Dеfendant, Louis Jordan, appeals after a verdict and a sentence to serve six years as a prior and persistent offender on a charge of unlawful use of a weapon. Section 571.030 RSMo Cum.Supp.1997. We granted leave to file a late appeal. The state charged Defendant with flourishing а handgun in an angry or threatening manner at his ex-girlfriend. Defendant claims that the trial court erred in: (1) overruling his motion in limine to exclude (a) evidence of uncharged crimes, and prior bad acts, and (b) a 911 tape; (2) sustaining the state’s motion to exclude the testimony of a defense witness; (3) overruling his motion to suppress a gun; аnd (4) allowing the state to introduce evidence sufficient to support a finding that he is a prior and persistent felony offender after the case had been submitted to the jury. We affirm.
There was evidence to support finding the following facts. During the summer of 1994, after she broke up with her boyfriend, L.M. engaged in sexual relations with Defendant. On April 2, 1995, L.M. gave birth to a baby. The baby’s father was not identified by a paternity test. Defendant believed he was the father. L.M. did not believe that Defendant was the father. She believed the father of her four-year-old was also the father of her baby. However, L.M. and Defendant often met to discuss the baby and the bаby’s paternity. They agreed to have a paternity test performed. L.M. also agreed to allow Defendant to visit her baby, but only during the day. However, Defendant came over whenever he pleased, usually at odd hours of the evening. L.M. had a problem with these visits. When she told Defendant that she had a problem with his visits, hе became upset.
On July 9, 1996, when L.M. arrived home from dinner with her current boyfriend and her two children, Defendant was knocking on her door. Defendant saw L.M. pull up to the house. He approached the passenger side of the car, the side in which L.M. was sitting. He began cursing and screaming at her. He demanded to know when the рaternity test was going to be performed. The driver tried to calm Defendant. Defendant became very angry. L.M. and her children got out of the car and walked to her aunt’s house to call the police. Defendant approached L.M. on the sidewalk, pointed a semi-automatic pistol at her and threatened to kill her. L.M. believed that Defendant was going to shoot her. On prior occasions, L.M. had seen Defendant with a gun. L.M. went to her aunt’s house to call the police. She told the 911 operator that he had been there before and that he had a gun. Before the police arrived, Defendant aрologized to L.M.’s boyfriend and drove away in his brown Ford Tempo.
Police arrived approximately fifteen minutes after the call. Shortly thereafter, they arrested Defendant who was hiding in bushes about three blocks away from L.M.’s residence. They searched Defendant but did not find a weapon. They noticed a vehicle that fit the description of the car in which Defendant fled with the gun. It was unlocked with the windows down. They searched the vehicle and found a gun in a bag on the front seat. The gun contained a clip and five rounds of ammunition. The crime lab subsequently testified the weapon still operated.
Defendant had previously harаssed and stalked L.M.. On one occasion, he broke a window at L.M.’s residence when she refused to let him inside. On another occasion, he went to her residence and when she again refused him entry, he became very angry, pulled her out of the house and slapped her on the face. Another incident involved Defendant following L.M. in his car for six or seven blocks when she arrived home from bowling with a friend.
*39 Prior to trial, Defendant argued a motion in limine to exclude the 911 tape in which L.M. refers to other incidents of harassment and prior bad acts by Defendant. The state argued that the tape was admissible as evidence of mоtive or intent. The court overruled Defendant’s motion. The tape was admitted without objection. A jury convicted Defendant of unlawful use of a weapon. The court sentenced him as a prior and persistent offender to six years.
In his first point on appeal, Defendant argues the trial court erred when it overruled his motion in limine to exclude Defendant’s uncharged crimes, prior bad acts, and L.M.’s 911 tape. He argues the alleged uncharged crimes and prior bad acts were not similar to the charge of knowingly exhibiting a weapon to be probative of Defendant’s guilt of the charged crime. Defendant claims thаt the admitted evidence was more prejudicial than probative.
Ordinarily, a ruling on a motion in limine is not appealable.
State v. Dwyer,
Defendant argues in his second point that the trial court abused its discretion in sustаining the state’s Rule 26.16 motion to exclude testimony of Defendant’s uncle as a defense witness. Defendant lived with his uncle and always knew that he could be a potential witness. Defendant failed to identify this witness during discovery. He argues the proposed testimony is crucial to his defense to impeach a state’s witness аnd to explain the reason he carried a gun. The court refused to permit the testimony of a witness first identified on the second day of trial.
“The trial court has discretion in determining whether a witness should be permitted to testify and we review only for an abuse of discretion which results in fundamental unfairness.”
State v. Bolen,
In
State v. Lopez,
defendant moved to endorse a witness on the second day of trial, after the state’s two primary witnesses had testified.
Lopez,
In this case, Defendant knew before trial that his uncle was a possible witness. He lived with his uncle and, of course, knew his whereabouts. Thus, the facts support a requirement for requested disclosure.
Bolen,
The record indicates Defendant made a sufficient offer of proof after the judge denied defense witnesses testimony.
Lopez,
In his third point, Defendant argues the trial court erred in overruling Defendant’s motion to suppress the gun taken from Ms car. The state justified the search as a matter of exigent circumstances. Defendant argued there were none. He argued that the evidence was obtained in violation of his rights under Article I, sections 10, 15, 18(a) of the Missouri Constitution, the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and section 542.261 et seq. RSMo 1994. The day of trial, Defendаnt argued and lost the motion to suppress evidence.
The state offered sufficient evidence to support all elements of the charge. Section 571.030 Cum.Supp. RSMo 1997. L.M.’s boyfriend testified that “[Defendant] walked towards her with a - what appeared to be a handgun and I would say about to shoot.” This evidence wаs received without objection. She testified, without objection, “when I got to the sidewalk [Defendant] toned and he pointed a gun at me, said he was going to kill me.” The jury as trier of fact weighs this evidence in making their decision. Introduction of the gun into evidence was unnecessary.
The state offered the gun into evidence. It was admitted without any objections on constitutional grounds. Rather, Defendant objected to some “black markings” on the evidence bag containing the gun. It is not clear what the intended legal objection may have been, perhaps a defect in chain of custody. In his motion for new trial, Defendant arguеd that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the gun on constitutional grounds.
When a pretrial motion to suppress evidence is denied and the evidence is subsequently admitted at trial, the defendant must renew the objection(s) or make a specific objection to preserve the issue for appellate review.
State v. Tidwell,
Here, the police arrested Defendant, and then seized the gun from his car located approximately twenty-five feet from him. The “automobile exception” authorizes police to perform warrаntless searches of vehicles and seize contraband found if “(1) there is probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains contraband and (2) exigent circumstances necessitate the search.”
State ex rel. Boling v. Malone,
Officer Thomas testified that on the evening of July 9, 1996 she responded to a call from L.M.’s residence. Upon arriving at L.M.’s home, L.M. gave her a description of *41 Defendant and told her Defendant had been at her house with a weapon and left in a brown Ford Tempo with the weapon. Thomas and another officer left to find Defendant. They found Defendant at his home hiding in some bushes. They arrested him. A car fitting L.M.’s description of the vehicle Defendant was driving was located about twenty-five feet from Defendant. The officers detained and frisked Defendant, but did not find a weapon on his person. Thereafter, Thomas sеarched the vehicle, which was unlocked with the windows down. She found the gun in a bag on the front seat.
In determining whether probable cause was met, we deal with probabilities.
State v. Hill,
In his fourth point, Defendant argues the trial court erred in allowing the state to introduce evidence sufficient to support a finding he was a prior and persistent felony offender because it was offered after the case had been submitted to the jury. He argues this violates section 558.021 RSMo 1994. In support of his argument, Defendant relies on
State v. Martin,
Here, the information alleged a prior conviction on July 28, 1988. The state introduced evidence of a conviction on October 28, 1988. The crime alleged in the charge, which resulted in a conviction, was the same as that introduced by the state. Defendant has not identified any prejudice. He suffered no prejudice. His argument fails.
Martin,
Defendant also argued that he was prejudiced by having a hearing on his prior convictions after the ease was submitted to the jury. The supreme court held in
State v. Kilgore,
We affirm.
