Fred James Anderson was convicted of burglarizing a building wherein valuable goods were stored and was sentenced to serve 12 months, of which six months were to be served on probation. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and sentence. Held:
1. Enumerations of error 1 and 2 directed to the overruling of motions for acquittal, first at the close of the State’s case, and secondly at the close of the State’s case after it was reopened and again closed, are without merit.
Pritchard v. State,
2. We find no error in the sentence imposed; .hence enumeration of error number 3 is without merit.
3. Officer B. L. Anderson, who investigated the matter and testified as a witness for the State stated that he found broken glass on the ground, under shrubbery near the building and immediately below or underneath a window. The owner testified that the window had been broken between the time he had last closed the building at the end of the week and his discovery upon opening the following Monday that it had been entered and certain property removed therefrom.
Officer Anderson asserted that pieces of glass- found inside the building, in the window itself and on the ground, were similar in appearance, and from that he concluded that the glass on the ground came from the window. This was a sufficient statement of the facts upon which he based his opinion to allow the officer to express it. Enumeration 4 is without merit.
Furthermore, the same or similar evidence was elicited several
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times from the same witness without objection.
Waters v. Wells,
4. The State introduced its Exhibit No. 8, a piece of the glass found on the ground underneath the broken window carrying the defendant’s fingerprints. Defendant’s objection that it had not been sufficiently identified as coming from the broken window was properly overruled. It was identified in the manner indicated in Division 3, above. Enumerations 5, 6 and
7,
urging that the court erred in admitting the exhibit, in “refusing to strike all evidence having to do with State’s Exhibit No. 8” and in failing to limit the purpose of its admission are without merit. “At most we think it could only be said that their admissibility was doubtful, and it has long been the rule in this State, when the admissibility of evidence is doubtful, to admit it and leave its weight and effect to be determined by the jury.”
Goodman v. State,
En bloc objections and exceptions are not effective in presenting a question for consideration when some of the evidence was clearly admissible.
Taintor v. Rogers,
5. Error is enumerated on the allowing of the State, after closing, to reopen its case and recall officer Anderson for further testimony. These enumerations are not meritorious. It was within the sound discretion of the court to permit this to be done, and a liberal practice in this respect to the end that justice may prevail is to be favored.
Bigelow v. Young,
Judgment affirmed.
