Otha Lee Russell and Lovell Davis were jointly charged, along with Rosie Shumate, with the aggravated robbery of Christopher Layman, Manager of the Crawfordsville Branch of Earle State Bank in Crawfordsville on September 1, 1976. They were jointly tried and found guilty. A verdict of acquittal of Rosie Shumate was directed. Both appeal, seeking reversal of the judgments of conviction. We find no reversible error and affirm both judgments.
We shall first consider the appeal of Russell. He presents two points for reversal, viz:
I
THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION IN DENYING THE APPELLANT’S MOTION FOR CONTINUANCE, EFFECTIVELY DENYING THE APPELLANT HIS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS TO EFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL AND TO DUE PROCESS OF LAW AS GUARANTEED BY THE SIXTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION.
II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN PERMITTING THE STATE TO INTRODUCE EVIDENCE OF OTHER CRIMES NOT CONTAINED IN THE INFORMATION FOR WHICH THE APPELLANT WAS TRIED.
The trial was held on Nоvember 30 and December 1, 1976. Russell was represented by appointed counsel, James C. McCaa III. Notice of trial date dated November 10, 1976, was given by the clerk, who certified that a copy was served on the defendant Russell and his attorney, James MсCaa III, by mail, posted on November 10. Just before the trial was commenced, Russell’s attorney orally moved for a continuance on the ground that he was appointed appellant’s attorney on November 10, only 20 days preceding the trial and hаd not had sufficient time to prepare an adequate defense. The motion for continuance was denied. The trial judge had checked the record and found that it reflected that McCaa had been appointed and notified of his appointment on September 20, 1976. McCaa stated that he did not recall having received any notice earlier than approximately November 10.
Rule 27.3, Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure, provides that the court shall grant a continuance only upon a showing of good cause. In this respect, it is not materially different from Ark. Stat. Ann. § 43-1705 (Repl. 1964) which provided that the court may postpone a trial upon sufficient cause shown by either party. The matter of continuances is addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the trial court, and its action will not be reversed on appeal in the absence of such a clear abuse of that discretion as to amount to a denial of justice. Kelley v. State,
Assuming that Russell’s attorney did not receive notice of his appointment until November 10, he has failed to show any abuse of discretion. Even though the notice indicated that the appointment covered six different charges against Russell, as he suggests, the trial court was never advised, either when the motion was presented, or by motion for new trial, what the attorney failed to do that could have been done, or what he did that he would not have done, if he had beеn afforded more time. Although we could hardly find an abuse of discretion upon some basis not presented to the trial court, appellant does not even suggest here what effect the time limitation had upon his defense. The only prejudice he mentiоns is the 45-year sentence imposed.
We have upheld denials of motions for continuance on similar contentions many times. In Shinsky v. State,
Russell’s argument on the second point is that the court permitted the state to produce evidence of an aggravated robbery in the theft of a truck, of interference with a law enforcement officer, of kidnapping, and another aggravated robbery charge. He emphasizes the fact that he was charged with these other crimes in informations separate and distinct from the charge of aggravated robbery on which he was tried. We find no mеrit in this contention. In the first place, the abstract of the record does not disclose any objection by Russell to any of this testimony. Furthermore, the evidence presented related a continuous course of conduct beginning with the entry of the robbers intо the office of the bank until their apprehension after they had abducted one of the bank employees in leaving the bank. During this interval, they had taken the automobile of the bank’s manager and used it to flee from the scene, had commandeered a pickup truck belonging to Henry Williams, after they had run the bank manager’s auto into a ditch, and had fired at the officers who were pursuing them. Appellants were then apprehended at a road block. At that time, they were occupying the pickuр truck and were in possession of the money stolen from the bank, along with some firearms and ammunition.
Even though evidence of separate and isolated crimes or facts having no bearing upon the charge under investigation cannot be shown, evidence showing all the circumstances connected with that particular crime may be shown, even if in doing so, other criminal offenses are brought to light. Butt v. State,
Evidence pertaining to the flight of the accused from the scene of the robbery was admissible as a circumstance to be considered with other evidence in determining probable guilt of the accusеd, including evidence of any criminal conduct constituting an inseparable part of the flight, even though evidence of the flight is cumulative. Murphy v. State,
Appellant Lovell Davis also raises two points for reversal. His first point is identical to Russell’s second point and his argument is a verbatim copy of that made on behalf of Russell. What we have said in treating Russell’s second point disposes of this issue, except for the fact that an objection to testimony of any witness about the flight from the bank, the abduction of the еmployee, the stealing of a vehicle and the subsequent stealing of a truck was made by Davis’ attorney.
Davis also asserts the following point for reversal:
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY GRANTING THE STATE’S MOTION FOR DISCOVERY AND PRECLUDING THE TESTIMONY OF THE APPELLANT’S WITNESS.
The prosecuting attorney moved to require the defendant to disclose the nature of the defense to be asserted and the names and addresses of persons whom defense counsel intended to call as witnesses in support thereof. The motion was made under Rule 18.3, Rules of Criminal Procedure. Davis responded by asserting that Rule 18.3 was not intended to allow the state to discover in advance оf trial “all defenses and/or witnesses” intended to be presented at trial; and, if so, that the rule is unconstitutional under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The trial court granted the motion but Davis, on advice of counsel, refused to furnish the information requested.
At the conclusion of the evidence on behalf of the state, appellant’s attorney made the following statement:
There was a witness that I intended to call, Mr. James Gracey, and Mr. Gracey has not been summoned or brought forward bеcause of the Court’s ruling, but the defendant did not comply with the order to provide Mr. Gracey’s name to the prosecution in advance. This is the first time that Mr. Gracey’s name has been brought forward.
Later, the attorney said that he was not producing Mr. Gracey, “at this time” and, when the trial judge responded that it was the attorney’s duty to comply with the court’s orders, the attorney stated that he had not received Mr. Gracey’s name until after the court had made the order requiring disclosure of the names of witnesses. The attorney’s concluding remark was:
Your Honor, if I may reply; I do feel that I had complied with the Court’s orders, and I am advising of the names of the witnesses at this time, at the time to present the defense, and that the witnesses will not be called, and that the defendant, Lovell Dаvis, intends to rest his case at this time in that regard in compliance with the Court’s ruling.
Of course, there was not a compliance with the court’s orders and appellant’s attorney had previously admitted that there had not been. We have absolutely no means of saying that the trial court abused its discretion with reference to the witness Gracey. The court’s order certainly did not require disclosure of the identity of a witness of which the defendant was at the time unaware. There was no showing that, by the exercise of proper diligence, Davis or his attorney could not have discovered the witness or obtained his name. But the witness was not present to testify and no effort was made to subpoena him. And, fatal to Davis’ argument here, no proffer was made. So far as we knоw, or can tell from the record, Gracey’s testimony may well have been inadmissible. We simply cannot find reversible error on such a record.
It does not appear from the statement of this point that Davis contends that he was prevented from testifying by the court’s ruling, but in his argument, he states that, in compliance with the court’s order, the appellant “neither testified himself nor called James Gracey to testify.” There is absolutely nothing in the abstract of the record to show that the trial judge ever ruled that Davis could not testify or that Davis ever offered to testify.
On the record before us, we do not reach the constitutional question. We should point out, however, that a similar rule has been sustained in Williams v. Florida,
The judgments are affirmed.
