We granted a writ of certiorari to review the second division of the opinion of the Court of Appeals in
Mable v. State,
1. The pertinent facts were described by the Court of Appeals as follow:
Appellant contends the trial court erred in failing to strike testimony by Detective-Sergeant E. C. Mansfield of the Americus Police Department regarding answers appellant gave while in custody to questions Mansfield asked after appellant had invoked his right to counsel. When appellant was apprehended, he had $612 cash in his possession. Mansfield testified that after appellant stated he did not have anything to say and requested a lawyer, the following conversation ensued:
“Mansfield: Is this your money?
Appellant: Yes, that is my money.
Mansfield: How much money is it?
Appellant: It is about two hundred and something dollars, isn’t it?
Mansfield: Where did you get this kind of money from?
Appellant: I have been working.
Mansfield: Can you tell me where you work at?
Appellant: Well, I don’t have anything else to say about it.”
Mansfield testified that other than telling appellant the money totalled $612, there was no further discussion. This testimony was followed by a question posed by the prosecutor regarding the officer’s knowledge of appellant’s ability to earn money prior to the robbery. Appellant’s counsel objected to that question, then moved the court to strike all of Mansfield’s testimony set forth above on the basis that it occurred after appellant invoked his right to counsel and requested the trial court to instruct the jury to disregard that testimony. The trial court overruled the motion. [Mable, supra,197 Ga. App. at 751 .]
The Court of Appeals affirmed this ruling, holding that “a motion to strike evidence may not be used to excise evidence where a movant who had an opportunity to do so fails to object contemporaneously with the admission of the evidence. [Cits.]” Id. at 752. Three judges dissented to this holding. Judge Sognier, writing for the three, contended that a party may move to strike illegal evidence at any time
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before the case goes to the jury, even where the party fails to object when the evidence is adduced.
Mable,
supra,
After reviewing the relevant authorities, see, e.g.,
Blount v. Beall,
a distinction is to be drawn between illegal testimony and secondary evidence or other evidence which is legal in itself because it is of probative value but is inadmissible until the proper foundation for its reception has been laid. . . . Evidence of a secondary nature, the only objection to which is that it was received without the preliminary foundation for its introduction being first laid, stands upon an altogether different footing; and if admitted without objection, it is to be treated as altogether competent, and the court may properly instruct the jury as to its relevancy and legal weight and effect. [Emphasis supplied.] [Patton v. Bank of Lafayette, supra,124 Ga. at 974 .]
In the present case, “[t]he illegal nature of Detective-Sergeant Mansfield’s testimony ... is not in issue . . . since even the State has admitted that the introduction of the challenged testimony was error of constitutional dimension.”
Mable,
supra,
2. Although the trial court erred in failing to strike the testimony, this error does not require reversal of the judgment, as the other evidence of guilt was so overwhelming that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Tankersley v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
