The defendants (appellants herein) were tried for armed robbery, convicted, and each sentenced to ten years imprisonment. During their trial, the district attorney offered in evidence a transcript of former testimony of one Stacey Rutherford taken more than two months earlier in a juvenile court proceeding. Rutherford was not listed as a witness on the indictment. The earlier testimony concerned the same case, and the defendants were present when it was taken and were represented by counsel who cross examined the witness. The *669 defendants objected to the admission of the transcript on the ground that the State had failed to prove that Stacey Rutherford was inaccessible. The trial court overruled the objection. Appeal is taken from the judgment of conviction. Error is enumerated on the overruling of the objection.
Code §38-314 provides: "The testimony of a witness, since deceased or disqualified, or inaccessible for any cause, given under oath on a former trial, upon substantially the same issue and between substantially the same parties, may be proved by anyone who heard it, and who professes to remember the substance of the entire testimony as to the particular matter about which he testifies.” The question here is whether Stacey Rutherford was "inaccessible” within the meaning of the Code so as to permit the transcript of his former testimony to be admitted in evidence.
In
Robinson v. State,
In the instant case, the State offered the testimony of two witnesses, both investigators for the district attorney’s office, to establish the inaccessibility of Stacey Rutherford. One investigator, Mr. Hewett, testified that he had not looked for the witness personally, but that three other persons had. He stated that they had spent approximately 15 to 20 manhours in a 24-hour period looking for the witness, and that 12 or 15 addresses and locations had been checked. The other investigator, Mr. McMichael, appears to have been the principal searcher. He testified that he had never seen the witness and that his descriptions were "really vague in my mind.” Stacey Rutherford *670 was described during the trial as a homosexual and as a "sissy,” a male who frequently dressed in female clothing. After describing unsuccessful attempts to locate the witness at two locations, Mr. McMichael testified: "I did find two people who knew this person but had not seen this person in approximately a week. I also talked to one, Ronald Briceson . . . Briceson stated the last contact he had had with this person was approximately two weeks ago and this person was living somewhere on Ashby Street. I have not had a chance to check Ashby Street to find out.”
Apparently no attempt was made to locate Stacey Rutherford until the day the trial began. Asked if he had tried to locate the witness when the defendants were indicted, Mr. McMichael testified: "No, I did not. I had discussed with Mr. Jenrette who is the assistant working in juvenile court and it was his suggestion that since we did have a transcript of this person’s testimony which was given in juvenile court, he suggested that I not make any attempt to make contact with this person until I could serve this person personally with a subpoena to be in court. It was his thinking we might have some reluctance on the part of this individual to testify and therefore it possibly might make herself or himself unavailable, so therefore rather than to scare this person off I didn’t make any contact with him.”
We are of the opinion that the search conducted in this case did not meet the requirements of diligence necessary to show that the witness was inaccessible. First, as in
Robinson v. State,
Judgment reversed.
