140 Ga. App. 353 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1976
Two of the four co-defendants appeal from their conviction of theft by taking.
1. The evidence authorized the verdict. The four co-defendants were identified by numerous witnesses as the young, black, male strangers who entered two stores in Cataula, Ga., and three in Pine Mountain, Ga., and peered through the window in a fourth store in Pine Mountain. Their pattern of behavior was for the four to enter a store, disperse throughout the store, and have three of them engage the salespersons in conversations and ask for and/or buy items which were away from the cash register, while a fourth stayed in the vicinity of, and kept an eye on, the cash register.
In the first store, when a customer suspicious of the defendants’ behavior (one of them kept one hand near what appeared to be a knife handle protruding from a pocket) called out the front of the store to her husband, the defendant near the cash register struck the counter, looked into the open cash register, told the saleslady, "Lady, don’t worry, we’ll be back,” then whistled to the other three, who were dispersed throughout the store and who all left the store on this signal. The defendants testified that they were "looking for a place to eat,” yet they looked into or entered six different stores, looking for or buying such items as ear bobs, a ring, a squeegee mop, a wash pan, tape and a handerchief. One asked for nails and didn’t know what kind he wanted. At a variety store, one was overheard asking another, "What in the world am I going to buy in here?” at which store a spool of thread and buttons were purchased.
In the last store, a plumbing and heating service, the
2. When the deputy sheriff who gave chase to the defendants’ car testified to the effect that he believed that the occupants of the car had seen him, defense counsel objected to the witness’ drawing a conclusion, on the ground that there was no way he would know what the defendants thought. The judge then commented, "I agree with what they thought.” The defendants contend that this was an unlawful comment and opinion on the evidence.
The error, if any, was harmless, as there was ample other evidence to authorize the verdict, and other evidence substantiating the conclusion that the defendants had observed the police car and were in flight. (The deputy testified he had to drive 90-100 m.p.h. to apprehend them.)
3. The charge on flight was authorized not only by the evidence of the fact that the defendants sped up when they observed the deputy’s car, requiring a high-speed chase to be apprehended, but also by evidence that they ran out of the stolen-from store and all the way to their car. Cf. Dent v. State, 136 Ga. App. 366 (8) (221 SE2d 228) (1975). The possibility that their running was due to the rain, as they testified, was covered by the charge to the effect that no inference hurtful to the defendants should be drawn if the jury should decide that flight or similar acts was due to reasons other than a sense of guilt.
4. The remaining enumerated errors are deemed to have been abandoned by not having been argued.
Judgment affirmed.