Upon a charge of theft of property having a value of more than $100 and of being an habitual criminal, the appellant was tried without a jury, found guilty, and sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment. For reversal it is argued that the State failed to prove all the elements of the alleged theft and that proof of prior convictions should not have been mentioned before there was a finding of guilt or innocence. We find no merit in either contention.
For the State, employees of the J. C. Penney Company, a chain department store, testified that the appellant and two other women were observed together in a Penney store in North Little Rock. They first stood in the lingerie department, with their backs to the employee who spotted their activities, and stuffed merchandise under their clothing. They went together successively to three other departments, taking merchandise in the same manner. They then left the store without paying for anything. When they were apprehended by the store’s security guard in their car in the store’s parking lot, two of the women were taking merchandise from their clothing and throwing it into the back seat, where the third woman was putting it into a garbage bag. Fifteen articles were recovered and introduced in evidence. They all had J. C. Penney price marks and had a total value of $236.48. The defense offered no testimony.
Even though the store employees could not say which of the three women took any particular article of merchandise, the proof is amply sufficient to support the trial judge’s specific finding that the three women acted in concert. Such a concert of action to commit an unlawful act may be shown by circumstantial evidence, without direct proof of a conspiracy by prior agreement. Caton and Headley v. State,
As to the second point, when both sides had rested the prosecutor stated that he had “some proof’ of prior convictions. In response to an objection (which the court overruled) that it was prejudicial to refer to prior convictions before the court had passed judgment, the prosecutor conceded that perhaps the defense was right and asked the court to make a ruling. The court then found the appellant guilty, after which the State introduced proof of prior convictions for forgery and uttering.
No error occurred. The case is unlike Hickey v. State,
Affirmed.
