Three separate indictments were returned against the defendant, Maynard
The State charged that the defendant, along with Charlеs Scott and Scott’s brother, Gerald, had committed the seven offenses in several Aroostook County towns during the period between December 21 and December 25, 1977. Testifying for the State at trial, Charles Scott related a common plan the three men employed in committing the offenses: The defendant would drive an automobile containing the three men to a location near a dwelling house that had been selected for entry in the expectаtion of finding firearms inside. Charles Scott would leave the vehicle and travel on foot to the house. He would then knock repeatedly on the door of the house prepared to tell anyone who answered that he hаd car trouble and needed assistance. If no one responded, Scott would enter the house, search primarily for firearms and then return to his companions in the automobile.
Prior to trial, the State moved under M.R.Crim.P. 13 to join the indiсtments for trial, and the defendant moved under M.R. Crim.P. 14 for a separate trial on each of the offenses. Following a brief non-testimonial hearing, the presiding Justice granted the State’s motion as to joinder of the seven offenses fоr trial and denied the defendant’s motion to sever “upon representation by the [Sjtate that all offenses constitute parts of a common scheme or plan.” He also denied that part of the State’s motion which had sought joinder of the indictments pending against Gerald Scott.
I. Joint Trial on Multiple Offenses
The defendant first argues that the presiding Justice erred in ordering the three indictments to be tried together because the seven offenses charged therein could not have bеen joined in a single indictment. This contention is totally unsupported by the applicable rules of criminal procedure. M.R.Crim.P. 8(a) provides that two or more offenses may be charged as separate counts in the same indictment if the offenses “are of the same or similar character
or
are based on the same act or transaction
or
on two or more acts or transactions which are connected or which constitute parts of a common scheme or plan.”
Id.
(emphasis added);
see State v. Gordon,
Me.,
The defendant next contends that even if joinder was permissible the presiding Justice committed reversible error in denying the severance motion because of a substantial likelihood that the jury would be unable to distinguish between thе seven offenses and would convict on the basis of cumulative evidence or hostility stemming from the number of offenses charged.
See, e. g., Drew v. United States,
Our joinder rules promote the efficient administration of criminal justice by avoiding needless repetition of evidence as well as added expense and delay.
E. g., State v. Anderson,
Me.,
The defendant also asserts that the presiding Justice abused his discretion in failing to order severance of the offenses
sua sponte
during trial because the claimed prejudice and confusion became apparent. Thе defendant predicates his argument on a faulty premise. The principle that a presiding Justice “has a continuing duty to keep a watchful eye over the proceedings in a joint trial and to order a severance when it becomes apparent that the rights of the accused will be prejudiced by the joinder,”
State v. Saucier,
Me.,
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence
At trial the defendant stipulated that Charles Scott committed each of the offenses alleged in the three indictments but denied any involvement in the commission of the seven crimes. The issue on which the State was put to proof, therefore, was whether the defendant was an accomplice of Sсott in the commission of these crimes. See 17-A M.R.S.A. § 57(3)(A).
The State produced Charles Scott to establish that the defendant was a participant in all the crimes charged. In his argument that the evidence of participation was insufficient to support the convictions, the defendant only attacks Scott’s credibility. Although it is clear that the credibility of Scott and the weight to be given his testimony were matters for the jury,
see, e. g., State v. Flaherty,
Me.,
Scott testified as to the participation of the defendant in the attempted burglary at the Porter dwelling and in the burglaries at the Applebee, Jеwell and Lovely dwellings. Other evidence in the case also implicated the defendant in the attempted burglary. This evidence was sufficient to enable the jury rationally to find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was an accomplice of Scott in the commission of these four crimes. We therefore affirm the convictions for the Porter attempted burglary and for the Applebee, Jewell and Lovely burglaries.
Scott’s descriptions of the other three offenses charged, and consequently the defendant’s complicity in these crimes, were either so confused or sketchy that on the basis of this testimony “ ‘no rational trier of fact could [find] proof of guilt beyоnd a reasonable doubt,’ ”
State v. Lagasse,
Me.,
[I]t is ordered that the Defendant be sent to the Maine State Prison for a period of three years on each of the seven charges. The period [sic] of imprisonment to be served concurrently. (Emphasis added).
Unfortunately, the judgments as signed and entered reflеcted concurrent three-year sentences on each indictment rather than a separate sentence as to each count of the multiple-count indictment. In light of the clear expression of the intention оf the presiding Justice, we deem this a clerical error subject to correction pursuant to M.R. Crim.P. 36. In any event, if there is a discrepancy between the oral pronouncement of sentence and the written judgment, the oral рronouncement controls. Cuozzo v.
United States,
The entry is:
(1) In CR-78-276, judgment vacated and the clerk is directed to enter judgment of acquittal.
(2) In CR-78-278, judgment vacated as to Counts III and IV and the clerk is directed to enter judgment of acquittal as to those counts; as tо Counts I, II and V, judgment affirmed and these counts are remanded for correction of judgment to reflect a sentence of three years in the Maine State Prison on each of said counts.
(3) In CR-78-279, judgment affirmed.
All concurring.
Notes
. The counts charging burglary and attemptеd burglary all alleged that the acts were done with the intent to commit, theft.
. Under the ABA Standards Relating to Joinder and Severance, a defendant has an absolute right to a severance of the offenses when the only basis for joindеr is that the offenses are of the same or similar character. ABA Standards Relating to Joinder and Severance § 2.2(a) (Approved Draft, 1968). This provision differs from Rule 14 of the Maine and federal criminal rules and, in any event, is irrelevant to the instant case because joinder of the offenses against the defendant for trial was not based solely on the similarity of the crimes charged.
. We find it unnecessary to review this matter under the standard of M.R.Crim.P. 52(b) because to the extent that substantial rights of the defendant were affected we dispose of such claims in Part' II of this opinion.
. The prosecutor devoted his attention to repeated unsuccessful efforts to introduce irrelevant and inflammatory evidence. Presumably, his concentration on this improper trial tactic diverted the prosecutor’s attention from proving the offenses charged.
