Appellant was indicted for unlawfully selling marijuana and was found guilty after a jury trial. He now appeals from the judgment of conviction and sentence entered by the trial court on the guilty verdict.
1. Some two and a half months subsequent to the sale of marijuana which underlay the instant prosecution, marijuana was seized from motor vehicles and the curtilage of the house where the sale had previously taken place. Over appellant’s objection, the trial court held that this subsequent discovery of marijuana on the premises was admissible “similar crimes” evidence.
“ ‘(E)vidence of other criminal acts of the defendant may be admitted if it “ ‘is substantially relevant for some purpose other than to show a probability that [the defendant] committed the crime on trial because he is a man of criminal character. . . .’” (Cits.) The purposes for which evidence of extrinsic offenses may be offered include motive; intent; absence of mistake or accident [each is (an) aspect of intent]; plan or scheme [of which the crime on trial is a part]; and identity. (Cits.) To render evidence of extrinsic offenses admissible for any of these purposes, the (S)tate must show that the defendant was the perpetrator of the extrinsic offenses, and that there is a sufficient similarity or connection between the extrinsic offense and the offense charged, such that proof of the former tends to prove the latter. (Cits.)’ [Cits.]”
Bennett v. State,
With regard to the showing of identity, there was sufficient evidence that appellant resided in the house in question, and thus pos
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sessed the subsequently seized marijuana. “Proof of [appellant’s] identity as perpetrator of the similar crime need not be beyond a reasonable doubt. [Cit.]”
Allen v. State,
With regard to the showing of similarity, the “[e]vidence of subsequent [possession of marijuana] would be admissible in a trial for sale of marijuana. [Cit.] This is particularly true when[, as in the instant case,] identity is in issue. [Cit.]”
Brown v. State,
2. Although the trial court gave instructions on the limited relevancy of the “similar crimes” evidence, appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s failure to instruct on the presumption of innocence or the requirement that such “similar crimes” must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
“The independent crime [s] . . . [were] not an element of the offense charged . . . requiring [their] proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Wallace v. State,
3. Appellant enumerates as error, the trial court’s giving of a charge on “the entire statute proscribing the possession, manufacture, delivery, distribution, dispensing, administering, selling or possessing [with intent to distribute] . . . marijuana. ‘It is not usually cause for new trial that an entire Code section is given. . . . This is so even though a part of the charge may be inapplicable under the facts in evidence.’ [Cits.]”
Smith v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
