delivered the opinion of the Court.
There is little substance in this appeal. An uncle and nephew, represented by competent counsel, pled guilty in the Circuit Court for Frederick County to breaking and entering Yost’s Diner. After the plea, Judge Clapp proceeded to take testimony to aid in his determination of the proper sentences to impose. During the course of this testimony, Officer Stafford of the State Police stated that appellants had confessed that they committed the crime to which they had pled guilty, and they also said that, shortly thereafter, they were interrupted in an attempt to break into a store in Brunswick by an officer; whereupon they abandoned their automobile and fled. They took a *584 truck belonging to Richard Kline without his permission, and returned to their place of residence, Hagerstown, where the truck was abandoned. (Other evidence supported the attempt to break into the store and the abandonment of their car.) Counsel for appellants objected “to this testimony as to any other crime other than the crime for which they are being tried,” and the court overruled the objection. The defendants did not testify, and, after a pre-sentence investigation, which disclosed criminal records extending over long periods of time, the court imposed sentences.
The only question for our determination is whether the court committed prejudicial error in overruling the objection. Judge Clapp was not trying the defendants to decide their guilt or innocence; he was taking testimony to assist in deciding the length of their sentences. The testimony received related to defendants’ actions over a period of some three hours, which included the commission of the crime to which they had pled guilty.
Appellants’ entire argument is based upon a misconstruing of the language used in the opinion in
Walker v. State,
We think and therefore hold that Judge Clapp’s ruling was within the previous holdings of this Court, and in accordance with the authorities elsewhere. The inquiry into circumstances relevant to the subject of aggravation or mitigation of sentence is not limited by the strict rules of evidence, and the trial judge is invested with wide discretion in determining the sentence to be imposed.
Farrell v.
State,
Judgment and sentence as to each appellant affirmed.
