UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. STEVE A. WALTON, APPELLANT
No. 74-1790
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
168 U.S. App. D.C. 305; 514 F.2d 201 (D.C. Cir. 1975)
January 23, 1975, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY: Appeal from the United States District Court for
the District of Columbia (D.C. Criminal 74-140).
COUNSEL: Stuart F. Johnson, (appointed by this Court), for Appellant.
David E. Wilson, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Earl J. Silbert, United
States Attorney, John A. Terry, James F. Rutherford, Bernard J. Panetta, II and
Jeffrey T. Demerath, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for Appellee.
JUDGES: Bazelon, Chief Judge, Tamm and Robb, Circuit Judges. Opinion
for the Court filed by Chief Judge Bazelon.
OPINION BY: BAZELON
OPINION
[*202] BAZELON, Chief Judge:
Steve Walton was tried before the District Court and convicted on June 25, 1974
of one count of unlawful distribution of marijuana. [Footnote 1] Walton concedes
that he sold at least two pounds of marijuana to undercover police officers in the
District of Columbia. His sole contention on this appeal is that the marijuana he
possessed and sold to the officers was not necessarily species Cannabis sativa L.,
which is, he argues, the only species of marijuana the distribution of which is
outlawed by federal and local law in the District of Columbia. Walton is indeed
correct that 21 U.S.C. § 802(15) (1970) does define marijuana as Cannabis sativa
L. but this fact, we think, is not sufficient to support Walton's contention that
Congress meant to outlaw the distribution of only one species of marijuana.
Walton's argument is initially premised on recent claims that marijuana is a so-called
"polytypical" plant with more than one species presently extant. [Footnote
2] According to the expert witness deposed by Walton, some botanists recognize four
species of marijuana other than sativa L., viz. Cannabis indica, Cannabis ruderalis,
Cannabis gigantea and a species not yet named but located in Afghanistan. [Footnote
3] The government and some courts [Footnote 4] challenge this position, and Walton
admits that expert opinion is not uniform on the issue. Since the District Court
did not make findings of fact on the point and rejected Walton's proffer of proof,
we must assume for purposes of decision that more than one species of marijuana
are extant.
We thus must consider whether the Congress meant to prohibit the distribution of
all species of marijuana or only the distribution of species Cannabis sativa L.
We first note the concession by Walton's expert that all the species of marijuana
possess the toxic agent " tetrahydrocannabinol", popularly known as THC.
[Footnote 5] It is conceded that the "hallucinogenic" or euphoric effects
produced by this agent led to the Congressional ban on possession, importation and
distribution of marijuana. The most cursory reading of the legislative history of
the various provisions outlawing marijuana permit no other conclusion. Thus, Walton's
argument is that Congress meant to outlaw the euphoric effects of the sativa L.
species but not the euphoric effect of other species. This result seems manifestly
unreasonable and furthermore could raise the most serious equal protection problems
if it were adopted, i.e. an individual convicted for distribution of sativa L. could
state with more than a little justification that no legitimate legislative purpose
permits the government to jail persons who obtain a THC "high" [*203]
from sativa L. but to not prosecute persons who obtain the exact same "high"
from another species. Moreover, Walton's expert concedes that at present there is
no reliable biochemical or spectrographic method for distinguishing between the
various species of marijuana. [Footnote 6] Thus, unless the government has access
to the growing plant, an unlikely situation, it can not at present prove that a
given defendant possesses one kind of marijuana or another. It may be that the government
has the capacity to develop a method but since Congress did not have the benefit
of any such method when it enacted the statute in issue here, one must certainly
pause to consider why Congress would enact a law the violations of which could not
proven on the basis of present knowledge. Even if Congress did have such a method,
it is apparently conceded that only citizens with expert botanical knowledge could
distinguish between the various species of marijuana. This suggests a serious due
process question: could the government prosecute an individual for possession of
sativa L. when there are no means whereby the average citizen can distinguish between
sativa L. and other species to thus conform his conduct to the requirements of the
law? It presses us to extremes to hold that Congress would enact a law the violations
of which are not detectable to the group of citizens to whom the law is addressed.
With the anomalous consequences of acceptance of Walton's argument in mind, we turn
to the legislative history for guidance. The law under which Walton was convicted
was enacted as part of the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, [Footnote 7] but the
definition of marijuana in that Act was carried forward without comment from the
Marijuana Tax Act of 1937. [Footnote 8] Looking at the legislative history of this
latter law, we find that the definition of marijuana was intended to include those
parts of marijuana which contain THC and to exclude those parts which do not. [Footnote
9] Furthermore, there was no testimony that we have been able to locate before the
Congress that marijuana was anything other than monotypical and there is no discussion
in the Congressional reports of different species of marijuana. The references to
the definition of marijuana in the hearings all either indicate that the witnesses
believed marijuana was monotypical or that the term sativa L. encompassed all marijuana
including that known as Cannabis indica. [Footnote 10] Walton's own evidence indicates
that the scientific community in this country did not become aware of the possible
polytypical status of marijuana until the late 1960's. [Footnote 11] There is no
evidence that this new knowledge was brought to the attention of Congress in 1970.
The legislative history is absolutely clear that Congress meant to outlaw all plants
popularly known as marijuana [*204] to the extent those plants
possessed THC. Every federal appeals court which has considered the point has reached
a similar conclusion. [Footnote 12]
Walton places principal reliance on the well-settled rule that criminal statutes
are to be strictly construed in favor of the accused. [Footnote 13] The two federal
district court cases and the one District of Columbia Superior Court case which
have accepted Walton's argument also rely heavily on this rule of statutory construction.
[Footnote 14] We, of course, have no dispute with this rule but do not think it
is to be applied in a case such as we confront here. This salutary rule of construction
is designed as a presumptive method of resolving ambiguities in a statutory proscription
and unless an ambiguity is found to exist, this rule of construction may not be
used to frustrate legislative intent. [Footnote 15] Here we have no ambiguity in
the purpose and reach of the statute prohibiting the distribution of marijuana.
As stated above, the clear purpose of the law is to proscribe the euphoric effect
of THC and there is not one iota of evidence that Congress meant to leave untouched
the euphoric effect produced by other species of marijuana. The use of the term
Cannabis sativa L. instead of the term Cannabis is not ambiguous when one considers
the fact that Congress was presented with no evidence that there were species of
marijuana which were not technically sativa L. but which produced the same effect.
The legislative history conclusively demonstrates that Congress believed it was
outlawing all marijuana which contained THC. The fact, averted to by Walton and
some courts, that expert opinion did exist that marijuana was polytypical at the
time Congress passed the Marijuana Tax Act, is of no relevance to the intent of
Congress since the fact was not popularly known [Footnote 16] and since Congress
is not held in the process of statutory construction to what it could have known
but to what it did in fact know. The lack of ambiguity in this case may be profitably
contrasted with the ambiguity found in United States v. Moore, 505 F.2d
426, 164 U.S. App. D.C. 319 (1974). There the Court averted to evidence of Congressional
awareness of and action directed in part to the result which the defendant's version
of the statute in issue would produce. Furthermore, acceptance of the defendant's
proposed interpretation did not, it was held, produce the absurd consequences that
acceptance of Walton's proposed interpretation would inevitably produce.
We note in conclusion that many rules of statutory construction place the [*205]
courts in an uncooperative position with regard to legislative intent. Judicial
protection of significant statutory and constitutional interests at times require
courts to demand a "clear statement" of intent before deferring to a legislative
judgment. There always comes a point, however, where the legislative intent is as
clear as is humanly possible and at that point the courts must either defer or exercise
their constitutional responsibilities. While Congress with the wisdom of hindsight
could have been more clear in its definition of marijuana, we can discover no significant
doubt about Congress' purpose in proscribing the distribution of marijuana. Hearing
no constitutional objection to this proscription, we are compelled to affirm Walton's
conviction.
Affirmed.