By way of a single indictment, appellant was individually charged with three counts of selling cocaine, a co-indictee was individually charged with two counts of selling cocaine and they were both jointly charged with one count of selling cocaine. Appellant and the co-indictee were jointly tried and the jury returned guilty verdicts on all offenses. The convictions of the co-indictee were affirmed on appeal. English v. State,
1. The denial of the motion to sever appellant’s trial from that of his co-indictee is enumerated as error.
It was not error to deny severance as to the count for which appellant and the co-indictee were jointly charged with selling cocaine. See generally Story v. State,
2. Over a hearsay objection, the supervising officer was permitted to testify as to what he had been told by the investigating undercover officer. Since the investigating undercover officer was herself a witness at appellant’s trial, it was not error to overrule the hearsay objection. Miller v. State,
3. The investigating undercover officer testified to her duties regarding contemporaneous documentation of the drug transactions in which she participated. Over objection, she was then allowed to testify, by reference to one of her contemporaneous records, as to the specifics of a drug transaction in which she and appellant had participated. The trial court did not err in allowing the witness to testify by reference to her records. See Bridges v. Mut. Benefit Health &c. Assn.,
4. The trial court’s failure to sustain an objection to certain evidence as having “no relevancy to this case” presents nothing for review. Sultenfuss v. State,
5. The remaining enumeration of error relates to an evidentiary ruling which has already been decided adversely to appellant’s contentions in the appeal of his co-indictee. English v. State, supra at 599 (1).
