The defendant, Robert Lenihan, was convicted by a jury of the crime of attempting to commit an indecent assault. At the conclusion of this trial, the defendant, having been properly warned in the absence of the court, as provided by § 54-118 of the General Statutes, was presented as a second offender and pleaded not guilty. He elected trial to the court, was found guilty and was sentenced to prison for a term of not less than four nor more than nine years. From this judgment he has appealed.
The basic assignment of error is addressed to the court’s conclusion that upon all the evidence the defendant was beyond a reasonable doubt guilty as a second offender. Under the relevant portion of our second offender statute, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt the identity of the defendant, his prior conviction and his imprisonment. 1 *554 It is the defendant’s contention that the state did not sustain its burden of proof as to imprisonment.
At the trial, a police captain testified to the identity of the defendant. In addition, an assistant clerk of the Superior Court appeared with the court’s record of the earlier case and testified that the defendant in 1954 pleaded guilty to the charge of assault with intent to kill and was sentenced to the state prison for a period of one to three years. The state then offered the 1954 court record as an exhibit. The court indicated it was unnecessary to mark the record as an exhibit since it would take judicial notice of the record unless there was objection. There was no objection.
There is no question concerning the trial court’s power to take judicial notice of a file in a proper case in the same court, whether or not between the same parties.
Guerriero
v.
Galasso,
It is this reasoning which supports the rule as stated in
People
v.
Meier,
A further claim of the defendant is that the court erred in allowing the state to open the case and recall a witness after the defense had rested. When the defense rested, the state requested permission to open the case for the purpose of asking one further question of a witness who had already testified. The assistant state’s attorney represented to the court that it was a question which he had forgotten to ask while the witness was on the stand. The ruling was not an abuse of the court’s discretion.
State
v.
Williams,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“See. 54-118. punishment upon second and third conviction. Any person having been eonvieted of any crime and imprisoned therefor in the State Prison or state reformatory in this state or in any state prison or penitentiary for a term less than life, who afterwards is eonvieted of any crime for which the imprisonment may be a term in the State Prison, may be imprisoned therein for a term not exceeding double the term provided by law for such offense.”
