OPINION
Derryl Dean Boone was convicted October 20,1978, in Washington County District Court Case No. CRF-77-282, for the offense of Robbery with Firearms, After Former Conviction of a Felony. The jury returned a sentence of twenty-three (23) years’ imprisonment under the direction and control of the State Department of Corrections.' He has appealed that conviction. This appeal was reviewed again on petition for rehearing. Appellant was represented on appeal by the appointed counsel. (First reported in 52 O.B.J. 2394, October 17,1981).
The State proved for the satisfaction of the jury that appellant, in concert with Bill Crawford, robbed the Kentucky Fried Chicken Store in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, on December 5, 1976. Bill Crawford drove appellant’s car and was instructed to wait in the Bestyet Store parking lot, until appellant returned from the robbery. However, because a police alert was put out for a disturbance in that area, Bill Crawford left the parking lot and ultimately returned to the living area of both men. Appellant was forced to find his own means of transportation home. Some $1,200.00 was taken in the robbery. The money was split-up between the appellant, Bill Crawford and several of their friends. Later, appellant and his friends moved to Osage County. Subsequently the Bartlesville Police obtained a search warrant for the place where appellant and his friends were living. Certain items of evidence were found that connected appellant with the Kentucky Fried Chicken Store robbery. The State offered numerous witnesses. Appellant did not testify and did not offer any defense.
In appellant’s first assignment of error, he asserts that the prosecutor acted in bad faith in the manner he presented the prosecution, i.e., he made prejudicial statements during the voir dire of the jury; and, in his opening statement, he stated things that he knew he could not later prove. The main thrust of this argument revolves around the testimony of one, Jesse Ford. Ford had been convicted for the commission of a felony and was serving a twenty year penitentiary sentence. At the time of trial he was located in the Bartlesville jail. When the prosecutor asked the first juror concerning the acceptance of testimony from a fellow inmate, defense counsel objected. The trial court sustained the objection and instructed the prosecutor he could make reference to the witness as being a convicted felon but he was not to intimate that appellant was serving penitentiary time, when appellant’s alleged statement was made to the witness. The court considered that the testimony would be bringing in other crimes against appellant.
During the prosecutor’s opening statement, he made statements that were perilously close to the violation of the court’s instruction concerning evidence of other crimes. Later, when Jesse Ford testified the prosecutor inquired about the statement appellant made to Ford concerning the robbery and permitted the witness to state the time and place the statement was made in such a manner that the jury could have implied that the appellant was incarcerated in the penitentiary when he made the statement. The court recognized the implication and upon the motion of defense counsel struck the entire testimony of Jesse Ford. Appellant asserts the prosecutor intentionally attempted to enter such testimony to secure appellant’s conviction.
We have considered appellant’s assignments of error in this area of concern and conclude that in view of the evidence against appellant that reversible error was not committed. Appellant cites Hilyard v. State,
Likewise, it was not error for the trial judge to deny the joint motion for mistrial, when Jesse Ford’s testimony was stricken from the .record. There is no doubt that the prosecutor desired to show the testimony of Jesse Ford because it revealed the statement appellant made to him concerning the robbery. In the adversary system either attorney may become strongly convinced that his procedure is proper and attempt to introduce evidence that may later become inadmissible. In the instant case the prosecutor appears to have bungled the testimony of Ford, when he permitted Ford to testify relative to the time and place appellant’s statement was made to him. Whether or not the jury gained the same implication that the trial judge gained is problematical. Concededly the trial judge is more sophisticated in the law than are the members of the jury. Nonetheless, considering the entire record herein, any error that was committed in the instant case relative to this issue appears at most to be harmless error, considering the vast amount of evidence otherwise presented. Chapman v. California,
Concerning the perjury appellant asserts to have occurred on behalf of the testimony of Bill Crawford, that question is not properly before this Court. The asserted perjury is not contained in the record now before this Court and any reference to what Bill Crawford might have testified to at a later trial is a matter for another forum. Any challenge concerning his testimony must be presented in a post-conviction procedure in the trial court, in accordance with 22 O.S.1971, § 1080 et seq., where a record can be properly made to reflect what actually transpired. Title 22 O.S.1971, §§ 952 and 953, provide for a motion for new trial on grounds of newly discovered evidence, but that motion must be brought within one year after the imposition of judgment and sentence. See also, Rule
Appellant’s contention that the “stocking cap” which had eye holes cut into it, but which the State’s evidence clearly showed was not the stocking cap used in the instant robbery, was improperly admitted. Appellant objected to the admission of that evidence at the same time objections were entered to the admission of a photograph of a .38 caliber Rossi Garcia pistol. The court admitted both items of evidence. The stocking cap had no probative value whatsoever and was improperly admitted.
Two assignments of error concern the improperly admitted stocking cap. The employees of the store testified that the robber wore such a cap. Two of the State’s witnesses testified that the cap was burned after the robbery. At trial another stocking cap was introduced, which the witnesses testified was like the one used in the robbery. Bill Crawford testified that he recognized the cap as belonging to appellant “[tjhrough another armed robbery.” Appellant moved for a mistrial and the prosecutor admitted that the comment was error, but urged the court to admonish the jury and deny the motion. The court did so.
Appellant insists that the prosecutor intentionally elicited the testimony from the witness. This error was properly preserved. Nonetheless that statement standing as it does is not sufficient to reverse this conviction. Appellant relies strongly on Neely v. State,
In Webb v. State,
As his last assignment of error, appellant relies on Lovell v. State,
In reviewing the instant case, we find that the evidence offered against the appellant was sufficient to convict him for the crime charged: the testimony of appellant’s accomplice, which was sufficiently corroborated; the description given by the employees of the store; the testimony relative to the stocking cap that was burned; the testimony concerning how appellant returned to his home, coupled with the condition of his clothes; and the testimony concerning the division of the money taken from the robbery. All of this testimony considered alongside of the asserted errors committed strongly outweighs any prejudice appellant might have suffered. Admittedly, some of the witnesses were not of the strongest character, but that is for the jury to evaluate. In the instant case, the jury weighed the testimony offered and found the appellant guilty.
Lastly, we do not consider the sentence of twenty-three (23) years imposed on appellant to be excessive. If the jury was prejudiced to the extent asserted by counsel, we believe the sentence would have been greater.
THEREFORE, after considering the record of trial before this Court, we are of the
