Court Opinion

ID: 1220857
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:05:05.849859+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:42:22.752868
License: Public Domain

204 S.E.2d 724 (1974)
21 N.C. App. 384
STATE of North Carolina
v.
Judy Barrett NEWTON.
No. 7427SC95.
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
May 1, 1974.
*725 Atty. Gen., Robert Morgan by Asst. Atty. Gen., Rafford E. Jones, Raleigh, for the State.
Daniel J. Walton, Gastonia, for defendant.
BROCK, Chief Judge.
Defendant argues that she was entitled to a nonsuit because there was a fatal variance between the charge and the proof. The bill of indictment charged defendant with possession of "Desoxyn." The evidence tended to establish that she possessed methamphetamine. Because there was no evidence offered at trial to establish that "Desoxyn" contained methamphetamine, defendant argues that the State failed to prove the charge contained in the bill of indictment.
The trial judge instructed the jury that Desoxyn and methamphetamine were the same thing. Defendant assigns this instruction as error on the ground that there is no evidence offered at trial to support the instruction.
Chapter 919 of the 1971 Session Laws, codified as G.S. § 90-91, classed methamphetamine as a controlled substance. Desoxyn does not appear by name as a controlled substance under the North Carolina Controlled Substances Act. However, our courts are not required to be ignorant of a fact which is generally and reliably established merely because evidence of the fact is not offered. The Courts will take judicial notice of subjects and facts of general knowledge, and also of facts in the field of any particular science which are capable of demonstration by resort to readily accessible sources of indisputable accuracy, and judges may inform themselves as to such facts by reference to standard works on the subject. 3 Strong, N.C. Index 2d, Evidence, § 3, p. 596. Each of the Schedules of the Controlled Substances Act provides that it "includes the controlled substance listed or to be listed by whatever official name, common or usual name, chemical name, or trade name designated." We take notice that Desoxyn is a trade name used by Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Illinois, for methamphetamine hydrochloride. In a like manner, it was proper for the trial judge to take such notice and to instruct the jury that Desoxyn and methamphetamine are the same thing. Because Desoxyn and methamphetamine are the same thing, there was no variance between the charge in the bill of indictment and the proof. It was made clear by the defendant's own testimony *726 that she knew the tablets were drugs. These assignments of error are overruled.
Defendant assigns as error the entry of the judgment in this case and moves in arrest thereof on the grounds that methamphetamine was listed under Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act at the time of her alleged offense on 10 February 1973. She argues that she was convicted of possession with intent to distribute and that simple possession of a Schedule III substance constitutes a misdemeanor, but that judgment was entered imposing punishment for a felony.
The Controlled Substances Act as enacted in 1971 listed methamphetamine under Schedule III (G.S. § 90-91(a)(3)). The same enactment provided in G.S. § 90-95(a)(3) that it was unlawful to possess a controlled substance, and in G.S. § 90-95(d) that any person who violates G.S. § 90-95(a)(3) with respect to a controlled substance included in Schedule III, for the first offense, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. At the same time, G.S. § 90-95(c) provided that simple possession of a substance included in Schedule II constituted a felony. However, G.S. § 90-88 granted to the North Carolina State Board of Health (now under the North Carolina Commission for Health Services) authority, under the guides set forth in the statute, to add, delete, or reschedule substances within Schedules I through VI of the Controlled Substances Act. The State Board of Health, on 23 March 1972, acting under authority of G.S. § 90-88, rescheduled methamphetamine from Schedule III to Schedule II. This was almost a year prior to the offense alleged against defendant. This assignment of error is overruled and the motion in arrest of judgment is denied.
No error.
PARKER and BALEY, JJ., concur.