OPINION
The plaintiff-in-error, Lee Hill, appeals his armed robbery conviction and ten (10) year penitentiary sentence.
The first assignment of error questions the legal sufficiency of the convicting evidence. We have carefully reviewed the record and hold that plaintiff-in-error has not carried his burden in this Court of demonstrating that the preponderance of the evidence is against the verdict and in favor of his innocence. McBee v. State,
Neither Gregory nor Hill testified, closing their defense without presenting any evidence. The second and final assignment of error complains of the introduction into evidence of Gregory’s confession, which also implicated Hill. No contemporaneous objection based upon a denial of the right of confrontation as set out in Bruton v. United States,
We have heretofore held that a clear
Bruton
violation, as certainly appears here, does not entitle one to a new trial when no timely and proper objection was made. This was the holding in Hester v. State, 2 Tenn.Cr.App. 11,
“[3] An objection made for the first time on appeal is not tenable, (citing cases) Errors to which no objection were made and exceptions taken in the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal, (citing cases) Generally, appellate courts review only questions presented for determination in the lower court, (citing cases) Supreme Court Rule 14(4) and (5).”
“[4] These defendants, under this record, cannot rely upon the Bruton rule; and the assignment based thereon is overruled.”
In the case of Floyd v. State, 1 Tenn. Cr.App. 106,
We adhered to this same rule in a case involving a tainted identification. Herman v. State, 2 Tenn.Cr.App. 257,
While recognizing the authority that holds that constitutional questions may be raised at any time, we believe that rule applies only to fundamental constitutional defects in the convicting process not waived or not subject to waiver. To apply the rule to questions of evidence admissibility would undercut the very function of the trial process, for it would become a tactical matter of defense to allow a bit of constitutionally inadmissable evidence into the record, in the hope for an acquittal but secure in the knowledge that a new trial would result. The vast majority of procedural and evidentiary questions may be said to be constitutional. Search and seizure, fifth amendment, due process, equal protection, right to counsel, or one of the many other constitutional provisions lies at the bottom of most trial proceeding questions. We cannot say that constitutional questions enjoy an immunity from being raised on the trial without by so doing destroying the trial process itself.
*144 Both assignments of error are held to be without merit and the conviction is affirmed.
