140 Ga. App. 894 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1977
Fred Pierce was convicted of robbery by force and sentenced to serve 15 years. He appealed. He enumerates error on the insufficiency of the evidence; because the in-court identification of appellant as the robber by the victim was tainted by a pre-trial examination of photographs; that the trial court erred in not charging on the defense of alibi; and erred "in failing to charge the jury on the law applicable to identification testimony in that the State has the burden of proving identity beyond a reásonable doubt and that identification testimony is an expression of belief or opinion by a witness.” Held:
1. Shortly after the occurrence in Savannah, Georgia, the police presented the victim five black and white photographs of five black males and he picked out one of them as the man who robbed him of his pistol after the defendant’s companion had hit him on the head with a mallet. Appellant contends the officer, when presenting the photographs for identification informed the victim "that the owner of the get away car was among them.” The transcript of the proceeding, which includes the testimony, fails to disclose this; nor does appellant point out where it may be found. The photographs submitted are not in the record, nor any description of them other than as stated above. The record discloses no impermissibly suggestive procedure so as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. See in this connection Simmons v. United States, 390 U. S. 377 (88 SC 967, 19 LE2d 1247). The case of Baler v. State, 124 Ga. App. 334 (183 SE2d 622) which distinguishes the Simmons case on its facts, has, because of this difference in facts, no application to the present case.
2. There was no error in failing to charge on alibi. The defendant never claimed, as contended in appellant’s brief, that he was in Detroit on July 30,1973, the date of the occurrence under investigation; on the contrary, he testified he did not know where he was on that date, and testified only that he returned to Detroit in June to go back to work for the Chrysler Corporation, and there was
3. Nor was there error, in the absence of a request, in failing to charge that the state has the burden "of proving the identity of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt.” The court charged generally that the burden was on the state to prove the defendant committed the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt. If the defendant desired said principle applied to a particular element of the case, he should have made a proper request to do so.
Judgment affirmed.