    judgment of acquittal at the close of all of the evidence, nor did he file a post-verdict motion for
    acquittal within ten days of the jury’s guilty verdict. See V.R.Cr.P. 29(a), (c). By failing to do
    so, he waived any argument on appeal regarding the sufficiency of the evidence. See Reporter’s
    Notes, V.R.Cr.P. 29 (failure to move for acquittal or to renew motion at close of all evidence
    “forecloses appellate consideration of all issues of sufficiency of the evidence”); State v. Norton,
    
    139 Vt. 532
    , 534 (1981) (reiterating that where defendant fails to challenge sufficiency of the
    evidence at the end of the trial by a motion under the rule for judgment of acquittal, issue is not
    preserved for appellate review, and “[t]his is true even when the defendant moves for acquittal
    after the State’s case, but fails to renew the motion at the end of the defendant’s case”), overruled
    on other grounds by State v. Brooks, 
    163 Vt. 245
     (1995).
    Defendant nonetheless asserts that the court committed plain error in failing to move for
    acquittal on its own motion. See V.R.Cr.P. 29(a). Specifically, he argues that there was
    insufficient evidence to establish an overt act as required under 13 V.S.A. § 1404(b).
    As the court instructed the jury, the essential elements of the charged crime were that: (1)
    defendant; (2) willfully agreed to enter into a conspiracy with one or more persons to commit the
    offense of dispensing a regulated drug; (3) defendant joined in the conspiracy with the purpose
    of committing the offense of dispensing a regulated drug; (4) defendant and at least one other
    coconspirator were not law enforcement officials or acting in collaboration with law enforcement
    officials; and (5) after defendant joined the conspiracy, either defendant or a conspirator
    performed a substantial overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. The court recognized that the
    State did not need to prove that there was an express agreement between the parties, but rather,
    the agreement could consist of a mutual understanding that the members would commit some
    illegal activity by means of a common plan or a course of action. See, e.g., People v. Longines,
    
    40 Cal.Rptr.2d 356
    , 358-59 (Cal.App. 1995) (“ [A] conspiracy may be shown by circumstantial
    evidence and the agreement may be inferred from the conduct of the defendants mutually
    carrying out a common purpose in violation of a penal statute.” (quotation omitted)).
    Title 13 V.S.A. § 1404(b) provides that:
    [n]o person shall be convicted of conspiracy unless a substantial
    overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy is alleged and proved to
    have been done by the defendant or by a co-conspirator, other than
    a law enforcement official acting in an official capacity or a person
    acting in cooperation with a law enforcement official, and
    subsequent to the defendant’s entrance into the conspiracy. Speech
    alone may not constitute an overt act.
    According to defendant, his own statement to police was the only evidence showing that he took
    the overt step of allowing these individuals to stay with him in exchange for crack cocaine. He
    maintains that this evidence is insufficient under the corpus delicti rule, and that his conviction
    must therefore be reversed.
    We find no plain error. “The purpose of the corpus delicti rule is to foreclose the
    possibility of conviction based on false confession where, in fact, no crime has been committed.”
    State v. FitzGerald, 
    165 Vt. 343
    , 350 (1996). Where the State’s case is based on a confession,
    “the corpus delicti must be corroborated by independent evidence.” 
    Id.
     Such evidence “need not
    2
    independently prove commission of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt, however; even slight
    corroboration may be sufficient.” 
    Id.
     The question is whether there was adequate corroborating
    evidence to show that a crime was committed.
    There was sufficient corroborating evidence here. Aside from defendant’s written and
    oral statements about receiving drugs and allowing these individuals to stay with him and sell
    drugs from his residence, the record shows that the police found crack cocaine and large amounts
    of cash on two of the individuals residing with defendant, including cash from a controlled drug
    sale. Crack cocaine was also found in the couch of the residence. The drugs were individually
    bagged for sale. Additionally, police found drug paraphernalia, including pipes and spoons, in
    defendant’s bedroom. There was also evidence that defendant’s alleged co-conspirators had
    travelled to Vermont from out-of-state, defendant allowed these individuals to stay with him,
    they were not paying defendant any rent, and they had brought cocaine with them. The evidence
    was sufficient to support a logical and reasonable inference that defendant received drugs from
    these individuals in exchange for allowing them to stay with him and that the crime of
    conspiracy to distribute cocaine was committed. The court did not commit plain error by failing
    to sua sponte move for judgment of acquittal on this count based on the corpus delicti rule. See
    Norton, 139 Vt. at 534 (“A [trial] court should move for acquittal only when the record reveals
    that the evidence is so tenuous that a conviction would be unconscionable”).
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice
    _______________________________________
    Denise R. Johnson, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice
    3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2010-173

Filed Date: 1/27/2011

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021