The relevant facts in these companion appeals are as follows: In the September 1988 term of court, appellants wеre indicted separately for the offense of trafficking in cocaine. During that term of court, appellants filed and served demands for speedy trial pursuant to OCGA § 17-7-170. In the next succeeding March 1989 term of court, appellants were reindicted jointly for the offense of trafficking in cocaine and the original indictments were nolle prossed.' On June 14, 1989, which was in the March 1989 term of court, the trial court enterеd an order “sending [the] case to trial calendar.” However, appellants’ counsel was thereafter granted a leave оf absence and appellants were not brought to trial on the joint indictment until the September 1989 term of court. The case was tried before a jury and verdicts of guilty were returned. The trial court entered judgments of conviction and sentences on the jury’s verdicts and apрellants filed separate notices of appeal but similar enumerations of error. The two *251 cases are hereby consоlidated for appellate disposition in this single opinion.
1. Appellants filed pleas in bar alleging the State’s failure to have complied with their demands for speedy trial. The trial court’s denial of those pleas is enumerated as error.
Citing
Hurt v. State,
In denying appellants’ pleas in bar, the trial court did not erroneоusly hold that the State’s nolle prosequi of the original indictments authorized the delay of appellants’ trial until the September 1989 term of сourt. The trial court based its ruling on the finding that the leave of absence that had been requested by and granted to appellants’ attоrney after June 14, 1989, had the effect of preventing the trial from thereafter being conducted during the remainder of the March 1989 term of court and evidenced appellants’ consent that the trial be continued until the ensuing September 1989 term. Appellants do not contest that the timing of their counsel’s leave of absence was such as to prevent their trial from otherwise having been conducted
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during the remainder of the March 1989 term of court. Compare
Birts v. State,
2. That the district attorney’s aunt served on the grand jury which returned the joint indictment upon which appellants were tried states no viable ground for quashing that indictment.
Bolds v. State,
3. It is immaterial to the validity of the joint indictment that it was returned prior to the State’s nolle prosequi of the original separate indictments.
Irwin v. State,
4. Appellant Watson movеd to quash the joint indictment as against him, on the ground that it alleged that he “was present in Fayette County, Georgia, with an amount of controlled substances [when], in reality, [he] was not in Fayette County until after his arrest in Coweta County, Georgia.” Obviously, this states no viable ground for quashing the indictment. Sеe
State v. Holmes,
5. After the first day of trial, a juror became ill and the trial court ordered a 48-hour postponement. During this period, an unrelated case was tried. When appellants’ trial was recommenced, they filed a plea of double jeopardy. The trial court did not err in denying this plea. A postponement, like a continuance, is not a “termination” of the proceedings within the meaning of OCGA § 16-1-8 (a) where, as here, the trial is resumed before the same jury. See
Barner v. State,
6. Appellants enumerate as error the admission into evidence of certain testimony elicited from a State witness on re-direct examination. The record shows that, for the most part, the objections that were raised in the trial court to this witness’ testimony arе too general to present any question for appellate consideration. See
Sultenfuss v. State,
7. Appellants enumerate as errоr what they contend to be “conflicting instructions” in the trial court’s jury charge. Appellants’ argument in this regard rests upon the premise that subsections (A), (B) and (C) of OCGA § 16-13-31 (a) (1) establish three separate and distinct crimes of trafficking in cocaine. OCGA § 16-13-31 (a) (1) “requires possession of only ‘28 grams or mоre of cocaine or of any mixture with a purity of ten percent or more of cocaine’ to be guilty of trafficking. [Cit.] Larger amounts by specified increment^] [established by subsections (A), (B) and (C)] affect only the punishment. . . . [Trafficking in cocaine requires only that the threshold amount [of 28 grams or more] be shown, after which the quantity possessed bears only on punishment.”
Partridge v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
