Claude Terry appeals his conviction and ten-year sentence for burglary of a Western Auto Store in Woodbury. At trial, the storekeeper testified that upоn hearing strange noises in the store after midnight by means of a receiver located in the bedroom of his nearby home, he hastened to the store and found а burglary in progress. Three men attempted to *656 flee the scene and he shot at the legs of all of them, concluding that he had struck one. The other two werе positively identified as Negroes. The three escaped. The sheriff alerted hospitals to be on the lookout for gunshot victims, and a report shortly arrived from a Warm Springs hospital that Claude Terry had arrived with a gunshot wound, having been "put out” at the hospital by two Negro males who did not linger on the scene, and that Terry had been sent to the Medical Center in Columbus. The sheriff went to the Medical Center and attempted to arrange to be given the bullet to be removed from Tеrry’s back. At trial, this bullet was introduced over defense objection, and expert testimony was given that it had been fired from the storekeeper’s gun.
Terry’s testimony was thаt he had been high on wine and marijuana and had fallen asleep in the back of his two friends’ car; they stopped somewhere; it later appeared that this was in the vicinity of the Western Auto Store; when they did not return he went to look for them; near the store he encountered yelling and shooting and ran back to thе car, not realizing until then that he had himself been hit.
On this appeal, both the state and the appellant address their main argument to the admissibility of the bullet. Terry argues that the chain of custody of the bullet was inadequately shown, and the state argues that the chain of custody did not have to be shown. We find the chain of custody quеstion irrelevant for reasons which will appear below.
When a test has been performed on an item of alleged evidence linking a defendant to a crime, there are at least three considerations involved in the identification of the item: (1) is it properly identified as having actually come from the defendant? (2) is it properly identified as the item actually tested? (3) where the item is one of a class of fungible items, e.g., blood samples, is an adequate chain оf custody presented to preserve its identity? This triple test was implicitly recognized in
Pittman v. State,
Here, the first of the tests set out above has not been met: there is in this record no identification of this bullet as that actually removed from Terry’s back. The testimony of Sheriff Branch was that when he went to the hospital he told "Doctor Mayer” to save the bullet thеy removed. Later, Sheriff Branch returned to the hospital and a nurse whose name he did not remember gave him a bullet in an envelope bearing a note to the effect that it was to be given to Sheriff Branch, and "she said Doctor Mayers told 'em to give me that when I came down.” The evidence showed that the bullet was inside a pillbox sealed with tape, and the box was labeled "1-7-73, Claude Terry, .45 caliber bullet, metal center, Doctor Goldman,” it bore a set of initials appearing to be "DB”; and the label additionally stated "tied with silk suture for identification.” The suture was wrapped around the bullet. Neither Dr. Mayer nor Dr. Goldman appeаred at trial, and the record is devoid of evidence of who removed the bullet from Terry’s back, as well as being devoid of cognizable evidence that thе bullet in the pillbox was that surgically removed. The inference to that effect (based upon hearsay,) from the circumstances and the label was never turned into a "fact” in this litigation through the state’s introduction of identifying testimony, and this hole in the proof requires our conclusion that the admission of the bullet was error.
Howеver, on the facts here, the error was not ground for reversal, because the defendant testified that he was shot outside the burglarized store and thus acknowledged the origin of the bullet because there is no testimony in the record tending to show that shots were fired in that incident from any gun other than the storekeeper’s. In light of this testimony from Terry, the admission of the bullet must be characterized as harmless error. See generally, Cameron & Osborn, When Harmless Error Isn’t Harmless, 1971 Law & Soc. Order 23.
Thus, our inquiry comes down to the question of whether, granted that Terry was shot in the incident, the record contains evidence authorizing the jury to find Terry guilty of burglary. The *658 testimony of the storekeeper was that as he aрproached the rear of his store he saw a shadow moving down the side of the store from the back of the building toward the street in the front; that he assumed it was a stray dog; that the figure then grew and stood up and became recognizable as a man; that he shot at it and as he fired the second time the figure steppеd from the side of the building out into the rays of the security light in front arid spun around flaring the bottom of his coat or jacket which had loose straps, ties, or buckles which the storekeeper could see flying out as he spun. Terry acknowledged as his own the jacket introduced by the state, having a bullet hole in the back, and identified by the storekeeper as similar to that which he observed on the man moving down the side of the store. However, Terry denied that he approached the back of the store, saying at least three times that he never got that far. His testimony is that he never got off the sidewalk.
Faced with this conflict in the evidence, it was the exclusive function of the jury to decide whom to believe.
Pinion v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
