Following a bench trial, the court found Renae Leeks guilty of criminal damage to property in the second degree. Leeks appeals, contending that insufficient evidence supports her conviction and that the trial court erred by admitting hearsay and by excluding from evidence a certified copy of the victim’s first offender conviction. We find no merit in these contentions and affirm.
1. On appeal, we must view the evidence “in the light most favorable to the verdict and the appellant no longer enjoys the presumption of innocence; moreover, on appeal this court determines evidence sufficiency and does not weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Williams v. State,
The victim testified that Leeks came to her workplace and threatened, “I’m gon’ get you, you gon’ get what’s cornin’ to you.” When the victim left work in her car 30 minutes later, Leeks threw a brick at her car while she was stopped at a traffic light. The victim testified that it cost $946.74 to repair her car.
Leeks contends this evidence was insufficient to support her felony conviction because the trial court admitted into evidence, without objection, a handwritten estimate to repair the victim’s car for less than $500. See OCGA § 16-7-23 (felony criminal trespass in the second degree requires damage in excess of $500). Thus, according to Leeks, the evidence on the amount of damage was conflicting and the trial court “should have applied the law of lenity and found the defendant guilty of [a] misdemeanor.”
We find no merit in Leeks’ sufficiency argument for several reasons. First, the repair estimate Leeks relies upon to establish a conflict in the evidence was hearsay. In the Interest of A. F.,
2. Leeks asserts the trial court erred by admitting into evidence two repair estimates exceeding $500 over her hearsay objection. While we find that the trial court should have excluded these estimates on hearsay grounds, In the Interest of A. E, supra, their admission was harmless in light of the victim’s testimony that she actually repaired the car for an amount in excess of $500. Austin v. State,
3. In her remaining enumeration of error, Leeks argues that the trial court erred by excluding from evidence a certified copy of a document showing that the victim received first offender treatment
Relying on Matthews v. State,
The only circumstance in which documents pertaining to a first offender record might be admissible for purposes of impeachment is “to disprove or contradict the testimony of the witness.” Matthews, supra,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We note that the foundation portion of the trial court’s ruling excluding the document from evidence might have related to this alternate method for introducing the document into evidence.
