            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

                            AT NASHVILLE             FILED
                         AUGUST 1998 SESSION
                                                      October 7, 1998

                                                    Cecil W. Crowson
                                                   Appellate Court Clerk
STATE OF TENNESSEE,             )
                                )    C.C.A. NO. 01C01-9710-CR-00491
            Appellee,           )
                                )    DAVIDSON COUNTY
VS.                             )
                                )    HON. SETH NORMAN,
EDWARD ANTHONY JOSLIN,          )    JUDGE
                                )
            Appellant.          )    (Conspiracy to Possess with Intent,
                                )     Possession with Intent to Deliver
                                )     (2 counts), and Delivery of Marijuana)



FOR THE APPELLANT:                   FOR THE APPELLEE:


SAM WALLACE, SR.                     JOHN KNOX WALKUP
227 Second Ave., North               Attorney General & Reporter
Nashville, TN 37201
                                     TIMOTHY F. BEHAN
                                     Asst. Attorney General
                                     John Sevier Bldg.
                                     425 Fifth Ave., North
                                     Nashville, TN 37243-0493

                                     VICTOR S. JOHNSON, III
                                     District Attorney General

                                     JOHN ZIMMERMANN
                                     Asst. District Attorney General
                                     Washington Sq., Suite 500
                                     222 Second Ave., North
                                     Nashville, TN 37201-1649




OPINION FILED:____________________



AFFIRMED


JOHN H. PEAY,
Judge
                                    OPINION



             A jury found the defendant guilty of conspiracy to possess with the intent

to deliver over seventy pounds of marijuana; two counts of possession with the intent to

deliver one-half ounce to ten pounds of marijuana; and delivery of ten pounds, one gram

to seventy pounds of marijuana. The trial court imposed an effective sentence of thirty-

nine years incarceration, with a total fine of one hundred sixty thousand dollars

($160,000). On appeal, the defendant presents ten issues for review, most of which deal

with the sufficiency of the convicting evidence or the propriety of the defendant’s

sentence. We affirm the defendant’s convictions and sentence.



             On August 23, 1994, members of the Metropolitan Police Department who

were working with the Drug Enforcement Administration drug task force learned that four

large, suspicious-looking packages were being sent via Federal Express from Phoenix,

Arizona, to Nashville. The packages were each addressed to the name “Brian Orman”

at the address of a property owned by a member of the defendant’s family. The return

address on the packages was phony. When the packages arrived in Nashville, a drug-

sniffing dog detected narcotics.



             Two police officers borrowed a Federal Express van and dressed as

Federal Express employees in order to deliver the packages. When they drove to the

address specified on the packages, they observed two males, Orman and the

defendant’s son, sitting in a pickup truck next to a house. Orman motioned for the

Federal Express truck to stop. When it did, Orman signed for the packages and helped

load them into the back of his truck. Orman and the defendant’s son were then arrested

and transported to the drug task force office. When the packages were opened, the

police discovered over 180 pounds of compressed marijuana wrapped inside of the

boxes. Orman and the defendant’s son identified the defendant as the owner of the

                                           2
marijuana. Orman had agreed to pick up the marijuana packages for the defendant in

exchange for money because he was unemployed, behind on his truck payments, and

needed to support his infant. These circumstances resulted in Count I, conspiracy to

possess over seventy pounds of marijuana with the intent to deliver.



             The drug task force had learned that a confidential informant had previously

purchased marijuana from a man named Matthew Clay, who received the drugs from the

defendant. On December 26, 1994, the drug task force gave the informant money to buy

marijuana from Clay while surveilling Clay and the exchange. One officer watched Clay

as he drove to the residence of 6010 Pennsylvania Avenue. The defendant’s girlfriend

lived at 6010 Pennsylvania Avenue, which is directly behind the defendant’s house on

California Avenue. After stopping at 6010 Pennsylvania Avenue, Clay then drove to a

store parking lot in Ashland City, where he exchanged three-quarters of a pound of

marijuana he had received from the defendant for money from the informant. These

circumstances resulted in Count II, possession with the intent to deliver one-half ounce

to ten pounds of marijuana.



             The informant had made arrangements with Clay to purchase twelve

pounds of marijuana. On December 28, 1994, the police followed Clay from his place of

employment to 6010 Pennsylvania Avenue. They watched as the defendant left his

second residence on East Stewart Lane and drove to meet Clay at 6010 Pennsylvania

Avenue. They saw the defendant remove a plastic bag from his truck and give it to Clay.

Clay then left the defendant’s house and headed toward Ashland City, where he was to

meet the informant. Before he arrived at the designated meeting place, however, he was

arrested by the police. Fourteen pounds of marijuana were found in a plastic bag inside

his van. Meanwhile, a search warrant was executed on the residence on East Stewart

Lane, where thousands of dollars were seized, and the residence at 6010 Pennsylvania

Avenue, where eight pounds of marijuana were seized. The marijuana seized at 6010

                                           3
Pennsylvania Avenue resulted in Count III, possession with the intent to deliver one-half

ounce to ten pounds of marijuana,1 and the exchange of marijuana between the

defendant and Clay resulted in Count IV, delivery of ten pounds, one gram to seventy

pounds of marijuana.



                   Based on this evidence, a jury found the defendant guilty on all counts. The

defendant was sentenced to fifteen years incarceration as a Range II multiple offender

on Count I; six years incarceration as a career offender on Count II; six years

incarceration as a career offender on Count III; and twelve years incarceration as a

career offender on Count IV. All sentences are to be served consecutively to one

another, for an effective sentence of thirty-nine years.2 The trial court also imposed a one

hundred thousand dollar ($100,000) fine for Count I; a five thousand dollar ($5000) fine

for Count II; a five thousand dollar ($5000) fine for Count III; and a fifty thousand dollar

($50,000) fine for Count IV. The defendant now appeals.



                   The defendant first challenges his conviction on Count I, conspiracy to

possess over seventy pounds of marijuana, claiming that the only proof to sustain his

conviction is the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, Brian Orman.                                             The

defendant concedes that if Orman’s testimony was corroborated, it would be sufficient to

sustain his conviction for Count I.


         1
           The indictment reflects that Count III is possession with intent to deliver ten pounds, one gram
to seven ty pounds mariju ana. Du ring trial, the Sta te adm itted that it need ed to cor rect the ind ictmen t to
reflect possession with the intent to deliver one-half ounce to ten pounds marijuana, as the proof
sho wed that o nly eigh t pou nds of m arijua na w as s eized from 6010 Pen nsylva nia A venu e. Up on th is
concession, the trial court stated it would so charge the jury. The jury returned a verdict of “guilty as
charged,” even though a corrected indictment is absent from the record. Although the jury instructions
are absent from the record, we are assuming that the jury was properly charged. We are also assuming
that th e jud gm ent fo r Cou nt III, w hich reflec ts the char ge of poss ess ion w ith the inten t to de liver o ne-h alf
ounce to ten pounds marijuana, is correct, as it is consistent with the conversation the parties had on the
reco rd du ring tr ial.

         2
         The judgment form for Count III incorrectly indicates that the sentence for Count III should be
served conse cutively to the s entenc e impo sed in “C ount III,” rathe r than to on e of the oth er coun ts.
Considering that the judgment form for Count I expressly states the trial court’s intention to sentence the
defendant to an effective sentence of thirty-nine years, it is obvious from the record that the trial court
intended the sente nce in C ount III to be c onsec utively served to the sen tences impos ed in Co unts I, II,
and IV. On remand, this scrivener’s error should be corrected.

                                                            4
              The rule is well settled in Tennessee that a defendant cannot be convicted

on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice. Sherrill v. State, 204 Tenn. 427, 321

S.W.2d 811, 814 (1959). An accomplice is defined as “a person who knowingly,

voluntarily, and with common intent with the principal offender, unites in the commission

of a crime.” Clapp v. State, 94 Tenn. 186, 30 S.W. 214, 216 (1895). To corroborate the

testimony of an accomplice, “there should be some fact testified to, entirely independent

of the accomplice’s evidence, which, taken by itself, leads to the inference, not only that

a crime has been committed, but also that the defendant is implicated in it.” Id. This

corroboration must consist of some fact or circumstance which affects the identity of the

defendant. Furthermore, the jury is to determine the degree of evidence necessary to

corroborate the testimony of an accomplice, and it is sufficient “if there is some other

evidence fairly tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” Id.

at 217.



              Here, Orman was indicted for and pled guilty to conspiracy to possess over

seventy pounds of marijuana, thus establishing that he was an accomplice to the

defendant. However, contrary to the defendant’s argument, the defendant was not

convicted solely upon Orman’s testimony. At trial, Orman testified that in return for

payment, the defendant asked him to pick up some packages of marijuana that he was

expecting to be delivered, that the packages of marijuana belonged to the defendant, and

that he identified the defendant as the owner of the packages after he was arrested.

Orman’s testimony was amply corroborated. A police officer testified that after the

packages were delivered and Orman and the defendant’s son were arrested, the

defendant’s son also identified the defendant as the owner of the packages. There was

also evidence that the defendant’s “main man,” a euphemism for “drug supplier,” was a

man named “Ricco” from Phoenix and that Ricco was a known drug supplier who

operated out of Arizona. Moreover, the day before the packages were sent from Phoenix,

the defendant withdrew three thousand dollars ($3000) from his bank account. This

                                            5
evidence is sufficient corroboration of Orman’s trial testimony, which is sufficient to

support the defendant’s conviction for Count I, conspiracy to possess over seventy

pounds of marijuana.



              The defendant also challenges his convictions for Counts II-IV, claiming that

because the trial testimony of Matthew Clay, who the defendant contends was an

accomplice, was not corroborated, Clay’s testimony is insufficient to support his

convictions. The defendant’s argument is based on an incorrect premise, i.e., that Clay

was the defendant’s accomplice in the crimes charged in Counts II-IV. Clay could not

have been considered an accomplice in Counts II-IV because he did not share a common

intent with the defendant to commit the crimes charged; Clay was nothing more than the

defendant’s agent for delivery. Because he was not an accomplice in Counts II-IV, his

trial testimony need not have been corroborated in order to be sufficient to support the

defendant’s convictions on those counts.



              However, even if Clay could have been considered the defendant’s

accomplice, there was sufficient evidence in the record to corroborate Clay’s trial

testimony. Clay testified that he had picked up some marijuana from the defendant and

had given it to another person (the confidential informant) on December 26. Clay also

testified that on December 28, he was arrested for possessing fourteen pounds of

marijuana, which he had received from the defendant earlier that day. A police officer

testified that on December 26, he watched Clay stop by the residence at 6010

Pennsylvania Avenue and then proceed to a store parking lot in Ashland City, where he

gave three-quarters of a pound of marijuana to the confidential informant. A police officer

also testified that on December 28, Clay met with the defendant at 6010 Pennsylvania

Avenue, and the defendant gave Clay a plastic bag. The plastic bag was later recovered




                                            6
in Clay’s van when he was arrested; the bag contained fourteen pounds of marijuana.3

Even if Clay could be considered an accomplice to Counts II-IV, this evidence would be

sufficient to corroborate Clay’s testimony.



                   Next, the defendant appears to challenge his convictions on Counts III and

IV on the grounds that these convictions, the first of which deals with possession of

marijuana on December 26 and the second of which deals with delivery of marijuana on

the same day, violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. We fail to understand how such an

argument can be raised in good faith, however, since the record is clear that each count

concerns a different quantity of confiscated marijuana: Count III arose from the marijuana

seized at 6010 Pennsylvania Avenue pursuant to a search warrant, while Count IV

concerned the plastic bag of marijuana that the defendant gave to Clay and that was

found in Clay’s van following his arrest. Because each count arose under different

circumstances and is supported by different evidence, the defendant’s double jeopardy

challenge is wholly without merit.



                   The defendant also challenges his sentence, complaining that his sentence

is excessive because he is not a violent offender and his convictions do not involve

“serious hard drugs.” However, the defendant failed to include a copy of the sentencing

hearing transcript in the record, as is his burden as appellant to do. T.R.A.P. 24(b).

Because the record is incomplete, we are precluded from reviewing the propriety of the

sentence imposed; instead, “we must conclusively presume the judgment of the trial court

was correct.” State v. Matthews, 805 S.W.2d 776, 784 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990).




         3
           W hile th e polic e off icer s aw C lay acc ept th e plas tic ba g fro m th e def end ant, h e did n ot se e him
actu ally plac e it in his van b eca use the a ngle a t whic h he w as ob serv ing th e exc han ge ob struc ted h is
view. The defe nda nt arg ues that w ithou t suc h evid enc e and witho ut the police offic er ob serv ing th at it
was co ntraban d that was excha nged, the police offic er’s testim ony cann ot corrob orate C lay’s. W e
disagree. It is enough that the police officer testified that he saw Clay accept the plastic bag, that it was
the only plastic bag found in Clay’s van when he was arrested, and that the plastic bag contained
fourteen pounds of marijuana.

                                                             7
              At the end of his brief, the defendant makes two other abrupt assertions,

i.e., that the trial court erred in allowing into evidence “conduct that was not included in

the indictment,” and that the trial court erred in allowing into evidence proof about the

individual named “Ricco.” However, the defendant failed to raise these issues in his

motion for a new trial, thus waiving these issues on appeal. See T.R.A.P. 3(e); State v.

Clinton, 754 S.W.2d 100, 103 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988). The defendant has also waived

these issues by failing to cite to the record or to any authority. See Rules of the Court of

Criminal Appeals of Tennessee 10(b).



              Finding no merit in the defendant’s arguments, we affirm his convictions and

sentence.



                                                  _______________________________
                                                  JOHN H. PEAY, Judge



CONCUR:



______________________________
THOMAS T. W OODALL, Judge



______________________________
L. TERRY LAFFERTY, Special Judge




                                             8
