Opinion by
On December 20, 1968, James Owens, the appellant, was arrested for robbery. Appellant was tried on April 11, 1969 before Judge Edmund B. Spaeth, Jr., sitting without a jury, on indictments charging aggravated robbery and corrupting the morals of a minor. He was found guilty of aggravated robbery and a demurrer was sustained to the indictment charging corrupting the morals of a minor. Post-trial motions were argued and denied, and a sentence of from two to eight years was entered. The Superior Court affirmed per curiam, with two Judges dissenting. We granted allocatur.
*523 The evidence presented at trial showed that on December 20, 1968, one George Haines was attacked and robbed of his money, hat and gloves by a group of boys. Haines could not identify his attackers, but the Commonwealth produced Elmer McBride, a part-time cab driver and Government security officer, who witnessed the entire incident from his parked cab nearby. McBride made a positive identification of the appellant. McBride testified that after appellant and his cofelons had committed the crime, they walked directly in front of his cab. A few seconds later, a police car arrived with two police officers. McBride personally assisted in apprehending appellant, and testified that he never lost sight of him from the time of the robbery until he was apprehended. McBride’s testimony on how appellant was apprehended was corroborated by the two arresting police officers.
Appellant took the stand and testified that he was leaving a bar when he was stopped by McBride. He further testified that he was on his way to meet two girls—one his girlfriend—whom he had sent out to find another young man. * After appellant had testified, the Commonwealth moved for a continuance to obtain rebuttal witnesses. Defense counsel objected, and Judge Spaeth, in denying the request for a continuance, said, “I am prepared to decide it.” Judge Spaeth then asked for closing arguments and, after hearing them, found appellant guilty of aggravated robbery.
The sole issue is whether the above statement indicated that the lower Court had in effect decided that appellant was guilty prior to the completion of the trial, thereby destroying his presumption of innocence and shifting to appellant the burden of proof.
*524
In
Commonwealth v. Bonomo,
In
Commonwealth v. McNair,
In
Commonwealth v. Horn,
We must therefore review Judge Spaeth’s remark in the context of the entire trial to see if he was “so prejudiced or biased that his mind [was] not open to conviction by the last evidence presented.”
In his Memorandum Opinion, Judge Spaeth said that after hearing all of the evidence on both sides as well as the arguments of counsel, he did not believe appellant’s story and he was convinced of defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. After carefully studying the entire record, we are convinced that Judge Spaeth was not prejudiced or biased, and appellant is not entitled to a new trial.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
