99 So. 2d 304 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1957
The appellant was adjudged guilty of Grand Larceny, and sentenced to pay a fine of $1,000, or in default thereof, to serve one year in the State Penitentiary. The information charged that the appellant being an agent, employee and trustee of Fine Foods Operating Company, Inc., and having in his control certain money of the firm, did with intent to defraud appropriate said money. The trial of the cause, before the court without a jury, was commenced on October 16, 1956; at which time the appellant’s counsel asked for the imposition of the rule for the separation of the witnesses, whereupon witnesses were excluded from the courtroom. After the testimony of the first witness for the State, the cause was upon the court’s own motion adjourned until October 30, 1956, for the specific purpose of producing the testimony of a certain Mr. Chessler, whose testimony the court deemed essential to a determination of the case. Mr. Chessler was the actual owner of the corporation whose funds the defendant was accused of appropriating. When the witness Chessler was called on October 30th, he admitted that he had been shown and had read a copy of the prior testimony. Objection was made to his testifying and the objection was overruled. That ruling is assigned as error, and this court finding that it was an error prejudicial to defendant’s right to a fair trial, the judgment is reversed.
It is the settled law of this State that the matter of placing witnesses under or exempting them from the rule is within the discretion of the trial judge and that his action will not be reversed unless it is made to appear that the court abused its discretion and that such abuse worked to the prejudice of the party complaining. McVeigh v. State, Fla., 1954, 73 So.2d 694,
Reversed and remanded.