Appellant was charged by information with the crime of robbery. A jury trial resulted in a verdict of guilty and a sentence of nine years in the state penitentiary. Present counsel was appointed for purposes of this appeal.
Appellant first contends for reversal that the jury verdict is not supported by the evidence. We disagree. The prosecuting witness, Cleo Smith, testified that on the night of the robbery, while he was working alone behind the counter at Lake Liquor Store in Hot Springs, a dark-haired man wearing dark trousers and a blue knit golf shirt entered the store between 11:30 p.m. and midnight, got a coke from the vending machine, and asked to have a fifty-dollar check cashed. When Smith refused, the man displayed a small pistol and inquired: “You’ll cash it for this, won’t you?” He then demanded and received all of th2 twenty and ten dollar bills in Smith’s till. Approximately five minutes elapsed from the time appellant entered until he made his getaway in a car which Smith described as being a two-toned, light over dark color. Smith identified appellant, both at the police station and at the trial, as the robber.
The owner of the store testified that an inventory of the money disclosed that $420.00 had been taken. Two officers related to the jury the events leading to appellant’s arrest and the subsequent search of his light over dark, two-toned car which produced a high powered rifle, a cheap small holster, and a box of 25-caliber shells.
Appellant presented an alibi witness who testified that appellant was with him in Monroe, Louisiana, all day and most of the night of the date of the robbery. Direct and cross-examination disclosed that this witness had a felony record and that he had first met appellant twenty years ago in Washington, D. C. at the National Training School, a federal institution for boys. Appellant then took the stand and corroborated his alibi witness’ story. He also displayed to the jury several clearly noticeable arm tattoos which the state’s witness, Smith, failed to mention in his description of his assailant.
In rebuttal, the state called two witnesses who testified they saw appellant in Hot Springs on the day of the robbery.
Reconciling conflicts in the testimony and weighing the evidence are, of course, within the exclusive province of the jury. Wright v. State,
In his second and final point for reversal, appellant argues that there was a fatal variance between an allegation in the information and the proof at trial. The information charged appellant with robbing Cleo Smith of “$420.00 silver and paper money”; whereas the proof at trial only established the taking of $420.00 in paper money. Appellant relies upon our earlier decisions such as Silvie v. State,
In Butler v. State,
Appellant was fully apprised of the charge (robbery) against him. He does not demonstrate any resulting prejudice, nor does he even claim that he was in any way misled by the asserted variance. This slight variance in no manner affected the substantive issue of guilt or innocense. See Snider v. State,
Finding no merit in appellant’s contentions, the judgment is affirmed.
