Appellant was charged with various sales of marijuana in five indictments containing a total of nine counts. He was acquitted of the charges in two single-count indictments and found guilty of the remaining seven counts. On appeal he sets forth as error the denial of his motion to sever the offenses and the admission of certain testimony.
1. Six of the seven counts of which appellant was convicted were sales of marijuana by appellant to undercover agents. The seventh involved a sale of marijuana witnessed by a plainclothes officer. Appellant sold the contraband in manila coin envelopes and, in six of the seven counts, the transaction took place on a certain street in Albany while the purchaser remained seated in his automobile. In the seventh incident, the undercover purchaser met appellant at the latter’s home and accompanied him to the home of appellant’s mother, where the contraband sale took place. The seven sales took place over a four and a half month period, and six of them occurred during “a long-term undercover operation.”
“Where criminal offenses are joined solely on the ground that they are of the same or similar character, the defendant has a right to have the offenses severed. [Cit.] However, where the offenses are so similar that they show a common scheme or plan or have an identical modus operandi, severance is discretionary with the trial court.” Mack v. State,
2. At trial, two witnesses stated that certain exhibits were marijuana. Appellant objected on the ground that no foundation had been laid for either witness to reach that conclusion. Each witness amended his testimony to state that he believed the material to be marijuana, based upon his experience. Whether such testimony was harmful error was rendered moot by the testimony of State Crime Lab chemists whose tests on the material were positive for marijuana.
3. Finally, appellant asserts that the testimony of a witness should have been excluded after the witness stated that appellant “looked like” the man who sold him marijuana. Since the police officer who observed the sale positively identified appellant as the seller, the witness’s inability to positively identify appellant as the seller is not reversible error.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
