Opinion
Steven Vela Prado appeals from a judgment of imprisonment after a jury found him guilty of the following felonies:
*672 Count I robbery of Ahmad Ahmad and the Mayfair Market Pen. Code, § 211
Count II assaulting Robert Hansen with a deadly weapon, and by means of force likely to produce serious bodily injury Pen. Code, § 245
Count III burglary of the Mayfair Market Pen. Code, § 459
Count XIII robbery of Teresa Sibaja, Kikue Palacio, and J & E Liquors Pen. Code, § 211
Count XV assault with a deadly weapon upon Sibaja and Palacio Pen. Code, § 245
Count XVI burglary of J&E Liquors Pen. Code, § 459.
Appellant does not challenge counts XIII, XV and XVI; accordingly there is no need to discuss those offenses.
On November 16, 1979, Ahmad Ahmad (counts I and III) was, along with various relatives, working at the Mayfair Market in Salinas. Three men, one armed with a shotgun, entered the store. The man with the shotgun said “Holdup,” and directed Ahmad and his family to lie on the floor. The gunman ordered Ahmad’s father to open the register and took “everything” from the register, including 100 $1 bills, coins, and money orders. At trial, Ahmad identified money orders which had been taken from his store. Each of the three men carried a paper bag when they left the store.
At about 5 p.m. the same day, Robert Hansen (count ÍI) entered the Mayfair Market and saw appellant with a gun in his hand; appellant pointed the gun at Hansen’s head and made Hansen lie on the floor. Hansen saw appellant walk back and forth, and then go around the corner. Hansen remained on the floor until someone told him it was all right to get up.
The next day, a San Jose police officer responded to a call concerning an assault and battery upon a woman at 1805 Cortez, San Jose. The officer spoke with Cecilia Prado, the woman who had called the police. The officer, accompanied by two others, went to her home. When there was no response to his knocks, the officer entered the house and found appellant Prado and another man seated on a couch in the living room. *673 The officer placed his hand on appellant’s shoulder in an attempt to wake him. After jumping from his seat and yelling obscenities at the officer, appellant attempted to go to the back of the house. In the process, he knocked the officer’s hand aside and was arrested for assault and battery. The officer then looked for a third suspect. He went to the rear of the house and saw another officer pursuing one Retana. The officers caught Retana in a parking lot, and retrieved a brown paper bag and wallet that he had thrown down. In it the officers found loot from the Mayfair Market robbery.
The officer pat-searched one suspect and found money resembling that taken in the robbery. Appellant acknowledged that he had been using a Ford LTD parked in the driveway; in that car the officer found a pistol identified by Hansen as the one used in the robbery.
Appellant concedes that a robbery, assault and burglary were committed at the Mayfair Market. He contends, however, that he was never sufficiently identified as the perpetrator of these crimes. On that basis he argues that the court should have granted his motion for acquittal. (Pen. Code, § 1118.1.)
Appellant points out that Ahmad, the Mayfair Market clerk who was robbed, was unable to identify appellant in several photographic displays. Hansen did identify appellant at trial but had been unable to make any positive identification of appellant at photographic displays. When Hansen first made an identification, it occurred in court at the preliminary hearing while appellant sat with four or five other persons on a bench. Appellant contends that the courtroom confrontation at the preliminary hearing amounted to an impermissibly unfair one-man showup.
(Stovall
v.
Denno
(1967)
Hansen’s in-court identification of appellant as the man who held a gun on him was positive; Hansen testified that he knew appellant “by seeing him. His facial features.”
Appellant’s contention that Hansen’s identification was tainted by a one-man showup must be rejected as the trial court’s contrary finding is supported by substantial evidence. When Hansen saw appellant at the preliminary hearing, appellant was sitting among a group of four or five present in the bench area. Nobody directed his attention toward those *674 particular people; rather he recognized appellant as soon as he (Hansen) walked into the courtroom.
Hansen’s failure to select appellant’s photograph in photographic displays is not conclusive. When Hansen saw the photographic displays, he picked out several pictures as resembling appellant, but explained that he did not make a positive identification due to the nature of the photographs. At the same time he told a police officer that if he could see the assailant in person, he would be able to identify him.
Hansen’s failure to make a positive identification of appellant based on photographic displays merely goes to the weight of the evidence, not its sufficiency. In
People
v.
Lindsay
(1964)
Appellant correctly notes that in considering a motion for acquittal, the trial court applies the same test as does an appellate court in reviewing a judgment of conviction.
(People
v.
Blair
(1979)
Appellant points out that while it was alleged in the information that he had suffered two prior convictions, for each of which he served
*675
a prison term, there was no allegation that appellant served
separate
prison terms for these convictions. On that basis appellant argues, citing
People
v.
English
(1981)
Penal Code section 667.5, subdivision (b), provides that “the court shall impose a one-year term for each prior separate prison term served for any felony .... ” On application by respondent, this court has judicially noticed records prepared according to Penal Code section 969b, including (a) judgments and (b) a summary of sentencing data pertaining to appellant. These records establish conclusively that appellant served two separate prison terms for possession of heroin (Health & Saf. Code, § 11350), assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)) and possession by an ex-felon of a firearm (Pen. Code, § 12021). “[T]he information need not necessarily charge that the defendant served separate sentences if it appears from the record in some manner that such is the fact or if the court has so found . . .. ”
(People
v.
James
(1978)
Appellant points out that the record does not show that the court advised him of the rights being waived in admitting the prior convictions and the consequences of the admissions. The omission was error
(In re Yurko
(1974)
The judgment is affirmed.
Caldecott, P. J., and Poché, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 9, 1982.
