The defendant was arraigned on an information containing three counts. In the first and third counts he was charged with indecent assault. The second count charged him with placing a child under the age of
sixteen
years in such a situation that his morals were likely to be impaired, in violation of § 53-21 of the General Statutes. The case was tried to the jury. The defendant’s motion to dismiss the information was granted as to the
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first and third counts but denied as to the second count, and, on that count, the jury returned a verdict of guilty. To a second part of the information charging the defendant as a second offender under § 54-118 of the General Statutes, the defendant pleaded guilty and was sentenced by the court. The defendant moved to set aside the verdict but later withdrew the motion. He appealed from “the verdict rendered . . . and the sentence of the Court.” The appeal was not taken from the final judgment in strict accordance with the language of § 52-263 of the General Statutes. However, in a criminal case the imposition of the sentence is the judgment of the court.
State
v.
Lindsay,
The defendant has assigned error in several respects. The claims of error in the finding and in the charge to the jury have not been pursued in the brief, and they are therefore considered as abandoned.
West Realty Co.
v.
Ennis,
Included in the claims of proof are the following facts which are pertinent to our consideration of the evidential rulings: In the summer of 1959, the *490 defendant met a fonrteen-year-old boy through the boy’s grandmother, who was employed by the defendant in a rooming house in Hartford. The parents of the boy had been divorced in Florida while he was in Connecticut. The defendant, without anyone’s permission, took the boy to live in a single-family house in West Hartford. The house was under the control of the defendant and was occupied by him and by other men as boarders. The defendant registered the boy in school and falsely represented that he was the boy’s uncle. The boy attended school in West Hartford from September 15, 1959, to April 1, 1960. During this period, he was frequently absent from school and was tardy several times. Although his intelligence test score was average, his performance record in school was below his indicated intelligence potential. The defendant signed the boy’s report cards. Drinking parties were held at the house, and the boy attended them with the defendant. On one occasion he was given beer. At one of these parties, there was heavy drinking, and girls became drunk and were taken into bedrooms. The defendant called the boy harsh names, used profane and vulgar language in his presence and struck him. The boy was the victim of an indecent assault by one of the boarders. At another time, the boy saw one of the men committing an unnatural act on his own person.
The claims of error in rulings on evidence are the sole questions to be considered. In two instances, after the court made its rulings, no answers were given to the questions to which objection had been made. Consequently, if there was error in those rulings, it was harmless. At another time, the defendant gave no reason to support his objection to a question. Since no ground was urged by the state
*491
in support of its admissibility and no ground of objection was stated, we do not consider the ruling.
Casalo v. Claro,
Finally, the defendant claims that the court erred in overruling his objection to a question asked of the boy concerning his observation of the activities of one of the boarders in the house. The objection was based on the ground that the evidence was irrelevant to the issues. The state was clearly entitled to elicit from the witness a description of the conditions and environment in which he lived. His situation in the house and the events which took place there had an important bearing on the question whether the defendant had placed a minor child in such a situation that his morals were likely to be impaired. The court did not err in admitting the evidence, and the objection was properly overruled.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
