Appellant was indicted for assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature (ABHAN). The appellant entered a plea of nolo contendere with the understanding that the judge would determine whether the degree of the offense was ABHAN or the lesser included offense of simple assault and battery. The court found the appellant guilty of ABHAN and sentenced him to two years suspended upon payment of a two-thousand ($2,000) dollar fine and one year probation. The appellant now claims there was insufficient evidence to support the trial judge’s finding. We affirm.
A plea of
nolo contendere
is for all practical purposes a plea of guilty in the case in which it is pled.
Kibler v. State,
267 S. C. 250,
A court cannot hear testimony after accepting the plea to determine either the fact or degree of the defendant’s guilt because the plea admits all the elements of the offense charged. In
Kibler, supra,
we stated that “once a plea of
nolo contendere
is entered, it is beyond
There was sufficient evidence in the record to support a conviction of ABHAN. Because the judgment of the trial court was unaffected by the error in taking testimony, we affirm.
