delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant was found guilty of grand larceny of an automobile in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, by the court sitting without a jury.
He is a man who apparently has a serious problem with drink and a strong attachment to automobiles belonging to others.
His first contention questions the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding of his guilt. The constituent elements of larceny are so well known that it is unnecessary to repeat them. See
Canton Bank v. American Bonding Co.,
*434
The question was fully presented to the trial court, who decided the issue adversely to the appellant. The state of one’s mind or
scienter
is a question of fact.
Putinski v. State, supra; Tufts v. Poore,
After his arrest, the appellant was taken before a magistrate for a preliminary hearing on the charge of the larceny of the car, and he pleaded guilty. At his trial below, a police officer, over objection, was permitted to testify to this fact. The appellant concedes that a plea of guilty on preliminary hearing is not
per se
inadmissible in the trial under indictment, but contends the plea before the magistrate in the instant case was an extra-judicial confession
(Williams v. State,
If we assume, without the necessity of deciding in this case, that the appellant’s contention is a sound analysis of the law and the objection to the question propounded should have been sustained, we think the error was harmless, for the fact that appellant pleaded guilty before the magistrate came into evidence by another witness; and one witness testified, without objection, that the appellant admitted he stole the motor
*435
vehicle. When the prosecuting witness was on the stand, he was asked on cross-examination: “Whom did you tell the Magistrate told you that the car was taken? Didn’t you say it was your wife?” He replied: “No, I didn’t tell the Magistrate anything. He [the appellant] pleaded guilty. That was all. They held him over for bail.” And the apprehending officer testified that the appellant, when first accosted, stated that the automobile belonged to his brother-in-law, from whom he borrowed it several times a week. After checking with the Communications Bureau, the officer asked the appellant: “Why didn’t you tell us you stole the car in the first place?” He said: “The reason I didn’t tell you is because I am on probation.” The officer then asked: “For what?” And the appellant replied: “For stealing automobiles.” It is a well-established principle of the general law, including criminal law, that it is harmless error to admit inadmissible testimony, if the same testimony is properly before the court from another source.
State Roads Comm. v. Bare,
Appellant’s court-appointed attorney included in his brief, at appellant’s request, four additional contentions raised by the appellant personally. The first claims the wrongful admission of certain hearsay testimony. The question is not properly before us, no objection having been made below. Maryland Rule 885. Next, he claims that he “can produce witnesses to prove owner of car misrepresented the extent of his acquaintance with defendant.” If the testimony were material and available at the time of trial, his failure to produce the same at his trial waived his right to do so later.
Stansbury v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
